Games & Quizzes
Don't forget to Sign In to save your points
This is a modal window.
PERFECT HITS | +NaN | |
HITS | +NaN | |
LONGEST STREAK | +NaN | |
TOTAL | + |
Hello.. This is Six Minute. English from BBC. Learning English. I'm Phil. And I'm Georgie.. Has this ever happened to you?. You eat a doughnut and get a sugar rush. A strong feeling of excitement
and energy, only to collapse. an hour later with a headache? Food affects us more than we realise.
That's because what we eat alters our brain chemistry, changing our mood
and emotions. Our brain is working 24 hours a day,. even while we sleep.. So it needs more fuel than other body parts.. So can we eat our way to feeling happy? In this programme,
we'll be discussing the relationship between food and the brain and,
as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well.
Sounds great, Georgie. But first. I have a question for you. Humans, with an average brain weighing
one and a half kilos, are one of the cleverest animals,
but which mammal has the biggest brain? Is it:. A) an African elephant, B) a dolphin or C) a sperm whale.
/dəˈspīt/
contemptuous treatment or behaviour. Without being affected by something; in spite of.
/ˈwərkiNG/
Doing your job. action of doing work. To do your job in your company or workplace.
/ˈav(ə)rij/
Typical or normal; usual; ordinary. number expressing the central or typical value in a set of data. To add numbers then divide by the number of items.
/ˈkwesCH(ə)n/
What you ask about; issue. To have or express concerns or uncertainty.
/bəˈtwēn/
in space separating things. From one person, thing, or place, to another.