trancript1

BBC Learning English

6 Minute English

                                                  Love letters

NB: This is not a word for word transcript

Yvonne:Hello, I'm Yvonne Archer and Rob has joined me for today's 6 Minute English.

Now Rob, put yourromantic

hat on and tell us, have you ever sent or receiveda love letter?

Rob:Mm – both actually. I have sent one and I've received one as well.

Yvonne:And why don't you write love letters any more?

Rob:Because there's not enough time.

Yvonne:Well, today we're going to make time for love, because we're talking about‘Wives and Sweethearts’. It’s an exhibition at London's National Army

Museum. The exhibition includes letters from soldiers onthe front lineto their

loved ones which date back over the last 200 years. But before we find outmore – here's today's question, Rob.

Rob:OK!

Yvonne:In which year was The Royal Mail – Britain's postal service – founded?

a) 1516      b) 1710 or        c) 1780

Rob:I would say, quite a long time ago – probably 1710.

Yvonne:

OK, we'll find out whether you're right or wrong later on! Now, back to "Wives

and Sweethearts" – the collection of letters at the National Army Museum. It

aims to show us how army life affected personal relationships between soldiers

and their wives, sweethearts and families. But Rob – what would you say is

'a

sweetheart'?

Rob:It's a nice word, isn't it? And 'sweetheart' is quite an old-fashioned noun – so

now, we usually say 'girlfriend' or 'boyfriend'. But basically, a sweetheart is

someone we're sweet on – someone we like a lot and hold dear to our heart.

We're very fond of them.

Yvonne:So we might call a child 'a sweetheart' - or even a colleague who we really

appreciate. So, thanks for that explanation Rob - you're a sweetheart!

Rob:And so are you!

Yvonne:

Now, the letters in the exhibition were sent during the Napoleonic War, theCrimean War, World Wars I and II and even during the conflicts we'reexperiencing today. So they go back as far as 200 years. Let's listen to someexcerpts…

.Insert 1: Excerpt from love letters

1.  I do miss you so very much…

2.  Shall we become engaged in a sort of distant way? 

Yvonne:

The number of words used in the first excerpt gives the impression that the

letter was written a long time ago, doesn't it, Rob?

Rob:

Yes, it does. And today, we'd probably be more direct and simply say: "I missyou very much", but instead, we heard "I do miss you so very much".

Yvonne:

Now the second writer seems quiteshy

or unsure of how the young lady feels,because instead of simply asking his sweetheart to marry him, he suggests thatthey becomeengagedwhile he's still away

.Rob:He suggests that they get engaged 'in a sort of distant way' because he's farfrom home and can't propose marriage in person.

Yvonne:OK, well let's hope she accepted his proposal and that they got married after

the war. But of course, not all the letter writers were reunited,as Dr FrancesParton, organiser of the exhibition, explains:

Insert 2: Dr Frances Parton, Exhibit Organiser

Some of them are very moving and quite distressing. Obviously, we've looked at all the

aspects of a soldier's relationship and sometimes that can be very, very difficult when it

involves separation and obviously, in worst case scenarios, bereavement.

Yvonne:Rob, Dr Parton describes some of the letters as'verymoving'

. What does shemean by that?

Rob:

Well basically, when we read them, they make us feel very emotional –perhaps even tearful.

Yvonne:And some aspects – areas – of a soldier's relationship can involve '

worst casescenarios'.

Rob:'Worst case scenarios' are situations that couldn't possibly be sadder or more

dangerous, for example. And here, Dr Parton is talking about the fact that in

some cases, soldiers and their loved ones died.

Yvonne:Mm - well luckily, Caroline Flynn-MacCloud's husband recently returned

safely from a seven month

deploymentin Afghanistan. They have a wonderful

collection of love letters as a result, which are included in the exhibition at theNational Army Museum.

Rob:

Wow – they must be very different from the love letters written by soldiers

hundreds of years ago.

Yvonne:

Well funnily enough, Caroline says that they're not!

