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Vocabulary: Sweaty, Smelly Valentine

There is lots of vocabulary to do with smell in the text. It’s all explained below in the glossary. After your daily bit of free English study, have some more fun by watching the videos at the end! :)

“Will be home in three days – Do not wash”

Vocabulary: Sweaty, Smelly ValentineThis is the famous message that Napolean Bonaparte sent to his wife, Josephine when he was on his way back home from a war. Obviously, he was turned on by her pungent smell and wanted to experience it at full power. I imagine that Napolean would have had quite an odour too after being at war and riding home for 3 days on horseback: horses are not exactly known for their sweet aroma, are they? (This sentence is an example of a question tag. Find out more here). So Napolean, the horse and Josephine must have made quite a stink when they finally got together. I wonder if Josephine had the same romantic idea about sweaty stench as her husband?

Well, probably not, because apparently she introduced him to bathing and perfumes…take a hint, Boney! Josephine, who grew up in The West Indies, liked exoctic fragrances like vanilla and cinammon. Napoleon preferred Eau de Cologne, which included citrus oils as well as lavender, rosemary and jasmine. So why did he want to breathe in the bouquet of Josephine’s b.o.?

In a new Royal Society of Chemistry book, Lust & Love: Is it more than chemistry?, it states that pheromones are included in sweat. These natural body chemicals, which have a specific scent, can be attractive to the opposite sex. Think about how animals know when it is the right time to mate. That’s why sometimes boyfriends and girlfriends like swapping t-shirts – the smell of the perspiration of their lover is comforting.

But don’t think that if you go for weeks without washing and reek you will suddenly become irresistible. The author, Gabriele Froböse says that sweat is only OK up to a certain point…then you just stink to high heaven.

Everybody perspires all the time, even if you use deodorant. The interesting thing is that perfume or deodorant mixes with everyone’s individual smell, so that the same brand of perfume, say Chanel No#5, smells slightly different on every single person.

Anyway, forget the expensive products! Be romantic and this Valentine’s Day, go au naturel for your lover. Isn’t that the most romantic thing you could do for them?
 

 
You might be interested in our other Valentine’s Day posts:
Valentine’s Day means saying numbers
‘As’ – Rules of Date Club
Anti-Valentine’s Special: I promise not to keep that promise
 

Smells Vocabulary

Pungent
having a strong smell (usually bad)
Odour
a distinctive smell (usually unpleasant: the odour of cigarette smoke)
Aroma
a distinctive smell (usually pleasant: the aroma of fresh coffee)
Stink
a strong unpleasant smell: His breath stank of booze
Stench
a strong VERY unpleasante smell: the stench of rotting meat
Fragrance
a pleasant, sweet smell
b.o.
abbreviation: body odour
scent
a pleasant smell
reek
to smell strongly and unpleasantly
stink to high heaven
Idiom: sth is incredibly smelly (in a bad way)

 
Or maybe you will use deodorant…


 
And here’s our very own Kate Winslet showing the attraction of a good perfume…


 
Not to be outdone, here’s Keira Knightley earning her money by saying whatever the advertisers tell her to


 
These perfume ads are like works of art, aren’t they?


 
OK, this is definitely the last one!


 

Discussion Questions

  1. Which is your favourite advert from the ones here? Why?
  2. Do you think people buy perfumes because of the smell or because of the advertising?

 

Bren Brennan Posted by on Feb 14 2012. Filed under Vocabulary. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

3 Comments for “Vocabulary: Sweaty, Smelly Valentine”

  1. I like the one of “trésor” by Lancôme best.

    I would guess they buy it because of the smell. Yet I would say, that a nice ad is supporting the game “to transport flavours” into the public.

    Very nicely done.

    • Thanks for your comment, Gaby.
      I agree. The Lancome ad has got very good music, photography (especially the lighting) and Kate Winslett can really act. Even though we only see a brief moment of this relationship, there is a lot in her acting that gives the viewer a whole background to the story that they can imagine.

      The last ad for Miss Dior has similar filmography and vibe, but I think that they are trying to hit toooooo many French cliches – it takes away a bit of the power of the simplicity of the Lancome advert.

  2. For me there is too much going on in the Dior ad in a very short time.

    The ad, I would prefer after the Lancôme one, is the Chanel ad.
    It is also well done.

    Best wishes over to England
    Gabi

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