IELTS Speaking for Success - 🥊 Sport (S04E18) + Transcripts

Episode Date: October 22, 2020

What are the benefits of doing sport? What was your favourite sport when you were a child? Do you like to watch sports on TV? What kinds of sports would you like to try in the future? Tune in and hav...e a great day!  -  IELTS Speaking for Success PREMIUM: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s04e18 Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner  Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts  © 2020 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. We're the host of the IEL Speaking for Success podcast, the podcast that aims to help you improve your speaking skills as well as your listening skills and have a joke along the way. We started this podcast to give you a look at how an educated native speaker would answer some of the recent ILD speaking questions. For high score, Ben 9 score. But none were available, so I'll have to do.
Starting point is 00:00:29 Maria, what are you doing? I'm surfing the internet. Oh, you're so athletic. I am. I do it every day. And it's also quite a coincidence because today we're going to talk about sport. Sports, yes. In AIL speaking in Part 1, they can ask you questions about sport. Rory, do you like sport? I suppose not particularly when it comes to mainstream sports. I'll watch the odd football match in the passing.
Starting point is 00:01:00 And I came up with some news back home, but I wouldn't say I was a huge sports fan or anything. Do you like extreme sports? Ah, okay. Well, that's the one that tickles my fancy. I love extreme sports. I've been bungee jumping and the second the coronavirus restrictions go, I'll be shooting and I want to go glider flying and skydiving and sorbing. I think they're great ideas. Do most people in your country like sport? I think so. I mean, Britain's kind of renowned as a football and rugby obsessed nation. So it certainly seems this way. What sports do people in your country play? Well, like I said, I think football and rugby are sort of the mainstay sports, just going by the TV coverage. But a lot of people also play golf, including my auntie and uncle.
Starting point is 00:01:50 And in fact, I think golf was invented in Scotland. And of course, I think, well, diving gets a lot of attention because there's like famous divers like Tom Daly that are quite well known, I guess. What was your favourite sport when you were a child? Oh, I loved swimming. That was the one I liked the most. I used to go every week before breaking for the weekend. That was great fun. I'm not so sure it was great fun for my parents who used to transport me there, but I enjoyed it.
Starting point is 00:02:23 Did you do much sport when you were younger? Eh, well, aside from swimming, not really. I was actually more of a bookworm, to be honest with you, and I probably still am. I do more now, I guess, if you consider going to the gym and playing video games as sports, which some people do. What are the benefits of doing sport? Well, I think the health benefits are certainly the most obvious. So, for example, if you go and run around for a period, I think it's supposed to be you're meant to have 30 minutes of intense exercise. so doing contact sports like football or rugby would count as that.
Starting point is 00:03:08 So they're the most obvious. But there are social benefits to it as well because you meet new people at football clubs, for example. Or if you do martial arts, then you could meet people at your local jiu-jitsu club. What's it called? A dojo. That's what it is. And you, well, like I say, you can network there. If you're not there to make friends, then you could network and.
Starting point is 00:03:32 if you have a business that you're particularly fond of and want to meet new people like that, for example. Do you like to watch sports on TV? Well, like I said, I'll have a glance in the passing, but I wouldn't spend a great deal of time on it. I don't... Well, sorry, actually, I have a lot on my plate right now, so there's not really a great deal of time
Starting point is 00:03:54 to just sit and stare at the screen all the time. Maybe when I'm older, I'll probably do it more often. You tend to see that in places, where people hang out back home. There's lots of older men who go to the pub and watch football, for example. So maybe that's the destiny I have to look forward to. What kinds of sports would you like to try in the future? Well, like I said, all of the extreme sports.
Starting point is 00:04:18 I'm particularly looking forward to going skydiving and flying a glider. I think that will be really good fun. But there's not really anything normal. I think the closest thing is probably taking up Jiu-Jitsu again. I think I'd really like to start that over. Who's your favourite sport star? I don't actually have one, to be honest. I can think of some famous ones,
Starting point is 00:04:46 but outside of their contributions to sport, I don't think they're particularly any more or less interesting than the people I know. So the short answer is, I can't say. And the long answer is, I can't say because I find people closer to me to be more interesting and famous people. Rory, thank you so much for your sporty answers.
