时间:2018-12-26 作者:英语课 分类:2007年ESL之餐饮娱乐


英语课

03 At a Casino


GLOSSARY



slot machine – a machine where one puts in a coin and pushes a button tomove the images (pictures) inside the machine, and if three images are thesame, one receives a prize of a lot of coins* Grandma likes to play the five-cent slot machines because with just ten dollars,she can play all night.


jackpot – a large amount of money; the maximum amount of money that onecan win when playing a game* The jackpot for this game is one million dollars! to break even – to win the same amount of money that one has already lost* When I had lost $100, I started to get very nervous, but fortunately a fewminutes later, I won $100 and broke even.


to rub off on (someone) – to be contagious; to move from one person toanother* Basho is so smart!  We should start spending more time with him, to see ifsome of his intelligence rubs off on us.


high roller – a person who bets a lot of money at a casino* High rollers sometimes bet thousands of dollars on a single game. blackjack table – where people play a card game, trying to get cards that areclose to but not more than 21 points* Pete lost $250 at the blackjack table last night.  He isn’t very good at cardgames.


roulette – a game where a small ball is dropped onto a moving round plate withnumbers and people bet money on which number the ball will land on* Don’t touch the roulette wheel while it’s moving or you might change whichnumber the ball lands on!


high-stakes – very risky, where a lot of money can be won or lost* In her job, Naomi is responsible for some very high-stakes deals that are worthmillions of dollars.


to bet – to make a guess about how a game will end, so that if one is correct onereceives more money, but if one is wrong one loses the money that one has bet* Luke bet $415 that the black horse would win the race, but when it fell andbroke its leg, he lost all his money.


comps – “complimentary;” free gifts that casinos give to the players who arebetting large amounts of money, such as free meals or a night stay at the hotel* When Yvonne started placing big bets in Las Vegas, the casinos gave her lots of comps, including a free room and free meals.


to gamble – to bet or risk money on a game or race* We spent the night gambling and stopped only when we lost all of our money.


to bankroll – to provide money usually for someone else to play casino games* Lisbet doesn’t have enough money to go to casinos, but her uncle is bankrollingher to keep her busy.


to count cards – to remember which cards have already been seen in a game,so that one can make better bets* You’d better not get caught counting cards while you’re playing with yourfriends.  They won’t be your friends for long!


to try my hand at – to try to do something for the first time, especially to play agame or to make something* Shelly’s learning how to cook and today she has decided to try her hand atmaking lasagna.


to get kicked out of (somewhere) – to be told to leave a place* Last night, a group of men were kicked out of the bar because they were yellingand fighting with each other.


casino – a place where gambling games are played* In the United States, each state has a minimum age (usually 18 or 21) forpeople who can go into casinos.


tournament – a competition with many different games to see who is the bestplayer or team* Are you going to watch the final game in this year’s soccer tournament?


chips – small, round pieces of plastic that represent money and are used incasino games to make bets on a game* In most casino games, a white chip is worth $1, a red chip is worth $5, a bluechip is worth $10, a green chip is worth $25, and a black chip is worth $100.


dice – plastic cubes used to play games, and each of the six sides has 1, 2, 3, 4,5, or 6 dots* When Rita rolled the dice, they fell off the table, so she had to roll again.


COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS1.  How much money did Hannah lose before winning $80 on the slot machine?


a)  The entire jackpot.


b)  $80, the same amount she won.


c)  One bankroll.


2.  Tad tells Hanna that to count cards is:


a)  A good way to win in card games.


b)  A bad idea.


c)  Easy to learn.


______________WHAT ELSE DOES IT MEAN?


to betThe verb “to bet,” in this podcast, means to make a guess about how a game willend, so that if one is correct one receives more money, but if one is wrong, oneloses all the money that he or she has bet: “Bhawna bet $100 in that pokergame, and she was really happy when she won!”  The verb “to bet” can alsomean that one believes that something is true or that something will happen:


“Looking at the sky, I bet it’s going to rain this afternoon.”  People sometimes say, “I bet!” to show that they understand how another person feels.  Forexample, if one person says, “I was really tired after working 60 hours last week,”


the other person might respond by saying, “I bet!” to show that he or sheunderstands.


chipsIn this podcast, the word “chips” means small, round pieces of plastic thatrepresent money and are used in casino games to make bets on a game: “Ithought that black chips were $1, but they’re actually $100, so I lost a lot ofmoney.”  The word “chips” also means thinly sliced pieces of potato that arecooked in oil and salted: “Sunder likes to eat potato chips with his luncheveryday.”  A “chip” is also the place on a piece of glass, ceramics, or woodwhere a small piece has broken off: “Be careful when you drink from that cup,because there is a small chip near the top.”  The phrase, “he’s a chip off the oldblock” refers to someone who is very similar to his or her father: “Leo is a chip offthe old block.  He dresses just like his dad.”


