Trump assassination attempt: BBC Learning English from the News

78,173 views ・ 2024-07-17

BBC Learning English


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

00:00
From BBC Learning English,
0
120
2120
00:02
this is Learning English
1
2240
1760
00:04
from the News, our podcast about the news headlines.
2
4000
3595
00:07
In this programme, Trump assassination attempt - US reacts.
3
7595
5285
00:15
Hello, I'm Neil.
4
15960
1240
00:17
And I'm Georgie.
5
17200
1200
00:18
In this programme we look at one big news story
6
18400
3200
00:21
and the vocabulary in the headlines that will help you understand it.
7
21600
4160
00:25
You can find all the vocabulary and headlines from this episode,
8
25760
3800
00:29
as well as a worksheet, on our website:
9
29560
2760
00:32
BBCLearningEnglish.com.
10
32320
2720
00:35
So, let's hear more about this story.
11
35040
3240
00:42
People in the US have been reacting
12
42400
2720
00:45
after an assassination attempt on Donald Trump.
13
45120
4040
00:49
Now, an assassination is a murder and
14
49160
3200
00:52
it's the murder of someone important or famous.
15
52360
3120
00:55
Thomas Matthew Crooks shot at Trump as he spoke at an event in Pennsylvania,
16
55480
5000
01:00
injuring the former president's ear.
17
60480
2400
01:02
One man in the audience was killed in the attack,
18
62880
2800
01:05
two others were seriously injured.
19
65680
2520
01:08
Security officers then shot the gunman dead,
20
68200
2840
01:11
and the exact reason for his attack is unclear.
21
71040
3360
01:14
We have a headline which gives us more information about the gunman,
22
74400
4360
01:18
Thomas Matthew Crooks.
23
78760
1920
01:20
Yes, this one is from Sky news, which is based in the UK.
24
80680
3760
01:24
Trump gunman: An 'outcast' who wasn't let on school rifle team
25
84440
4360
01:28
because 'he was a bad shooter'.
26
88800
1760
01:30
So, that headline again from Sky news:
27
90560
2800
01:33
Trump gunman: An 'outcast' who wasn't let on school rifle team
28
93360
5120
01:38
because 'he was a bad shooter'.
29
98480
3160
01:41
We're interested in the word 'outcast' from this headline.
30
101640
4120
01:45
Okay, so let's break it down and look at the second part,
31
105760
3200
01:48
um, so 'cast' as a verb means to throw something.
32
108960
3760
01:52
Yeah, so if we cast something or someone out, it means we throw them,
33
112720
5400
01:58
we throw them away.
34
118120
1160
01:59
So, we can see this meaning in the noun -
35
119280
2360
02:01
'an outcast', and an outcast is a person who is cast out -
36
121640
4800
02:06
someone who is not accepted by other people.
37
126440
3040
02:09
Yes, and it's got a serious meaning, really,
38
129480
4120
02:13
it can be connected to people from a different race or class,
39
133600
5200
02:18
so it's connected to inequality often. Yes, that's right.
40
138800
3800
02:22
But we also use it socially to describe someone who doesn't fit in
41
142600
4040
02:26
or doesn't have any friends,
42
146640
1720
02:28
and that is the meaning that we see in the headline -
43
148360
2840
02:31
the shooter was an outcast,
44
151200
1800
02:33
it suggests he didn't really fit in with people.
45
153000
4200
02:37
We looked at 'outcast', someone who is not accepted by society.
46
157200
5080
02:42
For example, the business is treating working mothers like outcasts.
47
162280
4840
02:49
This is Learning English
48
169320
1640
02:50
from the News, our podcast about the news headlines.
49
170960
4000
02:54
Today, we're talking about the assassination attempt on Donald Trump
50
174960
3960
02:58
and its impact on the US.
51
178920
2280
03:01
Politicians across the USA have been critical of the attack on Trump.
52
181200
4440
03:05
Yes, President Biden has said that US politics must never be a 'killing field'.
53
185640
6720
03:12
And there are concerns about how the violence will impact the US elections
54
192360
4120
03:16
in November, where Biden and Trump are due to compete to be the next president.
55
196480
5240
03:21
Let's have another headline.
56
201720
1520
03:23
This headline is from the Financial Times, based in the UK,
57
203240
4000
03:27
and it is: America is staring into the abyss
58
207240
5320
03:32
Let's hear that again.
59
212560
1240
03:33
America is staring into the abyss, from the Financial Times.
60
213800
4440
03:38
Now, this is an article about the significance
61
218240
3760
03:42
of the assassination attempt in American politics.
62
222000
3720
03:45
Let's start by looking at this word 'abyss'.
63
225720
2480
03:48
Neil, what does it mean?
64
228200
1400
03:49
Well, literally, an abyss is a very big, deep black hole.
65
229600
6360
03:55
But of course, there isn't suddenly a deep hole in the USA.
66
235960
4400
04:00
The headline is describing the social and political situation as an abyss.
67
240360
4880
04:05
Yes, and that's how we often use 'abyss' - metaphorically to describe
68
245240
5840
04:11
a dangerous and powerful situation.
69
251080
3080
04:14
Now, if you fell into a real abyss, a big hole,
70
254160
3600
04:17
that would be a very bad situation for you.
