6-Minute-English listeners are truly global, coming from all over the world, |
including some of the coldest countries on Earth -- places like Finland, where winter temperatures drop to -20°C. |
Are you good at dealing with the cold, Phil? |
I’m not sure, but I do know that I don’t like it. |
What about you, Becca? |
Well, I’d rather be too hot and cool down than too cold and try to warm up. |
Yes, me too. |
Here in the UK, it never gets as cold as Finland, but it’s not unusual to see some people dressed in T-shirts while others are wrapped up in warm clothes. |
Why do people feel the cold so differently? |
That’s what we’ll be discussing in this episode, as well as learning some useful new words and phrases. |
But now I have a question for you, Becca. |
According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the lowest temperature ever recorded was a very cold -89°C... |
but where? |
Was it: a) the Arctic, b) Antarctica, or c) the top of Mount Everest? |
Hmm. I’m going to guess b) Antarctica. |
OK. Well, we’ll find out the answer at the end of the programme. |
Our experience of cold depends on many things, including our genes, culture and place of birth, but perhaps the most obvious thing is the clothes we wear. |
Professor Gunhild Satren lives on the icy island of Svalbard, 800 miles inside the Arctic Circle. |
Here, she advises presenter Caroline Steel on how to dress against the cold, for BBC World Service programme CrowdScience. |
So, what should we consider when choosing our clothes? |
First and foremost, I would say that perhaps the gender differs. |
So, males often are more tolerant, perhaps, than females. |
Then it’s of course what you’re used to. |
Are you used to dealing with the cold? Are you not? |
Gunhild says that first and foremost, men and women feel the cold differently. |
She uses the phrase first and foremost to mean ’more than anything else’. |
She wants to emphasise that something -- in this case, someone’s gender -- is the most important thing to consider. |
There is some debate about whether men or women are more tolerant of the cold. |
Being tolerant of something means being able to endure it without getting hurt. |
Another important factor is whether you are used to the cold -- if being in cold environments is something you’re familiar with. |
It might sound obvious that someone born in Arctic Svalbard would feel less cold than someone born in Brazil, |
but apart from environmental factors, are there actual physical differences that allow people to cope better with the cold? |
Dr Cara Ocobock studies reindeer herders in northern Finland -- people who live in cold temperatures every day and have done for centuries. |
She measures their reaction to extreme cold and compares it to ordinary Finns from warmer parts of the country. |
Here, Cara shares her findings with Caroline Steel from BBC World Service’s CrowdScience. |
OK. My guess is the reindeer herders deal better in the cold. |
Yes and no. |
The more data we collect within this area, the more confusing the picture gets. |
I can say that subjectively, at this point, the reindeer herders, at least kind of mentally, handle the cold far better. |
They are far less likely to shiver. |
So, do the reindeer herders deal better with the cold? |
The answer is yes and no -- a phrase meaning partly and partly not, used when there’s no clear answer to a question. |
However, Cara does say subjectively, the herders manage better. |
They don’t feel so cold. |
Subjectively means based on your personal inner experience rather than objective facts. |
And physically there are differences too. |
Reindeer herders are less likely to shiver -- the shaky movement that cold muscles make to try and warm them up. |
In fact, how we experience the cold is probably a combination of everything we’ve discussed, including genetic adaptations passed on from parents to children. |
Right, I’m off to find my gloves and woolly hat, so why don’t you reveal the answer to the question, Phil? |
Yes, I asked where the lowest temperature on Earth was ever recorded. |
You said b) Antarctica. |
And that is... the right answer. |
The lowest temperature ever recorded on Earth was at the Vostok Research Station in Antarctica in 1983. |
Let’s recap the vocabulary we’ve learned, starting with the phrase first and foremost, meaning more than anything else. |
A person who is tolerant of something is able to endure it without being hurt. |
If you’re used to something, you’re familiar with it. |
The idiom yes and no means partly and partly not, and is used when you can’t give a clear answer to a question. |
The adverb subjectively means in a way that’s based on your personal experience rather than objective facts. |
And finally, a shiver is the shaking movement made by your muscles when you feel cold or afraid. |
Once again, our six minutes are up. |
Bye! |

BBC六分钟英语
BBC六分钟英语


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