CULTURE NOTEIn the United States, gambling is “illegal” (against the law) in most states. However, “reservations” or communities of Native American populations areallowed to make their own laws, and many of them have decided to makegambling legal.  They have opened many casinos on their reservations andpeople travel for many miles to gamble there.


The casinos are usually very large buildings with restaurants, bars, and hotels. They are usually far from large cities.  Inside the casinos, people can play slotmachines, roulette, poker, blackjack, and many other gambling games.


Gambling on reservations is known as “Indian gaming” and it is very “controversial,” which means that some people think it is good, and other peoplethink it is bad.  The people who don’t like Indian gaming say that it encourages people to gamble and to lose money, and that it hurts their families.  They alsothink that it isn’t fair that Native American communities are the only peopleallowed to build casinos in most states.


People who like Indian gaming say that the casinos are an important source of“income” or money for the Native American “tribes” or small Indian nations. Because the tribes don’t have to pay federal, state, or local taxes, Indian gamingis very “profitable,” meaning it makes a lot of money for tribes that have beenvery poor.  Most of the casinos give a lot of their money to a tribal organizationthat supports other community groups working on important “causes” such as education, environmental protection, or health programs.


______________Comprehension Questions Correct Answers:  1 – b; 2 – b


COMPLETE TRANSCRIPTWelcome to English as a Second Language Podcast number 249: At a Casino.


This is English as a Second Language Podcast episode number 249.  I'm yourhost, Dr. Jeff McQuillan, coming to you from the Center for EducationalDevelopment in beautiful Los Angeles, California.


Remember to visit our website at eslpod.com.  You can get the transcript of thedialogue of this episode, as well as our complete Learning Guide.


This episode is called “At a Casino.”  A casino, “casino,” is a place where you goto gamble.  Las Vegas, Nevada, is the most famous place in the United States for casinos.  Let's go!


[start of story]


Hanna:  Where have you been?  I’ve been trying to find you.  I just won $80 fromthis slot machine.  It’s not the jackpot, but now I’ve broken even. Tad:  That’s really great.  Maybe some of your luck will rub off on me.  I’m justabout to see what the high rollers are doing.  Do you want to come with me tocheck out the blackjack tables or roulette?


Hanna:  I’m not that good at those high-stakes games, where people bethundreds of dollars on a single play!  I’d like to get the comps they get, but I don’thave that kind of money to gamble with. Tad:  Yeah, I wish I had somebody rich to bankroll me, too. Hanna:  I’ll just come and watch you play.  You know, I wish I knew how to countcards.  Then, I might try my hand at poker. Tad:  Don’t even think about counting cards.  If you get caught, you’d get kickedout of this casino in a minute.  Hey, there’s a poker tournament going on overthere.  I want to go watch that later.  But first, I want to get my hands on somechips or some dice.  I’m feeling lucky.


Hanna:  Let’s go.


[end of story]


This is a dialogue between Hanna and Tad.  Hanna begins by asking Tad“Where have you been?”  Hanna has been trying to find Tad to tell him that she“just won $80 from” a “slot machine.”  A slot, “slot,” machine is a gamblingmachine where you put in a quarter or a dollar in coins and you either push abutton or pull what we would call a lever, “lever,” and that causes the numbers -the pictures - inside the machine to go around, and there are usually three ofthese images and if all three images are the same, then you win a prize.  So, it's a type of gambling machine - a slot machine.  Some people just call them theslots.  Those are the machines that you can play sometimes for as little as anickel - five cents - but usually they're a quarter - 25 cents - or a dollar.


Hanna says that she didn't win the jackpot, but she's “broken even.”  The jackpot,“jackpot,” (one word) is a large amount of money in a casino when you aregambling.  Usually the verb we use is hit the jackpot.  “I hit the jackpot,” that canmean I've won a lot of money or it can mean I've been very successful atsomething.  You might hear somebody say, “When I met my wife, I hit thejackpot, ‘not that she's rich - though that would be nice, too - but she is sowonderful she's like winning a prize.


