Bob's Short English Lessons

Learn the English Phrases WITH IT and I'M WITH YOU

January 14, 2021 Bob the Canadian Season 1 Episode 75
Bob's Short English Lessons
Learn the English Phrases WITH IT and I'M WITH YOU
Show Notes Transcript

Read along to practice your English and to learn the English phrases WITH IT and I'M WITH YOU

In this English lesson I wanted to help you learn the English phrase, with it. When you are talking about a person and you say that person is with it, you mean that their brain is working really good and they are mentally competent. Here are some example sentences of the phrase, with it. I could say, I'm not really with it this morning because I haven't had my coffee yet and I really need caffeine so my brain works. You could say something like, my grandfather is 97 years old and he's still really with it. So when you use the phrase, with it to talk about a person, you're basically talking about how well their brain is working. So for me, I just know that if I don't get a good night's sleep, I'm not very with it the next day. I'm kind of off my game a little bit.

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The second phrase I wanted to teach you today is the phrase, I'm with you. So when you say I'm with you it means that you agree with that person. If you were to say to me, the sun is a beautiful thing to see every day, I would say, I'm with you on that. I really think that a sunny day is a beautiful day, except if it's over 30 degrees then I don't really enjoy it. But when you say to someone I'm with you it means that you agree with them. If someone was to say, football is the best sport in the world, you might reply and say, ah, I'm with you. I keep wanting to say soccer, that's why I'm making an S sound. Football is amazing. It is the best sport, I'm with you.

So to repeat, if you say that someone is with it it means they're alert, their brain is working really well and they are just energetic and thinking clearly. If you say I'm with you, it means you agree with someone. I feel like I was making a few or almost making mistakes as I'm recording this because for some reason I'm not really with it today. I was really with it but I came outside and it's extra windy and it was hard to find a place to record a video. So if you'll just excuse me, I'm a little out of sorts. I'm not totally with it right now. I will a moment though. Let me just refocus.

Let's look at a comment from a previous video. And this comment is from Xavier. And Xavier says, "in Spain the electric bill "has risen by 28% so far in January. "They may think we are made of money. "That's not a good way to make our day." And my response was, "ouch, that's a pretty steep increase "to make matters worse, you're probably at home "using a lot of electricity."

So Xavier, thank you so much for that comment. This is from the video yesterday, where I looked at the phrase, to be made of money and I looked at the phrase, it made my day. So yes, costs of electricity. So in Ontario, Canada, the government has actually frozen the cost of electricity for this month and they actually lowered it to a lower rate. Now, I like that, that's really nice because we're all home it's nice to have a little bit cheap electricity. I'm sorry Xavier, if in Spain it's getting more expensive. I don't mean to brag but in Canada they've lowered the rate but I'm worried that over the next five or 10 years in Canada we'll all have to pay a lot more taxes to the government because the Canadian government is borrowing lots of money in order to get the country through this epidemic, through this COVID pandemic. And so I feel like the more money we borrow the more taxes we're all going to have to pay over the next 10 years but I'll take it. I don't mind having electricity a little bit cheaper especially in the winter.

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In this English lesson I wanted to help you learn the English phrase, with it. When you are talking about a person and you say that person is with it, you mean that their brain is working really good and they are mentally competent. Here are some example sentences of the phrase, with it. I could say, I'm not really with it this morning because I haven't had my coffee yet and I really need caffeine so my brain works. You could say something like, my grandfather is 97 years old and he's still really with it. So when you use the phrase, with it to talk about a person, you're basically talking about how well their brain is working. So for me, I just know that if I don't get a good night's sleep, I'm not very with it the next day. I'm kind of off my game a little bit.

The second phrase I wanted to teach you today is the phrase, I'm with you. So when you say I'm with you it means that you agree with that person. If you were to say to me, the sun is a beautiful thing to see every day, I would say, I'm with you on that. I really think that a sunny day is a beautiful day, except if it's over 30 degrees then I don't really enjoy it. But when you say to someone I'm with you it means that you agree with them. If someone was to say, football is the best sport in the world, you might reply and say, ah, I'm with you. I keep wanting to say soccer, that's why I'm making an S sound. Football is amazing. It is the best sport, I'm with you.

So to repeat, if you say that someone is with it it means they're alert, their brain is working really well and they are just energetic and thinking clearly. If you say I'm with you, it means you agree with someone. I feel like I was making a few or almost making mistakes as I'm recording this because for some reason I'm not really with it today. I was really with it but I came outside and it's extra windy and it was hard to find a place to record a video. So if you'll just excuse me, I'm a little out of sorts. I'm not totally with it right now. I will a moment though. Let me just refocus.

Let's look at a comment from a previous video. And this comment is from Xavier. And Xavier says, "in Spain the electric bill "has risen by 28% so far in January. "They may think we are made of money. "That's not a good way to make our day." And my response was, "ouch, that's a pretty steep increase "to make matters worse, you're probably at home "using a lot of electricity."

So Xavier, thank you so much for that comment. This is from the video yesterday, where I looked at the phrase, to be made of money and I looked at the phrase, it made my day. So yes, costs of electricity. So in Ontario, Canada, the government has actually frozen the cost of electricity for this month and they actually lowered it to a lower rate. Now, I like that, that's really nice because we're all home it's nice to have a little bit cheap electricity. I'm sorry Xavier, if in Spain it's getting more expensive. I don't mean to brag but in Canada they've lowered the rate but I'm worried that over the next five or 10 years in Canada we'll all have to pay a lot more taxes to the government because the Canadian government is borrowing lots of money in order to get the country through this epidemic, through this COVID pandemic. And so I feel like the more money we borrow the more taxes we're all going to have to pay over the next 10 years but I'll take it. I don't mind having electricity a little bit cheaper especially in the winter.

We heat our house with oil, our furnace burns oil but we also use electricity to run the fan and the furnace and other things around the house. And so having electricity a little cheaper during the winter isn't actually a bad thing for me. I actually think I kind of appreciate it.

Anyways, I hope you're having a good day. I hope you're all really with it right now and learning a lot of English in this lesson. I'll see you tomorrow with another short English lesson.