Thursday, 28 August 2014

The Scottish independence debate is heating up

I wrote a post a few weeks ago about the possibility of Scotland becoming an independent country.  On 18th September, the people of Scotland will vote Yes or No to this question: Should Scotland be an independent country?  Asking the country’s voters to decide a yes or no question is called a referendum.  The side which wants independence for Scotland is called the Yes Campaign.  The side which wants to stay with the U.K. is called the Better together Campaign.  With only about three weeks until the referendum, the debate is heating up... 

This week the politicians who head the opposing camps held a live tv debate.  The Yes Campaign is headed by Alex Salmond.  The Better Together Campaign is headed by Alistair Darling.

What do you imagine the issues they talked about were?  If you had to decide whether your area would break away from a larger country or not, what questions would you have?

Well, one of the main debating points was currency.  Scotland and the rest of the U.K. use the pound (Pounds Sterling).  The Better Together Campaign claims that Scotland may not be able to use the pound after independence.  The Yes Campaign has always claimed that nobody could stop Scotland from using the pound. 
 
This has been a successful strategy for the Better Together Campaign until now.  But during the debate, Mr. Darling seemed to admit that nobody could stop Scotland from using the pound as its currency.

Mr. Salmond attacked Mr. Darling on welfare.  The U.K. government recently cut welfare benefits for disabled people.  The current U.K. government is led by the Conservative Party.  That party, which is still associated with Margaret Thatcher, is generally very unpopular in Scotland.  Mr. Salmond suggested that if Scotland does not become independent, we may have to suffer for many years.  Because Scotland’s population is much smaller than England’s, even if a U.K. party is very unpopular in Scotland, Scottish voters find it difficult to change the government.

The two politicians also argued over how much oil money Scotland could receive and whether an independent Scotland could really get rid of the U.K.’s nuclear weapons, which are based in Scotland.
According to the BBC report, Mr. Salmond appeared confident and well-prepared.  Mr. Darling appeared “nervous and edgy”.  Opinion polls showed that 71% of people thought that Mr. Salmond won the debate.  The Yes Campaign has been getting closer to the Better Together Campaign in opinion polls recently.  This tv debate may help this trend to continue.



Vocabulary:
to head something  - To lead something or to be a leader of something
opposing camps – Two sides or groups working against each other
to admit something – To accept that something is true, even though accepting it may be bad for you.
welfare – Financial help from the government to weak citizens, for example the poor or unemployed or disabled.
to be associated with something or someone – To be connected to something or someone in people’s minds.
to be edgy – To be uncomfortable or to be frightened and lack confidence.
an opinion poll – Before an election or vote, many people are asked how they will vote.  The results are added up to make a prediction of the election result.  That is an opinion poll.

 

Thursday, 21 August 2014

Gie’s a brek!

Can you identify the language used in the title of this article? 

Anyone from my hometown will recognise it immediately, but many native speakers of English would struggle to understand what the sentence means or even to identify it as a variant of English.

It is Scottish English, more specifically from Glasgow or the surrounding area.  “Gie’s a brek”, translated into standard English means, “Give me a break”.

My Japanese wife went to Glasgow to study English and when she got there, she wondered why so many people were speaking German.  It’s not German.  We just have a strong accent and a strong local identity, with many idioms or expressions which are not used in the rest of the English speaking world.

I guess I had a similar experience.  When I first came to Japan I lived in Osaka.  I wondered why I couldn’t find many of the expressions and words I heard around me in my Japanese textbook.  “Maido, Okini!” 

Perhaps it would not be useful for most of my students to closely study Glaswegian English unless they intend to go to Glasgow.  But it might be fun anyway to try to guess the meanings of some phrases.  So I will write some below.  See if you can guess any correctly and let me know how you get on:
 

Gonnae no dae that!
Will you please not do that!
 
Ah’m aff tae buy a bunnet.
I’m off to buy a hat.
 
Where’s the burds?
Where are the women/chicks?
 
Ah cannae dae it.
I can’t do it.

Y’aw right, hen?  How’s it gaw’n?
Are you all right, dear?  How are you?

He’s a Weejie.
He’s a Glaswegian.

 

Thursday, 14 August 2014

Daydreaming about a desert island


As I am writing this, I am on holiday.  No work, no students.  I should be lying by the swimming pool with a pina colada in hand.  But instead here I am sitting in front of my laptop writing my blog.  That’s dedication for you.

But since I am not supposed to be working, I will choose a topic which is fun to write about.  I hope you will indulge me. 

There is a radio show in Britain which has been running on the BBC since 1942 called “Desert Island Discs”.  A desert island is a tropical island which is uninhabited.  On this show, an interviewer talks to a famous person and they imagine that they will be sent to live on this desert island alone. 

