打开/关闭菜单
打开/关闭个人菜单
未登录
未登录用户的IP地址会在进行任意编辑后公开展示。

English:Daily English 11 Getting Ready for Bed and Going to Sleep:修订间差异

来自Tec Fancy
(Create:Daily English 11 Getting Ready for Bed and Going to Sleep)
 
(update content)
 
(未显示同一用户的1个中间版本)
第1行: 第1行:
== '''Dialogue/Story''' ==
=== Dialogue/Story ===
'''Slow Speed''' begins at: 0:58
Slow Speed begins at: 0:54


'''Explanation''' begins at: 2:40
Explanation begins at: 2:52


'''Normal Speed''' begins at: 16:02
Normal Speed begins at: 118:14
----
----


== '''Complete Transcript''' ==
=== Complete Transcript ===
Welcome to English as a Second Language Podcast number 10: Relaxing, Reading the Mail, and the Trash
Welcome to English as a Second Language Podcast number 11: Getting Ready for Bed and Going to Sleep


This is English as a Second Language Podcast episode number ten. I’m your host, Dr. Jeff McQuillan, coming to you from the Center for Educational Development in beautiful Los Angeles, California.
This is English as a Second Language Podcast episode number eleven. I’m your host, Dr. Jeff McQuillan, coming to you from the Center for Educational Development in beautiful Los Angeles, California.


In this episode, the ninth of our 10-part special series on daily English, I’ll talk about relaxing, reading the mail, and taking out the trash. Let’s get started.
In this episode, the last of our 10-part special series on daily English, I’ll talk about getting ready for bed and going to sleep.
 
Let’s get started!


[Start of story]
[Start of story]


With the dinner dishes done, my wife and I each sit down on the couch to chill out and watch the national news which comes on at 6:30. During the newscast, I sort through the day’s mail. Most of it is junk mail and bills. There are also several fliers for houses for sale in the area. I check the front stoop and see that there are no packages.
At 10:30, I decide to get ready for bed. When I was little, my mother would read me a bedtime story. I’m looking forward to having that ritual with my own kids someday.


I like to watch TV and my wife likes to watch reality shows. One thing I hate is having to watch all of the commercials, so I turn the sound down when they come on. After the show is over, I thumb through the latest issue of the Atlantic Monthly, while my wife reads a novel by her favorite mystery writer.
I go into the bathroom and turn on the tap. I wash my face, and dry it with my towel. I floss and brush my teeth. I have to admit that by this time, I’m beat, and so is my wife. She cleans up when I’ve finished up.


At around 9, I remember that tomorrow is trash day, so I take the kitchen garbage out and dump the recycling bins as well. I roll the trash container out to the street ready for the garbage trucks, which come by early in the morning.
In the meantime, I walk into the bedroom and get undressed. I put my dirty clothes in the hamper and I put on my pajamas. Wearing my slippers, I go into the kitchen to get a glass of water to put next to the bed in case I need it during the night. I pull back the covers, fluff my pillow, and climb into bed. I set my alarm clock for 6:15, and turn off the overhead light. I lay my head down and pull up the covers, kissing my wife goodnight. Some nights I have trouble falling asleep, but tonight, I didn’t need to count any sheep. I nod off right away and before long, I’m fast asleep.


[End of story]
[End of story]


We begin with the sentence “With the dinner dishes done.” The dinner dishes are the dishes we use to eat our dinner, and when I say they are done, I mean that they are washed and dried. So, with the dinner dishes washed and dried, “My wife and I sit down on the couch to chill out.” “To chill (chill) out (out) – two words – means to relax. Sometimes we use this expression as a command. If someone is very excited, you may say, “Hey, chill out,” means relax, don't be so excited. You will also hear just the word chill. “Hey, chill,” that's informal for relax, don't be so excited. You will also hear people say, “I'm just chilling.I am just chilling means I'm just relaxing. Again, that's very informal.
This episode is called "Getting Ready for Bed and Going to Sleep."
 
"At 10:30, I decide to get ready for bed," to do the things I need to do so I can go to sleep. "When I was little, my mother would read me a bedtime story." “Bedtime” (bedtime) – all one word – is, of course, the time that you go to bed - that you go to your bed so you can sleep. A bedtime story is a story you would tell a child to help them fall asleep. Many children like to be told a bedtime story. These are often what we would call “fairy tales” (fairy) “tales” (tales). A “tale” is just another word for a story, and a fairy tale is a story about something that isn't true, usually with imaginary characters.
 
"I’m looking forward to having that ritual with my own kids someday." "I’m looking forward to having that ritual." A “ritual” (ritual) is something that you do on a regular schedule or at a regular time every day or maybe every week or every month, and you do the exact same things in the exact same order. We also use that word, ritual, when we are talking about some religious ceremonies. Some religious events have certain rules - certain order - a certain order that they follow, and that is a ritual.
 
"I go into the bathroom and I turn on the tap." The “tap” (tap) is the same as the faucet. Well, you turn on the tap so the water comes out. "I wash my face, and dry it with my towel." I dry my face - I make it dry using a “towel” (towel) which is a cloth that you use to dry yourself, or to clean yourself. I floss my teeth and I brush them.


