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Words and Their Stories: Get Your Act Together

11 June 2009

I'm Susan Clark with the Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.

A woman from Japan was telling a friend about her trip to the United States. The woman had visited major businesses and investment companies in New York City and Chicago.

"I studied English before I left home, " she said. "But I still was not sure that people were speaking English."

Her problem is easy to understand. Americans in business are like people who are in business anywhere. They have a language of their own. Some of the words and expressions deal with the special areas of their work. Other expressions are borrowed from different kinds of work such as the theater and movie industry.

One such saying is get your act together.

When things go wrong in a business, an employer may get angry. He may shout, "Stop making mistakes. Get your act together."

Or, if the employer is calmer, he may say, "Let us get our act together."

Either way, the meaning is the same. Getting your act together is getting organized. In business, it usually means to develop a calm and orderly plan of action.

It is difficult to tell exactly where the saying began. But, it is probable that it was in the theater or movie industry. Perhaps one of the actors was nervous and made a lot of mistakes. The director may have said, "Calm down, now. Get your act together."

Word expert James Rogers says the expression was common by the late nineteen seventies. Mister Rogers says the Manchester Guardian newspaper used it in nineteen seventy-eight. The newspaper said a reform policy required that the British government get its act together.

Now, this expression is heard often when officials of a company meet. One company even called its yearly report, "Getting Our Act Together."

The Japanese visitor was confused by another expression used by American business people. It is cut to the chase.

She heard that expression when she attended an important meeting of one company. One official was giving a very long report. It was not very interesting. In fact, some people at the meeting were falling asleep.

Finally, the president of the company said, "Cut to the chase."

Cut to the chase means to stop spending so much time on details or unimportant material. Hurry and get to the good part.

Naturally, this saying was started by people who make movies. Hollywood movie producers believe that most Americans want to see action movies. Many of their movies show scenes in which the actors chase each other in cars, or in airplanes or on foot.

Cut is the director's word for stop. The director means to stop filming, leave out some material, and get to the chase scene now.

So, if your employer tells you to cut to the chase, be sure to get to the main point of your story quickly.

This WORDS AND THEIR STORIES program was written by Jeri Watson. I'm Susan Clark.



Comments:

1. Appreciation

Thank you very much for such an informative material. I'll try to go on with this sort of English Language instruction you've presented. Good luck
Submitted by: Afsaneh (Iran)
07-09-2009 - 06:10:23

2. english story

i want learning english word by word
Submitted by: mitra jafari (iran)
07-08-2009 - 15:14:38

3.

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Submitted by: Erica (Taiwan)
07-08-2009 - 05:55:43

4. amazing

Today I started with VOA I found it an amazing program. I have never seen a helpful program as VOA thank you VOA
Submitted by: Rabi (Libya)
07-07-2009 - 16:02:22

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Submitted by: MARIA LUIZA MACEDO SILVA (Brasil)
07-06-2009 - 21:56:36

6. english

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Submitted by: Aminzahir (afghanistan)
07-06-2009 - 06:00:58

7.

VOA is useful program. Thanks to VOA I lean Engilsh.
Submitted by: hee ran (korea)
07-05-2009 - 12:19:37

8. thanks

realy interesting method to learn expressions thanks so much ;)
Submitted by: imen (turkey)
07-05-2009 - 10:39:21

9. good

It is good for my classmate to read. It is interesting!
Submitted by: Melody Kwan (Hong KONG)
07-05-2009 - 04:55:34

10. ENGLISH LANGUAGE

I WISH TO LEARN ENGLISH, BUT I FACE WITH A LOT OF PROBLEMS, SO WHAT I CAN DO? HOW TO LEARN IT IN COMPELETLY FORM?
Submitted by: hadi (afghanistan)
07-03-2009 - 21:08:31

11. I would like to learn English through Ur site.

Salam! I am glad to see ur site . It may improve our English very soon.
Submitted by: Farhad (Honey Afghanistan)
07-03-2009 - 10:10:47

12. Get Your Act Together

Hello to all. Learning English as a second Language can be meaningful, if we take into account its culture,that is learning English doesn't make sense without its culture and idioms. Therefore,it is nesessary for us to learn Idioms in certain Contexts. Take care
Submitted by: Aliakbar Tajik (Iran)
07-03-2009 - 07:14:38

