Euro 2020: Player has heart attack: BBC News Review

57,148 views ・ 2021-06-15

BBC Learning English


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

00:00
Hello and welcome to News Review from BBC Learning English.
0
120
3560
00:03
I'm Neil. Joining me is Catherine. Hi Catherine.
1
3680
3040
00:06
Hello Neil. Hello everybody. So, the Euros 2020 football
2
6720
4960
00:11
tournament kicked off this weekend and there were shocking
3
11680
3520
00:15
scenes as Danish player Christian Eriksen collapsed on the field.
4
15200
6640
00:21
If you would like to test yourself on any of the vocabulary
5
21960
2840
00:24
you hear on this programme, there's a quiz
6
24800
1680
00:26
on our website at bbclearningenglish.com.
7
26480
3240
00:29
Now, let's find out more about the story from this BBC News report:
8
29720
4600
00:56
So, Danish footballer Christian Eriksen collapsed on the football
9
56840
4760
01:01
field just before half-time. Many of his fellow players were in tears,
10
61600
5680
01:07
absolutely shocked at what was happening.
11
67280
2640
01:09
He was treated on the football pitch and then taken to hospital.
12
69920
4200
01:14
He is recovering now and the Danish team doctor said he had actually
13
74120
4520
01:18
suffered a cardiac arrest – that's a heart attack to you and me.
14
78640
3840
01:22
So, very serious situation.
15
82480
3240
01:25
Yeah, he is fortunately recovering now
16
85760
3560
01:29
and the game actually went on, didn't it Catherine?
17
89320
2840
01:32
Yes, it did. It was abandoned temporarily so they stopped playing,
18
92160
3520
01:35
but once all the players realised or were told that he was awake,
19
95680
3880
01:39
they decided to continue the game,
20
99560
2000
01:41
which was eventually won by Finland by one goal to nil.
21
101560
4680
01:46
OK. Well, you've been looking around the various headlines about this story
22
106240
4080
01:50
and you've picked out three really interesting words and expressions.
23
110320
3600
01:53
What have you got?
24
113920
1320
01:55
Yes, today we are looking at: 'stable','heartfelt' and 'eye-opening'.
25
115240
8040
02:03
'Stable', 'heartfelt' and 'eye-opening'. So,
26
123280
3800
02:07
let's start with your first headline, with that word 'stable', please.
27
127080
3480
02:10
Yes, we're at Sky first of all – the headline:
28
130560
3320
02:24
'Stable' – fixed; not likely to change.
29
144800
5080
02:29
Yes, we have an adjective here. It's spelt S-T-A-B-L-E
30
149880
6040
02:35
and it refers to physical things,
31
155920
3080
02:39
which are fixed in position and they don't move.
32
159000
4600
02:43
So, for example, Neil, your camera is not wobbling at the moment, is it?
33
163600
3920
02:47
You've got a very, very secure, still picture.
34
167520
3920
02:51
Yes, I'm using a tripod to make sure that the pictures here are 'stable'.
35
171440
5040
02:56
If I didn't have it, it would wobble. I'm now wobbling my tripod.
36
176480
3720
03:00
Right. That's very 'unstable'. You've got an 'unstable' picture there.
37
180200
3880
03:04
Yes, I have, yeah. So, 'stable' is used to talk about
38
184080
4720
03:08
physical things like this tripod, but we can also use it, like many...
39
188800
4600
03:13
like many items of vocabulary, in figurative way.
40
193400
3480
03:16
Yes, absolutely. So, 'stable' here is referring to his physical
41
196880
4040
03:20
condition – his medical condition – saying that if something's...
42
200920
3960
03:24
if you're 'stable' medically, it means you are not changing:
43
204880
3880
03:28
you're not getting worse. You're probably not getting better,
44
208760
3600
03:32
but it means that your condition is not changing so it's not as
45
212360
4040
03:36
worrying as when your condition is critical or deteriorating.
46
216400
4920
03:41
It basically means very little change.
47
221320
3120
03:44
Yeah. And we can use it to talk about, sort of, situations in general.
48
224440
3840
03:48
For example, the economy can be described as 'stable'.
49
228280
3720
03:52
Yes, when there's not great periods of economic change, where investments
50
232000
4720
03:56
aren't changing too much, things aren't going up and down too much,
51
236720
3200
03:59
we can say: 'It's stable.' You can talk about other things, like...
52
239920
3160
04:03
you can be in a 'stable relationship'.
