IELTS Speaking for Success - 📱 Mobile Phones 2 (S07E03) + Transcript
Episode Date: February 21, 2022What was your first mobile phone? How often do you use your mobile phone? Can you describe your mobile phone? How has your mobile phone changed your life? Tune in and have a great day! - Get exclus...ive episodes on IELTS Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Our course on Phrasal Verbs: https://successwithielts.com/podcourses Transcript: https://bit.ly/transcripts07e03 Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2022 Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, Sunshine. I'm Maria.
And my name is Rory, and we are the host of the AIL Speaking for Success podcast.
The podcast aims to help you improve your speaking skills as well as your listening skills along the way.
We've started this podcast to give you gorgeous grammar and fabulous vocabulary for your IEL score, the highest score.
Is it a band nine score?
It is a band nine score, the band nine score.
Maria, what's our coincidence today?
Maria, are you paying attention?
Oh, sorry, sorry, my phone was going off there.
Um, yeah, what?
Oh, your phone was going off.
Shall we talk about mobile phones?
Oh yes, let's talk about mobile phones.
Dear listener, we have our Super Dupa Premium episodes,
and this week, Rory, the Scottish Rory,
is going to describe an interesting song
in Speaking Part 2.
And in Speaking Part 3, we're going to discuss music in general.
You can get them on Patreon, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Telegram.
The links are in the description.
Also, dear listeners, you might notice that my voice sounds a little bit different from usual
because I have a cold today, a really bad cold.
So, what to do if you can't understand anything I'm saying?
Well, we have our handy, dandy transcript.
that you can access, so they're always super clear, well, whenever I'm not being clear,
and you can find them by clicking the link in the description too.
What was your first mobile phone?
I think it was this brick-like Nokia.
I mean, we were talking about 20 years ago, so I can't remember the exact model, but the make
was definitely a Nokia.
How often do you use your mobile phone?
Well, I think it's on an everyday basis now.
since it's a smartphone, so it's synced to my email, calendar, everything I need to work.
I even used it to record the podcast.
Do you use it for texting or calls?
I honestly can't remember the last time I sent a real text or made an actual call,
but I use those functions on various messenger services and social media sites that I'm signed up to pretty much all the time.
Can you describe your mobile phone?
I suppose it looks like a black mirror to borrow an expression.
It's just a handheld screen most of the time.
And when I try to keep in my pocket so it's darkened most of the time as well,
I doubt it's much different from any other smartphone you've come across, to be honest.
Will you buy a new smartphone soon?
I have no plans to.
My current one does the job and it's always such a hassle to buy a new one and transfer everything over.
And this one has some sentimental value too, since it was a gift.
maybe from my next birthday, but certainly I've nothing solid planned just yet.
How has your mobile phone changed your life?
I often find myself thinking about that, actually.
It would be like I was missing a limb if I had to give it up now.
I think it's changed everything from how often I communicate to who I communicate with,
maybe even how I communicate, to be honest.
I can't imagine life without it.
Well, I can, but it isn't a very pleasant thought.
Thank you, Rory.
for your nice answers.
So, mobile phones or smart phones, or just phones?
So this is a huge discussion.
Oh, it doesn't matter.
Well, here, the questions were mostly about mobile phones, weren't they?
So mobile phones and smartphones are used interchangeably with phone.
But if we think about a phone with like a connection, a landline connection,
do you have, do you have a phone with a landline?
connection. I don't. Our house does, but that's because my parents are of an older generation,
so they're used to this. Yeah, my parents also have a phone with a landline, but now whenever you say
a phone, give me your phone, it means like, okay, it's a smartphone, right? Yeah. And if it's not a
smartphone, it's this button phone without any internet, so nothing. But again, like, how many people still use
these button phones. I know one person who does. Well, when I lived in Russia, no one did. But when I
lived in Africa and Timor, everybody did because they were very cheap and easy to run.
But that was like how much time ago, like many years ago, well, five, ten years ago?
Yeah, it was like almost eight years ago, I think. Anyway, the point is that we're usually talking
about smartphones when we talk about mobile phones. Yeah. Yeah. So mobile phones, smartphones,
listener, it's fine, or just my phone.
Okay.
And Rory used to have this brick-like Nokia.
Remember, this Nokia, which was like huge, like a brick?
So that's a good thing for comparing something.
You could say it's brick-like or it's block-like.
Yeah, it was huge.
Well, it wasn't huge.
It just, the shape.
It's so weird.
It's like a brick.
You're talking to a brick.
Whereas now we have these flat, well, they're just screens.
They look like compact mirrors.
And you've mentioned the words model and the make.
So the model of my phone is what?
Well, the model, it's maybe easier to talk about the make first.
