Wimbledon: Return of tennis tournament: BBC News Review

35,220 views ・ 2021-06-29

BBC Learning English


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Hello and welcome to News Review from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Neil and joining me for this programme is Tom. Hello Tom.
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Hello Neil and hello to our audience. Today's story is about the
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start of the world's most famous tennis tournament: Wimbledon.
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If you want to test yourself on any vocabulary that you hear today,
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there's a quiz on our website at bbclearningenglish.com.
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Now, let's find out some more about the start of
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Wimbledon from this BBC News report:
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OK. So, it's the start of the famous tennis tournament Wimbledon.
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Last year, the tournament didn't happen:
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there was no Wimbledon because of the Covid-19 pandemic. This year, only
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half the normal amount of visitors are allowed to go to Wimbledon, but
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they hope to be able to allow more visitors later in the tournament.
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You've been looking at this story, checking out the various news and
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sports websites to find some language that's useful. What have you got?
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I have: 'washout', 'makes the most of it' and 'net gain'.
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'Washout', 'makes the most of it' and 'net gain'.
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So, let's start then with your first headline please, Tom.
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Yeah. My first headline, Neil, is from Mail Online, here in the UK – it says:
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'Washout' – event ruined by heavy rain.
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Yeah. So, let's talk about 'washout'. OK.
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So, yeah, 'washout' is all one word: W-A-S-H-O-U-T – a 'washout'.
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It's a noun and it describes something completely ruined by the rain.
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Yeah, and it's clearly made up by...
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made up of two words put together: 'wash' and 'out'.
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Now, most people know that 'washing' is connected to cleaning things.
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This has got more to do with the,
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sort of, volume of liquid – of water – hasn't it?
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Yeah, I guess. I mean, if you think 'wash' – of
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movement of water – then this water comes and 'washes' the event 'out'.
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It puts it out of the picture. Yeah, so it creates a big problem.
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Yeah. So, here we have it as a noun, 'a washout',
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but there's also a verb – a phrasal verb version, isn't there?
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Yeah. Unsurprisingly, the phrasal verb is 'wash out'.
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Two separate words: that verb 'wash' and the particle 'out'.
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So, we could say that Wimbledon could be 'washed out' by the rain.
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You'd often see it with that participle form.
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Yes. Yeah, or a wedding or something like that or, in fact,
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I just got a notification from my son's cricket team saying that
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tonight's game is 'washed out'. It is 'a washout': it's cancelled.
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We could say a 'complete washout' or a 'total washout' as well.
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We could use these, sort of, strong words with it.
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There is one other meaning as well, Neil.
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OK. Yeah. What's that?
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Which is actually to do with cleaning: when you were a child,
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did your mother ever tell you to 'wash your mouth out'?
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Well, I know what you're going to say next, Tom,
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but I never, ever used any bad language or swear words,
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so this didn't happen to me, but I know it happened to you.
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So, if we clean the inside of something with water,
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we could say that we 'wash it out'.
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Now, when I was a kid and I used to use bad language, my mother would
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say to me, 'Thomas, go and wash your mouth out with soap and water!' You
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know, go and clean your mouth and stop using it to say dirty things.
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Obviously, Neil, that doesn't happen any more.
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Absolutely. She did a good job because I've
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never heard you use a bad word.
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  Maybe after this slide.
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OK. Let's get a summary:
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Heavy rain is, of course, an inconvenience for lots of people,
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but for others it can be really, really serious.
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We have a story about what heavy rain did in Australia, don't we, Tom?
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Yeah, we do. And it uses that word 'torrential' from our last headline.
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So, you can find out by clicking the link.
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OK. Let's have a look at your next headline.
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Sure! My next headline is from the New York Times in the USA – it says:
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'Makes the most of it' – tries to enjoy something as much as possible.
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Yeah. So, this expression, 'makes the most of it' – it's got
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a third person 's'; we normally say 'make the most of it' – means try to
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enjoy something as much as possible. It's an idiom, which means that
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the meaning is separate from the individual meaning of the words.
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And if you look at these words – 'make', 'the', 'most', 'of', 'it'
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– they don't say... they don't tell us that much.
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Though altogether, they have this meaning for the set phrase:
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try to enjoy something as much as possible
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Yeah. So, we can think about
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often situations where things haven't gone exactly as you planned. So Tom,
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you've probably had the experience of a summer holiday in the UK?
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Yeah, very recently: a couple of weeks ago in Devon.
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How was the weather?
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Actually, it was beautiful.
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It was not a 'washout', but there's always that chance.
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Yes. And now I've... I remember a holiday I had
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in Scotland a few years ago, where it rained all day, every day.
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It didn't stop raining, but we made...
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It was a 'washout'!
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  ...'We made the most of it'.
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You know, we still did the things we wanted to do:
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we saw some beautiful countryside, bought some nice whisky in Scotland,
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so we kept ourselves entertained. We 'made the most of it'.
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Yeah. You can 'make the most of it'; another one, Neil,
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is you can 'make the best of it'.
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This is a different sort of variation – has the same meaning.
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You could 'make the most of it', 'make the best of it'.
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And 'it' is a pronoun so you could say,
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'You made the best of your holiday.'
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  Time now for a summary:
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So, talking about idiomatic language. We have a whole series on idioms
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and the sort of English that people use in their everyday lives.
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It's called The English We Speak. Where can our viewers find it, Tom?
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They can, as always, they can click the link in the video description.
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OK. Let's have a look at your next headline.
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Next headline, Neil, from the Guardian back in the UK again.
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It says – this is my favourite headline – it says:
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'Net gain' – final profit.
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Now, this is... this is fantastic, isn't it Tom?
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There are a couple of jokes in here, what we call puns: plays with words.
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There are a couple of puns, yeah. Before we look at the puns,
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let's have a look at the actual meaning of 'net gain'.
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So, 'gain': 'gain' can be a verb and it can be a noun.
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It means what we receive, or it means to receive.
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And if you run a business, the 'net gain' is, kind of, your final profit.
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So, after you've paid your staff and paid your taxes and thought
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about your costs, it is the profit that you have remaining.
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It is your 'net gain' – pure profit.
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Yeah. Often used in financial language and situations,
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but there is a double meaning here, isn't there?
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Yeah, there is, which is that
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when you play tennis you of course use a 'net'.
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Yeah. You try to avoid the 'net'.
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You try... yeah, you avoid the 'net'
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and you also – you play tennis on a 'tennis court'.
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So, if we look back at the headline,
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the writer of this headline – he's having a joke. 'To court the public'
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means to be nice to the public and appeal to them. Obviously, it's an
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excuse to use that word 'court' and it's an excuse to use the word 'net',
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because we're talking about tennis. It's a very funny British headline.
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Yes, and very typical of headline writers: they like to find these
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words that have double meanings that, kind of, reflect on the story.
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Yeah. So, anyway 'net gain' is the final amount of money that you
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make if you are a business person. The opposite is a 'net loss'.
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So, if you finish trading and you haven't made any money,
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you've made a 'net loss'.
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I'm, kind of, at a 'loss' as to what more I can say about this one, Neil.
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OK. That sounds like it's the right time to get a summary:
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Time now then, Tom, for a recap of our vocabulary please.
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Of course! Today's vocabulary was:
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'washout' – event ruined by heavy rain.
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'Makes the most of it' – tries to enjoy something as much as possible.
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And 'net gain', which is final profit.
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If you want to test yourself on the vocabulary, please go to our
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website bbclearningenglish.com. You can find a quiz there.
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Don't forget also that we are all over social media.
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Thanks for joining us and goodbye.
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Bye.
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