71
257760
2520
04:20
You might not be able to get out of it.
72
260280
2000
04:22
It would be really scary and dangerous.
73
262280
2040
04:24
Yeah, exactly.
74
264320
1520
04:25
In the headline, America is staring into the abyss.
75
265840
3400
04:29
That means the country is looking at the dangerous situation.
76
269240
4080
04:33
'Staring into the abyss' is a common metaphor, isn't it, Neil?
77
273320
3704
04:37
It is. Yes. We also talk about 'being on the edge of an abyss',
78
277024
4856
04:41
and we use that to describe
79
281880
2760
04:44
a dangerous, overwhelming, frightening situation in front of us.
80
284640
5600
04:50
But it is quite dramatic language, isn't it?
81
290240
2800
04:53
We often use 'staring into the abyss' in writing and in headlines.
82
293040
4760
04:57
We don't often use it in speech.
83
297800
2640
05:02
We've had 'staring into the abyss', facing a large, dangerous situation.
84
302480
5640
05:08
So, for example, the company is staring into the abyss of bankruptcy
85
308120
5120
05:13
after four years without making a profit.
86
313240
4520
05:17
This is Learning English from the News from BBC Learning English.
87
317760
4080
05:21
We're talking about the assassination attempt
88
321840
2480
05:24
on former US President, Donald Trump.
89
324320
2840
05:27
Since the shooting, Donald Trump has attended the Republican convention.
90
327160
4800
05:31
This is where politicians from the Republican Party pick their candidates
91
331960
5400
05:37
for the election in November.
92
337360
2040
05:39
Thousands of supporters gathered in Milwaukee to cheer on Trump,
93
339400
3480
05:42
who wore a bandage on his ear.
94
342880
2120
05:45
At the convention,
95
345000
1160
05:46
Trump was confirmed as the Republican candidate for president,
96
346160
3440
05:49
and he picked JD Vance as his candidate for vice-president.
97
349600
4840
05:54
Here's a headline about Trump's response to the shooting.
98
354440
3240
05:57
It's from The Telegraph, based in the UK.
99
357680
2720
06:00
'Trump 2.0' ditches old rhetoric for new mission to unite America.
100
360400
5720
06:06
That headline again: 'Trump 2.0' ditches old rhetoric
101
366120
5320
06:11
for new mission to unite America.
102
371440
3360
06:14
Now, this headline gives the opinion that Trump's behaviour may change.
103
374800
4680
06:19
'Rhetoric' means speech or writing that is designed to change people's minds.
104
379480
5240
06:24
It's very common during political campaigns
105
384720
3000
06:27
where politicians want to convince us to vote for them.
106
387720
3520
06:31
Now, this headline writer says that Trump has ditched this old way
107
391240
4480
06:35
of speaking, and that means he has stopped using it.
108
395720
3800
06:39
Yes, but we are interested in the phrase, 'Trump 2.0'.
109
399520
4920
06:44
What does it mean? Are there two Trumps now, Neil?
110
404440
3160
06:47
So this could be confusing.
111
407600
2040
06:49
What you heard in the headline was 'two point oh'.
112
409640
4080
06:53
Actually it's written as a number two dot zero,
113
413720
5040
06:58
but we say 'two point oh', and we often say oh instead of zero,
114
418760
5720
07:04
for example, in phone numbers.
115
424480
2480
07:06
So, 2.0 comes from technology doesn't it?
116
426960
3560
07:10
So think about gadgets or computer programs -
117
430520
3080
07:13
engineers usually describe the second version of a program
118
433600
3480
07:17
or a product as '2.0'.
119
437080
2520
07:19
Now, here it's an adjective we use to describe someone
120
439600
3680
07:23
or something that has changed, usually for the better -
121
443280
3600
07:26
'Trump 2.0'. Yes,
122
446880
2200
07:29
So it doesn't mean that Trump has literally been reprogrammed,
123
449080
4040
07:33
but the headline is saying that following this assassination attempt,
124
453120
3840
07:36
he might be like a new version of himself.
125
456960
3360
07:40
Now remember that this is the opinion of the article writer.
126
460320
3600
07:43
Yes, now we can use '2.0' informally to talk about a dramatic change in someone
127
463920
5640
07:49
or something, so we can use it in a more lighthearted way as well.
128
469560
4760
07:55
We've had 2.0 - a new, improved version of something.
129
475280
4600
07:59
For example,
130
479880
1360
08:01
Georgie is looking very tired today.
131
481240
2200
08:03
She can go home and have a good night's sleep
132
483440
2160
08:05
and then come in tomorrow refreshed.
133
485600
1960
08:07
It could be 'Georgie 2.0'.
134
487560
3200
08:10
That's it for this episode of Learning English from the News.
135
490760
3480
08:14
We'll be back next week with another story.
136
494240
2720
08:16
If you want to learn more from the news,
137
496960
1960
08:18
we have lots of programmes to help on our website,
138
498920
3000
08:21
visit BBCLearningEnglish.com.
139
501920
3120
08:25
Don't forget, we're also on social media.
140
505040
2000
08:27
Look for BBC Learning English.
141
507040
2160
08:29
Goodbye for now. Bye.
142
509200
1800
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