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  • he's a review from BBC Learning English Hello and welcome to News Review.

  • The program where we show you how to use language from the latest news stories in your everyday English.

  • Huh?

  • I'm Dan, and joining me this morning is Catherine.

  • Hi, Catherine.

  • Hello down and Hello, everyone.

  • So what's the story?

  • Well, today's story is about diet and health.

  • Two very important things.

  • Let's find out more from this radio.

  • One news report experts warning about the dangers of fussy eating.

  • It's after a medical journal reported the case of a 17 year old who suffered severe damage to his eye sights after living on a diet of chips and crisp since leaving primary school, tests revealed he had severe vitamin deficiencies and malnutrition.

  • So this is a story from the UK Now a boy of 17 has permanently damaged his eyesight.

  • This is a result of him eating very little as except chips and crisps.

  • Since he was a primary school age, tests have revealed that the reason for this eyesight damages because his body didn't have enough vitamins and minerals so serious consequences of a very restricted diet.

  • Yes, Speaking of that diet, there's some confusion chips and crisps.

  • Could you, uh, just define those for everybody?

  • Yes.

  • So there's chips and crisps mean different things in different countries Here in the U.

  • K.

  • Crisps are made of potatoes sliced and fried in oil.

  • You buy them ready, made in pockets on dhe chips are cooked.

  • Their served hot usually buy them freshly cooked.

  • They are sticks of potatoes, sometimes called french fries.

  • Old fries in the UK chips are hot.

  • Crisps are cold sliced potato.

  • So I would get my chips from a fast food outlets such as McDonald's or Burger King Or where?

  • Or I would buy my crisps in a supermarket.

  • Exactly that.

  • Perfect.

  • All right, well, we've got three words and expressions that our viewers can use to talk about this story.

  • And what do we have for them?

  • Catherine, we have go blind, fussy on dhe deficiency.

  • Go blind, fussy and deficiency.

  • Okay, let's have our first headline, please.

  • Okay, so we're at news 18.

  • The headline is thine.

  • First in UK to go blind Death after being on junk food diet for 10 years.

  • Ripple two go blind, become blind.

  • Now go is obviously a verb.

  • And I'm quite familiar with it, but I don't know it.

  • In this context.

  • Nobody is moving anywhere, so okay, yes.

  • Oh, go.

  • It's a really flexible and useful verb in English.

  • There's pages and pages of dictionary definitions of it because we use it in so many contexts.

  • So the core meaning of go is to move from one place to another.

  • This is about moving the sense of change.

  • So is about changing from warm condition to another.

  • So if you go blind, you become blind.

  • You lose your eyesight.

  • Okay, so this is obviously quite a negative changes that.

  • Is that a theme?

  • It often is.

  • Yeah.

  • If you the changes usually from from one state to aware state in this case losing your eyesight, you can go blind.

  • You can go death.

  • You can.

  • If you're losing your hair, you can see you're going board or going gray like silver on the sides.

  • Quite distinguished.

  • It works for a lot of celebrities s Oh, yes.

  • Changing you can go crazy.

  • Congar O C and I.

  • And there's lots of ways that you can change your physical or mental condition.

  • And is it only for people?

  • It's often for people, but No, not just for people.

  • We can talk about food going bad.

  • Your food can go cold.

  • Your food can go off something and starts to go rotten and smell horrible.

  • Like this morning when I went to my fridge to get some milk for a cup of tea and I found that the milk had gone off.

  • Uh, horrible.

  • Shocking.

  • The morning black tea.

  • You can also use it in a business contacts.

  • You can go broke.

  • You can go bankrupt, you can go out off business.

  • OK, so it's quite a common useful word for changing states.

  • Yes, of this.

  • All right, let's have a look at our second headline then, please.

  • All right, we're going to Buzz now on the headline is fussy eater.

  • 17 left blind on death after diet off chips, sausages, aunt crisps.

  • Fussy.

  • Not easily pleased regarding certain things.

  • This is an unusual word for C.

  • Is it in an objective?

  • It is an objective.

  • It spelled f u double s.

  • Why, it means yeah, you're really particular about whatever it is you're fussy about.

  • Objectives that have the similar meaning off particular.

  • Choosy, picky, fastidious.

  • So someone who's fussy only likes things the way that they like them.

  • Exactly that there's only certain areas.

  • Firstly, people are quite perceived is very difficult.

  • Okay, so if you're a fussy easy, you only like certain foods and they have to be cooked a certain way.

