15 min listen
15. Election Day Vocabulary!! (English Vocabulary Lesson)
15. Election Day Vocabulary!! (English Vocabulary Lesson)
ratings:
Length:
16 minutes
Released:
Nov 1, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
On today’s episode, the final episode in this series on US election vocabulary, we will look at the Election Day. Who can vote? Where do they vote? How do they voter? When will the results be announced? When will the winner become president? These questions, and the vocabulary connected to them, will be answered in today's episode of Thinking in English! If you haven’t already, make sure you listen to episodes 6, 9, and 12 for even more political vocabulary!!
FULL TRANSCRIPT: https://thinkinginenglish.blog/2020/11/01/15-election-day-vocabulary/
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VOCABULARY LIST
To go to the polls (v) - to vote
The USA will go to the polls on November 3rd
To cast (v) - to vote
All the votes in the election have now been cast and counting has begun
absentee (n) - someone who is absent
If you can’t vote on election day, you can vote using an absentee ballot
intimidation (n) - the action of frightening or threatening someone, usually in order to persuade them to do something that you want them to do
As the election approaches, it will be difficult to prevent voter intimidation and fraud
invalidation (n) - the action of stopping a document, ticket, law, etc. from being legal or officially acceptable
Voting fraud led to the invalidation of the election
To tamper (v) - to make changes to something that you should not, usually without enough knowledge of how it works or when you are trying to damage it
I could see immediately that the lock had been tampered with
suppression (n) -the act of preventing something from being seen or expressed or from operating
The suppression of free speech
electorate (n) - all the people who are allowed to vote
The electorate chose Barack Obama as the next President of the USA
surge (n) - a sudden and great increase
There has been a surge in house prices recently
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FULL TRANSCRIPT: https://thinkinginenglish.blog/2020/11/01/15-election-day-vocabulary/
INSTAGRAM - thinkinginenglishpodcast (https://www.instagram.com/thinkinginenglishpodcast/)
Twitter - @thinkenglishpod
BLOG: thinkinginenglish.blog
EMAIL: thinkinginenglishpod@gmail.com
VOCABULARY LIST
To go to the polls (v) - to vote
The USA will go to the polls on November 3rd
To cast (v) - to vote
All the votes in the election have now been cast and counting has begun
absentee (n) - someone who is absent
If you can’t vote on election day, you can vote using an absentee ballot
intimidation (n) - the action of frightening or threatening someone, usually in order to persuade them to do something that you want them to do
As the election approaches, it will be difficult to prevent voter intimidation and fraud
invalidation (n) - the action of stopping a document, ticket, law, etc. from being legal or officially acceptable
Voting fraud led to the invalidation of the election
To tamper (v) - to make changes to something that you should not, usually without enough knowledge of how it works or when you are trying to damage it
I could see immediately that the lock had been tampered with
suppression (n) -the act of preventing something from being seen or expressed or from operating
The suppression of free speech
electorate (n) - all the people who are allowed to vote
The electorate chose Barack Obama as the next President of the USA
surge (n) - a sudden and great increase
There has been a surge in house prices recently
---
Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thinking-english/message
Released:
Nov 1, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
13. Local Citizenship!! (English Vocabulary Lesson) by Thinking in English