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  • What are you doing? Bad dog. Get down. Get down. Get down. Dog's always up on

  • the table; getting cookies, getting his dog treats. Get down. Ow! Hmm. Wow. So,

  • "get down" literally means you're on something and you go down. Mm-hmm. But

  • there's many other slang mean... meanings for "down", "get down". And a

  • lot of people ask me, like: "Ronnie, where... where...? Where do you come up

  • with ideas for videos? Or where do you get your material for your videos?" The

  • answer is: Music. I listen to music. Obviously, I don't eat music; I listen

  • to it. And a lot of the material I get are from the bands I listen to. First

  • one: "down for life". Billy Biohazardthe guys from Biohazard. Thank you for

  • being "down for life". Amazing band, Biohazard; really old, metal band. Metal

  • crossover band, if you will. So, "Down for Life" is a Biohazard song. And what

  • does it mean? It means that you will always be with someone, or: "I will

  • always trust you". If you're "down for life", it means: "I can always count on

  • you to help me". Great song, by the way; check him out. Second: "I'm not down."

  • This is from my second-favorite band ever in the world, called: "The Clash".

  • And they have a song, and the lyrics are: "I'm not down". And I thought:

  • "Wow. Are they up?" Oh, what does that mean? It means: "I don't agree" or: "I

  • don't want to do that." So, I can say to you: "Hey. Are you down with giving me

  • 100 dollars?" Someone's like: "Nah, I'm not down with that". "I don't want to do

  • that", or: "I don't agree with that."

  • Oh. I don't have a musical reference for this one. That's okay. "I'm down",

  • obviously, is the opposite of: "I'm not down". "I'm down for that" means: "I

  • agree", or: "Let's do this". So, I say: -"Oh, hey. I'm having a party at my

  • house. Are you down?" -"I'm up. No, I'm down". "Are you down for that?" means:

  • "Do you want to come? Do you want to hang out?" You agree to something. Now,

  • you have to be careful, because: "I'm down for" and then if you have: "I'm

  • down with" someone, the meaning is different. So: "I'm down with Teddy", or

  • with someone means you're friends. So, listening to the Beastie Boys, they say:

  • "Oh, I'm not down with that guy." It means they're not friends with that

  • person. But if you hear people say: "Oh, I'm down with them. It's okay. We can go

  • to their party." It means they have a good relationship or they're friends.

  • So, you can "be down with" someone or "not down with" someone. This is a

  • really, really common thing that I hear people use all the time, even in a

  • business situation at work. People would say: "You know, you've gotta get" — and

  • "gotta" is "have to" or "got to" — "You gotta get your presentation down." Huh.

  • The presentation should be not up; I don't get it. "To get something down"

  • means you perfect it. And if you perfect something, it means you make sure it is

  • 100% wonderful. So, you have no mistakes in something. So, you can say: "Oh, you

  • know, I've tried to cook this dish, but I just haven't got the recipe down yet"

  • means it's not perfect yet. But when you "get the recipe down", it means that

  • it's perfect and it's ready for me to eat. Thank you.

  • Oh, next one. Ah. KC and the Sunshine Bandyeah. Wasn't a big fan, but,

  • sometimes, words and lyrics get stuck in my head. Today, "The Carpenters" are

  • stuck in my head. They're a band from the 70s. Wow. We're not going to talk

  • about that because "Get Down and Boogie" by the KC and the Sunshine Band: "Get

  • down, get down! Boogie." I don't know how it goes even. "Get down" in this

  • situation means, like, disco and dance. So, you'll hear songs from the 70s,

  • saying: "Get down. Get down on it. Get down on it". "Cool in the gang", again,

  • basically in the 70s this meant, like, party and dance. So, hey. We can still

  • use that vocabulary now. It's not as recent as we'd like to have it, but we

  • still use it and it helps you understand the lyrics. "Get down on the dance

  • floor." Oh, are people on the dance floor falling down? I don't get it. It

  • means dance. Dance, people, come on. Shake that ass. This happens; happens a

  • lot and people freak out. -"Oh my god. What's happened?" -"Oh, my social media

  • doesn't work! How am I supposed to post pictures, and let the world know what

  • I'm eating today? Oh, my social media is down. Oh my god, I can't watch a series

  • on TV." Some series providers, Netflix, for example, might be down and you're

  • devastated. You just don't know what to do with yourself. So, if some kind of

  • social media or some kind of computer things are "down", it means it's not

  • working. I'm really thirsty. Hold on. All right, much better. Thank you. "Did

  • you get this down?" Or somebody say: "Hey, take this down." But it's not

  • anything to take, and it's not down. So, maybe you're in a meeting and your boss

  • says: -"Hey, take this down." -"But you've given me nothing." This means:

  • "Write this down." Please write. So, if someone says: "Take this down", "Did you

  • get this down?" This means: "Did you write it?" Or: "Can you write it for me,

  • please?" English is weird. Why don't you just say: "Hey, did you write this? Can

  • you write this?"

  • If you're sad, or depressed, you can say: "I'm down." A lot of people... No,

  • not a lot of people. But people will say: "I'm down in the dumps", which is

  • weird as well. But the short-form is: "I'm down." And last one, so popular.

  • So, humans, we can take a goose or a duck, and we rip off their little

  • feathers, and then we stuffed them in a jacket or in a blanket, and it keeps us

  • warm. So, this is a material called: "down". And it's a material made from

  • goose or duck feathers. So, feathers are the deuce... The deuce. That means poo.

  • Feathers are the hair of a... not a cat; a duck or a goose. So, we call it

  • "down". I don't know why it magically changes names, but when it's on the

  • duck, it's a feather; as soon as we pull it off, it's "down". So, it's really,

  • really common and popular for people to buy 1,000s dollar jackets with the

  • little symbols right there. You know what I mean. It's not an American duck.

  • And people spend millions of dollars on these "down jackets" with a special

  • symbol here. You could get a much cheaper "down jacket" to keep you warm.

  • And a lot of people are against "down". They're like: "No, we don't want you to

  • kill the ducks and the geese, and take their feathers off and put it in a warm

  • jacket." And that's your opinion. I mean, I don't have a jacket from an

  • American duck, but if you're living in the Arctic or living in a very cold

  • country, it's probably the material you're gonna want to go with. If you're

  • not "down with down jackets" and killing animals for their feathers, you should

  • be "down with me, down for life" taking English lessons online; private lessons

  • with me. We can get "down and boogie". Woo, and have some fun.

  • www.englishwithronnie.com. Learn all this slang and more with me. I'm out of

  • here.

What are you doing? Bad dog. Get down. Get down. Get down. Dog's always up on

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Learn 10 ways to use “DOWN” in English: I’m down, get down, down for life...

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    Summer 發佈於 2022 年 02 月 01 日
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