Hello everyone and welcome to EnglishPod.
My name is Marco.
Hi guys, my name is Catherine and today we have an upper intermediate level lesson for you about some very interesting things.
That's right.
Today we're going to talk about fortune tellers or people that read your future.
Alright, so if I want to know who I will marry, if I will be rich, I will go to this fortune teller and she or he will tell me what's in my future.
That's right.
It's very popular in many cultures around the world, many different ways of reading your future or telling you your future.
So let's jump into this dialogue and see what's going on today.
Look at this newspaper article about this famous local medium.
It says that she is really gifted and so popular now that she's booked solid with appointments for the next 12 months.
You don't really believe in all that hocus pocus mumbo jumbo, do you?
Well, I have had many friends that went to a psychic and got their palms read and most of the things the psychic told them came true.
Of course it does.
They tell you general and obvious things like that you'll be successful or have a big house.
I think most of the times they're just scam artists.
Well, historically it's a practice that many cultures share.
Reading the tarot cards.
In the East they would even read tea leaves.
I even heard that there are people that make you smoke a cigar and then read your ashes.
All superstitious nonsense.
I would still like to go to one and see what he or she has to say just for kicks.
Great.
I'll make an appointment.
Alright, we're back.
So a lot of interesting things here.
Let's take a look at some of those words on language takeaway.
Language takeaway.
So in language takeaway today we are focusing on some words that describe fortune telling but also the different ways of doing so.
The first word we have is actually a name for a person who can read the future, right Marco?
That's right.
A medium.
In the dialogue we hear about a woman who is a medium and is very talented.
Actually a medium is interesting because a medium is a person who can communicate with the dead.
That's right.
Or who can communicate with the other side.
And if you think about middle, medium, I mean they mean the same thing.
It's someone who is in the middle of two things.
And so a medium can maybe transmit these different ideas or signals.
Right, right, exactly.
So it's a person that basically communicates, as you say, with the dead or someone that can listen to people who are not here anymore.
But obviously they are a type of person that could also use this gift to tell your future or to have the people who are dead tell you what's going to happen in the future.
That's right.
And so another kind of person who would do something similar is a psychic.
That's right.
Alright, now a psychic is a person who generally will read your future for you, will tell you the future.
Maybe the psychic will have a special tool like a crystal ball.
Just remember that in English, psych, like psychology, psychosis, has to do with your mind.
That's right.
Alright, so a psychic uses their mind to find out things about you or your future.
That's right.
So sometimes psychics will claim that they can read your mind as well, right?
It's a little scary.
So as you say, these are different people who supposedly can tell you your future.
And as you said, they use different methods or different tools.
One of them is, for example, having your palms read.
Alright, so the psychic will go to you, Marco, and will look at your hand and will read your palm.
Now, where on your hand is your palm?
It's on the other side, the side where you grab things with.
The inside, so the soft part.
The inside, yes.
And maybe on your palm, you have many different lines.
So the psychic will look at the lines and will say, oh, well, this line is very long, so you will have a long, long life.
That's right.
So supposedly in your hands, you have lines that determine how much money you will have or if you will, how many kids you will have or how long you will live.
So that's called a palm reading.
Or I am going to have my palm read.
That's right.
Now, the other person doesn't really believe in all that stuff and says that they are just scam artists.
So he's saying that the psychics or the mediums are just scam artists.
Alright, so what is a scam artist?
Well, a scam artist is not a real artist.
Right, right.
A scam artist is a thief, someone who will maybe tell you a story or who will lie to you to try and take your money.
That's right.
So he's not really like a robber, like somebody that will break into your house and take your things.
No, he won't use a gun, maybe.
Hopefully not.
But he will tell you a story or will lie to you in a way that makes you want to give him money.
That's right.
That's right.
So I don't know if any of you have ever received an email from someone who said, I am a wealthy person from a different part of the world and I want you to give me money to help me so I can come to America and these kinds of things where you don't know the person, he's probably lying to you.
It's a very sad story.
They say, please give me money so I can come to visit you or so I can come and have a good life.
That's a scam artist.
That's right.
