IELTS Speaking for Success - 🚦 Traffic (S05E11) + Transcript
Episode Date: January 25, 2021How do most people travel to work where you live? What traffic problems are there in your area? How would you reduce the traffic problems in your area? Tune in and have a great day! - IELTS Speakin...g for Success PREMIUM: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s05e11 Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2021 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 are the host of the AIL Speaking for Success Podcast.
The podcast themes to help you improve your speaking skills, as well as your listening skills along the way.
We started this super podcast because we really want you to use high-level words and gorgeous grammar in your AILD speaking and in your English life.
For a high score.
Ben-night score.
Rory, we are recording in this studio, and you were late.
You were like 20 minutes late.
I was late. I was caught in a traffic jam, which is my new excuse for having terrible timekeeping.
Shall we talk about traffic? Oh, why not?
Yes, dear listener, in speaking part one, they can ask you questions about traffic where you live.
Rory, how do most people travel to work where you live?
Probably either by metro or car or bus, although some people take the trams and the trolley buses these days.
some lucky souls get to go on foot
but the rest of us are like sardines and cans
in the rush hour unfortunately
What traffic problems are there in your area?
Well just Russian traffic and driving in general really
rules are selectively followed and enforced
and the roads are sometimes packed
then there's this rush to the metro in the morning
and then you have the rush hour in the evening time as well
you're lucky if you can get a seat actually
especially if you're a man
mercifully, I'm only a few stops from where I get the bus, so it's okay for me, but it can still be
quite annoying. It's the same with most kinds of public transport, to be honest with you. Some of the
ladies I work with have this propensity to save a seat for their bags, because they should never
be left on the floor, apparently, which means it's always a struggle to get a comfortable
spot, regardless of whether it's public or private transport, it seems, sometimes.
Are there more traffic problems now than in the past?
Well, there's more traffic in general now, so I imagine there's been a proportionate rise in the number of problems.
But maybe the seriousness has decreased compared to before because we have more safety measures.
Like everybody's got improved seatbelts and there are airbags.
Actually, as it turns out, windscreen wipers weren't invented initially with cars.
They had to be invented later on.
So, yeah, all of these technological improvements probably mean that maybe there are fewer,
problems, maybe? Do you think there will be fewer traffic problems in the future where you live?
Well, the infrastructure in Moscow is always developing, so I think the trend I mentioned earlier
will continue where I am at the local level too. How do traffic problems affect you?
Well, aside from slow traffic and struggling for a seat, not tremendously, my schedule's
quite flexible and I've learned to live withstanding, so it's not a major issue for me.
How would you reduce the traffic problems in your area?
I think the only way to do that would be to have fewer people.
But then the side effect would that would just be spreading the problem around or increasing the problems over a wider area.
I think it's better to flow around problems than try and solve them.
So I spaced out my schedule, found things to do while I wait and just be generally more patient with people.
And that worked out pretty well for me so far.
Rory, thank you for your answers.
That's okay. Hopefully...
what could we say?
No, it's okay. If you have no joke, it's fine just to say, like, no problem.
There's always a joke, though.
What are you doing?
Being bored.
Waiting for you to talk about grammar and vocabulary.
So when we talk about traffic, we say traffic jams.
And worry, what's a good synonym for traffic jams?
A pain in the bum. A pain in the bum.
A pain in the neck.
No, congestion.
Traffic congestion.
Yes, traffic congestion is a great word.
You can use it in the essay, in speaking.
Do we say traffic congestions?
No, because it's uncountable.
Yes, traffic congestion or traffic jams or like one huge traffic jam.
We can also say the roads are congested.
Yes, and it's not just roads.
Your nose can be congested when you have a cold,
which means it's full of bleh.
Exactly.
That's the sign to Victor.
Make sure that your nose is not congested.
Like you have no problems breathing.
We can also say heavy traffic.
The traffic is really heavy.
Or busy traffic.
Or sluggish traffic?
Slow traffic.
I was going to say slow, but then I thought it would be too much of a, well, lower band word.
It's sluggish.
That's why you say sluggish.
I was sluggish with my answer there.
And we can say that I usually get stuck in traffic.
So the phrase is like getting stuck in traffic.
But you do get stuck in traffic.
And I do tell people I get stuck in traffic, whether it's true or not.
When the examiner asks you how people travel to work, you can say buy metro, buy bus, by car, by car, by car, by car, by bus, but on foot.
You can say by foot
But it's just not a common
It's wrong
No, no, don't say that
I've heard people talking about by foot before
Really?
Yeah, it's not common
But it does exist
No, usually we say on foot
But usually it's on, yeah
And Rory, you said that
Some roads are sometimes packed
So the same as congested
Yes
And if you travel by metro
Sometimes it's difficult
To find a place
And Rory has used a nice one
about some of the ladies who have this propensity to save a seat.
Yes, so a propensity is this, it's a tendency to behave in a certain way.
And usually, at least when I use it, it's used to mean something that people do,
which is often annoying or dangerous, for example.
When we talk about traffic problems, you should say like many traffic problems or fewer.
Traffic problems. We don't say less problems. No, no, no, no, no, no. Fewer traffic problems or fewer people. So I wish there were fewer people on the road, so fewer cars. So fewer, this is your word. And that is bad in grammar because even native speakers make mistakes with that. Oh yeah, native speakers usually say less people, less cars. And then by the end of that discussion, you have less brain cells. Yeah, so fewer. Fewer people, fewer cars, fewer traffic problems.
