To nick (исполнитель: BBC: The English We Speak)
Helen: Hello, and [bad word] to The English We Speak. My name is Helen. Rob: And I'm Rob. Helen: I saw you looking for your headphones earlier; did you find them? Rob: No, Helen. I looked for them everywhere. Someone must have nicked them. Helen: Nicked them? What do you mean? Rob: Oh, sorry, what I mean is someone stole my headphones. To nick something means to steal something. Helen: That's terrible. But how is it spelt? Rob: It's spelt N.I.C.K. nick, to nick something. Helen: My son's best friend is called Nick. It's the same spelling, isn't it? Rob: It is, but not the same meaning. Here the word 'nick' is a verb and it's British slang too. Helen: Let's hear a couple of examples. What items have been stolen? Man: Someone nicked my bike this morning. Lady: Oh, no. Did you report it to the police? Man: Yes, I did. Man 1: Where are the chocolate biscuits I was saving? I am sure I saw them yesterday. Man 2: Sorry, I don't know. Blame Dave, he's always nicking things. Rob: So, one of them lost a bike and the other one lost his chocolate biscuits. Helen: Unlucky chaps. Maybe the police can help them. Rob: Yes. The police can definitely help them by nicking those petty thieves. Helen: That's very confusing. The police can nick too? They can steal? Rob: No, no, no, no. The police can't nick things from people. But when they arrest someone, we can say the person is nicked. It means they're arrested by the police. Woman: Have you heard from Inspector James? Man: No. He's working on a big case. I think they have just nicked the main suspect! Helen: So if a criminal is caught by the police, then we can say he's nicked. Rob: That's right. Let's go over the two meanings of the verb 'to nick'. First, if something is nicked, it means it's stolen. Helen: Like my pen got nicked. Rob: Yes, that's right. But if a person gets nicked, we mean he's arrested by the police. Helen: [bad word] got nicked for throwing a pie [bad word] Murdoch. Rob: Yes, he did. Helen, you've got it. Just remember it's not a formal expression. Helen: Thank you. I'll keep that in mind. Bye for now. Rob: Bye!