Well, my wife and I are chilling, and we're watching the national news. The “national news” is the news broadcast on television, and in Los Angeles, this is at 6:30 in the evening - it comes on at 6:30. When we say a television show “comes on,” we mean that that is when it begins - that is when you can watch it. The national news can also be called a “newscast” (newscast). A newscast is a news program. You could have a local newscast, with just news about Los Angeles, for me, or a national newscast.
"I have to admit that by this time, I’m beat." "I have to admit" is an expression that we use when you're going to say something that maybe you don't want to say - you don't want to tell the truth. In fact, there's also an expression, "to tell the truth." So, I have to admit means I have to say - to tell the truth. "By this time," meaning by 10:30 - "by this time, I’m beat." To be beat, "beat," means to be very tired. Someone says, "Oh, I'm beat," they've been working all day or they've, like me, been watching television all day, and now I'm beat - I'm tired. Of course, I don't watch television all day, just part of the day!


Well, “During the newscast, I sort through the day’s mail.” “To sort (sort) through,” means that I am looking at today's mail and usually I am separating it so that I separate the different kinds of mail - the different kinds of letters - that I got that day.
Well, my wife is also beat. In the story I say, "I'm beat, and so is my wife," meaning my wife is also very tired. "She cleans up when I’ve finished up." Once again, you see those two-word verbs. To clean up is, in this case, to clean your face, to brush your teeth; to get yourself clean is to clean up. “To finish up” is really the same as to finish, but we love in English to use those prepositions as part of these two word verbs. So, I finish up, meaning I finish doing what I need to do, and then my wife goes into the bathroom and cleans up.


Most of my mail - and this is true - is either junk mail or bills. “Junk (junk) mail” is mail that you get that you don't want. Usually it is advertisements, people trying to get you to buy something; we call that junk mail. Most of my mail is either junk mail or it's “bills.” And a “bill” is a statement - a piece of paper from some company that you have to pay money to. You get a bill for your electricity, for your phone, for your Internet access. You have to pay your bills. Well, you should pay your bills; maybe you don't.
"In the meantime," meaning while my wife is doing that. "In the meantime" (meantime) – all one word – I walk into the bedroom and get undressed." So, when my wife is in the bathroom, "I walk" - at the same time - "into the bedroom and I get undressed." “To get undressed” is the opposite of to get dressed. So, if you get undressed, you take off your clothes.


“There are also several fliers for houses for sale in the area.A “flier” (flier) – the plural is fliers, with an “s” – is an advertisement - it's an announcement or an advertisement. Usually it's one or two pages - one or two pieces of paper. Sometimes the advertisements, or the fliers, are folded up. And, it's very popular for people who are selling houses to use fliers that they mail you or they put on your house - outside of your house. These fliers are for houses that people are selling - “houses for sale in the area.
"I put my dirty clothes" - the clothes I was wearing - "in the hamper and I put on my pajamas." A “hamper” (hamper) as a noun, is a place, usually in your bedroom or bathroom, where you put dirty clothes or dirty towels; we call that a hamper. “To hamper,” as a verb, means something different. “To hamper someone” means to get in their way - to prevent them from doing something. But as a noun, a hamper, or a clothes hamper, is a place, usually it's a big plastic box with a top on it, or it could be made of wood, and that's where you put your dirty clothes. And then, at some point during the week, I hope, you wash your clothes so you can have clean clothes again. Unless, of course, you're not married, in which case, if you are a man and single, you may not wash your clothes that much.


“I check the front stoop and see that there are no packages.” “I check” - I look out at “the front stoop.” “A stoop” (stoop) is the stairs in front of your house. Often this word is used when we are talking about large buildings - apartment buildings or condominium buildings. In New York or Boston, some of the cities on the eastern coast of the United States, people talk about sitting on the stoop, that mean you're sitting on your stairs. But, you can also use the word to talk about your own stairs in front of your house. The top of those stairs is where you might find packages. A “package” (package) is usually a box or something that is bigger than just a regular letter that you receive in the mail or that is delivered to you by some private company.
Well, I have "my dirty clothes in my hamper," and since I don't have any clothes on, remember I have undressed, "I put on my pajamas." “Pajamas” (pajamas) are sometimes abbreviated as “PJs” (PJ) – PJs. Your pajamas, or PJs, are the clothes that you wear when you are going to bed. For example, I have pajamas that say Superman on it, and I wear my Superman pajamas to bed. Doesn't everyone?


Well, I look at my stoop and I see “there are no packages” - no one loves me; no one sent me a package. I then talk about how I like to watch television, and so does my wife. “My wife likes to watch reality shows.” A “reality show” (reality) is a type of television show where they have a competition or a contest. “Big Brother” and “American Idol” are two examples of popular reality shows. They take people - average people, they say - and they have a competition or a contest.
Well, in addition to putting on my pajamas, I also put on my slippers. A “slipper” (slipper) is a shoe that you wear usually just inside the house. So, when you are getting ready for bed and you want to walk around the house, you don't put your shoes on, you would put some slippers on. Some people wear slippers in their house, especially if the floors are cold, and they'll put the slippers on at night and have them on at night as they walk around in their house or in the morning.


