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Easy English: Learn English with everyday conversations - 61: Pub Grub pt.2

61: Pub Grub pt.2

02/04/25 • 19 min

Easy English: Learn English with everyday conversations

Isi and Mitch discuss the final courses of a pub menu; unhealthy halloumi sticks, slimy onion rings, French/Belgian fries vs English/Dutch chips, jacket potatoes, Mary Rose sauce, sticky toffee pudding and... spotted dick?

Before all of this, let Mitch and Isi treat you to an uplifting, school assembly song...

Interactive Transcript

Support Easy English and get interactive transcripts and bonus content for all our episodes: easyenglish.fm/membership

Transcript

Intro

Isi:
[0:22] Hello.

Mitch:
[0:23] Hiya, welcome to the Easy English Podcast episode 61.

Isi:
[0:28] Wow. Do we always want to say welcome?

Mitch:
[0:31] Well, until we reach 100, I always consider that people are still stumbling onto us.

Isi:
[0:37] God, and everyone now, 39 more episodes. I would like to know if there's a Monday morning song that you can sing for us? It's Monday morning, we have a coffee, our second actually, and I want you to sing a typical song, that you would sing to kids going to school like, yay! Monday morning!

Mitch:
[0:54] hat's exact... I wasn't thinking exactly that, but I was thinking... the first thing I thought was this one song; morning has broken... very sad. And then I thought what's actually more uplifting and upbeat? And I thought what are the songs we sang at school assembly? Did you have an assembly before school started

Isi:
[1:16] No, not every day, with special occasions, yes. I think I only did it in primary school, those assemblies. But do you sing a song, then? I don't think so, no. And your song was quite depressive I have to say.

Mitch:
[1:27] Yeah yeah, but we we didn't sing that song at school assembly, that's why I thought, what did we sing at school assembly? Because it was always a way to get the kids up and running, early in the morning, because I mean early in the morning, we started at nine. (That's holidays.) And so, the only songs can really remember us singing, are... before I get into the one I was thinking of, we had this bizarre one called '20th century highway man', which was an eco-song we'd sing. And it was like about a guy, who's like, working for a big business destroying the Amazon. (Okay.) And it's like; 20th century highway man... he's the 20th century something something man. And then the chorus goes; stand and deliver, he's heading for the Amazon River. He'll steal from the forest, he'll steal from the trees, He gets what he wants and he wants what he see. (Why?) I don't know Okay, but forget that It just came in my head.

Isi:
[2:25] That's what you sang. In the assembly room?

Mitch:
[2:27] Yeah, yeah. (What?!) 20th century highwayman. It's like a Bob Dylan song.

Isi:
[2:33] Wait... is that to educate children about colonialism?

Mitch:
[2:37] I think it's more about eco...

Isi:
[2:39] Not that Britain was in the Amazon.

Mitch:
[2:42] No, the empire never quite reached that part of the world.

Isi:
[2:46] Would have been better to have a song about...

Mitch:
[2:50] About what? Bringing slaves over?

Isi:
[2:52] No. Well, if you want to do the make... The next generation feel the guilt thing, which is good, I think. at least do it properly, with a region that you did colonise. Colonise?

Mitch:
[3:09] Colonise, yeah?

Isi:
[3:10] Colonise. But now... well, anyway.

Mitch:
[3:13] Anyway, you want to wake up the kids. So the song we actually sung, which I remember, and you probably also did it, because I think... it's almost a hymn, but it's not religious or anything. And it was; If I had a hammer, I'd hammer in the morning, I'd hammer in the evening, all over this land. I'd hammer out danger, I'd hammer out a warning, I'd hammer out love between my brothers and my sisters, all over this land... la la la la, la la la la, la la la la, second verse, la la la, If I had a bell, I'd ring it in the morning, (Ding ding ding ding.) I'd ring it in the evening, (Ding ding ding ding.) all over this land, I'd ring out a danger, I'd ring out a warning, I'd ring out love between my brothers and my sisters, all... and I'm just... I'm doing like a globe, I'm doing jazz-hands while sort of doing a. .. (Yeah, Mitch is dancing.) I'm doing a jazz-hands while sort of like drawing the outline of the world, with my hands. I'd hammer out love between my brothers and my sisters, all over this land.

Isi:
[4:22] Okay, third one, come on.

Mitch:
[4:24] I don't know what that instrument is.

Isi:
[4:26] If I had a song.

Mitch:
[4:27] Oh, yeah?

Isi:
[4:28] I'd sing it in the morning, I'd sing it in the evening, all over this land, I don't know... how's that melody? I'd sing out danger.

Mitch:
[4:37] D...

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Isi and Mitch discuss the final courses of a pub menu; unhealthy halloumi sticks, slimy onion rings, French/Belgian fries vs English/Dutch chips, jacket potatoes, Mary Rose sauce, sticky toffee pudding and... spotted dick?

