IELTS Speaking for Success - 🧠Traveling (S05E01) + Transcript
Episode Date: December 7, 2020Do you like travelling? How long was the longest trip you took? What kind of places have you visited? Tune in and have a great day! - IELTS Speaking for Success PREMIUM: https://linktr.ee/sfspremiu...m Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s05e01 Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2020 Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Now that we're millionaires, we can afford the studio!
Yeah, this is really cool.
But of course, we wouldn't be able to do any of this without any of the people who have listened to us.
We should give a particular thank you to our subscribers on our premium podcast.
IELP Speaking for Success Premium.
They've, like, the reason this was all possible, in addition to the people who did our
Speaking for Success course to help prepare them for the exam.
So thank you guys.
Thank you so much.
We really appreciate all your support.
Hello, lovely, I'm Maria.
And my name is Rory, and we are 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 started this podcast because we want you to use high-level words and gorgeous grammar
in your AILD speaking and in your English life.
Maria, I'm thinking about travelling a lot recently.
Traveling? Traveling where? To your balcony?
It's a good place to start, isn't it? But yeah, traveling in general.
Shall we talk about traveling?
Let's talk about traveling.
Rory, do you like traveling?
I love it.
I think I've been to about 30 different countries, actually.
And I've loved every single one for different reasons.
Each time I met really cool people, and I've had a blast.
So, yes, I absolutely adore traveling.
Have you done much traveling?
Well, like I said, I think so.
I know there are about 200 countries in the world, and I've only seen about 30 of them.
But I think that's more than most people, so I would say.
so. How long was it the longest trip you took? Well, I suppose Russia, technically speaking,
because this was only supposed to be going, I was only supposed to be here for a year,
but here we are, five years later, and I'm still going strong. Probably after that, the second
longest one was Sweden for Erasmus, which is like a scholarship exchange program in Europe.
And then I spent seven months away in the mid-2000s traveling around.
Africa and East Timor, which is a small island off of Indonesia.
So I suppose you could say I'm used to these sort of long haul adventures.
What kind of places have you visited?
Oh, go on. All kinds. I visited developed and developing countries, active war zones, savannas,
rainforests, islands, mountains, coral reefs. It would be easier to talk about the kinds of places
I've not visited yet. I think my favorite place.
places are usually by the sea. But I took a short trip to Kurdistan in northern Iraq. And that's a
completely landlocked part of the world. That was a once in a lifetime experience. I'll treasure
forever, even if it did get me put on a watch list. Do you think it's better to travel alone or
with other people? Well, I almost always travel alone. It gives you a bit more autonomy and freedom of
action. I quite prized that. So that's good for me. I can
still see the advantages of traveling with someone. Hopefully one day I'll find that person who's
an ideal traveling companion. What do you do while you're traveling? Well, all kinds of things.
I've been free diving, and I wrote a few books while I was away, and I read a lot of books. I read a lot more
than I've read a lot more than I've written, sorry. I go out and I talk to strangers and have adventures.
Of course, I do traditional things, like tasting the local cuisine and sightseeing, but I try to balance this
with some more unique experiences as well.
And meeting new people is definitely more unique
than just seeing the sites.
Would you like to have a job
that requires traveling to other countries?
Well, I kind of do, or I did at least.
I've been around the block for work for a few times,
though I wouldn't really want to do it regularly
since it's quite hard on you.
What places would you like to visit in the future?
Oh, I've got a little list, actually.
I'd like to see Belarus and Armenia and Georgia and more of Russia, of course, it's the biggest country in the world, and the Balkans as well, particularly Serbia and Croatia. My friend and I have a plan to go there. And of course, I'll visit my friends in the Americas when I get a chance as well. There's still a lot to see and do out there.
Rory, thank you so much for your answers.
We've been on quite the travel in terms of vocabulary and grammar, haven't we? Sorry, that was a terrible, terrible joke. I tried.
Yes, let's talk about super vocabulary and traveling grammar.
First of all, when we talk about traveling, we use the super present perfect.
Do we?
Yes, absolutely.
And Roy, you've told us that I've been to about 30 countries, and we usually say, well, we always say, I've been to, I've been to, I've been to.
So that's like pronunciation as well.
It's not, try to avoid saying like, I have been, like stress on every word, I've been to.
It's much, well, it's more natural.
extra points for pronunciation. Have you been to Peru? I've not been to Peru, but I've spoken to
someone from Peru and actually we she was in the free lessons that I did a few weeks ago.
