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Dan: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English.
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I'm Dan, and joining me today is Neil. Hi Neil.
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Neil: Hi, everyone!
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Dan: Bless you! Are you ok?
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Neil: I think I'm coming down with something serious.
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Dan: It's just a case of the sniffles.
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Neil: The sniffles
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is an informal way of saying a cold or flu.
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It comes from the sniffing sound people make
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when they have a runny nose.
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Dan: And a runny nose is when liquid mucus keeps
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leaking from our nose,
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usually when we are sick.
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I'm afraid you'll just have to soldier on Neil.
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Neil: To soldier on means to continue despite difficulty.
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I'm dying!
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What's it about anyway?
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Dan: It's about 'man flu',
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and whether it's actually real, or
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just something men like to complain about.
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We'll give you 6 words and expressions – and, of course, our quiz question.
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Neil: Alright, fire away.
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Dan: In a survey conducted by Nuts magazine
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that asked its readers
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how long they took to recover from a cold or flu,
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where women put an average of 1.5 days,
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what did men put?
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Was it a) 1 day
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b) 2 days or c) 3 days?
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Neil: I'm going to say 3 days.
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The threat of 'man flu' is real.
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Dan: Well, we'll find out later, but let's clarify.
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'Man flu' is the tendency that many people believe men
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have to complain about a minor illness,
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such as a cold or flu,
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and act as if they were suffering from something
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a lot more serious.
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Neil: Yes. But science cannot say whether men
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do actually suffer more than women,
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or if men just tend to complain more.
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Dan: Let's hear from this British couple
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about whether they think 'man flu' is real or not.
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Man: Men definitely do suffer a lot more, I think,
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than women do when we get flu.
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Woman: Yeah, I'm not so convinced.
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I feel like they just complain more.
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Woman: I was ill recently and I just carried on
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and went to work and everything.
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And when Chris had got sick recently
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he was on the sofa and couldn't really do anything, so…
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Dan: And it seems that it's not just in the UK.
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Listen to this BBC Journalist interviewing a woman
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from Europe.
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BBC Journalist: You're from the Netherlands.
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Have you ever accused your
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boyfriend of having man flu?
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Dutch woman: Oh, absolutely yes. Yeah.
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BBC Journalist: What have you accused him of doing?
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Dutch woman: …whining?
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Neil: Whining is when someone complains repeatedly
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and often in an annoying way about something.
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So, there certainly seems to be something there
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but nothing has been proven, right?
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Dan: Well, a recent scientific study
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has indicated that there could be something
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to 'man flu' after all.
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Doctor Kyle Sue,
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an assistant professor of
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family medicine at Memorial University
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of Newfoundland in Canada,
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has suggested
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that there could be a difference
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between men and women
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when it comes to respiratory diseases.
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Neil: Respiratory meaning related to breathing.
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He says that there was already a lot of evidence
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from existing studies suggesting men experience
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worse, longer-lasting symptoms.
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Dan: Symptoms are the feelings of illness caused
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by a disease.
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Listen to him explain why this is.
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Dr Sue: It seems that the higher the testosterone levels,
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the lower the immune response to
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these types of infections,
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whereas the higher the oestrogen level,
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the stronger the immune response.
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Neil: Testosterone and oestrogen are hormones
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that exist in both men and women.
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Testosterone is higher in males
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and oestrogen is higher in females.
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Dr. Sue's research suggests that
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the more oestrogen a person has,
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the better able they are to fight off the infection.
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That's it then! Man flu is real!
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Dan: Hold your horses, Neil.
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There are two problems.
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First of all, the Royal college of GPs in the UK
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says that there is no such thing as 'man flu'.
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And secondly,
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even Dr Sue admits that these results, including his own,
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are only 'suggestive' and are not 'definitive'.
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Neil: So, basically he's saying that
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there is a suggestion that 'man flu' exists,
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but the evidence so far cannot say for sure.
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Dan: Exactly.
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More studies need to be done.
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But you know what we can be sure about?
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The answer to this week's quiz question.
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I asked you
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in a survey conducted by Nuts magazine
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that asked its readers
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how long they took to recover from a cold or flu,
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where women put an average of 1.5 days,
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what did men put?
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a) 1 day b) 2 days or c) 3 days
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Neil: And I said 3 days.
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Dan:And you were
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right!
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Neil :Good!
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Dan: The men said they took twice as long to recover!
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Neil: It must be all that manly testosterone.
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Let's review our vocabulary, shall we?
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Dan: Our first was the sniffles.
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If you have the sniffles,
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you have a cold, informally speaking.
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What's the best cure for the sniffles Neil?
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Neil: Stay in bed and sweat it out, my mum always said.
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Just make sure you have lots of tissues
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to deal with your runny nose.
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That's when a person's nose leaks mucus,
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usually because they are ill. Yuck!
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Dan: Next we had soldier on.
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This phrasal verb means to continue despite difficulty.
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When was the last time you had to soldier on, Neil?
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Neil: A few days ago when I went the whole day
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without eating any lunch!
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Then we had 'man flu'.
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That's is the name given to the situation where a person,
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often a man,
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tends to complain and exaggerate a small illness
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such as a cold.
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Do you do that, Dan?
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Dan: I'm sure my wife would say I do!
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Next we had whining.
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If you whine, you complain repeatedly
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and often in an annoying way.
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Neil: Like my children did
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last time I didn't buy them ice-cream.
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And finally we had symptoms.
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These are the feelings of illness caused by a disease.
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What are the symptoms of flu, Dan?
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Dan: A headache, aching muscles, and a fever.
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And that's the end of this 6 Minute English!
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Don't forget to check out our YouTube,
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Facebook, Twitter and Instagram pages.
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There you made it. You can collapse now.
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Neil: Bye.
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Dan: Bye!