Insert 3: Caroline Flynn-MacCloud, wife of a soldier

Letters begin with the declaration of love and how much one is missing someone and end

pretty much the same way, and also saying not to worry. And in the middle, you have a

whole sort of section about quite banal things. When I wrote to him, sort of everyday

things to show life was going on as normal without him. And he wrote a bit about what

he was doing, but frustratingly, very little about what he was doing.

Yvonne:

So letters start by saying how much people love and miss each other and they

end by asking each other not to worry. But the middle of the letters are quite

interesting, aren't they?

Rob:

Yes, they are. That's where the

banal

things are written – the most ordinary or

even boring information about everyday life. But Caroline's husband didn't tell

her much about what he was doing out in Afghanistan.

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Yvonne:

No, perhaps soldiers aren't allowed to send too many details home because of

security issues and of course, they don't want to worry their loved ones at

home, do they?

Rob:No.

Yvonne:Well I don't know about you Rob, but I think I'm going to try to get to that

exhibition – and perhaps write a few more love letters of my own!

Rob:A good idea, actually. It'll be good to get pen to paper again and not rely on e-mail.

Yvonne:Exactly

.Right Rob, earlier, I asked: in which year was the Royal Mail founded?And you said…

Rob:I said 1710.

Yvonne:And you were….wrong!

Rob:Oh dear!

Yvonne:It was in 1516.

Rob:I am surprised. That is a long time ago so think of how many letters have been

sent since then.

Yvonne:Especially love letters.

Rob:Yes.

Page 5 of 7

 Yvonne:Do join us again soon for more "6 Minute English".

Both:Goodbye!

Vocabulary and definitions

someone who has a lot of positive and sometimes

romantic

unrealistic ideas, particularly about love

the front line

place where soldiers are directly fighting their enemy in a

war, and in danger of being killed

term used to express fondness for someone else,

a sweetheart

sometimes in a romantic way

shy

person who is quiet, nervous and uncomfortable with other

people

engaged

two people who have promised to get married to each

other

distant

far away

very moving

something which makes you emotional

worst case scenarios

the most unpleasant or unsatisfactory situations you can

imagine

deployment

movement of army troops to a place

something that is very ordinary and not interesting

banal

More on this story:

http://www.national-army-museum.ac.uk/exhibitions/special-displays/wives-

sweethearts

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2010

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                                          BBC Learning English

                                   6 Minute English

                                             A new lease of life

NB: This is not a word for word transcript

Alice:Hello, I'm Alice.

Finn:AndI'm Finn.

Alice:And this is 6 Minute English! This week we’re talking about an amazing

scientific achievement – it’s called a totalartificialheart.

Finn:That’s a heart that’s made completely artificially – in fact it’s made of plastic.

Something artificial is something that isn’t real.

Alice:This total artificial heart has givena new lease of life

to a patient in the UnitedStates – so before we find out more, Finn, I have a question for you. Which ofthese creatures has the slowest heartbeat? Ready?

Finn:OK, I’m ready!

Alice:A, an elephant, b, a human being or c, a dog.

Finn:Hmm – I’m really not sure about that. Do different size dogs have different heartbeats

I wonder, Alice?

Alice:I don’t know! I only know which of them has the slowest heartbeat and I’ll

give you the answer at the end of the programme. So let’s find out more about

this total artificial

heart. Here’s heart doctor, cardiologist Dr Doug

Page 1 of 7

Horstmanshof talking about his patient, Troy Golden, a pastor from the United

States who was born with a serious heart condition.

Insert 1: Dr Doug Horstmanshof

He suffers from a disease called Marfan's syndrome that he was born with. Physically,

He wasn't even able to get out of bed anymore, could barely bear weights, could barely

breathe comfortably. Emotionally, mentally, spiritually - he had reached a point so low

that most of us can't even imagine.

Alice:

Dr Doug Horstmanshof says his patient suffered badly from his disease. He

had reached a point so low that most of us can’t even imagine.