So the make is like the brand or like the specific company that makes the phone basically.
And the model is the kind of phone made by.
the company. So, for example, I think my phone right now is a Samsung S-10, maybe. So the make is
Samsung, but the model is S-10. Ah, okay. And that's a good point for thinking about, like,
adjectives and nouns, because I said it's a Nokia, but you could say, like, it's a Nokia
phone, or it was a Nokia phone. Do they still make Nokia's? I don't know. I have no idea. For me,
is like a phone is like either Samsung or Apple.
And what do you call the phones which you can flip them?
So they consist of two parts.
So you just like flip, flip the part?
A flip phone.
A flip phone.
A flip phone, yeah.
And then we have our smartphones and everything we have is synced to our email, calendar,
to something else we may not even know about.
So it's synced to something.
Yes, but that just means whenever you update it in one place, it becomes updated somewhere else.
So if I add something to my calendar on my computer, because it's synced to my phone, it updates on the phone as well.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Sometimes Vanya used to make some appointments and he used some programs and then I have them on my phone.
You know, okay, so we have a meeting on Saturday.
And I didn't do anything, but it's just there, you know, like,
like what?
Vanya, are you inside my phone?
I also had the same problem.
And then Vanya stopped doing it.
He's looking at us now, smiling, but he knows.
Yeah, so, dear listener, you know that your mobile phone lives its own life,
and you may not even know about certain things that are happening inside your own mobile phone.
Do you know what's happening inside your own mobile phone?
Do you know what's happening inside your phone?
Oh, no, I have no idea.
Seriously.
No idea.
I don't, I can't control my mobile phone, my smartphone, my phone.
So we use it for texting and making calls.
So if you write a text.
That's the thing.
I think we do, yes.
Well, let's think about texting and calls.
Ah, yeah, okay.
Like, for me, when I make a call from a phone, it's like I put the number in
and I press the call button
or when I text I type the message
into the message part
and it sends a message via text
but or SMS
but nowadays
most of the messages I send
are on Instagram
but that's Instagram Messenger
WhatsApp Messenger
Facebook Messenger
What about if you use a WhatsApp Messenger
Do you still send a text or
what do you call this?
I call that messaging
I think they're two different things, yeah.
Okay, okay.
So if you text, you write a text like an SMS,
but if you message somebody,
you use WhatsApp, Vibor, or some local messengers?
I think so, but I don't know what the difference is.
Maybe, like, we could talk about text messages,
like you pay a price per message,
whereas with WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger,
are there, you don't pay for this.
But do you think that nowadays people use it interchangeably, the same as mobile phones,
smartphones?
So, okay, I'll write you a text, meaning I'm going to WhatsApp you.
I was thinking about this because I have never heard someone say, I'll text you or text me.
It's always message me.
Message me, really?
Yeah, it's always message me or send me a message or I messaged him the other day.
That's really weird, isn't it?
The language has changed and we didn't even know.
So texting and write a text and a text is gone
Or it's like it's dying out
Now message me
I messaged you
Yeah that's why I said in my in my answer
It's like a real text
Like using the text messaging
Like function on the phone
An actual call using the call function on the phone
Not like open Facebook messenger and call my friend
For example
Yeah yeah so an actual call
like the call, like the actual call.
Right, cool.
What about this black mirror?
You said like, oh, it looks like a black mirror.
My phone looks like a black mirror.
I sold that.
Because, of course, there's this British television show by Charlie, somebody.
Charlie Brooker, that's it.
And he made this TV series called Black Mirror,
which was like you look at your phone and you hold it up and you can see yourself,
but it's black.
So it's like a black mirror.
And it does look.
like a black mirror, doesn't it? You look
at it and you see your reflection
in the dark and it's all about
well, the TV series is about how
technology has a dark side
and it does, doesn't it? So black mirror
yeah, five seasons
Annable Jones, Charlie Brooker
available on
N. Netflix.
The N word. The N word.
Netflix people, if you're listening,
you are free to sponsor our podcast.
So our mobile phone is just a hand
held screen, handheld.
Yeah. Handheld
is an adjective
to describe something that you hold in your
hand when you use it. That's the most important
thing. It's like holding in a hand
and using at the same time.
So, for example,
you couldn't say that a glass
is handheld, even though you hold it
in your hand. In order to use it, you have to have
it next to your face. Whereas
for a phone, it's handheld
because you hold it in your hand and you
use your thumb to send a message, for example.
If you read e-books and you have this special device,
so it could be like a handheld reader, yeah?
Reader is this is how you call it?
Right.
Then buying cell phones, cell phones, mobile phones, smartphones,
oh yeah, it's such a hassle to buy a new phone.
