GETTING TO THE END ZONE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 53
About This Presentation
Title:

GETTING TO THE END ZONE

Description:

Familiar Sports. BY A NOSE ... 'We thought that it would be an extreme survey this month with people throwing in ... Unfamiliar Sports. BOTTOM OF THE NINTH ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:79
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 54
Provided by: pld9
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: GETTING TO THE END ZONE


1
GETTING TO THE END ZONE
  • Translation of Sports Terminology
  • Ulisses Wehby de Carvalho
  • New York City, October 29th, 2009

2
Agenda
  • Test
  • Why is it important?
  • How does that affect me?
  • Terminology from familiar sports
  • Terminology from unfamiliar sports
  • Q A

3
Test
  • Sports can help us better understand
  • Geography
  • History
  • Economy
  • Culture

4
Test
  • Denver Dolphins
  • Boston 49ers
  • New York Supersonics
  • Philadelphia Mavericks
  • Minnesota Heat
  • Orlando Steelers
  • Phoenix 76ers
  • Los Angeles Brewers
  • Miami Dolphins
  • San Francisco 49ers
  • Seattle Supersonics
  • Dallas Mavericks
  • Miami Heat
  • Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Philadelphia 76ers
  • Milwaukee Brewers

5
Why is it important?
  • Sports terminology is used everywhere
  • In English
  • Used more often
  • Not limited to informal situations
  • Unfamiliar sports

6
How does that affect me?
  • Improve
  • Listening skills
  • Vocabulary
  • Gain confidence
  • Learn the language
  • Have fun!

7
Familiar Sports
  • BY A NOSE
  • The race this year is all over, everyone agrees
    on the morning after Iowa. Bush and Gore have the
    nominations. (My guess is Gore by a nose in
    November.) (Time)
  • Horse racing
  • Politics

8
Familiar Sports
  • RAISE THE BAR
  • When owner Jeff Gramm opened Cayo Espanto in
    1999, he raised the bar on luxury accommodations
    in Belize, with a staff-to-guest ratio of
    one-to-one and amenities once available only on
    islands like St. Barts. (New York Times)
  • Track Field
  • Tourism

9
Familiar Sports
  • THROW IN THE TOWEL
  • We thought that it would be an extreme survey
    this month with people throwing in the towel, but
    it hasnt happened, said David Bowers Merrills
    chief global investment strategist. There is no
    real sign of capitulation. (Financial Times)
  • Boxing
  • Finance

10
Familiar Sports
  • SAVED BY THE BELL
  • JUMP THE GUN
  • BEHIND THE EIGHT BALL
  • NECK AND NECK
  • SMOOTH SAILING
  • LOW BLOW
  • JOCKEY FOR POSITION
  • DIVE (RIGHT) IN

11
Familiar X Unfamiliar Sports
  • Familiar
  • Boxing
  • Horse racing
  • Track Field
  • Sailing
  • Basketball
  • Tennis
  • Pool
  • Soccer
  • Unfamiliar
  • Baseball
  • Football
  • Golf

12
Unfamiliar Sports
  • BOTTOM OF THE NINTH
  • Its the bottom of the ninth inning, and we have
    two outs and two strikes, says Oliver Ryder, a
    geneticist. And scientists are looking for a home
    run as they try to save the northern white rhinos
    from extinction. About 40 remain in the world.
    (CNN)
  • Baseball
  • Science

13
Unfamiliar Sports
  • BATTING A THOUSAND
  • You guys are batting a thousand, a voice from
    Mission Control said, congratulating them on
    their journey. (CNN)
  • Baseball
  • Space Technology

14
Unfamiliar Sports
  • HUDDLE
  • GOP Senate leaders see the Domenici offer on
    Medicare as a possible solution. They huddle in
    Doles office in the Capitol. (USA Today)
  • Football
  • Politics

15
Baseball
  • Whoever wants to know the heart and mind of
    America had better learn baseball, the rules and
    realities of the game.
  • Jacques Barzun (b. 1907), U.S. scholar. Quoted
    in Michael Novak, The Joy of Sports, pt. 1
    (1976).