Finn:A point so low – a condition that is so bad you can’t imagine things getting any worse.

Alice:Troy Golden was physically, emotionally, spiritually and mentally exhausted.

He had been put on a list for a heart transplant in January 2010 but couldn’t find a donor.

Finn:A donor – somebody who gives you something, in this case a human heart.

Somebody who donates a heart or a liver or kidney is called an organ donor.

Alice:And Troy’s heart was in such a bad condition a normal heart pump wouldn’t

work for him, so Dr Horstmanshof decided to do something incredible in

September 2010. He removed his patient’s heart completely and replaced it

with a plastic heart – the total artificial heart. It contains valves, a pump and

also batteries to keep it powered.

Finn:So that was September 2010 – Troy Golden has had his new heart for several

months now. How has it been functioning?

Alice:Let’s hear what he says.

Insert 2: Troy Golden

Yeah, I really have got to the point that I don't even really notice it, other than it's loud.

So... I think for my wife it feels, to her, she can hear it beating so she knows I'm alive, so

it's very comforting to her.

Alice:Troy Golden says his wife can hear the heart beating, and she finds the sound very comforting

Finn:Comforting – it makes her feel safe and secure.

Alice:And Troy Golden says he’s got to a point where he doesn’t really notice his new heart.

Finn:He’s got to a point where he doesn’t notice his new heart, which means he’s

got used to it.

Alice:Another doctor, Dr Kevin Fong, a Consultant Anaesthetist at University

College Hospital in London, says the total artificial heart is almost  unbelievable – he calls it

mind-blowing 

Insert 3: Dr Kevin Fong

It's mind-blowing to think that where he once had a heart, there's now a mechanical

device; that it's been replaced with plastic and tubes attached to a pneumatic pump

inside the rucksack on his back.

Alice:

Dr Kevin Fong, a Consultant Anaesthetist from University College Hospital in

London, describing the mechanical device which is keeping Troy Golden alive.

Finn:pneumatic  pump – now, a pneumatic pump is an air pump, and this one is  kept in a

rucksack  on the patient’s back.

Alice:Troy Golden carries the rucksack on his back, and he says it’s great to know

his heart is pumping. He says it’s wonderful to feel alive again.

Insert 4: Troy Golden

It is great to know that my… that  the heart is pumping, that my heart is pumping. I

guess it's not mine, but it is wonderful to feel alive again.

Alice:

Troy Golden who has been given a new lease of life with his total artificial heart.

Finn: A new lease of life – that’s new energy and a new sense of happiness.

Alice:So, before we go today, Finn – have you had a chance to think about my

question about the heart rates of different creatures.

Finn:Well, I think the bigger the animal the slower the heartbeat, so I’m going to go for elephant.

Alice:Ah, well done – very good! Apparently an elephant’s heart beats only 25 times

a minute, a human being, usually between about 60 and 90 times a minute, and

a dog, between 100 and 150 heartbeats every minute!

Finn:There you go.

Alice:Yes. So, a chance to hear some of the words and phrases. Finn, would youmind?Finn:

artificial  a new lease of life

heartbeat

comforting

got to a point

mind-blowing

pneumatic

rucksack

Alice:

Thanks for that, Finn.

Finn:

You’re welcome.

Alice:

Well that’s all we have time for today, and we’ll have more "6 Minute

English" next time.

Finn:

Bye for now! 

Vocabulary and definitions

objects or materials which do not occur naturally, and are

artificial

made by people

a new lease of life

a new, positive stage in your life

heartbeat

the regular movement of the heart as it pumps blood

around the body

comforting

reassuring

got to a point

reached a position or time

mind-blowing

extraordinary or amazing

pneumatic

powered by compressed or pressurised air

rucksack

large bag for carrying personal belongings, which is

carried on the back

More on this story:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-12422348

Read and listen to the story online:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/general/sixminute/2011/03/110303_6min_english_heart_page.shtml

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 7 of 7

 BBC Learning English

6 Minute English

Sleepwalking

NB: This is not a word for word transcript

Alice:

Hello, I'm Alice…

Stephen:

And

I'm Stephen.

