馃攳
English Slang: fresh from the bakery! - YouTube
Channel: English with Ronnie 路 EnglishLessons4U with engVid
[0]
Hey, guys. Ready to
learn some more slang?
[4]
Do you like bread? Mm-hmm.
We eat a lot of
[8]
bread in Canada, and sometimes when we eat
bread, bread actually means money. I'm going
[17]
to teach you about slang. "Going To The Bakery".
For some strange weason... Weason. Reason,
[24]
we have a lot of slang words about toast.
I guess we love toast.
[31]
I'd like to share with you the magic of toast.
This, ladies and gentlemen, is a lovely piece
[39]
of bread. However, there is a magic machine
called a toaster, and you put the bread into
[47]
the toaster, and doo-doo-doo-doo, it becomes
toast. So, toast and bread are very different.
[56]
Toast is heated. Bread that's delicious, and
bread is just bread. So, let's go on and learn
[63]
some slang, slang, slang
about bread and toast.
[66]
The first one is "bread" means "money". Also,
the word "dough". Now, this pronunciation
[75]
is strange, it looks like "douhug-ha", but
it's actually just "dough". So, you will hear
[83]
in movies: "Hey, you got the
dough?" And you're like:
[87]
"Are they making a pizza? Why are
these bad guys making a pizza?"
[92]
They're not actually making a pizza.
They're talking about money.
[96]
This actual part of the bread that I have...
Bread is sold in a "loaf". I'll teach you
[110]
about loaf after, but actually, this part of
the bread that I have is called the "heel"
[116]
of the bread, h-e-e-l. This means it's the
last piece of the bread or the end of the
[121]
bread. So, the heel of the bread is the last
piece. Usually... Or the first piece. Usually
[128]
people don't eat this one. I don't know. Poor
heel of the bread. "Heel" also has a slang
[135]
meaning, it means a bad person. So, if you
say: "He's a heel", or: "She's a heel", it
[142]
generally means they're bad people.
So, "heel" means a bad person.
[149]
As I told you before, we have the word "loaf".
"Loaf" means the quantity of bread, but English
[158]
slang is so crazy, we've made it dirty for
you. "Loaf", you will hear people say:
[166]
"Pinch a loaf".
[173]
So maybe you're watching TV or watching
a movie, or your Canadian friend says:
[178]
"Hey, guys, I got
to pinch a loaf."
[181]
Pinch, pinch a loaf? Why
are you touching my bread?
[186]
"Pinch a loaf" actually means
go to the toilet and go poo.
[195]
Yay, or take a shit.
[199]
So: "Pinch a loaf" means you
actually have to poo, not
[205]
anything to do with pinching
my piece of bread, here.
[209]
Another word: "roll". "Roll" is like a piece
of bread that's rolled up. It looks like this
[217]
a lot. This, in slang, means "go" or "leave".
So you will hear people say: "Let's roll."
[226]
You'll be like: "Rolling, rollercoaster".
"Roll" just means a piece of bread, but it
[230]
means: "Let's go! Come
on, now, let's go."
[233]
And "bun" is a hair style where all the hair
is on the top of your head or near the back
[241]
of your head. It's really popular for women,
but it's becoming popular for men if they
[249]
have long hair. It looks like a bun, too.
Would you like this bread? It's delicious.
[258]
"Buns" in the plural mean your bum or your rear
end. So, if you're walking down the street
[267]
and someone says: "Hey, nice buns." It means
your rear end, your buttocks, or your bum.
[275]
So it's a compliment. -"Nice buns." -"Why,
thank you." "Bun in the oven" means that the
[285]
person is pregnant, so they have a bun in
the oven. The oven would be the uterus, I
[291]
guess, and the bun would be the baby. Again,
I'm not too sure how these words came about
[298]
in slang, but they did.
[301]
The next one when you're going to the bakery
store... A bun is like a roll. Buns and rolls
[311]
are very quite similar. If you have a hamburger,
it's the bread that you put between the meat.
[318]
So a bun and a roll, almost the same thing,
but a muffin's different. So, "bun", really,
[329]
is the bread of a hamburger, but it
can be a hairstyle or your rear end.
[334]
Now, "bun in the oven".
[336]
A "muffin top". Muffins are like cupcakes or
sweet bread, but they don't have any icing
[343]
on top. So, a "muffin top", this is crazy,
this is funny, is a person who wears their
[351]
pants too tight, and their midsection fat...