You should do the research, then look for bargains,
then compare different models and makes off.
off and try not to die of boredom. So it's a lot of work. Yeah. So it's such a hassle. And also,
if you've always used Samsung and then you've decided to, oh, I'm going to go Apple. Oh, so they switch
from Samsung to Apple. Yeah. And you have to learn how to use it again. Yes. This was it.
Because when I switched from Apple to Samsung, I had to learn because you have this thing called muscle
memory in your, well, in your muscles.
And it means they react without your brain processing the information.
So it's like when you get used to using your Apple phone and then you switch over to
Samsung, which is a very different interface or way of using it.
And you have to relearn how to do it automatically again.
You have to physically think about what you do to work the machinery.
Why did you do that?
So you didn't like Apple and they decided to go Samsung?
No, it was a decision.
It was made for me, actually.
I had an iPhone 7, and then my ex worked for Samsung, and I got a new one.
He bought me one for my Christmas present.
This was two years ago.
That's why this phone has some sentimental value for Rory.
It's just, like, important for him.
Yes.
So it reminds you of, like, something in the past, which was nice.
And it is nice when someone buys you a phone.
So if I give you this button phone, like, this.
like the cheapest button phone on your birthday,
would you use it?
Would you just ditch your Samsung nice phone?
How am I supposed to use it?
You know, yeah.
Take a break from the internet and all social media.
No.
Yeah, so you see, Rory will not be able to function without his phone
because it would be like he was missing
a part of his body.
Or missing a limb.
A limb.
Yeah, a limb is like a leg or an arm.
So if Rory had to give it up, meaning had to throw his phone away,
it would be like missing a limb.
That's a very nice way to say that.
We're dependent on our phone.
Our phone is like my third hand.
It's my third eye or ear.
Yeah. It's like part of me now.
So it would be like I was missing a limb if I had to give it up.
That's a very nice weight of saying that.
There's some nice grammar.
I even used to use it for recording the podcast.
Used to use it.
We did record the podcast on the phone.
Gosh.
Yeah, like when we got started.
Oh, yeah.
And you can tell because the quality was awful.
Yeah, it was horrible, huh?
Well, not that horrible, but still.
There was passive voice.
The screen is darkened or it's darkened,
which means it's not lit up.
It's also passive voice.
It's dark.
And make sure to use the present perfect.
Like, it's changed everything.
It has changed everything.
My phone has changed my life.
It has changed.
everything. It has become part of me, my BFF, best friend forever, my phone. Woohoo.
And we have a nice phrase that you can use for any answer. I often find myself thinking about that
actually. So that's just another way of saying I think about it all the time or usually.
Yeah, like, let's talk about shoes. Maria, will you buy new shoes soon?
Oh, I often find myself thinking about that actually.
Do people go into planetariums?
I often find myself thinking about that, actually.
Do they?
Does that happen?
That is a normal question.
Oh, God, yeah.
Be careful.
Be careful.
It should sound natural.
Well, yeah.
You use it once and then you just keep going.
Anyway, thank you very much for listening.
Hopefully, we've given you vocabulary and super duper grammar.
And if your phone goes off, for example, we made a joke about my phone going off.
So it just starts ringing.
Yeah, somebody is calling me and the phone is making noises, yeah?
It goes off.
Yes.
Speaking of going off, we should go off to the next episode.
Bye.
Bye.
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What was your first mobile phone?
I think it was this brick-like Nokia.
I mean, we were talking about 20 years ago,
so I can't remember the exact model,
but the make was definitely a Nokia.
How often do you use your mobile phone?
Well, I think it's on an everyday basis now,
since it's a smartphone,
so it's synced to my email, calendar,
everything I need to work.
Oh, I even use it to record the podcast.
Or sorry, I even used it to record the podcast.
Do you use it for texting or calls?
I honestly can't remember the last time I sent a real text
or made an actual call,
But I use those functions on various messenger services and social media sites that I'm signed up to pretty much all the time.
Can you describe your mobile phone?
I suppose it looks like a black mirror to borrow an expression.
It's just a handheld screen most of the time.
And when I try to keep in my pocket, so it's darkened most of the time as well,
I doubt it's much different from any other smartphone you've come across, to be honest.
Will you buy a new smartphone soon?
I have no plans to
My current one does the job
And it's always such a hassle to buy a new one
And transfer everything over
And this one has some sentimental value too
Since it was a gift
Maybe from our next birthday
But certainly I've nothing solid planned just yet
How has your mobile phone
Changed Your Life
I often find myself thinking about that actually
It would be like I was missing a limb
If I had to give it up now
I think it's changed everything
from how often I communicate
to who I communicate with,
maybe even how I communicate, to be honest,
I can't imagine life without it.
Well, I can, but it isn't a very pleasant thought.
