If You Are Feeling Blue, Are You Calm,
Strong, or Sad?
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(escucha el audio más de una vez para familiarizarte con los términos que
se introducen y explican)
By the way,
there’s actually a phrase for this act: to coin a phrase means to invent
a new saying. The Grammarist website explains that using the word “coin”
as a verb began in the 1300s. It related to putting an image on a piece
of metal money. But the expression did not come about until 500 years
later, when some English speaker coined the phrase “to coin a phrase.”
Anyway, today we begin with a phrase that scientist Wallace Nichols
coined in more recent years. It explains how people feel when they are
near water. That phrase is “blue mind.”
It is also the name of Wallace’s book, published in 2014. He uses the
phrase to mean a sense of calm and happiness one has near a lake, river,
ocean or other body of water. In this phrase, the color blue is
positive. It suggests both the color of water and a feeling of mental
quiet.
The color blue is also sometimes linked to a feeling of security, say
researchers who study how colors make people feel. If you call someone
true blue, you mean you can depend on her completely. A true blue friend
is loyal and trustworthy. A friend like that is extremely valuable. You
might even say that someone who is true blue is worth her weight in
gold. But that would be mixing idioms!
In some phrases, blue relates to being the best. If you win top prize,
you win a blue ribbon. Sometimes you really do get a piece of fabric
that is the color blue. But you can also just describe something that is
excellent with the adjective “blue ribbon” – such as a “blue ribbon
restaurant.”
In business, a successful company that has a very positive public image
can be called a blue chip operation. If you own a piece of that company,
then you own blue chip stock. Anything that is of high quality can be
blue chip.
A writer on the business website Motley Fool reports that English
speakers started using the term in the early 1900s. It relates to the
game of poker. In the game, people use flat, round pieces called chips.
The blue chips had the highest value. At the end of the game, players
exchanged their chips for real money. So it is no surprise that the more
blue chips you gain, the better!
But in some other English expressions, the word "blue" is linked to some
more complex ideas.
If you have the blues, you are sad, even depressed. The website Word
Histories says that this sorrowful meaning appeared in a story in
England in the 1400s. The color blue related to skin that was hurt or
bruised.
Artists may also go through a blue period. This is a time when their
work suggests painful feelings.
Hopefully, those low times do not come very often – perhaps once in a
blue moon. This expression has come to mean happening rarely. It refers
to the unusual times when one month includes two full moons. The second
moon is a “blue moon.” Such an event is seen as special and noteworthy.
In comparison, something that is a bolt from the blue is unexpected and
usually bad. Let’s say you and your business partner had just launched a
new store. You thought you were working well together. So, the news that
she was leaving to take a new job was a bolt from the blue.
The idea is that of lightening or thunder appearing in a cloudless sky.
News of unexpected illness or a sudden death can also be a bolt from the
blue.
So, what does the color blue mean for you? Calmness, loyalty, sadness,
surprise or something else? After all, every culture and every person
reacts to colors differently.
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