Starting point is 00:05:07 Thank you for being a good sport about listening. I'm a good sport. So am I. Hey, sport. Oh, do you remember this film, The Great Gatsby? And the Gatsby in the film, he calls his friend, Hey, sport. Sport.
Starting point is 00:05:28 You're a good sport. Now seems a good time to be honest and say that, I never watched that film or read the book. Oh, how, how you live in your life without the Great Gatsby? I'll find the time when I'm older. I'm busy. You've watched the Great Gatsby, and Great Gatsby goes like, hey, good sport. You're a good sport, like, meaning you're a good person, right?
Starting point is 00:05:53 Yeah, I think that's supposed to mean, like, it's meant to be a cute way of saying friend, like, hey, sport. And that's meant to me, like, hey, sport. Hey, my friend, chum, pal. I think it's more common than America, to be honest with you. I've not really heard any British people saying it. Yeah, because the Great Gatsby was written by an American author. What's it? Yes.
Starting point is 00:06:15 Oh, why do I think it was written by Oscar Wilde? Is this just one of these things that I don't know about that I've just made up in my head? Okay, dear listen, now we are going off on a huge tangent. So the Great Gatsby, a novel written by American author Scott Fitzgerald, who is right. Maria is right, because Maria graduated from Moscow City Pedagogical University. Yeah, okay. Yeah, but now we don't say old sports. We say, hey, mate, or dude, so it's perhaps a bit old-fashioned.
Starting point is 00:06:54 Rory, shall we go over the sports vocabulary and grammar? I think we should for a high score. Right, so sport or sports? It doesn't matter. Like, for example, if you're talking about one sport in particular, then you could say sport, but if we talk about it in general, you could say sport or sports, it doesn't matter. Sports is good for you or sports are good for you? Well, sport singular is good for you, and sports, plural, are good for you.
Starting point is 00:07:23 It doesn't matter. Sports are good for you? Yeah. Okay. It's a different kind of sport. We do sport or we play sport. Yes. Or you could go, but only certain kinds of sport.
Starting point is 00:07:38 And you don't say go sport. You'd have to say what the sport is. Like go swimming, for example. Go jogging, go snowboarding, go riding. Go skydiving. Go skydiving. Yeah, go skydiving. What about zobing?
Starting point is 00:07:51 Go zorbing as well. Yeah. Jiu Jitsu. Is it Jiu Jitsu? Jiu-jitsu? J-jitsu. J-jitsu or judo? Yeah, but you don't play or go.
Starting point is 00:08:05 You do judo. Exactly, yes. So why? Maybe because it's a skill, whereas you play sports with balls, like I play tennis, I play football, you do sports that require skill, and you go,
Starting point is 00:08:24 well, it's funny. Like, maybe it's something that involves freedom of movement. So, for example, you go swimming, you go running, but you can choose where to go. Maybe it's to do with freedom of choice. Yep, possibly. We're having a grammar moment. Yeah, we have a grammar moment. We do yoga or do gymnastics, do aerobics, play balls games, and I have a joke, Rory.
Starting point is 00:08:53 You know, like, it takes one ball. to play football, but doing triathlon takes two. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. So basically, de jacena, it takes balls to do triathlon. Triathlon is when you swim, swim, run, and ride a bicycle. Yeah, it takes balls. Extremely rude and unprofessional. Yes, it's a bit of an unprofessional moment on the podcast.
Starting point is 00:09:24 Yeah, also, Rory, you said take up. Jiu-jitsu. Yes, so if you take up a sport, then you start doing it. Yeah. So Rory wants to take up skydiving, take up Jiu-Jitsu. Oh, I just want to go skydiving once. So I want to go skydiving, but I want to take up Jiu-Jitsu as a hobby. Right, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:45 And if the question is like, what would you like to do in the future? So you say, I'd like to take up and then name the sport or activity that you'd like to take up, basically, start. I'd like to take up yoga, I'd like to start yoga. And you should know the name of your favorite sport, like football, rugby. Roy, you've mentioned some different activities, Zobbing, skydiving. What else do you say? Paragliding? No, I want to go glider flying.