“One thing I hate” about watching television - something I don't like - “is having to watch all the commercials.” A “commercial” is the same as an advertisement on television or radio; it's an announcement from a company that wants you to buy what they are selling. Well, I don't like watching the commercials, “so I turn the sound down.” “To turn the sound down” means to lower the volume, to make it so that it is less loud - it is quieter. “I turn the sound down when” the commercials “come on.” Again, that verb, “to come on,” means that they are on the television - that they start.
Well, "Wearing my slippers, I go into the kitchen to get a glass of water," and I want to put that water "next to my bed in case I need it during the night." So, if I need to drink water at night, I have a glass of water next to me. "I pull back the covers." The “covers” (covers) are the blanket, the comforter, and the top sheets. We take those things and we have to pull them back. To pull back means to take them and move them towards the bottom of the bed so that you can get in, and after you get in, you're going to pull the covers up. So, you pull back the covers to get into the bed, and then you pull them up to cover you again so you can stay warm.


“After the show is over,” - after the show is done - finished - “I thumb through the latest issue of the Atlantic Monthly.” “The Atlantic Monthly” is a monthly magazine in the United States. “To thumb through something” – (thumb) through – two words – means to look through something, but usually not to be paying too much attention. You're sort of looking but you're not necessarily reading very carefully. We use that expression – that verb – when we are talking about magazines in particular. You're looking at them, perhaps waiting in a doctor's office - in the waiting room of a doctor's office you thumb through the magazines. Well, I'm thumbing through the Atlantic Monthly, and my wife is reading a novel. A “novel” (novel) is a fictional book - a book that is not a true story.
"I pull back my covers," and I "fluff my pillow." The pillow is what I put my head on. “To fluff” (fluff) means to make your pillow bigger by hitting it very softly on the sides. So, you take your pillow and you put one hand on each side of the pillow and you move your hands back and forth toward each other and away from each other, and that allows the pillow to be a little bigger - to be a little softer.


“At around 9,” that is at 9 p.m., “I remember that tomorrow is trash day.” “Trash” (trash) is anything that you are getting rid of - that you are throwing out - that you don't want anymore, and trash day is the day that the garbage trucks come by and take the trash away. Now, in Los Angeles we have a public trash service, so that the government has trucks that it sends out, and it picks up your trash - it takes your trash and puts it into the truck, and then takes it away. That is trash day. In my neighborhood it is on Fridays and every neighborhood is different, they do a different part of the city each day.
"I fluff my pillow, and I climb into bed." Notice that verb “to climb” (climb) into bed. It means the same as to get into bed. We might use that particular verb, to climb into, if we are very tired, for example. You can also use it just to mean to get into bed.


So, this is trash day and I need to “take the kitchen garbage out and dump the recycling bins as well.The “garbage” (garbage) is just another word for trash. We sometimes talk about garbage that is trash in the kitchen in particular. This is the kitchen garbage, and I have to take it out, meaning I have to take the bag and put it outside so that the garbage truck can come by and pick it up.
So, I "climb into bed. I set my alarm clock for 6:15," - for 6:15 in the morning, of course - "and I turn off the overhead light." The “overhead” (overhead) – all one word – is a light that is on the top of your room - on the ceiling of the room. The top of the room is called the “ceiling” (ceiling). So, an overhead light is on the top of the ceiling - or on the ceiling, and I turn the overhead light off.


In Los Angeles, and in many cities, we also have recycling bins. “To recycle” (recycle) means to use again, and in Los Angeles, we have a recycling bin where you can put your newspapers and other things that they can use again - they can recycle. A “bin” (bin) is just another name for a box, usually a plastic box.
"I lay my head down." “To lay” (lay) here means to put something down. Usually we use that verb when we are talking about people or a part of your body. "I lay my head down and I pull up the covers," so I am warm, and because I'm such a great husband, I kiss "my wife goodnight." “To kiss someone goodnight,” means to kiss them and in a sense, to say goodnight to them. "Some nights I have trouble falling asleep." “To fall (fall) asleep (asleep)” means to go to sleep - to start sleeping.


In my city, we have trash containers that you can roll; they have little wheels on them. A container is like a big box that you put something in, and so a trash container is a big, in my case, plastic box that has wheels that I can then put it down on the street. You have to put your trash containers on the street.
Sometimes "I have trouble falling asleep, but tonight, I didn’t need to count any sheep." The expression “to count sheep” (sheep) is used because we traditionally when we are trying to fall asleep, some people say that it helps if you try counting numbers, so you start with one, two, three, four. And, for some reason, I don't know why, it is traditional to count sheep. Sheep are a type of animal. A sheep is an animal that you take the hair off of, and you use the hair of the sheep to make clothing, for example. I don't need to count sheep because I'm very tired. If you are not tired or you have difficulty falling asleep, you might want to try counting sheep. One, two, three, four, and by the time you reach five million you should be asleep!


Each container has a different color. In my case, black is the color for trash; blue is the color for recycling trash, so newspapers, for example; and green is where you put things like leaves and grass, things that you have in your - outside of your house that you want to get rid of, that are plants, that sort of thing.
"I nod off right away." “To nod (nod) off” – two words – means the same as to fall asleep. It's just another way of saying fall asleep, "I nod off." Sometimes people will use that expression when they're at a meeting and it is very boring at work, and you may say to someone, "I almost nodded off" - I almost fell asleep. That usually happens to my students when I am teaching.


