Trump acquitted: BBC News Review

53,360 views ・ 2021-02-16

BBC Learning English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:00
Hello and welcome to News Review from BBC Learning English.
0
320
3440
00:03
I'm Catherine and joining me today is Tom. Hello Tom.
1
3760
3760
00:07
Hello Catherine. Good morning and hello to our audience.
2
7520
2960
00:10
Today's story is about former US president Donald Trump.
3
10480
4800
00:15
Mr. Trump was acquitted, or found not guilty,
4
15280
3840
00:19
at his recent impeachment trial.
5
19120
2240
00:21
Now, don't forget – if you want more on this story and to do a quiz,
6
21360
3920
00:25
just go to our website: bbclearningenglish.com.
7
25280
3920
00:29
Now, let's hear more about this story from this BBC News report:
8
29200
4480
00:49
So, Donald Trump's impeachment trial has ended.
9
49920
4240
00:54
The trial aimed to establish whether Mr. Trump was responsible
10
54160
5040
00:59
for causing the attack on the US Congress last month.
11
59200
4480
01:03
Mr. Trump was acquitted, or found not guilty, in the case
12
63680
4480
01:08
and this is the second time that this has happened.
13
68160
3440
01:11
OK. And you've been looking at the headlines around this story,
14
71600
3280
01:14
haven't you Tom? What words have you picked out for us today?
15
74880
4720
01:19
Our words and expressions for today, Catherine, are:
16
79600
3040
01:22
'sad chapter', 'rifts' and 'kerfuffle'.
17
82640
4879
01:27
'Sad chapter', 'rifts' and 'kerfuffle'.
18
87840
3760
01:31
So, let's take a look at your first headline.
19
91600
2960
01:34
My first headline is from India. It's the Hindustan Times – it says:
20
94560
5520
01:46
'Sad chapter' – negative period.
21
106560
3120
01:49
Now, what can you tell us about this word, Tom?
22
109680
3520
01:53
Let's begin with 'chapter'. 'Chapter' is a noun: C-H-A-P-T-E-R.
23
113200
5920
01:59
And a 'chapter' is a part of a book.
24
119120
3280
02:02
A part of a book – so part of a story.
25
122400
2800
02:05
Now, what's this got to do with Trump, Biden, democracy?
26
125200
4160
02:09
What's going on?
27
129360
1680
02:11
Good question. So, if we think about... let's begin with the headline.
28
131040
6400
02:17
The headline talks about Mr. Biden's quote
29
137440
2880
02:20
that Trump's acquittal was a 'sad chapter'
30
140320
3360
02:23
or a negative period for American democracy.
31
143680
3680
02:27
If you think about democracy as a sort of... a lifeline or a story:
32
147360
5760
02:33
Mr. Biden is saying that the acquittal
33
153120
2080
02:35
marks a negative period in this ongoing story.
34
155200
3840
02:39
OK. Got it. So, a 'chapter' is like a period of life –
35
159040
4480
02:43
in this case, a period of the kind of story of democracy.
36
163520
3760
02:47
So, we can only use 'chapter' when we're talking
37
167280
2800
02:50
about big things like democracy and world events?
38
170080
2880
02:52
Or can you use it to talk about a period of your own personal life?
39
172960
4560
02:57
Very good question.
40
177520
1600
02:59
No, we don't just use 'chapter' for sort of important things;
41
179120
3760
03:02
we can use it a lot in our personal life as well.
42
182880
3840
03:06
For example, when I went to university
43
186720
4320
03:11
that was the start of a 'new chapter' in my life:
44
191040
2960
03:14
it was something completely different that I'd never done before.
45
194000
3040
03:17
A 'happy chapter', Tom?
46
197040
1680
03:18
It was a very happy chapter, yeah.
47
198720
1600
03:20
'Happy and exciting chapter,' you could say.
