Subtitles section Play video
-
he's a review from BBC Learning English.
-
Hello, and welcome to news Review the program where we show you how to use the language from the latest news stories in your everyday English.
-
Hi, I'm Shaan.
-
And joining me today is Katherine.
-
Hi, Katherine.
-
Hi, Sean.
-
Hi, everybody.
-
What story do you have for us today?
-
Today?
-
Some.
-
We have a story about a very hot topic.
-
Can you guess what it is?
-
Let's find out from this.
-
BBC Radio Four News bulletin 2016 is on course to be the warmest year on record, and it will be the third year in a row that a new record has been set.
-
The findings were announced at a meeting of the U.
-
N Weather Agency's The World Meteorological Organization in Marrakech.
-
In Morocco, climate scientists said that although the El Nino weather phenomenon had had an impact, carbon emissions were the most significant factor.
-
16 of the 17 warmest years in history have been recorded this century, so a story there about the earth's temperature on 2016 is almost definitely going to be the hottest year since humans started recording the temperature peso A worrying story.
-
It's quite serious Yeah, on So what?
-
Words and phrases are being used by new sites online to talk about this story.
-
Okay, well, we're going to look at two groups of words.
-
The first group of three words all have a very similar meaning and the words are sweltering, sizzling on scorching.
-
Our second group of phrases also have very similar meanings to each other.
-
And they are on course on track, on on pace.
-
Okay.
-
And how were the first group of words appearing in the new stories?
-
Okay, so let's look at the headlines and we have global news.
-
Website tells us scorching 2016 on pace to be hottest year on record.
-
Secondly, from the Australian website In daily, we have sweltering 2016 to set heat record on In the story itself, we're told the world is set to notch up a new heat record in 2016 after a sizzling 2015.
-
All right, so we have scorching, sizzling and sweltering, which are all extreme adjectives, Meaning very, very, very hot.
-
Very, very, very hard.
-
Yes, on they all have pretty much a similar meaning Is not ones more extreme than the other, is it?
-
No, not at all.
-
All of the mean very, very, very hot.
-
They're not particularly graded.
-
So if you want to describe a situation where something is extremely hot, use the one use your favorite might.
-
Nice, because headlines convey vary their language with all these different synonyms they do.
-
And they're all quite dramatic as well.
-
Good for headlines.
-
Yeah, and as their extreme, we have to use an extreme adverbs.
-
We can't use very sweltering.
-
Can we not?
-
It'll know you would say absolutely scorching.
-
Now we've both got quite thick jumpers on today.
-
Well, it was Hold on the way to work this morning I waas in this office.
-
It's sweltering with all the light it is.
-
Yes, it is, Actually, I'm feeling quite warm as well.
-
Yeah, Patmore than quite warm.
-
This office this studio is sweltering, sweltering, scorching, sizzling on now sizzled.
-
What the what?
-
The verb sizzle makes me think of bacon sausages cooking.
-
You get a frying pan in particular.
-
So if you've got a pan, you're cooking it in a lots of oil in the pan and something that's quite fatty.
-
So when you put it in the pan, it goes spitting and hissing bubbling and smelling lovely, and the noise it makes in particular sounds like the word sizzle.
-
So sizzle means cooking something so that it's spitting and making a lot of frying noise.
-
So sausages sizzle, sizzle.
-
You're making me hungry.
-
I'm getting quite hungry as well.
-
Okay, so let's move on to the next group.
-
Yeah, that's then what do we have for the next group of words?
-
Okay, so let's go back to our headlines on We're looking at USA Today 2016 on track for hottest year on record.
-
Al Jazeera tellers 2016 on course to be hottest year on record on our final one.
-
Back to global news on, we have scorching 2016 on pace to be hottest year on record.
-
So almost identical headlines there, which tells her that the woods are probably pretty similar.
-
Yes, so we have on course on track and on pace.
-
Yep, and they mean happening in the way we expect, based on what's been happening until now, exactly that, Yes, so there's a kind of you know what's gonna happen.
-
The result will be because of what happened leading up to this moment.
-
Often it's used for plans So for plans, all things you want to happen.
-
So, for example, your school you want to get a final grade A at the end of the year.
-
If you look at all your essays and your great you've had so far, but maybe four A's and two B's.
-
So looking at that, you're likely to get a final grader.
-
You're on course to get a final Grade eight because you've had quite a few Grade A's up till now, so it's often quite positive.
-
But in these stories, it's not positive uses.
-
They used for something quite negative.
-
It is, and it's quite unusual, But I think it works, and they've used it because we're talking about the hottest year on record.
-
So it's kind of record is actually something that's never been done before, and often that's quite positive.
-
Think of Olympic athletes breaking records, so even though this result will be negative, we're using it in this kind of record way.
-
So, generally speaking on course and on track off a positive things here, it's being played around with a little bit.
-
Yeah, and we're using it here because 2016 isn't over yet.
-
We're in November so we can't say for definite because something may happen.
-
Yep, we may have a cold spell in in December.
-
Yeah, it may change it, but it's yucking likely.
-
It's looking very, very likely.
-
And that's a key with on course.
-
On track on Pace is looking very likely none coursing on track, a much more common not later than on pace.
-
Yeah, much more common.
-
Yes, on course.
-
On track.
-
Those are the ones we will see more often.
-
The newspapers chills on pace, but I think it's less less common.
-
Yeah, and it kind of if you think about the literal meaning of a course and track, it makes sense.
-
Doesn't execute on course on track.
-
You on a journey somewhere on a route.
-
Yeah, course under path are often literally like pavements, or you go to a stadium.
-
There's a running track where athletes runs.
-
It was literally what you move on.
-
Yeah, on what follows.
-
If we want to use a noun or a verb, what structure do we use yet?
-
We're with on course, and on truck you can use.
-
You can follow them by four plus a noun phrase, or you can follow them both by to be and a verb phrase, and it's the same for on pace, but again, just a little more unusual to see those structures.
-
Okay, thank you very much.
-
Now, before we recap, let's look at our Facebook challenge.
-
So we asked you.
-
We've been exploring some idioms related to track, which these track idioms can we use when we travel to places where not many people go a make tracks be lose track or C go off the beaten track?
-
What kind of responses did we have?
-
Fantastic responses.
-
Always.
-
We caught a few people out with make tracks.
-
A few people thought that the answer was make tracks that wasn't quite correct.
-
The answer we were looking for was answer C, which was, um, off the go off the beaten track for well done.
-
John Lopez, Aisha, Mark and Yuko, now Connie as well as everybody else who got that correct well done.
-
And to find out the meaning of those other two track idioms, go to our website BBC leading english dot com.
-
Now, before we make tracks, Catherine, can you recap of the words and phrases we've heard today?
-
Most definitely So we had sweltering, sizzling and sculpturing, which are all extreme adjectives, which means very, very hot.
-
Then we had on course, on track and on pace, which refer to things which are happening the way we expect them to, based on what has happened until now.
-
Okay, and if you'd like to test yourself on these words and phrases, go to our website BBC learning english dot com.
-
Now I think it's time for us to leave the sweltering studio.
-
So you soon.
-
Goodbye, Goodbye.
-
He's a review from BBC Learning English.