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Hi guys! Welcome to the video series Idioms We Heard This Week.

Today, I’m sitting down with my husband David

and we’re going to talk about some interesting idioms, phrasal verbs, vocabulary words,

that came up that made us go hmm this week.

So to start, I want to talk about some visitors we had.

Tom Kelly, who a lot of you might know, and he’s been on this channel quite a bit,

he and his wife Julie came to visit us this past weekend.

So fun!

They’re just so fun! There’s such good people.

So anyway, there was a birthday party that we had to go to,

for one of Stoney’s friend. Someone turning 2 years old.

So, David, Stoney, and I went there,

and Tom and Julie went out exploring in the neighborhood

and he texted me: We’re out and about.

Is there anything you need?

Like, should…can we pick up something for dinner or whatever?

And I texted him back: No, we’re all set.

And then I thought, oh, all set. That’s sort of an interesting phrase

that we use.

And when I did a little bit of research about it online,

people seem to imply that it was a little bit regional,

that it was more of a New England thing. But…

Really?

Yeah. But I grew up in Florida, you grew up in PA,

I didn’t feel that it was really a regional thing.

I don’t think so.

So when you’re ‘all set’, it means you don’t need anything,

something is finished,

you don’t need help or assistance.

So what would be another case which you might use or hear the phrase ‘all set’?

Yeah, the one that I thought of was when you are at a restaurant,

and the server comes and says ‘Would you like anything else?'

This is at the end of the meal.

I often find myself saying ‘Oh no, we’re all set.’

And it’s, I’m implying we’re all set or I might even say:

‘And we’re ready for the check.’

Yeah.

So it’s like ‘Nope, we’re done, and we’re ready to go.’

Yeah, we don’t need anything more.

This is actually reminding me when I was in graduate school,

I tutored a girl in high school.

And her mom was asking me about a phrase

that the high schoolers were using and that was ‘I’m good.’

Like if the high schoolers were at her house, and she would say,

you know, ‘Can I get you a soda or whatever?’

And they would say ‘I’m good’

and she didn’t know, does that mean yes? Or does that mean no?

And I explained it means ‘No, it’s sort of like I’m all set, I’m good, I don’t need anything.’

Right.

No, thank you.

Mm-hmm

Okay, another word that jumped out at me this week was,

Stoney has a book with little flaps that you can lift which, of course, he loves

and there are 100 animals to learn in this book and one of them is badger.

And I was thinking about how I actually saw a badger in real life, probably

six or eight years ago,

I was by myself walking in the woods in western Massachusetts and this huge thing

walked across the trail in front of me and I was like:

“What was that?”

And I never even knew what it was until I saw Stoney’s book.

‘Huge’ meaning what?

Like four or five feet long.

  • Wow.
  • Yes.

Larger than a dog?

Oh yeah. I mean, way, way shorter.

  • Yeah.
  • Way more squat.

Wow.

Yes and I didn’t know what it was

even and until I was looking at Stoney’s book

and there was a picture of it. I was like, ‘Oh, it was a badger.’

And then I was thinking, you know,

I kind of know a little bit about otters.

They swim and the river,

badgers, they like to make dams.

What— oh no, sorry.

  • Beavers.
  • Beavers.

Beavers like to make dams.

But what is the deal with a badger?

Like, what does a badger do? What’s…

What should I know about badgers? And then,

then I thought about how we use the word badger

in a negative way.

And it means like to pester somebody, to keep bothering somebody about something.

For example,

I told David that I wanted to make this video,

and I sort of badgered you to cut your hair.

Did you feel a little badgered?

Like, every day, I was like ‘Don’t forget to cut your hair before Thursday.’

I just— I felt openly badgered.

You did.
Yes.

So it wasn’t just like—

It wasn’t slightly badgered…

It was like ‘Shut up Rachel, I get it.’

Yeah. Mm-hmm.

I badgered you.

You badgered me.

Well, the reason why I badgered him, for the record, is because he kept not doing it.

That’s classic badger mentality.

Another word for it would be ‘nag’.

  • Yeah.
  • I nagged.

I was a nag. I was nagging him a little bit. I was badgering him

to cut his hair. He did. Doesn’t he look nice?

