[English]
Welcome to Learning English,
a daily 30 minute program
from The Voice of America.
I'm Caty Weaver and I'm Mario Ritter, Jr.
This program is designed
for English learners,
so we speak a little slower
and we use words and phrases,
especially written for people learning
English.
On this program, Andrew Smith answers
a listener's question
about the difference between so and NIT.
Jill Robins and John Russell
tell about ways
to intensify or down tone Adverbs.
Andrew is back to tell us about America's
first national Park.
Then we finish the Open Boat
by Stephen Crane on American Stories.
But first,
this week on Ask a Teacher,
we answer a question from Ruhollah
in Afghanistan
about using the words sew and knit.
And related terms,
dear.
VOA Learning English.
I am sending this email
to know what the differences
are between sewing and knitting
or so and knit.
Besides that,
I wanted to know what I can call
a woman or a man that makes clothes.
Thank you.
I'm happy to answer this question, Rola.
An important difference between
sewing and knitting is that when we So
we connect pieces of fabric or cloth
that are already made, when we knit,
we make the cloth itself from
strings called yarn.
Also,
the word sewing can describe many ways
people connect or repair
fabric and clothes.
For example.
People can so many kinds of clothes
such as socks, shirts,
dresses, hats and gloves.
People can also sew larger things
such as window coverings or tents.
A person can so using a sewing machine,
or simply by using their hands
with a needle and thread,
knitting does not generally require
use of a machine
or a needle and thread to knit.
A person uses thicker strings called yarn
along with two thin
sticks called knitting needles.
Yarn is usually made of
small natural pieces called fibers
such as wool or cotton.
While sewing thread is often less than one
millimeter
thick, knitting yarn is generally 2
to 5 millimeters thick.
Many people who knit make clothing
for cold weather,
such as wool sweaters, hats and scarves.
They may also knit blankets
or other things
that can be used in the home.
More than 50 years ago, most Americans
who earned money
sewing clothes in a factory were women.
They were called seamstresses.
Today, we sometimes
call any person who sews a soloist,
or we can simply say a person who sews.
And a person
whose job is to sew or repair clothes
to make them fit well is called a tailor.
For our readers and listeners,
what are your questions
about American English?
Do you like to knit or sew?
We want to hear from you.
Send us an email at.
Learning English at VOA News.
And please
let us know where you are from too.
And that's ask a teacher.
I'm Andrew Smith
from VOA Learning English.
This is every day grammar.
Imagine you are at a business meeting.
You have just presented a plan
to your business partners.
They want to give suggestions
for how to make your plan better.
The conversation might sound like this.
I really like your plan.
Yes, it's pretty good.
But it needs a little revising.
Of course, you did a very good job.
But you might need to consider
a few more points.
Yes. It will probably be more effective
if you highlight the staffing requirements
and expand on the budget.
Whether you like business
or not,
this conversation gives you important
grammar information that you can use in
just about any situation.
In particular,
the exchange offers examples
of some of the most important adverbs
that you will hear in everyday speech.
This week we will explore
special adverbs that increase
or decrease the force of a statement.
These adverbs are
sometimes called amplifiers
or down toners.
Adverbs are words that modify
or change the meaning of adjectives.
Verbs and sometimes entire sentences.
They are often used to show time,
a way of doing something or place
or degree.
A measure of something.
Some kinds of adverbs act as amplifiers.
The word amplify means
to make something stronger.
So these amplifiers make the meaning
of an adjective or sentence stronger.
In American English,
amplifiers have three common uses
increasing intensity, expressing
certainty and showing precision.
This information comes from
Susan Conrad and Douglas Biber,
two experts on English grammar.
Words such as Really
and vary are among the most common
that increase
the intensity of a statement.
They usually modify an adjective.
Take the adjective. Good.
For example, imagine you are trying
some food that your friends cooked.
Perhaps you want to tell them
this food is good.
You could increase the intensity
of your statement
by using the word very.
This food is very good.
You could express certainty
by using an amplifier.
Such as? Definitely.
This is definitely the best food
I've ever had.
Or you could use an amplifier
to show precision.
At exactly 5:13 p.m.
on February 6th.
I ate the best food
I've ever had in my life.
Other kinds of adverbs act as down toners.
Down toners
are the opposite of amplifiers.
They reduce the force of a statement
or express doubt.
In other words,
they set the tone of a statement.
You can remember the term down toner
by thinking about what it does.
Toning down a statement
down toners have three common functions
reducing intensity, expressing doubt,
or showing imprecision.
Three common down toners in conversational
English are pretty maybe,
and probably say Conrad and Biber.
How can you use down toners
to change the meaning of the statement?
Take our earlier example.
This food is good
if you want it to reduce
the intensity of your statement.
You could say this food is pretty good.
You could show doubt, even raise questions
by saying
this is maybe the best food I've ever had
or this is probably
the best food I've ever had.
