Euro 2020: Player has heart attack: BBC News Review

57,108 views ・ 2021-06-15

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. Hi Catherine.
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Hello Neil. Hello everybody. So, the Euros 2020 football
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tournament kicked off this weekend and there were shocking
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scenes as Danish player Christian Eriksen collapsed on the field.
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If you would like to test yourself on any of the vocabulary
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you hear on this programme, there's a quiz
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on our website at bbclearningenglish.com.
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Now, let's find out more about the story from this BBC News report:
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So, Danish footballer Christian Eriksen collapsed on the football
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field just before half-time. Many of his fellow players were in tears,
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absolutely shocked at what was happening.
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He was treated on the football pitch and then taken to hospital.
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He is recovering now and the Danish team doctor said he had actually
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suffered a cardiac arrest – that's a heart attack to you and me.
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So, very serious situation.
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Yeah, he is fortunately recovering now
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and the game actually went on, didn't it Catherine?
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Yes, it did. It was abandoned temporarily so they stopped playing,
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but once all the players realised or were told that he was awake,
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they decided to continue the game,
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which was eventually won by Finland by one goal to nil.
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OK. Well, you've been looking around the various headlines about this story
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and you've picked out three really interesting words and expressions.
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What have you got?
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Yes, today we are looking at: 'stable','heartfelt' and 'eye-opening'.
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'Stable', 'heartfelt' and 'eye-opening'. So,
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let's start with your first headline, with that word 'stable', please.
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Yes, we're at Sky first of all – the headline:
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'Stable' – fixed; not likely to change.
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Yes, we have an adjective here. It's spelt S-T-A-B-L-E
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and it refers to physical things,
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which are fixed in position and they don't move.
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So, for example, Neil, your camera is not wobbling at the moment, is it?
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You've got a very, very secure, still picture.
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Yes, I'm using a tripod to make sure that the pictures here are 'stable'.
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If I didn't have it, it would wobble. I'm now wobbling my tripod.
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Right. That's very 'unstable'. You've got an 'unstable' picture there.
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Yes, I have, yeah. So, 'stable' is used to talk about
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physical things like this tripod, but we can also use it, like many...
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like many items of vocabulary, in figurative way.
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Yes, absolutely. So, 'stable' here is referring to his physical
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condition – his medical condition – saying that if something's...
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if you're 'stable' medically, it means you are not changing:
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you're not getting worse. You're probably not getting better,
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but it means that your condition is not changing so it's not as
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worrying as when your condition is critical or deteriorating.
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It basically means very little change.
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Yeah. And we can use it to talk about, sort of, situations in general.
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For example, the economy can be described as 'stable'.
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Yes, when there's not great periods of economic change, where investments
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aren't changing too much, things aren't going up and down too much,
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we can say: 'It's stable.' You can talk about other things, like...
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you can be in a 'stable relationship'.
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That means the kind of relationship where there isn't lots of drama,
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you're not arguing and breaking up and getting back together;
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you just have a strong, solid, reliable relationship.
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Yeah. And you've already mentioned it,
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but the negative of 'stable' is 'unstable'.
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That's right, yes. So, if you're in an 'unstable relationship',
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you're doing lots of breaking up and arguing.
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If the economy is 'unstable',
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it means there's lots of ups and downs with the economic situation.
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Now, like with most words in most languages, there are different
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versions of the word. We've been looking at the adjective...
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we've been looking at the adjective.
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We can also turn this into a noun: 'stability'.
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Yes, we can... yeah. So, that would be 'stability'.
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That's S-T-A-B-I-L-I-T-Y
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and the negative of that is 'instability',
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so starting with an 'in-', the prefix 'in-',
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is the opposite of 'stability' as a noun.
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So, we've got 'unstable', but 'instability'.
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Yes! Different prefix there: from 'un-' to 'in-'.
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And it gets worse, I'm afraid...
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I'm afraid it does, yeah.
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...because the verb form of this word 'stable' is 'stabilise'.
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Yes. And the opposite of that is...?
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'Destabilise'. Yeah.
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So, we've got all the different prefixes: we've got 'unstable',
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'instability' and 'destabilise'. And just to make it slightly more
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complicated, there are two ways to say... to spell 'stabilise'.
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If you're here in the UK, you spell it with an 's' in the middle.
