팟캐스트 영어단어장 obscure 잘 알려져 있지 않은, 모호한 charcuterie [ʃɑ:rkù:tərí:,ʃɑ:rkú:tərì:] (프랑스에서) 돼지고기 집, (특히 돼지고기의) 조리
all caps 모두 대문자로 쓰인 dawn on somebody ~에게 분명해지다[~이 깨닫게 되다] It's dawning on me. demoralized 사기가 저하된 save the day 가까스로 해결하다 out of the left field 의외의, 생각지도(예상하지) 못한 곳에서 amplify 증폭시키다 when it comes to ~에 관한 한, …라면, …에 대해서[관해서]라면 misunderestimate 누군가를 잘못 과소평가하다 consensus 의견 일치 literature 문학, (특정 분야의) 문헌[인쇄물] outlawed 불법으로 procrastinate (해야 할 일을 보통 하기가 싫어서) 미루다[질질 끌다] hangry 배고파서 화나는((hungry(배고픈)와 angry(화난)의 합성어)) bias 편견 paternalistically 온정주의적으로 paternalism 가부장주의 theremin 테레민 ((2개의 진공관에 의해서 맥놀이를 일어나게 하여 소리를 내는 전자 악기의 일종))
capacito [kəˈpæsɪtə(r)] 콘덴서(condenser)라 부르기도 하며, 회로에서는 전하를 저장하는 역할을 한다. to be clear 분명히 말하면
There's a famous idea in economics that shopping for holiday gifts is a waste of time and money — an "orgy of wealth destruction," as the economist Joel Waldfogel once put it. Economic logic says that instead of giving someone a present, you should just give them cash so they can buy themselves what they really want. Last year at Planet Money, we tried to spread that message by commissioning an original song called "Cash is King."
But Planet Money host Jeff Guo believes in the economic virtues of gift giving. On today's show, Jeff tries to win over Planet Money's resident Scrooge, Kenny Malone, by going on a quest to find him the perfect gift. Along the way, they're visited by the spirits of three Nobel prize-winning economic theories that can explain why gift-giving is actually good. And by the end, Kenny's heart may just grow three sizes larger.