Episode 0200
Summary
Two speakers discuss food choices, with one expressing concern about the other's frequent consumption of unhealthy fast food and sugary drinks. The first speaker eventually agrees to adopt healthier eating habits, prompting a cautious acceptance from the second speaker who emphasizes the importance of sticking to the promise.
Transcript (Click timestamp to jump)
Englishpod.com
I'm hungry. Let's go grab a bite to eat.
Sure. How about we go home and prepare a couple of sandwiches?
Nah, let's get a burger and fries.
All you ever do is have unhealthy fast food. Pizza, fries, burgers, and hot dogs. You have to start eating better.
What are you talking about? I have salad sometimes.
Yeah, right. I'm serious. You should also cut down on your sugar intake as well.
You drink carbonated drinks that are high in fructose syrup. It's really not healthy.
Fine, I'll start drinking water and having home-cooked meals that are low in fat. Are you happy now?
It's a start, but I'll be happy when I see you stick to your promise.
Summary
The audio features a discussion about junk food between two speakers, Marco and Catherine. They announce their 200th lesson, then delve into a dialogue about unhealthy eating habits, followed by a detailed "Language Takeaway" section explaining terms like "unhealthy," "fast food," "carbonated drinks," and "fructose syrup." The "Fluency Builder" segment focuses on phrases like "grab a bite to eat" and the correct usage of "how about." Finally, they share their personal favorite junk foods, highlighting regional differences in food terminology and preferences before concluding the episode.
Transcript (Click timestamp to jump)
Hello everyone and welcome back to English Pod.
My name is Marco.
And my name is Catherine and we've got a special announcement to make today.
That's right. This is lesson number 200.
Woohoo!
Woohoo! So good job, English Pod. We have over 200 lessons already in our library, so that's that's like enough for like six months of continuous learning, I think.
But the lessons keep coming and they keep getting better. So of course you should continue to listen to us. We just thought we would mention that today is the special number 200.
Exactly. And because it's a special number, we're gonna talk about a very laid-back topic, but very interesting nonetheless. We're talking about junk food.
You might argue that it's actually too laid back and it's the cause of many problems in America and other places in the world. Junk food is unhealthy food.
So let's take a listen to today's dialogue and we'll be back in a moment to talk about what's going on.
I'm hungry. Let's go grab a bite to eat.
Sure. How about we go home and prepare a couple of sandwiches?
Nah, let's get a burger and fries.
All you ever do is have unhealthy fast food. Pizza, fries, burgers, and hot dogs. You have to start eating better.
What are you talking about? I have salad sometimes.
Yeah, right. I'm serious. You should also cut down on your sugar intake as well. You drink carbonated drinks that are high in fructose syrup. It's really not healthy.
Fine. I'll start drinking water and having home-cooked meals that are low in fat. Are you happy now?
It's a start, but I'll be happy when I see you stick to your promise.
Alright, we're back. So let's take a look at some of the great words and phrases all about junk food now in Language Takeaway.
Mm, my favorite. The stuff makes me hungry.
But it's not very good for you.
It's not, it's terrible. And especially his favorite food was burger and fries.
Oh, had it for dinner last night.
Really? You had burger and fries?
Yeah, maybe. Well, it's not very healthy and there is a great way to describe this. The word is unhealthy.
Alright, so yes, as you say, it's very unhealthy. Well, yeah, because you get fat, they're very high in calories, so it's unhealthy. So that means it's not good for you.
That's right. So just a reminder, in English, when we hear the word unhealthy or unhappy, this means not healthy, not happy. Un is a prefix that means not.
Mhm.
Okay, and talking about unhealthy food, in general, what are we talking about? We're talking about fast food.
Okay, so this might require a story. What is the meaning behind fast food as opposed to slow food? Because there is no slow food, right?
Uh, I think now they have it in like France or something like that. They talk about slow food. But anyways, fast food is food that is prepared very quickly. So you go, you order, in two or three minutes you have your entire order ready to go.
Okay, so maybe this is the food that I could get at McDonald's or Burger King where they make it very, very quickly and I can go home or I can go to the office with my food ready.
Exactly. So fast food, very popular among countries, very popular nowadays among busy people who have no time to sit down at a restaurant or eat or sit down and have a proper lunch.
Fast food.
And one of the important drinks at a fast food restaurant is a carbonated drink. So this carbonated, what does this mean?