16
The field
17
Hardball or Softball?
  • PLAY HARDBALL
  • But the government agency isnt planning to play
    hardball. Authority officials, rather, say they
    recognize that Starwoods difficulty in getting
    construction financing isnt the companys fault.
    (The Wall Street Journal)
  • Finance

18
The playing field
  • TAKE A RAIN CHECK
  • So while Republican Mayor Rudy Giuliani takes
    pride in leading the nations oldest and largest
    St. Patricks Day parade, most Democrats take a
    rain check. (CBS News)
  • Politics

19
The playing field
  • COVER ALL THE BASES
  • She can do this by buying individual stocks, but
    frankly, with just 25,000 to invest, I think
    shes much better off in mutual funds. She can
    easily put together a portfolio of four to six
    funds that will cover all the bases. (CNN)
  • Finance

20
The playing field
  • BALLPARK FIGURE
  • Democrats think the total may be 200 billion.
    Id say 150 billion is a good ballpark figure,
    said economist Laurence Meyer, who has advised
    CBO. Other experts agree. (USA Today)
  • Politics

21
The playing field
  • IN THE BALLPARK
  • It wont be higher, said Craig Shniderman,
    executive director of Food Friends, the other
    charity involved in the AIDS ride. Its in the
    ballpark, but it has the potential to be somewhat
    lower. (The Washington Post)
  • Business

22
The game
  • GET THE BALL ROLLING
  • The Bank of East Asia, Hong Kongs third largest,
    got the ball rolling in late July. The first bank
    in the city to announce its results for the first
    half of the year, BEA registered a robust 39
    rise in net profits to 120.5 million.
    (Asiaweek.com)
  • Finance

23
The batter
  • ONES TURN AT BAT
  • The Republicans have found a recipe for success,
    only when they get their turn at bat what should
    they expect from the Democrats? My God, where are
    we going? (The Washington Post)
  • Politics

24
The batter
  • STEP UP TO THE PLATE
  • Sullivan also threw back at committee Chairman
    Fred D. Thompson (R-Tenn.) some of the phrases
    that Thompson used Tuesday when he called on
    President Clinton to step up to the plate and
    take responsibility for Democratic fund-raising
    abuses. This is your Senate, Sullivan said.
    This is your Republican Congress. (The
    Washington Post)
  • Politics

25
The batter
  • KEEP ONE'S EYE ON THE BALL
  • We have said, Lets keep our eye on the ball,
    one Arab diplomat said yesterday. Lets not let
    others distract us.... It would be nice if we
    could figure out what to do with the peace
    process in parallel. (The Washington Post)
  • Diplomacy

26
The strike zone

27
Base hit
  • RIGHT OFF THE BAT
  • Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., who introduced the
    measure to the committee, said, Let me clarify
    right off the bat that no U.S. funds go to
    perform abortions abroad. (CBS News)
  • Politics

28
Base hit
  • GET TO FIRST BASE
  • Researchers hadnt done enough trials or testing
    of the vaccine and we never got to first base,
    Arndt said. (The Washington Post)
  • Politics
  • Also MAKE IT TO FIRST BASE and REACH FIRST BASE

29
Base hit
  • GET TO FIRST BASE
  • Guys, go back to first base. Kiss more, because
    its more important to her. (USA Today)
  • Foreign Affairs

30
Foul ball
  • HIT A FOUL BALL
  • The president hit a foul ball instead of a home
    run, said Graham, who assumed the Judiciary
    Committee seat of the late Rep. Steven Schiff,
    R-N.M., earlier this year. (The Washington Post)
  • Politics

31
Fly ball and error
  • DROP THE BALL
  • A lot of the brokers facing claims today dont
    look shady. Theyre probably very nice people,
    but they dropped the ball. (Chicago Tribune)
  • Insurance

32
The strike
  • THROW A CURVE (BALL)
  • The events moderators threw conservative
    activist Gary Bauer somewhat of a curve ball on
    one his core-value issues, abortion. Williams
    asked Bauer if a loved one of his was raped and
    impregnated, and if that person decided to have
    an abortion, would he support that decision.
    (CNN)
  • Politics

33
The bases
  • (WAY) OFF BASE (TO BE)
  • The cagey and low-key Mr Daschle generally
    ignores the venom but expresses his
    disappointment about one attack or another.
    The rhetoric is way off base, and Im
    disappointed people are using it, is his formula
    response. (Financial Times)
  • Politics