I put the trash containers out on the street because the garbage trucks “come by early in the morning.” They “come by,” a two-word verb, which means that they come to your house - they drive to your house. And, in my neighborhood, they come by very early, so at six o'clock on Friday morning I can hear the trucks outside my window. I don't like it, but I need to have my trash taken away, so one day of the week I wake up early because I can hear the garbage trucks outside.
"Before long," meaning in a very short time – "before long, I’m fast asleep." “To be fast (fast) asleep” means to be completely asleep. There's a similar expression that means the same, “to be sound asleep” (sound). “To be sound asleep” means that you are sleeping completely, it will not be easy to wake you up.


Now let's listen to the story, this time at a native rate of speech.
Now let's listen to the story, this time at a native rate of speech.
第58行: 第66行:
[Start of story]
[Start of story]


With the dinner dishes done, my wife and I each sit down on the couch to chill out and watch the national news which comes on at 6:30. During the newscast, I sort through the day’s mail. Most of it is junk mail and bills. There are also several fliers for houses for sale in the area. I check the front stoop and see that there are no packages.
At 10:30, I decide to get ready for bed. When I was little, my mother would read me a bedtime story. I’m looking forward to having that ritual with my own kids someday.


I like to watch TV and my wife likes to watch reality shows. One thing I hate is having to watch all of the commercials, so I turn the sound down when they come on. After the show is over, I thumb through the latest issue of the Atlantic Monthly, while my wife reads a novel by her favorite mystery writer.
I go into the bathroom and turn on the tap. I wash my face, and dry it with my towel. I floss and brush my teeth. I have to admit that by this time, I’m beat, and so is my wife. She cleans up when I’ve finished up.


At around 9, I remember that tomorrow is trash day, so I take the kitchen garbage out and dump the recycling bins as well. I roll the trash container out to the street ready for the garbage trucks, which come by early in the morning.
In the meantime, I walk into the bedroom and get undressed. I put my dirty clothes in the hamper and I put on my pajamas. Wearing my slippers, I go into the kitchen to get a glass of water to put next to the bed in case I need it during the night. I pull back the covers, fluff my pillow, and climb into bed. I set my alarm clock for 6:15, and turn off the overhead light. I lay my head down and pull up the covers, kissing my wife goodnight. Some nights I have trouble falling asleep, but tonight, I didn’t need to count any sheep. I nod off right away and before long, I’m fast asleep.


[End of story]
[End of story]


Before you chill out after listening to this episode, be sure to thank our wonderful scriptwriter, Dr. Lucy Tse.
Make listening to her scripts part of your daily English learning ritual. I speak of our very own scriptwriter, Dr. Lucy Tse. Thank you, Lucy!


From Los Angeles, California, I’m Jeff McQuillan, thank you for listening. Come back and listen to us again right here on ESL Podcast.
From Los Angeles, California, I’m Jeff McQuillan, thank you for listening. Come back and listen to us again right here on ESL Podcast.
第75行: 第83行:
----
----


== '''Glossary''' ==
=== Glossary ===
'''to chill out''' – to relax
bedtime story – a story that adults read to children before they go to sleep at night


<nowiki>*</nowiki> He chills out by listening to his favorite jazz CD and drinking a glass of wine.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Can you read me one more bedtime story before I have to go sleep?


'''national news''' information about what happened in the country that day, usually found in a newspaper or on a TV news broadcast
ritual something that is done repeatedly and in the same way every time


<nowiki>*</nowiki> Did you know that the flooding in this area was on the national news last night? It must be more serious than I thought.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> His morning ritual includes drinking a cup of coffee, eating a banana, and taking the dog for a walk.


'''newscast''' – a news program on television or radio
tap faucet; the metal thing that water flows through into a sink


<nowiki>*</nowiki> I heard in yesterday’s newscast that price of beef will probably go up in the next few months.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Please turn off the tap while you’re brushing your teeth. It’s wrong to waste water.


'''to sort through''' to put objects in order; to look for one object in a group of objects
towel – a soft piece of fabric that absorbs water and helps someone or something become dry


<nowiki>*</nowiki> The team thought of many great ideas during the meeting. Now they need to sort though them and select the best ones.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Yuki always uses two towels when she showers: one for her body, and one for her hair.


'''junk mail''' unwanted mail that will be thrown away usually without being read
beat very tired; exhausted


<nowiki>*</nowiki> I never give my address to companies but I still get a lot of junk mail.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> After working on the report for 14 hours, I was beat and I wanted to go to sleep.


'''bill''' an invoice; a piece of paper that states how much money one needs to pay for something (such as a credit card, electricity, gas, or phone)
undressed without clothes; not wearing clothes; naked


<nowiki>*</nowiki> When I saw the phone bill for this month, I knew that there was a mistake. I never called Peru!
<nowiki>*</nowiki> You should always close the bedroom curtains before you get undressed.


'''flyer''' – a piece of paper that advertises an event or product
hamper – a container for dirty clothes


<nowiki>*</nowiki> The soccer club put fliers all over the school to let people know when its next meeting would be.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Make sure you do the laundry when the hamper is full.