Before all of this, let Mitch and Isi treat you to an uplifting, school assembly song...

Interactive Transcript

Support Easy English and get interactive transcripts and bonus content for all our episodes: easyenglish.fm/membership

Transcript

Intro

Isi:
[0:22] Hello.

Mitch:
[0:23] Hiya, welcome to the Easy English Podcast episode 61.

Isi:
[0:28] Wow. Do we always want to say welcome?

Mitch:
[0:31] Well, until we reach 100, I always consider that people are still stumbling onto us.

Isi:
[0:37] God, and everyone now, 39 more episodes. I would like to know if there's a Monday morning song that you can sing for us? It's Monday morning, we have a coffee, our second actually, and I want you to sing a typical song, that you would sing to kids going to school like, yay! Monday morning!

Mitch:
[0:54] hat's exact... I wasn't thinking exactly that, but I was thinking... the first thing I thought was this one song; morning has broken... very sad. And then I thought what's actually more uplifting and upbeat? And I thought what are the songs we sang at school assembly? Did you have an assembly before school started

Isi:
[1:16] No, not every day, with special occasions, yes. I think I only did it in primary school, those assemblies. But do you sing a song, then? I don't think so, no. And your song was quite depressive I have to say.

Mitch:
[1:27] Yeah yeah, but we we didn't sing that song at school assembly, that's why I thought, what did we sing at school assembly? Because it was always a way to get the kids up and running, early in the morning, because I mean early in the morning, we started at nine. (That's holidays.) And so, the only songs can really remember us singing, are... before I get into the one I was thinking of, we had this bizarre one called '20th century highway man', which was an eco-song we'd sing. And it was like about a guy, who's like, working for a big business destroying the Amazon. (Okay.) And it's like; 20th century highway man... he's the 20th century something something man. And then the chorus goes; stand and deliver, he's heading for the Amazon River. He'll steal from the forest, he'll steal from the trees, He gets what he wants and he wants what he see. (Why?) I don't know Okay, but forget that It just came in my head.

Isi:
[2:25] That's what you sang. In the assembly room?

Mitch:
[2:27] Yeah, yeah. (What?!) 20th century highwayman. It's like a Bob Dylan song.

Isi:
[2:33] Wait... is that to educate children about colonialism?

Mitch:
[2:37] I think it's more about eco...

Isi:
[2:39] Not that Britain was in the Amazon.

Mitch:
[2:42] No, the empire never quite reached that part of the world.

Isi:
[2:46] Would have been better to have a song about...

Mitch:
[2:50] About what? Bringing slaves over?

Isi:
[2:52] No. Well, if you want to do the make... The next generation feel the guilt thing, which is good, I think. at least do it properly, with a region that you did colonise. Colonise?

Mitch:
[3:09] Colonise, yeah?

Isi:
[3:10] Colonise. But now... well, anyway.

Mitch:
[3:13] Anyway, you want to wake up the kids. So the song we actually sung, which I remember, and you probably also did it, because I think... it's almost a hymn, but it's not religious or anything. And it was; If I had a hammer, I'd hammer in the morning, I'd hammer in the evening, all over this land. I'd hammer out danger, I'd hammer out a warning, I'd hammer out love between my brothers and my sisters, all over this land... la la la la, la la la la, la la la la, second verse, la la la, If I had a bell, I'd ring it in the morning, (Ding ding ding ding.) I'd ring it in the evening, (Ding ding ding ding.) all over this land, I'd ring out a danger, I'd ring out a warning, I'd ring out love between my brothers and my sisters, all... and I'm just... I'm doing like a globe, I'm doing jazz-hands while sort of doing a. .. (Yeah, Mitch is dancing.) I'm doing a jazz-hands while sort of like drawing the outline of the world, with my hands. I'd hammer out love between my brothers and my sisters, all over this land.

Isi:
[4:22] Okay, third one, come on.

Mitch:
[4:24] I don't know what that instrument is.

Isi:
[4:26] If I had a song.

Mitch:
[4:27] Oh, yeah?

Isi:
[4:28] I'd sing it in the morning, I'd sing it in the evening, all over this land, I don't know... how's that melody? I'd sing out danger.

Mitch:
[4:37] D...

Previous Episode

undefined - 60: Mitch's Monthly Recap

60: Mitch's Monthly Recap

This week, Mitch announces the 7-day free trial of Easy English's new earner Membership, before giving you his monthly recap; he discusses the phrase 'sports washing' as Saudi Arabia get the rights to host FIFA World Cup 2034, analyses Mark Zuckerberg new 'Meta' look, reviews the Netflix produced movie 'I Came By' and re-imagines beloved zoologist Sir David Attenborough as a killer in the new sub-genre of middle class man horror.

