Djokovic hits line judge with ball: BBC News Review

59,378 views ・ 2020-09-08

BBC Learning English


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Hello and welcome to News Review from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Neil. Joining me is Catherine. Hello Catherine.
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Hello Neil. Hello everybody. Yes, a sports story today and tennis player
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Novak Djokovic has been disqualified from the US Open.
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And don't forget, you've got to test yourself on the vocabulary from this
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News Review. Go to our website at bbclearningenglish.com to find it.
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Right. Let's hear more about that story about Novak Djokovic
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from this BBC Sports report:
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Yes. World tennis number one, Novak Djokovic,
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is out of the US Open. He hit a ball in anger; it hit a line judge in
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the neck. She's not seriously injured but he's been
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asked to leave the US Open tournament.
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OK. It's the story everyone's talking about. What vocabulary
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have you picked out?
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Yes, we have: 'kicked out', 'blown his or her or their chances' and 'fuel'.
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'Kicked out', 'blown his/her/their chances' and 'fuel'.
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OK. Let's have a look at your first headline.
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And we're starting in Russia – the
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publication Russia Today says:
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'Kicked out' – forced to leave.
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Yes, so we have two words here.
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The first word: 'kicked' – K-I-C-K-E-D – and the second word 'out' – O-U-T.
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'Kicked out.'
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Now, I know what 'kick' means, Catherine.
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Yes? It means to hit something
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pretty hard with your foot so... That's right.
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Are we saying here that Novak Djokovic was 'kicked' so hard
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he flew out of the US Open?
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Like a footballer? Like a giant football.
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Err... no. Clearly we're not saying that. But the idea
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of being forcibly – forcibly having to leave or move
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is the idea of 'kick'. If you kick a football it moves, whether it wants to or
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not, because you've used some force, and that's the idea here:
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Novak Djokovic has been required to leave
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forcefully – not with actual physical force
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but he's got to go and he may – whether he wants to or not, he's going.
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Now the idea of 'kicked out' also means that you have to leave
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an organisation, an event, or some other kind of activity because
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you've broken the rules. Now, here the rule – clearly there's a rule against
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hitting umpires with balls and hitting balls in anger.
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He broke that rule so he's required to leave. So, if you break a rule somewhere
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Neil, you may be or you may get kicked out.
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OK. Now, we've heard another word with a similar meaning: 'disqualify'.
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So, why can't I just say 'disqualify'? What's different about 'kicked out'?
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Well, 'disqualified' is more formal. It's a bit longer.
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It's less dramatic than the idea of 'kick',
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isn't it? So, newspapers like this because of the drama and because it's
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more colloquial and because it's slightly shorter.
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Meaning-wise, they're very similar but I would say that 'kick out',
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as well as being informal, has a broader meaning.
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So, if you get 'kicked out' of a meeting, you haven't been
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disqualified because you haven't broken a set of
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official rules and a meeting isn't a competition – because 'disqualify' is for
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things like competitions – but 'kicks' or 'kicks out' has a wider range
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of uses for a wider range of situations. But it still means you've
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done something wrong; you're going.
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Right, I was in a bar
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for the first time in months, recently. Nice!
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Yeah. Having a nice quiet
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drink, but somebody had got a little bit too excited perhaps:
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they had a bit too much to drink, they're making lots of noise,
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upsetting people, and the barman kicked him out. He got kicked out.
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Yeah. If you 'kick somebody out'
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or you can 'be kicked out' – often used in the passive – and it's not just
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for physical places as well; you can get kicked out of a
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Facebook group if you break the rules or if you upset
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people. So, you can get kicked out of virtual
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organisations and groups as well as real ones.
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OK. Let's have a summary of that:
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If you would like to learn more about phrasal verbs like
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'kicked out', we have the perfect programme for you,
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don't we Catherine?
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We do: The Grammar Game Show!
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Don't miss it – it's a lot of fun. Click the link.
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OK. Let's see your second headline.
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Yes and we're in the UK
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now, with the Express – the headline:
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'Blown his, her or their chances' – missed an opportunity.
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Yes. Two words: B-L-O-W-N – 'blown' – that's the past participle
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of the verb 'to blow'.
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The second word: C-H-A-N-C-E-S – that's chances,
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or as people like you pronounce it, Neil?
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'Chances'.
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Yes, the North-South divide in the UK
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and elsewhere. You will hear two pronunciations of this word:
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'chances' or 'chances'. You choose the one you like; they're both
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easily understood.
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I think it's probably most useful to think of the word
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'blow' here as an explosion.
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Yes, it is. So, 'blow' is when you push
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mouth out of your – sorry – air out of your mouth, like...
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if you're blowing on hot soup, for example. But we also talk about things
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'blowing up' if there's an explosion:
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something, another word to describe... a synonym for explode is blow up
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and this is right. This is the better way to think of it.
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He had an opportunity. The opportunity is gone
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and it didn't just fade away: it went
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instantly. It went spectacularly: it was dramatic, it was exciting, it was
