2020 Emmys - New records set: BBC News Review

45,846 views ・ 2020-09-22

BBC Learning English


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Hello and welcome to News Review from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Tom and joining me today is Catherine. Hi Catherine.
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Hello Tom. Hello everybody. Today's story is
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all about the Emmy Awards.
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The Emmy Awards! And don't forget – if you want to test
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yourself on the vocabulary that you learn today,
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you need to go to bbclearningenglish.com to find a quiz.
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Now, let's hear more about this piece from a BBC Radio One news bulletin:
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Yes! So, the Emmy Awards have happened online this year – digital only.
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Now, these are the big television awards, hosted in the United States, and the
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comedy Schitt's Creek won no less than
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seven awards, which is a record.
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Seven awards – an Emmy record – incredible!
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So, we've got three words and expressions you can use to talk about this story.
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Yes, we have. We have: 'sweeps', 'win big' and 'a big night'.
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'Sweeps', 'win big' and 'a big night'.
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Catherine, let's have a look at your first headline, please.
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Yes. We're starting in Canada today and the headline
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from City News 1130 is:
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'Sweeps' – easily wins everything that can be won.
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That's right – 'sweeps' – S-W-E-E-P-S.
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The pronunciation has a lovely 'e' sound in the middle. Tom, do us a demo!
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'E' – 'sweeps'.
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'Sweeps'. OK. Now, 'sweeps' is a verb.
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Tom, what do you do – tell us – when your kitchen floor is dirty?
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When my kitchen floor is dirty, Catherine,
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I use one of these: I use a brush. And I use the brush to clean the floor.
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Nice. The verb for using the brush to clean
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is: 'to sweep'.
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And – oh, is that a nice sweeping motion you're doing there?
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Yeah, you can see it's a large – 'woomph' – strong motion to the side.
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And every piece of dirt on your floor gets caught up in your brush, doesn't it Tom?
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It does, yeah: it just takes it all up.
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And, actually, is there a phrasal verb we can use here?
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Yes, you can 'sweep up' the dirt on your floor.
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So, 'sweep' – if you sweep something or you sweep something up,
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you get all of it: nothing escapes.
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And this is the idea of 'sweeps' in our headline.
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If they swept all the Grammy [Emmy] Awards, they had all seven comedy awards – there was
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nothing left for anybody else. So when we 'sweep' at an Awards – or we 'sweep' prizes,
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it means we get all of them. There's nothing left for anybody else.
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We sweep them up. We collect them all or we obtain them
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all easily. Now, is this the same as the phrasal verb
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'sweep away'? Are they related?
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It's... they are related, but the meaning
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is quite different. If you 'sweep away' the competition it means that
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you win everything and nobody else gets anything else.
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So, it's the same sort of meaning but 'sweep away' refers to
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your opponents. When you 'sweep up' it refers to the prizes.
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So, we could say they 'swept up' the prizes because
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they 'swept away' the competition.
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Exactly. Exactly. Great! Thanks Catherine.
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Let's have a look at our summary slide:
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And if you're enjoying the video, we have more videos about
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cleaning vocabulary, don't we Catherine?
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We do. Just click the link to watch. Click the link.
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OK. Wonderful! Catherine, can we have our next headline, please?
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Yes. Now, we're in the UK with BBC News – the headline:
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'Win big' – to win many times or win a large prize.
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That's right. Now, this is a two-word expression.
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The first word: 'win' – W-I-N. The second word is big – B-I-G.
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Now, we know 'big' as an adjective that we use before a noun,
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but here it's an adverbial expression:
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'win' is the verb, 'big' is the type of win.
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So, it's an adverb here, 'big':
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if you 'win big' it means you win everything that can be won.
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Now, in the Emmys there were seven awards and the programme Schitt's Creek got
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all of them, so they won really big.
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So, Schitt's Creek got seven Emmy Awards. Do I need to win
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seven things to win big, or do I need to win many things
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if I want to win big?
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Well, that's one way of winning big – if you win a lot of
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competitions altogether, a lot of prizes in a competition – but if you just win
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one prize, but it's a really big prize, that's another way you can win big.
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And we use this expression a lot
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with gambling. So if you gamble one dollar
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and you win 10,000 dollars you can say you won big.
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You won big. I could say... there's a noun phrase I can use to explain that,
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isn't there, after I've won big?
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Yes, you could say you had a 'big win' and that just means you won a lot,
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or you won something really important, or you just
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had a really – a win you were really happy about.
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Have you ever had a 'big win' in anything, Tom? You must have done.
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Have I ever had a big win, or have I ever won big?
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I think I won a colouring competition at school once, when I was a child.
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Nice! What was the prize?
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I think it was a badge.
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Oh, well that's a big win when you're seven years old. For a seven-year-old, that is a big win.
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Excellent. OK. Thank you Catherine. Let's take a look at our summary slide:
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Now, talking of big things that happened at award ceremonies,
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something happened at an awards ceremony last year, didn't it Catherine?
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Yes. That was a really big win for a couple of people there.
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To find out what happened, click the link in the video. Click the link.
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Great! Catherine, can we have your next headline, please.
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Yes. Still in the UK – now with Sky News:
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'A big night' – an important evening which is usually expected.
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What can you tell us about this expression, Catherine?
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Well, it's a three-word expression.
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First word is: 'a'. The second word: 'big' – B-I-G.
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And the third word: 'night' – N-I-G-H-T.
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So, 'a big night' is a night where – an evening where
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important things happen, usually because you know that they're going to happen.
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It could be a wedding, it could be a birthday party,
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an awards ceremony – but it's a night that's usually planned
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where you put the dress on, or the tux on, and it's all exciting,
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and sometimes quite expensive, and you remember it for a long time.
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Yeah. I think this idea of planning is important.
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So, Schitt's Creek would know that they were in the
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competition because they had their suits on, etc.
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But do we need to... do we need to expect something for it to be a big night?
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Well, no. I mean you can have a big night
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that you weren't expecting. You know, you go out
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thinking a normal night has got... a normal evening will happen
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and then something really unexpected happens.
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But there's another way we can use the phrase 'big night'
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and it doesn't mean that you get a wedding proposal, or a prize, or anything:
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it actually means that you just have a big, big party.
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A big night of partying.
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Yeah. Lots of alcohol, lots of dancing, a very late night.
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And you usually feel quite tired,
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to say the least, the next day. It's a bit like...it's a bit like Neil's birthday
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last year, wasn't it? That was a really big night.
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That was a big night, yes.
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I came home at three o'clock in the morning.
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So a big night: an important evening which is usually expected,
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or a big night of partying. Let's take a look at our summary slide:
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Fantastic. Catherine, please could you recap the vocabulary from today's programme.
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Yes. We had: 'sweeps' – easily wins everything that can be won.
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We had: 'win big' – win many times or win a large prize.
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And we had: 'a big night' – an important evening which is usually expected.
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Remember you can test yourself on today's vocabulary
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on the website bbclearningenglish.com and we are all
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over social media as well. That's it from us today.
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Thanks for watching. Bye.
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Bye!
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