Because they probably don't have a bad life, they just want you to give them money.
That's right.
That's right.
So that is a scam artist.
And what he went on to say about how all of these things, about fortune telling, about psychics and everything is just superstitious nonsense.
So then the girl went on to explain and saying that it's not really true that many cultures do things like, for example, read the tarot cards.
Alright, so we had palm reading first, maybe talking to dead people with a medium.
But this is another tool that psychics use to communicate with maybe the dead or to understand the future.
So we have tarot cards and they're actually cards.
You know, like playing cards.
But they're a little bit different, right?
They don't have diamonds and hearts.
They have different pictures.
Right, they have pictures of, for example, a king or a queen or a picture of a river or different symbols that basically the person who is getting their fortune read will take it and move them and shuffle them.
And then we'll start flipping the cards over and then you will see supposedly what your future will be like.
Alright, so those are tarot cards.
But we have one more word here and it actually comes from the friend who doesn't believe in these scam artists.
Right.
It calls it all superstitious nonsense.
That's right.
So a person that is superstitious believes in superstitions.
And those are beliefs of good or bad luck.
Yeah, that's right.
So if I believe that the number 13 is very, very bad, I will avoid the number 13.
I won't sit down and chair number 13.
I won't buy a house on floor number 13.
Right.
Because I'm superstitious.
I believe that that number is bad luck.
That's right.
So many people believe that it's bad luck to break a mirror or to walk under a ladder.
Yes, also many Americans believe it's bad luck to open an umbrella inside.
That's right.
So it's interesting because many cultures around the world have different types of superstitions, but we'll talk about that in a little bit.
Why don't we move on now to some fluency builder and take a look at some phrases.
Look at this newspaper article about this famous local medium.
It says that she is really gifted and so popular now that she's booked solid with appointments for the next 12 months.
You don't really believe in all that hocus pocus mumbo jumbo, do you?
Well, I have had many friends that went to a psychic and got their palms read and most of the things the psychic told them came true.
Of course it does.
They tell you general and obvious things like that you'll be successful or have a big house.
I think most of the times they're just scam artists.
Well, historically, it's a practice that many cultures share.
Reading the tarot cards.
In the East, they would even read tea leaves.
I even heard that there are people that make you smoke a cigar and then read your ashes.
All superstitious nonsense.
I would still like to go to one and see what he or she has to say just for kicks.
Great.
I'll make an appointment.
Alright, an important phrase that you don't have to be a psychic to use is booked solid.
Now we heard this at the beginning of the dialogue.
Right, because this person is so famous that so many people want to go there and get their fortunes read that this person is already booked solid for the next 12 months.
Okay, now booked solid is a very nice colloquial way to describe having no time for anything in English.
So basically if a restaurant, for example, is booked solid, it means there are no tables available.
That's right.
Nothing is available.
Everything is already reserved.
Yeah, it happens also with hotels.
Some hotels during, I don't know, let's say the Olympics, many of them are booked solid for the entire month.
Or you could even say this with your friends.
You say, hey Marco, do you want to hang out Thursday, say 7 o'clock?
Sorry, I'm booked solid the entire day.
Popular guy.
That's right.
So you can say that a person is booked solid or that a business is booked solid.
Now this next phrase is kind of more, it's not really real words, but we say they are.
Hocus pocus, mumbo jumbo.
Alright, hocus pocus is a way to describe superstitious things.
Like magic, right?
Because I think it comes from, supposedly it's a spell that witches or wizards will say, like hocus pocus and things like that.
Cadavera, hocus, yeah.
But basically this is something that we say when we're joking now in English.
So I'll say, oh gosh, Marco, I just broke this mirror.
Seven years bad luck.
Do you really believe in all that hocus pocus?
Yes, I'm very superstitious.
So hocus pocus here means superstitious things.
Like magic, superstitious stuff.
It's all hocus pocus.
What about mumbo jumbo?
Mumbo jumbo is also something we say when we're talking about magic or things that are superstitious.
So I can say, I don't believe in any of that superstitious mumbo jumbo.
It means basically, I don't trust it.
I don't think it's true.
