IELTS Speaking for Success - 🧩 Puzzles (S08E02) + Transcript

Episode Date: September 20, 2022

Do you like puzzles? Do you like doing word puzzles or number puzzles? Did you like doing puzzles when you were a kid? When do you do puzzles, during trips, or when you feel bored? Do you think it is ...suitable for older people to do puzzles? Tune in and have a great day! - Watch the video version of this episode: https://youtu.be/WaUfd0Gym0U 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/s08e02 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
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, Sunshine. I'm Maria. And my name is Rory, and we're the host of the AIL Speaking for Success Podcast, the podcast that aims to help you improve your speaking skills, as well as your listening skills along the way. We've created this podcast to give you joy, happiness, super-duper vocabulary and grammar. Gorgeous grammar, which leads you to glamour. For a high score. Bad night score. Roy, what are you doing up there?
Starting point is 00:00:30 I'm trying to get the skylight closed. You look puzzled? Well, yes, because it's like a puzzle. Let's talk about puzzles. What a coincidence. Co-co-co-co-co-co-co-coincidence. It is a coincidence, but I need to fix the skylight. Yes, dear listener, Puzzles is a new Speaking Part 1 topic.
Starting point is 00:00:53 We used to have it in Speaking Part 2, but now it's a comeback and the examiner can ask you questions about puzzles in speaking part 1. Rory, do you like puzzles? Well, not really. It's always difficult for me to follow the instructions, let alone make out any solutions. Although now that I think about it, it's not because they're not particularly engaging. It's just because I have other things on my mind, to be honest with you. Do you like doing word puzzles or number puzzles? Well, ideally neither, but if I had to choose one, I suppose it would be word puzzles because they most closely match up with my area of expertise, which is English.
Starting point is 00:01:37 I suppose doing my or working out my finances is enough of a number puzzle for me. Did you like doing puzzles when you were a kid? I think I used to, but I had more time to finish them off back then. Whereas now I don't really, because I've got all these jobs to do, working out how to finish a Rubik's cube or to put together a jigsaw takes ages for me. So I don't really have the time for it. When do you do puzzles during trips or when you feel bored? Well, I think the closest I get is when I'm setting them up for classes and I have to work out the solutions.
Starting point is 00:02:12 If I had to choose, then it would probably be during trips, like filling out a crossword on a plane if I didn't have a book and there was nothing else to do. But that's just an example. Do you think it's suitable for older people to do puzzles? Well, I think they're the ones best place to do it since they have, well, or they usually have more free time on their hands and they have more experience. Although now I think about it, young people are always putting up or posting pictures of their wordels, aren't they? So maybe we shouldn't rule them out entirely. Hey, thank you, Rory, for your answers. We weren't puzzled by them at all.
Starting point is 00:02:53 Dear listener, this week, in our premium speaking, Rory is going to describe a time when he received money on his birthday as a gift. And in speaking part three, we are discussing money and gifts. These are new IOT speaking topics. And in our writing episodes, yes, we do have our writing podcast. This week, we are talking about an essay, is it a positive or negative development essay about children and their smartphones and how much time they spend every day on their smartphones? The links are in the description.
Starting point is 00:03:37 Do check it out. and hope that you enjoy it and find it super useful. So, Rory, when I asked you, do you like puzzles, you said that you enjoy making out the solutions? Well, I said it was quite difficult to make out the solutions. But if you make something out, that just means that you either see it clearly or in this case see it clearly in your mind's eye, so understand it clearly.
Starting point is 00:04:06 So it's difficult to make out the solution. It's difficult to find the solutions. But you could say the same thing about anything. Like in foggy weather, it's difficult to make out things in the distance. So it's difficult to see things in the distance too. So we make out solutions, right? The phrase of verb. But what do we do with puzzles?
Starting point is 00:04:26 We do puzzles. We complete puzzles. We what? I talked about it later. I said to fill out a crossword, which is another way of saying that you complete it as well. But you can also fill out forms. So if you were ever asked questions about writing, then you could say I need to write when I have to fill out a form.
Starting point is 00:04:45 Fill out a crossword, do a puzzle, complete a puzzle. And a crossword is a kind of puzzle, right? What are the kinds of puzzles can you talk about here? You can talk about jigsaw puzzles. I was going to say, I mentioned jigsaw puzzles and Rubik's cubes as well. I think those are the big ones that I have experience with. But you have logic puzzles as well, like Sudoku, for example. It's where you have to match up numbers and squares.
Starting point is 00:05:12 I'm not really explaining that very well, but you've seen this before. So yeah, crosswords, jigsaw puzzles, Sudoku, so these are all different kinds of puzzles. And also you can talk about this wood cubes or something. This is pieces of wood and you arrange them in different ways. So, yeah, word puzzles and number puzzles. right? And Roy, you said that if I had to choose, I choose something like word-based
Starting point is 00:05:41 puzzles. Or just word puzzles. So like crosswords. Yeah, crosswords are word-based. What else is word-based? Hangman, that's like a word-based puzzle or a word-based game that you play. Is it a puzzle? Hangman. It is because you have to work out a solution. So it's usually entertaining.