'''stoop''' porch and stairs; the area in front of a home’s front door, with steps down to the sidewalk
pajamas clothes worn while sleeping


<nowiki>*</nowiki> During the summer, their house gets really hot so they usually sit on the front stoop and drink lemonade in the evenings.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> My cotton pajamas are the most comfortable clothes that I own. I love sleeping in them.


'''package''' a box that contains a gift or something that one purchased
slippers soft, warm shoes that are worn only inside the house


<nowiki>*</nowiki> His grandparents always send him Christmas packages that are full of cookies and gifts.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> She often puts her slippers in front of the fireplace to warm them before she puts them on her feet.


'''reality''' '''show''' a television show with real people (not actors) in their daily life or in a special situation that is part of the show
to pull back to fold back; to move back


<nowiki>*</nowiki> MTV’s “Real World” put strangers in a house to live together for several months and was one of the most popular early reality shows in the United States.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> When she heard the doorbell, she quietly pulled back the curtains to see who was at the front door.


'''commercial''' an advertisement on television or radio
covers the layers of fabric that cover a bed


<nowiki>*</nowiki> Although it was only a two-hour movie, it was on TV for three hours because there were so many commercials.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Our cat likes to sleep in our bed under the covers, but we don’t allow her to do that.


'''to thumb through''' – to quickly turn the pages of a book, magazine, or newspaper
to fluff – to make something larger and softer by hitting or brushing it


<nowiki>*</nowiki> As I was thumbing through the magazine, I was surprised to see an article written by my cousin.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> I can’t sleep on a hard pillow so I always fluff my pillows at night.


'''novel''' a book with an imaginary story, such as a romance or a mystery
overhead on the ceiling; over one’s head


<nowiki>*</nowiki> He loves reading novels, but his wife only reads biographies.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Overhead lights are good in living rooms and dining rooms, but in bedrooms I prefer a small table lamp so that I can read before falling asleep.


'''trash''' '''day''' a regular day of the week when trucks come to collect garbage from houses on a street
to lay down – to put something or oneself in a horizontal (sideways) position


<nowiki>*</nowiki> I’m glad tomorrow is trash day since we have so much trash from moving over the weekend.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> I laid down the book I had been reading and turned out the lights.


'''garbage''' trash; waste; items that one doesn’t want and should be taken away
to fall asleep to begin to sleep


<nowiki>*</nowiki> After the party, her parents were shocked to see how much garbage people had left on the floor.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Drinking a glass of warm milk often helps Jacomo fall asleep at night.


'''recycling''' treating used items so that they can be used again
to count sheep to imagine sheep jumping over a fence and to count them as a way of falling asleep


<nowiki>*</nowiki> Does this city have good plastic and glass recycling programs?
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Do you ever try counting sheep when you have trouble falling asleep?


'''trash container''' a tall, plastic container for storing garbage, often on wheels
to nod off to start to sleep, often without intending or wanting to


<nowiki>*</nowiki> Last night some dogs opened the trash containers and now there is garbage all over the street.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> He was so tired that he was nodding off during the meeting. His boss was not happy.


'''garbage trucks''' trucks that come to collect garbage from houses
fast asleep sleeping soundly; sleeping very well; sleeping and unaware of other things happening


<nowiki>*</nowiki> I don’t like driving behind garbage trucks because they are very slow and they smell bad.
<nowiki>*</nowiki> The little boy was fast asleep when they got home and he didn’t wake up as his father carried him to bed.
----
----


== '''Culture Note''' ==
=== Culture Note ===
'''Athletic Trainers'''
Summertime Safety


Overview
Many people look forward to the return of warmer “temperatures” (how cold or warm it is outside) in the spring and summer months. Whether you're relaxing in the “backyard” (outdoor area behind one’s house), “gardening” (planting and growing flowers, vegetables, and other plants), enjoying the “pool” (small area built for swimming), or exploring “the great outdoors” (nature), here are some ways to help keep you and your family healthy this spring and summer.


Athletic trainers specialize in “preventing” (keeping from happening), “diagnosing” (identifying the problem or illness), and “treating” (giving medical care to improve) muscle and bone injuries and illnesses. They work with people of all ages, from young children to “soldiers” (people whose job is in the military) and professional athletes. They follow instructions from doctors and other healthcare providers.
In the warmer months, people like to cook food on the “grill” (metal surface placed over fire to cook meat and vegetables). When grilling, use a meat “thermometer” (device used to measure temperature) to make sure that you cook meat and “poultry” (chicken and other birds people eat) thoroughly. Also, put cooked meat on a clean “platter” (large plate), rather than back on the one that held the “raw” (uncooked) meat, to avoid “cross-contamination” (the transfer of “bacteria” (harmful substance that causes illness) from one place to another).


Athletic trainers are usually one of the first healthcare providers “on the scene” (at the location) when injuries occur. With a doctor, they often discuss specific injuries and treatment options or “evaluate” (examine to reach a decision) and treat patients. Some athletic trainers meet with a team of “physicians” (doctors) regularly.
“Binge drinking” is when people drink five or more alcoholic drinks on a single occasion for men or four or more drinks on a single occasion for women, generally within about two hours. Binge drinking is associated with many health problems, including:


Many athletic trainers work in educational facilities, such as high schools and colleges. Others may work in doctors’ offices or for professional sports teams. Some athletic trainers work in “rehabilitation” (course of treatment done to return one to normal health and activity) clinics, in the military, or with “performing artists” (people who perform in the arts, such as dancers). They may spend much of their time working outdoors on sports fields in all types of weather.
- “Motor vehicle” (cars, trucks, and more) “crashes” (hitting each other or some other thing).