That makes up for it.
Yeah.

Okay, so then I was also thinking about what other animal words do we use this way?

When we’re talking about an animal

or we use something relating to an animal to describe a human

or something human and I thought of the word ‘bear hug’.

Do you guys know this term?

It’s when you give like a big,

huge embrace of somebody.

There are different ways you can hug, right?

You can be like a little light hug, or like I hardly want to touch you hug.

That is not a bear hug. A bear hug is…

like a huge embrace. Lots of body contact in a bear hug.

And Stoney, who’s two years old, is just learning about hugging.

Yeah.

And I was just saying that to him.

No, I want a bear hug. He gave me kind of a light one

and I wanted him to really hug me.

Yeah. We’re trying to get him to give us a really good hugs

while we can and we’re like teaching him.

No, put your arms around my neck and squeeze.

We’re badgering him into it.

We are. We are badgering Stoney into giving us bear hugs.

Okay, we also thought about, you had brought up sheepish.

  • Sheepish.
  • Mmm-hmm.

Yeah. I think it means that you’re feeling a little bit

cautious or a little shy. A little bit anxious.

Hesitant, maybe.

  • Yeah.
  • Yeah.

It often comes up in

how someone answers a question.

Mm-hmm.

They answered sheepishly,

like, sort of, they hesitated in their answer that they weren’t sounding confident.

Yeah. Now, our chairs, our dining room chairs, are squeaky.

Sure are.

We’ll have to get them re-glued.

Okay, another animal one I thought of was ‘squirrely’.

So you could use this to describe a person

and basically it means they’re sort of acting like a squirrel,

which is like moving a lot. Quick movements.

I read that it can also mean odd or eccentric.

Eccentric.

Eccentric. Is that how you say that?

Yeah.

I don’t say it that way.

I think I’m right.

Well, I’ll have to look it up.

David is correct.

The pronunciation of this word is: eccentric.

Eccentric.

So another one I was thinking of this week was,

I was typing an email to my assistant

talking about an email that had not been sent properly

and I said ‘Was it an oversight?’

And then I was thinking about oversight and overlook

and how they mean the same thing but ‘oversight’

is the noun version.

An ‘oversight’ is something that you failed to notice

and the verb of it would be ‘I overlooked that, I’m sorry, I missed it.’

But overlook is also a noun and it has nothing to do with missing something.

Not noticing something.

But an overlook would be like a Vista,

a visual over a cliff, overlooking something below.

Right. Right.

Yeah. That’s tough. That those two are verb and noun.

Yeah.

They are really different.

So when you fail to notice something,

the noun is: It was an oversight.

The verb is:

I overlooked that. Overlook.

But ‘overlook’ as a noun, is like a viewpoint.

For example, if you’re driving along the highway, you might see

Scenic Overlook Ahead.

A sign for that and then you can pull over, take a break, take in the view, that’s an overlook.

Those are always good. Not always. But they’re almost always worth it.

  • Yeah.
  • To stop.

You might as well.

Take a little break.

We did that a lot on our road trip.

Well, yeah because that was the whole point of the road trip,

was to like take our time on the road.

I feel like growing up,

my family used to take monster road trips,

because we lived so far from all of our family.

We were always going somewhere. We always had like a destination in mind.

We’re always trying to get there quickly,

which might be 18 hours.

Like it took 18 hours to drive from our house to my grandparents’ house.

So there was no stopping for overlooks.

It’s my childhood.

We just had to get there because there is already so much driving involved.

The last thing I noticed this week that I thought, ‘Oh! I want to teach that in a video.’

is it’s cold in Philly, and I was walking down the street,

and someone was walking towards me and we were all kind of huddled into our jackets

and she said something to me and I didn’t understand

and I said ‘Sorry’ and then she repeated herself and I thought

‘Sorry’, that’s such a good word to know because

when I’ve been in another country,

trying to speak and learn and study another language,

I’ve always struggled to know the quickest, most efficient way

to let someone know that you didn’t understand what they said.

And so I thought I’ve got to tell my students about this, if they’re not already using it.