Starting point is 00:06:01 Yeah, you see. So I enjoy solving puzzles. I enjoy. I enjoy working out solutions, right? So if you do crosswords, Sudoku, yeah, you can use these nice words. And you can say, for example, I enjoy doing puzzles, which match up with my area of expertise. Expertise or expertise? Expertise.
Starting point is 00:06:23 And that's another phrasal verb that I picked out for this one as well. So if something matches up, then it fits together well. And actually, you could talk about matching up with your expertise or your area of expertise, but for puzzles, you could also talk about matching up the jigsaw pieces as well. You can also say that my life is a puzzle.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Yeah. You said that working out my finances is enough of a numerical puzzle for me. So this is just a way of stressing the fact that it's a difficult thing to do. So if it's something is enough of something, it's just like, yeah, this is enough. I don't need any more.
Starting point is 00:07:00 So working out my finances is enough of enough. number puzzle or if we were talking about something else like word puzzles for example then you could say oh writing an email or reading my colleagues emails is enough of a word puzzle for me it's already complicated enough i don't need anymore and if you never do any puzzles never like um fiddle with a rubics cube or something else you can say yeah my life is a puzzle or my job is a puzzle my personal relationship is a puzzle for me so yeah so a rubyx cube right so you finish a Rubik's Cube and also you can say to finish
Starting point is 00:07:36 off a puzzle. Yeah. I suppose what else could we say? Solve a puzzle, finish a puzzle. We've already said complete as well. Or do. Yeah, do a puzzle. So there's lots of verbs to go with puzzle. And phraso verbs, which was the whole focus of today's episode.
Starting point is 00:07:52 How long would it take you to the Rubik's cube? What you mean? Make all of this make all of the colors match up. Yeah. Oh, you know what I used to do. I had this Rubik's cube and the Rubik's cube had these stickers. So it's actually like yellow stickers, green stickers. You know, what I would do, I would just like take off the sticker, put it there, take off another sticker, put it there. So I had like, oh, like, nice. I think lots of people
Starting point is 00:08:20 have done this as well or being tempted to do it, to be honest. As marius, Rubik's cube. We are talking about the phrasal verbs and the different verbs there, but we could also talk about words to describe puzzles. So obviously puzzles, puzzling. I think that. That's a bit too obvious for most people. But we can talk about puzzles being engaging or not very engaging. So that just means that they're interesting or not very interesting. And you can do puzzles in different places. And when you go traveling or when, for example, you feel bored.
Starting point is 00:08:50 Yeah. And one of the questions was like, do you do puzzles when you feel bored? And Rory said, yeah, I can fill out a crossword if I'm really bored. Yeah, but usually I have a book with me on a plane, so this is not something that I would do first. But when you go traveling, Rory, so you went to Italy, did you take any puzzles with you? I didn't know, but I had like a whole load of books. I don't know if you saw the Instagram post, but I like reviewed a book every so often. And that was what I did when I was on holiday in Italy.
Starting point is 00:09:26 To be honest, using, I was good, here's the, another way you could use enough of working out how to use the public transit. system in Naples was enough of a puzzle as well. So I didn't really need something on a bit of paper other than the bus timetable to try and understand that. So this is a great structure and a great strategy. If you have no idea what kinds of puzzles to talk about, you can say like, oh, traveling by Metro in Rome was a real puzzle for me. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:54 Or enough of a puzzle for me. Was enough of a puzzle for me. Or like, living my life is enough of a puzzle for me. Thank you very much. don't need any more. Oh, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, all this like Rubik's Cube and jigsop puzzles and, and taking IOT's exam. Is it a novel puzzle?
Starting point is 00:10:10 Yeah. Especially the reading. Do you remember? Like, we were talking about this. You get a question and you look at it and it's like none of the answers are appropriate, but you have to choose one. It's a real puzzle. It's really puzzling, puzzling.
Starting point is 00:10:23 Right. And you can say that puzzles are more suitable for older people or the elderly or, you know, young people, right? Are there any puzzles, maybe like apps with puzzles? There are. And I have, oh, I'm really annoyed now that you've asked me this question, because I have some on my phone, but I've completely forgotten what they're called. I suppose the closest thing I have is like chess, but that's not really a puzzle. That's more like a game that you play with a computer, or at least in the case of what I've got on my phone. What other puzzles can you have? Murdo's a puzzle. You could probably get jigsaw puzzle apps on your phone, I'm sure.