48
200320
2720
03:23
OK. Any other expressions that we can use
49
203040
2240
03:25
relating to sort of 'chapters' of our lives?
50
205280
4080
03:29
When a 'chapter' ends, we can use another expression
51
209360
4000
03:33
related to books, which is 'turn the page'.
52
213360
3440
03:36
So, if you 'turn the page' on a chapter, you end it:
53
216800
3760
03:40
you sort of – you begin a new portion.
54
220560
2320
03:42
Nice explanation. OK.
55
222880
1360
03:44
Well, it's time to 'turn the page' on this chapter of News Review
56
224240
4400
03:48
and we're going to finish this section with a summary.
57
228640
3280
03:51
Very good!
58
231920
1493
04:00
So, we're talking today about Donald Trump's second impeachment trial
59
240320
4160
04:04
but a while ago we talked about his first impeachment trial, didn't we Tom?
60
244480
4800
04:09
We did – in the BBC offices –
61
249280
2080
04:11
and you can find that video by clicking the link.
62
251360
2800
04:14
Can we now have your second headline?
63
254160
2960
04:17
Of course. My second headline comes from
64
257120
2320
04:19
the Financial Times in the UK – it says:
65
259440
3920
04:28
And that word is 'rifts'.
66
268960
1920
04:30
'Rifts' – serious breaks or separations.
67
270880
3920
04:34
Now, this word's a noun, isn't it Tom?
68
274800
2320
04:37
It is. It's plural – the singular noun is 'rift': R-I-F-T.
69
277120
5920
04:43
And a 'rift' is a serious break or separation.
70
283040
2880
04:45
And we often use this in geographical terms,
71
285920
2553
04:48
don't we, to describe geographical features?
72
288473
2887
04:51
Yeah. So, literally a 'rift' is a crack, or a break or a split.
73
291360
6080
04:57
So, you could have a 'rift' in clouds or rocks, for example.
74
297440
5440
05:02
Of a valley: if you think about a valley –
75
302880
2800
05:05
you know, two high sides with a space in between them –
76
305680
5120
05:10
a valley is a 'rift'. It's just a really big 'rift'.
77
310800
2800
05:13
Big geography then – these are big.
78
313600
2400
05:16
You don't get a little 'rift' in a pebble
79
316000
2400
05:18
or a little small rock you can hold in your hand.
80
318400
1920
05:20
Yeah. Like, there are no 'rifts' under my shoe – do you know what I mean?
81
320320
3520
05:23
They... we're using this economy of sort of large – excuse me.
82
323840
5600
05:29
We're using this language of large scale,
83
329440
2880
05:32
so we normally use it for sort of important and momentous things.
84
332320
5280
05:37
So, when we use 'rift' figuratively, we're talking about a split or a division
85
337600
7520
05:45
between people who had been on good terms.
86
345120
2800
05:47
So, let's go back to that headline. It says:
87
347920
3840
05:51
'Senate acquittal exposes deep Republican rifts over Trump.'
88
351760
5040
05:56
What this is saying is that – what the headline says is that
89
356800
5920
06:02
Donald Trump's acquittal has shown that there is a big gap
90
362720
5120
06:07
between Republicans: between his own party.
91
367840
2880
06:10
You know, they're very far away from each other and they've split.
92
370720
3360
06:14
So, they really don't agree and they're not getting on.
93
374080
3280
06:17
Exactly.
94
377360
640
06:18
OK. And we only use this to talk about kind of big people in politics?
95
378000
4880
06:22
Or can you have a 'rift' in the family,
96
382880
1840
06:24
if you really fall out with somebody in your family?
97
384720
2240
06:26
You can have a 'rift' in a lot of things
98
386960
1600
06:28
and we can use it a lot in our day-to-day life as well.
99
388560
3280
06:31
For example, we could have a 'rift' in a family, as you said,
100
391840
4560
06:36
or 'rift' in a relationship or a 'rift' in a marriage.
101
396400
4140
06:40
OK...