I think it's silly.
Right.
So mumbo jumbo you refer to that nonsense, that irrational or unbelievable stuff.
That's right, it's irrational.
Very good.
So hocus pocus referring to magic, mumbo jumbo referring to superstition or things that are not really believable, let's say.
And to end the dialogue, the guy says, well, you know what?
Okay, let's go to this psychic and see what she has to say just for kicks.
Just for kicks.
Now, I love this phrase.
I use it a lot.
It's very, very colloquial, very spoken English.
So you guys should try to use it.
It means just for fun.
Just for fun.
So I'm not going because I believe.
Right.
Because I just said I think it's hocus pocus mumbo jumbo.
Right.
But I do think it will be fun.
So let's go just for kicks.
Just for kicks.
Yeah.
So it means that you're doing something not seriously.
You're just doing it for fun.
That's right.
So you can do anything just for kicks, really.
Maybe maybe like if you just sit down and start doing some math problems just for kicks.
Yeah, you would do that, wouldn't you, Marco?
Just for kicks.
Yeah.
Or I'm going to take a singing class just for kicks, even though I don't take singing very seriously.
Right.
It's not like you want to become a professional singer.
You just want to do it for fun.
That's right.
All right.
Great stuff.
Why don't we review everything one last time?
Look at this newspaper article about this famous local medium.
It says that she is really gifted and so popular now that she's booked solid with appointments for the next 12 months.
You don't really believe in all that hocus pocus mumbo jumbo, do you?
Well, I have had many friends that went to a psychic and got their palms read and most of the things the psychic told them came true.
Of course it does.
They tell you general and obvious things like that you'll be successful or have a big house.
I think most of the times they're just scam artists.
Well, historically, it's a practice that many cultures share.
Reading the tarot cards.
In the East, they would even read tea leaves.
I even heard that there are people that make you smoke a cigar and then read your ashes.
All superstitious nonsense.
I would still like to go to one and see what he or she has to say just for kicks.
Great.
I'll make an appointment.
All right.
So speaking about superstitions, as you said, some superstitions are more local.
Like, for example, I think it's Americans that believe it's bad luck to open an umbrella inside a house.
Yes.
I know that, for example, in China, the number four is considered bad luck.
That's right.
So you'll see that many buildings don't have a floor number four or fourteen.
That's right.
And actually it's similar in Western cultures because some hotels will not have a floor thirteen.
That's right.
Are there any superstitions that are from Ecuador?
I think Hispanic.
Oh, there is one that's very particular with women, with Hispanic women.
They will not put their bags, their purses on the floor.
Yes, I've heard this before.
What is it?
Your money will fly away.
Your money will fall out or your money will go away.
So women will not put their bags or their purses on the floor.
That's why you will always put it on a chair or on the table.
Never, never on the floor.
They're very superstitious about this.
Very interesting.
Well, have you ever had your fortune told by a psychic?
No, no, I've never.
I've seen gypsies.
So gypsies are people that don't really live somewhere.
They don't settle anywhere.
They move around.
They go from city to city.
And I've seen them and they've approached me asking me if I want my fortune read.
But I don't really believe in that.
So it just seems like they wanted me to give them five dollars and they would just tell me anything.
You think it was mumbo jumbo?
I think it was mumbo jumbo.
Have you had your fortune read?
I've had tarot cards read for me.
To be honest, I don't really remember what my fortune was.
I don't remember if it was right or not right, but I do remember feeling very uncomfortable because the things that my and I don't believe in these things because I'm not superstitious.
But the things that the fortune teller told me I thought were interesting because they were very similar to things that I knew about myself.
It's interesting because some people will go to a fortune teller just for kicks and will actually agree or find it amazing what the fortune teller told them.
And other people aren't really just not really interested, but it's very closely related to different cultures.
Some people have witch doctors that also will cleanse you or tell you your future and stuff like that.
That's right.
So we're actually very curious to hear about your culture.
Do you have superstitions in your culture and are there traditional forms of fortune telling?
Let us know.
Our website is EnglishPod.com.
All right, guys, we'll see you there.
Bye.