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  • Huge floods in Sydney. Has the climate crisis made them worse?

  • This is News Review from BBC Learning English. I'm Neil.

  • And I'm Beth. Learn words and expressions

  • you can use to talk about climate change.

  • And don't forget there's a quiz on our website.

  • But for now, some more on our story.

  • Eight months' rain in just four days

  • in parts of Sydney.

  • Thousands of people are being told to leave their homes

  • in the Australian city.

  • It's the third time

  • this year that floods have hit.

  • Experts say it is being caused by the La Nina weather pattern,

  • but made worse by climate change.

  • You have been looking at the headlines, Beth.

  • What's the vocabulary?

  • We have 'deluge', 'new normal', and 'far from'

  • This is News Review from BBC Learning English.

  • Let's have a look at our first headline. This one comes from BBC News.

  •   And we're looking at 'deluge'

  • which means a very heavy fall of rain in a short period.

  • But there is more to it than that.

  • Yeah, there is. To start,

  • there's the pronunciation.

  • There's a /j/ sound in the middle, and a /dʒ/ sound at the end. 'Deluge'.

  • And we can't see this in the spelling,

  • and it's also a rather formal sounding word.

  • Yeah, and that funny pronunciation, and the fact it's a bit formal,

  • is probably because of its French and Latin origin.

  • If you want something less formal,

  • you can say 'downpour'.

  • Going back to 'deluge',

  • though, we can use it to talk about more than just rain.

  • Yeah, we can use it to talk about a lot of things happening

  • at the same time. For example, 'a deluge of emails' or 'a deluge of work'.

  • Yeah, and in this case,

  • it can also be a verb.

  • You can 'be deluged by something'.

  • It means that you've got too much of something to do.

  • Beth, I am deluged.

  • I've got too much to do. I think we'd better give you a break then, Neil.

  • Let's have a look at that one more time and I'll relax.

  • Let's have a look at our next

  • headline. This one comes from CNN News.

  •   And we are looking at 'new normal'. Now,

  • this is an expression which became popular during the Covid pandemic

  • lockdowns. Absolutely.

  • During lockdowns,

  • people stopped doing things they considered normal before the pandemic.

  • Things like meeting

  • family and friends, working in an office, travelling. But all that changed.

  • That was the old normal.

  • Yeah. And in the new normal office workers had to work from home.

  • You couldn't meet up with friends and family.

  • You couldn't really travel.

  • People had to, many people still have to, wear a mask - that became the new normal.

  • Yeah. And so with this story,

  • it's the third time

  • this year that Sydney has flooded,

  • so it doesn't normally suffer from that much rain.

  • But now flooding is no longer an unusual event.

  • Yeah. So, unfortunately for Sydney,

  • it seems floods are the new normal.

  • Let's have a look at that one more time.

  • OK. Our next headline, please.

  • This one is from the Evening Standard.

  • We are looking at 'far from' which means 'not at all'.

  • Yeah, now as you all know,

  • we usually use 'far' to talk about physical distance, but in this case,

  • we're using 'far from' to talk about situations.

  • So you can imagine that if something is far from over,

  • as it's used in this headline,

  • it means that it is not at all over. There are plenty more floods to come.

  • Yeah, and it's pretty useful this 'far from'.

  • We can use it, not just 'far from over',

  • we can use it in other situations. Yeah, we can.

  • For example, we can say that something is 'far from ideal'

  • which means that it is 'not at all a good situation'.

  • Yes, and we were talking earlier about the Covid

  • lockdowns. Lots of people had to work from home, including us.

  • Now, if you make radio or videos like this,

  • it is far from ideal to work. from home. Yeah.

  • It's definitely better to be in a studio like this one.

  • Absolutely. Now,

  • 'far from', also, why do we need it?

  • We said that it means

  • 'not at all'. So, why do we need another expression?

  • Well, I mean it means, metaphorically,

  • that there's a long way to go.

  • So, it has a more dramatic way of saying 'not at all'. OK.

  • Let's look at that one more time.

  • We've had 'deluge': Too much rain at once,

  • can be too much of other stuff too.

  •   'New normal': things used to happen

  • one way, but now they happen like this. And 'far from'. It means

  • 'not at all'.

  • Don't forget there's a quiz on a website.

  • Thank you for joining us, and goodbye. Bye.

Huge floods in Sydney. Has the climate crisis made them worse?

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