I saw that in a CV. I was reading once.
And I asked the teacher what the difference between less and fewer was in the interview.
And they couldn't tell me.
Well, actually, they could, they attempted to.
They said, less is used in formal situations and fewer is used in informal situations.
And that was just, no, no.
If you don't know the answer to something, don't lie.
Especially not to somebody who's interviewing you for a job.
Yes, Dalyzna, you can remember now and forever that few
Fewer people, fewer cars, but less energy, less money, less, what, water.
But fewer teachers who don't know the difference between fewer and less are employed by me.
Then you said something like, there has been a proportionate rise in the number of problems.
Yeah, so a proportionate rise is just as something else rises, something also rises at the same time.
you can also have a proportionate decrease as well.
And you can say that the number of traffic problems has increased or has decreased over the years.
So we are using the present perfect tense here.
And also about traffic problems, Rory has mentioned that Moscow is always developing.
So my city is always developing and traffic is getting more and more horrible.
For example.
Roy, what did you do with your schedule?
You space it out, right?
Yeah, so to be honest, it's probably not the best way of describing it.
I space out the things on my schedule,
so it means that if there's a problem with the traffic, then at least I'm not late.
Or at least I try to.
It's sometimes quite difficult.
And it's better to flow around problems.
Yeah, I like this expression, like be like the water and flow around the problem.
So rather than try and solve problems,
you find alternative ways of getting.
around them. So the problem is just something you ignore. Yeah, so you can get annoyed by traffic problems
or you can just flow around traffic problems. Yeah, another word which is important is to commute
and commuters. So for example, many people commute to work by metro or by bus, right? So instead of
saying just people go to work, you say commute to work, which is a very specific word. And there are
millions of commuters getting stuck in traffic.
A morning commute.
Ooh. Could you give us a sentence?
Sure. My morning commute, well, you could talk about,
my morning commute from my apartment to my place of work takes about an hour.
Would you like to use a bicycle to stay out of traffic?
I wouldn't like to use a bicycle in Moscow. That would be taking my life into my hands.
And I hate cyclists. I really don't like them.
Sorry if anyone's a cyclist even, I should say.
Yeah, and we also talked about rush hour, right?
Can you say like peak hour?
Or it should be rush hour?
Well, rush hour is used for the time when people are moving around from work to home or home to work.
But peak hours usually describes when something is in service or something is in use the most.
So peak hours on trains could be the rush hour, but it could also be
at the weekend when people are moving around
because they have the free time to do this.
Yeah, and we say like in the rush hour.
And Roy, I was wondering
why it's called a rush hour,
a rush hour, if no one is moving.
Well, the reason why no one's moving
is because they're all so, well,
they're all in such a hurry.
And there's a joke here.
You see rush hour, but no one is moving, you know?
It's ironic.
But hopefully you'll be in a rush now
to use all this vocabulary with your exam
when you do your speaking exam.
Roy, don't you think we are overdoing the jokes?
No, it just feels like we're overdoing it
because we're sitting recording like 25 billion sessions,
25 billion recordings in a row.
Anyway, thank you very much for listening.
And remember, the road to success is rarely free of traffic jams.
Bye!
Bye!
Bye, bye, bye.
Rory, how do most people travel to work where you live?
Probably either by metro or car or bus.
Although some people take the trams and the trolley buses these days.
Some lucky souls get to go on foot,
but the rest of us are like sardines and cans in the rush hour, unfortunately.
What traffic problems are there in your area?
Well, just Russian traffic and driving in general, really.
rules are selectively followed and enforced
and the roads are sometimes packed
then there's this rush to the metro in the morning
and then you have the rush hour in the evening time as well
you're lucky if you can get a seat actually
especially if you're a man
mercifully I'm only a few stops from where I get the bus
so it's okay for me
but it can still be quite annoying
it's the same with most kinds of public transport
to be honest with you
some of the ladies I work with have this
propensity to save a seat for their bags
because they should never be left on the floor, apparently,
which means it's always a struggle to get a comfortable spot,
regardless of whether it's public or private transport, it seems, sometimes.
Are there more traffic problems now than in the past?
Well, there's more traffic in general now,
so I imagine there's been a proportionate rise in the number of problems,
but maybe the seriousness has decreased compared to before
because we have more safety measures.
Like, everybody's got improved seatbelts,
and there are airbags.
Actually, as it turns out, windscreen wipers weren't invented initially with cars.
They had to be invented later on.
So, yeah, all of these technological improvements probably mean that maybe there are fewer problems, maybe.
Do you think there will be fewer traffic problems in the future where you live?
Well, the infrastructure in Moscow is always developing,
so I think the trend I mentioned earlier will continue where I am at the local level, too.
How do traffic problems affect you?
Well, aside from slow traffic and struggling for a seat, not tremendously,
my schedule is quite flexible and I've learned to live withstanding,
so it's not a major issue for me.
How would you reduce the traffic problems in your area?
I think the only way to do that would be to have fewer people,
but then the side effect would that would just be spreading the problem around
or increasing the problems over a wider area.
I think it's better to flow around problems than try and solve them,
So I spaced out my schedule,
found things to do while I wait,
and just be generally more patient with people,
and that worked out pretty well for me so far.
