Scots couple win biggest ever Euromillions
Source: dylan nolte on Unsplash
Lottery win: Euromillions couple are 'tickled pink'
A couple from Largs in Ayrshire have been named as the winners of the £161m Euromillions jackpot.
Chris Weir said she and her husband Colin were "tickled pink" when they realised they had scooped Tuesday's jackpot.
Chris Weir said she and her husband Colin were "tickled pink" when they realised they had scooped Tuesday's jackpot.
"I even had a glass of white wine which is something I normally only do at Christmas!" laughed Chris.
The prize was Europe's biggest ever and was capped after a series of rollovers.
On the night of the draw Chris was checking their numbers on the BBC's Red Button digital text service about midnight on the television in their bedroom.
"I started circling the numbers I had matched but wasn't doing very well. Then on the fifth line, all the circles seemed to join up."
The telephone line run by Camelot for claims was closed. Chris and husband Colin sat up all night they were so excited.
"When we first realised we had won, it felt like a dream," Colin said. "Everything went into slow motion."
Life changing
When asked at a media conference in Falkirk what they will do with the money, Chris said: "We're not flashy people."
"The next steps are going to be the most difficult... with great wealth comes great responsibility," added Colin.
The Weirs have both had serious health conditions in recent years and have not been able to work.
Colin, 64, had previously worked as a television cameraman and Chris, 55, is a fully-trained psychiatric nurse.
The most exciting aspect of their windfall is the opportunity to travel.
"We have both always wanted to see the Great Wall of China and Colin would love to stand at the foot of Ayers Rock in Australia," said Chris.
"We also love art galleries, so this gives us the chance to visit those in Paris and in Russia. These are all things we thought we would never see."
They have also already decided to buy homes for their two children, Carly and Jamie (both in their 20s).
UK winning streak
Before Tuesday's draw, the largest lottery winner in the UK was the player who claimed £113m in the Euromillions last October and chose to remain anonymous.
The couple have displaced former postal worker Angela Kelly from East Kilbride, who became Scotland's biggest winner in August 2007 when she scooped £35,425,411.80 in the Euromillions jackpot.
Britons have banked the Euromillions jackpot more than 14 times in the last two years.
Last year, two anonymous UK winners scooped £113m and £84m.
And Nigel and Justine Page, from Gloucestershire, won the £56m jackpot prize on EuroMillions in February 2010.
National Lottery operator Camelot runs the Euromillions draw in the UK and has also had the same role for the weekly Lotto draw since it was launched in 1994.
The firm says that its draws have created about 2,400 lottery millionaires in the UK in the intervening 17 years.
If the winner of Tuesday's draw had been a single player, he or she would instantly have been placed 430th in this year's Sunday Times Rich List just above Scottish businessman Sir Angus Grossart and Irina Abramovich, the former wife of Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich.
Two other UK-based lottery players won £1.7m after they successfully matched five numbers and one Lucky Star.
"Chris Weir said she and her husband Colin were "tickled pink""
to tickle means to make sb laugh or feel unconfortable by touching them with your fingers.
Are you ticklish?
What does "tickled pink" mean?
A: delighted or B: afraid
Other colour idioms:
If something happens out of the blue, it happens ...
A: suddenly and unexpectedly or B: as it usually happens
You receive a golden handshake when you ...
A: retire or are made redundant or B: are rewarded for helping sb
What colour do you is an unimportant, harmless lie?
A: white or B: black
If you catch sb committing a crime or doing stg bad or embarrassing, we catch them...
A: yellow-handed or B: red-handed
Click on the link to listen to the winning couple.
Vocabulary:
ganar / llevar - (inf)
el sorteo -
ostentoso -
no acostarse -
riqueza -
con éxito -
una ganancia inesperada -
a los pies de -
el gordo -
un paso -
Eso ocurre cuando nadie gana la lottería de una semana y el premio de la semana siguiente es más grande.
Es un verbo que significa que todos los numeros que tienes, son iguales con los numeros que han sido sorteado.
Eso significa que limitan algo, que no se puede pasar un cierto numero.
I am not sure about the translation of the last three words. Give me the word in Spanish as well as in English. At the same time, you could correct any mistakes in my Spanish.
una ganancia inesperada -
a los pies de -
el gordo -
un paso -
Eso ocurre cuando nadie gana la lottería de una semana y el premio de la semana siguiente es más grande.
Es un verbo que significa que todos los numeros que tienes, son iguales con los numeros que han sido sorteado.
Eso significa que limitan algo, que no se puede pasar un cierto numero.
I am not sure about the translation of the last three words. Give me the word in Spanish as well as in English. At the same time, you could correct any mistakes in my Spanish.
Grammar Point:
"If the winner of Tuesday's draw had been a single player, he or she would instantly have been placed 430th in this year's Sunday Times Rich List"
The above is an example of 3º Conditional which we use to describe a different past and its (past) consequence.
Reality: The winner of the draw wasn't a single player and so they weren't placed 430th on the Sunday Times Rich List.