Alice:

And this is 6 Minute English! This week we’re talking about

sleepwalking

.Have you ever walked in your sleep, Stephen?

Stephen:

I don’t think so, but I’ve been known to tell stories in my sleep.

Alice:

Oh, fascinating. This is a new development by scientists in the United States

that shows that sleepwalking is

genetic –

it’s passed on from parent to child.

They’ve been looking at the

genes

of four

generations

of a family who have a

lot of sleepwalkers. But before we find out more, I have a question for you,

Stephen. What do the letters REM stand for? And it’s not just the name of an

American pop group….

Stephen:

REM – that’s something to do with sleep?

Alice:

It is – does it stand for:

a) rapid eye movement

b) random eye movement or

c) relative eye movement

Stephen:

I’m going to guess a) rapid eye movement.

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 1 of 6

 

 

Alice:

As usual, I won’t tell you the answer now – we’ll find out at the end of the

programme! So let’s hear more about what it’s like to be a sleepwalker. Here’s

Margaret Brand, a woman who often spends several hours a night sleepwalking:

Insert 1: Margaret Brand

Sometimes I was just back in bed and didn’t know that I’d sleepwalked. But I’d wake

up in the morning and find that things had been moved or eaten or forgotten – and it

had to be me because I was the only person in the flat. Other times I would wake up,

usually in the kitchen. I took medication – on one occasion, three 20ml doses of

morphine.

Alice:

Margaret Brand said that she moves or eats things when she’s sleepwalking,

and she once took

medication

– drugs - while she was asleep.

Stephen:

She says

on one occasion,

she took

doses

of morphine.

Alice:

That’s dangerous. There are also other instances when sleepwalking

can put the

person or other people in danger. Dr Dev Banerjee is a sleep expert at the

Heartlands Hospital in Birmingham, in the UK. He says that there have been

occasions when sleepwalkers have injured themselves, or even got into their

cars to drive:

Insert 2: Dr Dev Banerjee

I think (for) the majority of those that sleepwalk (it) is fairly harmless and quite novel

actually, but there are a proportion who do injure themselves, fall down the stairs. I’ve

got someone from Bristol who put his hand through a glass window and severed his

radial artery. Not only just injuries, but risks of injuries such as getting out of the house,

onto the street. There have been cases, I think in America, where people got into their

car and drove down a freeway.

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 2 of 6

 

 

Alice:

Dr Dev Banerjee, who says that usually sleepwalking is

harmless

– even novel

– unique and quite amusing.

Stephen:

What else do scientists know about sleepwalking, Alice?

Alice:

They know it’s pretty common. One in five children sleepwalk and one in ten

adults. And there’s a new development by scientists in the United States that

shows

it runs in families

– it’s genetic.

Stephen:

It is passed on from parent to child in a person’s

genes

.

Genes

control which

features identify a person.

Alice:

Scientists examined the DNA – the genetic code of a family of four generations

who suffer from sleepwalking, and found that they carried a

defective

gene,

chromosome 20.

Stephen:

A defective

gene – that’s a gene which has a fault. DNA

is the complicated

code that makes a human unique and is carried from generation to generation.

Alice:

Once the defective gene has been identified it means it could be easier to find

treatments and tests for sleepwalkers. People that carry the defective gene have

a

50-50

chance of passing it onto their children.

Stephen:

50–50

- that means they have an equal chance of either inheriting the gene

or

not inheriting it! 50 per cent vs per cent.

Alice:

Here’s the BBC’s Health Reporter, Michelle Roberts:

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 3 of 6

 

 

Insert 2: Michelle Roberts

DNA analysis of the 22 relatives, from the great-grandparents downwards, located the

chromosome where the fault lies. Sleepwalkers with these genes on chromosome 20, had

a 50-50 chance of passing them onto their children. More work is needed to see if the

discovery will explain all cases of sleepwalking, but in the meantime, the researchers say

it should help them to develop tests and treatments.

