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Hello. Welcome back to www.engvid.com. Today, we're going to be dealing with: "Idioms of Colour".
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Okay? There are really beautiful ways of describing things in the English language,
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and they will add a degree of richness and variety to your spoken and written English.
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I'm going to be telling a story today about my friend, Bob, and what happened to him,
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and you're going to be learning 12 idioms using colour, or 10-12 colour idioms. First
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thing I wanted to point out was here in the UK, we spell "colour" with a "u". We like
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our u's in UK style English, original English. But in the America... Well, in the USA, they
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tend to forget about our worthy u's. So, you know, make your own mind up.
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My friend, Bob, he got beaten up until he was "black and blue". Okay? He got beaten
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up. Okay? So, "black and blue", it describes the colour of his skin because he has bruises.
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Okay? He gets beaten up. He was in a fight. He got in a fight until he was... Until he
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was beaten black and blue. It means he got badly beaten up.
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The police said that the matter was "black and white". Okay? So, my friend, he's got
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beaten up, so I ask the policeman: "What's happened, here? My friend, he got beaten up."
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And they said to me that the matter, that this whole topic, this subject, this event,
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it was "black and white". Okay? It was clear. Okay? It was clear what had happened. There
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was no questions: what had happened? My friend, Bob, had been drunk, so he got attacked, he
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got beaten up. Okay?
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So, what did I do? Well, I asked Bob's mom: "Why? What's happened? What's happened to
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Bob? He got drunk. He got beaten black and blue. What's going on, Mrs. Bob?" And Mrs.
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Bob said: "Well, Bob, he's always been a bit of a 'black sheep'.
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" That's a red sheep. What's
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a black sheep? Ma-a-a. A black sheep is one that goes a different way. So, we got lots
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of sheep. Okay? Here's a big family of sheep, and here's Bob. Here's Bob being a black sheep.
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Well, what does a "black sheep" mean? Well, a "black sheep" means he's gone a different
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way. Okay? Because most of the time, sheep are what colour? Yes, they're white. But Bob,
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he's a black sheep, he's a bit different. He's taken a wrong turning. You are going
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the wrong direction. Okay?
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So, I'm still talking to Mrs. Bob, and I'm like: "Yes, but he was 'born with a silver spoon'.
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" Okay? If I'm born with a... Woo, it's silver, the spoon. With a silver spoon
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in his mouth, it means the gods are giving riches. Okay? Caliban in The Tempest, Shakespeare:
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"Me dreamed that the clouds opened and showed riches ready to drop upon me." Okay? Sorry.
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A bit over your head. He's born with a silver spoon, Bob. Okay? What...? What the...? What
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does that mean? It means he was born into a good family. Yeah? He's born into a big
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house, there's a car, there's food. But Bob's been a black sheep, okay? And he's gone to...
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He's gone to Hull instead of to New York, maybe. Sorry, people in Hull. It's a glorious
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city. I love it very much.
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Okay, so he was born with a silver spoon. He was given-okay?-gold, silver; valuable.
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Okay? Lots of money for gold and silver. He was given "a golden opportunity", a great,
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a fantastic, a magnificent, a brilliant opportunity. Yeah? To... To go to a good school. Okay?
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And so Bob went to the good school, but he thought... Okay? Past tense of the verb: "to
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think", he thought that "the grass was always greener on the other side". Okay? So here's
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Bob, he's at his school. He's got his silver spoon, and he thinks that it's always better
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to be... Well, a... Someone swimming in the sea, under water. He thought it was always
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greener to be a deep sea diver. Okay? A deep sea diver. So "deep" means far under the water,
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right down. So Bob thought it was greener to be under water, to be doing something completely
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different. Okay? So here's Bob, to think it's greener on the other side, he always thinks
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it's better over there. So if I'm in a blue car, I think it's better to be in a red car;
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if I'm in a red car, I think it's better to be in a blue car. Bob thought it was better
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to be a deep sea diver. Uh-oh.
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So, he soon was "in the dark" about things. Okay? So he's swimming, he's in the water.
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He's in the dark, it means: don't know what's going on. Yeah? I don't know. So, you could...
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You could say... If someone asked you a question, you could say: "Sorry, mate. I'm a bit in
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the dark about that." It means: "I don't know. No one has told me." Yeah?
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Because he was a bit in the dark with his finances, he didn't know what was going in
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and out of his bank, he soon came "into the red". Yeah? "Into the red", yeah? Pound sign
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going down, down, down, down, down. Or dollar, if you prefer the dollar. I don't. Okay, he's
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going into the red until he's minus. Yeah? So he has no money at all.
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What Bob really wanted was for people to "roll out the red carpet" for him, to treat him
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as an important person. Okay? You see movie stars, they have the red carpet. Bob so wants
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to have the red carpet rolled out for him, but he's being a deep sea diver, and he doesn't
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have any money. I'm not saying that deep sea divers don't have money. Don't get me wrong.
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It's just Bob's a bit in the dark about what to do with his money, and so it all goes to
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the wrong places.
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Now, Bob would have been "tickled pink"... Okay? You know what tickle is? Tickle. [Laughs]
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That looked a bit like a chimpanzee, but tickle is like, you know, we have an itchy bit here,
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an itchy bit here. [Laughs]. Yeah? That's to be tickled. Okay. A bit weird. Sorry. Inappropriate.
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To be "tickled pink", it means really happy. Yeah? Pink, you know, it's kind of... It's
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a happy colour, a bit of a gay colour, but it's happy. Yeah? Tickled pink. He would have
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been... He would have been. So we can use our tenses with... Because it's "to be tickled
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pink", so he wanted to be... No. We wouldn't say: "He wanted to be". He was tickled pink.
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So normally, we would use it in the past or in the present. I am tickled pink that you're
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watching my video right now.
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So, we never really saw his "true colours", dee, dee, dee. Yeah? You know the song? His
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true colours. We never really saw Bob's true colours. It was such a shame.
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And he didn't really "pass life with flying colours". But, you guys, on the other hand,
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are going to pass my quiz with flying colours. Aren't you? You're going to know exactly what
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"black and blue", when you beat him black and blue. To see things in "black and white",
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yeah, crystal clear. The "black sheep" of the family, the one who does things a bit
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different. "Born with a silver spoon", born with everything they could want. "Given a
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golden opportunity". "The grass is always greener on the other side" or not.
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"In the dark", when you don't know about something. "In the red", when you're in the minus.
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"Roll out the red carpet", to be treated importantly. And "tickled pink" when you're so happy with
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everything.
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You want to see the "true colours". So "true colours", what is this? It's if my colour
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is red, and grey, and black, and blue, it's like saying my person. These are my colours.
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Inside my mind, you see all the beautiful colours. Okay? It's seeing my heart, seeing
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the colours that are in me, Benjamin. Okay? To see someone's true colours, you see the
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best of that person. Okay? So... You could see... "To see someone's", okay? The true
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colours of someone. To see someone's true colours. To see the very best of that person.
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Okay? "To pass with flying colours". Flying, yeah? I'm doing pretty well because I'm flying,
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so the colours... So we're flying colours. What do you think "flying colours" are? Sort
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of red, yellow, green, blue, pink, purple, I don't know. "With flying colours" just means
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that you do exceptionally well, like 100% distinction.
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That is what I want you to do now. Do the quiz: www.engvid.com, quiz on "Idioms of Colour".
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If you really want to, subscribe to my YouTube channel, and I've got some more things going
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on at Exquisite English. So if you want to continue the relationship and, well, get out
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of the dark in terms of your English, then maybe go there as well.
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Thanks a lot for watching my video. See ya next time.