★☆☆Don’t Get Caught With Your Pants Down

2013年07月17日 ★☆☆, VOA, Words and Their Stories.

Read and understand the article. If you may have any difficult words to pronounce and words you cannot understand, always ask your teacher.

*Teachers will divide the article into 2-3 paragraphs to help you understand and check the pronunciation of the difficult words.

Vocabulary

*Read the words carefully.

  1. restless /ˈrɛstləs/ (adj.)feeling nervous or bored and tending to move around a lot : not relaxed or calm
  2. tighten /ˈtaɪtn̩/ (v.to make (something) tight or tighter or to become tight or tighter
  3. sleeve /ˈsli:v/ (n.)he part of a shirt, jacket, etc., that covers all or part of your arm
  4. roll up /ˈroʊlˌʌp/ (phrasal v.)to form (something) into the shape of a ball or tube
  5. cuff /ˈkʌf/ (n.) the part of a sleeve, glove, etc., that covers the wrist

Article

Don’t Get Caught With Your Pants Down

* Read the text below

MP3 Download (right-click or option-click and save)

 (1)Have you ever considered all the English expressions that include words about clothes? Let’s see if I can name a few “off the cuff” — or without any preparation

(2) People wear pants to cover the lower part of their bodies. We sometimes say that people who are restless or nervous have “ants in their pants.” They might also “fly by the seat of their pants” — they use their natural sense to do something instead of their learned knowledge. Sometimes, people may “get caught with their pants down” — they are found doing something they should not be doing. And, in every family, one person takes control. Sometimes a wife tells her husband what to do. Then we say “she wears the pants in the family.”

(3) Pants usually have pockets to hold things. Money that is likely to be spent quickly can “burn a hole in your pocket.” Sometimes you need a belt to hold up your pants. If you have less money than usual, you may have to “tighten your belt” — you may have to live on less money and spend your money carefully. But once you have succeeded in budgeting your money, you will have that skill “under your belt.”

(4) I always praise people who can save their money and not spend too much. I really “take my hat off to them.” Yet, when it comes to my own money, I spend it “at the drop of a hat” — immediately, without waiting. And sadly, you cannot “pull money out of a hat” — you cannot get money by inventing or imagining it.

(5) Boots are a heavy or strong kind of shoes. People who are “too big for their boots” think they are more important than they really are. I dislike such people. I really do. You can bet your boots on that!

(6) Yet, truly important people are hard to replace. Rarely can you “fill their shoes” — or replace them with someone equally effective.

(7) Yet, truly important people are hard to replace. Rarely can you “fill their shoes” — or replace them with someone equally effective.

(8) My father is an important person. He runs a big company. He wears a suit and tie and a shirt with sleeves that cover his arms. Some people who do not know him well think he is too firm and severe. They think he is a real “stuffed shirt.” But I know that my father “wears his heart on his sleeve” — he shows his feelings openly. And, he knows how to “keep his shirt on” — he stays calm and never gets angry or too excited.

(9) Also, my father has never “lost his shirt” in a business deal — he is too smart to lose all or most of his money. This is because my father “rolls up his sleeves” — and prepares to work hard. He often has a special plan or answer to a problem that he can use if he needs it. He is like a person who does magic tricks. We say “he has a card up his sleeve.”

Discussion

*Let’s talk about the article base on the questions below

  1. Do you like clothes and fashion? Do you have your own style or do you follow the current trend? Please explain your answer.
  2. In what situations do you tighten your belt? Please share your experience.
  3. How do you think the way you dress affects your life?

Tags: , , ,