Hanna says that she's “broken even.”  To break even is an expression thatmeans to win, in this case, the same amount of money back that you bet - thatyou gave.  So, if you put 20 dollars into a slot machine, and then you win 20dollars back, you've broken even.  Businesses also break even when they getmore or the same amount of money in as they are spending to produce theirproduct.  After you break even - what's sometimes called the break even point -then you start to make a profit.


Tad says, “That’s really great.  Maybe some of your luck will rub off on me.” When we say something will rub off on someone, we mean it will move from oneperson to the other.  Usually it's something that you use for a positive quality -“Maybe some of your luck will rub off on me,” meaning maybe I'll be lucky now.


Tad says he's “just about to see what the high rollers are doing.”  The high,“high,” rollers, “rollers,” are people who spend a lot of money at a casino - peoplewho gamble a lot of money, who bet 100 dollars on a pair of cards - that wouldbe a high roller.


“Do you want to come with me to check out the blackjack tables or roulette,” Tadasks.  Blackjack, “blackjack,” (one word) is a game.  It is a card game where youtry to get 21 points.  A blackjack table is a place in the casino where they play blackjack.  Usually there's one person, who works for the casino, who we call thedealer, “dealer.”  The dealer deals the cards - he gives people the cards - and you play against the dealer; if you beat the dealer, then you get money.  Usually there are five, maybe six people sitting at this table.


Roulette, “roulette,” is a game where a small ball is dropped or put into a movinground plate, and there are numbers on this plate - it's almost like a bowl - and theball drops into the bowl and it bounces around, and then it stops at a number. We would say it lands, “lands,” on a number, and whichever number the balllanded on, that person, if they bet money on that number, would win money.


Hanna says that she's “not good at those high-stakes games, where people bethundreds of dollars on a single play.”  High-stakes, “high stakes,” (either twowords or with a hyphen in between) is something that is very risky, where youcan win or lose a lot of money.  To bet, “bet,” means to make a guess about howsomething will end so that the correct person wins money and the wrong guess means you lose money.  More generally, however, a bet, when we talk about acasino, to bet means to put money into a machine or to risk money in hopes thatyou will win more money back.


Hanna says, “I’d like to get the comps” the high rollers get, “but I don’t have thatkind of money to gamble with.”  Comps, “comps,” is short for complimentary,which is another word that means free.  In a casino, comps are things that thecasino gives the high rollers - people who spend a lot of money - they give themcertain things so that they will continue to gamble at their casino.  To gamble,“gamble,” means to bet or to risk money on a game, or perhaps, on a race ofhorses you could gamble - lots of things you can gamble on.


The expression, “I don't have that kind of money,” means I don't have that muchmoney.  When someone says, “I don't have that kind of cash” - “I don't have thatkind of money,” they mean they don't have that much - they don't have enough.


Tad says, “Yeah, I wish I had somebody rich to bankroll me.”  To bankroll,“bankroll,” (one word) means to give money to someone, in this case, to givemoney to someone so they can gamble.  You can bankroll a business, forexample - that's also a gamble!  But here, Tad means someone to give himmoney so he can play at the casino. Hanna says, “I’ll just come and watch you play.  You know, I wish I knew how tocount cards.  Then, I might try my hand at poker.”  To count cards is to rememberwhich cards have been played in a game so that you can make a better bet.  Inmost casinos in the United States, counting cards is not allowed - they don't likepeople who count cards.


Hanna says she wants to try her “hand at poker.”  The expression to try yourhand, “hand,” at something means to do something for the first time, often whenwe are talking about a game.  “I'm going to try my hand at roulette” - I've neverplayed roulette before, but I'm going to try it. Interestingly, the word hand is also the word we use for the cards that you get ina game of poker, which is a card game.  You talk about your hand; those are thecards that you are given by the dealer in blackjack or in poker.


Poker is a game that usually involves each person getting five cards.  The personwith what we would call the best hand - the person who has the highest cards orthe best kind of cards - would win.  The game of poker has its own vocabulary that we don't have time to go into today, maybe in another podcast.


Tad says, “Don’t even think about counting cards.”  When we use thatexpression, don't even think about it, you're warning somebody not to dosomething. Tad says that “If you get caught,” meaning if the casino realizes that you aretrying to count cards, you'll “get kicked out of this casino in a minute.”  To bekicked out of somewhere means to be told to leave.  You could be kicked out ofyour house if your wife doesn't like what you have been doing, so be careful! Tad says Hanna could be “kicked out in a minute.”  In a minute means immediately or right away - very soon.