These statements
express someone's opinion about the food,
but they are not as strong
as the example sentences
that use amplifiers.
In other words, saying this food is
pretty good is not as forceful as saying
this food is really good.
So what does this discussion of food
have to do with the exchange we heard
at the beginning of this report?
Let's think back to the business
conversation.
I really like your plan.
Yes, it's pretty good,
but it needs a little revising.
Of course, you did a very good job,
but you might need to consider
a few more points.
Yes, it will Probably be more effective
if you highlight the staffing requirements
and expand on the budget.
You might notice that one of the speakers
uses amplifiers such as Really?
And very.
She is using these words
to give more force to her statement.
She is probably more excited
about the business plan.
The second speaker uses down toners
the words pretty and probably for example.
So you might suspect that
he is more guarded about the plan.
Maybe he has doubts
that the new plan will be better.
The amplifiers and down toners they use
are also among the most common ones
that you will hear in American English.
These words are useful
in a number of settings.
They are polite and acceptable
in almost any situation.
Remember this?
The amplifiers and sound toners
we have discussed
today are common in conversation and
different amplifiers, and down
toners are more common in writing.
For example, you are more likely to read
words such as indeed,
certainly, or approximately,
than you are to hear them
in everyday conversation.
If you use these amplifiers
and down toners
in conversation, your speech will take
on a very official sound.
While that might be a
good idea
in a formal presentation or speech,
it might not be the best choice
for an everyday conversation.
I'm Jill Robbins.
And I'm John Russell.
Yellowstone National
Park in the western United States
was the world's first national park,
established in 1872.
It is famous for its geothermal activity
and wild animals.
It includes beautiful mountains,
deep canyons, lakes and rivers.
Yellowstone is still one of
the largest national parks in the U.S.
It takes up almost 9000 square kilometers.
Most of the park lies
within the western state of Wyoming.
The park is unusual
because of what lies underneath it.
It sits on top of an ancient supervolcano
known as the Yellowstone Caldera.
The caldera remains an active volcano.
A lake of hot liquid
rock is about
six kilometers under the park.
Expert say
this lake is under huge
amounts of pressure.
The pressure and heat cause geysers
to shoot hot water out of the ground
and mud to boil.
At Yellowstone,
the park is home to more than 300 geysers.
There are more geysers
and hot springs in Yellowstone
than any other place on earth.
Old Faithful is the name of the park's
most famous geyser
because it erupts about every 90 minutes.
Yellowstone is home to the largest group
of wild animals
in the lower 48 United States.
These include bison,
grizzly bear, elk, deer, moose,
fox, beaver, coyote and wolves.
In 2024,
park officials
estimated the bison population
to be about 4500 animals.
That makes it the largest group of wild
bison in the world.
There is still a wild West in America,
and its name is Yellowstone.
I'm Andrew Smith.
We continue the story
of the Open Boat by Steven Crane.
As we told you last week.
The story is based on true events in 1896.
Crane was traveling to Cuba
as a newspaper reporter.
On his way there, his ship
sank in the Atlantic Ocean.
Crane climbed into the last
remaining small lifeboat.
Three men got into the boat with him.
They were the ship's captain, the cook
and a sailor named Billy.
For three days,
the men steered the tiny boat
through high
waves off the coast of Florida.
At last, they saw land.
Here is Shep O'Neal
with the final part of the story.
A long stretch of coast
lay before the eyes of the man.
Slowly, the land rose up
out of the mountainous sea.
The man could see a
small house against the sky.
To the south, they could see
a lighthouse tide.
Wind and waves were pushing the lifeboat
northward.
The man thought someone on land
would have seen the boat by now.
Well, said the captain.
I suppose we'll have to attempt
to reach the shore ourselves.
If we stay out here too long.
None of us will have the strength left
to swim
after the boat sings.
So Billy the Sailor turned the boat
straight for the shore.
If we don't
all get ashore, said the captain,
I suppose you fellows know where to send
news of my death.
The men then exchanged some information.
There was a great deal of anger in them.
They thought, if I'm going to be drowned,
why in the name of the seven man
gods who rule the sea.
Was I permitted to come this far
and think about sand and trees?
The waves grew
stronger.
They seemed always just about to break
and roll over the little boat.
The coast was still far away.
The sailor said, Boys,
the boat won't live 3 minutes more
and we are too far out to swim.
Shall I take you to see you again,
Captain?
Yes, go ahead, said the captain.
The sailor turned the boat and took her
safely out to sea again.
It's funny.
Those life saving people haven't seen us.
One of the men said.
Maybe they think we're out here for sport.
Maybe they think we're fishing.
Maybe they think we're fools.
Once more, the sailor rowed the boat
and then the reporter Road.
Suddenly
they saw a man walking along the shore.
The man stopped walking.
He moved his hand in the air
to wave at them.
He saw them.
Now he was running to the house.
The captain tied a
cloth to a stick and waved it.
Now there was another man on the shore.
