Maria: Yay! So, dear listeners, street markets, so what's a street market? Usually, it's an open-air market, so a shop in the open, okay? So, you go to a market square, or to kind of like a big street or a square, and there's a market, open-air places, open-air markets. Usually they happen on the weekend, but not necessarily, and there are different markets. For example, a market where you can buy food, or a flea market. Rory, what's a flea market?
Rory: Isn't that where you can buy second-hand things at reduced prices? Is that right? I've never been to a flea market, so I don't know.
Maria: No? Oh, wow. So, there are famous flea markets all over Europe, and they're quite beautiful markets with music and food and dancing and different events every weekend. So, you can buy second-hand clothes, bags, antiques, some vintage stuff, furniture. A flea market, like F-L-E-A. Or you can talk about the farmers’ market, where you can buy food, local products. There are also some, I don't know, like garage sales. So, for example, if Rory wants to sell his stuff, Rory organises a garage sale of his personal stuff.
Rory: Even though I don't have a garage. It's still called a garage sale. The reason why is that's usually where all of your old things are kept. If you are from a middle-class background, but I live in an apartment, so there is no need for a garage or a garage. I also don't drive, so there's like a compounding lack of need here.
Maria: So, dear listener, in your country, there are flea markets. There are garage sales. There are farmers' markets. Even if you don't know of them, there are lots of street markets. But some of them are called, aren't they, like, fairs? A fair. What's a fair?
Rory: A fair, that's less a market and more, I think, they're usually connected to some kind of celebration. So, for example, you might have a fair with different rides on for a particular holiday. And there might be stalls connected to that, but fairs and markets are generally separate things. One is about celebrating and having fun, and one is about buying things.
Maria: Yeah. So, a fair is a large public event where goods are bought and sold, usually from tables that have been specifically arranged for the event. Yeah, actually, a craft fair. And you go there and you can buy some wooden stuff from the local people. So, a craft fair. You can talk about, like, craft fairs or vegetable fairs that are organised every weekend in your city or village, wherever you live.
Rory: If indeed they are.
Maria: People bring their wares to the city centres. Wares. Rory, what do you mean by wares?
Rory: Wares are just the things that they sell or the things they make in order to be sold.
Maria: Their products, their goods, their wares. When the examiner asks you, when was the last time you went to or when was the last time you saw? And then you kind of, you react naturally, dear listener. It's super Band-nine important. You just say, well, I don't know, really. That's a good question. Well, let me think… a street market. Probably it was when I was abroad, actually. OK, so a very natural response from Rory. And then you talk about... Then you talk about stalls. So when you are at the market, you see different stalls. And a stall is where products are laid out for you. A stall, like a vegetable stall, a large kind of table with products. And you can say that there were rows of stalls. So lines of stalls, many stalls. And people sold all kinds of things from jewellery to stationery. So all kinds of things. Rory, if I say that I can buy knick-knacks at a market, what do I mean?
Rory: Is that not just… you buy odds and ends, which is another word for bits and pieces.