This is actually the fancy word for soda or for fizzy drink.
Fizzy. Okay, so something that's carbonated has bubbles.
Yeah, it has bubbles.
For example, a lot of Europeans drink carbonated water. That means water with bubbles in it.
Mhm, that's right.
So actually the bubbles are caused because the drink has a high concentration of a certain gas, such as carbon. So that's why it has all these bubbles and it's fizzy, like Coca-Cola for example.
Right, Coca-Cola or Sprite. These are carbonated drinks.
Very good.
So you have carbonated water and you have carbonated soda. What is the thing that makes soda different? What is it that makes soda taste so good?
It's sweet and the ingredient that makes it sweet is called fructose syrup.
Fructose syrup is essentially sugar.
Yeah, and it comes from corn, I believe, right?
That's right. So you can also hear the name corn syrup and this is a sweet syrup that comes from corn that makes drinks like Sprite and Coca-Cola taste so good.
Mhm. It's also very unhealthy for you.
Yes, because it has a lot of calories. So that is one of the main ingredients in soda. Now you know, you have fructose syrup.
All right, so that's all we've got for language takeaway. Let's take another listen to today's dialogue. We'll be back in a second.
I'm hungry. Let's go grab a bite to eat.
Sure. How about we go home and prepare a couple of sandwiches?
Nah, let's get a burger and fries.
All you ever do is have unhealthy fast food. Pizza, fries, burgers, and hot dogs. You have to start eating better.
What are you talking about? I have salad sometimes.
Yeah, right. I'm serious. You should also cut down on your sugar intake as well. You drink carbonated drinks that are high in fructose syrup. It's really not healthy.
Fine. I'll start drinking water and having home-cooked meals that are low in fat. Are you happy now?
It's a start, but I'll be happy when I see you stick to your promise.
Alright, we're back. So now we have a couple of great phrases that we heard along the dialogue, so let's take a look at those now in Fluency Builder.
Alright, so starting off, this is a very interesting phrase because we saw it in the first sentence and it says, let's go grab a bite to eat. Let's grab a bite to eat.
So to grab is to hold something with your hand, okay, to do it quickly. Um, he grabbed my arm. So to grab a bite to eat, a bite is a small taste, we're going to have a quick meal.
So after work, you want to go grab a bite to eat?
That means let's go have something to eat quickly.
Yeah. Oh, I'll be there soon. Let me just grab a bite to eat.
So bite is a little bit, it's a small amount of food.
Mhm. Now for our next phrase, it's very important because I've noticed that a lot of our English learners make the mistake of using this phrase. It's how about.
How about.
So in today's dialogue, the phrase is, how about we go home and prepare a couple of sandwiches?
Mhm. So, how about is used as a suggestion is, how do you feel or what do you think of going home and preparing a couple of sandwiches?
So another way to say this is, why don't we go home and prepare some sandwiches?
Exactly.
But commonly English learners make the mistake of using how about as a way of saying how was it or how is it? So, for example, how about your weekend?
Eh.
Wrong. Okay.
So, how was your weekend?
Exactly.
So, how about is usually used when we make a suggestion. How about we go see a movie on Saturday?
Or how about we go to my parents' house for Christmas this year?
Or finally, how about you get another job so that we can have more money to spend on going out to eat?
Very good.
So how about these are all suggestions. Why don't you get another job? Why don't we go to our parents' house for Christmas?
So you can't say, um, how about your weekend? You say, how was your weekend?
So there's a big difference there.
Very good. So make sure to stay away from that typical mistake using how about.
Now, moving on, we were talking about fast food and how it's bad for you and she said, you know what? You should also cut down on your sugar intake. So to cut down, that's a phrasal verb.
That's right. Cut down. So that means to decrease.
Um, I'm trying to cut down on the amount of soda that I drink.
Mhm. Or I'm trying to cut down on how much I spend on the weekends.
Okay, so to cut down means to decrease or to lessen.
Mhm, very good.
And for our last phrase, the whole thing that we're talking about and one of the favorite meals for everyone, burger and fries.
Okay, so this is one of many combinations for meals. You can have a burger and fries, which is a hamburger and French fries. So oftentimes you say, hey, let's go grab a burger and fries.
Um, another combination, especially in England is fish and chips.
Yeah, fish and chips.
