IELTS Speaking for Success - 🛌 Morning time (S08E14) + Transcript
Episode Date: December 12, 2022Do you like to get up early in the morning? What's your morning routine? Do you like mornings or evenings? Is breakfast important for you? Is there any difference between what you do in the morning no...w and what you did in the past? Tune in and have a great day! - Watch the video version of this episode: https://youtu.be/iqZ8vrpSRi0 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/s08e14 Our IELTS Writing podcast: https://linktr.ee/wfspremium 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're the host of the IEL Speaking for Success podcast,
the podcast that needs to help you improve your speaking skills,
as well as your listening skills along the way.
We've started this podcast to give you joy, vocabulary,
and gorgeous grammar for your high I.I.L.S.K.
Bad night score.
Rory, look at yourself.
Why do you look so tired?
It's the freaking afternoon.
Oh, my God.
You sure know how to make a girl feel special about herself.
For you, it's the afternoon.
You're three hours ahead of me.
It's the morning time here.
Oh, the morning time.
Shall we talk about the morning time?
Oh, it's a coincidence.
Let's do it.
Rise and shine.
You know, I can be a morning person sometime in the afternoon.
Ha, ha, ha, ha.
And, dear listener, it's a joke episode as well.
And let me give you a joke to start off with, you know.
You just did? Can we not have more?
No, no, no, it's just like...
So like a proper joke.
This joke is a Christmas cracker joke,
or you can call it a dead joke.
Not dead, like not alive, but dead.
Like, mommy and dad.
Dead joke.
So are you ready, Rory?
No.
Ready, Rory.
Okay, so every morning,
I tell my family that I'm going to go jogging.
Jogging.
Jogging.
And then I don't go.
It's a running.
I cannot wait for the Christmas hiatus.
Let's talk about morning time.
Let's talk about morning time.
Do you like to get up early in the morning?
Well, I would definitely say I'm an early riser.
I get up at 5.30 every morning and the hopes of getting more done.
And I'd certainly think it makes me more productive.
What's your morning routine?
Well, that depends on the day, but nothing terribly out of the ordinary.
I mean, on the average weekday, if we're talking about,
about the average weekday, then I get up, I work out, and I study languages for a few minutes,
fire off some emails, and then get stuck in with the main parts of the day.
Do you like mornings or evenings?
Well, even though I still do things in the evenings, I feel like I get more done in the mornings.
I have no way of proving that. It's just a feeling that I have.
Well, that and I'm more energetic in the mornings, although I suppose that's a feeling too, isn't it?
Is breakfast important for you?
It didn't used to be, but it's a big part of my start of the day now, since I don't think I could function without my coffee or shake, to be honest with you.
Is there any difference between what you do in the morning now and what you did in the past?
Oh, absolutely. I mean, I get up earlier. I actually have breakfast now, and I do exercise in the morning.
So I think altogether I'm much more active than I used to be, for sure.
Thank you, Rory, for your answers. We've just woken up. We're all over.
now fresh from all this vocabulary and grammar.
Your voice just went really hoarse there.
It's like, I feel so fresh.
Dear listener, we've got our super special premium episodes for you.
And this week on our premium, Rory, is describing the home of someone he knows well
and who he often visits.
And in speaking part three, we're discussing houses, accommodation in general.
The link is in the description.
We've got special Christmas sales.
Do check them out.
Rory, you told us you are an early riser.
So I am a morning person.
I am an early riser.
You can also say I'm a lark.
Can you say I'm a lark?
If you lived in the 18th century, then you could.
Because like morning people, there used to be larks,
but evening people, they are a night owl.
Can I say like, oh, I'm not a morning.
person, I'm a night owl. You could. It's just really cliche.
Clchay, yeah. All right. So you can say, I'm not a morning person. I'm an early riser.
And a very good phrase to say, I usually get things done. So I get a lot of things done in the
morning. So I'm more productive. I produce things. So our Rory produces things at freaking 5.30 in the
morning. Oh my God. You haven't stopped doing this, right? So still 5.30?
