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每日听力|BBC六分钟 - 6 Minute English - The bitter taste of sugar

小芳老师 2020-09-18

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每日听力内容来自BBC英语六分钟,版权归BBC所有,仅供学习交流如有侵权也请后台联系。该节目英式英语,每日更新,和实际生活密切相关。每个听力文件6分钟,而且每次都有听力题目,可以用来备考四六级等各种英语考试考试。

How much sugar do you have a day? Rob and Neil talk about the recent recommendation by the World Health Organisation for people to reduce the amount of sugar they eat even more than previously advised. They say that it should account for 5% of the total energy we take from food – down from 10%.

What do experts suggest to help people eat less sugar? Follow the discussion and learn some food-related vocabulary.

Transcript

Note: This is not a word for word transcript

Rob
Hello I'm Rob. Welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm joined today by Neil.

Neil
Hello. Neil here. Excuse me I'm enjoying a bar of chocolate…

Rob
Where did you get that from?

Neil
In the vending machine upstairs – that's the automatic machine with drinks and sweets – you put coins in it to release whatever you paid for.

Rob
Now, if it was up to some health professionals, you wouldn't see many of those machines around anymore.

Neil
What? No more machines which offer you as many sweets as you like, no questions asked?

Rob
Exactly. The World Health Organisation has recently proposed a cut in its recommendation for how much sugar we should have. They now say that it should be less than 5% of ourcalorie intake.

Neil
A calorie is a unit that measures how much energy you get from food, and calorie intake is how many calories we eat in a period of time – say a day, for example.

Rob
Yes. So this might be it for sugar for you today, Neil.

Neil
Well, let me see… this bar of chocolate contains 215 calories! That's quite a lot, isn't it?

Rob
But life can be sweet even with less sugar, Neil. So today, we're going to talk about what should be done to help us eat less sugar and you'll learn words about food.

Neil
But I like my sugar!

Rob
Many people do. So let me ask you about how much they like it. Which country has the highest sugar consumption? Is it:

a)    China

b)    India

c)    The United States

Neil
I think it's the United States.

Rob
Okay. Well, we'll have the answer at the end of the programme! Right, so let's talk about sugar. Health experts are looking for ways to make us eat less of it.

Neil
We all know that too much sugar can cause not only obesity and diabetes but also tooth decay – this destroys the hard surface of your teeth and exposes more sensitive parts. Ouch!

Rob
Yes, it can be very painful. You might enjoy eating sweets but nobody likes toothache – that's what we call the pain in your teeth.

Neil
Experts say we should always brush our teeth after eating sugary food.  

Rob
Yes. Aubrey Sheiham, Professor of Dental Public Health at University College London, goes even further. He is part of a team which is suggesting the authorities in England reduce the number of vending machines in public places. Listen to what he says. Which word does he use to describe Neil's chocolate bar and other kinds of wrapped sweets?

INSERT
Aubrey Sheiham, Professor of Dental Public Health at University College London
We shouldn't have vending machines with confectionery and soft drinks in any publicly-funded institutions – no schools, nurseries, hospitals etc. – and also limit the amount of sugar in school meals, nurseries' meals. That again would be a first step that one would take.

Neil
He mentions 'confectionery', meaning chocolate and sweet snacks, which can be bought from vending machines, along with soft drinks – which are cold sweet drinks that are not alcoholic.

Rob
The professor doesn't want these machines in state schools or hospitals. And he also wants meals served to children in schools to have less sugar.

Neil
He's got a point there. We get used to sugar in childhood. And it seems that the more sugar we eat, the more we want. But if we get used to eating things which are less sweet, after a while when we eat something very sweet, it doesn't taste so good. Do you understand what I mean?

Rob
Yes, I do. It's a matter of habit. We don't need so much sugar to enjoy the sweet taste. But the professor says there's another way of encouraging us to eat less sugar. Aubrey Sheiham talks about tax on sugar. France has already adopted a sugar tax. Where's the money being spent? Let's listen.

INSERT
Aubrey Sheiham, Professor of Dental Public Health at University College London
You've got a lot of public support in France where the consumption of sugar has gone down considerably. And, what is good about what the French have done is that tax that has gone on sugar is being spent in the health service. This is a way that you could actually use that money from the sugar tax and spend it on improving health care and dental care.

Rob
He says it's being spent on the health service. This is the doctors' surgeries and hospitals financed with public money – money paid to a government in the form of taxes.

Neil
Oh, so chocolate might become more expensive! Not so good for me because I have a sweet tooth

Rob
Ah a sweet tooth, yeah, like me – a strong preference for sweet food. Well, people with a sweet tooth should be careful or they might end up with toothache.  

Neil
I care a lot about my teeth.

Rob
Good on you. You've got a fine set of gnashers there. Okay, let's go back to our quiz. I asked you which country has the highest sugar consumption. The options were: China, India and the United States.

Neil
And I said the United States.

Rob
And Neil, you are wrong. The correct answer is actually India. According to a report issued by the US Department of Agriculture in 2012, India was the country with the highest consumption of sugar. Then we had China and the country in this list which ate the least amount of sugar is the United States.  These countries are also amongst the largest producers of sugar. Okay. Well, now our time is up. Let's remember some of the words we explained today.

Neil
Yes. They were:

vending machine

calorie intake

calorie

tooth decay

toothache

confectionery

soft drinks

health service

to have a sweet tooth

Rob
Thanks, Neil. That is it for today. Why not go to bbclearningenglish.com to hear more 6 Minute English. Bye for now!

Neil
Bye!

Vocabulary

calorie intake
the amount of calories we eat in a period of time – a day, for example

calorie
unit that measures how much energy you get from food

tooth decay
when the hard surface of your teeth breaks down and exposes more sensitive parts

toothache
pain in your teeth

confectionery
chocolate and sweet snacks

soft drinks
cold sweet drinks which are not alcoholic

health service
doctors' surgeries and hospitals financed with public money – money paid to a government in the form of taxes

have a sweet tooth
to have a strong preference for food that tastes sweet

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