- Level 6 Natural Listening
-
Street Food
Views #1512 | Intermediate (B1) -
Bustling Bangkok
Views #1511 | Intermediate (B1) -
Expiration Dates
Views #1494 | Intermediate (B2) -
Throwing Things Out
Views #1493 | Intermediate (B2) -
Giving Gifts
Views #1472 | Intermediate (B1) -
Black Friday
Views #1471 | Intermediate (B1) -
Body Idioms - Part 2 | Part 1
Views #1466 | Intermediate (B2) -
Body Idioms - Part 1 | Part 2
Views #1465 | Intermediate (B2) -
Brain Drain
Views #1456 | Intermediate (B2) -
Out of Country
Views #1455 | Intermediate (B2) -
Brush and Shave
Views #1400 | Intermediate B2 -
Shower Schedule
Views #1399 | Intermediate B2 -
Power of Personality
Views #1398 | Intermediate B2 -
Living for Today
Views #1376 | Intermediate B2 -
Bucket List
Views #1375 | Intermediate B2 -
Dream Time
Views #1374 | Intermediate B2 -
The Medic
Views #1370 | Intermediate B1 -
Women in Uniform
Views #1369 | Intermediate B2 -
Her Do-over
Views #1366 | Intermediate B1 -
His Do-over
Views #1365 | Intermediate B1 -
New York Sports
Views #1364 | Intermediate B2 -
New York Tips
Views #1363 | Intermediate B2 -
His Life in Japan
Views #1360 | Intermediate B2 -
Her Life in Japan
Views #1359 | Intermediate B2 -
Baby on Board
Views #1356 | Intermediate B2 -
Proud Papa
Views #1355 | Intermediate B2 -
In the Club
Views #1450 | Intermediate (B2) -
In the Tropics
Views #1349 | Intermediate (B2) -
Single's Day
Views #1348 | Intermediate (B1) -
Commercial Christmas
Views #1347 | Intermediate (B1) -
Dialed In vs Unplugged
Views #1342 | Intermediate (B2) -
E-Mail Habits
Views #1341 | Intermediate (B2) -
Life Without Cars
Views #1340 | Intermediate (B2) -
The Stubborn Recovery
Views #1322 | Intermediate (B2) -
Car Smash Ups
Views #1321 | Intermediate (B2) -
Shockingly Different
Views #1320 | Intermediate (B2) -
First Memories of Canada
Views #1319 | Intermediate (B2) -
Homegrown Foreigner
Views #1310 | Intermediate (B2)
Notice: Did you know you can get an instant definition of any word on this page, just by double-clicking on it?
Try it now! Double-click any word on page to see the definition!
Throwing Things Out
Rachel and Todd discuss when they get rid of old items.
Todd: I'm here with Rachel. We were talking about expiration dates. You were saying that you throw out your clothes regularly.
Rachel: Fairly regularly.
Todd: Yeah. Do you donate them or just toss them?
Rachel: I put them in the recycling.
Todd: There you go.
Rachel: And hope they're going to be remade into something else.
Todd: Yeah, I guess, yeah I always take it out on the day that they'll say that they'll pick up clothes.
Rachel: Yeah. The reason for that is because I usually put, throw clothes out when they'll start to look a bit shabby, so I don't think anyone else wants to wear them.
Todd: Right.
Rachel: By that stage.
Todd: What about furniture? How often do you try to get new furniture?
Rachel: Almost never.
Todd: Yeah.
Rachel: That's something I don't ... Yeah, I'll put up with what I've got.
Todd: Yeah.
Rachel: It seems like such a waste to throw out such large things.
Todd: Yeah, but you never want to replace the couch or the chair?
Rachel: The couch has been replaced three or four times.
Todd: Right.
Rachel: That's a big one, but we've still got the same kitchen table. We had got to get some new chairs.
Todd: Yeah, I've never been a big furniture guy, but I just when I see something that's really cheap ... I would never buy new furniture. I'm always amazed like who buys new furniture? Because when you walk by a store and you see the furniture, it's so expensive. I'm gonna sound really cheap, but it's like I'm like, wow, why would you pay hundreds of dollars or thousands of dollars for that when you can just buy one used or whatever for ten bucks or twenty bucks?
Rachel: I'm definitely a used furniture person now.
Todd: Yeah.
Rachel: When we moved into our house we did go to a furniture store and bought all new furniture. It's easy. It's done. Everything looks new. It's kind of nice, but I almost exclusively buy second hand furniture now. Depending on which store you go to, you can get some really good bargains on some beautiful old antique, that look really nice in your house, and cost a fraction of something new.
Todd: Yeah. That's why you like anything that's made with metal or wood because you usually think it's going to age well.
Rachel: Yes.
Todd: Plastic, not so much.
Rachel: No, no. I've definitely sworn off plastic. I think plastic's a fill in if you need something quickly.
Todd: Yeah.
Rachel: And cheaply, but definitely don't like to buy plastic now.
Todd: What about electronic goods, like getting a new TV, a new refrigerator, stuff like that? How often do you buy?
Rachel: We just wait until that breaks down. That's a pretty easy one.
Todd: What about the TV though? The TVs don't break down. They go on forever. How often do you think, oh I want a new TV, I want a new nicer TV?
Rachel: Our last TV broke.
Todd: It did?
Rachel: Well, we had lightening hit the house, and we lost several electronic items.
Todd: Wow.
Rachel: We lost a keyboard, and a computer. I think we lost two out of ... We had three hard disc DV players.
Todd: It was an electrical surge that fried all the circuits?
Rachel: It fried the house, yeah pretty much.
Todd: Wow. I did not know that could happen.
Rachel: Yeah.
shabby
They'll start to look a bit shabby.
Something that is shabby is in poor condition. Notice the following:
- You need a haircut. You are looking
shabby.
exclusively
I almost exclusively buy second hand furniture now.
Here, exclusively means only. It is the only option. Notice the following:
- This room is exclusively for teachers, not
students.
put up with
Yeah, I'll put up with what I've got.
Here, to put up with something means to tolerate it or endure it. Notice the following:
- At his job he puts up with a lot of abuse.
cost a fraction
It cost a fraction of something new.
If something costs a fraction, then it is much cheaper than the alternative. Notice the following:
- Owning a bike costs a fraction of owning a
car.
break down
We just wait until that breaks down.
When something breaks down, it no longer works properly or as well as it did before. Notice the following:
- As people age, their bodies start to break
down.
surge
It was an electrical surge that fried all the circuits.
A surge is a sudden and powerful movement of something that causes great force. Notice the following:
- A tsunami is a huge surge of water onto
land.
Vocabulary Quiz
cost a fraction • break down • surge
Bình luận (0)