时间:2018-12-08 作者:英语课 分类:2018年VOA慢速英语(三)月


英语课

 


Hello and welcome to Words and Their Stories from VOA Learning English. On this program we explore common words and expressions in American English.


In the United States April 1 is a day when you need to be a little careful.


Why?


It is April Fool’s Day so someone might play a practical joke on you -- a harmless trick for fun.


We did a program on fool expressions a couple of years ago. We explained how to use foolhardy and foolproof. We talked about the idiom “A fool and his money are soon parted.”


But we left out some things. So, here we are again talking about fools!


Probably the most common definition of “fool” is someone who is silly and, well, foolish. It is very easy to trick a fool.


“To fool” can also mean to pretend. For example, “The child said he was sick but he was only fooling. He was in perfect health.”


If you say, “I was only fooling” that means you are not serious. You are kidding. So, if you say something to someone as a joke but they take you seriously, you can say to them, “I was only fooling.” Here, you could also say, “I was only kidding.”


A person dressed as a clown holds an umbrella over a police officer in Switzerland, 2017.


We often pair “fool” with the verbs “play” and “act” to form the expressions play the fool and act the fool. They both describe someone who is easily tricked or deceived. Or sometimes, we play the fool because we fall deeply in love and cannot think clearly.


Love runs deeper than any ocean


You can cloud your mind with emotion


Everybody plays the fool, sometime


There's no exception to the rule


Listen, baby, it may be factual, may be cruel


I want to tell ya!


Everybody plays the fool


The Main Ingredient sings “Everybody Plays the Fool”


Sometimes we use it to describe someone who is not easy to fool. For example, if your friend John is really smart and not easily tricked, you could say that he’s not one to play the fool. If that is too wordy, you can simply say he is no fool.


If you make a fool of yourself, you do something that makes you look foolish or silly.


For example, imagine you are at a party. Suddenly your best friend sees a young woman who he really likes. He wants to get her attention. So, he starts dancing. But, no one else is dancing. In fact, there is no music playing. You calmly go up to him and say, “You might want to stop. You are making a fool of yourself.”


But making a fool of yourself is better than making a fool of someone else. That is just mean. If a person tries to make a fool of you by yelling at you in public, just walk away. He will end up making a fool of himself.


Now, if you are fooling yourself you are unwilling to accept the facts of a situation. In other words, you are in denial. If you think that you can learn perfect English in a very short time without studying or practicing, you are really fooling yourself.


Now, when we pair the word “fool” with “around,” we get an expression that has several meanings.


One is to spend time without any purpose. If you have the day off from work, you might decide to fool around all day.


Another meaning is to behave playfully. The two friends were fooling around near the train tracks when they heard a call for help!


But be careful. “Fool around” also means light-hearted sexual activity. For example, the husband and wife were fooling around in the kitchen when their friends and family walked in for dinner. Awkward!


In these three example, you could also say mess around. It has the same meaning and we use it in the same situations.


Finally, we often use the word “fool” in warnings to others. For example, “Don’t fool around with that! You will break it.” Or, “Stop fooling around.” And the ever popular, “This is no time to fool around.”


I’m Anna Matteo. And that’s end of this program. And this will be the last Words and Their Stories … ever.


I’m just fooling. We’ll back next week with a new show. No fooling!


And you're fooling yourself if you don't believe it


You're kidding yourself if you don't believe it


Why must you be such an angry young man


When your future looks quite bright to me


Words in This Story


practical joke – n. a joke involving something that is done rather than said : a trick played on someone


pretend – v. to act as if something is true when it is not true


kid – v. to speak to (someone) in a way that is not serious : to say things that are not true to (someone) in a joking way


deceive – v. to make (someone) believe something that is not true


denial – n. a condition in which someone will not admit that something sad, painful, etc., is true or real


awkward – adj. not easy to deal with



学英语单词
abusive statement
acid flesh
alarm wheel rocker cover
anti-fogery ink
atheroprotected
Belleplaine
besmirchers
big-girl
Black Isle (Pen.)
blotz
budgerows
canis minors
Carex jiaodongensis
cinnamon-colored
closed slots
commodities for summer use
compensatory model
complex-dissociation constant
compound equation of payment
confederate soldiers
conjugate addition
constant luminance transmission
continuous rectification
dc and ac generator
desiderability
deterioration of business conditions
dragoneras
dyadic obervation system
dynamic error-free transmission (deft)
Ebert
electron microbeam analysis
ellipse
epidemic conjunctivitis
exception-peinciple system
forenenst
forest tent cater pillar
genus Aranea
genus volvoxes
gone out of
goodly
haemorrhagings
hold you down
hollow out something
image evaluation
impregnate with bitumen
incorrect manipulation
irreconcilableness
Janis Joplin
keratoplsia
labor relations
left coronary vein
machine made
mandator
Melicope pteleifolia
mensweare
mingle-mangles
mistakenness
myriostictus
nennius
no-bond resistance
Nokono-shima
noradrenergic receptor
oligoarticular
penny - wise and pound - foolish
perennially frozen lake
persistent session
perturbation matrix
perturbed orbit
phase coincidence
pis aller
pitch coil
policy development
powder distribution
precipitating factors
psychopathic
Purproxanthin
Ravennans
razor ribbon
reacting force
reflector-type antenna
retort temperature
roll-down overedger
rosefinch
selective coating
shamwana
sheriffwick
shitakes
short purchase
single-disc polyphase meter
smoothing filter
snacot-fish
sodium 12-silicotungstate
sondik
Tageszeitung
Thiococcus
Thiomidil
trotties
vaginae septa
warmly resolving cold-phlegm
white caustic
yellow-headed
Yongban