13. Words and their stories

I thank you for the oportunity to learn about words of specialized areas like econimics, accounting and business administration. It is a very important site to go when you really need to improve your english.
Submitted by: MarcĂ­lio Torrent (Brazil)
07-02-2009 - 14:26:57

14. english

send some lessons to my e-mail if possible
Submitted by: ahmed (somalia)
07-02-2009 - 13:12:38

15. It is very useful for us to merge into US

I had travelled to US before, it is somewhat difficult for me to communicate with local people of US sometime, because some local expressions and idioms often used. so, I think it is very useful for us to learn more US local expressions. thank you very much.
Submitted by: He Yang (China)
07-02-2009 - 07:15:30

16. it is going well

iam student i wana to lean eng voa and it is very well how is eng geting alon
Submitted by: mohamed (somali comunity)
07-01-2009 - 15:36:33

17. Thank so much for your work

Now i am trying to improve my english and i found that VOA special is very useful for my listen skill english. thanks and best regards.
Submitted by: Hung Nguyen (Viet Nam)
06-30-2009 - 09:18:38

18. Thank you so much

I wil start learn English for reading ......I love it so much. That's very useful for me...
Submitted by: Phet (Thailand)
06-30-2009 - 00:55:37

19. Very Good

As soon as i read it, I printed it. Thanks I love it!!!
Submitted by: Mohammad Saleem (Afghanistan)
06-28-2009 - 04:15:38

20. Thanks

This kind of information is good for the beginner people like me. thanks
Submitted by: Monica Idrovo (Ecuador)
06-19-2009 - 15:05:21

21.

"Get your act together!Cut to the chase." Today I learned these two sentence.And I really want to express my gratitude to the voa special enlish. this website is so helpful!
Submitted by: chocol ()
06-19-2009 - 03:02:41

22. Idiomatic communication

Learners of English from non-English speaking countries are at times demotivated by such things as idioms and phrasal verbs. Even teachers of English normally find it hard to make their students fully understand such ways of speaking. However, native speakers feel very excited when hearing someone say something the way it is.
Submitted by: Ton That Hoa (Vietnam)
06-18-2009 - 16:08:50

23. GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER

The article is interesting & educative.Pls keep it up.
Submitted by: Muyideen Abdulkair (Nigeria)
06-17-2009 - 08:33:22

24. WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.

I am very happy to learn about this. I hope if you can give more lessons similarity would be excellent. Thanks for give us this kinds of lessons.
Submitted by: Kim Hong Ta (Canada)
06-16-2009 - 21:21:34

25. Get your act together

It was my first time i visited this websit i read it. it was nice story. THANK YOU VERy MUCH
Submitted by: zabihullah (England)
06-16-2009 - 17:41:14

26. cut to the chase

hello , the expression ' cut to the chase ' remember me the Egption expression . that when one give long details in his speach maybe another said to him" give me from the end".i don't want give details and one from the readers tell me cut to the chase . thanks VOA SE.
Submitted by: Hachim rakan (Iraq)
06-15-2009 - 07:42:07

27.

VOA special english program is a very good material for english learning, thank U very much!
Submitted by: Jeffrey (China)
06-14-2009 - 13:24:08

28.

thank to voaspecialenglish for its english learning programs especially words and their stories that provides us with a lot of english expressions and helps us to better our english as whole
Submitted by: bell bikond andre rene (edea cameroon)
06-13-2009 - 14:06:34

29. Get Your Act Together

get your act together" & "cut to the chase" are so interesting . Thanks for sharing .
Submitted by: Tony (China)
06-13-2009 - 09:40:45

30. Cut to the chase

The phrase cut to the chase is to be a very interesting way to advice people to get the very important part in their speeches, but the phrase get your act together seem to be a little difficult to understand to define the meaning of reorganizing some thing.
Submitted by: Jianchun Chen (China)
06-13-2009 - 07:57:22

31. Please don't go to the extreme

Whilst an expression or idiom can make our daily communication more colorful and vivid, it can easily trap us into not making us understood as otherwise. To cut to the chase, we talk and communicate to be understood. But if we go to the extreme by using too many local expressions or idioms which are not yet universally popular, our receivers or listeners will get lost. If that is the case, what is our purpose of communication? So please don't go to the extream!
Submitted by: TANG Qixiong (the People's Republic of China)
06-13-2009 - 06:24:56

32. Words and their stories

Very useful and interesting information. Thanks a lot
Submitted by: Francisco (Colombia)
06-13-2009 - 04:35:37

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