Tad says that “there’s a poker tournament going on over” on another side of thecasino.  A tournament, “tournament,” is a formal competition - a game - usually many different games to see who is the best player.


Tad says that he doesn't want to go there right now; he wants to get his “hands on” - meaning he wants to get some - “chips or some dice.”  Chips, “chips,” has acouple of different meanings.  In this episode, chips are small, usually roundpieces of plastic that represent money.  So, you don't put actual money on thetable when you are betting, say, in blackjack or poker, you use these coloredchips - these little pieces of plastic.  At the end of the night, you take your chips and you cash them in.  To cash in your chips means to get real money back, theamount of money equal to the kind of and number of chips you have.  Foradditional definitions of this word chips, take a look at the Learning Guide fortoday.


Dice, “dice,” is the plural of the word die, “die,” as a noun, and those are littlecubes - little pieces of plastic or wood that have six sides on them, each side has a number, usually a little dot.  There's one, two, three, four, five, six - so eachside has either one, two, three, four, five or six dots, and dice are used in playingcertain kinds of gambling games.


Now let's take a listen to the dialogue at a normal speed.


[start of story]


Hanna:  Where have you been?  I’ve been trying to find you.  I just won $80 fromthis slot machine.  It’s not the jackpot, but now I’ve broken even. Tad:  That’s really great.  Maybe some of your luck will rub off on me.  I’m justabout to see what the high rollers are doing.  Do you want to come with me tocheck out the blackjack tables or roulette?


Hanna:  I’m not that good at those high-stakes games, where people bethundreds of dollars on a single play!  I’d like to get the comps they get, but I don’thave that kind of money to gamble with. Tad:  Yeah, I wish I had somebody rich to bankroll me, too. Hanna:  I’ll just come and watch you play.  You know, I wish I knew how to countcards.  Then, I might try my hand at poker. Tad:  Don’t even think about counting cards.  If you get caught, you’d get kickedout of this casino in a minute.  Hey, there’s a poker tournament going on overthere.  I want to go watch that later.  But first, I want to get my hands on somechips or some dice.  I’m feeling lucky.


Hanna:  Let’s go.


[end of story]


The script for today's podcast was written by Dr. Lucy Tse.


If you have a question or comment, be sure to email us.  Our email address is eslpod@eslpod.com.


From Los Angeles, California, I'm Jeff McQuillan.  Thanks for listening.  We'll seeyou next time on ESL Podcast.


English as a Second Language Podcast is written and produced by Dr. Lucy Tse,hosted by Dr. Jeff McQuillan.  This podcast is copyright 2007.




学英语单词
a. perinealis
accrued charge
acoustic magnetic mine
adlecting
administration of internal affairs
Aflogualnum
ai chi
alternative procedure
ampholite
art and part
artificial caving
assidue
base of petroleum
black cottonwood
blue-green bacterium
bursting speed
cascading down
centricdiatom
cloud-bases
complementary scale
consistorial
conventional-arms
counter-cast
Crista sacralis intermedia
Cynwyl Elfed
Daphne holosericea
departmental arrangement and distribution in commodity stock
Direct Copper Blue 2R
disinflations
drip channel
event oriented simulation
eye-serve
factorization method
facular
Fentathienil
flower
geomagnetic periodic variation
go yachting.
group demodulator filter
harpending
hepatitis sequestrans
information management program
initial overburden pressure
insulation varnish
intrapore
inverse beta process
journal box lid hinge
lanatest
light pressure separator
Lothair
megalodiscs
merry-go-round
monoethanolamine(surfactant)
moving current-weighted Passche indexes
neutralizing water tank
new staff
Nihon-maru
non-specified-time relay
nuclear quadrupole spectrum
oil pressure switch
one-cancels-the-other order
orbit maneuver engine
output transfer function
Pare's suture
plain shank
plant hole
poikilosmotic character
preregeneration
progressive wave
pushback
put somebody up to
RCITR
reducing capacity
reductive alkylation
regional index call warrant
RFRNA
Rhodiola wallichiana
Richardson's ground squirrel
rosette phyllotaxy
semi-tractor
sexlessnesses
sgd.
shell tuck
sickling diathesis
simple deterministic language
spaces out
spantik
spread back
sugarcane top
system of gravitational unit
tea-tree
telephone bills
tiled mode
use test
vendibler
vertical decomposition
voltage and frequency response
wear plate
Y ligament
Yang Shiying
zori