Starting point is 00:10:14 Glider flying. Isn't it the same as paragliding? No, no. If you're glider flying, then you're inside a big, well, it's kind of like a plane. but a plane has engines so this is more like a structure with wings the concept is the same though okay
Starting point is 00:10:33 you can also say football or soccer there's no difference right football or soccer I'm soccer in the United States and football everywhere else because football in the United States means something very different yeah different yeah okay Rory you've mentioned mainstream sports so kind of like football
Starting point is 00:10:53 tennis and also you've mentioned mainstay sports, mainstay. Yeah, mainstay is like what people, well, use the most often, or what people watch the most often in this case. So, like, football is a mainstay sport. I think so. Okay. We can also say contact sports.
Starting point is 00:11:16 So I'm into contact sports. Like, I like contact sports. Like... Do you like contact sports? No. I like contact dancing like tango or bachata
Starting point is 00:11:29 yeah more intimate than salsa for example right and so contact sports like team sports individual sports extreme sports popular sports competitive sports
Starting point is 00:11:41 risky sports and martial arts right? Yeah well martial arts is just a really nice way of saying sports where you're fighting
Starting point is 00:11:49 so Jiu-Gatoo Karate yeah judo right, Rory, what tickles your fancy? Oh, extreme sports. So if something tickles your fancy, it attracts your interest. For example, you can say, skydiving tickles my fancy? Yes, although it's usually used to refer to things that are like small and not so serious, but I was using it ironically there because, obviously, skydiving is quite a major procedure.
Starting point is 00:12:21 But what can usually tickle? your fancy. Carving. Oh, it's usually talking about food. Bonanas and raisins? No, they don't tickle my fancy because I hate... Rory hates, but... Serniki. Serniki ticles my fancy.
Starting point is 00:12:38 I love Serniki. Ah, right. Okay. Syrniki, traditional Russian food, Sireniki, tickle Rory's fancy. Rory, you've used a very interesting expression twice. I'll watch football in the past. Oh, right. In the passing just means when you're walking past or if you're not particularly
Starting point is 00:13:01 doing anything and your eyes are sort of wandering and then you look at the screen and then you're like, okay, there's some football on and that team is winning and then you just go back to whatever it was you were doing before. So it's kind of in the background? Yeah, it's kind of like that. It's a bit more of an active process though, but it's still pretty, it's not very involved. So can you say, I don't usually watch sports, but I can watch football in the passing. Yeah. While doing something else, I can watch football.
Starting point is 00:13:29 Yes. Okay. And you said I'll watch, but the question was about the past, but you used the future, what on earth is going on? I think that's because I'm 100% certain about what I'm probably going to do in the passing. Oh, this is so confusing. It's like future in the past. But Will isn't used for just the future.
Starting point is 00:13:52 is used for expressing certainty and I know for a fact that if there's a football match on then I'm 100% likely to at least look at it for a minute or so just to see what's happening. Yeah, so instead of saying... We're talking about grammar here. Yeah, we're talking about grammar like Ben 9 grammar. So instead of usually...
Starting point is 00:14:11 Instead of saying I watch football in the passing, I'll watch football in the passing. But if you were more traditionally minded, you would say if a football match was on, I would watch it in the passing. The second conditional. Yay! So even if you have a more traditional idea about grammar, then you can still win.
Starting point is 00:14:29 Or you can say, if I had more time, I definitely watch some football. Yes. Yes. And then you were using wood. When you talk about sports, you should use the present perfect continuous. Like, I've been playing tennis. Like, I've been playing tennis for 10 years. Or I've been doing yoga for one week.
Starting point is 00:14:52 I've been playing, I know, basketball, I've been going jogging, right, for two months. You can lie, you can just make it up, so choose an activity or a sport and just make up this sentence. Rory, how long have you been doing, how long have you been going to the gym? Is it about two months now? Yeah, so I've been going to the gym for about two months.
