Talking About Crime and Court in English Spoken English Lesson

Hi, I’m Gina. Welcome to Oxford Online English!  

In this lesson, you can learn to talk about crime 
in English. You’ll learn vocabulary you can use  

to talk about crime, criminals 
and the justice system in English.

Before we begin, check out our website: Oxford 
Online English dot com. Do you want to see a  

range of video and listening lessons to improve 
your English, all 100% free? We have that!  

Do you want to take online classes 
with a professional teacher?  

We can do that, too! Oxford 
Online English dot com.

Let’s start with part one, where you’ll hear a 
conversation about being a victim of a crime. 

How was your trip?

My trip was good… But my house 
was burgled while I was gone.

Oh no!

Yeah… I came back to find the back window 
broken, and everything was messed up inside.

I’m so sorry to hear that. 
Do you know when it happened?

Not exactly. Apparently there have been 
several break-ins in the area recently, though.

Did they take much stuff?

Some electronics, a laptop, a few other 
small things. It’s all replaceable,  

but it’s still not a good feeling.

I’m sure. Still, maybe the police will 
catch them and you’ll get it back.

Maybe, but I doubt it. They 
came and dusted for prints,  

but they said that there was almost 
no chance of recovering my things.

Really?

They say that stolen goods tend to be moved 
out of the city and sold somewhere else,  

so they’re very difficult to trace. The 
detective told me that there’s a whole  

network of fences around the country, 
and they move stolen items between them.

Sounds like big business.

Look at a sentence you heard 
at the start of the dialogue. 

Do you remember the missing word?
The word was ‘burgled’, from the verb ‘to burgle’.

With crime vocabulary, you often 
need to learn words in threes. 

Do you know the noun forms?
Here they are. 

You need to know one noun for the person, 
one noun for the activity, and the verb.

Sometimes, some of the forms might be the 
same. For example: murder, murderer, murder.

Sometimes, one of the forms might be a completely 
different word, like this: steal, thief, stealing. 

Keep this in mind when learning crime vocabulary.

Let’s look at some other useful 
vocabulary from the dialogue. 

Here’s a task for you: look at the definitions. 
Can you match the words to the definitions?

Pause the video and find your answers.
Could you do it? Let’s look! 

‘Break-in’ and ‘burglary’ have a similar meaning; 
you could use either word in this sentence. 

‘Fence’ is a colloquial word, 
but it’s useful sometimes  

as there’s no single word with the same meaning.

Let’s move on to part two. Don’t forget that 
you can always review a dialogue or a section  

as many times as you need.

That was fun!

Yes, we should do it again some time.

By the way, how are you getting home?

I’ll walk through the park, 
and then get the bus, I think.

Maybe get a taxi instead? My colleague 
was mugged near here last week.

Really? I didn’t think there 
was much street crime here.

No, me neither, but it’s better to be careful.  

She was robbed at knifepoint. 
She’s fine but it was scary.

I bet. I know there’s a lot of 
pickpocketing on public transport  

here, but I didn’t think 
there was much violent crime.

Well, maybe it was just bad luck, 
but better to be safe, I think.

Yeah, I’ll get a taxi.

Let’s see if you can remember the key 
vocabulary you heard. Look at some sentences.

Can you remember the missing words? 
Pause the video and think about it.  

If you want, go back and listen to 
the dialogues again, and find them! 

Ready? Let’s look. 

Did you get them right? Next, 
can you explain what they mean? 

Mugging is a kind of robbery. In general, 
‘robbery’ means stealing by using violence or the  

threat of violence. Mugging is robbery which takes 
place on the street, or in another public place. 

‘Street crime’ includes crimes like mugging,  

pickpocketing, graffiti, and so on. In general, 
it refers to crimes which are committed in public. 

‘She was robbed at knifepoint’ means that someone 
threatened her with a knife. You can also use the  

word ‘gunpoint’. For example, ‘The gang held 
the bank staff at gunpoint during the robbery.’ 

Pickpocketing means stealing from someone’s bag 
or wallet, usually in a crowded public place. 

Here’s an important point: in English, there 
are many different words for different types  

of stealing. You’ve heard some of 
them already: burglary, robbery,  

mugging and pickpocketing. There’s also 
shoplifting which means stealing from shops.

It’s more common to use these 
specific words when possible,  

instead of using general words like ‘stealing’.

Don’t forget also to learn the three words for 
each crime. For example: mug, mugger, mugging. 

Is there much street crime or 
pickpocketing where you live?  

