IELTS Speaking for Success - 💰 Money (S10E05) + Transcript
Episode Date: February 11, 2024Do you spend a lot of money? How do you save money? Did you save money when you were younger? Do parents give pocket money in your country? Do you use payment apps or mobile payments? Tune in and hav...e a great day! - Book a class with Rory here: https://successwithielts.com/rory Get exclusive episodes on IELTS Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Our course on Phrasal Verbs: https://successwithielts.com/podcourses Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s10e05 Our IELTS Writing course: https://linktr.ee/wfspremium Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2024 Success with IELTS 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're the host of the AILD Speaking Per Success podcast.
The podcast that 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 super vocabulary for your high
aisle.
Go-low.
Rory, you do need to buy a new phone and earbuds and probably a new microphone.
Oh my God.
Jesus.
I'm not amazing.
of money, woman. Oh yeah. Let's talk about money. Do you spend a lot of money?
Well, I think that depends on what you mean by a lot, to be honest with you. I mean, for example,
things like yoga and the gym have pretty fixed prices. So it's not really something you spend
a lot of money on. Of course, the fact that I go there when the average person does not
means that I probably do spend a lot of money on it. So what I'm saying is it's all relative,
really. How do you save money? Well, right now I don't save money because I've just bought a house
and I'm paying to have it renovated and making all the various repairs to it over the course of time.
So that's proving to be a bit of a money pit right now. However, usually when I save money,
I have different accounts with different purposes. For example, I have an investment savings account
or an ISA and once the money is in that account, it just stays there and doesn't move.
It's kind of like a psychological barrier for me.
There's nothing to stop me from doing it,
apart from the thought of this money is there for saving.
Did you save money when you were younger?
Well, like a lot of kids, I had a piggy bank
at various places to store money and save it up.
And my parents tried to cultivate this idea of saving money for a rainy day
and getting money together and piling enough
in order to buy more expensive things in the future
that require you to save over time.
Do parents give pocket money in your country?
Well, they certainly used to give kids a few pounds.
Pounds are the currency in my country.
However, I'm not sure about nowadays.
Everything is so expensive and kids are so excessively supervised
that probably it's not as popular as it used to be.
Do you use payment apps or mobile payments?
Yes, actually, once, but it was by accident.
Because I was holding my phone and my car.
in the same hand and I went to tap my card, but I tapped my phone instead, so it made the
contactless payment with the phone, and it paid with money from an account that I didn't want
to use. It wasn't a huge amount, so it wasn't really a big deal, but ever since then, I have
never used payment apps for this exact reason, because I'm just terrified of making a mistake.
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where Rory and I are discussing speaking part two,
And three. This week on our premium, in Speaking Part 2, we are describing at time Rory bought something from a street market.
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Hey, money, dear listener, you should remember that money is. There is a lot of money.
Okay. Or I don't have much money. We don't say monies. Moneys are they? No, no, no. So money, it is good. Money, what, means happiness, for example. Okay, so we use it. Money is good. Little money, not much money. Also, a large amount of money, not number. Okay, careful. And what proposition Rory do we?
use. Spend money. Shoes. Spend money
clothes. We spend money on shoes and spend money on clothes.
Right, dear listener, please, please make sure you use this. I don't spend much money on clothes,
okay? Or just, I don't spend much money on anything. But I do spend a lot of money on
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Okay, so win-win situation.
Rory goes to the gym and apparently he does yoga.
Rory, do you do yoga?
What do you mean apparently?
I definitely do yoga.
So, yoga classes have a fixed price.
So the price is fixed.
Okay.
Like, the price doesn't get more expensive, for example.
Yes.
Well, it doesn't seem to get more expensive.
It's always been the same price that I've paid for it for the last several.
years, whether that's true in other places I'm not so sure. However, I hate these questions about
like a lot. Do you spend a lot of money? Do you eat a lot of food? Because what is a lot? Like,
a lot for someone could be not so much for somebody else, which is why I answered it in the way I
do, because, you know, my life for some people might not look very expensive. And yet for other
people, they might think, oh my God, he spends a lot of money on lots of different things.
So it's all relative, dear listener, relative.
And if it's all relative, of course,
that means that it's all defined in comparison to something else.
If a person doesn't have much money, what can we say?
Can I say I'm short of money or I'm short for money?
