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Learn the English Phrases GET TO THE POINT and BOILING POINT

Learn the English Phrases GET TO THE POINT and BOILING POINT

FromBob's Short English Lessons


Learn the English Phrases GET TO THE POINT and BOILING POINT

FromBob's Short English Lessons

ratings:
Length:
4 minutes
Released:
Sep 21, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Read along to practice your English and to learn the English phrases GET TO THE POINT and BOILING POINT:In this English lesson, I wanted to help you learn the English phrase get to the point. Are you ever in a conversation where someone's telling you a story or they're telling you about something they did the day before, and they just go on and on? In English, when we say that someone is going on and on, it means they're telling a story that should take about 30 seconds, but as you're listening to them, it's probably gonna take them about 5 or 10 minutes to tell the story, In that situation, you could say, "Hey, get to the point." It's not a nice thing to say. I guess you could say it in a nice way. When my children are telling a long story about something, sometimes I say, "Hey, get to the point." If you wanted to say it politely, you could say, "Hey, I'm running a little short on time. Could you please get to the point?" But when you say to someone "Get to the point," basically, you wanna know the end of the story. You don't wanna know all the details along the way.WANT MORE ENGLISH LESSONS? GO TO YOUTUBE AND SEARCH, "BOB THE CANADIAN"#englishlessons #english #englishphrase #speakingenglish #bobthecanadianThe other English phrase I wanted to teach you today is the phrase boiling point. Notice both of my phrases have the word point in it today. I usually do it that way, I think. But boiling point is of course, the point at which water starts to boil. When you heat water up, when it gets to 100 degrees Celsius, that's the boiling point. It starts to bubble in the pan. But that's not why I'm teaching you this phrase today. We also use the phrase boiling point to talk about the point at which someone gets angry. So if you are frustrated and you are aggravated and someone's just bothering you, at a certain point you reach your boiling point. And you might, at that point, yell something like, "Just get to the point." So anyways, to review, when you say to someone "Get to the point," you want them to tell the end of the story, instead of telling the whole story for a very long time. And when you reach your boiling point, it's the point at which you go from being quietly annoyed to actually being angry and maybe, even the point at which you start yelling at someone. Hopefully that doesn't happen.Anyways, let's look at a comment from a previous video. This comment is from Lolly Lolly, a longtime viewer on both by channels. Lolly Lolly says, "Hello from France. My boss is driving me nuts. So it's time for me to find another job and turn over a new leaf. Thanks, Bob." And it's not on here, but she also said her boss was driving her crazy or driving her bananas, I think. My reply was bosses can be that way sometimes. I have to admit, sometimes it's hard to appreciate the work a boss does because they always seem to be telling us what to do. So thanks for the comment, Lolly Lolly. I'm not sure if you would agree with me on that. I think that bosses are interesting people. I mean, in order to have a job, you have to have a boss, but bosses sometimes can be just a little bit annoying. They always seem to find the things you are doing wrong instead of always telling you all of the good things that you are doing right. So when you have a job, obviously you work hard and you try to do the best job possible. But anyways, Lolly Lolly, that was a great use of two different phrases, the turn over a new leaf phrase, and also the phrase that your boss was driving you nuts.I think I might do a video on all the different phrases that you can use when you're frustrated. Hmm, let me think about that. Anyways, it's a really nice day here today.Support the show
Released:
Sep 21, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

If you want to learn English with short easy-to-understand lessons then you've come to the right place. I'm Bob the Canadian and I make videos on Youtube (Just search for "Bob's Short English Lessons" on Youtube!) as well as podcasts right here to help you learn English. Four times each week I upload a short English lesson with a complete transcript in the description. During these lessons I teach one or two curious phrases from the English language and answer a listener question. Thanks for joining me and I hope your English learning is going well!