Animal Idioms! Conversational American English with JenniferESL

66,054 views ・ 2015-11-10

Rachel's English


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

00:00
Hi everybody! This video is going to be a little different from what you’re used to
0
530
4850
00:05
seeing on Rachel’s English. This is a compilation video where I’m taking several of my videos
1
5380
6700
00:12
and combining them into one longer video on a single topic. What’s really exciting is
2
12080
6450
00:18
that we have another teacher helping with this video. Jennifer of JenniferESL. She’s
3
18530
7320
00:25
been a popular YouTube English teacher since 2007 and I’m really excited that she’s
4
25850
6450
00:32
helping with this video.
5
32300
1980
00:34
Today’s topic: animal idioms.
6
34280
4120
00:45
People are always asking me for more videos on idioms. So today you’re going to learn
7
45489
5260
00:50
a lot, all related to animals: chickens, horses, and monkeys. All of these idioms are familiar
8
50749
9610
01:00
to Americans, and used in conversational English.
9
60359
4380
01:04
Let’s get started hearing from teacher JenniferESL on idioms relating to chickens.
10
64739
7160
01:20
In our first set of expressions related to chickens, we have two nouns. The first, chicken.
11
80720
7940
01:28
A chicken is a coward. If someone says ‘don’t be a chicken’, they’re saying, ‘don’t
12
88670
7739
01:36
be a coward’, don’t be scared. We can say this in a teasing way, as a joke. But,
13
96409
7901
01:44
because chicken means coward, it’s an insult. It can be offensive, so be careful.
14
104310
7099
01:51
The second is a noun phrase, pecking order. Pecking order. To peck is an action that chickens
15
111409
9570
02:00
do with their beak, their mouth part. They can peck at the ground. Peck, peck, peck.
16
120979
7890
02:08
Pecking order refers to behavior within a group. Not a group of chickens, but a group
17
128869
5980
02:14
of people. Pecking order is hierarchy, it’s everyone’s status within a group. If we
18
134849
8331
02:23
ask, “What’s the pecking order?”, we’re asking what’s the ranking within a particular
19
143180
6860
02:30
social group.
20
150040
1760
02:37
In our second set of expressions related to chickens, we have four verbs. The first, chicken
21
157080
6780
02:43
out. Chicken out. I already explained that a chicken is a coward. So to ‘chicken out’
22
163870
8460
02:52
is to decide not to do something because you’re a coward. So if you chickened out, you didn’t
23
172330
7700
03:00
do something because you were too afraid.
24
180030
2860
03:02
Next, flew the coop, usually said in the past tense. Flew the coop. A coop is a structure
25
182890
10110
03:13
where we keep chickens. It’s where they live. If the chickens flew the coop, they
26
193000
5750
03:18
got out. If someone flew the coop, they left, they’re gone for good. And it usually implies
27
198750
8269
03:27
some sort of escape to freedom.
28
207019
3670
03:30
Next, run around like a chicken with its head cut off. It’s a very colorful and maybe
29
210689
7701
03:38
not-so-pleasant. But to run around like a chicken with its head cut off means that someone
30
218390
6989
03:45
is going around in a crazy rush with little direction and no clear thinking. They’re
31
225379
7661
03:53
very stressed and worried. They’re running around like a chicken with it’s head cut
32
233040
5140
03:58
off.
33
238180
1589
03:59
And last, we have ‘walk on egg shells’, often used in the progressive, walking on
34
239769
7071
04:06
eggshells. Egg shells break, they crack easily. If you’re trying not to crack these eggshells,
35
246840
7770
04:14
you’re walking carefully. If you’re walking on eggshells, you’re trying to be very careful.
36
254610
7600
04:22
You’re afraid that maybe something you say or something that you do could offend or upset
37
262210
7950
04:30
someone. So if you’re walking on eggshells, you’re being very careful not to upset anyone.
38
270160
7940
04:39
One time I got to see a chicken being slaughtered, so I literally got to see a chicken run around
39
279949
6590
04:46
with it’s head cut off. It was pretty out of control. Thanks so much to Jennifer for
40
286539
6190
04:52
teaching us those idioms. They’re all idioms that are well-known and used, so don’t chicken
41
292729
6530
04:59
out, do try using them in speech.
