Keeping Your Head Above Water
2013年11月26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.
- unpleasant /ˌʌnˈplɛzn̩t/ (adj.)not pleasant or enjoyable : causing discomfort or pain
- debt /ˈdɛt/ (n.) an amount of money that you owe to a person, bank, company, etc.
- seek /ˈsɑ:t/ (v.)to search for (someone or something) : to try to find (someone or something)
- debate /dɪˈbeɪt/ (v.)a discussion between people in which they express different opinions about something
- troubled /ˈtrʌbəl/ (adj.) having many problems
Article
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(1)Expressions about water are almost as common as water itself. But many of the expressions using water have unpleasant meanings.
(2) The expression to be “in hot water” is one of them. It is a very old expression. “Hot water” was used 500 years ago to mean “being in trouble.” One story says it got that meaning from the custom of throwing extremely hot water down on enemies attacking a castle.
(3) That no longer happens, but we still “get in hot water.” When we are “in hot water” we are in trouble. It can be any kind of trouble — serious or not so serious. A person who breaks a law can be “in hot water” with the police. A young boy can be “in hot water” with his mother if he walks in the house with dirty shoes.
(4) Being in “deep water” is almost the same as being “in hot water.” When you are in deep water, you are in a difficult position. Imagine a person who cannot swim being thrown in water over his head.
(5) You are “in deep water” when you are facing a problem that you do not have the ability to solve. The problem is too deep. You can be “in deep water,” for example, if you invest in stocks without knowing anything about the stock market.
(6) “To keep your head above water” is a colorful expression that means staying out of debt. A company seeks to keep its head above water during economic hard times. A man who loses his job tries to keep his head above water until he finds a new job.
(7) “Water over the dam” is another expression about a past event. It is something that is finished. It cannot be changed. The expression comes from the idea that water that has flowed over a dam cannot be brought back again.
(8) When a friend is troubled by a mistake she has made, you might tell her to forget about it. You say it is water over the dam.
(9) Another common expression, “to hold water,” is about the strength or weakness of an idea or opinion that you may be arguing about. It probably comes from a way of testing the condition of a container. If it can hold water, it is strong and has no holes in it. If your argument can “hold water” it is strong and does not have any holes. If it does not “hold water” then it is weak and not worth debating.
(10) “Throwing cold water” also is an expression that deals with ideas or proposals. It means to not like an idea. For example, you want to buy a new car because the old one has some problems. But your wife “throws cold water” on the idea because she says a new car costs too much.
Discussion
*Let’s talk about the article base on the questions below
- Do you like water? How much water do you consume everyday?
- What is the good thing and the bad thing about water?
- Thomas Fuller said: “We never know the worth of water till the well is dry.” What do you think of this quote?