Hello Ladies and Gentlemen and welcome back to Spika presents "Get the Vocab"
the show that teaches you english using tv series
My name is Riccardo and in this season 
we are going to talk about "The Big Bang Theory"
as you folks all know
In every video we talk about 
the key words of a specific episode
Remember to watch this video first
 before you watch the episode
But then please don't forget to come back
 on our website
and check out the amazing things that we have for you!
But now please let's continue with The Big Bang Theory!
The first word we are going to see today is
Now nourishment is the food you need to take
in order to live and grow healty
For example: the trees take nourishment from their roots
Now this informal expression
 is meanly used to describe
when you do a favour to someone  
who is in need of help
Because it comes from the idea 
  of giving a bone to a dog
it has a bit of a negative meaning
just like the other person is not on you same level
As in: me and Vanessa wanted to go to Paris for Easter but we couldn't, because I had to work
So I threw her a bone and I got her a box of chocolates at the supermarket
And that, ladies and gentlemen,  is how you keep a lady
OK! That's it! I' m done!
No no no, I'm kidding! 
Come here, it was jut the example!
Now this means when you tell someone 
they must not do something
and you are giving them an order
So you forbid them to do something
This is an irregular verb and it has the same structure as
So it goes
As in:  Julieth' s family forbade her to see Romeo again!
Oh, Romeo!
Now this noun describes  that period
 in your adolescence
when things  start to... change
You become taller,  hair starts growing in places you've never imagined
And your voice changes.
So you go: "Hey guys! What's up? How are YOU DOING"
What's going on?!
Now this noun comes from the adjective
which means strange  or wierd
Like a situation in which you don't know 
how to react or what to do
For example:
SPICE GIRLS: "WANNABE"
Need to buy the shampoo!!
That was awkward!!!
This is the noun of the verb "To misunderstand"
which means when one person says something and the other understands somenthing completely different
So there is a misunderstanding
The verb is created by putting
And doing so we give a negative meaning 
to the second verb
There are plenty of other verbs that starts with  
"Mis" in english language
Like: misleading, misjudging, et cetera, et cetera
All with a negative meaning
Now this is an informal expression  to describe when something good happens to a person by chance
So it has nothing to do with his ability or how good he was
So it has a bit of a negative meaning when you say he had a lucky hunch
For example:
Newton discovered the gravity because of the apple, 
but we all know is was just a lucky hunch!
I could have discovered the gravity!
 
