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BBC - 6 Minute English (YouTube), Using 'x' for 'kisses': 6 Minute English - YouTube

Using 'x' for 'kisses': 6 Minute English - YouTube

Neil: Hello. Welcome to 6 Minute English, I'm Neil.

Rob: And I'm Rob.

Neil: We're going to be looking at a letter

from the English alphabet. It's a letter

which has a particular meaning when

used at the end of a piece of informal

writing such as letters, emails, texts and

messages.

Rob: I'm very EXcited.

Neil: Ha ha, very good, very good Rob!

Rob: My EXpectations are really high.

Neil: Yep, that's another good one.

Rob: Is it an EXtraordinary letter?

Neil: OK, thank you Rob, that's enough of

your jokes. I'm getting EXasperated!

Oh, now you've got me at it! Well no prizes

for guessing what letter we're focussing

on today?

Rob: Why?

Neil: No, it's not Y.

Rob: No, no. I didn't mean the letter ‘y',

I meant the word ‘why', as in - why are

there no prizes?

Neil: Because of all the not so subtle

clues you've been giving. The letter is X.

Rob: Yes. Exactly.

Neil: Alright, I think we get the idea!

Before we go much further, let's have a

question. English has 26 letters. Which

language has 74 letters? Is it

a) Khmer, b) Hindi or c) Armenian?

Any ideas Rob?

Rob: An excellent question but quite

obscure, I'm going to say b) Hindi.

Neil: Well, I'll have the answer later on.

Now, Rob, what does the letter X all by

itself at the end of a message mean?

Rob: Well, it means a kiss. The more

kisses, the more affection you are

showing.

Neil: Where does this concept of putting

an X to mean a kiss, come from? Dr Laura

Wright is from the Faculty of English at

Cambridge University and she appeared

on the BBC Radio 4 programme

Word of Mouth. When does she say this

practice started and where does it come from?

Well, we've been adding Xs for kisses at

the bottom of letters since at least 1763.

So the very first one we know of had seven

Xs. I have to say, I haven't gone to seven ever.

We get X from the Roman alphabet which

got it from the Greek alphabet,

pronounced /ks/ and the Romans...

Presenter: That's nearly a kiss, isn't it?

Yes it is, isn't it? I think a penny's

just dropped there.

Presenter: It has, clunk.

Neil: What do we learn about the origins

of the X for kisses?

Rob: Well, it's been used since at least

1763, and it comes from the Roman

alphabet and they got it from the Greeks.

Neil: And why did this come to mean a kiss?

Rob: Well, Dr Wright suggests it's because

of the original pronunciation - /ks/.

Neil: And at the point the presenter made

the connection, didn't he?

Rob: Yes, he did. And Dr Wright used a

phrase for when someone suddenly

understands something,

particularly something that is obvious to

others. She said the penny has just dropped.

Neil: And this has got nothing to do with a

penny, which is small coin, actually

dropping anywhere. But the presenter

makes a joke by using a word we use for

the noise of something falling, clunk.

Rob: Although, to be honest, a penny

would never really clunk. That's more like

the noise two heavy metal objects would

make - the clunk of a car door, for example.

Neil: Let's listen to that exchange again.

Well, we've been adding Xs for kisses at

the bottom of letters since at least 1763.

So the very first one we know of had seven Xs.

I have to say I haven't gone to seven ever.

We get X from the Roman alphabet which

got it from the Greek alphabet,

pronounced /ks/ and the Romans...

Presenter: That's nearly a kiss, isn't it?

Yes it is, isn't it? I think a penny's

just dropped there.

Presenter: It has, clunk.

Neil: One thing to note about putting an X

at the end of a communication is that it is

not something you do for everyone. It's

usually only to friends and family

members, people you might kiss in real

life. Professor Nils Langer from

the University of Bristol told a story about

a colleague of his who wasn't too familiar

with this convention. What was her mistake?