42
299259
4741
05:04
Because people used to use horses a lot for work and transportation, there are a lot of
43
304000
5900
05:09
horse idioms. One night a couple of years ago, I was wearing a big horse mask in lower
44
309900
6600
05:16
Manhattan and got inspired with my friends to come up with as many horse idioms as we
45
316500
7090
05:23
could.
46
323590
900
05:24
Would you believe we came up with almost 20 phrases and idioms that use the word horse,
47
324490
7239
05:31
or somehow reference horses. And, I’m sure there are more.
48
331729
5220
05:36
>>Get off your high horse. >> Get off your high horse. That’s a perfect one.
49
336949
2891
05:39
>> Lori ... >> Stop horsing around.
50
339849
1480
05:41
>> These are, you have so many idioms! >> Yeah, I’m cheating.
51
341329
4220
05:45
Get off your high horse. To be on a ‘high horse’ is to have an attitude of arrogance,
52
345549
5851
05:51
of self-righteousness. ‘Get off your high horse’ means, stop being so arrogant. You
53
351400
5880
05:57
have a couple options with the T in ‘get’. You can either make it a flap T, connecting
54
357280
5630
06:02
it to the word ‘off’, get off, get off. Or, if you’re really emphasizing and going
55
362910
5900
06:08
to make a pause, you can make it a stop T. Get off. Get off your high horse. Stop horsing
56
368810
8900
06:17
around. Horsing around is rough or rowdy play, usually in good fun. My mom often accused
57
377710
8519
06:26
my brother and I of horsing around.
58
386229
2210
06:28
>> Horse idioms. We have: don’t look a gift horse in the mouth…
59
388480
6620
06:35
>> …you can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink,
60
395100
3560
06:38
>> …hoofing it.
61
398660
1240
06:39
Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth. This means, don’t be ungrateful or suspicious
62
399910
6140
06:46
when someone gives you something. A friend said this to me recently when I was talking
63
406050
5290
06:51
about an offer that I got from someone to help me with my business. And I was a little
64
411340
4380
06:55
suspicious. He said, “You know, Rachel, don’t look a gift horse in the mouth.”
65
415720
5220
07:00
You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink. This basically means, you can’t
66
420940
5580
07:06
make people do what they don’t want to do. Let’s talk a little bit about the pronunciation.
67
426520
6700
07:13
You can lead a horse. So the main verb here is the word ‘lead’. That means ‘can’
68
433220
7000
07:20
is a helping verb. So we don’t want to say ‘can’. We instead want to reduce that
69
440220
5580
07:25
word to ‘kn’, ‘kn’. You can lead. You can lead a horse to water. But you can’t
70
445800
7450
07:33
make it drink. You might hear a CH sound happening between ‘but’ and ‘you’, but you,
71
453250
6729
07:39
but you. This can happen when the T is followed by the Y consonant, but you, but you. But
72
459979
8291
07:48
you can’t make it drink. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink.
73
468270
5489
07:53
Hoofing it means to be moving really fast, to be running somewhere. For example, I hoofed
74
473759
7060
08:00
it to work because I overslept. Note that the double-O here is pronounced as the UH
75
480819
6590
08:07
vowel, just like cook, book, and Brooklyn.
76
487409
4370
08:11
>> Straight from the horse’s mouth. >> Making hay.
77
491779
4970
08:16
>> A charlie horse.
78
496749
2140
08:18
Straight from the horse’s mouth means that you’ve something from the most authoritative
79
498889
6150
08:25
or dependable source. For example:
80
505039
3791
08:28
>> Did you hear Jane is quitting her job? >> No way. Where did you hear that?
81
508830
5460
08:34
>> From Jane herself. Straight from the horse’s mouth.
82
514290
3900
08:38
Making hay, or, making hay while the sun shines. This is to make the most of current opportunities.
83
518190
8130
08:46
If you put doing something off, you may loose the opportunity to do it. For example, let’s
84
526320
7140
08:53
make hay and go for a run before it starts raining again.
