Disappearing words (исполнитель: 6 Minute English)
Весь текст, к сожалению не умещается, продолжение здесь: [bad word] /downloads.bbc.co.uk//worldservice/learningenglish/6minute/090312_6min_disswords_pdf.pdf Группа Learning English. Kate: Hello, I'm Kate Colin and this is '6 Minute English' - and thanks to Jackie Dalton for joining me today. Good Morrow Jackie! Jackie: Eh…pardon? Kate: Good Morrow! I beseech thee, [bad word] thou? Jackie: Ermm… Kate: Don’t worry, I didn’t expect you to understand that, I’m speaking in ‘Old English’. What I said was the equivalent of saying, ‘Good morning – where do [bad word] from?’, using words which were in use a few hundred years ago and that we don’t use any longer. Jackie: Hello Kate. Yes, English is a language which is evolving all the time. So this means that there are new words continuously appearing and older words are disappearing. I didn’t understand the ‘Old English’ you started the programme with, because you were using words which we no longer use in everyday speech. Kate: Exactly. So, as you might have guessed, the topic we’ll be discussing is language and how it evolves and develops. So Jackie, as usual, I have a question for you….. Some of the oldest English sounding words date back how many years? a) 1000 years b) 20,000 years c) 500 years Jackie: (answers) Kate: OK, well we’ll check your answer at the end of the programme. But first, we’re going to hear part of an interview with a scientist who has been using a [bad word] to study our use of words and their evolution through time. Can you tell us what ‘evolution’ means? Jackie: Yes, ‘evolution’ – it’s similar to the word ‘evolving’, which I explained earlier. ‘Evolution’ is the gradual process of change and development over a long period of time and in this context it refers to language and how it develops and changes over the years. Kate: OK – well let’s listen and see if you can hear which words he thinks are some of the oldest in the English language… Mark Pagal ‘Well we’ve be able to discover that the numbers two, three and five and the pronoun ‘I’ and ‘who’ – those are the oldest words in the English language’. Kate: So Jackie, did you get that? Jackie: Yes, he said that the oldest words were two, three and five and the pronoun ‘I’ and the word, ‘who’. Kate: That’s correct. It’s hard to believe that some of the words we use everyday are in fact, extremely old. Back to our scientist, as well as thinking about words that have been in use for many years, he also predicts which words may eventually [bad word] extinct. Kate: Jackie, what does ‘predict’ mean? Jackie: To ‘predict’ is to say what you think will happen in the future, especially as a result of having prior knowledge or experience. For example, it’s cloudy outside today, so I predict that it’s going to rain later. Kate: and ‘extinct’ what does ‘extinct’ mean? Jackie: ‘to [bad word] extinct’ means to be no longer in existence or you can use the phrasal verb ‘to die out’. The word is often used when talking about a tribe of people or a type of animal which has ‘died out’, for example the dinosaurs have [bad word] extinct. Kate: So our scientist predicts which words are likely to [bad word] extinct. He does this by finding out how quickly different words evolve or develop and are replaced by other words with the same meaning. Now, let’s listen to the next extract. ….which words does he predict might [bad word] extinct? Mark Pagal ‘We can make some guesses as to what words might next go extinct, so for example the word ‘dirty’ seems to have the highest rate of change and so we might predict that sometime in the next 750 years, that word will be lost’. Jackie: He said the word ‘dirty’ may be lost or [bad word] extinct in the future. This is because it’s being replaced quite quickly by other words that mean the same thing. ...