A colleague of mine from Bristol, who... when

she came over from Germany thought

that X was just the normal way of closing a

letter in England and so she would finish

any letter with Xs, even a letter to the

Inland Revenue. We never heard, really,

how the Inland Revenue responded

to these letters with these Xs.

Presenter: They docked her another 20

quid, I think!

Neil: What was her mistake, Rob?

Rob: She didn't realise that you don't put

an X on every communication. So she

even put it on business letter including

one to the Inland Revenue, which is the

government department in the UK that

deals with tax.

Neil: We don't know how the tax people

felt about the letter with kisses. But the

presenter joked about what their

response would have been.

Rob: Yes, he joked that they probably

docked her another 20 quid. To dock

money is to cut the amount of money you

are expecting to receive and a quid is a

slang word for a British pound.

Neil: Now time for the answer to our

question. English has 26 letters. Which

language has 74 letters? Is it…

a) Khmer, b) Hindi or c) Armenian?

Rob: I guessed b) Hindi.

Neil: Well, I suppose it was a one in three

chance, but not correct this time. The

answer is a) Khmer. Very well done if you

knew that. Now on to the vocabulary we

looked at in this programme.

Rob: We started with a penny. A penny is

an English coin.

A hundred pennies makes one pound sterling.

Neil: The phrase 'the penny has dropped'

means that someone has suddenly

understood something.

Rob: A clunk is the noise of two heavy

objects hitting each other.

Neil: The Inland Revenue is the UK's tax

authority.

Rob: And if you dock money from someone,

you reduce the amount of money you pay

them. For example, as an employee in the

UK your tax is automatically docked from

your salary.

Neil: And finally, a quid, which is a slang

term for one pound sterling. Right, before

they start docking our pay for being late,

it's time to say goodbye. Find us on

Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, our

App and of course the website

bbclearningenglish.com.

See you soon, goodbye.

Rob: Bye bye!

Using 'x' for 'kisses': 6 Minute English - YouTube |||kisses||| 'x' für 'Küsse': 6 Minuten Englisch - YouTube Utiliser "x" pour "kisses" : 6 Minute English - YouTube キス」に「x」を使う:6分間英語 - YouTube '키스'에 'X'를 사용하기: 6분 영어 - YouTube Używanie "x" dla "pocałunków": 6 minut po angielsku - YouTube Usar 'x' para 'beijos': 6 Minutos de Inglês - YouTube การใช้ 'x' สำหรับ 'kisses': ภาษาอังกฤษ 6 นาที - YouTube 'Öpücük' için 'x' kullanmak: 6 Dakikalık İngilizce - YouTube Використання "x" для "поцілунків": 6 хвилин англійської - YouTube 使用“x”表示“亲吻”:6 分钟英语 - YouTube

Neil: Hello. Welcome to 6 Minute English, I'm Neil. นีล: สวัสดี. ยินดีต้อนรับสู่ 6 Minute English ฉันชื่อนีล

Rob: And I'm Rob. ร็อบ: และฉันคือร็อบ

Neil: We're going to be looking at a letter นีล: เราจะดูจดหมายกัน

from the English alphabet. It's a letter |||字母||| |||Buchstabe||| |||字母表||| จากตัวอักษรภาษาอังกฤษ มันเป็นจดหมาย

which has a particular meaning when ซึ่งมีความหมายเฉพาะเมื่อใด

used at the end of a piece of informal ||||||||非正式的 ใช้ต่อท้ายคำที่ไม่เป็นทางการ

writing such as letters, emails, texts and การเขียน เช่น จดหมาย อีเมล ข้อความ และ

messages. ข้อความ

Rob: I'm very EXcited. ร็อบ: ฉันตื่นเต้นมาก

Neil: Ha ha, very good, very good Rob! นีล: ฮ่าฮ่า ดีมาก ดีมาก Rob!

