May 25, 2013 19:14 UTC

Words and Their Stories: Green Expressions

Read, listen and learn with stories in Special English. Double-click any word to find the definition in the Merriam-Webster Learner's Dictionary.

Community Gardens Grow Green Space in New York CityCommunity Gardens Grow Green Space in New York City
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Community Gardens Grow Green Space in New York City
Community Gardens Grow Green Space in New York City
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Now, the VOA Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.
 
Green is an important color in nature. It is the color of grass and the leaves on trees. It is also the color of most growing plants.
 
Sometimes, the word green means young, fresh and growing. Sometimes, it describes something that is not yet ripe or finished.
 
For example, a greenhorn is someone who has no expereince, who is new to a situation. In the fifteenth century, a greenhorn was a young cow or ox whose horns had not yet developed. A century or so later, a greenhorn was a soldier who had not yet had any experience in battle. By the eighteenth century, a greenhorn had the meaning it has today - a person who is new in a job.

About one hundred years ago, greenhorn was a popular expression in the American west. Old-timers used it to describe a man who had just arrived from one of the big cities back east. The greenhorn lacked the skills he would need to live in the hard, rough country.

Someone who has the ability to grow plants well is said to have a green thumb. The expression comes from the early nineteen hundreds.

A person with a green thumb seems to have a magic touch that makes plants grow quickly and well. You might say that the woman next door has a green thumb if her garden continues to grow long after your plants have died.

The Green Revolution is the name given some years ago to the development of new kinds of rice and other grains. The new plants produced much larger crops. The Green Revolution was the result of hard work by agricultural scientists who had green thumbs.

Green is also the color used to describe the powerful emotion, jealousy. The green-eyed monster is not a frightening creature from outer space. It is an expression used about four hundred years ago by British writer William Shakespeare in his play "Othello."

It describes the unplesant feeling a person has when someone has something he wants. A young man may suffer from the green-eyed monster if his girlfriend begins going out with someone else. Or, that green-eyed monster may affect your friend if you get a pay raise and she does not.

In most places in the world, a green light is a signal to move ahead. A green light on a traffic signal means your car can continue on. In everyday speech, a green light means approval to continue with a project. We want you to know we have a green light to continue this series next week.

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This VOA Special English program, WORDS AND THEIR STORIES, was written by Marilyn Christiano. I'm Warren Scheer.
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by: Venezuela from: Venezuela
05/18/2012 9:40 PM
Hello, VOA. Nice to have found such an interesting site for my students. However, access to the audio has been limited. Can you consider this so as to let more of us download the audio files for our classes? Thank you so much in advance.


by: Sandrine from: France
05/18/2012 7:27 PM
This is the same for me. I can't listen to the programme as there is no possibility to listen to the stories with this new page. This was what I found interesting on your website.


by: Anonymous
05/16/2012 2:01 PM
How can I hear this article ? I can not find out the play button !


by: Alice from: China
05/16/2012 5:04 AM
I am from China,I've been listening to VOA news for a while,really like it,but VOA news changed to a new page,I am not able to listen to its news ever since,no access to us,please consider our net censorship,I'd like to hear from VOA news very soon.