How can you protect yourself from this? 
Think about what you could say on this topic. 

OK? Let’s move on.

Where’s John? He’s twenty minutes late!

He probably underestimated how long 
it would take to get here on the bus.

Why’s he taking the bus?

Oh, you didn’t hear? He was done for DUI.

No way!

Yeah. He got a twelve-month driving ban, and 
he has to do some community service, too.

Wow! He’s such a car nut, too. 
That must really hurt him.

I’m sure. I think it’s worse because he 
got a couple of speeding tickets last year,  

so he already had some points on his license.

Well, he can’t really complain.

Let’s see three sentences from the dialogue.
What do these phrases mean? Could you explain  

them to someone?
Try it now. 

Try to complete these sentences. Pause 
the video and say your answers out loud,  

or write them down, or both.
Could you do it? Let’s check!

‘Done’ is British slang. It means ‘convicted’, 
meaning that you are found guilty in court. ‘DUI’  

stands for ‘driving under the influence’, 
which means driving while drunk or on drugs.

If you wanted to say this in a more formal 
way, you could say ‘He was convicted of DUI’.

If you want to say this in a neutral style, 
you could say ‘He was arrested for DUI.’

‘Arrested’ and ‘convicted’ aren’t the 
same. ‘Arrested’ means when the police  

first find you and take you to the police station. 
‘Convicted’ is when you are found guilty in court.  

However, in everyday conversation, people 
might not use these words so precisely.  

People might say ‘arrested’ when the 
real meaning is ‘convicted in court’. 

A driving ban means that you are forbidden 
from driving for a period of time. 

Community service is a punishment, 
usually for less serious crimes.  

It means you have to spend a certain 
number of hours working for free.  

For example, you might have to 
pick up litter on the street. 

If you have points on your license, you have been 
caught breaking the law while driving before.  

Many countries use a points system. If 
you, for example, break the speed limit  

and the police catch you, you get points on 
your license. If you get too many points,  

you might lose your driver’s license, or you 
might be banned from driving for some time.

Clear? To practise, try answering some questions.
Think about your answers to these questions.  

Pause the video, make your answers, and say 
them out loud. If you want extra practice,  

write your answers in the comments 
and share them with other learners! 

Could you do it? Great! 
Let’s look at one more point. 

Before you listen to the dialogue, 
we have a challenge for you:  

try to find words with these 
meanings in the dialogue. 

Got it? Try to find these words as you listen.

Could I ask a favour? Could I 
take half a day off on Wednesday?

Should be OK. Can I ask what it’s for?

Well… I have a friend who 
was arrested for shoplifting.  

She says she didn’t do it, and 
for what it’s worth I believe her,  

but anyway, Wednesday is her court date 
and I said I’d go along to support her.

Sure, no problem. How long is the trial?

It’s at the magistrates’ court, so as I understand  

it it’s pretty quick. It’s not a 
full trial with a jury and so on.

Do you think she’ll get off?

I don’t know. Even if not, she has a 
clean record so I don’t think she’ll  

get more than a slap on the 
wrist, figuratively speaking.

Yes, I mean, I don’t think people 
go to prison for shoplifting, right?

I don’t think so. At least, not 
for a first offense. Anyway,  

that’s not really my concern. I’m just going 
to support her, and whatever happens, happens.

Before you listen to the dialogue, 
we have a challenge for you: try to  

find words with these meanings in the dialogue.
Got it? Try to find these words as you listen. 

Could you do it? Let’s see the answers.

‘Get off’ is slang. More formally, 
you could say ‘be found innocent’.  

So, in the dialogue I
asked ‘Do you think she’ll get off?’  

In formal English, you’d say ‘Do 
you think she’ll be found innocent?’ 

‘A slap on the wrist’ is an idiom. Often, it’s 
used to refer to a punishment which is less  

serious than it should have been. So, 
if some people commit a serious crime,  

but only receive a light punishment, you could 
say ‘They got away with a slap on the wrist.’

Different countries have different justice 
systems. In the UK, there are two levels of court:  

magistrates’ court and Crown Court.  

Magistrates’ courts deal with things like theft, 
traffic offenses, minor assault, and so on.  

More serious crimes go to Crown Court, where 
trials are held with a jury of twelve citizens.

There’s much more useful language relating 
to crime and punishment in the dialogues,  

so we recommend reviewing them at least once,  

and writing down words or 
phrases you want to remember.

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!

