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  • So what are you into? Are you into football or basketball? Did you understand what I asked

  • you? I asked you, “what do you like doing?” Maybe you've heard this statement from people

  • earlier and it has confused you, what are they asking, what am i into, what does this

  • even mean? So today we are looking at different ways to talk about your interests, what you

  • like doing and what you don't like doing and we'll talk in terms of degrees, for example

  • you're just crazy about football and you're just crazy about Facebook and maybe you're

  • just into something. So like this we are gonna cover different degrees of your interests.

  • So keep watching this session with me, my name is Michelle. Now we are going to look

  • at some very interesting expressions that we have with us on the board and the first

  • one is what I started the lesson with, this is ,‘into’. Sowhat are you into?’

  • this means thatwhat do you like doing’. In other words if you want me to put it very

  • simply it means, ‘what are you interested in’. Sointomeans, ‘very interested’.

  • So if you like listening to jazz, you could say, ‘I'm into jazz’. Which means that

  • you're very interested in jazz. And sometimes if you really like cooking or if you're very

  • interested in cooking, you could say, I got into cooking since I left home. So since you

  • started living outside your home you got into cooking, which means that you started enjoying

  • cooking. Okay so this isintofor you, which means, ‘very interested’. You could

  • use it withgotas well and you could say, ‘I got into somethingetc. etc.

  • etc. Now we look at the next one and that ismad about’. So this is a bit stronger

  • thaninto’. ‘Intois used when you you're interested in something, very interested

  • for that matter but you usemad about’, when you really enjoy something. What's the

  • first thing that comes to your mind when I say that you really enjoy? Is it football?

  • So if you really enjoy football, you could say, ‘I'm mad about football’. This means

  • you really enjoy it. So football is your interest, a very strong interest and you really enjoy

  • it, so you could say, ‘I'm mad about football’. And sometimes you could also say, ‘I'm crazy

  • about football’. So this is another way of saying the same thing, ‘crazyis just

  • another synonym formadwhich means just another word formad’. So you could

  • say they are crazy about football but I'm mad about basketball. Okay now with this we

  • look at the next one and this isobsessed’. Have you ever heard this word before? Soobsessed

  • means that you do something to such a degree, that you only think about it. Or maybe you

  • can't stop thinking about it. So do you have any celebrity crush? I mean that any celebrity

  • that you just love and you're crazy about and you just can't stop thinking about the

  • celebrityJulia Roberts, is that? So if you're really crazy about someone and you

  • can't stop thinking about them, that's calledobsession’. ‘Obsessionfor you.

  • Can't stop thinking. Sometimes obsession is so much that it goes into the crazy territory.

  • What I mean is that you're so obsessed with someone that it actually becomes unhealthy

  • for you. You start becoming anxious and emotionally unstable. So let's say that, someday you see

  • your celebrity crush face-to-face, how would you feel? You'd probably be awestruck, dumbstruck

  • and you would not be able to say a word, you'll be likemum! And you'll be so emotionally

  • unstable that you'll not know what to say. So it's always good to avoid obsessions you

  • know you should not go into that unhealthy territory when you talk about interests. It's

  • okay to be till here, ‘mad aboutbut if you go up to theobsession’, it becomes

  • unhealthy. And what about the next word that we have, ‘passion’. So this is something

  • even greater thanobsessionor isobsessiongreater thanpassion’? Wellobsession

  • is a bit greater thanpassionin terms of the unhealthiness attached to it. ‘Passion

  • is not unhealthy. ‘Passionis usually very healthy which means that it leads you

  • to do something, it leads you to action for something. For example, ‘back in the older

  • days, passion was used for religious martyrs’, which means that people who would die for

  • their religion. But now it has lost that intensity in terms of you know dying for religion, but

  • rather it has become dying for your love. So what if you go on a date with a person

  • for the first time and they get on their knees and tell you that they would die for you,

  • they are probably passionate about you or maybe just nuts, which means that it might

  • be just crazy. So passion is basically associated with love, but you can also use to talk about

  • your interests using the wordpassion’. For example, you are just crazy about photography

  • which means that you love doing it, it's really nice and you enjoy it just a lot. So that's

  • when you can usepassion’. But it's less thanobsessionand more thanmad

  • about’. Sopassionis, when you love doing something. To put it in a sentence you

  • could say that, ‘photography is my passionand forobsessedyou could say, ‘she's

  • really obsessed with fashion’, which means that she just can't stop thinking about fashion.