Rob: My EXpectations are really high. ||expectations||| Rob: ความคาดหวังของฉันสูงมาก

Neil: Yep, that's another good one. ||นั่นคือ||| นีล: ใช่ นั่นเป็นอีกสิ่งหนึ่งที่ดี

Rob: Is it an EXtraordinary letter? ||||extraordinary| Rob: มันเป็นจดหมายพิเศษหรือเปล่า?

Neil: OK, thank you Rob, that's enough of นีล: โอเค ขอบคุณร็อบ ก็พอแล้ว

your jokes. I'm getting EXasperated! ||Ich werde||genervt ||||fed up ||||exasperado ||||Zniecierpliwiony เรื่องตลกของคุณ ฉันเริ่มจะโกรธแล้ว!

Oh, now you've got me at it! Well no prizes |||||||||prizes โอ้ ตอนนี้คุณเข้าใจฉันแล้ว! ดีไม่มีรางวัล.

for guessing what letter we're focussing เพื่อเดาว่าเรากำลังเน้นตัวอักษรตัวไหน

on today? วันนี้เหรอ?

Rob: Why? ร็อบ: ทำไม?

Neil: No, it's not Y. นีล: ไม่ ไม่ใช่ Y.

Rob: No, no. I didn't mean the letter ‘y', ร็อบ: ไม่ ไม่ ฉันไม่ได้หมายถึงตัวอักษร 'y'

I meant the word ‘why', as in - why are ฉันหมายถึงคำว่า 'ทำไม' เช่นเดียวกับใน - ทำไมจึงเป็นเช่นนั้น 我的意思是‘为什么’这个词,比如 - 为什么会

there no prizes? ไม่มีรางวัลเหรอ?

Neil: Because of all the not so subtle |||||nicht so||subtil |||||||not so subtle |||||||sutil นีล: เพราะความไม่ละเอียดอ่อนทั้งหมด Neil: 因为所有这些不那么微妙的。

clues you've been giving. The letter is X. 线索提示||||||| pistas||||||| เบาะแสที่คุณให้ ตัวอักษรคือ X 你一直在给出的线索。这个字母是X。

Rob: Yes. Exactly. ร็อบ: ใช่. อย่างแน่นอน. Rob: 是的。完全正确。

Neil: Alright, I think we get the idea! ||Ich|denke|||| นีล: เอาล่ะ ฉันคิดว่าเราเข้าใจแนวคิดนี้แล้ว! Neil: 好的,我觉得我们明白了!

Before we go much further, let's have a ก่อนที่เราจะไปไกลกว่านี้เรามามี

question. English has 26 letters. Which คำถาม. ภาษาอังกฤษมี 26 ตัวอักษร ที่

language has 74 letters? Is it ภาษามี 74 ตัวอักษร? ใช่ไหม

a) Khmer, b) Hindi or c) Armenian? |高棉语||||| |a) Khmer||b) Hindi|||Armenian |c) armênio||b) Hindi|||armênio a) เขมร b) ฮินดีหรือ c) อาร์เมเนีย?

Any ideas Rob? มีความคิดอะไรบ้างร็อบ?

Rob: An excellent question but quite ||great||| Rob: เป็นคำถามที่ยอดเยี่ยมแต่ค่อนข้างมาก

obscure, I'm going to say b) Hindi. unbekannt|||||| Unclear, I choose.|||||| obscuro|||||| คลุมเครือ ฉันจะพูดว่า b) ภาษาฮินดี

Neil: Well, I'll have the answer later on. นีล: ฉันจะได้คำตอบทีหลัง

Now, Rob, what does the letter X all by เอาล่ะ ร็อบ ตัวอักษร X ทั้งหมดเขียนว่าอะไร

itself at the end of a message mean? ตัวเองอยู่ท้ายข้อความหมายความว่า?

