Sunday, May 15, 2011

14 May 2011: gold idiom

In this episode, The Teacher introduces you to three idiomatic phrases connected with the colour gold.

1. As good as gold.
2. A heart of gold.
3. Worth its weight in gold.


The script:
Hello, I’m a very interesting, and intelligent and rich man. 
Not really. 
And today this gold and I will be getting together to teach you some English idioms. 
I bet you’ve never been taught by some gold before!
 And now… a metallurgy lesson. 
Gold is… good. 
Ah.   My boss’s dog, Brian. 
He asked me to look after him while he went away on holiday. 
My boss says Brian’s as good as gold. 
But I’m not so sure. 
In English, if someone - usually a child, or a pet, is very well-behaved, we say they’re as good as gold. 
As good as gold. 
There you are Brian, good dog…Ah!
Argh! Brian! Brian! Get down! No! Let go, Brian! Sit! Sit! Argh! Roll over! No, lay down Brian! ARGHGHGH! 
Have you met my sister? 
She’s a lovely girl, but I don't know why… nobody seems to like her. 
She’s so kind and helpful… 
…that’s right. She’s got a heart of gold. 
In English, if someone is very kind and helpful, we say they’ve got a heart of gold. 
A heart of gold. 
And next in our lesson on gold…. 
Gold is… 
… heavy…and… valuable. 
Um, what IS the time, by the way? 
Ah, thank you. 
Clocks are SO useful, aren’t they? In fact, they’re worth their weight in gold. 
In English, if something is extremely useful, we say it’s worth its weight in gold. 

My self-talk:


3 comments:

  1. the sounds arround u are so funny ^^

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  2. just joking. hehe. About ur record, I heard some pronunciation mistake: learn, gold, that ( no more "that" ^^), first, worth. Go google and hear the pron of these words to fix ur mistake ^^

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  3. the sound you heard was the noise of chilđren who were playing in the ground in front of my house.

    ReplyDelete