  • Or you know if you want to use it as a noun, you could also sayobsessionand you

  • could say that, ‘losing weight is my obsession’. So here you useobsessionas a noun

  • andpassionas I told you, ‘photography is my passionorhistory has always

  • been my passionor you could say, I'm passionate about cinema’. Okay, now with this we look

  • at the next word that we have and this word is pronounced asavid’. Soavid

  • is a person who really likes to do something as much as they can. What about reading? Do

  • you really like reading? Then maybe you like to do it almost all the time, whenever you

  • get an opportunity you pick up a newspaper or pick up a book or maybe just scroll through

  • your phone through articles and you start reading because you're an avid reader, which

  • means that you try to do something as much as you can. So a synonym for this would be

  • eager’, which means that you just can't wait to do something. Another word that you

  • can use foravidiskeenand if you want to use it in a sentence you could

  • say, ‘I'm an avid readeror you could say, ‘I'm a keen cyclist’. So this is

  • how you use this word before a noun nowavidcan have one more meaning and that is, ‘greedy’,

  • okay? ‘Avidcan also meangreedy’. So if someone tells you that, ‘you're avid

  • for success’, they are not telling you that you're eager for success, they are telling

  • you that you're greedy for success. So according to the context, you have to understand what

  • doesavidmean, whether it meanseageror it meansgreedy’. Okay now with that

  • we look at the next one, ‘lives and breathes’. This is a phrase that you can use to talk

  • about your interest. We've already looked at some words, but now we'll look at a phrase,

  • so if youlive and breathesomething, you give all your time to that thing, okay?

  • Live and breathemeans, give all your time to it. In real life you give all your

  • time to living and breathing, but sometimes there are certain things which we almost give,

  • do as if youre breathing. For example if you really love listening to music and that's

  • what you do all the time then you could say, that I live and breathe music, okay? Now with

  • this we look at the next phrase that we have and that is, ‘wrapped up’. So do you know

  • what is a wrapper? A wrapper is a cover with which you cover a gift, you wrap it. So there

  • is no part of the box that is visible. The same way when you're wrapped up with something,

  • you only do that thing and you cannot think about doing anything else. There are times

  • in our lives when we have so much work to do that we're completely loaded and we don't

  • have time to do anything else, not even pick up a phone call. Those are the times when

  • you're wrapped up with work. And if such is the case, then you could call up, if you if

  • you get a call from your friend you could pick up and say, ‘hey, I'm really wrapped

  • up in work right now, can I get back to you tomorrow?’ So this means that you can only

  • think about your interest at that time. So when you're wrapped up you can only think

  • about one thing. The next is, ‘right up my street’. So when something is just the

  • correct thing for you, you say that, ‘it's, right up my street’. If you love eating

  • and if you love charity and there's an event, which has both of these things you could say

  • that, ‘hey, this event is just right up my street because I love eating and I love

  • raising money for charity’. So this means that, ‘it's just correct for you’. This

  • is how a Britisher would say, ‘right up my streetbut if an American had to use

  • the same phrase he would say, ‘it's right up my alleywhich means same as street

  • in American English. Okay, now we have looked at so many phrases and words to talk about

  • the things that we like. At the same time there are things that we do not like which

  • we are not interested in and those kind of things can be expressed using the word, a

  • phrase, ‘not my thing’. So if you don't enjoy something and you don't usually do it,

  • it's not your thing’. For example, if you don't dance often, you could say, ‘sorry

  • dance is not my thingif someone asks you to dance, you could say, ‘sorry, dance is

  • not my thing’, which means I don't like it and I usually don't do it. So, ‘not my

  • thingmeans you usually don't do it. An alternative to this would be, ‘not my cup

  • of teathis is a British version of this American phrase, ‘not my thingand in

  • British English you'd say, ‘not my cup of tea’. So if you don't like playing board

  • game, you could say, ‘sorry, I don't like playing board games, it's just not my cup

  • of tea’. Now we have the last one and that is something that leaves you cold, so feeling

  • really cold is not a great feeling and if something leaves you cold it actually makes

  • you feel bad after it finishes likeoperafor me, I really don't like opera, I sort

  • of get afraid when I hear to it, so it leaves me cold, which means that I feel scared and

  • I don't feel good after listening to opera, so I don't listen to it. So if ever someone

  • invites me to listen to opera I say that, ‘sorry it scares me and it leaves me cold’.

  • So this expression means that something makes you feel rather worse, leaves you feeling

  • worse. So the next time someone asks you what are you into? Or what's your passion? Or maybe

  • your obsession? You have various ways to tell them about the things that you are interested

  • in and the things that you're not interested in. So feel free to use these phrases and

  • also leave me a comment if any of these works out for you and if you like this lesson please

  • click the like button and thank you so much for staying with me till now. See you soon

  • in another lesson bye-bye

So what are you into? Are you into football or basketball? Did you understand what I asked

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