Fish would be a fried fish sandwich and chips would be a French fries as well.
That's right. So and actually in England they call french fries, they call them chips.
So, if you're confused by the word chips or potato chips and french fries, these are different things in different places. But if you're talking to an American, french fries is the way to go.
Or for a while, they were called freedom fries.
Well, we don't need to talk about that. We can talk about that in a later lesson. But for now, the phrase is burger and fries.
Alright. So let's listen to our dialogue for the very last time.
I'm hungry. Let's go grab a bite to eat.
Sure. How about we go home and prepare a couple of sandwiches?
Nah, let's get a burger and fries.
All you ever do is have unhealthy fast food. Pizza, fries, burgers, and hot dogs. You have to start eating better.
What are you talking about? I have salad sometimes.
Yeah, right. I'm serious. You should also cut down on your sugar intake as well. You drink carbonated drinks that are high in fructose syrup. It's really not healthy.
Fine. I'll start drinking water and having home-cooked meals that are low in fat. Are you happy now?
It's a start, but I'll be happy when I see you stick to your promise.
We're back. Marco, you're laughing. I know you like junk food. What's your favorite junk food of all time?
Actually, I am a big, big fan of fried chicken. Mmm.
I love fried chicken.
Yummy.
It's, I don't know, it's I I think it's really greasy and oily and it's very, very bad, but I can't help it. It's very good.
You can buy bags of it in America.
Like a pound bag of fried chicken.
You buy by the pound in America, right? Yep. You pay you pay for how much it weighs.
Wow.
That's amazing. I actually really enjoy it, but places like Kentucky Fried Chicken, they're too expensive for a fried chicken.
Yeah, you you don't necessarily want to go there. There's other places that are a lot more, um, maybe traditional that are pretty good.
How about you? What is your favorite junk food?
Chicago style hot dog and French fries. Yeah.
Like a you know, when you go to see a baseball game, you get a hot dog. But Chicago style is good. It's not too much stuff on it. You have a a poppy seed bun, so it's a bun, a piece of bread with some seeds on it and a lot of mustard and ketchup and onions.
I really enjoy hot dogs, but the one thing that I cannot have on a hot dog is mustard or relish.
Oh my gosh. Those are the two best things. Okay, I can't talk to you anymore.
Well, tell us what your favorite junk food is and tell Marco that he's crazy if he doesn't like mustard. Um, our website is Englishpod.com. Ask us questions as well. We're happy to answer them.
Until next time.
Bye everyone.
Summary
This audio is an English vocabulary review session. It introduces several phrases like "grab a bite," "how about," "all you ever do," "cut down," and "stick to." The session follows a structure where a female speaker provides definitions or example sentences, a male speaker (Speaker 2) vocalizes the vocabulary words, and another male speaker (Speaker 1) acts as a narrator guiding the pace and segments. It progresses from definitions to word repetition, then to using the words in full sentences, and includes a segment for faster repetition. The overall tone is instructional and neutral.
Transcript (Click timestamp to jump)
The English Pod audio review.
Listen to the meaning, then say the vocabulary word.
Get food that can be eaten quickly.
Grab a bite.
Something frequently done.
All you ever do.
Reduce the amount taken or used.
Cut down.
What do you think?
How about.
Continue doing something.
Stick to.
Let's try that faster.
Reduce the amount taken or used.
Cut down.
Get food that can be eaten quickly.
Grab a bite.
What do you think?
How about.
Something frequently done.
All you ever do.
Continue doing something.
Stick to.
Now say the word and hear it in a sentence.
Grab a bite.
Do you want to go grab a bite after work?
Grab a bite.
Let's grab a bite before we go to school.
Grab a bite.
Derek and I are going to grab a bite with Catherine.
How about.
How about we go to the movies tonight?
How about.
How about you pick me up at 3?
How about.
How about we go to my parents' house for Christmas this year?
All you ever do.
All you ever do is complain.
All you ever do.
All you ever do is play computer games.
All you ever do.
All my parents ever do is yell at me.
Cut down.
We need to cut down on unnecessary expenses.
Cut down.
The doctor said I should cut down on my sugar intake.
Cut down.
Our company had to cut down operational costs.
Stick to.
It's hard for me to stick to this diet.
Stick to.
You have to stick to your promise.
Stick to.
I will stick to my New Year's resolution this year.