Alice:

The BBC’s Health Reporter, Michelle Roberts, who says more work is needed

to see if the discovery of the sleepwalking gene will help explain all cases of

sleepwalking

.

Well, that’s all we have time for today, Stephen – but before we

go, what did you think about REM?

Stephen:

I guessed that it stands for ‘rapid eye movement’.

Alice:

And you’re right. It’s the stage of sleep where your eyes move around a lot –

and it’s about 20-25% of your total sleep apparently.

Stephen:

Well, don’t say you don’t learn anything new on 6 Minute English!

Alice:

Exactly, Stephen. And before we go, because you did so well answering the

question, would you mind reading some of the words and phrases we’ve heard

today?

Stephen:

Yes of course:

sleepwalk

genetic

genes

doses of medication

harmless

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 4 of 6

 

 

it runs in families

generations

defective

50-50

Alice:

Thanks so much for that, Stephen. We hope you’ll join us next time on "6

Minute English".

Both:

Bye.

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 5 of 6

 

 

Vocabulary and definitions

do things while asleep, e.g. walk around

sleepwalk

genetic

inherited; a feature that someone was born with that was

passed on by their parents or grandparents

genes

parts of living cells which carry information about physical

characteristics, e.g. a person’s appearance and health

doses of medication

specific amounts of medicines taken at regular times, as

instructed by a doctor

harmless

not dangerous

it runs in families

it is a feature or condition that affects several people who

are related

generations

here, members of a family who are directly related through

their parents, grandparents, great grandparents etc

defective

faulty, imperfect

50-50

two equal possibilities

More on this story:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-12394009

Read and listen to the story online:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/general/sixminute/2011/02/110224_6min_english_sleep_page.shtml

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 6 of 6

 

BBC Learning English

6 Minute English

Citizen Journalism

NB: This is not a word for word transcript

Stephen:

Hello, I'm Stephen.

Rob:

And

I'm Rob.

Stephen:

And this is 6 Minute English! This week we’re talking about

citizen

journalism

.

Rob:

Citizen journalism – that’s when people who aren’t

trained

journalists write or

report about their experiences or use

social media

, like Facebook or Twitter, to

broadcast their messages.

Stephen:

Over the last few weeks, media companies have published a large number of

videos, photos, phone calls and blogs from citizen journalists in countries

where protests have been taking place, and there aren’t many – or any -

traditional journalists. But as usual, I’m going to start with a question for you,

Rob.

Rob:

OK, I’m ready.

Stephen:

Which of these six countries, according to figures from internet world stats, has

the largest percentage of people using the internet?

Rob:

The largest percentage of people who use the internet. OK. Have got you any

clues?

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

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Stephen:

Well, your six countries are South Korea, Japan, the US, the UK, India or

China.

Rob:

Hmm…let me think. I would say South Korea.

Stephen:

Well, I won’t tell you the answer just yet. We can find out at the end of the

programme. So let’s talk about citizen journalism. Could citizen journalists

ever replace traditional journalists? Peter Barron, the Director of External

Relations at Google, says there has been a massive

democratisation

in access

to information.

Rob:

A massive democratisation – that's when people all over the world can access

information on the internet, and use the same tools

to publish

information

themselves.

Insert 1:

Peter Barron, Director of External Relations, Google

The point here is that there has been a massive democratisation in access to information

and the ability to publish information – so everybody these days can be a publisher.

What you’ve seen time and time again, is that the very high quality material rises to the

top and becomes a trusted brand, alongside the trusted brands that already exist.

Stephen

:   Peter Barron from Google believes that the best quality blogs will become as

trusted as media companies -

media brands

- which already have a good

reputation.

Rob

:   Very high quality material rises to the top – the best blogs will become as

popular as traditional broadcasters or newspapers.