Still 5.30, although I stay in bed for a little bit longer. So it's like, wake up at 5.30 and then switch on the heating and then go back to bed and wait for the heat to rise and then I can function.
Painful, dear listener. It's a painful morning.
It's not a painful morning. It's fine. It's just you need to get used to it. That's all. You have to really, really want to do it. And if you don't really want to do it, then do not do it.
So do you lie in your bed or you lay in your bed?
I lie in my bed.
Lie in my bed, okay, for some time?
Although in the past, I lay in my bed for some time.
Oh, I was going to say, just looking at it here, I talk about getting more done.
And usually when we talk about getting things done, that's by someone else for us.
But when I say, I get more done, or I feel like I'm getting more done, or in the hopes of getting more done, and we talk about the morning, then we're talking about ourselves doing more things.
So it's like you're treating yourself as someone who is working for you.
Ooh, grammar for a high score.
Oh, morning routine.
So we develop our morning routine or we set our morning routine.
And Rory told us, like, nothing really out of the ordinary.
Yes.
I'd like to think that most people don't do anything out of the ordinary for their morning routine.
I mean, this is the time when you usually wake up and become active for the day.
normally that's a very logical process.
There's very few people, you know,
like one day, on Monday I jump out of bed and set myself on fire.
On Tuesday I jump into a pit of bats.
And then on Wednesday, I wake up and I drink a liter of petrol
and then I go for a run.
Like, no, you would have a pretty normal morning routine,
nothing out of the ordinary to start your day.
And then you begin the unusual things, no?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, some mornings could be quite unusual.
Maybe the first of January or...
No, I think the first of January waking up then is quite usual for everybody.
Nobody wakes up on the morning of the 1st of January.
Everybody wakes up in the afternoon and everyone is hungover.
And if you say that you are not, then you're probably the person who is working in the bar
enabling everyone else to become hungover.
What did you mean when you say fire off some emails?
Fire like fire off.
I talked about fire there.
But when I'm talking about firing emails, like typing very fast and then send and then again.
And so it's just like a really quick list of things to be done.
Sorry, a very quick way of doing things, I should say.
So I wake up, I work out, I fire off some emails.
And usually people just grab their phones, they start scrolling through their Instagram accounts, yeah?
No, don't do it.
No, no.
You should wake up.
You should be, you know, like grateful to your body.
Then you take deep breaths.
You think about Rory.
Think about me.
Or should I get this premium podcast?
Oh, by the way, we have Christmas sales.
So this is what you should be thinking about right in the morning, early in the morning.
Okay?
Good for you.
Christmas sales.
The link is in the description.
Yes.
You should be thinking about capitalism early in the morning.
I do.
Although, getting back to the whole social media.
thing. It's really bad for you to do that
because you just sit in bed and then you look at social
media and then you never get out of bed and it's
not a very productive use of time.
Although
I do actually check my social
media in the morning.
There we go. It's when I'm working out.
When I do my planks, I sit there
and answer messages for I'm planking.
So if anyone's ever
gotten a reply from me at
545 in the morning, just know
that I'm sitting there like rigidly
on the floor trying to
a plank and answer your message at the same time, which is why there might be some spelling
mistakes, because it's very difficult to do, and I don't recommend people do that.
Rory the multitasker.
No, it's not good. It's probably ruined the posture in my back, but I still can't help myself
because I don't have time.
So we can say that I prefer mornings. I feel like I get more done in the morning than in the
evening. And then I'm more energetic, I'm more productive in the morning than evenings.
But also, dear listener, if you are not a morning person like me, because I kind of, really, I can't do it.
I've tried many times, but seriously, I'm just not, can you say that I'm not wired to get up in the morning?
I'm not kind of wired towards mornings.
Or I'm not made for mornings.
I'm not made for this experience.
I'm not made for mornings.
