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Welcome to Chattable! 🎙️ The podcast for everyday English. We want you to enjoy #English learning experience. We want to add color to your #vocabulary. Build your #confidence. Make you feel #proud. Segment 1: "Sniff around" Host Banter / Concept: Start by talking about how teams find new talent or how rumors start. Read the example: "The coach is sniffing around other school playgrounds to find a good quarterback for his high school football team." Background: Explain that this phrase comes directly from the animal kingdom! Think of a dog or a hound using its nose to investigate, hunt, or find a hidden treat. They are quietly exploring with their senses. Metaphorically, it transferred to humans who are investigating something or looking for opportunities. How to Apply it in Daily Life: Tell your learners this phrase is used when someone is looking for information, a new job, or a specific person, but doing it somewhat quietly or informally. It's not a formal, public search. It’s more like asking people on the side, checking out the competition, or looking for clues. Segment 2: "Move the goal post" (or goalposts) Host Banter / Concept: Transition into the frustrations of playing a game where the rules keep changing. Read the example: "The regulator keeps moving the goal post with their shifting policies, so the companies are having a hard time planning their products and investments." Background: This is a very literal sports metaphor. Picture a football, soccer, or rugby field. Imagine a player is running down the field, getting ready to kick the ball into the goal to win the game. But right before they kick, someone literally picks up the goalposts and moves them 50 yards away! How to Apply it in Daily Life: This is a fantastic idiom for business, arguments, or school. We use it when someone changes the rules, conditions, or expectations in the middle of a process, making it much harder for you to succeed. It is almost always used to express frustration. Segment 3: "Buzz" / "Buzzing" Host Banter / Concept: Shift the energy to excitement, anticipation, and rumors. Read the example: "His fans are buzzing about his potential return to the tennis court again." Background: The origin here is the literal sound that bees or insects make when they fly in a swarm—that continuous, vibrating "bzzzz" sound. Centuries ago, people started using it metaphorically to describe the low, constant sound of a large crowd of people talking excitedly at once. How to Apply it in Daily Life: Tell your learners this word can be a noun ("there is a lot of buzz") or a verb ("everyone is buzzing"). We use it to describe high excitement, intense interest, or widespread rumors about a specific topic, event, or celebrity. It’s the perfect word for social media trends.