Hello, everyone. Welcome to EnglishPod. My name is Marco. My name is Katherine. And today we're talking about something that I haven't actually seen in a long time, but is very common in the States, especially in suburban areas. That's right. We're going to get a subscription, as the title of the lesson says. So we're going to subscribe to magazines, newspapers, stuff like that. Right, so there's a guy coming around to everyone's houses and he's offering different magazine subscriptions. So let's take a listen to today's dialogue and we'll be back in a moment to talk about what's going on. Good afternoon, ma'am. My name is Mike and I'm selling subscriptions to all sorts of periodicals. No, thank you. I'm not interested. Please, ma'am, if you could spare five minutes of your time, I'm sure we could find something that could interest you. I wish I could, but I have to walk the dog and finish cooking, so if you'd excuse me. We have a great variety of magazines all about cooking. This one, for example, is a bimonthly publication with recipes from all over the world. Wow, well, that would be kind of useful. Do you have any other cooking magazines? Sure do. This one is a quarterly publication, but each issue has over 200 color pages of recipes and also many home decorating ideas. Wow, this is nice. Okay, sign me up for both publications. You mentioned you have a dog. Most pet owners sign up for this weekly newsletter that has information on dog care, pet shops, and even pet sitters. That's exactly what I needed. What else do you have? Well, I also have... All right, we're back. As you saw, Mike is not very excited to be selling subscriptions, but he has magazines about almost everything, I think. That's right, and he's actually a pretty good salesperson because it sounds like this customer is going to buy quite a few magazines. Exactly, and so he used a lot of interesting vocabulary related to magazines and subscriptions, so let's take a look at those now in Language Takeaway. Okay, so this first word is one that we've already said a couple of times in today's lesson. This is the topic of the lesson. The word is subscription. Okay, so if you get a subscription, that means that you are paying money to receive something every month, every week, et cetera. That's right, so the time is fixed. Like you said, it could be weekly. The time could change, but basically you have a promise that after you pay this money, you will receive something periodically. So there are many things that you could have a subscription for, not just magazines. Newspapers come in subscriptions. That's right, or maybe you pay for satellite TV. That's a subscription. You pay every month and you receive channels, like lots of channels. Exactly, or hopefully EnglishPod. You receive by subscription or you pay the subscription fee. Exactly, so with EnglishPod, you subscribe. That would be the verb. A subscription is the noun. You subscribe to a service like a newspaper magazine and you receive the magazine or the service every month, every week, every day, depending on what the subscription is like. Okay, and so because subscriptions come at different time frames, so for example, EnglishPod, we have lessons three times a week. Newspapers are often times every day. They come in different periods of time. We call these kinds of publications periodicals. Okay, so for example, as you said, a newspaper, it comes every day. That's the period of time, so it's a periodical. The same as a magazine, sometimes they are weekly, sometimes they are monthly. Is a book a periodical pop quiz? No. Okay. No, because you only get it once. Right, so basically a periodical has to be something, I guess, that comes out every so often a new version, a new edition, right? It's continually updating. Okay, so that is periodicals and subscriptions. Now moving on to when he was trying to sell the magazines, he said, we have a great variety of magazines all about cooking. So what is a variety? Variety is a great word. It's a word I personally am a very big fan of. I like to have many choices to choose from. So variety means something that has many options. For example, at the grocery store, there is a great variety of food. There are apples and crackers and cakes and wine. So variety means there are many different kinds of something. Okay, so many choices. So if you go to a bookstore, you can find a variety of books and magazines, for example. All right, now moving on to, again, when we're talking about the period of time, how often she's going to get this cooking magazine, the one that he's showing her is a bimonthly publication. So what exactly does it mean if she receives a magazine bimonthly? Okay, so this is a bit confusing in English. Bimonthly has two meanings, but what's important is the word by here or the prefix by. That means two. Okay. Okay, so we could say bimonthly, biweekly, biannually. These all mean two. So in this case, we're talking about something that I receive two times every month. Okay. Or it can be that you get it once every two months. Okay, so that might be confusing. In the first case, let's just say that it's the month of October, and I have this great subscription to a magazine, so in October, I will receive it two times. Exactly, so you get it twice. Or it could also mean that you receive the magazine in October, and then you don't receive another magazine until December. So it's a bimonthly publication. Every other month. Every two months. Right, so this is very confusing for us. It's probably confusing for you, but if you see this word bimonthly or biweekly, you should ask the person who's offering the subscription what kind they mean. Is it every month two times, or is it every other month? Alright, so exactly. Just remember the prefix by means two, and then if it's bimonthly, biannual, biweekly, you have to more or less make sure that they specify what they mean, because they can mean both, and that's how ambiguous this word is. It is, but the next one, the next one we have for you is not nearly as confusing. It's a very, very common word in both periodicals and sales, but also in marketing and business as well. Right, we're talking about a quarterly publication, or something that comes out once every quarter. Right, so if you think about a year, a year has 12 months, a quarter of a year is three months. So the first quarter is January, February, March. Exactly. So quarterly publication means that you will get a magazine four times in one year. Okay, we could also talk about quarterly sales. You know, this quarter our business did very well, but last quarter was not so good. So quarter means three months at a time. Exactly. And for our last word on language takeaway today, we are talking about a weekly newsletter. So weekly is pretty straightforward. You receive it once every week. That's right. So weekly publications are very common. What is a newsletter? A newsletter is important in periodicals because it's not a magazine, but it's not a letter either. It's basically short update, a couple of pages maybe, or even one page that's on a piece of paper that gives you information about a group or a club or a community. For example, we could say the EnglishPod newsletter