Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing
Podcast Image

American English With Brent

Hurricane Milton: Storm of the Century Slams Florida: 30 IELTS and TOEFL Prep Terms

10 Oct 2024

Description

Hurricane Milton is expected to slam Florida in the next couple hours. In this English lesson, we will watch a news clip and talk about all the difficult vocabulary that might give English learners some trouble. πŸ’™ WANT BONUS ENGLISH? Become a channel member. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCakDTg9dhhAsr3WmHyJDa-g/join πŸ“° Get 15% off GROUND NEWS https://check.ground.news/AmericanEnglishBrent πŸ“½οΈ Want to record lessons like this? I livestream with STREAMYARD: https://streamyard.com/pal/c/6287572368359424 πŸ‡ΉπŸ‡· πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡ͺ πŸ‘¨πŸΌβ€πŸ¦± Want a Hair Transplant? Check out https://cabhealth.com/ Get 10% off a hair transplant Code Brent10 1. Tracking – Following the path of something. β€’ Experts are tracking Hurricane Milton as it moves toward Tampa Bay. 2. Downgraded – To reduce the strength or importance of something. β€’ Hurricane Milton was downgraded from Category 5 to 4 as it reached Fort Myers. 3. Weakened – Made less strong. β€’ The storm weakened slightly before hitting Tampa Bay, but it remains dangerous. 4. Weekend – The end of the week (Saturday and Sunday). β€’ Hurricane Milton is expected to hit over the weekend, causing major disruptions. 5. Destructive – Causing great damage. β€’ Milton is a destructive storm, leaving widespread damage in Fort Myers. 6. Downplay – To make something seem less important. β€’ Officials warn residents not to downplay the severity of Hurricane Milton. 7. Storm surge – A rise in sea level caused by a hurricane. β€’ A dangerous storm surge is expected along the Gulf Coast as Milton approaches. 8. A wide swath – A large area. β€’ Hurricane Milton could impact a wide swath of Florida, including Tampa Bay. 9. Barreling towards – Moving quickly and forcefully. β€’ The storm is barreling towards Fort Myers, expected to hit by midnight. 10. Make landfall – When a storm reaches land. β€’ Milton will make landfall near Tampa Bay with high winds and flooding. 11. Eye of the storm – The calm center of a hurricane. β€’ The eye of the storm passed over Fort Myers, offering a brief moment of calm. 12. Once in a century storm – A storm that happens very rarely. β€’ Meteorologists are calling Milton a once in a century storm due to its strength. 13. Mandatory evacuation – A forced order for people to leave an area. β€’ A mandatory evacuation was issued for Tampa Bay ahead of Milton’s arrival. 14. Shuttered – To close something, often for protection. β€’ Shops in Tampa Bay shuttered their windows in preparation for the storm. 15. Shuttered – To shake or tremble in fear. β€’ Residents shuttered in fear as the winds of Milton intensified. 16. Flee – To run away from danger. β€’ Thousands of people fled Fort Myers to escape the coming storm. 17. Petrified – Extremely scared. β€’ Many residents were petrified as Hurricane Milton approached the Gulf Coast. 18. Suspended commercial travel – Stopped travel for safety reasons. β€’ Airports in Tampa Bay suspended commercial travel as the storm grew stronger. 19. Widespread destruction – Damage over a large area. β€’ Milton caused widespread destruction along the Gulf Coast, leaving many homes damaged. 20. Gulf Coast – The coastline along the Gulf of Mexico. β€’ The Gulf Coast is preparing for Hurricane Milton’s arrival, especially near Tampa Bay. 21. A huge rush – A large number of people doing something quickly. β€’ There was a huge rush to buy supplies before Milton hit Fort Myers. 22. Escorting – Accompanying someone or something for protection. β€’ Police were escorting evacuees out of the storm zone to safer areas.

Audio
Featured in this Episode

No persons identified in this episode.

Transcription

This episode hasn't been transcribed yet

Help us prioritize this episode for transcription by upvoting it.

0 upvotes
πŸ—³οΈ Sign in to Upvote

Popular episodes get transcribed faster

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Please log in to write the first comment.