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(escucha el audio más de una vez para familiarizarte con los términos que
se introducen y explican)
I am not
going to lie to you: Not all bugs are created equal.
We like some insects and hate others.
For example, if you see a big cockroach run across the floor, you might
run for the insecticide spray.
But if you see a brightly colored butterfly landing on a flower outside
your window, you probably will not spray it with poison.
So today, we are not going to talk about cockroaches. Let’s talk about
butterflies instead!
Butterflies are beautiful both in their appearance and movements.
They flutter. This means they move their wings back and forth very
quickly. The word “flutter” even goes very nicely with the word “butterfly.”
Butterflies flutter by.
Other things can flutter, like a sail on a boat
that flutters in the wind. Flutter can also mean to move in an uneven,
irregular way. When two people are in love, you can say their hearts are
“all a flutter.”
This fluttering movement led to the expression “to have butterflies in
your stomach.” This means you feel nervous. It feels like you have
butterflies fluttering around inside you.
To have butteries in your stomach is a common expression, so much so
that we often just say we have butterflies. For example, if I am nervous
before speaking in public, I can say, “I’m so nervous! I have
butterflies!”
Butterflies can also flutter from one place to another. They do not
spend too much time on one flower or plant. Some people do this as well.
They flutter about, not spending too much time in once place too long …
like a butterfly.
That is where we get the term “social butterfly.” We use it to describe
a person with a lot of friends and a lot of social engagements, like
parties and get-togethers.
These two butterfly expressions are fairly common and you can use them
in any situation. But today, we will talk about another butterfly
expression, one that is a little more … philosophical.
We call this the Butterfly Effect.
The butterfly effect is a theory. It claims that one small action can
lead to major events. For example, a butterfly fluttering its wings can
have a great effect -- like producing a storm -- in another part of the
world.
But this expression is not just used by great thinkers, you know,
philosophers. Every small decision you make can have a butterfly effect
in your own life.
For example, let’s say that one night you agree to meet friends at the
movies. On the way, you stop to help a man with a broken bicycle. This
makes you late and you miss the movie. But the man is thankful. He gives
you his card and invites you to lunch.
As it turns out, he is a book publisher who offers to look at a book you
have just finished writing. Your stopping to help him led to events in
your life happening very differently.
Now, you may hear other expressions that mean about the same thing. We
also have the ripple effect. If you throw something into a body of still
water, it cause ripples in the water, one leading to the next.
Then there is the domino effect. Dominoes is a game where you stack up
domino tiles close to each other. You push one which falls into the next,
which falls into the next, and so on and so on – until they are all down.
The snowball effect is when something small gets worse and worse over
time. Imagine a ball of snow rolling down a hill getting bigger and
bigger as it collects more snow.
We usually use “to snowball” only for bad things. We use the others for
both good and bad events. And you can use all of these in either formal
or informal situations.
One big difference is that we can say something dominoed, or snowballed
or even rippled. Although that one is less common. However, we do not
say something butterflied. For example, “The man could not have known
that his not going into work would domino into a very interesting day.”
These expressions are all chain reactions. They all mean that one thing
leads to the next, to the next and so on.
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