Short of money?
I feel definitely short of money right now.
Sometimes I'm short of money, okay, so I don't spend much,
or I'm never short of money, I'm fine.
Okay, I have some extra cash, some extra.
money to spend.
However, I am definitely short of money because my house is a money pit,
which is just another way of seeing a project that is very financially draining.
So ever since I bought this place, I have been spending money on doing it up.
For example, you may have noticed that my background has changed because I paid for blind,
which you would think is not expensive, but as it turns out, costs hundreds of pounds.
So if something is a money pit, you just, you know, you poor money into it, okay?
So it just asks you, oh, I need more money, I need more money.
And you just like, you feed it more money.
No, no, no, feed me.
Okay, that's metaphorically.
It's almost done, though.
I have to hire a plumber to do a few things in the bathroom and then,
dear God, please let it be finished.
Just like, we're running out of things to fix, really.
I hope we are anyway.
So you can say that I've just bought a flat or I've just bought a house or I've bought, I don't know.
A laptop, anything.
Like anything that costs a lot of money to keep going is a money pit.
I've just bought a car and it's a money pit because I have to spend money on it.
On it.
Okay.
Yeah.
Even if you haven't bought anything, Delisna, you can just say something.
Like to use this nice phrase, a money pit.
Pit.
You save money or you don't save money.
You can also invest money into something.
Okay?
So, oh, I usually invest money into what?
into our premium episodes.
Invest money in yourself, dear listener,
and in your high aisle score.
The link is in the description.
And if you want to invest money in other ways,
you could get an ISA, an ISA,
which stands for individual savings account.
This is a kind of account which builds up,
well, it should build up more interest over time
compared to a normal current account,
which is what most people use to keep their money.
Yeah, because you give your money to the bank
and then you have an interest.
like interest, some like what, some more money because you put your money in there.
It's best not to think too much about it because when you understand what money is and how the
concept works, then you just completely lose touch with reality.
So if you say that I've just bought a house, so you can also say that I have it renovated.
So when you kind of like change the walls, you kind of like make it better.
So the expression is I have it renovated or I'm having.
It's renovated now.
Renovated.
Can't change things.
And this expression means that you pay some other people to do it for you.
Okay?
You don't do it yourself.
So worry doesn't do anything himself.
He just pays money to certain people who do it for him.
I don't do anything for myself.
I just work in a different field.
So I paid some very nice people.
Thank you Mark and Brian, my plaster and plumber, who fixed it all.
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So Rory is having it renovated.
Or you can say I had my house renovated last year, so I had to pay a lot of money.
Money for it.
I did have to pay a lot of money for it.
I spent money on it, but I paid for it.
And usually you save for something as well.
Well, actually, you can save money on something too.
You save money for a purchase, so this is in order to buy it.
But you save money on something when there is some kind of discount,
so this is the money that you have saved.
Why is it a psychological barrier for you?
Barrier like a wall, barrier between money and worry.
Because it stops me from doing something.
So if I understand that things are in this account for this purpose of saving, then I don't touch them.
Which was a problem recently because I was focused on saving money and then I had to spend the money.
And because I have the psychological barrier, it was stopping me from realizing that this money could be used for that.
So I was using money from other places instead.
But of course, the money is saved for the purpose of the house.
So I was just being silly.
I used to save a lot of money when I was younger.
So I used to, but not anymore.
For example, at school I used to save some money, or at university I used to save some money.
And where you put this money in?
So at school or at university, maybe like when you were a kid, you have a special thing to put your money in there.
What do you call it?
It's a piggy bank.
Yeah, a piggy bank.
Bank like a piggy bank is usually like in the shape of a pig or some other animals or a piggy bank.
It is usually.
However, give me 10 seconds because I have a different kind of piggy bike.
I'm sharing this with people
on trust that no one will make fun of me
because this is a piggy bank that I made
when I was a very small child in primary school
okay so remember small child
but the idea of a piggy bank is to have the hollow space
with the hole in the top where you save the money
and cannot get access to it very easily
Oh it's so cute
de listening if you want to see a piggy bank
that young Rory made
please go to our YouTube
and you can just admire this
lovely piggy bank
when you save it for a rainy day
okay
you save money for a rainy day
so when you save money for a rainy day
it's like you are saving for the future
when you might not have enough money
to pay for something and then it's there
for you to pay for it
and how do you say it how do you use it in a sentence
well when I was younger
my parents used to encourage me to save for a rainy day
and now every month
I try to put some money away
for a rainy day.
