IELTS Speaking for Success - 📱 Mobile phones (Part 1) + Transcript
Episode Date: June 16, 2024What was your first mobile phone? How often do you use your mobile phone? Do you often use your mobile phone for texting or calls? Will you buy a new one in the future? How has your mobile phone ch...anged your life? Tune in and have a great day! - Get exclusive episodes on IELTS Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Book a class with Rory here: https://successwithielts.com/rory Our course on Phrasal Verbs: https://successwithielts.com/podcourses Transcript: Coming later today Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2024 Podcourses Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, lovely. I'm Maria.
And my name is Rory, and we are the hosts of the AIL Speaking for Success podcast.
The podcast dreams 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 high-Ild school.
Your bad ninth score.
Rory.
Rory.
Come on, Rory.
Oh, sorry, Maria.
My phone was going.
Oh, your phone.
phone. Your mobile phone?
Yes.
Shall we talk about mobile phones?
Absolutely.
And Elyss, now we're going to start off with a joke.
Just from the get-go, here's the joke.
My cell phone got drunk.
He took too many screenshots.
What was your first mobile phone?
Oh, wow. I think it was a Motorola phone.
The model number escapes me.
Now, it looked like a brick though, and even had like one of those visible aerials, which none of them do these days.
How often do you use your mobile phone?
Oh God, just about every waking moment of the day, to be honest, unless I'm working or reading.
Not to make or take calls, though. Usually it's just to post on social media or listen to videos while I work out or do chores.
Do you often use your mobile phone for texting or calls?
Well, not nearly as much as I used to. Everyone messages these days, really.
don't they? Can't even remember the last time I sent an SMS or place to call.
Will you buy a new one in the future?
Oh, absolutely, yes. I've had this one since about 2019, and it needs a new screen and battery now
since the first one is slightly cracked and the second thing doesn't last nearly as long as it should.
But frankly, I'll be getting a new one within the year since it'll be faster and it'll have
more and better features, I hope. Maybe for my birthday, if I'm lucky.
How has your mobile phone changed your life?
Oh God, I think it would be easier to list the ways that hasn't changed things, frankly.
I have greater connectivity and access than I could ever have imagined.
More than just with a laptop, for example, since the phone is more portable.
And I can do more through the various apps, and I can manage things like my finances, at the touch of a button.
It really has revolutionized things.
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So do you listen up, mobile phones.
or you can call them cell phones or just phones.
What else, Rory, can we say?
I think that's about it really.
Maybe your smartphone.
Most people just say their phone, though.
My first phone was a Motorola.
Or it was a Samsung.
Or what other brands do we have?
What other brands are paying us for free advertising?
Yeah, so here we use an article because it was a Motorola.
It was a Samsung.
So a phone by this.
company. The model number escapes me now. Like, I don't remember the model. So you can say,
oh, the name of the brand escapes me now. Or the model number escapes me now. I don't remember
this. The model number is just the kind of phone that it is. For example, I have a Samsung
S10, which is definitely five years old. I think the latest model is like a Samsung S24, maybe,
just to date our episode completely. And then, of course, for the iPhones, the model number
is just a number.
I think we're on iPhone 15 now, aren't we?
I'm a Samsung person.
I don't know what iPhones are all about.
Yes, dear listener, Rory is an iPhone person?
I am not an iPhone person at all.
I'm a Samsung person also.
No, no, I used to be.
Oh, okay, hello.
Oh, you changed.
I thought you were an iPhone person.
No, no, no way.
You can comment on the size.
My old phone, my first phone, looked like a brick.
A brick is like a brick, this piece of rock.
Yeah, something used to build houses with.
Most phones are not like this now, though.
They're flat or they look like a mirror, a black mirror.
Every waking moment of the day means very often.
And you can say, I use my phone every waking moment of my day.
So every second I'm awake, I use my phone all the time non-stop.
When I'm working, sleeping, having breakfast, breathing.