Rob: Well, it means a kiss. The more Rob: ก็หมายถึงการจูบ ยิ่ง

kisses, the more affection you are |||亲密感|| |||Zuneigung|| |||affectionate|| จูบ ยิ่งเสน่หา

showing. กำลังแสดง

Neil: Where does this concept of putting นีล: แนวคิดเรื่องการวางนี้อยู่ที่ไหน

an X to mean a kiss, come from? Dr Laura |||||||||Dr Laura

Wright is from the Faculty of English at ||||英语系||| Wright||||Department||| ไรท์มาจากคณะภาษาอังกฤษที่

Cambridge University and she appeared ||||was present มหาวิทยาลัยเคมบริดจ์และเธอก็ปรากฏตัวขึ้น

on the BBC Radio 4 programme ในรายการวิทยุบีบีซี 4

Word of Mouth. When does she say this ||口碑||||| การบอกต่อ. เมื่อไหร่เธอจะพูดแบบนี้.

practice started and where does it come from?

Well, we've been adding Xs for kisses at ||||亲吻符号|||

the bottom of letters since at least 1763. 至少自1763年以来,字母的底部。

So the very first one we know of had seven |||||||||seven 所以我们知道的第一个就是七。

Xs. I have to say, I haven't gone to seven ever. <Xs> im Kontext von <Xs. Ich muss sagen, ich bin noch nie bis sieben gegangen.>|||||Ich||||| ||||||||||in my life Xs. Должен сказать, что я ни разу не ходил на семерку. 先生。我必须说,我从未去过七。

We get X from the Roman alphabet which 我们从罗马字母中得到X,

got it from the Greek alphabet, 罗马字母又是从希腊字母中得到的。

pronounced /ks/ and the Romans... |罗马字母|||

Presenter: That's nearly a kiss, isn't it?

Yes it is, isn't it? I think a penny's ||||||||便士的 ||||||||worth a lot ||||||||um centavo

just dropped there. |was dropped|

Presenter: It has, clunk. |||咔哒声 |||klonk Presenter|||loud mechanical sound |||um som seco

Neil: What do we learn about the origins |||||||origins

of the X for kisses? ||||kisses

Rob: Well, it's been used since at least

1763, and it comes from the Roman

alphabet and they got it from the Greeks. |||||||希腊人 alphabet|||||||

Neil: And why did this come to mean a kiss?

Rob: Well, Dr Wright suggests it's because ||||suggests||

of the original pronunciation - /ks/. ||original|pronunciation|

Neil: And at the point the presenter made ||||||the speaker|

the connection, didn't he?

Rob: Yes, he did. And Dr Wright used a

phrase for when someone suddenly

understands something,

particularly something that is obvious to ||||显而易见| ||||clear|

others. She said the penny has just dropped. |||||||realized ||||a ficha||| 她指出,这只是刚刚领悟到。

Neil: And this has got nothing to do with a 尼尔:这与一分钱没有任何关系,实际上,一分钱是个小硬币

penny, which is small coin, actually ||||kleine Münze| 其他人。

dropping anywhere. But the presenter ||||speaker deixando cair||||

makes a joke by using a word we use for

the noise of something falling, clunk. |||||Klonk 东西掉落的声音,砰。

Rob: Although, to be honest, a penny 罗布:虽然说实话,一分钱

would never really clunk. That's more like 永远不会发出砰的声音。更像是

the noise two heavy metal objects would

make - the clunk of a car door, for example. ||咔嗒声|||||| make - 比如汽车门的发出的咔嗒声。

Neil: Let's listen to that exchange again. |||||conversation| |||||diálogo| Neil: 让我们再听一遍那个对话。

Well, we've been adding Xs for kisses at Well, we've been adding Xs for kisses at

the bottom of letters since at least 1763.

So the very first one we know of had seven Xs. Так, самый первый из известных нам экземпляров имел семь иксов. 所以我们知道的第一个有七个X。

I have to say I haven't gone to seven ever. |||||||||in my life 我必须说我从来没有去过七个。

We get X from the Roman alphabet which ||||||Roman alphabet| 我们从罗马字母中得到X

got it from the Greek alphabet,

pronounced /ks/ and the Romans...

Presenter: That's nearly a kiss, isn't it?