If someone says something and you don’t understand,

you can simply say the word ‘Sorry’ with your intonation going up.

And that’s like saying ‘I am sorry, I didn’t understand.’ Could you please repeat yourself?

It’s like saying all of that in one simple word: sorry.

And also it’s, it’s, you’re not standing out as a non-native speaker by doing that.

  • Right.
  • People say that for different reasons.

It might mean that it just wasn’t quite loud enough.

Mm-hmm.

Saying ‘sorry’

as in ‘I need a little more volume’ but it can also be

sorry…

as in ‘Sorry, I wasn’t… sorry, I wasn’t quite paying attention. Can you tell me again?’

Sorry?

Mm-hmm.

That’s a great trick.

Yeah. So native speakers use that one all the time too.

So that is a good one to have on-hand when you’re speaking with Americans.

So guys I think I forgot to introduce my husband David at the beginning of this video.

So this is my husband David.

Hey, everybody.

And we got the idea to make a series of videos like this

that are a little bit more conversational, that are discussing

interesting things with English that we noticed throughout our week.

So that we can be teaching you idioms or interesting words that

we’re actually using in our daily conversational lives.

The idea for this came out of our podcast.

We had a podcast going last year

which we discontinued because of not quite having enough time

but we made 25 episodes and they’re, they’re pretty good.

You can get a free transcript for any of those

so if you want to go back and listen to some of those podcasts,

you can go to RachelsEnglish.com/podcast

Also let me know what you thought of the format of this video.

Something more conversational. Was that helpful for you?

And I think we can even ask people if they hear an idiom or phrasal verb,

and they’re not quite sure the meaning or how it’s used,

that they can comment below and we can think about using that also in one of our videos.

Yeah. That’d be great.

Yeah. So please feel free to do that

if you hear something you’re not quite sure what it means or why it was used like that.

Then put it in the comments below and we’ll read those and

might be able to answer it in a future video.

So that’s it guys, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.

嗨,大家好! 欢迎收看本周我们听到的成语系列视频。

今天,我和我的丈夫大卫坐下来

,我们将讨论一些有趣的成语、短语动词、词汇,

这些都是让我们本周去的。

所以首先,我想谈谈我们的一些访客。

汤姆凯利,你们很多人可能都知道,他经常上这个频道,

他和他的妻子朱莉上周末来拜访我们。

很有趣!

他们真是太有趣了! 有这么好的人

所以无论如何,我们必须参加一个生日派对,

为斯托尼的一个朋友。 一个2岁的人。

所以,大卫、斯托尼和我去了那里

,汤姆和朱莉在附近出去探索

,他给我发了短信:我们出去走走。

你有什么需要吗?

就像,应该……我们可以拿点东西吃晚饭吗?

我给他回了短信:不,我们都准备好了。

然后我想,哦,一切就绪。 这是我们使用的一个有趣的短语

当我在网上对它进行一些研究时,

人们似乎暗示它有点区域性

,它更像是新英格兰的东西。 但是……

真的吗?

是的。 但我在佛罗里达长大,你在宾夕法尼亚长大,

我不觉得这真的是一个地区性的事情。

我不这么认为。

因此,当您“一切就绪”时,这意味着您不需要任何东西,

事情已经完成,

您不需要帮助或帮助。

那么,您可能会使用或听到“一切就绪”这个短语的另一种情况是什么?

是的,我想到的是当你在一家餐馆时

,服务员过来说‘你还想要什么吗?

这是在用餐结束时。

我经常发现自己说:“哦,不,我们都准备好了。”

而且,我暗示我们都准备好了,或者我什至可以说:

“我们已经准备好接受检查了。”

是的。

所以这就像“不,我们已经完成了,我们准备好了。”

是的,我们不需要更多。

这其实是在提醒我在读研究生的时候,

我辅导过一个高中女生。

她妈妈问我

高中生用的一个短语,那就是“我很好。”

就像高中生在她家,她会说,

你知道,“我可以给你一杯苏打水吗?” 管他呢?'

他们会说“我很好”

而她不知道,这是否意味着是的? 或者这意味着没有?