Starting point is 00:10:58 Really? Oh wow, maybe online crosswords. Yeah. And you mentioned like paper-based puzzles. So we have like word-based puzzles, paper-based, like on paper, crossword. Or you can also talk about, I don't know, apps that you have on your phone with puzzles. Yeah. If you do. And you mentioned this wordless. Word-wordles. No, I mentioned them. The only reason I mentioned them is because people post them all the time. I actually, that was one of the, that was another. phrase of verbs that we use, putting up or, meaning putting up on social media, or posting on social media. So they're always putting them up there. And I can see them. It's like the green squares and the yellow squares, and I think some of them are orange. And I don't really know how it works, but the ideas that you have to solve or work out which word is in the puzzle based on these things that they have in common with other words. And somehow this is wildly popular. I don't understand wordal, but it's an example of a puzzle, and you could say it's an example of a puzzling puzzle,
Starting point is 00:12:00 because I have no idea how it works. Sorry, that's my really bad explanation of why I picked wordal for that, because I don't know what it is. It's a puzzle for me. It's a puzzling puzzle. Can we really say it's a puzzling puzzle? Well, you could as a joke and then laugh, and then the examiner looks at you like you're crazy, but they would, like, if you're laughing at the joke about the language, then it's probably a good sign that you have good control over it. Or you just have no life like me. So if you decide to play with words, you can't do this, but make sure that the examiner is with you and they understand that you are making a joke. Oh, I was puzzled by a puzzle. You know, if you kind of are not comfortable with it, just don't do it. Yeah, because it's very strange.
Starting point is 00:12:46 I was puzzled by a puzzling puzzle. I'll stop making jokes, I promise. Okay, okay. If I enjoy jigsaw puzzles, Roy, so let's imagine that you have this jigsaw puzzle with a photo of me or with a photo of us together, right? So jigsaw puzzle. What do you call this little thing? You're like, woo, woo, woo, this. Oh, the pieces. Yeah. So jigsaw pieces. And we can say, for example, if your puzzle, jigsaw puzzle has 1,000 pieces, it's a 1,000 piece puzzle. Yes. Right? And Rory, have you ever completed this jigsaw puzzle with 5,000 pieces or maybe 10,000 pieces?
Starting point is 00:13:33 I don't even think when I was a child and I used to do these things, I ever completed something so big. Back then it's because I didn't have the attention span for it. And now it's because I just don't have the time. I don't. Maybe people get satisfaction from putting everything in the right place and completing something. But I don't think that's a good use of my time. Sorry if you like jigsaw puzzles, by the way. talking about my own personal experience, not criticizing yours.
Starting point is 00:13:58 And you know what? My brother had a jigsaw puzzle and it was just like a black square, just like this. What's the point in that? Does that make a particular statement or something? I don't know. And now he completed it. And now it's on the wall. So you can just like glue it all together.
Starting point is 00:14:18 So it's like one kind of a painting picture kind of thing. Good for him. It's not what I would spend my time doing. I'm really sorry Maria's brother. It's just not my thing. You can also say that doing jigsaw puzzles is therapeutic for me. So you said entertaining. It's having fun, but also it could be therapeutic.
Starting point is 00:14:38 You just like forget about your thoughts. You're focusing on these like black pieces, putting them all together. So put them together. So what kind of words do we have? Engaging, calming, therapeutic, puzzling. Crazy, puzzling. Sorry. All right.
Starting point is 00:14:57 Delisa, please tell us what kinds of puzzles do you like? Or would you like to do this black jigsaw puzzle with black pieces? Or practice your writing for part one and write a process description for how to do wordel. And I'll read that and assess it. Actually, if someone sends me one of those on Instagram, I will read it. And I'll give you feedback because that's quite useful for both of us. If you're interested in getting a link to the transcript for this episode, that's in the description below. Please leave a comment and remember to like and subscribe.
Starting point is 00:15:30 Please choose your favorite phrase of verbs. Two phrase of verbs that you would like to use in your IEL speaking. Write them in the comments. Okay? And let's not be puzzled by puzzling puzzles. Now that we've solved that puzzle, bye. Bye! Ronnie, do you like puzzles?
Starting point is 00:15:59 Well, not really. It's always difficult for me to follow the instructions, let alone make out any solutions. Although now that I think about it, it's not because they're not particularly engaging. It's just because I have other things on my mind, to be honest with you. Do you like doing word puzzles or number puzzles? Well, ideally neither. But if I had to choose one, I suppose it would be word puzzles, because they most closely match up with my area of expertise, which is. English. I suppose doing my or working out my finances is enough of a number puzzle for me. Did you like doing puzzles when you were a kid?
Starting point is 00:16:34 I think I used to, but I had more time to finish them off back then. Whereas now I don't really, because I've got all these jobs to do, working out how to finish a Rubik's cube or to put together a crossword, not a crossword, to put together a jigsaw takes ages for me. So I don't really have the time for it. When do you do puzzles? during trips or when you feel bored? Well, I think the closest I get is when I'm setting them up for classes and I have to work out the solutions. If I had to choose, then it would probably be during trips,
Starting point is 00:17:07 like filling out a crossword on a plane if I didn't have a book and there was nothing else to do. But that's just an example, and not a very good one at that. Do you think it's suitable for older people to do puzzles? Well, I think they're the ones best place to do it since they have, well, or they usually have more free time on their hands and they have more experience. Although now I think about it, young people are always putting up or posting pictures of their wordles, aren't they? So maybe we shouldn't rule them out entirely.

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