Weather Report
JENNIFER:
It’s freezing outside! What happened to the
weather report? I thought this cold front was supposed
to pass.
GABRIELA:
Yeah, I thought so too. That’s what I read
online this morning.
JENNIFER:
I guess the wind chill is really driving
down the temperature.
GABRIELA:
Can we go inside? I feel like my toes are
starting to go numb.
LANGUAGE NOTES
•
A “cold front” means a large mass of cold air. It can
be plural: There were multiple cold fronts this January.
•
Here “supposed to” refers to something that is
intended or expected to happen: I
thought it was supposed to rain today. This phrase can be
used for many situations: I thought the train was
supposed to arrive at 9:00 a.m. sharp.
•
Yeah / Yup / Uh huh are informal conversational
cues used by native speakers in
conversation. Each of these responses could be used
here for “yes.” Gabriela affirms what Jennifer is saying.
The most polite way to affirm a response is to say “yes.”
•
Listen for the emphasis on “That’s what I read
online this morning.” This useful
phrase can be used with other verbs to convey
information: That’s what I heard on the radio. / That’s
what I saw on TV. / That’s what I read online.
•
Chill / freezing / cold: These words describe cold
weather. I feel the wind chill. / I feel the chill. / I am
freezing. / I am cold.
•
Wind chill is the effect of the wind making the
temperature feel colder on a person’s
skin. This is an uncountable noun. The temperature is 4
degrees, but with the wind chill it feels like -8. These
phrases are used in weather reports as well.
•
The phrase “driving down” means “forcing to be
lower” and can be used in many situations. An oversupply
of new houses is driving down sales prices in the area.
Introductions and small talk
1-9