So all the fat from the side hangs over their
[360]
pants. So, "muffin top" is something that we
would try to avoid, but it actually looks
[367]
like you have a muffin on the top of your
buns. Do you have muffin top? It's... It's...
[374]
You know what, ladies, gentlemen? It's...
It's not really sexy to have a muffin top.
[381]
Of course, you're going to have some body
fat, but try and tuck it in, maybe buy your
[386]
pants a bit bigger. Get
rid of your muffin top.
[390]
And, oh, Ronnie, got to have a nice one. "Sweetie
pie". "Sweetie pie" generally means that the
[399]
person is nice. Aww. So you can say: "Ronnie's
such a sweetie pie." Th-... What? Ronnie?
[407]
Th-, this one? Yeah, I know.
[410]
And let's move on to the enormous task of the
toast. You probably know this definition
[417]
of "toast", it's very common.
You'll see in movies,
[422]
the people will be at a wedding
in Brazil, and they'll be like:
[425]
"Raise a toast to the
bride and groom",
[427]
and they drink. So,
[431]
"toast" means like saying: "Cheers", and usually
the person has a wee, which means small, speech
[440]
to talk about the people. So at a wedding:
"Raise a toast to the bride and groom", and
[445]
someone usually talks incessantly
about the bride and the groom.
[451]
This is where we get into the lowdown of the
slang. "Toast" as an adjective means it's
[457]
broken. So you might
hear someone say:
[461]
"My car is toast."
[464]
You drive toast? That's insane!
[468]
Oh, it means it's broken.
[471]
"My computer is toast." Or:
[473]
"My marker is toast."
[475]
It basically just means it's broken.
English is weird.
[481]
When we talk about people, people
cannot be broken. You can't say:
[486]
"I am broken."
[488]
You can say you're hurt badly, but we never say
people are broken. Things can be broken, but
[494]
not people. To be hurt badly.
So, someone might say:
[500]
"If you mess with
him, you're toast."
[504]
I'm bread in the toaster all of a sudden?
Again, it means that you are going to get
[510]
hurt very badly. This is
like a warning or a threat.
[514]
"Toasted", this means drunk or stoned. "Stoned"
means you've done some kind of drugs. The
[523]
exact same definition for "toasted" would be
"baked", which has to do with the bakery.
[530]
"Baked" means you're high on drugs, so does
"stoned". So, "baked", "stoned", and "toasted"
[536]
means that you're high on drugs, but "toasted"
can mean drunk or stoned. Mm-hmm. Slang gets
[544]
difficult. So you might
hear someone say:
[547]
"Wah, I was toasted last night."
[550]
That means they're drunk. If you hear your friends
or people you know, or on TV, people say:
[557]
"Let's get... Let's
get toasted, man."
[562]
It probably means they're
smoking some drugs.
[566]
There's a DJ phenomenal called "toasting".
If you're familiar with Dancehall or Reggae
[573]
music, or one my favorite 1960's Jamaican Ska
music, there's something called "toasting",
[580]
and this is basically lyrical chanting over
riddim. Yeah, man, bring the riddim one time,
[587]
slowly. "Riddim" basically means music, it's
like a Jamaican word for music. And we would
[593]
know it as DJing. So, maybe you go to the
club and a song is playing, and the guy or
[600]
the girl on the mic, the
microphone is yapping incessantly:
[603]
"Coming up next, blah, blah, yap, yap, yap. Yeah, yeah,
guys! Welcome to the club. We're having a great time."
[609]
This, but if you actually say words and almost sing
is called toasting. There's famous... A really
[615]
famous Ska band called "The Toasters",
that's how they get their name.
[621]
"Toast" is also apparently New York City slang
for a gun. Now, reaching out there, ladies
[630]
and gentlemen, do you know Fitty Cent? Also
50 Cent. He's a rap... A rap... Rap guy, rap
[638]
star, rapper. Rap, rap, rapper. And from New
York City. In his song "Wanksta", he talks
[645]
about never leaving home without toast. He's
not eating bread. He doesn't like bread. It
[653]
actually means a gun. That's
something I had to look up.
[657]
If you have questions
about delicious toast,
[661]
please go and ask a baker.
[664]
Maybe they can help you.
Or ask me.
[666]
Catch you later.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage