America's secret slang. Riding shotgun. Season 2
Description
America's Secret Slang proves that we speak history every day as it documents the stories behind our unique American version of English, from words like "southpaw" to phrases like "bet your bottom dollar". Every day we use words and phrases that come from deep within our history. Their origins reveal a lot about us and where we came from, but most of us have no idea what these terms originally meant. In this episode we look at how forms of transportation from horses to trains to cars, and different intoxicating substances from opium to booze, influenced the common words and phrases we say every day. Why do insensitive people "ride roughshod" over others, while lucky people ride the "gravy train"? Who put the jay in "jaywalker", and the bus in "busboy"? Why are "highways" high, what do "turnpikes" turn, and why is a wild person "hell on wheels"? When it comes to substances, who put the hero in heroin, the junk in junkie, and the ooze in booze? And what's the connection between George Washington and the words grog and groggy?
Runtime
43 minutes
Series
Subjects
Genre
Database
Alexander Street
Direct Link
Similar Films
Communicating Feedback. English at Work
English composition I. Discovering voice. Lesson 12
Do You Like Them?
Fortune blue. Scenario videos
Training teachers for reading recovery
Where are you from? English in Three Minutes
Vocabulary. Expression for "I agree"
Celebrating diversity
Lesson starters. Writing a monologue
America's secret slang. Straight from the horse's mouth. Season 2
English composition I. Explaining relationships. Lesson 2
Basic English, a teaching picture
Global English. Episode 5
Study English. Glass artist. Series 2, [episode] 16
Experiments with language