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  • Could apples, berries and cacao improve our memory as we get older?

  • This is News Review from BBC Learning English. I'm Neil.

  • And I'm Beth.

  • Make sure you watch to the end to learn vocabulary to talk about this story.

  • Don't forget to subscribe to our channel, 'like' this video

  •   and try the quiz on our website. Now, the story.

  • What you eat could improve your memory as you age.

  • That's according to new research in the US that found people

  • with a diet rich in flavanols may be less likely to lose their memory.

  • The substance is found in tea,

  • berries, apples and cacao -

  • the seed that chocolate is made from. But while

  • some scientists think eating more dark chocolate could help, others say

  • more research is needed.

  • You have been looking at the headlines, Beth, whats the vocabulary?

  • We have 'keep something at bay', 'stave off' and 'drive'.

  • This is News Review from BBC Learning English.

  • Let's look at our first headline. This is from the Mail Online...

  • So, this headline is suggesting that eating dark chocolate can help

  • prevent you from losing your memory as you get older. The expression

  • we are looking at is 'keep something at bay'.

  • It's quite a strange sounding expression. What does it mean?

  • Well, quite simply, it means

  • 'to stop something bad or dangerous,

  • harmful, from happening to you.

  • So, in this case, the harmful thing is memory loss.

  • We want to prevent memory loss,

  • so we want to keep it at bay.

  • Yes, and this expression, does have a wider use.

  • It's not only about memory loss.

  • No, it's not. We can use it for lots of harmful things,

  • but it is often related to health.

  • So, for example, washing your hands can keep infections at bay

  • or exercising can keep heart disease at bay.

  • Yes and take note, we can also use the word 'hold'

  • instead of 'keep'. 'Hold something at bay'.

  • It means exactly the same thing.

  • Let's look at that again.

  • Let's look at our next headline.

  • This is from The Guardian.

  • Again, this headline is about preventing something bad

  • from happening to us, in this case, memory loss.

  • The expression we're going to look at is 'stave off'. Now, that word 'stave' -

  • that's an old fashioned-sounding word for a long stick, isn't it?

  • It is, yeah, and it might help you to think

  • about that long stick to understand this expression.

  • So, Neil, imagine something is physically threatening you.

  • Maybe a pack of wild dogs and you have a long stick.

  • What are you going to do with it?

  • Well, if a pack of wild dogs was attacking me,

  • I would use the long stick to protect myself.

  • Maybe I could wave it and the dogs would go away.

  • That's a strong mental image.

  • It might help you to remember the meaning of this phrasal verb,

  • but, actually, we don't usually use stave off in a literal sense any more.

  • We don't, but it does have the same meaning.

  • It just means to prevent something bad from happening.

  • Just like our first expression, 'keep something at bay' and again,

  • this is something we often use with health.

  • Some people say that drinking orange juice can stave off a cold,

  • but we can also use it to mean prevent other general negative things.

  • Yes. And one more interesting thing to note 'stave off'

  • is a phrasal verb and it's the kind of phrasal verb that

  • you can split in the middle.

  • So, you could say 'orange juice staves off colds'

  • or you can say 'orange juice staves colds off'. Let's look at that again.

  • Let's look at our next headline.

  • This is from The Independent...

  • So, this headline is looking at the same story,

  • but from the opposite angle. It's saying that a diet low in flavanols,

  • now, that's that substance that you find in apples, berries,

  • tea and cacao, a diet low in that, could cause memory loss and the word

  • we're looking at is 'drive' - a familiar word used differently here.

  • Yes, but we're not talking about cars here.

  • So, drive actually has a wider meaning than the one

  • we all know connected to cars

  • and driving. It can also mean 'to force something in a certain direction'.

  • Yes, so when the headline says that a diet, low in flavanols,

  • drives memory loss,

  • it means that that diet pushes in the direction of memory loss.

  • In the same way,

  • when you drive a car,

  • actually, what you're doing is just forcing it to go in a certain direction.

  • OK, let's look at that again.

  • We've had 'keep something at bay' -

  • prevent something bad affecting you.

  • 'Stave off' -

  • also, prevents something bad affecting you.

  • And 'drive' - force in a certain direction.

  • Did you know that exercise can also help our brains?

  • To learn more, watch this episode of News Review.

  • Don't forget to click here so that you can subscribe and never miss another video.

  • Thanks for joining us.

  • Bye.

  • Bye.

Could apples, berries and cacao improve our memory as we get older?

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Can diet improve memory?: BBC News Review

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    Bright に公開 2023 年 06 月 01 日
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