85
533460
3150
08:56
A charlie horse. This phrase is used for muscle cramps in the legs. You might hear this phrase
86
536610
7730
09:04
as you watch the Olympics this summer.
87
544340
2280
09:06
>> I could eat a horse. >> I’m so hungry I could eat a horse. That’s
88
546620
3340
09:09
true. >> Did we say don’t beat a dead horse? Don’t
89
549960
3340
09:13
beat a dead horse.
90
553300
1460
09:14
I could eat a horse. Well, this means, of course, that you’re very very hungry. Notice
91
554760
6040
09:20
the T at the end of the word ‘eat’ links to the next word, a, a schwa sound, so it’s
92
560810
7230
09:28
a flap T or a light D sound. Eat a, eat a, eat a. I could eat a horse.
93
568040
7470
09:35
>> Rachel, are you hungry? >> Yeah, I skipped lunch, so I could eat a
94
575510
5030
09:40
horse.
95
580540
960
09:41
Don’t beat a dead horse. You might say this to someone who can’t let a situation go.
96
581500
7750
09:49
If you think someone needs to accept things as they are, and they just keep talking about
97
589250
5280
09:54
‘what if?’, ‘what if?’, then you might say: Look, don’t beat a dead horse. It’s
98
594530
6190
10:00
done. >> Don’t put the cart before the horse.
99
600720
3920
10:04
>> That’s a horse of a different color.
100
604640
3740
10:08
Don’t put the cart before the horse. This means be patient and do things the right way,
101
608380
6540
10:14
in the right order. Sometimes it’s very tempting to do things out of order and skip
102
614920
5370
10:20
ahead. But it doesn’t always get the best results. Someone might say to you: do it right,
103
620290
6380
10:26
don’t put the cart before the horse.
104
626670
2800
10:29
A horse of a different color. That is when you bring something up that is unlike that
105
629470
5640
10:35
which you are already talking about. For example, to me, writing and spelling are easy. But
106
635110
6560
10:41
math, that’s a horse of a different color. Meaning, to me, math is very hard.
107
641670
5490
10:47
>> Oh, there are so many idioms with ‘horse’! >> Hold your horses!
108
647160
4980
10:52
>> Hold your horses! >> That’s a great one.
109
652140
3020
10:55
Hold your horses. That means hold on, be patient, stop what you’ve just started. It’s among
110
655160
6800
11:01
the most common of these horse idioms. Notice I’mreducing the word ‘your’ to ‘yer’,
111
661960
6450
11:08
‘yer’. Hold your horses.
112
668410
2840
11:11
>> This is a one-horse town. Put a horse out to pasture.
113
671250
6010
11:17
A one-horse town is a small, maybe insignificant town. For example, he’s very overwhelmed
114
677270
7960
11:25
by the city, he comes from a one-horse town.
115
685230
2770
11:28
To put a horse out to pasture. This is when a racing horse is retired, but it can also
116
688000
5670
11:33
be used with people, when someone is forced to retire. For example, Larry is past retirement
117
693670
5900
11:39
age. I think it’s time to put him out to pasture.
118
699570
3579
11:43
>> Wild horses couldn’t drag him away. >> Oh that’s a good one. I use that sometimes.
119
703149
5080
11:48
My friend used that once recently. Wild horses couldn’t drag him away. This
120
708229
4831
11:53
is said when someone is very engrossed in or committed to something. Nothing can persuade
121
713070
5780
11:58
him or her to leave or stop doing that thing. For example,
122
718850
4830
12:03
>> Are you watching the Mad Men Finale tonight? >> Yes, wild horses couldn’t drag me away.
123
723680
6740
12:10
>> A dark horse candidate, for example.
124
730420
2140
12:12
A dark horse is someone who is more or less unknown who emerges to a place of prominence
125
732570
7050
12:19
or importance, usually in a competition. This is used quite a bit to describe a candidate
126
739620
5580
12:25
in politics.
127
745200
970
12:26
After doing our idiom research, we went out to dinner, and then made our way home. Although,
128
746170
6680
12:32
I can’t really recommend riding a bike in the horse mask, because essentially, I could
129
752850
5520
12:38
not see a thing out of it.