You can say, I take my calls, I text, I write messages, I post on social media, I watch videos,
and I use my phone while I work out or do chores.
What are chores?
And the expression is to do chores.
Chores are just the jobs that you have to do around the house, clean the floors,
Clean the dishes.
Clean the windows.
I don't know what other chores there are, to be honest.
I have a cleaning lady that does everything else.
And can you say, like, oh, I'm addicted to my mobile phone.
Probably, yeah.
Like, what else can I say to mean that I use it very often?
I can't leave it alone.
Ooh, I can't leave it alone.
I never leave home without my phone.
There you go, deylus.
We use our phone for texting.
To text means to write an SMS.
What a message.
We used to.
Everybody just messages now.
Messages are like things that you send on I message or WhatsApp or maybe Telegram.
But a text message is like you go into your little text messaging app and send a text message through the airway.
It's something that I have got done in about, I don't know, 10 years at least.
But what is a text?
If I send you a text, if I text, like what do I do?
Can I say that I text you on the word?
WhatsApp or on Telegram?
No, your message on WhatsApp or Telegram, but you text
someone using a text message.
Yeah, someone drops you a message.
If they drop you a text, that's like a text message that you send.
I can't even describe this.
It's been so long since anybody sent one.
But yeah, text message is something that arrives, if you have a smartphone,
it arrives in your specific text messaging app.
But most people just message.
Oh, that's interesting.
So, dear listener, now we don't text, we just message.
Okay.
You might get a text message from a company or advertising,
or maybe someone has a dumb phone,
like one of the really old phones that doesn't have an internet connection,
but most people just message.
And you can say,
I can't even remember the last time I sent an SMS.
So I sent an SMS or placed a call.
So kind of I made a call.
Placed a call.
When you talk about your phone, you should use Present Perfect.
I've had it since 2000.
or I've had it for two months.
So not present perfect continuous I've been having.
No, no, no, no, no.
I've had this phone for a long time.
You can say it needs a new screen or my battery doesn't work.
What other things can we replace on phones?
I think it's just the screen and the battery.
Maybe you replace the case, which is the thing that surrounds the phone.
I also need to do this.
I've had the same case for about five years as well.
what can you say about the screen?
Like if it's kind of like,
if you drop your phone and the screen,
like something happens to the screen.
It's cracked.
Or you could say it's smashed.
Cracked is better because the glass is shatterproof.
And usually you can still use the phone
even if the glass is cracked or the screen is cracked.
And the listener, this is your chance to use super vocabulary.
So even if your phone is okay,
please make sure to use it.
You should say, I've had this phone for a long time, my screen is cracked, and my battery is low.
What do you say about the battery?
The battery runs out quickly, or the battery has been on the fritz, something like this to describe it not working as well as it should be.
My battery runs out quickly.
Okay.
And I'll be getting a new one soon.
A new one, one meaning.
phone. I'll be getting a new phone soon or I'm looking at the new models to replace my older
phone. I would love to have better features. It will be faster. So our phone has features.
Okay, so all this like camera, buttons, what else?
Audio recording. Just trying to think, like, you have a camera. Do you replace the camera in a phone?
No, it's very expensive. You buy a camera.
new phone. Yeah, I think it's better to
find a phone. The same thing for the buttons, the buttons
are integrated into the phone.
If you have to replace the button,
it's probably totally gone.
But I'm very impressed. Some people
change their phone every year, but I've had the same
phone for five years, and it's almost
just as good as it was when I first
bought it. Of course, the battery is degraded
now a little bit,
but it still does what it should do.
My phone has changed
my life. So,
smartphones,
have changed my life.
Again, we use present perfect.
And if you're like me,
you give the good old-fashioned answer of,
I think it would be easier to list the ways
it hasn't changed my life,
or hasn't changed my life.
I have greater connectivity and access.
So with my smartphone,
I have good connection, like,
Is that connection, you mean?