你好,我是吉娜。 欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

在本课中,您可以学习用英语谈论犯罪
。 您将学习可以用来用英语

谈论犯罪、罪犯
和司法系统的词汇。

在开始之前,请查看我们的网站:Oxford
Online English dot com。 您想观看

一系列 100% 免费的视频和听力课程来提高
您的英语水平吗? 我们有那个!

您想与专业老师一起参加在线课程
吗?

我们也可以这样做! 牛津
在线英语 dot com。

让我们从第一部分开始,在那里您将听到
关于成为犯罪受害者的对话。

你的旅途怎么样?

我的旅行很好……但是我
离开时我的房子被盗了。

不好了!

是的……我回来发现后窗
坏了,里面的一切都乱七八糟了。

我很遗憾听到这个消息。
你知道它是什么时候发生的吗?

不完全是。 不过,显然
该地区最近发生了几起闯入事件。

他们带了很多东西吗?

一些电子产品,一台笔记本电脑,还有一些其他的
小东西。 都是可以更换的,

但是感觉还是不好。

我确定。 不过,也许警察会
抓住他们,你会拿回来的。

也许吧,但我对此表示怀疑。 他们
来找指纹,

但他们说几乎
没有机会找回我的东西。

真的吗?

他们说,赃物往往会被运
出城市并出售到其他地方,

因此很难追踪。
侦探告诉我,全国有一个完整

的围栏网络
,他们在它们之间移动被盗物品。

听起来像大生意。

看看你
在对话开始时听到的一句话。

你还记得丢失的单词吗?
这个词是“burgled”,来自动词“to burgle”。

使用犯罪词汇时,您通常
需要三个一组地学习单词。

你知道名词形式吗?
他们来了。

您需要知道一个人的
名词、一个活动的名词和动词。

有时,某些形式可能是
相同的。 例如:谋杀,凶手,谋杀。

有时,其中一种形式可能是完全
不同的词,例如:steel、thief、stealing。

在学习犯罪词汇时请记住这一点。

让我们看看对话中的其他一些有用的
词汇。

这是给您的任务:查看定义。
你能将单词与定义相匹配吗?

暂停视频并找到答案。
你能做到吗? 我们看看吧!

“闯入”和“入室盗窃”具有相似的含义;
你可以在这句话中使用任何一个词。

“围栏”是一个口语词,
但有时它很有用,

因为没有一个词具有相同的含义。

让我们继续第二部分。 不要忘记,
您始终可以

根据需要多次查看对话或部分。

蛮好玩的!

是的,我们应该过一段时间再做一次。

顺便问一下,你怎么回家?

我想我会穿过公园
,然后坐公共汽车。

也许换个出租车? 我的同事
上周在这里附近被抢劫了。

真的吗? 我不认为
这里有很多街头犯罪。

不,我也不是,但最好小心点。

她被持刀抢劫。
她很好,但很可怕。

我打赌。 我知道这里有很多
公共交通工具上的扒窃事件

,但我认为
暴力犯罪并不多。

好吧,也许这只是运气不好
,但我认为最好是安全的。

是的,我会叫出租车。

让我们看看你是否能记住
你听到的关键词汇。 看几句。

你能记住丢失的单词吗?
暂停视频并考虑一下。

如果需要,请返回并
再次聆听对话,然后找到它们!

准备好? 我们看看吧。

你找对了吗? 接下来,
您能解释一下它们的含义吗?

抢劫是一种抢劫。 一般来说,
“抢劫”是指通过使用暴力或以暴力相威胁的方式进行盗窃

。 抢劫是
发生在街上或其他公共场所的抢劫。

“街头犯罪”包括抢劫、

扒窃、涂鸦等犯罪。 一般而言,
它是指公开实施的犯罪。

“她被持刀抢劫”是指有人
用刀威胁她。 您也可以使用

“枪口”一词。 例如,“该团伙
在抢劫期间用枪指着银行工作人员。”

扒窃是指从某人的包
或钱包中偷窃,通常是在拥挤的公共场所。

这里有一点很重要:在英语中,
不同类型的偷窃有很多不同的词

。 您已经听说过其中一些
:入室盗窃、抢劫、

抢劫和扒窃。 还有
入店行窃,这意味着从商店偷窃。

尽可能使用这些
特定的词,

而不是使用诸如“偷窃”之类的通用词更为常见。

不要忘记学习每个犯罪的三个词
。 例如:马克杯,抢劫犯,抢劫。

你住的地方有很多街头犯罪或
扒窃吗?