Education, Training, and Certification
- “Drowning” (dying from breathing in too much water)


Athletic trainers need at least a bachelor’s degree, although both bachelor’s and master’s degrees are common. In most states, athletic trainers need a “license” (piece of paper stating one’s qualifications) or “certification” (permission given after passing an exam or satisfying the requirements), although specific requirements “vary” ( are different) by state.
- “High blood pressure” (too much force in moving blood through the body) and other “cardiovascular” (related to the heart) diseases.


Nearly all states require athletic trainers to be certified. The independent Board of Certification (BOC) offers the standard certification examination that most states use to give licenses.
Prevent skin cancer” (disease where “abnormal” (not normal) cells in the body grow in abnormal ways). Avoid being outdoors during the “midday” (the middle of the day) if the sun is “intense” (very strong), use “sunscreen” (lotion or liquid to protect one’s skin from the effects of the sun), “cover up” (protect the skin) with clothing, wear a “brimmed hat” (hat with a wide edge at the bottom to cover the face), and wear “sunglasses” (dark glasses) that block harmful “rays” (light from the sun).
[[分类:ESLPod]]
[[分类:Daily English]]

2024年9月18日 (三) 15:23的最新版本

Dialogue/Story

Slow Speed begins at: 0:54

Explanation begins at: 2:52

Normal Speed begins at: 118:14


Complete Transcript

Welcome to English as a Second Language Podcast number 11: Getting Ready for Bed and Going to Sleep

This is English as a Second Language Podcast episode number eleven. I’m your host, Dr. Jeff McQuillan, coming to you from the Center for Educational Development in beautiful Los Angeles, California.

In this episode, the last of our 10-part special series on daily English, I’ll talk about getting ready for bed and going to sleep.

Let’s get started!

[Start of story]

At 10:30, I decide to get ready for bed. When I was little, my mother would read me a bedtime story. I’m looking forward to having that ritual with my own kids someday.

I go into the bathroom and turn on the tap. I wash my face, and dry it with my towel. I floss and brush my teeth. I have to admit that by this time, I’m beat, and so is my wife. She cleans up when I’ve finished up.

In the meantime, I walk into the bedroom and get undressed. I put my dirty clothes in the hamper and I put on my pajamas. Wearing my slippers, I go into the kitchen to get a glass of water to put next to the bed in case I need it during the night. I pull back the covers, fluff my pillow, and climb into bed. I set my alarm clock for 6:15, and turn off the overhead light. I lay my head down and pull up the covers, kissing my wife goodnight. Some nights I have trouble falling asleep, but tonight, I didn’t need to count any sheep. I nod off right away and before long, I’m fast asleep.

[End of story]

This episode is called "Getting Ready for Bed and Going to Sleep."

"At 10:30, I decide to get ready for bed," to do the things I need to do so I can go to sleep. "When I was little, my mother would read me a bedtime story." “Bedtime” (bedtime) – all one word – is, of course, the time that you go to bed - that you go to your bed so you can sleep. A bedtime story is a story you would tell a child to help them fall asleep. Many children like to be told a bedtime story. These are often what we would call “fairy tales” (fairy) “tales” (tales). A “tale” is just another word for a story, and a fairy tale is a story about something that isn't true, usually with imaginary characters.

"I’m looking forward to having that ritual with my own kids someday." "I’m looking forward to having that ritual." A “ritual” (ritual) is something that you do on a regular schedule or at a regular time every day or maybe every week or every month, and you do the exact same things in the exact same order. We also use that word, ritual, when we are talking about some religious ceremonies. Some religious events have certain rules - certain order - a certain order that they follow, and that is a ritual.

"I go into the bathroom and I turn on the tap." The “tap” (tap) is the same as the faucet. Well, you turn on the tap so the water comes out. "I wash my face, and dry it with my towel." I dry my face - I make it dry using a “towel” (towel) which is a cloth that you use to dry yourself, or to clean yourself. I floss my teeth and I brush them.

"I have to admit that by this time, I’m beat." "I have to admit" is an expression that we use when you're going to say something that maybe you don't want to say - you don't want to tell the truth. In fact, there's also an expression, "to tell the truth." So, I have to admit means I have to say - to tell the truth. "By this time," meaning by 10:30 - "by this time, I’m beat." To be beat, "beat," means to be very tired. Someone says, "Oh, I'm beat," they've been working all day or they've, like me, been watching television all day, and now I'm beat - I'm tired. Of course, I don't watch television all day, just part of the day!

Well, my wife is also beat. In the story I say, "I'm beat, and so is my wife," meaning my wife is also very tired. "She cleans up when I’ve finished up." Once again, you see those two-word verbs. To clean up is, in this case, to clean your face, to brush your teeth; to get yourself clean is to clean up. “To finish up” is really the same as to finish, but we love in English to use those prepositions as part of these two word verbs. So, I finish up, meaning I finish doing what I need to do, and then my wife goes into the bathroom and cleans up.