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If you're speaking American English, it's with a 'z'.
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Yeah. I would like to apologise on behalf of the English language
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for the complicated collection of prefixes connected to this word.
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Yeah... sorry everyone.
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Let's get a summary:
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If you are interested in stories about football,
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we have a really interesting one about the European Super League.
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That didn't go very well, did it Catherine?
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No, didn't last long at all.
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But you can find out what happened by clicking the link.
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OK. Let's have a look at your next headline.
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Yes, in the UK with Hello and the headline:
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'Heartfelt' – sincere.
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Yes, we've got two words here: H-E-A-R-T.
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The second word: 'felt' – F-E-L-T.
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But we put them together without a space and we have one word:
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'heartfelt'. Now, the meaning of this word is kind of,
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very much related to the two words that it's made of. 'Felt' – if you
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'feel' something in your 'heart', we're talking about emotions.
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So, thinking of the heart as a place where you feel love, or happiness,
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or grief, pain – all of those emotional things – 'heartfelt'
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means it's very strongly felt: a strong emotion, a deep feeling.
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So, we often use the word 'heartfelt' as an adjective
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to describe a noun such as, in here, a statement.
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A 'heartfelt statement' means a really deeply emotional statement.
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Or we can talk about 'heartfelt apologies',
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when you say you're sorry. and you really, really mean it.
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Yeah. You often hear a 'heartfelt speech' at a wedding.
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You do, yes. Yes, when they're... when the groom's kind of saying
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how much he loves his wife and he's crying with emotion.
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Yeah, you can say: 'That's a heartfelt speech.'
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Yeah. And just to say again,
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we're talking about 'heart' in the poetic sense:
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we know this is a story about an illness
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and somebody's heart – the physical organ, the heart –
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but I don't think there's a connection here in this headline.
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No, I think it's just a coincidence.
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Yeah. OK. Let's get a summary:
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OK. How about this for 'heartfelt'! We have a story about a TV producer,
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who proposed to his girlfriend live on TV at the Emmys.
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What do our viewers have to do, Catherine?
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Just click the link down there and you'll go straight to the show.
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OK. Let's have a look at our next headline please.
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Yeah. Next off, we're at givemesport.com – the headline:
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'Eye-opening' – revealing in a surprising way.
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Yes. Another two-word expression.
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This time the two words are joined together with a hyphen – a little,
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short line between both words. The first part is 'eye' – E-Y-E.
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The second word: 'opening' – O-P-E-N-I-N-G.
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If something is 'eye-opening', it surprises you because you
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learn something you didn't know before – often something that's
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quite unexpected, or impressive even.
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Yeah. And it's just another example of how figurative the language is
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that we use. You know, if you want to see something better, what do you do?
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You 'open' your 'eyes'... really wide.
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Yeah... open your eyes wide.
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Open... yes. So, that's not really what it means here, but it does
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have a kind of connection. It's the idea of making you surprised,
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making you kind of wonder, giving you some amazement: impressive.
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So, if you watch a TV programme – you know
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those nature documentaries, Neil? Yeah.
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Where you watch something about, like, a little spider that
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you never even think of, and then you discover this spider has this amazing
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world of all these wonderful things it can do in its lifetime: you know,
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the trials and difficulties it has, and the way it overcomes them.
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Those documentaries can be really 'eye-opening'
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because they teach you things you didn't know.
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Yeah, absolutely. Sometimes you hear about someone
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who spent an evening in an Accident and Emergency ward in a hospital.
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It's a real 'eye-opener' for them.
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Yes. Nice noun phrase there, yeah. If something is an 'eye-opener',
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it teaches you or surprises you with things you didn't know previously.
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And you're right – the word 'real' often comes with 'eye-opener':
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a 'real eye-opener'.
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OK. Well, let's get a summary of that:
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Time now for a recap of our vocabulary please, Catherine.
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Yes, we started with 'stable', which means fixed; not likely to change.
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Then we had 'heartfelt', meaning sincere.
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And we finished with 'eye-opening' – revealing in a surprising way.
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Do not forget to test yourself on the vocabulary;
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there's a quiz on our website bbclearningenglish.com.
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  And we are all over social media –
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just look for us. Thanks for joining us and see you next time.
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Goodbye. Bye!
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