你怎么能保护自己免受这种伤害?
想想你能就这个话题说些什么。

好的? 让我们继续前进。

约翰在哪里? 他迟到了二十分钟!

他可能低估了
坐公共汽车到这里需要多长时间。

他为什么要坐公共汽车?

哦,你没听到吗? 他已经完成了酒后驾车。

没门!

是的。 他被禁止驾驶 12 个月,而且
他还必须做一些社区服务。

哇! 他也是个汽车迷。
那一定是真的伤了他。

我确定。 我认为情况更糟,因为他
去年收到了几张超速罚单,

所以他的驾照上已经有一些分数了。

好吧,他真的不能抱怨。

让我们看看对话中的三个句子。
这些短语是什么意思? 你能

向某人解释一下吗?
现在就试试。

试着完成这些句子。
暂停视频并大声说出您的答案,

或写下来,或两者兼而有之。
你能做到吗? 让我们检查!

“完成”是英国俚语。 它的意思是“定罪”,
意思是您在法庭上被判有罪。 “DUI”代表“酒后驾车”

,意思是酒后驾车或吸毒驾车。

如果您想以更正式的方式表达这一点
,您可以说“他被判犯有酒驾罪”。

如果您想以中立的方式说这句话,
您可以说“他因酒驾

被捕”。“被捕”和“被定罪”是不
一样的。 “被捕”是指警察

第一次找到您并将您带到警察局。
“定罪”是指您在法庭上被判有罪。

然而,在日常对话中,人们
可能不会如此精确地使用这些词。


真正的意思是“在法庭上被定罪”时,人们可能会说“被捕”。

驾驶禁令意味着您在
一段时间内被禁止驾驶。

社区服务是一种惩罚,
通常针对不太严重的罪行。

这意味着您必须花费
一定的时间免费工作。

例如,您可能不得不
在街上捡垃圾。

如果您的驾照上有积分,那么您
之前在开车时被抓到了违法行为。

许多国家使用积分系统。
例如,如果您违反了速度限制

并且警察抓住了您,您的驾照就会获得积分
。 如果您获得太多积分,

您可能会失去驾驶执照,或者您
可能会被禁止驾驶一段时间。

清除? 要练习,请尝试回答一些问题。
想想你对这些问题的回答。

暂停视频,说出你的答案,然后
大声说出来。 如果您需要额外练习,

请在评论中写下您的答案
并与其他学习者分享!

你能做到吗? 伟大的!
让我们再看一点。

在您听对话之前,
我们有一个挑战:

尝试在对话中找到具有这些
含义的单词。

知道了? 试着在你听的时候找到这些词。

我能帮个忙吗? 我
可以在星期三请半天假吗?

应该可以。 我能问一下它是干什么用的吗?

嗯……我有一个朋友
因入店行窃被捕。

她说她没有这样做,
而且我相信她值得,

但无论如何,周三是她的出庭日期
,我说我会继续支持她。

好没问题。 审判多长时间?

它在地方法院,所以据我了解

,它很快。 这不是
陪审团等的全面审判。

你觉得她会下车吗?

我不知道。 即使没有,她也有
清白的记录,所以我认为她只会

得到比手腕上的一记耳光
,形象地说。

是的,我的意思是,我认为人们
不会因为入店行窃而入狱,对吧?

我不这么认为。 至少,不是
第一次进攻。 无论如何,

这不是我真正关心的问题。 我只是
要支持她,无论发生什么,都会发生。

在您听对话之前,
我们有一个挑战:尝试

在对话中找到具有这些含义的单词。
知道了? 试着在你听的时候找到这些词。

你能做到吗? 让我们看看答案。

“下车”是俚语。 更正式
地说,您可以说“被发现无辜”。

所以,在对话中我
问“你认为她会下车吗?”

在正式的英语中,你会说“
你认为她会被发现无辜吗?”

“一巴掌”是一个成语。 通常,它
用于指代

没有应有的严重程度的惩罚。 所以,
如果有些人犯了严重的罪行,

但只受到轻微的惩罚,你可以
说“他们一记耳光就逃脱了。”

不同的国家有不同的
司法制度。 在英国,有两级法院:

治安法庭和刑事法庭。

治安法庭处理盗窃、
交通违法、轻微袭击等问题。

更严重的罪行会进入刑事法庭,
由十二名公民组成的陪审团进行审判。

对话中有更多与犯罪和惩罚相关的有用语言,

因此我们建议至少复习一次,

并写下
您想记住的单词或短语。

感谢收看!

下次见!