53
243080
2600
04:05
That means the kind of relationship where there isn't lots of drama,
54
245680
2920
04:08
you're not arguing and breaking up and getting back together;
55
248600
3240
04:11
you just have a strong, solid, reliable relationship.
56
251840
4720
04:16
Yeah. And you've already mentioned it,
57
256560
1760
04:18
but the negative of 'stable' is 'unstable'.
58
258320
3040
04:21
That's right, yes. So, if you're in an 'unstable relationship',
59
261360
3240
04:24
you're doing lots of breaking up and arguing.
60
264600
2200
04:26
If the economy is 'unstable',
61
266800
1960
04:28
it means there's lots of ups and downs with the economic situation.
62
268760
4400
04:33
Now, like with most words in most languages, there are different
63
273160
4520
04:37
versions of the word. We've been looking at the adjective...
64
277680
3080
04:40
we've been looking at the adjective.
65
280760
2160
04:42
We can also turn this into a noun: 'stability'.
66
282920
4520
04:47
Yes, we can... yeah. So, that would be 'stability'.
67
287440
3840
04:51
That's S-T-A-B-I-L-I-T-Y
68
291280
4240
04:55
and the negative of that is 'instability',
69
295520
4280
04:59
so starting with an 'in-', the prefix 'in-',
70
299800
2560
05:02
is the opposite of 'stability' as a noun.
71
302360
2360
05:04
So, we've got 'unstable', but 'instability'.
72
304720
2840
05:07
Yes! Different prefix there: from 'un-' to 'in-'.
73
307560
4280
05:11
And it gets worse, I'm afraid...
74
311840
2360
05:14
I'm afraid it does, yeah.
75
314200
1920
05:16
...because the verb form of this word 'stable' is 'stabilise'.
76
316120
3480
05:19
Yes. And the opposite of that is...?
77
319600
3200
05:22
'Destabilise'. Yeah.
78
322800
2000
05:24
So, we've got all the different prefixes: we've got 'unstable',
79
324800
3840
05:28
'instability' and 'destabilise'. And just to make it slightly more
80
328640
4840
05:33
complicated, there are two ways to say... to spell 'stabilise'.
81
333480
4640
05:38
If you're here in the UK, you spell it with an 's' in the middle.
82
338120
4240
05:42
If you're speaking American English, it's with a 'z'.
83
342360
3640
05:46
Yeah. I would like to apologise on behalf of the English language
84
346000
3440
05:49
for the complicated collection of prefixes connected to this word.
85
349440
4200
05:53
Yeah... sorry everyone.
86
353640
2360
05:56
Let's get a summary:
87
356000
2000
06:05
If you are interested in stories about football,
88
365080
2600
06:07
we have a really interesting one about the European Super League.
89
367680
3960
06:11
That didn't go very well, did it Catherine?
90
371640
2240
06:13
No, didn't last long at all.
91
373880
1520
06:15
But you can find out what happened by clicking the link.
92
375400
3560
06:18
OK. Let's have a look at your next headline.
93
378960
2640
06:21
Yes, in the UK with Hello and the headline:
94
381600
3560
06:32
'Heartfelt' – sincere.
95
392160
2920
06:35
Yes, we've got two words here: H-E-A-R-T.
96
395080
3600
06:38
The second word: 'felt' – F-E-L-T.
97
398680
2520
06:41
But we put them together without a space and we have one word:
98
401200
4440
06:45
'heartfelt'. Now, the meaning of this word is kind of,
99
405640
4360
06:50
very much related to the two words that it's made of. 'Felt' – if you
100
410000
4280
06:54
'feel' something in your 'heart', we're talking about emotions.
101
414280
5720
07:00
So, thinking of the heart as a place where you feel love, or happiness,
102
420000
3960
07:03
or grief, pain – all of those emotional things – 'heartfelt'
103
423960
4680
07:08
means it's very strongly felt: a strong emotion, a deep feeling.
104
428640
5840
07:14
So, we often use the word 'heartfelt' as an adjective
105
434480
3800
07:18
to describe a noun such as, in here, a statement.
106
438280
3760
07:22
A 'heartfelt statement' means a really deeply emotional statement.
107
442040
4760
07:26
Or we can talk about 'heartfelt apologies',
108
446800
3400
07:30
when you say you're sorry. and you really, really mean it.
109
450200
3800
07:34
Yeah. You often hear a 'heartfelt speech' at a wedding.
