日常生活中的英语对话
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英语对话课教学要以培养学生语言交际能力为目的,注重丰富的情景设计,学习实用易学的句型表达。我整理了,欢迎阅读!
一
Todd: OK, Kerri, I'm going to ask you about the news. Do you follow the news everyday?
Kerri: Sometimes.
Todd: How do you follow the news?
Kerri: Well, in Japan mostly the radio or the internet.
Todd: Oh, really. OK. What radio station?
Kerri: NPR, but on the military station.
Todd: OK. And what internet websites do you listen to?
Kerri: Well, usually it is just AP news or whatever.
Todd: OK. How much of the news do you think is true?
Kerri: I don't know. That's a tough question. I think that because there're so many journalists that often what makes into the papers is fairly accurate, but unfortunately some people leak rmation that is untrue to sway public opinion, so you have to kind of weed through things and consider why that news story is made public.
Todd: Yeah. How do most people in your country get the news?
Kerri: I think most people in the states get the news from TV and from the main broadcasting stations. The evening news sort of thing.
Todd: OK. Thanks Keri.
二
Todd: Simon, what is you hobby?
Simon: Playing soccer.
Todd: OK. Wow, you play soccer?
Simon: Of course!
Todd: How often do you play?
Simon: Now I don't play, but before I played about three or four times a week.
Todd: Wow, that's quite a bit. -- How e you don't play now?
Simon: I've retired.
Todd: You've retired.
Simon: Yeah, I came to Japan. I had a soccer team, but now that I work in Japan I can't play for my soccer team at home.
Todd: OK. Do you watch soccer on TV?
Simon: These days? No! No time. Always working at Seitoku.
Todd: OK. Yeah, we, we all have to work I guess. Um..who is the best soccer player in the world?
Simon: That's hard to say. Right now, there's a kid named Ronaldino for Brazil. Maybe he will be the best.
Todd: OK. Nice. An..and what is you favorite soccer team?
Simon: Deep Cove Royals. That's my soccer team.
Todd: OK. Great. All right. Thanks a lot.
三
Todd: OK. Matthew, we are going to talk about food.
Matt: OK.
Todd: What kind of foods do you like?
Matt: Well, now I'm in Japan at the moment, I'm eating a lot of sushi.
Todd: OK.
Matt: I've only got two weeks left here so it's kind of sushi three times a week.
Todd: Oh, wow! You really love the stuff.
Matt: Yeah, it's fun. It's great.
Todd: Where do you eat sushi?
Matt: Well, we either buy it in a supermarket, kind of buy a tray, about a thousand yen, or we'll go down to the conveyor belt restaurant just down the side the university on our way home.
Todd: OK.
Matt: Pick up a few plates.
Todd: The conveyor belt restaurant.
Matt: I don't know the Japanese word for that. We call it the conveyor belt restaurant.
Todd: When you go to sushi, how much does it cost?
Matt: Well, it's 130 yen for one plate, and usually there is two of us that go and usually we spend about one and a half thousand yen 1,500, about ten plates.
Todd: Ten plates!
Matt: Yeah! We like it!
一
Todd: OK, Kerri, I'm going to ask you about the news. Do you follow the news everyday?
Kerri: Sometimes.
Todd: How do you follow the news?
Kerri: Well, in Japan mostly the radio or the internet.
Todd: Oh, really. OK. What radio station?
Kerri: NPR, but on the military station.
Todd: OK. And what internet websites do you listen to?
Kerri: Well, usually it is just AP news or whatever.
Todd: OK. How much of the news do you think is true?
Kerri: I don't know. That's a tough question. I think that because there're so many journalists that often what makes into the papers is fairly accurate, but unfortunately some people leak rmation that is untrue to sway public opinion, so you have to kind of weed through things and consider why that news story is made public.
Todd: Yeah. How do most people in your country get the news?
Kerri: I think most people in the states get the news from TV and from the main broadcasting stations. The evening news sort of thing.
Todd: OK. Thanks Keri.
二
Todd: Simon, what is you hobby?
Simon: Playing soccer.
Todd: OK. Wow, you play soccer?
Simon: Of course!
Todd: How often do you play?
Simon: Now I don't play, but before I played about three or four times a week.
Todd: Wow, that's quite a bit. -- How e you don't play now?
Simon: I've retired.
Todd: You've retired.
Simon: Yeah, I came to Japan. I had a soccer team, but now that I work in Japan I can't play for my soccer team at home.
Todd: OK. Do you watch soccer on TV?
Simon: These days? No! No time. Always working at Seitoku.
Todd: OK. Yeah, we, we all have to work I guess. Um..who is the best soccer player in the world?
Simon: That's hard to say. Right now, there's a kid named Ronaldino for Brazil. Maybe he will be the best.
Todd: OK. Nice. An..and what is you favorite soccer team?
Simon: Deep Cove Royals. That's my soccer team.
Todd: OK. Great. All right. Thanks a lot.
三
Todd: OK. Matthew, we are going to talk about food.
Matt: OK.
Todd: What kind of foods do you like?
Matt: Well, now I'm in Japan at the moment, I'm eating a lot of sushi.
Todd: OK.
Matt: I've only got two weeks left here so it's kind of sushi three times a week.
Todd: Oh, wow! You really love the stuff.
Matt: Yeah, it's fun. It's great.
Todd: Where do you eat sushi?
Matt: Well, we either buy it in a supermarket, kind of buy a tray, about a thousand yen, or we'll go down to the conveyor belt restaurant just down the side the university on our way home.
Todd: OK.
Matt: Pick up a few plates.
Todd: The conveyor belt restaurant.
Matt: I don't know the Japanese word for that. We call it the conveyor belt restaurant.
Todd: When you go to sushi, how much does it cost?
Matt: Well, it's 130 yen for one plate, and usually there is two of us that go and usually we spend about one and a half thousand yen 1,500, about ten plates.
Todd: Ten plates!
Matt: Yeah! We like it!
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