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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
婚礼上新婚夫妇会受到大大小小的红包,然而他们也要考虑如何回馈宾客,这也是笔不小的开支,如今的婚礼费用都是多少呢?
Yvonne: Welcome to 6 Minute English! I’m Yvonne Archer1 – and Kate, thanks for joining
me today.
Kate: You’re welcome, Yvonne!
Yvonne: Now, as the wedding season comes to an end, many newly-weds – people who just
got married - will be thinking about money. So, as well as the money they received
as gifts, they’ll be thinking about how to pay back all the money they probably
borrowed. Kate, how much money do you think most people spend on a wedding?
Kate: Umm – well I've heard that it's even up to about £20,000.
Yvonne: Well, the average cost has gone up so a wedding this year is actually over £21, 000
Kate: Wow – that's just so much money!
Yvonne: But weddings aren’t only expensive for the bride and groom2 – the man and woman
who get married; their guests often have to spend quite a lot too. And that leads us
to today's question. Kate, on average, how much money does a guest spend to go
to a friend’s wedding? Is it…
a: £120
b: £240 or
c: £380
Kate: Oh, that's a really good question because the weddings that I've been to, I've
always ended up spending loads of money. So I'm going to go for b) £380.
6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010
Page 2 of 4
Yvonne: Okay, we'll find out whether you're right later on.
So, apart from a gift, something to wear, travelling to the wedding and perhaps
accommodation – somewhere to stay – wedding guests often spend money on ‘a
stag night’ or ‘a hen night’. But what are they? Kate, can you explain them for us,
please?
Kate: Well, ‘a stag night’ is an opportunity for the man and his male friends to have a
party for the last time before he gets married. The woman has ‘a hen party’ with
all her female4 friends for the same reason. And sometimes at a stag night or at a
hen night, people do things that they probably won’t do once they’re married.
Yvonne: Yes - and we’ll leave it there, shall we?! Now those events are sometimes called ‘a
stag do’ and ‘a hen do’, because the party often lasts for more than one evening.
Our colleague Emily is getting married soon and she told me that for her hen party,
she’s simply going out for a nice meal. But, that’s not typical – it’s not what
people usually do - as Emily explains. As we hear from her, who does she say is
‘the hen’, and what does the hen usually wear?
Emily
It usually involves a lot of drinking. The hen, i.e. the bride, will usually wear like a pretend veil5
and maybe some L plates, like on a car – you know, she's not quite married yet. And they
sometimes wear silly outfits7 and things but generally, they go to have a good time. They might go
to a club or to a restaurant.
Yvonne: So, a typical hen do might take place in a club – a night club – or in a restaurant,
and it ‘usually involves a lot of drinking’ - so the women usually drink a lot of
alcohol8. But, who is ‘the hen’ and what does she wear at her hen do? Kate?
Kate: Well, ‘the hen’ is the bride – or the bride-to-be, so the woman who’s getting
married. And she usually wears ‘a pretend veil’ – as Emily put it. That’s a bride’s
veil which isn’t real. It’s usually much smaller and shorter than the veil that brides
wear on their wedding day.
6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010
Page 3 of 4
Yvonne: And what about the ‘L’ plates? What’s that about?
Kate: Oh no – well those are large, red ‘L’s- or the letter ‘L’ - or ‘L’ plates – which are
put on a car to show that the person is still only learning3 to drive – so it's not legal
for them to drive yet. So, the hen’s friends make her wear ‘L’ plates to show that
she's not legally married yet.
Yvonne: Emily also said the hen sometimes wears a silly outfit6 – clothes that make people
smile or laugh. And of course, the stag – the man who’s getting married – might
also have to wear a silly outfit for his stag do. But let’s hear from Ben who got
married in 2004, but he hasn't forgotten his stag do. It lasted a whole weekend but
what did he choose to do?
Ben
The culture at the moment seems to be getting on a plane and going to Eastern Europe and doing
lots of drinking. But I didn't really fancy9 that; I wanted to do something outdoors and get very wet
and cold and sleep in a barn10 with no heating11 - because that's the sort of thing that sounds like fun
to me!
Yvonne: Ben thinks that ‘the culture at the moment’ – the thing that lots of men do - is to
fly to Eastern Europe for a stag weekend and drink lots of alcohol. But as Ben says,
he didn’t ‘fancy’ that – he didn’t want to do that. So Kate, what did Ben do for his
stag do?
Kate: Well, he wanted to do something outdoors – something that didn’t take place
inside a building. So Ben and his friends got very cold and wet - and then they
slept in 'a barn' without any heating –and that's a building that's made for animals
to sleep in.
Yvonne: But for Ben, that sounded like fun! Well, it’s time now for the answer to today’s
question. Kate, I asked: on average, how much money does a guest spend to go to
a friend’s wedding?
Kate: And I said it was b) - £240.
6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010
Page 4 of 4
Yvonne: It's more – it's actually £380.
Kate: Wow – that's so much money. Gosh!
Yvonne: Hmm – it is. Well that's all for today’s 6 Minute English – but do join us again
soon.
1 archer | |
n.射手,弓箭手 | |
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2 groom | |
vt.给(马、狗等)梳毛,照料,使...整洁 | |
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3 learning | |
n.学问,学识,学习;动词learn的现在分词 | |
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4 female | |
adj.雌的,女(性)的;n.雌性的动物,女子 | |
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5 veil | |
n.面纱,掩饰物,修女;vt.给...戴面纱或面罩;vi.带面纱或面罩 | |
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6 outfit | |
n.(为特殊用途的)全套装备,全套服装 | |
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7 outfits | |
n.全套装备( outfit的名词复数 );一套服装;集体;组织v.装备,配置设备,供给服装( outfit的第三人称单数 ) | |
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8 alcohol | |
n.酒精,乙醇;含酒精的饮料 | |
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9 fancy | |
n.想像力,幻想;喜好,爱;adj.想像的,时髦的,华丽装饰的,奢侈的;技巧的;vt.想象,自认为,喜好 | |
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10 barn | |
n.谷仓,饲料仓,牲口棚 | |
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11 heating | |
n.加热,供暖,暖气装置;adj.加热的,供暖的 | |
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