Biggest UK EuroMillions winners revealed
EuroMillions: Lottery winners scooped £184m with lucky dip ticket
Couple who live in £600,000 home become EuroMillions winners https://t.co/ruBlES1PSW via @MailOnline
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) May 19, 2022
Vocabulary:
hold
What's the one word that fits every sentence?
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) June 13, 2020
(hold, held, held)
1. hold an event e.g. funeral, party, conference, concert, meeting etc. = to organise (celebrar)
2. get held up (in traffic) / to hold up = to make sb/sth slow or late
3. hold (=have) a record /title in sth https://t.co/TbZEKEEdTE
run
run (a business, activity, organisation or country) = to organize or be in charge of
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) April 18, 2020
e.g. The store closed down because it was badly run.
(trains, buses) run - operate
e.g. Buses don't run on a Sunday here.
e.g. The trains are running late today. https://t.co/kRiaYIwH34 pic.twitter.com/fpeSKwSi7n
budget
#WOTD BUDGET (n) - an amount of money available to spend (presupuesto)
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) February 4, 2021
e.g. My BUDGET doesn't allow for staying in five star hotels.
e.g. They managed to finish the project WITHIN BUDGET.
(adj) - low in price (económico)
e.g. BUDGET AIRLINES have lead to a boom in tourism. https://t.co/wUeWMdsAIQ pic.twitter.com/qqdG1BDM1a
get on with
#PV GET ON WITH (sth) - to start or continue doing stg, especially work (ponerse a trabajar, ir al tajo)
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) August 29, 2020
e.g. Enough of the chatting. Let's GET ON WITH IT. I don't want to finish late.
e.g. I'd better GET ON WITH the housework. The kids will be home soon. pic.twitter.com/HCBq8ftPOW
worth
Only Nº 3 is right.
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) October 7, 2021
1. be worth + object (always necessary) / verb-ing
e.g. The cathedral ISN'T WORTH visitING.
e.g. Don't visit the cathedral. It'S NOT WORTH IT.
Blog post on Worth:https://t.co/NtiW7sGqNo
Try to complete the lyrics of Worth It :https://t.co/bK4XzXkEz6 pic.twitter.com/79EEoBp69c
claim
#WOTD claim
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) March 22, 2019
(afirmar)
- She claims that she knew nothing about her husband committing fraud.
- Scientists claim to have found a cure.
(reclamar)
- You should claim unemployment benefit.
- He claimed for his travel expenses.
What's the difference between claim and complain?
leak
#WOTD LEAK (v,n) - (of a liquid or gas) to escape from a hole or crack in a pipe or container; (of a container) to allow liquid or gas to escape (tener una fuga, gotear)
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) October 31, 2021
- to allow secret information to become generally known (filtrar)
e.g. The names WERE LEAKED TO the press. https://t.co/n6dOomR2tb pic.twitter.com/29SBPlSpmR
fancy
#WOTD fancy (v)
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) March 24, 2019
= want
- Do you fancy a coffee?
- What film do you fancy seeING?
- I've always fancied living there.
= find attractive
- She fancies her new colleague. He's very handsome.
= rate
- I don't fancy his chances of winning. (no creo que tenga muchas posibilidades)
rush
#WOTD RUSH (v,n) - to hurry or move quickly somewhere, or to make sb or stg hurry or move quickly somewhere (prisa, darse prisa, meter prisa a)
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) January 12, 2020
e.g. THERE'S NO RUSH. Take as long as you like.
e.g. Don't RUSH ME!
e.g. I'M IN A RUSH. I have to catch a train. pic.twitter.com/HEZOd8cSdw
Previous blog posts and tweets on lottery winners:
Scots couple win biggest ever EuroMillions
Spanish TV reporter apologises over emotional live lottery win https://t.co/2E88fwNMof
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) December 23, 2019
We all won the lottery! These 20 winners explain how they spent it http://t.co/kuG39CDguI via @MailOnline
— English in Madrid (@madteacher72) November 15, 2014
Comments
I´m glad that Joe and Jess were lottery winners and they scooped 184 million pounds. I hope that they go on being happy now. They seem a common couple, with two children, working and living with a limit budget. They can take their children to Hawaii and come back several times. As said Mrs. Thwaite, her father asked them what would do when they won, then I suppose that she must know what is going to do.
There are many finance experts able to give advices and they have already begun to work. The last advice said that they mustn´t to rush. ¡How prudent! I imagine a lot of banks and financial companies ringing them without stop every day.
I don´t want family rifts because of this enormous amount of money. I prefer to live calmly and to share our overage lifestyle among all family. It´s not a joke. If you don´t have a lot of properties to manage, you won´t have a lot of troubles. I don´t know if I don´t buy tickets for this reason or because I´m feel laziness to go to the lottery kiosk.
See you.
This couple, apart from appearing incredibly dull, were already hardly short of a bob or two. Click on the tweet to see the house that they own. But then again, if they worked hard and scrimped and saved for it ...
Be sure to click on tweets contained in any blog post and check out any links. Tweet any comments or at the very least like the tweet to show me that you've seen it.
I´m glad that Joe and Jess were lottery winners and they scooped 184 million pounds. I hope that they go on being happy now. They seem an ordinary couple, with two children, working and living with a limited budget . They can now take their children to Hawaii as often as they want. As Mrs. Thwaite said, her father asked them what would do when they won, then I suppose that she must know what she is going to do.
There are many finance experts able to give advice and they have already begun to work. The last advice said that they mustn´t rush. ¡How prudent! I imagine a lot of banks and financial companies ringing them all day.
I don´t want family rifts because of this enormous amount of money. I prefer to live calmly and to share our overage lifestyle among all family. It´s not a joke. If you don´t have a lot of properties to manage, you won´t have a lot of troubles. I don´t know if I don´t buy tickets for this reason or because I´m feel laziness to go to the lottery kiosk.
Their house is good, but it´s not Rockefeller. I like they were lottery winners because they are common workers. See you.
They live in a well-to-do part of the country in a house with lots of space and privacy but as I say, they may have worked hard to get it.
They had a week to think of something interesting to say when presented with the cheque but they just bored the pants of us.
I am pleased that they won the lottery because they are ordinary workers. (I would rather a shop worker, a cleaner or a language teacher had won)