a relatively small city <\/span> like Ottawa, which is not used to large protests. “They arrived in droves” means, they arrived in large numbers.<\/p>\nDo you remember the lessons we did on the immersive <\/span> Van Gogh experience? People came out in droves to see the Van Gogh immersive, electronic experience. That means, large crowds <\/span> of people went to see those exhibitions <\/span>. People came out in droves to see those experiences, which was somewhat frustrating <\/span> to museum directors. They try hard to get people to see the real art they have preserved <\/span>\u2014sometimes real Van Gogh paintings. But people came out in droves to see the simulated version <\/span>, which cost a lot more.<\/p>\nIf you’ve ever traveled to the U.S., you may have noticed that we have a lot of strange laws <\/span> about alcohol. For one thing, you have to be 21 years old to legally buy alcohol <\/span>. For another, we have “ dry counties <\/span>” where no alcohol can be sold in the entire county. Many states have strange rules about what time of day you can buy alcohol, how much you can buy at a time, where you can buy it, what kind of packaging it comes in. I’m in Mexico still, and you can buy a single beer at Oxxo, a convenience store <\/span>, and just take it home. In the U.S., you have to buy a six-pack <\/span>. <\/p>\nWell any time people want to change the laws about alcohol, people come out in droves to oppose the change <\/span>. A lot of people don’t want looser rules <\/span> around alcohol, and they come out in droves to make their opinions heard whenever anyone wants to change the rules. That means they attend public meetings <\/span>, they organize letter writing campaigns <\/span>, they have protests. You never hear from a lot of these people on any other political issue, but if a state or county wants to liberalize alcohol laws <\/span>, people come out in droves, they come out in large numbers, to oppose the change.<\/p>\nIn these examples, you can visualize <\/span> a lot of people doing something together. But it doesn’t always have to be that way. Cable television used to be a standard amenity in American households, but people are canceling their pay television in droves. They’d rather the flexibility and better technology of streaming services <\/span>. In this example, a lot of people are doing this, but they’re not doing it together.<\/p>\nIt’s often said that people are leaving California in droves. The state has a high cost of living, high taxes <\/span>, and heavy business regulation <\/span>. And especially after the pandemic, a lot of Californians have decided to move out of state; fewer and fewer people have decided to move into California. Now that remote work is popular option in the technology industry, a lot of people have decided to move out of the state.<\/p>\nIf you talk to people in Texas, or in some western cities <\/span> like Denver, Salt Lake City, and Boise, they’ll tell you that people are arriving in droves from California. That means the people in those cities have noticed <\/span> a lot of people from California moving to their cities. <\/p>\nQuote of the Week<\/h3>\n Here’s a funny quote from the comedian <\/span> George Carlin. I can’t give you many quotes from George Carlin without putting an “ explicit content <\/span>” advisory in Apple Podcasts, but I can give you this one. We were talking about the truckers, and how they drove all the way <\/span> from the western provinces to Ottawa. Here’s a funny quote from George Carlin: “Anyone driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone driving faster than you is a maniac <\/span>.”<\/p>\nIt’s funny because it’s true, we do judge <\/span> people pretty harshly <\/span> on the road. “Anyone driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone driving faster than you is a maniac.”<\/p>\nSee you next time!<\/h3>\n That’s about it for today’s lesson, number 448. Remember, the full lesson is available online at PlainEnglish.com\/448. That’s where you can follow along with the transcript, see translations of the hardest words, watch a video lesson, and get some extra practice. We\u2019ll be back again on Thursday with a new Plain English lesson. See you then!<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
If people do something \u201cin droves,\u201d they do it in large numbers.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":22,"featured_media":12974,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false},"terminology_category":[139],"lesson_number":[1817],"keywords":[1819],"content_tag":[],"level":[],"class_list":["post-12973","expressions","type-expressions","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","terminology_category-expression","lesson_number-1817","keywords-droves"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n
In droves | English expression meaning | Free online lessons with examples<\/title>\n
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