Jiaying Hello, I’m Jiaying. This is The English We Speak.
Neil And hello, I’m Neil. Hey Jiaying, we’re all thinking about going to that new restaurant for lunch. Do you want to come?
Jiaying No thanks. I went the other day and once is enough.
Neil Oh, you didn’t enjoy it? Was the food bad?
Jiaying It wasn’t terrible – it was a bit of curate’s egg!
Neil What’s that? The restaurant only sells eggs? That sounds a bit rubbish!
Jiaying No Neil. I said it’s a curate’s egg. We use the expression ‘curate’s egg’ to say that something is partly good, and partly bad. We often use it to describe something bad, but say it has good elements.
Neil So when you said the restaurant was a curate’s egg, you were saying it wasn’t a great experience. What was wrong with it?
Jiaying I’ll tell you after we listen to some examples of this phrase.
Examples That new film is a curate’s egg. Great action, but the story and acting were awful.
The day ended up being a bit of a curate’s egg. It was nice to see my friends, but after the car broke down and I got wet in the rain, I wasn’t happy.
I think her new novel is a curate’s egg. It has moments of brilliance, but overall it felt a bit of a let-down.
Jiaying This is The English We Speak from BBC Learning English. We’re talking about the expression ‘curate’s egg’. We use it to talk about something that has both bad and good qualities. Like when I said that restaurant was a curate’s egg.
Neil Yes! What was wrong with it?
Jiaying Well, for one – the food was a curate’s egg. It tasted nice but the cooks were so slow that the food was cold. Then the waiters were nice, but they kept dropping things.
Neil They sound a bit of a curate’s egg as well.
Jiaying Yes – and finally the decor. It was really vibrant and bright which was nice at first, but after a while it gave me a real headache.
Neil It sounds like the whole experience really was a bit of a curate’s egg. I think I’ll suggest somewhere different to the team.
Jiaying Good idea! Bye Neil
Neil Bye