comes out quarterly. Exactly. Usually in your offices you receive your company's newsletter. So usually some companies will come out with a monthly or a quarterly newsletter where if you have many offices or many branches all over the country or the world, then you will receive updates or news about what's going on in other places within your same company. That's right. So these are very useful for communication across the company. You can tell some people in your New York office that in Los Angeles we have a new company. A cafeteria or a new employee. Exactly. So that is what a newsletter is basically for. I think it's time now for us to listen to the dialogue again and we'll be back to talk to you with four key phrases on Fluency Builder right after this. I wish I could, but I have to walk the dog and finish cooking, so if you'd excuse me. We have a great variety of magazines all about cooking. This one, for example, is a bimonthly publication with recipes from all over the world. Wow, well that would be kind of useful. Do you have any other cooking magazines? Sure do. This one is a quarterly publication, but each issue has over 200 color pages of recipes and also many home decorating ideas. Wow, this is nice. Okay, sign me up for both publications. You mentioned you have a dog. Most pet owners sign up for this weekly newsletter that has information on dog care, pet shops, and even pet sitters. That's exactly what I needed. What else do you have? Well, I also have... Alright, so now we have some sentences or ways that you can say things on Fluency Builder. Fluency Builder. Okay, this first phrase is very, very common among sales and salespeople because basically it's a way to be polite and to ask someone to listen to you for a little while. The salesperson says, if you could spare five minutes of your time. Okay, so let's start with that part. If you could spare. So to spare something means do you have something extra? Do you have enough of it? Yeah, so I could say, can you spare five dollars? I forgot my wallet at home. So that means do you have an extra five dollars I could borrow? Okay, very good. So if you're asking someone to spare five minutes of their time, you're asking them to give you five minutes of their time. That's right. So if you could spare a second or if you could spare five minutes of your time, I would like to talk to you. Okay, so it's a very polite way to ask someone for their time. Now for our next phrase, the woman is also very polite. She says, you know what, I have to walk the dog. I have to finish cooking. So if you would excuse me. She's basically saying no in a very polite way. If you could excuse me. Right. I've got to go. So this is a kind of a very indirect but polite way of saying, I'm sorry, I can't stay. I got to go or I can't really talk to you right now. That's right. So if you're at a party, for example, and you're talking to somebody but you don't really want to talk to them anymore, you could say, it was nice talking to you if you could excuse me. It means if I can leave now. Okay. So you can say if you could excuse me or if you would excuse me. Both forms are pretty much the same. Okay. And what about when she actually is convinced about the magazine, she says, wow, this is nice. Okay, sign me up for both publications. Okay, sign me up. This means I would like a subscription. Okay, that means I would like you to take my information and I will give you some money. But this is also a really nice phrase in English because it means I want to do this. I'm interested. So if you would use this, let's in another context, for example, a group of friends are going to the movies. I say, oh, sign me up. I want to go. I heard that movie was awesome. Okay, very good. So sign me up is like include me. I want to go to or I'm part of it, of whatever you're doing. Exactly. Okay, so that's all the phrases we have for you today. I think they are really good. They're not specific for this circumstance of getting a subscription. As we saw, we can use them in many other situations. So I think we should go back, listen to the dialogue for the last time and we'll be back to talk a little bit more. Good afternoon, ma'am. My name is Mike and I'm selling subscriptions to all sorts of periodicals. No, thank you. I'm not interested. Please, ma'am, if you could spare five minutes of your time, I'm sure we can find something that could interest you. I wish I could, but I have to walk the dog and finish cooking. So if you'd excuse me. We have a great variety of magazines all about cooking. This one, for example, is a bimonthly publication with recipes from all over the world. Wow. Well, that would be kind of useful. Do you have any other cooking magazines? Sure do. This one is a quarterly publication, but each issue has over 200 color pages of recipes and also many home decorating ideas. Wow, this is nice. Okay, sign me up for both publications. You mentioned you have a dog. Most pet owners sign up for this weekly newsletter that has information on dog care, pet shops and even pet sitters. That's exactly what I needed. What else do you have? Well, I also have... All right, so subscriptions, periodicals, all this is very common, as you said, in the United States. People get them through the mail every month, right? That's right. And I have to say, it's changing now. You know, we used to get subscriptions at home when I was a kid. We'd have magazine subscriptions and even a newspaper subscription. But these days, people are doing more and more on the internet. So you don't see the guy with the subscriptions coming from, you know, going from door to door to sell you this. You do it yourself on the internet. So it's pretty common that way. Do you have any web subscriptions? No, no, no. I haven't signed up for any periodicals on the web. I do receive the newspaper every day. And that's about it. It's kind of hard to receive magazines where we are, but I am a big fan of magazines like National Geographic or Popular Mechanics. I had that when I was a kid. My grandmother would always give us a subscription to National Geographic for Christmas. It's a very good magazine. And it's so colorful, full of pictures and really interesting articles, not only about animals, but about the world in general. So it's really cool. That's right. And they always give you a map that you could take out and open up. And it was the best part of the whole magazine. Exactly. So actually, I really enjoy having subscriptions, periodicals, magazines, newspapers, not a big fan of newsletters or things on the internet. I kind of like to hold a magazine or take it with me if I'm on a trip. Yeah, I totally agree. So yeah, but I think many of our listeners may have a subscription to their local newspaper, local magazines, or maybe, as you said, internet subscriptions. I know some people sign up for the Harvard Business Review that's available online or even I think the New York Times has an online platform. They do. They do. So let us know what subscriptions do you have? What periodicals do you like to read? Our website, of course, is EnglishPod.com. You can also purchase a subscription there. We hope to see you on the website. And until next time. All right. Bye.