Structure:
If + had + past participle (imagining a different past) , + would + have + past participle (with a different consequence) i.e. would + present perfect + if + past perfect
N.B. When the sentence starts with if, the two clauses are separated by a comma.
Read and do the exercises contained in this previous post on 3º Conditional.
The above is an example of 3º Conditional which we use to describe a different past and its (past) consequence.
Reality: The winner of the draw wasn't a single player and so they weren't placed 430th on the Sunday Times Rich List.
Structure:
If + had + past participle (imagining a different past) , + would + have + past participle (with a different consequence) i.e. would + present perfect + if + past perfect
N.B. When the sentence starts with if, the two clauses are separated by a comma.
Read and do the exercises contained in this previous post on 3º Conditional.
Idioms:
"Chris Weir said she and her husband Colin were "tickled pink""
to tickle means to make sb laugh or feel unconfortable by touching them with your fingers.
#WOTD TICKLE (v) to touch (sensitive parts of someone’s skin) lightly, often making the person laugh
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) September 16, 2019
e.g. I tickled her feet with a feather.
(n) a feeling of irritation in the throat
(adj) TICKLISH - easily made to laugh when tickled pic.twitter.com/18Zdl3I8Vz
Are you ticklish?
What does "tickled pink" mean?
A: delighted or B: afraid
Other colour idioms:
If something happens out of the blue, it happens ...
A: suddenly and unexpectedly or B: as it usually happens
You receive a golden handshake when you ...
A: retire or are made redundant or B: are rewarded for helping sb
What colour do you is an unimportant, harmless lie?
A: white or B: black
If you catch sb committing a crime or doing stg bad or embarrassing, we catch them...
A: yellow-handed or B: red-handed
Comments
This couple is very lucky and I'm delighted for them. I usually play to Euromillions at weekend and Mondays morning I wake up very happy thinking that maybe I will rich and I check it on the Internet, but I have only won two numbers so far, but I don't lose hope.
ganar / llevar - (inf):to scoop
el sorteo -the draw
ostentoso -flashy
no acostarse -sit up
riqueza -wealth
Thanks for to continue working whith us.
Paloma
Good to hear from you. Did you get my mail? Somehow, I overlooked yours. The address I had for you was wrong.
Anyway, I am not in my native land yet. I'm off to Inverness on the 27th. I'm really looking forward to going.
How about you? Have you completed another part of the Camino?
I usually PLAY EUROMILLIONS at THE weekend and ON MONDAY MORNINGS I wake up very happy thinking that MAYBE I WILL / I might
BE rich / HAVE WON and I check it on the Internet, but I have only MATCHED two numbers so far, but I don't lose hope.
Thanks for CONTINUING TO WORK WITH us.
I've added some other words for you to find. Any corrections to my Spanish is welcome.
I hope you are enjoying the summer as much as I am. :-)
I got your e-mail and when you want, you can write to me to that address e-mail.
This summer I'm only going to go to my beach house. I can't go abroad because I am building a cottage in a village in Extremadura in front of the Sierra de Gredos and I don't have enough money to travel, but in September I will go a week to continue the Camino de Santiago. I hope to get to León.
I love being able to help you with the Spanish but your Spanish is very good, there is only a mistake: "Es un verbo que significa que todos los números coinciden con los números premiados", this rather grammatically.
con éxito - successfully
una ganancia inesperada -windfell
a los pies de -at the foot
el gordo -jackpot
un paso -¿?
Eso ocurre cuando nadie gana la lottería de una semana y el premio de la semana siguiente es más grande.-jackpot (bote)
Es un verbo que significa que todos los numeros que tienes, son iguales con los numeros que han sido sorteado.- to match
Eso significa que limitan algo, que no se puede pasar un cierto numero.- to cap
Bye, to talk soon
I really find few mistakes whenever you write which makes me very happy.
Thanks for helping with my Spanish. I really should make a special effort on my 10th anniversary here. It's embarrassing to say that :$
when/WHENEVER you want, you can write to me AT that E-MAIL ADDRESS.
SO I don't have enough money / I CAN'T AFFORD to travel...
una ganancia inesperada - WINDFALL
un paso - A STEP
Eso ocurre cuando nadie gana la lottería de una semana y el premio de la semana siguiente es más grande - A ROLLOVER
You will notice that I have completed the post with a grammar point and some colour idioms (with questions).
"There's no rest for the wicked"
You'll also noticed that I have started Twitter as well as Facebook. You should join me there even if it is just to read without participating.
September is a great month for a walking. I might go to Cadiz then if I can afford it :-)
We often read about people who strike it lucky in the lottery. Now and again we are happy for them but for most, we think that they are undeserving winners. In this case, Ms. Sturgeon will be eternally grateful to the couple.
... It has been for them a peak moment in their lives, which has allowed them to change everything. I love seeing and hearing from these two in such a special moment. As he says:unbelievable ! It's great to see how life can change in a moment, especially when it comes to such nice people.