110
454000
3920
07:37
You do, yes. Yes, when they're... when the groom's kind of saying
111
457920
4000
07:41
how much he loves his wife and he's crying with emotion.
112
461920
3080
07:45
Yeah, you can say: 'That's a heartfelt speech.'
113
465000
3040
07:48
Yeah. And just to say again,
114
468040
1680
07:49
we're talking about 'heart' in the poetic sense:
115
469720
2240
07:51
we know this is a story about an illness
116
471960
2920
07:54
and somebody's heart – the physical organ, the heart –
117
474880
3360
07:58
but I don't think there's a connection here in this headline.
118
478240
3000
08:01
No, I think it's just a coincidence.
119
481240
1960
08:03
Yeah. OK. Let's get a summary:
120
483200
2800
08:12
OK. How about this for 'heartfelt'! We have a story about a TV producer,
121
492880
5960
08:18
who proposed to his girlfriend live on TV at the Emmys.
122
498840
4800
08:23
What do our viewers have to do, Catherine?
123
503640
2280
08:25
Just click the link down there and you'll go straight to the show.
124
505920
3760
08:29
OK. Let's have a look at our next headline please.
125
509720
4240
08:34
Yeah. Next off, we're at givemesport.com – the headline:
126
514000
4200
08:45
'Eye-opening' – revealing in a surprising way.
127
525720
4200
08:49
Yes. Another two-word expression.
128
529920
2200
08:52
This time the two words are joined together with a hyphen – a little,
129
532120
4560
08:56
short line between both words. The first part is 'eye' – E-Y-E.
130
536680
6000
09:02
The second word: 'opening' – O-P-E-N-I-N-G.
131
542680
4280
09:06
If something is 'eye-opening', it surprises you because you
132
546960
4880
09:11
learn something you didn't know before – often something that's
133
551840
3320
09:15
quite unexpected, or impressive even.
134
555160
4680
09:19
Yeah. And it's just another example of how figurative the language is
135
559840
4280
09:24
that we use. You know, if you want to see something better, what do you do?
136
564120
5560
09:29
You 'open' your 'eyes'... really wide.
137
569680
1720
09:31
Yeah... open your eyes wide.
138
571400
2400
09:33
Open... yes. So, that's not really what it means here, but it does
139
573800
3920
09:37
have a kind of connection. It's the idea of making you surprised,
140
577720
4280
09:42
making you kind of wonder, giving you some amazement: impressive.
141
582000
3960
09:45
So, if you watch a TV programme – you know
142
585960
2040
09:48
those nature documentaries, Neil? Yeah.
143
588000
2480
09:50
Where you watch something about, like, a little spider that
144
590480
2240
09:52
you never even think of, and then you discover this spider has this amazing
145
592720
3800
09:56
world of all these wonderful things it can do in its lifetime: you know,
146
596520
4680
10:01
the trials and difficulties it has, and the way it overcomes them.
147
601200
4920
10:06
Those documentaries can be really 'eye-opening'
148
606120
2920
10:09
because they teach you things you didn't know.
149
609040
3040
10:12
Yeah, absolutely. Sometimes you hear about someone
150
612080
2400
10:14
who spent an evening in an Accident and Emergency ward in a hospital.
151
614480
4480
10:18
It's a real 'eye-opener' for them.
152
618960
2440
10:21
Yes. Nice noun phrase there, yeah. If something is an 'eye-opener',
153
621400
5320
10:26
it teaches you or surprises you with things you didn't know previously.
154
626720
3760
10:30
And you're right – the word 'real' often comes with 'eye-opener':
155
630480
3600
10:34
a 'real eye-opener'.
156
634080
2200
10:36
OK. Well, let's get a summary of that:
157
636280
3240
10:46
Time now for a recap of our vocabulary please, Catherine.
158
646560
4000
10:50
Yes, we started with 'stable', which means fixed; not likely to change.
159
650560
6360
10:56
Then we had 'heartfelt', meaning sincere.
160
656920
3040
10:59
And we finished with 'eye-opening' – revealing in a surprising way.
161
659960
5520
11:05
Do not forget to test yourself on the vocabulary;
162
665480
2640
11:08
there's a quiz on our website bbclearningenglish.com.
163
668120
3120
11:11
  And we are all over social media –
164
671240
2080
11:13
just look for us. Thanks for joining us and see you next time.
165
673320
3320
11:16
Goodbye. Bye!
166
676640
2120
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