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  • Language Notes

  • Topic 12: Aging

  • The funny thing about making videos

  • is that as the years go by

  • you get to see me age on camera.

  • I'd like to pretend that I'm not getting older,

  • but the truth is that we're all aging.

  • In this video we're going to talk about

  • some of the more visible signs of aging.

  • And I hope that after this,

  • you will continue to be kind to me

  • and not tell me how much I'm getting older,

  • but how young I still look.

  • Let's begin by making sure

  • you know how to use the word "age."

  • You first learn this word as a noun,

  • as in..."At what age do most children learn to talk?"

  • or..."What is the voting age in the U.S.?"

  • "Age" can also function as a verb.

  • This verb can be intransitive,

  • meaning it takes no object.

  • An example:

  • "It seems like you haven't aged at all!"

  • "Age" as a verb can also be transitive;

  • it can take an object.

  • An experience can age someone.

  • For example,

  • war ages people like no other experience.

  • "Age" as a verb is less common.

  • It can sound more formal and more bookish.

  • If I say,

  • "As we age, we grow wiser."

  • It sounds more formal compared to:

  • As we grow older, we become wiser."

  • If we add -ING to the word "age,"

  • we form a gerund.

  • Gerunds behave as nouns.

  • In this video,

  • we're going to talk about the signs of aging.

  • There are many different signs of aging.

  • Some are more noticeable than others.

  • I'll focus on these,

  • the more visible signs of getting older.

  • The first: wrinkles.

  • "Wrinkles" are lines in the skin.

  • Not all wrinkles are bad to have.

  • In fact, we can talk about laugh lines.

  • Laugh lines are wrinkles that show someone

  • has been happy. Someone has been smiling a lot in life.

  • You see these wrinkles around the eyes, around the mouth (mostly the mouth).

  • But some wrinkles...many women try to hide.

  • There are wrinkles right around the eyes

  • called "crow's feet."

  • They form like a little V around the eyes,

  • especially when we smile.

  • These crow's feet...we like to hide with make-up.

  • Laugh lines, crow's feet...

  • sagging skin.

  • As you grow older,

  • your skin is less firm,

  • and it begins to drop.

  • We say it "sags."

  • Sagging skin? - Not a very nice sign of aging.

  • People can get bags under the eyes,

  • and the skin can sag on the neck.

  • And people can have what's called a "turkey neck."

  • Crow's feet, turkey neck...

  • You see that some of our terms refer to animals.

  • All right.

  • Another sign -- age spots.

  • Oh, I don't like these.

  • Age spots are dark spots that form

  • on the face or the hands, arms, or legs.

  • Age spots.

  • Some people as they grow older are fortunate

  • to have all of their hair.

  • But many of us tend to lose our hair.

  • It grows thin.

  • So a sign of aging is hair loss.

  • Men in particular experience a receding hair line.

  • The hair lines moves back.

  • A receding hair line.

  • And eventually a man can go bald.

  • Women, too, but usually men are the ones

  • who go bald.

  • All people as they age eventually get gray hair.

  • I've had some unfortunately.

  • Soon I'll have to start dying my hair to hide all the gray.

  • But having gray hair or going gray, turning gray

  • is a sign of aging.

  • I may not like to admit it,

  • but I'm certainly not a young adult anymore.

  • I'm headed towards middle age.

  • In fact, some people might say

  • I'm already there.

  • "Middle age" generally refers to late 40s to early 60s.

  • I would prefer that you not talk about middle age to me.

  • You could say, as my cousins do,

  • "Jennifer, you're getting up there."

  • I'm not old, but I'm no spring chicken.

  • "No spring chicken" is a funny expression we have

  • to say "not young anymore."

  • Well, he's not an old man,

  • but he's no spring chicken."

  • No spring chicken.

  • When someone is quite old,

  • we say they're "over the hill."

  • But be careful with this expression.

  • It could be used in joking,

  • but if you're not joking, it sounds rude.

  • When you say someone is over the hill,

  • like, they're in their final years

  • and pretty much their life is done.

  • So it would be more respectful

  • to use another expression.

  • You could say that a man or a woman

  • is getting on in years.

  • Also, be careful with the word "old."

  • It could sound not as respectful

  • as you need to be.

  • You can talk about an old man or old woman,

  • but it would be much more respectful

  • to talk about an elderly man or an elderly woman.

  • Let's end on a positive note.

  • I'll teach you a few compliments

  • that you can pay to others.

  • You can tell a woman

  • that she ages like a fine wine.

  • And you can tell a friend

  • that you haven't seen in long time,

  • "You haven't changed a bit."

  • "You haven't aged at all!"

  • And to your special loved one,

  • who is getting up there,

  • tell him or tell her,

  • "You still look like you're 30."

  • On that we'll end.

  • Thanks for watching.

  • Happy studies!

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エイジング - 英会話ノート12 - 語彙力を身につける。新しいイディオム (Aging - English Language Notes 12 - Learn vocabulary. New idioms!)

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    pao2ge に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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