B2 - Cycling and bicycle vocabulary

11/08/2021 10 min Temporada 1 Episodio 14
B2 - Cycling and bicycle vocabulary

Listen "B2 - Cycling and bicycle vocabulary"

Episode Synopsis

Ask me a question for the podcast?Today, I'm going to talk about language around the bicycle. When you get on your bicycle, you say you push off, you push off and you start pedalling. Isn't it lovely to go out on your bicycle on a sunny day, when it's not too hot, not too cold? At the moment, I'm cycling along the river - along by the side of the river. Now, I think the first thing we could talk about is the all the different parts of the bicycle. Okay, of course it's got two wheels. And the wheels have tyres, TYRES, which are inflated. That gives you a nice, soft ride. So you ride a bicycle, you get on your bicycle, and you ride a bicycle. Sometimes if you have an accident, you can fall off your bicycle.Okay, talking about the tyres. Sometimes if you're unlucky, you can ride over something sharp and get a puncture, and the tyre deflates. And you have to get off your bike and fix your puncture. Or if you don't have a puncture repair kit, then you have to push your bicycle home. So, the wheels have spokes which are those long, thin spaghetti like things which given rigidity to the wheel. And the front wheel is held in the front forks which are two long metal parts which run down from the frame and the front wheel is inserted into the forks. Now the frame of the bicycle itself. There are different types, but often we talk about a gentleman's bike and the lady's bike and the gentleman's bike has a crossbar, which is a horizontal bar running from the top of the forks to the saddle or the seat of the bicycle, where you sit - on the saddle. And a lady's bike traditionally doesn't have that crossbar. So they don't have to, ladies don't have to lift up their leg to get over the saddle when they push off. Now, then, of course, to make the bike go along, you have to pedal and like many English words, it can be the noun, the thing or the verb. So you pedal along - you pedal, you turn the pedals and that drives a chain, which drives the back wheel. And probably you will have gears. And those gears, what they do is to allow you to go faster or slower. Go up hills. When you want to go up the hill, for example, what you'll do is to put it into a low gear, a low gear when you go downhill, or you want to go fast on the straight and you put it into a high gear. Right, the thing that you hold on to, to steer the bicycle is the handlebars. And on the handlebars, there aMy NEW book: "B1 English Vocabulary Builder - 22 Short Stories for Learning the Words and Phrases Students Need to Pass the B1 Exam" is now available! This book gives the learner enough vocabulary to pass any B1 exam (special help for Cambridge exams).To about my book, click here (you can access it from any Amazon platform):https://amzn.to/46AVFe9 Learners studying towards B2 level will be interested in my B1 to B2 reader: The Tudor Conspiracy (includes audio version) https://amzn.to/4gPsj0i For very young learners (from 8-10), I recommend my picture reader book for children learning A1 to A2 English. It comes with a fully dramatised audio version: https://amzn.to/46TCWvv At https://www.practisingenglish.com/ I offer learners of intermediate-level English, free grammar help and exercises and other English learning pages.https://www.practisingenglish.com/Be back soon with another podcast!Mike Bilbrough (Secondary school English teacher and Doctor in English philology)