Yeah, like, I don't know, maybe it's jeans, not jeans that you wear jeans, but jeans from your parents and great friends.
You can say that I experience lower cognitive and physical performance in the morning,
which means that you are like, like a zombie, what? Morning coffee doesn't help.
I've got some jokes about coffee. Rory, are you ready? Dead jokes or Christmas cracker jokes.
Like how you didn't even wait. Are you ready? No, let's do it.
So coffee. How does coffee help us in the morning? It makes us.
us, coffident.
Did you get that?
I'm not coffident that I'll be making it to the end of this episode, to be honest with you.
The coffee usually helps us in the morning how it makes us coffee dent.
Sounds like confident.
Coffee?
Coffident, confident.
Coffee makes us confident in the morning.
Oh, come on, it's funny.
No, that is funny.
It's a pun.
It's a pun.
Right.
Okay.
All right, another one, another one.
No, no, no.
How do you feel every day before you get your morning coffee?
It depends.
Am I getting it from you?
Because if it's coming with puns, then I'm not going to feel very coffee-dent.
Bro, you're not supposed to answer the question.
Well, that's true.
It's a rhetorical question.
So you're just batting in and ruining the joke.
So you have to sit there and take it.
Yes, exactly.
You are ruining the joke, which is already horrible.
Oh, I think you're already doing a great job of that yourself.
So, how do you feel every morning before you get your morning coffee?
Depresso.
Depresso, okay?
Espresso, depresso.
Your jokes are making me depresso.
All right, there you go.
Oh, don't you hate it when people say, like, when they order espresso and they say expresso?
Yeah, expresso, yeah, like expresso.
Everybody does that, and I'm just sitting there listening to them like, that's not.
how you say that word.
Espresso.
Espresso.
Sorry, I usually have an espresso, not ex-presso.
Or of our Italian listeners who, I think that word is from Italy anyway, you're welcome.
Breakfast.
You can say that breakfast is the most important meal of the day.
I usually have a substantial breakfast, substantial, you know, like a proper English breakfast.
Like this?
God, every day.
No, no, every day it would be crazy, right?
Yeah.
But you said that it's the start.
to the day, right?
Breakfast is your start to the day.
And then I can't function without my morning coffee,
and then you go ahead and crack a joke about coffee,
right in the exam.
And then the examiner is going to be like, what?
I could just imagine the examiner's face would be something similar to mine.
Sorry, I'm stretching while I'm recording.
I shouldn't be doing that.
But, Rory, what do you think?
If in the exam, so I take an I out speaking exam, right,
can I crack jokes? Can I say, oh, by the way, and speaking about coffee, I have this joke for you.
No, you can't just sit there and say, I know that we're here to do an exam or to have an exam,
but I'm going to tell you some jokes. You can't just do that. Why not? Why not? If it's just in the moment,
you know, like you remember a good joke, why not just tell a horrible dead joke?
Do you have any idea how stressful it is being an examiner for Cambridge or for IELTS?
You're sitting there trying to keep track of everything and all of the times and stuff. And now,
you have, you're being asked to sit there and be subjected to someone's jokes. No. Like, make one
in the middle of when you're talking, but not as part of the exam. If only it was part of the exam.
But no, do not do that. It's very stressful being an examiner. No, yeah, poor examiner.
If you are an examiner and you are listening to this, I'm very sorry. Yeah, we do respect you,
yes, and you are doing a wonderful job. Keep it up. Okay. Write to me and I'll give you some
more jokes in the written form or maybe I can record it.
Good luck.
When we talk about the difference between the past and now,
Eusta is your expression, right?
I used to be a morning person.
I didn't use to do exercise, right?
So please make sure you use this used to expression.
And now Rory is much more active.
So you can say, now I'm much more active in the morning
or I'm much more active in the evening.
Yeah.
I'm not being very active right now.
But I am.
I was.
This is a Saturday.
I woke up at 7 o'clock in the morning.
No, I woke up a half past 6 o'clock in the morning to be ready for this.