Yeah, Rory, with greater connectivity.
Or you are connected to people.
Um, gooder connectivity to everything in general,
but I'm thinking about the
internet here. My phone is more portable, so you can carry it around with you, you can put it in your
pocket. So my phone is more portable than a laptop or than the older models we used to have
back in 1990, for example, so it's far more portable. I should point out, I said it's more portable,
not it's more portable than a laptop, because I already talked about a laptop. And I think people
might have this urge to say it's more portable than because they're used to saying it that way.
But you don't have to. You can just say it's more portable when you're finished.
You can say that I do more through various apps applications. So how has it changed my life?
I can do much more through various apps. I have my internet. I can do my finances at the touch of a button.
A very nice phrase. So I can do something in a very convenient.
way and very fast. Do it at the touch of a button. Do it at the touch of a button.
Careful with the articles, at the touch of a button. So when you kind of pay your taxes,
you can do it at the touch of a button. And this has revolutionized things. Okay,
dear listener, it has changed things. We can do our finances. We can work. We can, I don't know,
do everything we want. Travel.
through your smartphone.
So this has revolutionized.
Revolutionized?
Yeah, like revolutionized?
Yeah, dramatically changed things.
Like if I didn't have a phone, my life would be very, very different.
If none of us had phones, our lives would be so much different.
No, I can't imagine my life without a smartphone.
I really am using it every waking moment of my life.
We'll allow it a listener.
Excellent.
And we'll wrap it.
up with a joke. Oh, great, another one. So this episode is special. We started with a joke,
and we finish it off with a joke. Rory, are you happy? Happy, happy, happy. Is the joke going to be a good
joke, Maria? Oh yeah, it's a brilliant joke, as always. So are you ready? Why didn't the skeleton
have a mobile? He had nobody to talk to? Oh, hell. Dilisla, did you get the joke? Did you get the joke?
Rory, could you explain the joke, please?
That's my favourite moment.
Rory explaining the joke he hates.
Actually, this joke,
if I explain it, will fall apart completely.
But the idea is a skeleton is just the bones.
It's not all of the body.
So a skeleton doesn't have a body.
And the word nobody means no person.
But no body means without a body.
So the skeleton had nobody to talk to.
It has two meanings.
But it also doesn't make anything.
any sense? Because it should be nobody to talk with if it's the shared experiences.
Oh, really? So there's a mistake. So why didn't the skeleton have a mobile? He had nobody to speak to.
To talk with. No, to talk with. To talk with. Yeah, the shared experience. Okay. Oh, dear listener,
thank you very much for listening. Stay with us. Love, hugs. Bye. Bye.
Nobody to talk to. My God.
What was your first mobile phone?
Oh, wow.
I think it was a Motorola phone, though the model number escapes me now.
It looked like a brick, though, and even had like one of those visible aerials, which none of them do these days.
How often do you use your mobile phone?
Oh God, just about every waking moment of the day, to be honest, unless I'm working or reading.
Not to make or take calls, though.
Usually it's just to post on social media or listen to videos while I work out or do chores.
Do you often use your mobile phone for texting or calls?
Well, not nearly as much as I used to.
Everyone messages these days, really, don't they?
Can't even remember the last time I sent an SMS or place to call?
Will you buy a new one in the future?
Oh, absolutely, yes.
I've had this one since about 2019,
and it needs a new screen and battery now since the first one is slightly cracked
and the second thing doesn't last nearly as long as it should.
But frankly, I'll be getting a new one within the year,
year, since it'll be faster and it'll have more and better features, I hope. Maybe for my birthday,
if I'm lucky. How has your mobile phone changed your life? Oh, God, I think it would be easier to list
the ways that hasn't changed things, frankly. I have greater connectivity and access than I could ever
have imagined, more than just with a laptop, for example, since the phone is more portable, and I can do
more through the various apps, and I can manage things like my finances at the touch of a button. It really
has revolutionized things.
