Foreshadowing provides hints or clues about what will happen later in the story, keeping the audience engaged and curious about the outcome.
Phrases like 'little did I know' and 'unbeknownst to me' can be used to introduce foreshadowing into a story, creating anticipation for future events.
Descriptive language, such as 'blanketed in snow,' paints vivid images in the listener's mind, making the story more engaging and relatable.
Common weather-related phrases include 'blanketed in snow,' 'the rain was pouring down,' 'the sun was beating down,' 'bitterly cold,' and 'baking hot,' which help describe the atmosphere vividly.
Switching tenses, such as using past simple for specific actions and past continuous for ongoing actions, provides context and adds depth to the narrative, especially when describing interruptions or simultaneous events.
Past simple is used for short, completed actions, while past continuous is used for longer, ongoing actions that may be interrupted or happening simultaneously with other events.
The present simple can make a story feel more dramatic and immediate, often used to create a sense of urgency or to bring the listener into the moment of the narrative.
This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK. How to have fun, anytime, anywhere. Step one, go to chumbacasino.com. Chumbacasino.com. Got it. Step two, collect your welcome bonus. Come to Papa welcome bonus. Step three, play hundreds of casino-style games for free. That's a lot of games. All for free? Step four, unleash your excitement. Woo-hoo!
Ch-ch-ch-ch-chumba. Chumba Casino has been delivering thrills for over a decade. So claim your free welcome bonus now and live the chumba life. Visit chumbacasino.com.
Hello, Happy New Year and welcome to Christmas Stories. I'm Pippa. And I'm Beth. Over the past few weeks, we've heard some true stories about Christmas and New Year from learning English presenters. That's right. I talked about when I went ice skating and almost broke my knees. Yes, and I told a story about when I took my blender to the theatre. Oh!
You can find all the stories on our website bbclearningenglish.com. In this final episode, we're going to look at some of the storytelling techniques that you can use to tell your own stories in English. Yes, so if your New Year's resolution is to get better at speaking in English, we've got some great tips for you.
OK, let's start with a story we heard from Neil about his car. Neil's car had broken down a few days before Christmas, but a colleague kindly offered to lend him a charger to fix it. Let's listen to some of the story. And I went home and I put the bag down by the front door and I didn't look at it or anything and I just started packing my bags for my trip on Christmas Eve the next day.
And I didn't really get up early or...
I wasn't in a rush at all. In fact, I was quite relaxed and later on I regretted that very much. Neil uses a technique called foreshadowing in his story. So he says he was quite relaxed and later on he regretted that very much. Yes. So Neil gives us some information about the end of the story, that he regretted being relaxed. So
We know when we're listening that something bad is going to happen. And using this technique keeps you interested. You want to find out what happens at the end of the story.
Yes, and there are a few phrases we can use to add foreshadowing into our stories like this. So we could say, little did I know. So you might say, little did I know a surprise was waiting for me. Yes, and another one is unbeknownst to me, which is a bit more formal, but we can use it in the same way. So you could say, unbeknownst to me, something very bad was about to happen. Music
OK, let's look at another storytelling technique. In episode two of this series, Phil told a story all about his Christmas in the countryside. Let's have a listen. Now, almost every Christmas card you get when you're a kid shows a snowy scene, a white Christmas. And the thing is, I've never had one. It never snows in London at Christmas or hardly ever.
But out in the countryside, it's a different story. So on Christmas Eve, as my parents and my aunt and uncle were preparing Christmas dinner, it started to snow. And it didn't stop. Pretty soon, the village we were staying in was blanketed in snow.
Phil's story has lots of descriptive details. He talks about the images of a white Christmas, a snowy Christmas, a Christmas card. And this gives us a picture to imagine as we're listening. Yes, and he also uses a nice descriptive phrase about the snow.
the weather. He says that the village was blanketed in snow. This means covered in snow. Now, it can be quite tricky to use interesting descriptive phrases when you're learning English.