"In the meantime," meaning while my wife is doing that. "In the meantime" (meantime) – all one word – I walk into the bedroom and get undressed." So, when my wife is in the bathroom, "I walk" - at the same time - "into the bedroom and I get undressed." “To get undressed” is the opposite of to get dressed. So, if you get undressed, you take off your clothes.

"I put my dirty clothes" - the clothes I was wearing - "in the hamper and I put on my pajamas." A “hamper” (hamper) as a noun, is a place, usually in your bedroom or bathroom, where you put dirty clothes or dirty towels; we call that a hamper. “To hamper,” as a verb, means something different. “To hamper someone” means to get in their way - to prevent them from doing something. But as a noun, a hamper, or a clothes hamper, is a place, usually it's a big plastic box with a top on it, or it could be made of wood, and that's where you put your dirty clothes. And then, at some point during the week, I hope, you wash your clothes so you can have clean clothes again. Unless, of course, you're not married, in which case, if you are a man and single, you may not wash your clothes that much.

Well, I have "my dirty clothes in my hamper," and since I don't have any clothes on, remember I have undressed, "I put on my pajamas." “Pajamas” (pajamas) are sometimes abbreviated as “PJs” (PJ) – PJs. Your pajamas, or PJs, are the clothes that you wear when you are going to bed. For example, I have pajamas that say Superman on it, and I wear my Superman pajamas to bed. Doesn't everyone?

Well, in addition to putting on my pajamas, I also put on my slippers. A “slipper” (slipper) is a shoe that you wear usually just inside the house. So, when you are getting ready for bed and you want to walk around the house, you don't put your shoes on, you would put some slippers on. Some people wear slippers in their house, especially if the floors are cold, and they'll put the slippers on at night and have them on at night as they walk around in their house or in the morning.

Well, "Wearing my slippers, I go into the kitchen to get a glass of water," and I want to put that water "next to my bed in case I need it during the night." So, if I need to drink water at night, I have a glass of water next to me. "I pull back the covers." The “covers” (covers) are the blanket, the comforter, and the top sheets. We take those things and we have to pull them back. To pull back means to take them and move them towards the bottom of the bed so that you can get in, and after you get in, you're going to pull the covers up. So, you pull back the covers to get into the bed, and then you pull them up to cover you again so you can stay warm.

"I pull back my covers," and I "fluff my pillow." The pillow is what I put my head on. “To fluff” (fluff) means to make your pillow bigger by hitting it very softly on the sides. So, you take your pillow and you put one hand on each side of the pillow and you move your hands back and forth toward each other and away from each other, and that allows the pillow to be a little bigger - to be a little softer.

"I fluff my pillow, and I climb into bed." Notice that verb “to climb” (climb) into bed. It means the same as to get into bed. We might use that particular verb, to climb into, if we are very tired, for example. You can also use it just to mean to get into bed.

So, I "climb into bed. I set my alarm clock for 6:15," - for 6:15 in the morning, of course - "and I turn off the overhead light." The “overhead” (overhead) – all one word – is a light that is on the top of your room - on the ceiling of the room. The top of the room is called the “ceiling” (ceiling). So, an overhead light is on the top of the ceiling - or on the ceiling, and I turn the overhead light off.

"I lay my head down." “To lay” (lay) here means to put something down. Usually we use that verb when we are talking about people or a part of your body. "I lay my head down and I pull up the covers," so I am warm, and because I'm such a great husband, I kiss "my wife goodnight." “To kiss someone goodnight,” means to kiss them and in a sense, to say goodnight to them. "Some nights I have trouble falling asleep." “To fall (fall) asleep (asleep)” means to go to sleep - to start sleeping.

Sometimes "I have trouble falling asleep, but tonight, I didn’t need to count any sheep." The expression “to count sheep” (sheep) is used because we traditionally when we are trying to fall asleep, some people say that it helps if you try counting numbers, so you start with one, two, three, four. And, for some reason, I don't know why, it is traditional to count sheep. Sheep are a type of animal. A sheep is an animal that you take the hair off of, and you use the hair of the sheep to make clothing, for example. I don't need to count sheep because I'm very tired. If you are not tired or you have difficulty falling asleep, you might want to try counting sheep. One, two, three, four, and by the time you reach five million you should be asleep!

"I nod off right away." “To nod (nod) off” – two words – means the same as to fall asleep. It's just another way of saying fall asleep, "I nod off." Sometimes people will use that expression when they're at a meeting and it is very boring at work, and you may say to someone, "I almost nodded off" - I almost fell asleep. That usually happens to my students when I am teaching.

"Before long," meaning in a very short time – "before long, I’m fast asleep." “To be fast (fast) asleep” means to be completely asleep. There's a similar expression that means the same, “to be sound asleep” (sound). “To be sound asleep” means that you are sleeping completely, it will not be easy to wake you up.

Now let's listen to the story, this time at a native rate of speech.

[Start of story]

At 10:30, I decide to get ready for bed. When I was little, my mother would read me a bedtime story. I’m looking forward to having that ritual with my own kids someday.

I go into the bathroom and turn on the tap. I wash my face, and dry it with my towel. I floss and brush my teeth. I have to admit that by this time, I’m beat, and so is my wife. She cleans up when I’ve finished up.