130
758370
4180
12:42
And finally, a few monkey idioms. At the YouTube space in Los Angeles, I found a monkey suit,
131
762550
7410
12:49
and couldn’t resist going over a few monkey idioms in costume.
132
769960
6470
12:56
To begin, let’s go over the pronunciation of the word ‘monkey’. This is a two-syllable
133
776430
5440
13:01
word with stress on the first syllable. DA-da, monkey. It begins with the M consonant sound,
134
781870
7890
13:09
where the lips come together. MMmmmo-. Then we have the UH as in BUTTER sound. This is
135
789760
7180
13:16
a completely relaxed sound. So, your tongue should be forward and relaxed, uh, uh, a little
136
796940
6230
13:23
bit of jaw drop, and your lips should be completely relaxed. MMmmmo-. Because this is a stressed
137
803170
6270
13:29
syllable, it should have the up-down shape of a stressed syllable in the voice. Mo-,
138
809440
6800
13:36
mon-.
139
816240
2360
13:38
Now we have the NG sound. The reason why the letter N is representing the NG sound is because
140
818600
6230
13:44
the next sound is the K, and they’re made in the same spot. So, to make the NG sound,
141
824830
4980
13:49
the tongue tip is here, touching behind the bottom front teeth, and the back part of the
142
829810
3880
13:53
tongue reaches up and touches the soft palate. The soft palate is lowered here because it’s
143
833690
5450
13:59
a nasal consonant, ng, ng-k. Then, to make the K, you just release the tongue down, monk-,
144
839140
9420
14:08
-k-. The soft palate will close for that. Then we go into the EE as in SHE vowel. Monkey.
145
848560
7140
14:15
Since it’s in an unstressed syllable, it should be very short and low in pitch, -key,
146
855700
5960
14:21
-key, -key. Monkey.
147
861660
2490
14:24
Let’s get into some idioms. First, ‘fun as a barrel of monkeys’. This means something
148
864150
6220
14:30
that’s really fun, kind of like this video. But I usually use it sarcastically, which
149
870370
5380
14:35
means that I am explaining something that is not at all fun. For example, I’m going
150
875750
4730
14:40
to the dentist to have a cavity filled. Fun as a barrel of monkeys. The stress pattern
151
880480
5760
14:46
for this phrase is DA-da-da-DA-da. Barrel of monkeys. So, in many cases we’ll reduce
152
886240
6720
14:52
the word ‘of’ to just have the schwa sound, no consonant at all. Barrel of, DA-da-da,
153
892960
7490
15:00
Barrel of. Barrel of monkeys. Now here we’re making ‘monkey’ plural, so the S will
154
900450
5850
15:06
be a Z sound, zz, because the sound before was a vowel. Monkeys, monkeys. So just a very
155
906300
7800
15:14
quick, soft Z sound at the end there. Barrel of monkeys.
156
914100
5670
15:19
Monkey business. This can mean silliness. So you might say to a room full of rowdy kids,
157
919770
5430
15:25
‘Enough with the monkey business’. But, it can also mean dishonest behavior. Monkey
158
925200
5790
15:30
business. DA-da-DA-da. So, the first syllable of ‘business’ is also stressed. This stressed
159
930990
7470
15:38
syllable has the IH as in SIT vowel, bu-, bu-, and the first S here represents the Z
160
938460
7240
15:45
sound. Bus-, business. The second syllable, since it’s unstressed, should be very quick,
161
945700
7440
15:53
-ness, -ness, -ness. Business. Monkey business.
162
953140
5550
15:58
Monkey suit. That’s what I’m wearing! That’s the literal meaning. But there’s
163
958690
4710
16:03
also an idiomatic meaning, and that’s a tuxedo or other formal evening wear for men.
164
963400
6140
16:09
Monkey suit. DA-da-da. Monkey suit. So, the word ‘suit’ has the S consonant sound.
165
969540
7210
16:16
The letters U-I represent the OO as in BOO vowel, and we finish with a Stop T. Monkey
166
976750
6370
16:23
suit, monkey suit. Monkey on my back. This is a problem or something
167
983120
6460
16:29
that’s really stressful that’s taking a long time to resolve or won’t go away.
