BBC 6 minute English-The commute
Transcript of the podcast
NB: This is not a word-for-word transcript
Neil: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I’m Neil
Alice: … and I’m Alice. Now Neil, how do you get to work
Neil: I cycle
Alice: I didn’t know that! Somehow I hadn’t imagined you as a cyclist. And where’s all your bike gear
Neil: Well, I sneak in in the mornings, have a shower, and get changed. That’s my bike in the corner over there
Alice: Oh, you’ve got a foldaway bike – which means it folds up so it’s easy to carry or put away. Do you wear lycra, Neil
Neil: Yes, I do… it’s very comfortable. I wear lycra as often as I can. Lycra by the way is a stretchy fabric used in tight-fitting sports clothes
Alice: Well, I’ll have to see if I can catch you on your way into the building – I’m intrigued about this sporty Neil I didn’t know about
Neil: ‘Intrigued’ means to be very interested in something. Well, Alice, I’m flattered. And today’s show is about commuting – or travelling between your home and your work. So how did you commute this morning, Alice
Alice: I got the Tube – that’s the subway system here in London, also known as the underground – and it was a nightmare. We stopped in a tunnel for so long that people started talking to each other
Neil: And for those of you who aren’t Londoners, that’s unusual! Do you ever talk to people on the train
Alice: No. People think you’re crazy if you talk to strangers
Neil: Well, maybe now’s a good time to talk about today’s quiz question, Alice. What question do you have for me? Alice Alright then. I know you like my questions, Neil. So here we go: What did the word ‘commuter’ originally describe? Was it someone who
a) travelled with other people
b) paid a reduced fare to travel? Or
c) travelled by train to work
Neil: Oh, that’s easy. I’m going to go for c) travelled by train to work
Alice: Well, we’ll find out later whether you’re right or not. Now let’s listen to a commuter in Nairobi who takes a matatu to get to work. These are minibuses used as shared taxis in East Africa. Can you spot a word that means being quick to notice things going on around you
INSERT Commuter, Nairobi, Kenya
When I’m stuck in the matatu there is a lot of strange things happen around you, so you have to be alert in Nairobi. When you open… when you leave your window open somebody can run away with your belongings. You may be speaking… using the phone… somebody just snatch your phone… you may expect the unexpected
Neil: The word used by this commuter in Kenya is alert. And in these noisy, crowded buses you need to be alert in case someone runs away with your belongings – belongings are the things that you own
Alice: Right. Somebody might snatch your phone – snatch means to take something quickly
Neil: Public transport in Nairobi sounds stressful! If I was taking the bus I’d want to have a nap – or short sleep
Alice: Yes. Well, people have done research on commuting and stress levels – and interestingly women are more likely to experience stress during their journey than men
Neil: Why’s that
Alice: Well, they’re more likely to do something which is being called ‘trip chaining’ – where they make one or more stops on the way to work or going home – for example to drop off or pick up the kids from school – and this makes it more likely that something will go wrong with their journey
Neil: Even if you aren’t trip chaining it’s no fun being stuck in a traffic jam – that’s a large number of vehicles close together moving slowly – or being packed into a crowded train like sardines. Let’s face it – travelling by car or by public transport can be really miserable
Alice: Yes. Packed in like sardines describes people standing so close together that they can’t move – like fish in a can! So let’s hear how longer commutes can affect your health from US researcher Christine Hoehner
INSERT Christine Hoehner, researcher at Washington University School of Medicine
My study found that adults who commuted longer distances from home to work were less physically active, less physically fit, weighed more and had higher blood pressure than those people who had shorter commutes
Neil: The American researcher must be talking about commuters who aren’t engaged in active travel, mustn’t she? Because if you cycle a longer distance then you’re being more physically active
Alice: I think you’re right, for once, Neil
Neil: Yeah
Alice: And I’d better start going to the gym more. I don’t like the sound of high blood pressure
Neil: Why don’t you hop on your bike, Alice? Then we can both wear lycra to work
Alice: That’s a fantastic idea, Neil! Moving on! Here’s the answer to today’s quiz question. I asked: What did the word ‘commuter’ originally describe? Was it someone who
a) travelled with other people
b) paid a reduced fare to travel? Or
c) travelled by train to work
Neil: And I said c) travelled by train to work. It must be right
Alice: And you were wrong I’m afraid, Neil! It’s b) someone who paid a reduced fare to travel. The Oxford Dictionary says the word ‘commute’ comes from from Latin commutare, from com- ‘altogether’ + mutare ‘to change’. The word was used in the US in the 1840s, when people paid a reduced or commuted fare to travel by rail from the suburbs into the city
Neil: OK. Can you tell us the words we heard today again, Alice
Alice: Of course I can. Here they are
foldaway bike lycra intrigued commuting the Tube alert belongings snatch nap traffic jam packed in like sardines commuted
Neil: Well, that’s the end of today’s journey with 6 Minute English. Please do join us again soon
Both: Bye