Interactive Transcript

Support Easy English and get interactive transcripts and bonus content for all our episodes: easyenglish.fm/membership

Show Notes

Transcript

Intro

Mitch:
[0:24] Hi everybody, welcome to a new episode of the Easy English Podcast. For those of you who are listening, you can actually find this video on YouTube. And for those of you on YouTube, hello! This week I wanted to bring you a new episode of Mitch's Monthly Recap. And I'm going to go over through some of the things that have happened in January and maybe a bit of December. Because we've all gone a bit doolally with "where the hell am I at the moment?" So right now, I'm recording this from the French countryside, which seems like a good idea. It might start raining at some point. This seemed like a good idea to bring all of my stuff into the middle of nowhere behind this like, rustic barn.

Mitch:
[1:11] Before we get on to our monthly recap for the rest of the world events that interest me, We have just announced our new Learner Membership, which allows you to get a seven-day free trial of some of our membership perks. If you go to easyenglish.video/membership then you'll be able to get worksheets, vocabulary lists and transcripts for all of our YouTube episodes, for seven days on a free trial. You'll also get access into our Discord server, so you can introduce yourself and get to meet other members and myself and Isi. If you enjoy your perks after the seven free days, maybe you're thinking of upgrading to a Video Membership, Podcast Membership, or the Conversation Membership to improve your speaking and listening skills. Maybe this is part of your new year's resolution, to improve your English. If so , then choose us and we'll help you along your way

Support Easy English and get interactive transcripts and bonus content for all our episodes: easyenglish.fm/membership

Next Episode

undefined - 62: Meeting Strangers

62: Meeting Strangers

After discussing the phrase 'mad as a hatter', Isi and Mitch discuss the British etiquette of interacting with strangers in private, in public and in pubs and restaurants.

Interactive Transcript

Support Easy English and get interactive transcripts and bonus content for all our episodes: easyenglish.fm/membership

Transcript

Intro

Mitch:
[0:23] Welcome to the Easy English Podcast, episode 62.

Isi:
[0:28] Hello, good morning.

Mitch:
[0:29] Good morning.

Isi:
[0:30] From Germany.

Mitch:
[0:31] From Germany. I'm living the German dream.

Isi:
[0:35] Mitch is just eating a pretzel with butter. Just had coffee and a pretzel, very German. We arrived, already over the weekend. It was the first thing in the supermarket that we got.

Mitch:
[0:46] What is the... this has now become a small topic, but how would you rank German supermarkets?

Isi:
[0:55] What does that mean?

Mitch:
[0:56] From top to bottom, which is considered the most premium, to the most scabby.

Isi:
[1:00] I don't even know all the supermarkets any more.

Mitch:
[1:04] In England?

Isi:
[1:05] I would say the best is, well, the best, the most expensive is, is it Marks and Spencers?

Mitch:
[1:14] Yep, I'd say so, Marks and Spencers.

Isi:
[1:16] You know that you eat, should our listeners hear you eating? Marks and Spencers and then...

Mitch:
[1:23] Morrison's.

Isi:
[1:24] Morrison's. Is that actually, even more premium?

Mitch:
[1:27] No, Morrison's is a more premium supermarket. M&S, which is actually a clothing store, has like, a small sort of, supermarket section.

Isi:
[1:38] Yeah, M&S. Then not Morrison's, next one. And Tesco's?

Mitch:
[1:45] I think Tesco's and Sainsbury's are kind of locked.

Isi:
[1:49] Sainsbury's and Co-op is also somewhere around them, I'd say. Or is Co-op actually better than Sainsbury's?

Mitch:
[1:55] Co-op is actually probably better than Sainsbury's and Tesco's.

Isi:
[1:57] Saino's, as we call it.

Mitch:
[1:59] Saino's.

Isi:
[2:00] And then probably ASDA, which is a discounter.

Mitch:
[2:05] Yeah.

Isi:
[2:05] And then the German ones.

Mitch:
[2:07] Then the German ones.

Isi:
[2:08] Lidl and Aldi. Where Lidl is better in England and Aldi is not... or?

Mitch:
[2:14] I'd say that Lidl could be above ASDA. ASDA also goes by the other name of ASBOs, which stands for Antisocial Behaviour Order.

Isi:
[2:23] Oh, God. I think ASDA has a lot more to offer, at least.

Mitch:
[2:27] It's usually massive, because it's owned by Walmart.

Isi:
[2:29] Yeah, and they have a lot of, if you like to cook from different cuisines, they have like World's Food Isles and all that. Lidl doesn't have that.

Mitch:
[2:37] Okay, so we're saying Marks & Spencer's M&S, Morrison's Co-op, Sainsbury's and Tesco's, then Asda, Lidl, Aldi. Okay, shall we move on to our actual program?

Isi:
[2:53] I would like to, yes, can I start?

Mitch:
[2:56] Please.

Support Easy English and get interactive transcripts and bonus content for all our episodes: easyenglish.fm/membership

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