168
989580
5260
16:34
For example, my friend is going through a nasty divorce. It’s a monkey on his back.
169
994840
5400
16:40
The stress pattern is DA-da-da-da-DA. Monkey on his back. So, ‘back’ is stressed. The
170
1000240
6900
16:47
words ‘on’, and the next function word, whether it’s ‘my’, ‘your’, ‘his’,
171
1007140
4870
16:52
or ‘her’, will be unstressed. So, ‘on my’, ‘on my’, those two words will be
172
1012010
5820
16:57
really quick, low in pitch, and not too clear, on my, on my. Or, it could be ‘on your’,
173
1017830
6640
17:04
‘on your’. Notice I’m reducing the word ‘your’ to ‘yer’. We’ve already made
174
1024470
5700
17:10
a video about that, so check it out. ‘On his’ or ‘on her’. In both of those cases,
175
1030170
6500
17:16
we’ll probably drop the H. On his, on his, monkey on his back. Or, on her, on her, monkey
176
1036670
7610
17:24
on her back. Check out this video on Dropping the H Reductions.
177
1044280
5260
17:29
Have you ever heard someone say “I’m going to go ape.” That means to get really angry.
178
1049540
5260
17:34
For example, if she screws up my car, I’m going to go ape. Both ‘go’ and ‘ape’
179
1054800
6650
17:41
are stressed, so the stress pattern is DA-DA. Go ape. We have the G consonant sound and
180
1061450
6840
17:48
the OH as in NO diphthong. Sometimes my students don’t round their lips enough for the second
181
1068290
5690
17:53
half of this diphthong, go, go, so make sure you do that. Ape. It begins with the AY as
182
1073980
7760
18:01
in SAY diphthong. Make sure you drop your jaw enough for the first sound of that diphthong,
183
1081740
5840
18:07
a-, a-pe. And finally, the P sound, ape. Go ape.
184
1087580
7200
18:14
Not all rodents are cute, but this one is. This is from my children’s collection of
185
1094780
5580
18:20
stuffed animals and hand puppets. I’m not even certain if this is a mouse or a rat,
186
1100360
7300
18:27
but seeing it reminds me of an idiom we have in English, rat race. ‘Rat race’ refers
187
1107660
8850
18:36
to the daily struggle to be successful at work where there’s competition and pressure
188
1116510
6220
18:42
to produce. One day after the other you go through this routine hoping to come out on
189
1122730
7120
18:49
top. But really, you’re one of thousands. ‘Rat race’ refers to this whole situation.
190
1129850
8000
19:02
Many complain about the rat race and say they hate the rat race. Some think about quitting
191
1142860
7160
19:10
the rat race. Others actually leave the rat race behind. They change jobs or they change
192
1150020
8100
19:18
their lifestyle. Maybe they retire early, or move out to the country where life is more
193
1158120
6500
19:24
peaceful.
194
1164620
1820
19:26
You’ve just learned a lot of idioms. Challenge to you: come up with a sentence for one of
195
1166440
8080
19:34
the idioms you learned in this video and put it in the comments below.
196
1174520
5600
19:40
Special thanks to Jennifer for her contribution to this video.
197
1180120
3460
19:43
That’s all for now. Thanks for joining Rachel and me for this special lesson. Happy studies
198
1183580
6910
19:50
to all.
199
1190490
2020
19:52
She has a huge collection of videos here on YouTube where she teachers grammar, vocabulary,
200
1192510
6850
19:59
and other skills. You can check out her lessons by clicking here or in the description below.
201
1199360
5980
20:05
Be sure to subscribe. Check out the exercises page on her website where she creates interactive
202
1205340
7090
20:12
exercises to help solidify what you’ve learned in the videos. Also, Jennifer teaches on WizIQ.
203
1212430
9060
20:21
Click here to see her schedule.
204
1221490
3480
20:24
And don’t forget to sign up for my mailing list, if you haven’t already, for free weekly
205
1224970
5180
20:30
emails full of English lessons and stories on American culture.
206
1230150
5020
20:35
That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
207
1235170
5480
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