我解释说这意味着‘不,这有点像我已经准备好了,我很好,我不需要任何东西。’

对。

不,谢谢。

嗯,

好吧,本周我突然想到的另一个词是,

斯通尼有一本书,你可以举起小襟翼,当然,他很喜欢

,这本书中有 100 种动物要学习,其中一种是獾 .

我在想我是如何在现实生活中看到一只獾的,大概

六八年前,

我一个人走在马萨诸塞州西部的树林里,这个巨大的东西

穿过我面前的小径,我当时想:

“那是什么?”

在我看到斯托尼的书之前,我什至都不知道它是什么。

“巨大”是什么意思?

大概有四五尺长。

  • 哇。
  • 是的。

比狗还大?

哦耶。 我的意思是,方式,方式更短。

  • 是的。
  • 更深蹲。

哇。

是的,我什至不知道它是

什么,直到我在看斯托尼的书

并且有一张照片。 我当时想,“哦,那是一只獾。

”然后我在想,你知道,

我对水獭有点了解。

他们游泳和河流,

獾,他们喜欢建造水坝。

什么——哦不,对不起。

  • 海狸。
  • 海狸。

海狸喜欢筑坝。

但是与獾有什么关系呢?

比如,獾是做什么的? 什么是…

关于獾我应该知道些什么? 然后,

我想到了我们如何

以负面的方式使用獾这个词。

这意味着喜欢纠缠某人,一直在为某事打扰某人。

例如,

我告诉大卫我想制作这个视频

,我有点纠缠你剪头发。

是不是觉得有点被打脸了?

就像,每天,我都在说‘别忘了在星期四之前剪掉你的头发。’

我只是——我觉得自己被公开纠缠了。

你做到了。
是的。

所以它不只是——

它没有一点点的纠缠

……就像“闭嘴,瑞秋,我明白了。”

是的。 嗯嗯。

我纠缠了你。

你缠着我。

好吧,我之所以纠缠他,为了记录,是因为他一直不这样做。

这就是典型的獾心态。

另一个词是“唠叨”。

  • 是的。
  • 我唠叨。

我是个唠叨。 我有点唠叨他。 我缠着

他剪头发。 他做到了。 他不好看吗?

这弥补了这一点。
是的。

好的,那么我也在想我们用这种方式使用的其他动物词是什么?

当我们谈论动物

或使用与动物相关的东西来描述人类

或人类时,我想到了“熊抱”这个词。

大家知道这个词吗?

当你给予某人一个大大的

拥抱时。

拥抱的方式有很多种,对吧?

你可以像一个轻轻的拥抱,或者像我几乎不想碰你的拥抱。

那不是熊抱。 熊抱……

就像一个巨大的拥抱。 熊抱中的大量身体接触。

两岁的斯通尼正在学习拥抱。

是的。

我只是对他这么说。

不,我想要一个熊抱。 他给了我一种轻的

,我希望他真的拥抱我。

是的。 我们试图让他在我们可以的时候给我们一个非常好的拥抱

,我们就像在教他。

不,把你的手臂搂在我的脖子上并挤压。

我们正在纠缠他。

我们是。 我们缠着斯通尼给我们熊抱。

好吧,我们也想到了,你提出来害羞了。

  • 笨拙。
  • 嗯嗯。

是的。 我认为这意味着你感到有点

谨慎或有点害羞。 有点着急。

犹豫,也许吧。

  • 是的。
  • 是的。

它经常出现在

某人如何回答问题上。

嗯嗯。

他们羞怯地回答

,就像,他们在回答时犹豫不决,因为他们听起来并不自信。

是的。 现在,我们的椅子,我们的餐厅椅子,都吱吱作响。

当然是。

我们必须让它们重新粘合。

好吧,我想到的另一种动物是“松鼠”。

所以你可以用它来形容一个人

,基本上这意味着他们有点像松鼠

,就像移动了很多。 快速动作。

我读到它也可能意味着奇怪或古怪。

偏心。

偏心。 你是这样说的吗?

是的。

我不是这样说的。

我想我是对的。

嗯,我得查一下。

大卫是对的。

这个词的读音是:古怪。

偏心。

所以我这周想到的另一个问题是,

我正在给我的助手打

一封电子邮件,谈论一封没有正确发送的电子邮件

,我说“这是一个疏忽吗?

