Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Hi this is Tutor Nick P and this is Adjective Phrase 16. The Adjective Phrase

  • today is dog-eat-dog. Okay. Let's take a look at the note here. If something is

  • dog-eat-dog, it means that it is a ruthless competition. So some competition, it

  • could be sports competition, it could be business competition, it could be

  • competition in politics. But it's usually some sort of competition between you

  • know, individuals or groups of people. We mean that someone is willing to do

  • almost anything to succeed even if it hurts or harms others. Okay.

  • The phrase alludes to the idea that the fierce struggle and competition between

  • people could turn them into animals. So people may start acting like

  • animals. So that's what the idea of dog-eat-dog is. When we say that it's a

  • dog-eat-dog world, a lot of times we use world with dog-eat-dog but it could use

  • other nouns too, it suggests that the idea ... it's just the idea that either you

  • eat others or you get eaten. So it's like you have no choice. Even if you don't

  • want to. If you don't eat them they're going to eat you. So it's a dog-eat-dog

  • world or a dog-eat-dog situation. Okay. You know, eat others you get .... relating to

  • Darwin's idea of survival of the fittest. So that's kind of where the idea of this

  • phrase comes from. All right. Let's look at a couple of examples we have here.

  • Example number one. Somebody might say, are you sure you really want to go into

  • politics ? Maybe this is a young person they say they want to get in to politics

  • and maybe this is a person that knows a lot about people that are in politics.

  • It's a dog-eat-dog world, in Washington. Many people in politics play dirty in

  • order to survive and you may find yourself in the same position. So if you

  • go there you, they'll ...either you may become corrupted or maybe you'll just not

  • succeed. That's what they mean by that. All right.

  • Number two. Number two has both an A and a B part. It's hard to believe that

  • the Olympic skater Tonya Harding. Yeah. This is all the way back in 1994. Tonya,

  • this was a famous story made all the main news the Tonya Harding had her

  • ex-husband hire an attacker to hit the other American skater Nancy Kerrigan in

  • the leg. Yeah. I don't know if it was ever officially established that that

  • Tonya Harding, you know, was involved in it. Because if she was involved in it,

  • really she should have been disqualified and she did go on to the Olympics. But I

  • do remember that she had to appear in court about this. And yeah they hit Nancy

  • Kerrigan in the leg. I don't know. So she could be more in the spotlight. I

  • don't know maybe. Tonya Harding wanted to be the only main Olympian or maybe she

  • thought Nancy Kerrigan was her competition. If she was number one maybe

  • she could make more money get more sponsors or whatever. But she was willing

  • to go this far. You know, she might have been involved in this. So all right. Let's

  • continue. They were both ... yeah. So here they want

  • to say they were both American you would think they should be like cheering for

  • each other or rooting for each other. That you know they would want each other

  • to do well. You know it should be for the country sort of idea. And then of course

  • B says well what can you say, it's a dog-eat-dog competition or it's a

  • dog-eat-dog world. That's the way they would probably refer to something like

  • that. Anyway, I hope you got it . I hope it's clear. Thank you for your time. Bye-bye.

Hi this is Tutor Nick P and this is Adjective Phrase 16. The Adjective Phrase

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it

A2 US

英語導師Nick P形容詞短語(16) Dog Eat Dog(狗吃狗) (English Tutor Nick P Adjective Phrase (16) Dog Eat Dog)

  • 13 0
    anitawu12 posted on 2021/01/14
Video vocabulary