he's a reviewfromBBCLearningEnglishHelloandwelcometoNewsReviewTheprogramwhereweshowyouhowtousethelanguagefromthelatestnewsstoriesinyoureverydayEnglish.
Hi, I'm Neil.
JoiningmetodayisDan.
Hello, sodown.
What's ourstory?
It's a storyabout a globalvirus, butitwon't makeyousick.
A virusthatwon't makeyousick.
Veryinteresting.
Let's findoutsomemorefromthisBBCWorldServicenewsbulletinexpertsandcybersecurityorwarningof a possiblenewwe'veofmalwareattacksaroundtheworldwhenpeoplereturntoworkaftertheweekend.
Themalwarepreventsaccesstocomputerdataanddemands a ransomtolifttheblock.
SostartinglastFridayandcontinuingthroughtheweekend, a nastycomputervirushasinfectedandspreadacross a largenumberofcountriesthroughtheircomputersystems.
So, forexample, whenthere's a TVprogramthathugenumbersofpeoplearewatchingatthesametime, let's say a footballmatchinonditz.
Ah, halftimeorthere's a breakfortheadverts.
LotsofpeopleintheUnitedKingdomatleast, willmake a cupofteaandputontheircattles, andthere'llbeanelectricitysurgeexactlylikethat.
Andwecanalsodosurgesoffemotionlike a surgeofjoyor a surgeofinterest.
Pricesmaysurgeduetoeconomicfactorsand, ofcourse, peoplethesuddenmovementofpeoplelikeOxfordCircusRushHourforyes, forexample, ournearesttubethat's undergroundtrainsysteminLondonisOxfordCircussitsoneofthebusiestinthecityandgoinghometime, there's a surgeofpeople.
Sometimestheyhavetoshut.
Thegatesjuststarted.
Toomanypeopletryingtogetdownintothattunnelcanalsobeusedas a verb.
Soaswellassayingthesurgeofpeoplepushingintothestation, wecansaythepeoplesurgedintothestationandas a generalruleofthumbwillusesurgeplusinwith a nounandSergeplusoffwithanemotion.
Okay, thanksforthat.
OurnextheadlineonwiththewordRansomware.
OursecondheadlinecomesfromtheBBCNewsandsaysMicrosoftwarnsRansomwarecyberattackis a wakeupcall.
Okay, soransomware, a virusdesignedtostop a computerworkingunlessmoneyispaid?
he's a reviewfromBBCLearningEnglishHelloandwelcometoNewsReviewTheprogramwhereweshowyouhowtousethelanguagefromthelatestnewsstoriesinyoureverydayEnglish.