It's Not Worth a Hill of Beans!

It's Not Worth a Hill of Beans! 歌词

歌曲 It's Not Worth a Hill of Beans!
歌手 英语听力
专辑 VOA慢速英语:词汇典故
下载 Image LRC TXT
[00:10.75] Now, the VOA Special English program,
[00:14.65] WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.
[00:17.11] In the early days of human history,
[00:20.62] people survived by hunting wild animals,
[00:24.17] or gathering wild grains and plants for food.
[00:28.83] Then, some people learned to grow crops
[00:33.58] and raise animals for food.
[00:36.73] They were the first farmers.
[00:39.93] Since the sixteenth century,
[00:42.79] the word farm has meant agricultural land.
[00:47.78] But a much older meaning
[00:50.28] of the word farm is linked to economics.
[00:54.33] The word farm comes from the Latin word, firma,
[00:59.48] which means an unchanging payment.
[01:02.93] Experts say the earliest meaning of the English word farm
[01:08.98] was a yearly payment made as a tax or rent.
[01:15.12] Farmers in early England
[01:18.49] did not own their land.
[01:21.05] They paid every year to use agricultural lands.
[01:26.10] In England,
[01:27.74] farmers used hawthorn trees along the edges of property.
[01:33.65] They called this row of hawthorns a hedge.
[01:38.50] Hedging fields was how careful farmers marked and protected them.
[01:45.86] Soon, people began to use the word hedging to describe steps
[01:52.82] that could be taken to protect against financial loss.
[01:57.86] Hedging is common among gamblers who make large bets.
[02:04.31] A gambler bets a lot of money on one team.
[02:08.52] But, to be on the safe side,
[02:12.03] he also places a smaller bet on the other team,
[02:17.23] to reduce a possible loss.
[02:19.97] You might say that someone is hedging his bet
[02:24.18] when he invests in several different kinds of businesses.
[02:29.77] One business may fail, but likely not all.
[02:35.38] Farmers know that it is necessary to make hay while the sun shines.
[02:42.68] Hay has to be cut and gathered when it is dry.
[02:47.58] So a wise farmer never postpones gathering his hay
[02:53.57] when the sun is shining. Rain may soon appear.
[02:58.97] A wise person copies the farmer.
[03:02.67] He works when conditions are right.
[03:06.07] A new mother, for example,
[03:09.66] quickly learns to try to sleep when her baby is quiet,
[03:15.22] even in the middle of the day.
[03:18.06] If the mother delays, she may lose her chance to sleep.
[03:23.08] So, the mother learns to make hay while the sun shines.
[03:29.33] Beans are a popular farm crop.
[03:33.88] But beans are used to describe something of
[03:37.79] very little value in the expression,
[03:41.69] not worth a hill of beans.
[03:44.85] The expression is often used today.
[03:48.04] You could say, for example,
[03:51.00] that a bad idea is not worth a hill of beans.
[03:56.30] Language expert Charles Earle Funk said
[04:01.76] the expression was first used almost seven hundred years ago.
[04:07.41] He said Robert of Gloucester described a message
[04:12.07] from the King of Germany to King John of England
[04:16.97] as altogether not worth a bean.
[04:22.84] (MUSIC)
[04:32.51] This VOA Special English program, WORDS AND THEIR STORIES,
[04:41.90] was written by Marilyn Rice Christiano.
[04:44.90] Maurice Joyce was the narrator.
[04:47.75] I'm Shirley Griffith.
It's Not Worth a Hill of Beans! 歌词
YouTube搜索结果 (转至YouTube)