Starting point is 00:15:16 Beautiful. You've just reminded me, though, when I go back home, I need to book a session of yoga. Oh, so Rory is going to. take up jiu-jitsu take up yoga wow you are a very sporty person
Starting point is 00:15:31 I'm only like doing yoga I don't know maybe once maybe twice playing backpipe drinking whiskey yoga at the same time at the same time Scottish yoga Scottish yoga
Starting point is 00:15:46 We're very famous people for yoga in Scotland I'll have you know Yes Scotland freedom I thought I thought yoga was more about
Starting point is 00:15:58 not having freedom Am I wrong about that No it is about freedom The freedom to do what the yoga person says Rory you've mentioned that Your country is renowned As a rugby-obsessed nation
Starting point is 00:16:12 I think it is Yeah renowned is a good word I think after football most people think about rugby Sorry Renowned is a good word It's like a combination between respectable and popular, I think. Yeah, but also, Rory, you should know that something else is very popular in your country.
Starting point is 00:16:32 And I've got a joke here. Is it drinking? No, no, no, not drinking. But actually, not like Great Britain. If we speak about Great Britain, some kind of sport was born in Great Britain. So, answer the question. What's a pumpkin's favorite sport? A pumpkin?
Starting point is 00:16:49 What's a pumpkin's favorite sport? Is it going to be something about carving? Squash. Ha, ha, ha, ha, because squash is a type of pumpkin. Squash was born in Great Britain. It's a posh, British sport. Squash, I used to play squash, actually. I used to be pretty good.
Starting point is 00:17:10 Is it posh? My parents used to play squash. I used to play with my mum. Oh, wow, nice. I used to play squash. Yeah. Google it now, squash. And not the pumpkin squash, but squash as a lot.
Starting point is 00:17:22 the sport. So here we go again. I used to play squash, but now I don't. Now I dance tango on a regular basis. And the tango Argentinian tango. Yeah. Oh, I was right, the tango Argento Argento. That's what it's called, isn't it? No, it's just Argentinian tango or just tango. I'm sure it's called the tango Argento. Maybe in Scotland. Ha ha. No, maybe in the world. So I can say that I've been dancing, right, or I've been playing squash for 10 years. Nice. Can you say I am an avid squash player? I'm an avid swimmer.
Starting point is 00:18:06 I'm an avid... I think it's usually, like, when you talk about being a fan, that's the most common collocation, like, I'm an avid sports fan. It's what I hear. You could say, like, I'm an avid swimmer or I'm an avid squash player, but I think it's more common to say you're an avid fan of something. Yeah, enthusiastic.
Starting point is 00:18:25 But also I can say I'm an avid reader. Or I was, I used to be an avid reader. Yeah, but then you'd like to say I'm an avid fan of reading. Yep, yep. And when we talk about sport, amateur is a nice adjective to mention. Amata.
Starting point is 00:18:41 Are you an amateur rugby player? No, I'm too small to be a rugby player. So if Rory was a professional, we call him a professional rugby player let's imagine a pro rugby player but let's not imagine that
Starting point is 00:18:58 because first of all rugby players are terrifying and second of all I would be annihilated by them probably you called yourself a bookworm yes because I usually read books more than play sports I haven't had the chance this year
Starting point is 00:19:12 because we've been in the middle of a crisis but normally I get through quite a few books every year yeah we can call a Rory a bookworm because he reads a lot and also Rory is a walking encyclopedia so he knows lots of facts from encyclopedia. I'm not that clever. You're cleverer than I am.
Starting point is 00:19:28 I didn't know who the Great Gatsby was. No, I'm very silly. I'm sorry, I didn't know who wrote the Great Gatsby. I know who the Great Gatsby is, sort of. Now now everybody knows who wrote the Great Gatsby and it's a great film with DiCaprio, go watch it now in English
Starting point is 00:19:41 and check out how he says It's a book! No, it's a film with DiCaprio also. It's a great film. Yeah, but like it's a book. We should be talking about the books first if we're pretending to be clever people. Yes, yes. Well, you can choose to read the book
Starting point is 00:19:57 or to watch the film with DeCAPro. It's amazing. But you should probably read the book. Right, we are going off on a tangent again. Is that your way of saying Rory's disagreeing with me? So let's talk about something different. Let's agree to disagree, shall we? Rory, you said a good collocation.
