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Learn the English Sayings TOO MANY COOKS SPOIL THE BROTH and MANY HANDS MAKE LIGHT WORK by Bob's Short English Lessonsratings:
Length:
4 minutes
Released:
Aug 10, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Read along to practice your English and to learn the English phrases TO RIP OFF and A RIP-OFFIn this English lesson, I wanted to help you learn the English phrase to rip off. Now, if you're wearing a bandage and you're done wearing it, you can rip off the bandage. But that's not the meaning I was meaning to teach you today. When you say that you rip off someone, it means that you steal something from them or you give them a really, really bad deal. If you were buying a bouquet of flowers from me, and I said, "There are 12 flowers in this bouquet," and then later when you got home, you realized there were only eight, you could say, "That person ripped me off. I got ripped off by that person. They said I was going to get a certain number of flowers and I got way less."WANT FREE ENGLISH LESSONS? GO TO YOUTUBE AND SEARCH, "BOB THE CANADIAN"If you enjoy these lessons please consider supporting me at: http://www.patreon.com/bobthecanadianBy the way, Jen and I never rip people off. It's a bad thing to do in business. It's not a nice thing to do at all. We do not ever rip people off. If you buy a bouquet from us and we say there's 12 flowers in it, there's probably actually 13 or 14 flowers in it. We like to give a little bit extra.The other phrase I wanted to teach you today is a noun, and it's a rip-off. I think I taught this one a couple of years ago. A rip-off is the way you describe when someone has ripped you off. So I'm going from verb form to noun form. You could say, "I bought this bouquet of flowers from Bob and there's only six flowers in it. He said there was going to be 12. This was a rip-off." So I got ripped off, verb form, or it was a rip-off, noun form. There's just a little bit of a difference there when you describe the situation.Anyways, to review, when you rip someone off, it means you steal from them or you lie in some sort of transaction and then they don't get what you said they were going to get. You could also use it for stealing. Like if someone took my trailer, I could say someone ripped off my trailer. That's outright stealing. And the noun form, you can call something a rip-off. My videos, I think, are a pretty good deal. I don't think they're a rip-off. They're free, and I think you always get what you're expecting, or usually.But hey, let's look at a comment from a previous video. This comment is from Sid. "Are there any venomous snakes in those bushes, Teacher Bob? Have you ever seen any? I don't know, outta the blue, this question came in my mind, so I asked. Loved today's episode. Thanks." And my response was, "There are no venomous snakes in my part of Canada."So when we walk around on the farm and when you see bushes like this, have no fear. Areas on the farm that we don't mow, where it's just all weeds, there is nothing living in here that is dangerous. One of the coolest parts about the part of the world I live in is that there really isn't anything dangerous here. Skunks are a little bit annoying. If skunks spray you, it really, really stinks. Sometimes there's animals that have a disease called rabies. So you might have a rabid dog or a rabid fox or something like that. And if they bite you, you have to get, I think you have to get some kind of medicine for that, some kind of needle. But generally, we're fairly safe here.Support the show
Released:
Aug 10, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode
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