Yes it is, isn't it? I think a penny's Ja, nicht wahr?||||||||

just dropped there.

Presenter: It has, clunk.

Neil: One thing to note about putting an X

at the end of a communication is that it is

not something you do for everyone. It's

usually only to friends and family |||||family

members, people you might kiss in real members||||||

life. Professor Nils Langer from |||朗格教授|

the University of Bristol told a story about |||布里斯托尔||||

a colleague of his who wasn't too familiar |||||||well-acquainted

with this convention. What was her mistake? ||惯例|||| ||mit dieser Konvention|||| ||meeting||||

A colleague of mine from Bristol, who... when

she came over from Germany thought 她来自德国,以为

that X was just the normal way of closing a ||||||||ending| X只是在英格兰写信的一种常规方式,所以她会结束

letter in England and so she would finish

any letter with Xs, even a letter to the |||<Xs> in diesem Kontext||||| qualquer||||||||

Inland Revenue. We never heard, really, |税务局|||| Finanzamt. Wirklich nie.||||| Domestic|Tax authority|||| Receita Interna|Receita Federal||||

how the Inland Revenue responded |||税务局| ||Inland Revenue||

to these letters with these Xs.

Presenter: They docked her another 20 ||扣了她20|| |Sie|docked|| ||deducted from pay|| ||descontaram||

quid, I think! 一英镑,我想|| Quid, denke ich!|| something|| o que||

Neil: What was her mistake, Rob? Neil|||||

Rob: She didn't realise that you don't put

an X on every communication. So she

even put it on business letter including

one to the Inland Revenue, which is the

government department in the UK that

deals with tax.

Neil: We don't know how the tax people

felt about the letter with kisses. But the

presenter joked about what their |开玩笑||| |scherzte||| |brincou sobre o|||

response would have been.

Rob: Yes, he joked that they probably |||scherzte|||

docked her another 20 quid. To dock |||||扣除 deducted|||pounds|| |||||ドック |||||descontou zog ihr weitere 20 Pfund ab. Etwas abzuziehen

money is to cut the amount of money you お金|||||||お金| bedeutet, den Betrag des Geldes zu kürzen, den Sie

are expecting to receive and a quid is a erwarten zu erhalten, und ein Pfund ist ein

slang word for a British pound. |||||Quid quid||||| |||||quid

Neil: Now time for the answer to our

question. English has 26 letters. Which

language has 74 letters? Is it…

a) Khmer, b) Hindi or c) Armenian?

Rob: I guessed b) Hindi.

Neil: Well, I suppose it was a one in three

chance, but not correct this time. The

answer is a) Khmer. Very well done if you |||Khmer|||||

knew that. Now on to the vocabulary we

looked at in this programme.

Rob: We started with a penny. A penny is |||||um centavo|||

an English coin.

A hundred pennies makes one pound sterling. ||||||英镑 ||||||Pfund ||||||libra esterlina

Neil: The phrase 'the penny has dropped' |||その||| 尼尔:短语“豁然开朗”

means that someone has suddenly 意味着某人突然明白了什么。

understood something.

Rob: A clunk is the noise of two heavy |||||噪音|||

objects hitting each other. |colidindo||

Neil: The Inland Revenue is the UK's tax

authority. Behörde

Rob: And if you dock money from someone, ||wenn|dir||||

you reduce the amount of money you pay du senkst|||||||

them. For example, as an employee in the

UK your tax is automatically docked from |Ihrer||||abgezogen| |||||retida|

your salary.

Neil: And finally, a quid, which is a slang ||||||||俚语 ||||funt brytyjski||||

term for one pound sterling. Right, before ||||Pfund Sterling||

they start docking our pay for being late, sie||||||| ||descontando||||| за опоздание начинают лишать зарплаты,

it's time to say goodbye. Find us on it is|||||||

Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, our Instagram||||

App and of course the website

bbclearningenglish.com.

See you soon, goodbye. |||さようなら

Rob: Bye bye!