Starting point is 00:20:16 sports coverage. Yes. So this is when we talk about sports that, well, whenever anything is broadcast on TV or broadcast in general, then it's getting coverage. You can have sports coverage on TV or in newspapers,
Starting point is 00:20:34 but you also have news coverage of any topic. So it's more flexible this way. You don't need to talk about it with only sports. Yeah, you can say I like sometimes I watch sports sports coverage in my country is pretty good so on TV or in newspapers
Starting point is 00:20:52 when we talk about the benefits of sports we can mention social and healthy benefits and Rory said that when you are doing some kind of sports you go to a sport center you can network with people network make friends yes it's make friends if it's like Well, I think the worst way of describing it is make friends if it's real, network if it's fake.
Starting point is 00:21:18 But it's not really like that. You network with people for business purposes and you make friends with people for fun. Thank you very much for listening. We hope that you keep fit and do sports on a regular basis or at least you watch some sports on TV. And remember, if you can't do sport, at least be a good sport. Yay. Bye. Rory, do you like sport? I suppose not particularly when it comes to mainstream sports.
Starting point is 00:21:55 I'll watch the odd football match in the passing. And I came up with some news back home, but I wouldn't say I was a huge sports fan or anything. Do you like extreme sports? Ah, okay. Well, that's the one that tickles my fancy. I love extreme sports. I've been bungee jumping and the second the coronavirus restrictions go,
Starting point is 00:22:15 I'll be shooting, and I want to go glider flying and skydiving and sorbbing. I think they're great ideas. Do most people in your country like sport? I think so. I mean, Britain's kind of renowned as a football and rugby-obsessed nation. So it certainly seems this way. What sports do people in your country play?
Starting point is 00:22:38 Well, like I said, I think football and rugby are sort of the mainstay sports, just going by the TV coverage. but a lot of people also play golf, including my aunt and uncle. And in fact, I think golf was invented in Scotland. And of course, I think, well, diving gets a lot of attention because there's like famous divers like Tom Daly that are, well, quite well-known, I guess. What was your favourite sport when you were a child? Oh, I loved swimming.
Starting point is 00:23:10 That was the one I liked the most. I used to go every week before breaking for the weekend. That was great fun. I'm not so sure it was great fun for my parents who used to transport me there, but I enjoyed it. Did you do much sport when you were younger? Eh, well, aside from swimming, not really. I was actually more of a bookworm, to be honest with you,
Starting point is 00:23:32 and I probably still am. I do more now, I guess, if you consider going to the gym and playing video games as sports, which some people do. What are the benefits of doing sport? Well, I think the health benefits are certainly the most obvious. So, for example, if you go and run around for a period, I think it's supposed to be you're meant to have 30 minutes of intense exercise,
Starting point is 00:24:01 so doing contact sports like football or rugby would count as that. So they're the most obvious. But there are social benefits to it as well, because you meet new people at football clubs, for example, or if you do martial arts, then you could meet people at your local jiu-jitsu club. What's it called? A dojo. That's what it is. And you, well, like I say, you can network there.
Starting point is 00:24:28 If you're not there to make friends, then you could network. And if you have a business that you're particularly fond of and want to meet new people like that, for example. Do you like to watch sports on TV? Well, like I said, I'll have a glance in the passing, but I wouldn't spend a great deal of time on it. I don't... Well, sorry, actually, I have a lot on my plate right now,
Starting point is 00:24:50 so there's not really a great deal of time to just sit and stare at the screen all the time. Maybe when I'm older, I'll probably do it more often. You tend to see that in places where people hang out back home. There's lots of older men who go to the pub and watch football, for example. So maybe that's the destiny. I have to look forward to. What kinds of sports would you like to try in the future?
Starting point is 00:25:14 Well, like I said, all of the extreme sports. I'm particularly looking forward to going skydiving and flying a glider. I think that will be really good fun. But there's not really anything normal. I think the closest thing is probably taking up Jiu-Jitsu again. I think I'd really like to start that over. Who's your favorite sport style? I don't actually have one to be honest.
Starting point is 00:25:43 I can think of some famous ones, but outside of their contributions to sport, I don't think they're particularly any more or less interesting than the people I know. So the short answer is, I can't say. And the long answer is I can't say because I find people closer to me to be more interesting and famous people.

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