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 2 of 6

 

 

Stephen:

Alan Rusbridger is the editor of the Guardian newspaper in the UK. He says

that traditional journalists will always be needed to make sense of large

amounts of information, something which citizen journalists might not be able

to do. He uses the example of Wikileaks.

Insert 1: Alan Rusbridger, Editor, The Guardian

The case of Wikilieaks was an excellent one; 300 million words would have been

completely meaningless if it had been dumped on the internet, as well as being

completely unsafe. It took months of Guardian, New York Times, Der Spiegel

journalists going through and finding the stories, redacting them and making sense of

them. So the journalist still has a valuable role as mediator, analyser and finder and

verifier of stories.

Stephen:

Alan Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian newspaper, who gives the example of

Wikileaks, where he says 300 million words, dumped on the internet, would

have been completely meaningless if journalists hadn’t been able

to go

through them

.

Rob:

To go through them – finding stories and checking them. He says the journalist

has a valuable role as mediator, analyser, finder and verifier of stories.

Stephen:

Journalists need to check stories – to

verify

them, to check they are safe to

publish and that they are true. Anne McElvoy from the Economist magazine

says that citizen journalism

hasn’t really

been tested yet.

It’s a very

valuable

source

when the story is on the street, but not when we, the readers, listeners or

viewers, aren’t sure which side we should be on.

Rob:  Whose side we should be on -

who we support. When it is clear whose side

we should be on,

citizen journalists

are very valuable, but when we don’t

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

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really know what’s going on, we need the traditional skills of journalists to

analyse material to help us understand. She says ‘we rely on the trade’ -

meaning the trade of the traditional journalist.

Insert 3: Anne McElvoy

Citizen journalism hasn’t really been tested yet; we’re writing a lot about it and

reflecting on it. But really, what we’ve seen is it being very active and also being a very

valuable source, I should say, but in situations where we kind of know, generally, which

side we are on. We know that the story is on the street. I think citizen journalism will

have a much tougher time when we have situations - which will arise - when we’re really

not sure which side should have the upper hand, or, indeed, what’s really going on. And

that’s an area where I think you do rely a bit on the old trade to have analysis skills and

to help you out there.

Stephen:

Anne McElvoy talking about citizen journalists. So, before we go today, Rob –

which of those six countries did you guess has the highest internet penetration?

That’s the highest percentage of population who are online.

Rob:

OK. Well, I said South Korea. Am I right?

Stephen:

Actually it’s the UK – followed by South Korea, then Germany, Japan, the US,

China and finally India.

Rob:

Well I never!

Stephen:

And a chance to hear some of the words and phrases we heard in the

programme today. Would you mind, Rob?

Rob:

OK, we heard:

citizen journalism

trained

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 4 of 6

 

 

social media

democratisation

to publish

media brands

to go through them

verify

hasn’t really been tested yet

valuable source

Stephen:

Thanks for that, Rob.

Rob:

You’re welcome.

Stephen:

Well, that’s all we have time for today - we’ll have more "6 Minute English"

next time.

Rob:

Bye for now!

Stephen:

Bye!

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

Page 5 of 6

 

 

Vocabulary and definitions

information collected by people who are not formally

citizen journalism

employed as journalists; their material is not always edited

and published by recognised media sources

trained

learned how to be a reporter through courses or lessons

social media

websites where people interact socially via different types

of technology and software

democratisation

a process which makes it easier for people to find out

about and contribute to the information available

to publish

to make your work available to the public through printed

or electronic media (e.g. books, newspapers, the internet)

media brands

well known companies or corporations which produce

media content (e.g. the BBC)

to go through them

to read, analyse and organise them

confirm something is true

verify

hasn’t really been tested yet

not yet known if it works well in really challenging

situations

valuable source

place where useful and trusted information can be found

More on this story:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/9405719.stm

Read and listen to the story online:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/general/sixminute/2011/03/110310_6min_english_citizen_journalism_page.shtml

6 Minute English

© bbclearningenglish.com 2011

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