34
The bases
  • HOME FREE (TO BE)
  • Patrick Davenport, managing general partner of
    Davenport Capital Ventures, said he wasnt under
    the impression that all 17 of the companies that
    presented at the Summit were home free. Some of
    them are happy just to be surviving and showing
    some progress, he said. (The Boston Globe)
  • Finance

35
Strike
  • TWO STRIKES AGAINST
  • Matalin, according to her critics, has two
    strikes against her. First, as some noted, Bush
    lost in 1992, and maybe bringing in his advisers
    isnt a great idea. (CNN)
  • Politics

36
Strike
  • THREE STRIKES AND YOU'RE OUT!
  • Now he makes sure his service-level agreements
    have a three-strikes-and-youre-out clause, and
    he checks his vendors references thoroughly.
    (Business Week)
  • Business

37
Strike
  • STRIKE OUT (v.) / STRIKEOUT (n.)
  • But as a former baseball exec, Bush knows the
    dangers of swinging for the fence A strikeout is
    much more likely than a home run. (Business Week)
  • Politics

38
Home run
  • HIT A HOME RUN
  • The potential is huge, and I love the category,
    but there will be plenty of early screwups and
    failures, just like in the handheld market before
    Palm hit a home run. (The Wall Street Journal)
  • IT
  • Also HIT A HOMER, HIT IT OUT OF THE BALLPARK

39
Home run
  • BATTING AVERAGE
  • If one hospital performs fifty bypasses a year
    with forty-five of them successful, while a
    second hospital performs only ten, but all of
    them successful, who really has the better
    record? The second hospital has the better
    batting average, but the first clearly has more
    experience. (The Wall Street Journal)
  • Medicine

40
Home run
  • TOUCH BASE WITH SOMEONE
  • I think that what this means is that U.S.
    Secretary of State Colin Powell and other
    diplomats will have to, on a daily basis, talk
    and touch base with these countries to ensure
    that a coalition holds. (CNN)
  • Diplomacy

41
Pinch hit
  • GO TO BAT FOR SOMEONE
  • Mrs. Clinton goes to bat for the president. (CNN)
  • Politics

42
Pinch hit
  • PINCH HIT
  • We hired her as a consultant to run and pinch hit
    on workshops were really very small staffed
    so weve known her through that kind of
    connection. (Business Week)
  • Business

43
Designated hitter
  • DESIGNATED DRIVER
  • If you know youre going to consume an abundance
    of alcohol, you need to make plans ahead of time
    to either have a cab or a friend come pick you up
    or carry a designated driver. (CNN)
  • Safety

44
Designated hitter
  • CLOUT
  • In the past, equality issues have often been
    sidelined and responsibility handed to small
    policy teams full of enthusiasm and ideas, but no
    political clout. (The Guardian)
  • Politics

45
The left field
  • COME OUT OF LEFT FIELD
  • He said changes proposed to rules on double
    taxation came totally out of left field.
    (Financial Times)
  • Politics

46
The left field
  • OUT IN LEFT FIELD
  • This highlights the fact that those asking the
    questions are not all out in left field
    somewhere. (The Washington Post)
  • Politics

47
Seventh-inning stretch
  • SEVENTH-INNING STRETCH
  • As for a turnaround, ABC is nowhere near the
    seventh-inning stretch. Eisner has properly set a
    low target this year, telling analysts it will
    take more than a single season to put ABC back
    into serious contention. (Business Week)
  • Business

48
Miscellaneous
  • OUT OF ONE'S LEAGUE (TO BE)
  • Bush probably didnt convince many voters that he
    was an intellectual heavyweight, but he didnt
    seem out of his league either. (CNN)
  • Politics

49
Miscellaneous
  • MAJOR LEAGUE
  • Overall, to be a serious contender for the major
    league, it helps to have some of the following
    The name of a major business school on your
    résumé (Harvard is good, so is Stanford. In
    Europe, INSEAD, LBS or IMD are popular).
    (Business-minds.com)
  • Business

50
Miscellaneous
  • COME OUT WINNERS
  • Even if a cost-benefit analysis of going to war
    was to show a loss, specific sectors of the
    economy can still come out winners aerospace
    and military technology being the most obvious.
    (The Observer)
  • Foreign Affairs

51
Thank you! Got a question?
  • ulisses_at_teclasap.com.br
  • www.teclasap.com.br/blog

52
O INGLÊS NA MARCA DO PÊNALTI
53
O INGLÊS NA MARCA DO PÊNALTI
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com