Introduction
Shopping lists, to-do lists, check lists – when was the last time you made, or followed, a list? When you stop to think about it, many of the things we read and write in our everyday lives are some sort of list, but why are they so common? Phil and Beth discuss this and teach you some new vocabulary.
This week’s question
According to the list on the Internet Movie Database website, which movie has made the most money ever?
a) Titanic
b) Avengers: Endgame
c) Avatar
Listen to the programme to hear the answer.
Vocabulary
bucket list
list of all the things a person would like to do before they die
puke
(slang) vomit, sick
bang for your buck
(idiom) value gained in return for the money, time or effort you spend doing something
saccharine
excessively sweet or sentimental and so considered insincere or inauthentic
the nub of (something)
the most important or essential point of (a situation, problem, etc.)
pros and cons
advantages and disadvantages
TRANSCRIPT
Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript.
Phil
Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Phil.
Beth
And I’m Beth.
Phil
A list is a collection of items with a single item written on each line, and they’re everywhere: shopping lists, to-do lists, even bucket lists – a list of all the things a person would like to do before they die. In fact, there’s an episode of 6 Minute English all about them*.
Beth
Imagine you’re at the supermarket and find someone’s shopping list. This happens a lot to Jo Nolan, a linguistics researcher whose new book explores our love of lists. Here’s Jo reading her shopping list on BBC Radio 4 programme Word of Mouth:
Jo Nolan
I only list the first four items, but the list read: “Nanas, aye-aye, puke, shrooms.”
Beth
“Nanas, aye-aye, puke, shrooms.” Err… can you work out what Jo was buying at the supermarket, Phil?
Phil
OK. Well, I’m going to guess that ‘nanas’ are bananas. And ‘shrooms’ – they’ve got to be mushrooms, right?
Beth
OK. But what about ‘aye-aye’ and ‘puke‘? What could they mean? Well, here’s Jo’s explanation to Michael Rosen, presenter of BBC Radio 4’s Word of Mouth:
Michael Rosen
And let’s just come back to puke… I mean, were you instructing yourself to be sick in the supermarket? I’m just a bit lost there.
Jo Nolan
No, it’s slightly grotesque. Erm… my husband doesn’t like cucumber, and the abbreviation for cucumber would be ‘cuc’, so he has always referred to it as puke.
Phil
Aha! Cucumbers make Joanna’s husband puke – a slang word for vomit. And puke rhymes with ‘cuc’, so it’s a way of reminding her to buy cucumbers. Wow! Sometimes lists are like secret codes. **
Beth
In this episode, we’ll find out why people love lists and learn some useful new words and phrases. And remember: you’ll find another list – of all the vocabulary used – on our website, bbclearningenglish.com.
Phil
But first, a question for you, Beth. According to the list on the Internet Movie Database website, which movie has made the most money ever? Is it:
a) Titanic,
b) Avengers: Endgame, or
c) Avatar?
Beth
I think it might be Avatar, although that might have been the most expensive to make. I’m not sure.
Phil
OK. Well, we’ll find out at the end of the programme. Popular songs are full of lists, and one of the most famous is My Favourite Things, sung by Julie Andrews in the film The Sound of Music. The song lists all her favourite things, from ‘raindrops on roses’ to ‘whiskers on kittens’. Here, Jo Nolan and Michael Rosen discuss the song on BBC Radio 4 programme Word of Mouth:
Jo Nolan
I feel like you get a lot – you get a big bang for your buck in that song. Maybe it’s the positivity – it’s a bit saccharine. Maybe that’s also part of the issue. The list encourages you to think really efficiently and economically, so I think you don’t waste a lot of time and effort making a nice sentence or using long words. You just get to the nub of things quite quickly.
Beth
The song’s list of ‘favourite things’ is long, and Jo says you get a big bang for your buck – an idiom meaning that you gain a lot in return for the money or effort you spend on something. But not everyone likes the song. Some call it saccharine – an adjective meaning excessively sweet, sentimental or insincere.
Phil
Lists often abbreviate the items they contain, so you get to the nub of things quickly. The nub of something means the most important or essential point about it.
Beth
Lists can be useful as well. Here’s Jo Nolan giving an example of a useful list to BBC Radio 4’s Word of Mouth:
Jo Nolan
A friend of mine who makes pros and cons lists finds that it really helps her resolve a situation. She halves her page: pros, cons. And she said by the end of it, she knows what she’s doing.
Phil
Lists help us make decisions by writing down all the pros and cons of a situation. The pros and cons is another way of saying the advantages and disadvantages of something, especially when you’re trying to choose between them.
Beth
The more you think about it, the more you see lists everywhere – in menus and bank statements, for example. And therapists even recommend listing all the good things in your life to feel happier – not bad for a few words on a scrap of paper.
Phil
OK. It’s time to reveal the answer to my question. Beth, I asked you which movie had made the most money ever, and you said Avatar. And now, according to the Internet Movie Database… that’s exactly right.
Beth
Yay!
Phil
OK. Let’s recap the vocabulary we’ve learned, starting with bucket list – all the things you would like to do before you die.
Beth
Puke is slang for vomit or sick.
Phil
If something gives bang for your buck, you gain a lot of extra value in return for the money or effort you put into it.
Beth
If you call something saccharine, you criticise it for being too sweet or sentimental.
Phil
The nub of a problem or situation is the most important or essential thing about it.
Beth
And finally, something’s pros and cons are its advantages and disadvantages. Once again, our six minutes are up, but remember – you’ll find a quiz and worksheet for this episode over on our website, www.bbc-story.com. Goodbye for now!
Phil
Bye!
** Later in the BBC World Service programme Word of Mouth, Jo Nolan explains that ‘aye-aye’ refers to broccoli, because during mealtimes her late father-in-law would often say to her children, “Aye-aye! Eat up your broccol-aye!”