The famous person then gets to pick eight songs to take with them, as well as one book of their choice and one luxury item.  The luxury item cannot be anything useful in helping them escape or contact the outside world.  It is just something that is fun and can be used to pass the time.  Guests often pick a piano or a comfortable bed, for example. 

I can’t remember who said it but I heard someone say that Americans often fantasise about winning an Oscar.  They imagine that they were famous and are giving a speech thanking everyone for winning the award.  In Britain people fantasise about being on Desert Island Discs. 

So, I am going to have a go too.  I don’t want to bore you with a long list of songs, so I will pick just four; two Western and two Japanese.  When I get back to work next week, I would be interested to hear my students’ selections too.
 
Western Songs:
Paul McCartney – Rinse the raindrops
George Gerschwin – Rhapsody in blue
 
Japanese songs:
Imawano Kiyoshiro – Morning call wo yoroshiku
R.C. Succession – ii koto bakari ha arya shine
 
Book:
Henri Charriere – Papillon
 
Luxury item:
A lifetime’s supply of sho-chu with ice.
 
Now, where did I put that pina colada?
 
 
Vocabulary:
Dedication – Commitment; effort put in to do something you think is important.
To indulge someone – To allow someone to continue without complaining even though they are perhaps doing something wrong.  For example, my daughter shouldn’t eat so many sweets but I indulged her because it was her birthday.
Uninhabited – Nobody lives there.
To fantasise – To imagine that something is true.  For example, many people fantasise about winning the lottery and imagine spending the money they would win.
An Oscar – An Academy Award, an award given to actors and actresses and others connected to successful films.
 
 
 

Thursday, 7 August 2014

Simple food for summer


Today (Wednesday 6th August) was ridiculously hot in Tokyo.  This is not weather for humans.  This is weather for lizards. 

One of my students told me that before she came to my flat in Nerima to take an English lesson, she found a woman in the train station toilets who had collapsed because of heat exhaustion.  She was waiting to be taken away by ambulance.  If you are in Japan over the summer, take care and remember to take lots of fluid. 

A few weeks ago I promised to write down a recipe.  I am not sure that the type of food I cook will be popular amongst many of my students.  It is very simple.  I decided to stop eating meat at home, although I still cook fish.  I don’t add any salt, sake or soy sauce when cooking, although I often use lemon juice, yuzu or salsa dressing to flavour food. 

But maybe such simple food is particularly suited to summer.  If it is very hot it is nice to eat fresh-tasting dishes, which are not thick or covered in sauce. 

So I will give a brief recipe for a very simple dish below, and hope that at least one person tries it and can tell me how they enjoyed it.  This will serve two people: 

Buy two packs of natto (fermented soy beans).  Buy one cucumber, a pack of mizuma (a leafy vegetable; lettuce would also be okay).  Buy a carrot, some baby tomatoes, some salsa sauce (this is a Mexican sauce which is red and is a little spicy; you can find it in some Japanese supermarkets).  Buy a bag of Doritos (I think that is a brand name but basically it is a kind of Mexican snack made from corn).  Cook some white rice as well. 

First, let’s make the salad.  After washing the vegetables, cut the mizuna into small pieces and put it in a bowl.  Then grate one carrot and add this to the bowl.  I recommend using organic carrots.  I can’t taste the difference between some organic vegetables and cheap supermarket ones but I can really taste the difference with carrots. 

Anyway, next cut the baby tomatoes into quarters and add them to the salad.  Then add in the salsa sauce.  Add as much as you like.  I usually add about five tablespoons of salsa. 

Now let’s make the curry.  This is very different from a typical Japanese curry.  This will be a soup curry which we will pour on top of the rice and natto, a little bit like ocha-zuke.  It’s also really, really easy. The salad will be a little spicy so I don’t use much curry rue.  Put two pieces of the rue into a pot.  Now boil the kettle and pour in some hot water.  I don’t use a measuring cup but I guess about three cups of hot water will be enough.  Next, chop the cucumber into small cubes and add this to the curry.  Mix the rue until it has melted. 

Put some cooked rice into two bowls and add one pack of natto to the top of each.  Now pour the soup curry on top of each.  Eat it with a spoon. 

Finally, add the Doritos to the salad.  You have to add it at the end because otherwise it will become soggy.  Divide it into two and it is ready to eat.

 Enjoy!

 
Vocabulary:
Ridiculously hot – Crazily hot.
A lizard – A kind of animal.  It has cold blood.
Heat exhaustion – If you stay in a hot place for a long time and become ill, then you are probably suffering from heat exhaustion.
Fluid – Liquid.  Water is a fluid.
To be suited to something – To match something; to go well with something.
Organic – If something is organic then it is grown without using many chemicals.  It is grown using a more natural method.
Typical – Ordinary or usual.
To melt – To become a liquid.  If ice becomes hot, then it melts into water.
Soggy – If something hard becomes soft when it is wet, then we can say it is soggy.