17.1.12

Easy tiger!


Rob: Hello, I'm Rob. And here comes Helen. Wow, she's changed her hair colour! It looks, well, different. Hi Helen I like your hair.
Helen: Don't say a word!
Rob: Whoa!
Helen: I don't want to talk about it.
Rob: About what? The fact you dyed() your hair?
Helen: Enough!
Rob: Whoa! Easy tiger!
Helen: I do not look like a tiger!
Rob: I never said you did. It's just an expression. Though come to think of it, your hair is kind of stripy orange now.
(Helen starts sobbing)
Rob: OK, you really don't look like a tiger though. I said "easy tiger!" which is just a way of saying "calm down".
Helen: It's all the hairdresser’s(理髮店) fault. He told me I would look beautiful with copper() highlights, then he did this to me. Now I have orange stripes(條紋), I look like a jungle animal.
Rob: No, you don't look like a jungle animal(叢林野獸). Listen to me. We say "easy tiger" when we want someone to calm down, to not get over-emotional, or not to rush into something.
Helen: Oh. You're talking about tigers because of the way I'm behaving, not because of my hair?
Rob: That's right. It's an expression that's usually used in informal situations, between friends. Here are some more examples.
Girl 1: I've just met the perfect man – he is tall, handsome, kind... I'm going to marry him and have children – we'll live together in a house by the sea, we'll -
Girl 2: Easy tiger! Do you even know his name?

Man: Right, this food is disgusting, we're leaving the restaurant right now!
Woman: Easy tiger! I quite like it here. Let's wait until the main course(主餐) comes.
Helen: I understand. Maybe my hair is not so bad after all.
Rob: No, it's just unusual. It doesn't make you look like a tiger... I'd say more of an orangutan(猩猩) than a tiger...
Helen: What! An orangutan!
Rob: Orangutans are very handsome creatures; they're a kind of rich auburn-copper(銅色) colour.
Helen: How dare you!(你怎麼敢)
Rob: Don't bare(裸露) your teeth like that, that's scary. Please…
(Sound of a real growling tiger!)
Rob: Easy tiger, easy!
(Tiger growling and huge roar).

this report is from bbc lerning english
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/language/theenglishwespeak/2012/01/120117_tews_54_easy_tiger_page.shtml 

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