So it was super cool talking to her. I've been to Peru. You have? Yes, that's why I asked
you this question. So that you could talk about yourself. Well I've been talking about myself for the last
10 minutes so I guess you should do that too. Yeah so dear listener, please do we use present
perfect. So I've been to many countries or I've been to London or I've visited because Rory for
example, told us that I visited developed and developing countries. So Russia is a developing
country, Germany is a developed country. Is it right? Well, Russia's kind of weird in that way,
isn't it? Because like you come to places like Moscow and St. Petersburg, which are fully developed
to explain, developing countries, sorry, developed countries have fully formed infrastructure
and they don't have problems, like serious problems with poverty, for example, and quality
of life, whereas developing countries are still working on these problems or issues.
Yeah, Russia is somewhere in the middle.
Yeah, you're on your way, though. I like living here.
Like, come to Russia, even though it's partially developed.
Yeah, it's like, Rory came to Russia for a year and ended up being here for five years or
even more, six years.
It's a phrasal verb to end up.
Or wind up.
Yeah.
Whoa.
Rory, you've mentioned having a blast.
Yeah.
It's like probably marks me out as being very old.
So yes, if you have a blast, you have a great time doing something, although it's a more idiomatic expression than just say, I had a great time.
It's very boring. Have a blast.
Yeah, so you can say, I've visited many countries and I've had a blast.
Or I had a blast.
I had a blast.
When we talk about traveling, we talk about adventures.
And, Rory, you said that I'm used to long-haul adventures.
Yeah. So I'm mixing up different adjectives here because usually you have a long-haul flight, which lasts.
for a really long time. But you can have a long-haul adventure, which lasts for a really long time.
It's an unusual collocation, so I'm kind of having fun with that language there.
So if I'm flying to New Zealand from Moscow, it's a long-haul adventure.
Oh, it's a long-haul flight. You might have an adventure on the plane.
Yeah, or you can say, like, I'm an adventurous traveler.
Yeah.
Roy, are you a traveler or a tourist?
Well, I like to think I'm a traveler because that's got more positive meaning to it, doesn't it?
although no one's doing much traveling these days, are they?
Yeah, so if you're a tourist, you just go there to see the sites and just be yourself.
But travelers go places to be changed.
And oh my God, am I a different person from where I first started?
Yeah, once in Rome, I think, or somewhere in Italy, I saw this note on a wall.
Welcome travelers, tourists go home.
Tourists do go home, though.
Yes, they do.
Okay.
So when you talked about the places you visited, you've mentioned.
war zones. Active war zones. And now Rory's on the watch list. Oh my gosh. So to explain,
first of all, an active war zone is a place where there's conflict happening. It doesn't have to be
a war officially. It could just be people are fighting. So, for example, I went to Kurdistan, which is in
northern Iraq. Parts of that are an active war zone. Or they were at the time. We were fighting the
Islamic State there. So obviously that counts as an active war zone if there's actually a conflict
there. A watch list is something that it's like a collection of names that people are put on
because they're suspected of being terrorists. So because I'd visited Iraq, which is classed as
an enemy country by the United States, I was put on a watch list and it means I had to have
an extended visa application process. Wow. Rory is super adventurous and a dead.
devil? No, well, there's a fine line between adventurers and crazy, isn't there? I think when I told
my mom, she nearly had a heart attack. Hi, Mom. Right, dear listeners. Now, Roby's mom knows the whole
truth. So you can mention, like, active war zones, rainforests, islands, mountains, mountains that you've
visited, right? Yeah, specific geographical features. Maybe mountain range is better.
Mountain ranges, even if you haven't visited these places, just, you know, use this nice words.
you can say that it was once in a lifetime experience, which is a very good phrase,
like it was once in a lifetime experience.
Yes, so if it's a once in a lifetime experience, it's something that you, well, plan only to do once or could only do once, like, well, bungee jumping.
For most people, that's a once in a lifetime experience.
Afterwards, you don't really feel the need to do it again, unless you're me and then you've done it three times, which I don't recommend.
And then you can say, I'll treasure.
I'll treasure this experience forever.
Yeah, so if you treasure something, it's a verb,
it just means that you value it a lot.
So I treasure my memories.
I treasure my time with you, Maria.
Oh, thank you so much.
And our producer who is lurking in the background.
