听播客学英语 274 金钱
时间:2013-10-21 02:47:53
搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
This Podcast uses words which are about getting money and paying for things. Some of the words may not be in your dictionary. If you do not understand something, send me an e-mail ([email protected]) and I will try to explain.
Kevin is going out for the evening with some friends. While he is out, he will need to pay for things, such as drinks in the pub, cinema tickets, a meal and a taxi home. In some places he can pay with a credit card or
debit1 card. At the cinema, for example, he can give the cashier his debit card. The cashier will put the card into a card reader and ask Kevin to type in his PIN, or personal identity number. The cost of the cinema tickets will then automatically be taken from Kevin’s bank account. In Britain, when we use a credit or debit card, we now must use a PIN. We used to be able to sign the credit or debit card
voucher2 but that is not normally possible now. The banks say that using PINs instead of signatures will reduce the number of fraudulent transactions.
But for some things, like paying for the taxi, Kevin will not be able to use a card. He will need cash – that is, notes and coins. So he goes to a cash machine. (The banks call these Automatic
Teller3 Machines (ATMs), but everyone else calls them cash machines.) He inserts his card into the machine and types in his PIN. He also types in the amount of money he wants to withdraw from his bank account, and a few seconds later the machine issues the money and a receipt which says how much he has
withdrawn4 and how much he has left in his account. Another way of withdrawing cash is called “cashback”. In some shops, such as supermarkets, if you pay with a debit card you can ask for some cash as well.
Can Kevin use cheques to pay for things? Maybe, if he has a cheque guarentee card. (Often a debit card is also a cheque guarentee card). But in Britain nowdays we rarely pay by cheque in shops or restaurants, and the number of cheques used each year has fallen sharply.
分享到: