Session 2

The Zika virus is 'no risk' to the Rio Olympics say the government of Brazil. But how is the media reacting? Watch and listen to Neil and Catherine discussing this story with Fernando from BBC Brasil. Learn the words and phrases you need to talk about the news

Sessions in this unit

Session 2 score

0 / 3

  • 0 / 3
    Activity 1

Activity 1

News Review

Will Zika affect Rio Olympics?

The World Health Organisation has said the spead of the Zika virus is an international public health emergency. But the governement of Brazil insists there's no risk that the Olympic Games in Rio will be cancelled.

In this programme, Neil and Catherine are joined by BBC Brasil's Fernando Duarte to explore the language being used by the world's media to discuss this story. Watch the programme and learn the words and phrases you need to talk about the news. Then see what you've learned with a short quiz.

Watch the video and complete the activity

The story

From a BBC report on 2nd February 2016:

Brazil says there's no risk that the Olympic Games in Rio will be cancelled despite the World Health Organisation's assessment that the spread of the Zika virus constitutes an international public health emergency.

A spokesman for President Dilma Rousseff said the lives of athletes and spectators would not be endangered, though pregnant women should not attend.

Fernando Duarte - BBC Brasil

For the population itself it's not a massive deal. However, we do know that there's a suspicion that some cases of microcephaly in babies are influenced by this virus. Until we have the confirmation we cannot speculate much about that. But it's scared the WHO enough for them to do so. So obviously the media's following suit. People are worried for other reasons. Dengue killed 2,000 people in Brazil in the last three years. Having said that, it's a disease that you can try to avoid and in the months of winter - from June to August in Brazil - the cases tend to drop dramatically.

Key words and phrases

the spread of 
the growing area affected by something

constitutes 
considered to be

endangered 
in a situation which could cause harm

outbreak
the sudden start of something, such as an illness or disease

declared
officially or formally announced or stated

nightmare
(here) very frightening or difficult situation

To do

Try these questions to test your ability to use the words from this News Review.

News Review quiz

3 Questions

How well did you understand the new language in today's programme?

Congratulations you completed the Quiz
Excellent! Great job! Bad luck! You scored:
x / y

Your challenge

Which of these is NOT an English phrasal verb?

a) To dream up – meaning invent.

b) To dream away – spend your time thinking of pleasant things rather than actually achieving anything.

c) To dream over – to wish things were different.

More

Learn more about this story in News Report.

End of Session 2

Join us in Session 3 for Lingohack - our video which teaches you words from the news using the latest BBC World News bulletins.

Session Vocabulary

  • the spread of
    the growing area affected by something

    constitutes
    considered to be

    endangered
    in a situation which could cause harm

    outbreak
    the sudden start of something, such as an illness or disease

    declared
    officially or formally announced or stated

    nightmare
    (here) very frightening or difficult situation