BOOK TWO, LESSON TEN(修正版)
BOOK TWO, LESSON TEN
N: Lesson Ten. Listen.
F: Henry! Where are you going?
M:Out.
F: Well, first you have to clean your room.
M: Aw, Ma, do I really have to?
F: Yes, you dO. You have to. Now.
M: I don't want to do it now. I'm late..
F: First things first. You need to learn good habits.
M: I don't want to learn good habits. My habits are OK.
F: Listen, Henry. You have to clean your room, and you have to do it now. I don't want to hear any more complaints.
M: I have to do this, and I have to do that. Have to, have to, have
to. What a life!
N: That's a conversation between a woman and her teenage son.
3en thirteen, fourteen, fifteen . . . teenage. His name is Henry, and he says something like, "Oh, Mother," "Oh, Mom." He says:
M: Aw,Ma.
N: You say it. Be a teenager. Say, "Aw, Ma." Then she says:
F: First things first.
N: She means you have to do the important things first, before other things. Say it: First things first. And then she says:
F: You need to learn good habits.
N: Good habits. A habit is something we do all the time, something we do regularly. Repeat. good habits Henry's mother says:
F: I don't want to hear any more complaints.
N: Complaints. A complaint is a protest. If necessary, find the word in a dictionary.complaint co-m-p-I-a-i-n-t And finally, Henry says at the end:
M: What a life!
N: What a life! Henry is really saying, "I don't like my life, my life is not a good life." You say it: What a life! Henry is a teenager. He speaks in an informal way. Instead of, "I don't want to do it now," he says:
M: I don' wanna do it now.
N: And instead of, "I don't want to learn good habits," he says:
M: I don' wanna learn good habits.
N: Instead of, "I have to do this, and I have to do that," he says:
M: I hafta do this, 'n' I hafta do that.
N: And finally, instead of, "What a life!" he says: M: Whadda life! N: Henry's speech is normal American English pronunciation. Repeat.
M: I don' wanna do it now. I don' wanna learn good habits. I hafta do this, 'n' I hafta do that. Whadda life!
N: OK. Now [epeat after me.
have to want to need to
I have to I want to I need to
he has to she wants to he needs to
Sam, repeat this phrase. improve my English improve my English All right, improve means "make better."
I want to make my English better. I want to improve my English.
Now I say a phrase, for example, "have to" and you say, "I have to improve my English." Always make a sentence with "improve my English." Ready? OK.
Have to.
M: I have to improve my English.
N: Need to.
F: I need to improve my English.
N: Want to.
M: I want to improve my English.
N: OK, now, not "have to" but "has to." We are speaking about Henry, so we say "he" and "his." Has to.
F: He has to improve his English.
N: Wants to.
M : He wants to improve his English.
N: Needs to.
F: He needs to improve his English.
N: OK. Very nice. Now listen.
SUSAN: Hi, Linda. What are you doing?
LINDA: I can't find my lipstick. I'm looking for some lipstick.
SUSAN: I have to find my purse. Where's Rita?
LINDA: Rita's sick. She has the flu.
SUSAN: I'm sorry to hear that.
LINDA: Yes, it's too bad, isn't it? Her doctor says she has to rest and take medicine twice a day.
SUSAN: Does she have to stay in bed?
LINDA: Yes. And she has to drink a lot of water.
N: OK, All right, Sam, now some "have to, has to" practice.
First, "have to." I -say a phrase, for example, "go home," and you say, "I have to go home." That's all. Easy? Sure. Let's do it. Ready?
Say the sentence, and then listen to the correct sentence. Go home.
F: I have to go home.
N: Study English.
M: I have to study English.
N: Work late.
F: I have to work late.
N: Now we talk about her - a woman - so we use she and has. Go to work.
M: She has to go to work.
N: Take medicine.
F: She has to take medicine.
N: Rest.
M: She has to rest.
N: Rest and take medicine.
F: She has to rest and take medicine.
N: OK. This is the end of Lesson Ten.
[ 此贴被ligengbeng在2007-12-08 17:57重新编辑 ]