Trump assassination attempt: BBC Learning English from the News

75,236 views ・ 2024-07-17

BBC Learning English


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From BBC Learning English,
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this is Learning English
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from the News, our podcast about the news headlines.
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In this programme, Trump assassination attempt - US reacts.
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Hello, I'm Neil.
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And I'm Georgie.
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In this programme we look at one big news story
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and the vocabulary in the headlines that will help you understand it.
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You can find all the vocabulary and headlines from this episode,
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as well as a worksheet, on our website:
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BBCLearningEnglish.com.
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So, let's hear more about this story.
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People in the US have been reacting
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after an assassination attempt on Donald Trump.
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Now, an assassination is a murder and
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it's the murder of someone important or famous.
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Thomas Matthew Crooks shot at Trump as he spoke at an event in Pennsylvania,
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injuring the former president's ear.
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One man in the audience was killed in the attack,
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two others were seriously injured.
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Security officers then shot the gunman dead,
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and the exact reason for his attack is unclear.
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We have a headline which gives us more information about the gunman,
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Thomas Matthew Crooks.
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Yes, this one is from Sky news, which is based in the UK.
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Trump gunman: An 'outcast' who wasn't let on school rifle team
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because 'he was a bad shooter'.
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So, that headline again from Sky news:
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Trump gunman: An 'outcast' who wasn't let on school rifle team
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because 'he was a bad shooter'.
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We're interested in the word 'outcast' from this headline.
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Okay, so let's break it down and look at the second part,
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um, so 'cast' as a verb means to throw something.
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Yeah, so if we cast something or someone out, it means we throw them,
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we throw them away.
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So, we can see this meaning in the noun -
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'an outcast', and an outcast is a person who is cast out -
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someone who is not accepted by other people.
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Yes, and it's got a serious meaning, really,
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it can be connected to people from a different race or class,
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so it's connected to inequality often. Yes, that's right.
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But we also use it socially to describe someone who doesn't fit in
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or doesn't have any friends,
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and that is the meaning that we see in the headline -
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the shooter was an outcast,
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it suggests he didn't really fit in with people.
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We looked at 'outcast', someone who is not accepted by society.
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For example, the business is treating working mothers like outcasts.
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This is Learning English
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from the News, our podcast about the news headlines.
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Today, we're talking about the assassination attempt on Donald Trump
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and its impact on the US.
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Politicians across the USA have been critical of the attack on Trump.
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Yes, President Biden has said that US politics must never be a 'killing field'.
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And there are concerns about how the violence will impact the US elections
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in November, where Biden and Trump are due to compete to be the next president.
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Let's have another headline.
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This headline is from the Financial Times, based in the UK,
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and it is: America is staring into the abyss
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Let's hear that again.
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America is staring into the abyss, from the Financial Times.
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Now, this is an article about the significance
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of the assassination attempt in American politics.
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Let's start by looking at this word 'abyss'.
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Neil, what does it mean?
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Well, literally, an abyss is a very big, deep black hole.
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But of course, there isn't suddenly a deep hole in the USA.
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The headline is describing the social and political situation as an abyss.
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Yes, and that's how we often use 'abyss' - metaphorically to describe
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a dangerous and powerful situation.
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Now, if you fell into a real abyss, a big hole,
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that would be a very bad situation for you.
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You might not be able to get out of it.
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It would be really scary and dangerous.
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Yeah, exactly.
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In the headline, America is staring into the abyss.
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That means the country is looking at the dangerous situation.
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'Staring into the abyss' is a common metaphor, isn't it, Neil?
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It is. Yes. We also talk about 'being on the edge of an abyss',
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and we use that to describe
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a dangerous, overwhelming, frightening situation in front of us.
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But it is quite dramatic language, isn't it?
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We often use 'staring into the abyss' in writing and in headlines.
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We don't often use it in speech.
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We've had 'staring into the abyss', facing a large, dangerous situation.
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So, for example, the company is staring into the abyss of bankruptcy
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after four years without making a profit.
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This is Learning English from the News from BBC Learning English.
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We're talking about the assassination attempt
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on former US President, Donald Trump.
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Since the shooting, Donald Trump has attended the Republican convention.
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This is where politicians from the Republican Party pick their candidates
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for the election in November.
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Thousands of supporters gathered in Milwaukee to cheer on Trump,
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who wore a bandage on his ear.
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At the convention,
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Trump was confirmed as the Republican candidate for president,
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and he picked JD Vance as his candidate for vice-president.
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Here's a headline about Trump's response to the shooting.
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It's from The Telegraph, based in the UK.
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'Trump 2.0' ditches old rhetoric for new mission to unite America.
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That headline again: 'Trump 2.0' ditches old rhetoric
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for new mission to unite America.
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Now, this headline gives the opinion that Trump's behaviour may change.
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'Rhetoric' means speech or writing that is designed to change people's minds.
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It's very common during political campaigns
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where politicians want to convince us to vote for them.
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Now, this headline writer says that Trump has ditched this old way
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of speaking, and that means he has stopped using it.
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Yes, but we are interested in the phrase, 'Trump 2.0'.
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What does it mean? Are there two Trumps now, Neil?
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So this could be confusing.
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What you heard in the headline was 'two point oh'.
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Actually it's written as a number two dot zero,
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but we say 'two point oh', and we often say oh instead of zero,
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for example, in phone numbers.
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So, 2.0 comes from technology doesn't it?
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So think about gadgets or computer programs -
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engineers usually describe the second version of a program
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or a product as '2.0'.
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Now, here it's an adjective we use to describe someone
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or something that has changed, usually for the better -
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'Trump 2.0'. Yes,
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So it doesn't mean that Trump has literally been reprogrammed,
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but the headline is saying that following this assassination attempt,
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he might be like a new version of himself.
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Now remember that this is the opinion of the article writer.
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Yes, now we can use '2.0' informally to talk about a dramatic change in someone
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or something, so we can use it in a more lighthearted way as well.
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We've had 2.0 - a new, improved version of something.
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For example,
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Georgie is looking very tired today.
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She can go home and have a good night's sleep
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and then come in tomorrow refreshed.
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It could be 'Georgie 2.0'.
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That's it for this episode of Learning English from the News.
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We'll be back next week with another story.
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If you want to learn more from the news,
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we have lots of programmes to help on our website,
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visit BBCLearningEnglish.com.
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Don't forget, we're also on social media.
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Look for BBC Learning English.
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Goodbye for now. Bye.
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