Hello, Banya.
When we talk about some activities that you can do while traveling,
so Rory has mentioned tasting, local cuisine.
Yes.
Cuisine, like food.
It is, but food's got, like food,
just food, but cuisine is like, it's not just the food, it's everything, like how it's prepared,
um, the environment, where you are. And it's a higher level word. So definitely use that instead of food.
Yeah. Careful, not cousin, cuisine. So you can say, I enjoy tasting local cuisine. I go sighting,
sighting like to see the local sites. Yeah. And then I balance this with more unique experiences.
Like talking to strangers. Talking to strangers. I love talking to strangers, by the way. And so if you,
you ever see me out in Moscow, then don't be afraid to say hi.
When we talked about other people or traveling alone, you mentioned a traveling companion.
Yes. So a traveling companion is someone that, well, comes traveling with you. You could say
a friend that goes traveling with you, but that's not a great expression. Traveling companion
is a much more common collocation. Yeah. And about the future, you can say, for example,
oh, in the future, I would really love to travel around the world or travel around the world.
or travel around the world
I'd like to go to, I'd like to visit
or I'd like to
go backpacking
around the world. You can, you don't have to travel
around the world, though. You can travel around countries
and people do,
and they have and they have a great time. Yeah,
it's called travel therapy.
And I have another joke
for you, Roryam. Are you ready?
Uh, no. I need vitamin
C, S-E-A, like the
C. I need vitamin C. I need vitamin C.
I need vitamin S for please stop the jokes.
Okay, okay.
I think we've covered a lot in terms of vocabulary.
Absolutely.
Thank you very much for listening.
Remember that if you can't buy happiness, you can buy a plane ticket.
Yes, and you can travel there to find it.
To Moscow.
To say hi to Rory.
And Maria.
Bye!
Bye, guys.
Rory, do you like traveling?
I love it.
I've been, I think I've been to a very...
30 different countries actually. And I've loved every single one for different reasons. Each time I met
really cool people and I've had a blast. So yes, I absolutely adore traveling. Have you done much
travelling? Well, like I said, I think so. I know there are about 200 countries in the world and
I've only seen about 30 of them. But I think that's more than most people, so I would say so.
How long was it the longest trip you took? Well, I suppose Russia, technically speaking,
because this was only supposed to be going, like I was only supposed to be here for a year,
but here we are, five years later, and I'm still going strong.
Probably after that, the second longest one was Sweden for Erasmus, which is like a scholarship
exchange program in Europe.
And then I spent seven months away in the mid-2000s traveling around Africa and East Timor,
which is a small island off of Indonesia.
So I suppose you could say I'm used to these.
of long haul adventures.
What kind of places have you visited?
Oh, go on. All kinds.
I visited developed and developing countries,
active war zones, savannas, rainforests,
islands, mountains, coral reefs.
It would be easier to talk about the kinds of places I've not visited yet.
I think my favorite places are usually by the sea,
but I took a short trip to Kurdistan in northern Iraq,
and that's a completely landlocked part of the world.
world. That was a once in a lifetime experience. I'll treasure forever, even if it did get me
put on a watch list. Do you think it's better to travel alone or with other people?
Well, I almost always travel alone. It gives you a bit more autonomy and freedom of action.
I quite prized that. So that's good for me. I can still see the advantages of traveling
with someone. Hopefully one day I'll find that person who's an ideal traveling companion.
What do you do while you're travelling?
Well, all kinds of things.
I've been free diving and I wrote a few books while I was away and I read a lot of books.
I read a lot more than I've read a lot more than I've written, sorry.
I go out and I talk to strangers and have adventures.
Of course, I do traditional things like tasting the local cuisine and sightseeing,
but I try to balance this with some more unique experiences as well.
And meeting new people is definitely more unique than just seeing the sites.
Would you like to have a job that requires travelling to other countries?
Well, I kind of do, or I did at least.
I've been around the block for work for a few times,
though I wouldn't really want to do it regularly,
since it's quite hard on you.
What places would you like to visit in the future?
Oh, I've got a little list, actually.
I'd like to see Belarus and Armenia and Georgia,
and more of Russia, of course, it's the biggest country in the world,
and the Balkans as well, particularly Serbia and Croatia.
My friend and I have a plan to go there.
And of course, I'll visit my friends in the Americas when I get a chance as well.
There's still a lot to see and do out there.