102
400560
480
06:41
Notice that I said 'in' as well.
103
401040
2160
06:43
Yes... yeah. Yeah, yeah.
104
403200
1120
06:44
Preposition's 'in'. Any other prep...
105
404320
1840
06:46
So, there's preposition 'in' – anything else we can use?
106
406160
2960
06:49
Two main prepositions we use with 'rift':
107
409120
2480
06:51
one is 'in' and the other one is 'between'.
108
411600
4080
06:55
So, with the headline we could say there is a 'rift in the Republican Party',
109
415680
5840
07:01
or we could say there is a 'rift between Republicans in the party'.
110
421520
5680
07:07
Aha! So, a 'rift in a thing',
111
427200
2400
07:09
and the 'rift between' is followed by the people
112
429600
3040
07:12
or the organisations who are in disagreement.
113
432640
3200
07:15
Exactly. Very well put.
114
435840
1600
07:17
And there are some verbs we can use with 'rift' as well:
115
437440
3120
07:20
you can 'open a rift' when it begins,
116
440560
4080
07:24
and when it closes you can 'heal or mend a rift'.
117
444640
4400
07:29
Nice! Nice – thank you for that. Let's have a summary:
118
449040
3603
07:40
And talking of things splitting up, we've got an archive story
119
460160
3360
07:43
about the EU and the UK, haven't we Tom?
120
463520
3680
07:47
We do, yes. This is a story on the split that happened
121
467200
3520
07:50
over the issue of Brexit and you can find it by clicking the link.
122
470720
4320
07:55
Thank you very much. Now, let's have your next headline.
123
475040
3600
07:58
Our next headline is from the BBC – it says:
124
478640
3721
08:08
'Kerfuffle'! Nice British English word, Tom. What can you tell us about it?
125
488640
4240
08:12
So, a 'kerfuffle' – a 'kerfuffle' is a disturbance or fuss over a minor issue.
126
492880
8000
08:20
So, it's a disturbance over something which isn't important.
127
500880
4800
08:25
What's interesting about 'kerfuffle' is it's a feature of spoken English
128
505680
4800
08:30
and you almost never see it written as in the headline.
129
510480
4880
08:35
So, we'd say it quite often but you very rarely see it written.
130
515360
4320
08:39
An example of a 'kerfuffle' over... a disturbance or fuss over a minor issue.
131
519680
6640
08:46
Let's think about Rob in the office.
132
526320
2480
08:48
The other day, Rob couldn't find his biscuits.
133
528800
3360
08:52
He said, 'Who's stolen my biscuits?'
134
532160
2400
08:54
He started to scream, he started to shout
135
534560
3360
08:57
and then eventually he found his biscuits.
136
537920
2960
09:00
Biscuits – not a big issue. There's no need to scream and shout, Rob.
137
540880
5520
09:06
Rob was creating a 'kerfuffle'. We could say, 'What a kerfuffle!'
138
546400
6240
09:12
Or: 'Such a big kerfuffle over nothing!'
139
552640
5600
09:18
So, without making too much of a 'kerfuffle'
140
558240
2320
09:20
about the word 'kerfuffle', let's have a summary:
141
560560
3628
09:31
Now, Tom, time to recap the vocabulary, if you would?
142
571760
4000
09:35
Yeah, of course. Today's vocabulary – we have:
143
575760
3360
09:39
'sad chapter' – negative period;
144
579120
3840
09:42
'rifts' – serious breaks or separation;
145
582960
4560
09:47
and 'kerfuffle' disturbance or fuss over a minor issue.
146
587520
7040
09:54
And you can test yourself on today's vocabulary with the quiz on our website.
147
594560
4160
09:58
You can find us all over social media too,
148
598720
2480
10:01
so thank you for watching and goodbye for now. Bye!
149
601200
3040
10:04
And see you next time.
150
604240
2403

Original video on YouTube.com
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7