”然后我在考虑疏忽和忽视

以及如何 它们的意思相同,但“监督”

是名词版本。

“oversight”是你没有注意到的东西

,它的动词是“我忽略了那个,对不起,我错过了。”

但是 overlook 也是一个名词,它与错过一些东西无关。

没有注意到什么。

但是俯瞰就像是远景,

悬崖上的视觉,俯瞰下面的东西。

对。 对。

是的。 这很难。 这两个是动词和名词。

是的。

他们真的很不一样。

因此,当您没有注意到某事时

,名词是:这是一个疏忽。

动词是:

我忽略了这一点。 俯瞰。

但是“俯瞰”作为名词,就像一个观点。

例如,如果您在高速公路上行驶,您可能会看到

Scenic Overlook Ahead。

一个标志,然后你可以停下来,休息一下,看看风景,这是一个俯瞰。

那些总是好的。 不总是。 但它们几乎总是值得的。

  • 是的。
  • 停止。

你还不如。

休息一下。

我们在公路旅行中做了很多。

嗯,是的,因为那是公路旅行的全部意义,

就是喜欢在路上花点时间。

我觉得自己长大了,

我的家人过去常常去怪物公路旅行,

因为我们住的地方离我们全家都很远。

我们总是去某个地方。 我们总是想着一个目的地。

我们总是试图快速到达那里

,可能需要 18 个小时。

就像从我们家开车到我祖父母家花了 18 个小时。

所以没有停下来俯瞰。

这是我的童年。

我们只需要到达那里,因为已经涉及很多驾驶。

本周我注意到的最后一件事是,我想,‘哦! 我想在视频中教这个。

“费城很冷吗,我走在街上

,有人朝我走来,我们都挤在夹克里

,她对我说了些什么,我没有”

听不懂,我说“对不起”,然后她重复了一遍,我想“

对不起”,这是一个很好的词,因为

当我在另一个国家,

试图说、学习和学习另一种语言时,

我已经 一直在努力寻找最快、最有效的方法

来让别人知道你不明白他们所说的话。

所以我想我必须告诉我的学生,如果他们还没有使用它。

如果有人说了什么而你不明白,

你可以简单地说“对不起”这个词,你的语调会提高。

这就像在说“对不起,我不明白。”你能重复一遍吗?

这就像用一个简单的词说出所有这些:对不起。

而且,这样做,您并不会以非母语人士的身份脱颖而出。

  • 对。
  • 人们出于不同的原因这么说。

这可能意味着它只是不够响亮。

嗯嗯。

说“对不起”

就像“我需要更多的音量”,但也可以是

抱歉……

就像“对不起,我没有……对不起,我没有很注意”。 你能再告诉我一次吗?

对不起?

嗯嗯。

这是一个很棒的技巧。

是的。 所以母语人士也一直使用那个。

因此,当您与美国人交谈时,这是一个很好的手头。

所以伙计们,我想我忘了在这个视频的开头介绍我的丈夫大卫。

这是我的丈夫大卫。

大家好。

我们有了制作这样一系列视频的想法,这些视频

更具对话性,

用英语讨论我们在一周中注意到的有趣事物。

这样我们就可以教您

在日常生活中实际使用的习语或有趣的单词。

这个想法来自我们的播客。

去年我们有一个播客,

由于时间不够,我们停止了播客,

但我们制作了 25 集,它们非常好。

您可以免费获得其中任何一个的成绩单,

因此如果您想回去收听其中的一些播客,

您可以访问 RachelsEnglish.com/podcast

也让我知道您对这个视频格式的看法。

更对话的东西。 这对你有帮助吗?

我认为我们甚至可以询问人们是否听到了成语或短语动词

,他们不太确定其含义或

如何使用,他们可以在下面发表评论,我们也可以考虑在我们的一个视频中使用它。

是的。 那简直太好了。

是的。 因此,

如果您听到一些您不太确定它的含义或为什么这样使用它的东西,请随时这样做。

然后将其放在下面的评论中,我们将阅读这些内容,并

可能在未来的视频中回答它。

就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。