In the meantime, I walk into the bedroom and get undressed. I put my dirty clothes in the hamper and I put on my pajamas. Wearing my slippers, I go into the kitchen to get a glass of water to put next to the bed in case I need it during the night. I pull back the covers, fluff my pillow, and climb into bed. I set my alarm clock for 6:15, and turn off the overhead light. I lay my head down and pull up the covers, kissing my wife goodnight. Some nights I have trouble falling asleep, but tonight, I didn’t need to count any sheep. I nod off right away and before long, I’m fast asleep.

[End of story]

Make listening to her scripts part of your daily English learning ritual. I speak of our very own scriptwriter, Dr. Lucy Tse. Thank you, Lucy!

From Los Angeles, California, I’m Jeff McQuillan, thank you for listening. Come back and listen to us again right here on ESL Podcast.

This course has been a production of the Center for Educational Development, in beautiful Los Angeles, California. Visit our website at eslpod.com.

This course was produced by Dr. Jeff McQuillan and Dr. Lucy Tse. Copyright 2006.


Glossary

bedtime story – a story that adults read to children before they go to sleep at night

* Can you read me one more bedtime story before I have to go sleep?

ritual – something that is done repeatedly and in the same way every time

* His morning ritual includes drinking a cup of coffee, eating a banana, and taking the dog for a walk.

tap – faucet; the metal thing that water flows through into a sink

* Please turn off the tap while you’re brushing your teeth. It’s wrong to waste water.

towel – a soft piece of fabric that absorbs water and helps someone or something become dry

* Yuki always uses two towels when she showers: one for her body, and one for her hair.

beat – very tired; exhausted

* After working on the report for 14 hours, I was beat and I wanted to go to sleep.

undressed – without clothes; not wearing clothes; naked

* You should always close the bedroom curtains before you get undressed.

hamper – a container for dirty clothes

* Make sure you do the laundry when the hamper is full.

pajamas – clothes worn while sleeping

* My cotton pajamas are the most comfortable clothes that I own. I love sleeping in them.

slippers – soft, warm shoes that are worn only inside the house

* She often puts her slippers in front of the fireplace to warm them before she puts them on her feet.

to pull back – to fold back; to move back

* When she heard the doorbell, she quietly pulled back the curtains to see who was at the front door.

covers – the layers of fabric that cover a bed

* Our cat likes to sleep in our bed under the covers, but we don’t allow her to do that.

to fluff – to make something larger and softer by hitting or brushing it

* I can’t sleep on a hard pillow so I always fluff my pillows at night.

overhead – on the ceiling; over one’s head

* Overhead lights are good in living rooms and dining rooms, but in bedrooms I prefer a small table lamp so that I can read before falling asleep.

to lay down – to put something or oneself in a horizontal (sideways) position

* I laid down the book I had been reading and turned out the lights.

to fall asleep – to begin to sleep

* Drinking a glass of warm milk often helps Jacomo fall asleep at night.

to count sheep – to imagine sheep jumping over a fence and to count them as a way of falling asleep

* Do you ever try counting sheep when you have trouble falling asleep?

to nod off – to start to sleep, often without intending or wanting to

* He was so tired that he was nodding off during the meeting. His boss was not happy.

fast asleep – sleeping soundly; sleeping very well; sleeping and unaware of other things happening

* The little boy was fast asleep when they got home and he didn’t wake up as his father carried him to bed.


Culture Note

Summertime Safety

Many people look forward to the return of warmer “temperatures” (how cold or warm it is outside) in the spring and summer months. Whether you're relaxing in the “backyard” (outdoor area behind one’s house), “gardening” (planting and growing flowers, vegetables, and other plants), enjoying the “pool” (small area built for swimming), or exploring “the great outdoors” (nature), here are some ways to help keep you and your family healthy this spring and summer.

In the warmer months, people like to cook food on the “grill” (metal surface placed over fire to cook meat and vegetables). When grilling, use a meat “thermometer” (device used to measure temperature) to make sure that you cook meat and “poultry” (chicken and other birds people eat) thoroughly. Also, put cooked meat on a clean “platter” (large plate), rather than back on the one that held the “raw” (uncooked) meat, to avoid “cross-contamination” (the transfer of “bacteria” (harmful substance that causes illness) from one place to another).

“Binge drinking” is when people drink five or more alcoholic drinks on a single occasion for men or four or more drinks on a single occasion for women, generally within about two hours. Binge drinking is associated with many health problems, including:

- “Motor vehicle” (cars, trucks, and more) “crashes” (hitting each other or some other thing).

- “Drowning” (dying from breathing in too much water)

- “High blood pressure” (too much force in moving blood through the body) and other “cardiovascular” (related to the heart) diseases.

Prevent skin cancer” (disease where “abnormal” (not normal) cells in the body grow in abnormal ways). Avoid being outdoors during the “midday” (the middle of the day) if the sun is “intense” (very strong), use “sunscreen” (lotion or liquid to protect one’s skin from the effects of the sun), “cover up” (protect the skin) with clothing, wear a “brimmed hat” (hat with a wide edge at the bottom to cover the face), and wear “sunglasses” (dark glasses) that block harmful “rays” (light from the sun).