Put some money away.
Yeah, you see?
So kind of like, do you save money?
Well, you know, I usually save money
for a rainy day.
So kind of if I save some money
for the future.
There's an even more advanced idiom
slash phasel verb for this
and it is to squirrel money away
but that means the same thing.
It's like hiding this money away
for the future.
Squirreling money away.
Yeah, could you give us a sentence?
It's difficult for me
to squirrel money away now
because I had this apartment to pay for.
You can also
say I usually save up money, save up, right? Or I never saved up anything. I prefer to save up money.
If you pile it up. So pile it up, pile money up.
Well, that just means that you build it up over time in big groups. So I think I used to save
something like 500 pounds a month and that money would pile up over time, which is good because
it's paying for the house now. Yeah, and how can we use the pile up in a sentence? Well, some people
believe if you invest in cryptocurrency say the money will pile up over time.
Parents give the children pocket money and children are excessively supervised.
Excessively, like too much.
Supervised like controlled by parents.
Okay?
It's too much supervision.
Right.
So cash is good, but Rory, is it true that today in the UK they pretty much don't use
cash?
and if you want to pay
buy cash
so they say
no no we don't accept cash
so you have to pay
with your card or with your phone
is it true?
Yes
so there are some places
that are cashless
we allegedly live in a cashless
society so it's difficult
to pay for things with cash these days
but I mean
it's possible this might be a thing
that happens more often in England
because for example there are some parts
of the UK like Scotland
in the highlands
which don't have great internet connection
so it would be very
difficult to make contactless payments there. And that's what you call this kind of payment.
You tap your card and you make a contactless payment. Yes, the listener. So contactless.
Yeah. And what do you do with your card? You tap it on the card reader. Yeah, and payment apps,
applications, payment applications, but you just say, okay, like Google pay, Apple pay and just like,
I pay with my phone. Yeah, I just tap my phone. Or I pay only with cash or buy cash.
I would say pay by cash or pay by card, but you can pay for things with cash and with cards as well.
Yes, I prefer cash, you know?
But if you are in the UK, cash is a problem, because many places don't accept cash.
It's just like shocking.
But I have cash, come on, I have money.
No, sorry, no.
We can't take your cash.
Places in England, and Scotland is different.
Yeah, because Scotland is freedom.
Absolutely.
Bye.
Do you spend a lot of money?
Well, I think that depends on what you mean by a lot, to be honest with you.
I mean, for example, things like yoga and the gym have pretty fixed prices.
So it's not really something you spend a lot of money on.
Of course, the fact that I go there when the average person does not means that I probably do spend a lot of money on it.
So what I'm saying is it's all relative, really.
How do you save money?
Well, right now I don't save money because I've just bought a house and I'm paying to have it renovated and making all the various repairs to it over the course of time.
So that's proving to be a bit of a money pit right now.
However, usually when I save money, I have different accounts with different purposes.
For example, I have an investment savings account or an ISA.
And once the money is in that account, it just stays there and doesn't move.
It's kind of like a psychological barrier for me.
There's nothing to stop me from doing it
apart from the thought of this money is there for saving.
Did you save money when you were younger?
Well, like a lot of kids, I had a piggy bank
at various places to store money and save it up.
And my parents tried to cultivate this idea of saving money for a rainy day
and getting money together and piling enough
in order to buy more expensive things in the future
that require you to save over time.
Do parents give pocket money in your country?
Well, he certainly used to give kids a few pounds.
Pounds are the currency in my country.
However, I'm not sure about nowadays.
Everything is so expensive and kids are so excessively supervised
that probably it's not as popular as it used to be.
Do you use payment apps or mobile payments?
Yes, actually, once, but it was by accident.
Because I was holding my phone and my car.
in the same hand and I went to tap my card, but I tapped my phone instead, so it made the contactless
payment with the phone, and it paid with money from an account that I didn't want to use.
It wasn't a huge amount, so it wasn't really a big deal, but ever since then, I have never
used payment apps for this exact reason, because I'm just terrified of making a mistake.