The two men waved their hands in the air
as if they were saying
hello to the men in the boat.
Now, what was that?
Moving on the shore.
It was a boss, a hotel boss.
A man stood on the steps of the bus
and waved his coat over his head.
The man in the boat
wondered what he wanted to say.
Was he attempting to tell them something?
Should they wait for help?
Should they go north?
Should they go south?
The man waited
and waited.
But nothing happened.
The sun began to go down.
It got dark
and cold.
They could no longer
see anyone on the beach.
The. The sailor rode
out, and then the reporter rode.
And then the sailor rode again.
They rode and rode through the long night.
The land had disappeared,
but they could hear the low
sound of the waves hitting the shore.
This was surely a quiet night.
The cook finally spoke.
Billy,
what kind of pie do you like best?
Pie, said the sailor
and the reporter angrily.
Don't talk about those things.
Well, said the cook.
I was just thinking about ham
sandwiches and
a night on the sea.
In an open boat is a long night.
The sailor continued to roll
until his head fell forward
and sleep overpowered him.
Then he asked the reporter to roll
for a while.
They exchanged places
so the sailor could sleep
in the bottom of the boat
with the cook and the captain.
The reporter thought that he was the one
man afloat on all the oceans in the world.
The wind had a sad voice
as it came over the waves.
Suddenly there was a long,
loud, swishing sound behind the boat
and a shining trail of silvery blue.
It might have been made by a huge knife.
Then there was another swish
and another long flash of bluish light,
this time alongside the boat.
The reporter saw a huge fin speed,
like a shadow
through the water,
leaving a long, glowing trail.
The thing kept swimming near the boat.
He noted its speed and power.
The reporter wished the man would wake up.
He did not want to be alone
with the shark.
The reporter thought as he rode.
He was angry that they had come so close
to land and yet might still die at sea.
Then he remembered a
poem that he had learned as a child.
It was a poem about a soldier
of the French Foreign Legion.
The soldier lay dying in Algiers.
Just before he died, he cried out.
I shall never see my own.
My native land.
And now,
many years after he had learned this poem.
The reporter for the first time understood
the sadness of the dying soldier.
Hours passed.
The reporter asked the sailor
to take the orders so that he could rest.
It seemed like only a brief period,
but it was more than an hour later.
When the sailor returned
the words to the reporter.
They both knew that only
they could keep the boat from sinking.
And so they rode hour after hour
through the night.
When they came, the four men saw land
again.
But there were no people on the shore.
A conference was held on the boat.
Well, said the captain.
If no help is coming, we might better
try to reach the shore right away.
If we stay out here much longer,
we will be too weak
to do anything for ourselves at all.
The others agreed.
They began to turn the boat
toward the beach.
The captain told them to be careful
that when the boat came near
the beach, the waves would sink it.
Then everyone should jump out of the boat
and swim to the shore.
As the boat came closer to land,
the waves got bigger and more violent.
At last, a large wave climbed into the air
and fell on the
small boat with great force.
The boat
turned
over as the men jumped into the sea.
The water was like ice.
The reporter was tired,
but he swam toward the beach.
He looked for his friends.
He saw Billy the Sailor in front of him,
swimming strongly and quickly.
The cook was near him.
Behind the captain held on to the
overturned boat with his one good hand.
Soon, the reporter could swim no longer.
A current was carrying him
back out to sea.
He thought, Am I going to drown?
Can it be possible?
But the current suddenly changed
and he was able to swim toward the shore.
The captain called to him to swim
to the boat and hold on.
The reporter
started to swim toward the boat.
Then he saw a man running along the shore.
He was quickly taking off his shoes
and clothes
as the reporter got close to the boat.
A large wave hit him and threw him into
the air over the boat and far from it.
When he tried to get up,
he found that the water was not over
his head, only halfway up his body.
But he was so tired
that he could not stand up.
Each wave threw him down
and the current
kept pulling him back to sea.
Then he
saw the man again jumping into the water.
The man pulled the cook to the shore.
Then he ran back into the water
for the captain.
But the captain waved him away
and sent him to the reporter.
The man seized the reporter's hand
and pulled him to the beach.
Then the man pointed to the water
and cried.
What's that?
In the shallow water?
Face down.
Lay Billy the Sailor.
The reporter
did not know all that happened after that.
He fell on the sand
as if dropped from a housetop.
It seems that immediately
the beach was filled with men
with blankets, clothes and whiskey.
Women brought hot coffee.
The people welcomed
the men from the sea to the land.
But still and dripping shape was carried.
Slowly up the beach
and the lands.
Welcome for the sailors body
could only be its final resting place.
When night came,
the light waves moved
in the moonlight.
The wind brought
the sound of the Great Sea's
voice to the men
on the shore.
And that's our show for today.
But join us again tomorrow
to keep learning
English on the Voice of America.
I'm Caty Weaver.
And I'm Mario Ritter, Junior.