  • Maybe they have to be arranged a particular way on your plate or you eat them in a particular order.

  • And if you're kind of trying to cook for somebody or shop for somebody who's a fussy eater is quite difficult because they really and they make a first.

  • I get upset and angry if you don't have the food the certain way.

  • So doesn't that just mean that they have high standards?

  • Is that no?

  • Are they not the same thing, A kind of a negative college connotation?

  • You can call yourself first.

  • See, I think about food.

  • There's a cross over into your two first.

  • You're so firstly that it's not about high standards.

  • You're just difficult.

  • You can say you're fussy about the kind of clothes you wear your fussy about the people you meet mixed with on that coming high standards.

  • But often a fussy eater in particular is quite a difficult person.

  • Yeah, you know anymore.

  • I used to be as a child.

  • I was quite fussy about what I would eat.

  • Yeah, I didn't really like vegetables very much.

  • Lots of cereal, sugar, chocolate.

  • And how was your How is that affecting your relationship with your caregivers at the time?

  • Uh, to be honest, my mom just gave up and said, OK, here.

  • Just get on with it.

  • Too fussy for May.

  • But these days I grew up, and now I don't make a fuss anymore.

  • Great little phrase Don't make a fuss if you don't make a first.

  • It means that you accept what's happening and you don't panic or get upset.

  • Or, you know, make drama about what?

  • It yet.

  • Thank you very much.

  • Right?

  • Let's move on to our next headline.

  • But before we do, Did you know that this is not the first time that BBC learning English has covered the dangers of processed food?

  • Isn't that right, Katherine?

  • That's right.

  • So if you want more vel couple on this topic, click the link and go straight to the show.

  • Thank you very much.

  • All right, let's have a look at our third and final headline.

  • Okay.

  • Mail Online boy, 17 goes blind because of a veteran deficiency caused by years of eating only french fries.

  • Pringles white bread on dhe sausage deficiency.

  • Not having enough of something.

  • Yes.

  • What type of word is this?

  • This is also a noun.

  • It's about D f I C i e N c.

  • Why on it means not having enough of something.

  • The clue is in the prefix d, which often means not without the opposite of a deficiency is a sufficiency.

  • It means you've got enough of something.

  • Okay, There are objective forms on there, sufficient and deficient.

  • Yes, absolutely.

  • If you are deficient in something, you don't have enough of it.

  • Okay?

  • So eventually, presumably, as we can stick, continue to use natural resources from the Earth, the Earth will become deficient in certain national reach.

  • It already is deficient in certain things.

  • Yeah, that is likely content to continue if things go the way they are, as we're told.

  • So deficiency means not enough of something we can use in medical and nutritional terms.

  • You can have a vitamin deficiency.

  • You can have an eye in deficiency just like this boy in this story, not the iron deficiency.

  • The vitamin D.

  • That's what they say happened to him?

  • Yes.

  • Um, and it could also mean if we take it away from a medical context, it could mean about standards generally not being high enough.

  • So this is kind of the opposite of fussy, but he's kind of artificial standard, But if you're deficient in something, you don't have enough of it.

  • So a business might have a deficiency in a particular area.

  • Maybe their payroll.

  • Maybe they're not paying their staff.

  • Amar enough or they're paying them too much.

  • Yeah.

  • Either way, it's bad for business.

  • Some kind of systemic problem in the business, something they're not doing enough off or they're not doing it correctly.

  • Okay, what kind of language we use to try and solve that problem so we can talk about words that go with deficiency?

  • Oh, you can address a deficiency.

  • You can remedy a deficiency.

  • You can tackle it efficiency.

  • You can correct a deficiency well done to everybody who got the answer.

  • Correct.

  • Now could we recap the vocabulary, please?

  • Sure, we hade go blind, which means become blind, fussy, not easily pleased regarding certain things on dhe deficiency, not having enough off something.

  • Thank you very much.

  • Now, if you'd like to test yourself on today's vocabulary, there is a quiz that you can take on our website.

  • That's BBC learning english dot com.

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  • It's free to download and free to use so you can learn with us wherever you go.

  • Thank you very much for joining us and good bye, Good bye.

  • He's a review from BBC Learning English.

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he's a review from BBC Learning English Hello and welcome to News Review.

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少年被薯片和垃圾食品飲食矇蔽了雙眼 - 新聞評論 (Teenager blinded by chips and junk food diet - News Review)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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