Yeah, but try learning some common expressions about the weather because these are easier to add into lots of different stories. So we've had blanketed in snow. That's the one that Phil used and this means covered in snow. And there were a couple of phrases with the preposition down. So you could say the rain was pouring down. That means it was raining really,
really heavily. And we also have a phrase, the sun was beating down, which means it was really, really hot. Yeah. And a couple more ways we can describe things being cold and hot. We can say it's bitterly cold. That means it's really cold, freezing. Or we could say it's
baking hot and that means it's really hot. Yeah, baking hot makes me think of opening an oven after baking a cake and that heat just comes out the oven. It's so hot. Yeah, so it's really good to use phrases like this in a story. If I said it was baking hot, you can imagine what that was like and it makes you more interested in the story. Yeah, definitely. Music
Okay, let's have a look at one more story. This one is from Georgie, who was talking about her New Year's Eve celebrations. She was at a party with friends and she left the room for just a few minutes.
And when I returned, I walked in on a very strange scene. So at this house, there was a fireplace and everyone was gathered around this fireplace in a kind of semicircle. And they were writing on bits of paper things that they were leaving behind in 2022. And they were announcing what these things were to the group and then throwing them in the fire. So things like negative
negative energy or ex-partners, things that they wanted to leave behind in that year. So did you notice how Georgie switches tenses to tell her story? Yes, she started off with the past simple. She said, when I returned, I walked in on a very strange scene and
Now she uses the past simple here because these are specific actions and they are very short. They started and finished in the past. When I returned and I walked in. Yeah, and then Georgie uses the past continuous. So she says her friends were writing on bits of paper and they were throwing them in the fire.
So Georgie walks in as this is happening. So it's happening in the past, but it's a continuous action. So it doesn't have a definite ending. And that's why she uses the past continuous. Yeah. And these are longer actions as well. If you return, it's quite quick. But if you're writing on paper, then it is a longer action. And we do combine these tenses often, and especially when we want to talk about an interruption. So, for example, you could say, I was doing the washing up.
when the doorbell rang. So here the doorbell has interrupted an action that you're doing, the washing up. And of course that's a longer action than the doorbell ringing. So that's why the doorbell rang is in the past simple.
Yeah, and this allows you to give a bit more context to your story and you can talk about two things that happen at a similar time. And you can also use the present simple when you're telling someone a story. So this makes it feel more dramatic. For example, in Georgie's story, she could say...
I walk into the room, my friends are writing things on paper and they're throwing them in the fire and I don't understand what's going on. Exactly. And this is actually more common in American English than British English, although it is used in both.
That's it for our Christmas Stories episodes. We hope you enjoyed hearing some true stories from the team at BBC Learning English. Send us an email to tell us what you think. Email learning.english at bbc.co.uk. And next week, our classic stories will be back with Tim and Mariam. Find all our stories and dramas at bbclearningenglish.com. Thanks for listening. Bye. Bye.
Thanks for listening to Learning English Stories. Did you know we have a BBC Learning English email newsletter? Subscribe for our latest lessons, worksheets and quizzes and weekly tips to help you study. Just search BBC Learning English newsletter or follow the link in the notes for this programme. Yoga is more than just exercise. It's the spiritual practice that millions swear by.
And in 2017, Miranda, a university tutor from London, joins a yoga school that promises profound transformation. It felt a really safe and welcoming space. After the yoga classes, I felt amazing. But soon, that calm, welcoming atmosphere leads to something far darker, a journey that leads to allegations of grooming, trafficking and exploitation across international borders. ♪
I don't have my passport, I don't have my phone, I don't have my bank cards, I have nothing. The passport being taken, the being in a house and not feeling like they can leave.
You just get sucked in so gradually.
And it's done so skillfully that you don't realize. And it's like this, the secret that's there. I wanted to believe that, you know, that whatever they were doing, even if it seemed gross to me,
was for some spiritual reason that I couldn't yet understand. Revealing the hidden secrets of a global yoga network. I feel that I have no other choice. The only thing I can do is to speak about this and to put my reputation and everything else on the line. I want truth and justice.
And for other people to not be hurt, for things to be different in the future. To bring it into the light and almost alchemise some of that evil stuff that went on and take back the power. World of Secrets, Season 6, The Bad Guru. Listen wherever you get your podcasts.