VV 33 – Vocabulaire anglais financier: Macroéconomie (1)

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Dans ce Vocabulaire anglais des affaires leçon, nous allons examiner certains termes macroéconomiques clés, ce PIB et ce PNB. Nous allons explorer le cycle économique naturel, qui comprend des périodes d'expansion, récession et parfois même dépression. Nous examinerons également l'idée de la balance commerciale entre les pays, qui peut être décrit comme un excédent commercial ou un déficit commercial.

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BEP 224 – Anglais financier: Discuter d'un budget (2)

Dans cette leçon d'anglais des affaires, nous continuons notre regard sur le vocabulaire et les collocations pour discussing a budget.

A budget is a plan for spending money. And you’ll often hear the word “budget” used as a noun. But “budget” is also a verb. We can budget carefully or poorly. We can budget not only money but also time. And how we budget can help or harm our business. If we spend too much money, we may decrease profits. But if we don’t spend enough money, the business may not grow or thrive. It’s all about balance.

A typical budget includes a long list of items that we need to spend money on. And in a budget meeting, you’ll hear people talk, or argue, about where to spend more and where to spend less. Donc, how do we do this? Bien, in today’s dialog, we’ll learn some of the common expressions we use when we discuss budgets.

Avant d'écouter, parlons un peu de Collocations en anglais. Une collocation est un groupe de mots que les locuteurs natifs utilisent souvent ensemble. Une collocation correcte semble naturelle, alors qu'une colocalisation incorrecte ne semble pas naturelle. Par exemple, in English we say “budget cuts” to talk about lower spending. But we can’t say “budget slices” or “budget chops,” even though “slice” and “chop” mean “cut.” Those simply aren’t natural expressions.

Vous entendrez de nombreuses collocations utiles dans le dialogue d'aujourd'hui. Pendant que vous écoutez, essayez de choisir ces combinaisons naturelles de mots. Ensuite, nous expliquerons ce qu'ils signifient et comment les utiliser dans le débriefing.

Today we’ll rejoin Kate, Harry, and Linda as they discuss the budget for their IT department. Kate and Harry are managers, and Linda is their supervisor. Dernière fois, they talked about the past year’s budget. Aujourd'hui, you’ll hear them making a plan for the upcoming year.

Questions d'écoute

1. What does Kate say the finance department wants to focus on?
2. What is Harry’s concern about replacing the workstations?
3. What does Kate think can be changed to save money?

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BEP 223 – Anglais financier: Discuter d'un budget (1)

Bienvenue dans le module d'anglais des affaires pour la leçon d'aujourd'hui sur vocabulaire anglais financier and discussing a budget.

Budgets aren’t just for accountants. Almost everyone in business has to talk about money and how to spend it. It doesn’t matter if you’re a manager with a million dollar budget or a field tech just tracking your expenses. You’ll be talking about money and budgets.

En fait, talk about budgets is everywhere. Turn on the news and it’s not hard to hear people discussing budget “cuts” or budget “reductions.” You can hear about governments with budget “deficits” and budget “surpluses.” Everyone’s worried about money, and in business, earning more often means spending less. These are the topics you’ll hear about today.

Avant d'écouter, parlons un peu de collocations. Une collocation est un groupe de mots que les locuteurs natifs utilisent souvent ensemble. Une collocation correcte semble naturelle, alors qu'une colocalisation incorrecte ne semble pas naturelle. Par exemple, in English we say “budget cuts” to talk about lower spending. But we can’t say “budget slices” or “budget chops,” even though “slice” and “chop” mean “cut.” Those simply aren’t natural expressions.

Vous entendrez de nombreuses collocations utiles dans le dialogue d'aujourd'hui. Pendant que vous écoutez, essayez de choisir ces combinaisons naturelles de mots. Ensuite, nous expliquerons ce qu'ils signifient et comment les utiliser dans le débriefing.

You’re going to hear a conversation between two managers in the IT department of a large company and their boss. Kate and Harry are the managers, and Linda is the boss. They’re discussing the past year’s budget and how they spent their department’s money.

Questions d'écoute

1. What does Linda want to examine first?
2. What does Harry say about the large one-time cost the department had?
3. According to Linda, what is finance concerned about?

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BEN 20 – Perspectives économiques américano-chinoises

Business English for Economics

Dans ce Actualités en anglais des affaires leçon, we take a look at the economic prospects for the USA and China.

The relationship between the world’s two biggest economies is sure to undergo some major changes in the months ahead. With Obama set to remain in the White House for 4 more years, and Xi Jinping moving in to Zhongnanhai for the next decade, all eyes will be on how the new faces work together amid these tough economic times.

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BEN 17 – Facebook IPO: The Aftermath

Business English News 17 - Facebook IPO Aftermath

Dans cette leçon d'anglais des affaires, we follow up on Facebook’s recent IPO.

After a long wait, and even more hype, Facebook joined NASDAQ on May 18th; although it wasn’t all smooth sailing for Zuckerberg and friends. After opening 30 minutes late, and climbing briefly from the opening price of $38 a share; reality set in.

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