Rory.
Does it show?
You're crazy.
No, I had...
Let's out of your mind crazy with this 5.30 routine.
I had to call my friends and reorganize my driving test, my driving lesson,
because I'm snowed in right now.
You are what?
I'm snowed in.
Oh my God, yeah.
At the time we're recording this podcast,
Scotland is currently being subjected to what's called a yellow weather alert for snow.
And that means that there's lots of traffic and travel disruption caused by large amount of snowfall.
So this means that I am currently cut off from the rest of the world,
isolated in the middle of nowhere, because the roads don't work now.
So at least now you are a.
admitting that you are in the middle of nowhere. Yeah, so you can say that I'm snowed...
I always told you I was in the middle of nowhere.
No, I told you you were in the middle of nowhere and you were like, it's a big city or...
No, I didn't say that. No? I said that for like, if we talk about Dundee, Dundee is not in the
middle of nowhere, but Aberlauer is definitely in the middle of nowhere. Sorry if you're from
Aberlauer by the way. It is in the middle of nowhere. So if you say I'm snowed under at the
moment, it means I'm very busy, right?
you can say, like, I'm usually snowed under in the morning because it's the busiest time of the day.
But, Roy, you said, I'm snowed in.
Yes.
Snowed in, like, literally the result of snow in Scotland and you have these mountains of snow.
Okay.
Right, dear listener, how are you doing?
Are you a morning person?
Are you an early riser?
Or you are like me who prefers afternoons or who is a morning person in the afternoon?
Could you please write in the comments below?
Let us know.
Also, please comments on Rory's habit, routine of getting up at freaking 5.30 in the morning.
Do you still have tuna for breakfast?
I have...
Not for breakfast.
That you microwave.
Tuna that you cook in the microwave.
I don't cook...
Look, let me set out my diet for you, just so that we can get all of this out of the way right now, right?
Yes, let's let's go.
Protein shake with coffee in the morning.
for lunch there is a wrap and chicken and then for dinner yes i have eggs and tuna and cheese in a microwave
it sounds disgusting it's nice it is helping me i don't criticize your diet your diet of cigarettes and
vodka where does this come from it comes from too many nights out with you it was tequila not
vodka.
Oh, right.
Okay, that's the biggest problem there is there.
Just like, yeah.
So we're not discussing our alcohol habits.
It's just we drink juice.
Sometimes it's just too much juice.
Right.
Thank you very much to listener for going through this with us.
For enduring dead jokes.
And remember, when you understand English jokes, this means that your English level is what?
Hi, in the sky.
Yes, it means that you've got a very good level of English
and you can understand jokes, even.
Even our horrible jokes.
Thank you very much.
Do check out our Christmas sales.
That's a very good deal.
The link is in the description.
Please check out the Christmas sales because I wrote the copy for that
and I would like to get some feedback about how engaging it is.
Bye.
Do you like to get up early in the morning?
Well, I would definitely say I'm an early.
riser. I get up at 5.30 every morning and the hopes of getting more done, and I'd certainly think it
makes me more productive. What's your morning routine? Well, that depends on the day, but nothing
terribly out of the ordinary. I mean, on the average weekday, if we're talking about the
average weekday, then I get up, I work out, and I study languages for a few minutes,
fire off some emails, and then get stuck in with the main parts of the day. Do you like mornings or
evenings? Well, even though I still do things in the evenings, I feel like I get more done in the
mornings. I have no way of proving that. It's just a feeling that I have. Well, that and I'm more
energetic in the mornings, although I suppose that's a feeling too, isn't it? Is breakfast important
for you? It didn't used to be, but it's a big part of my start to the day now, since I don't
think I could function without my coffee or shake, to be honest with you. Is there any difference
between what you're doing the morning now and what you did in the past?
Oh, absolutely. I mean, I get up earlier. I actually have breakfast now, and I do exercise in the morning.
So I think altogether I'm much more active than I used to be, for sure.