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big, it was shocking and that's the idea. If you blow your chances,
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you really really do something that just makes
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the chance – the opportunity – gone, gone, gone.
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Yeah. Normally of course, there would... Have you ever blown your...?
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...be a pronoun in there: we would say 'blown his chances',
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but because it's a headline, as we know,
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words go missing, don't they?
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Yes, that's right. Yes, the headline has
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taken out the pronoun 'his' but generally you blow 'your' chances,
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or he blows 'his' chances, or she has blown 'her' chances and Neil, I expect
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you have blown your chances of doing something once or twice in your life,
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have you?
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Well, a long time ago when I was in a
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different job, I had the opportunity for a promotion.
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However, for some strange reason I was quite argumentative in a
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meeting once... critical, No??
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very critical of my boss in a very...
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I find that very hard to believe – you
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criticising people in meetings, Neil...!
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Very, very publicly. And my boss didn't really like this.
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Funnily enough, I didn't get that promotion.
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No...! I blew my chance.
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With your poor behaviour in meetings, you
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blew your chances of a promotion.
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I blew it.
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You blew it.
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Yeah, that's a shortened... And that's another way...
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That's a shortened version, isn't it, of 'to blow your chances' –
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just 'to blow it'. Exactly, yes.
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We often say, 'Don't blow it!' as a warning to people
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when they're doing really well at
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something and we know – we're trying to say:
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don't get over excited, don't get overconfident, don't do
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anything stupid, don't blow it. It means don't spoil
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this opportunity.
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You've got a penalty in the last minute of the World Cup final...
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...don't blow it. Don't blow it!
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Very easy to blow it in that situation.
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OK. Let's have a summary:
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If you like stories about sport and exercise and keeping fit, we have a great
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one for you.
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We do. And you can find that story by
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just clicking the link.
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It's about running marathons and how they can add years to your life.
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OK. Your next headline, please.
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And we're in Australia now – the Sydney Morning Herald.
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It's an opinion piece. It reads like this:
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'Fuel' – make more intense.
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Yes. F-U-E-L – 'fuel'. Now, you know what fuel is, don't you Neil?
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So, I'm a little bit confused here,
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Catherine; I thought fuel was something you put in your car
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to make it go, like petrol or diesel, or wood or coal
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that you would put on a fire, but here this is a verb. So, what's happening?
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What's happening?? Yes, so you're right:
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'fuel' is something that provides energy or power.
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That's the key to this. Now, if we make it a... a verb form:
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if you fuel something, you provide
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energy or power. Now, we're not talking about
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coal or electricity here, but we are talking about
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sort of mental energy in the form of motivation.
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So, where petrol makes a car move forward – what this commentator is
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saying is that criticism will provide energy
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for Novak Djokovic to perform even better. And some of us are like this,
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aren't we Neil? If I say to you: 'You can't make that programme any better!'
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you will go away and you'll probably make it better, because
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you thrive on people saying you can't do something.
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Am I right?
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You're probably right, yes. So, it's probably useful to think of
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Novak Djokovic here as a fire and the criticism
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as a log, a piece of wood that you throw onto the fire.
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The fire becomes more intense.
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Exactly that, yeah. Good explanation.
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Yeah. Often we see this word used as a
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verb with the word 'speculation'.
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Yes. Now, that's a slightly different way of using it but it's the same idea.
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If you 'fuel speculation' – speculation is... means rumours
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or ideas about something that's going to happen.
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If you 'fuel speculation', you add to those stories. You
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contribute to the rumours. So, if I see a colleague
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looking in the window of a jewellery shop, and I come
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back and tell you, that will probably
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fuel speculation that that colleague is going to propose
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marriage to his girlfriend, because he's looking at rings.
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Yes, absolutely. Yeah. And I've got a nice little
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extra headline that I read about this morning: apparently
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demand for teeth whitening has been fuelled during lockdown because people
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have spent lots of time looking at themselves in the mirror.
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Oh no! Neil, you're gonna start a teeth whitening crisis.
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The whole world will be buying up teeth
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whitening kits, because you said that.
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Are you saying I'm gonna fuel that demand?
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You're fuelling it right now.
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I'm gonna – after this programme, I'm gonna
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google teeth whitening... again.
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OK. Let's have a summary:
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Time now for a recap of our vocabulary please, Catherine.
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Yes. We had 'kicked out' – forced to leave.
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We had 'blown his, her or their chances' – missed an opportunity.
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And 'fuel' – make more intense.
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If you want to keep improving your English, check out our website
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bbclearningenglish.com and we are all over social media.
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Take care. Stay safe. See you next time.
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Bye! Bye.
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