6
BOOK ONE, LESSON FIVE
N: Lesson Five. Listen, and repeat. Yes. I am. Yes, I am. Yes, you are. Yes, he is. Yes, she is. Yes,
it is. Yes, we are. Yes, they are.
N: Hello, Susan.
F: Hi, Robert.
N: Susan, are you single?
F: Yes, I am. I'm twenty-five years
old, and I'm single.
N: Twenty-five?
F: Yes. Twenty-five and single. N: Now you, Sam. Answer my questions.
Is Susan single?
Yes, she is. She's not married, she's single. How old is she? Twenty-five. She's twenty-five years old. Now tell me all about Susan.
Twenty-five and single. Susan is twenty-five years old, and she's single.
Hi, John.
M: Hi, Bob.
N: Please, John, no nicknames.
Robert, not Bob.
M: Sorry, Robert. No nicknames. N: Thanks. John, are you single. M: No... well, yes. Yes, I'm
single.
N: Not married?
M: No, not now. Divorced. I'm
divorced.
N: Oh. And you're-um...
twenty-six or twenty-seven. M: No, but thanks.
N: Thirty?
M: Thanks again. I'm thirty-eight. N: Really?
M: Really.
N: Now, Sam, answer the questions.
How old is John?
Thirty-eight. Is he divorced? Yes, he is. Tell me all about John.
He's thirty-eight and divorced. He's thirty-eight years old, and he's divorced.
Now repeat after me.
No, I'm not. No, she's not. No, he's not. No, it's not. No, we're not. No, they're not.
Now listen again.
F: I'm Susan. I'm twenty-five, and
I'm single.
II
AUDIO SCRIPT
M: I'm John. I'm thirty-eight, and
I'm divorced.
N: Now answer the questions.
Is John thirty-eight?
Yes, he is. Is Susan married? No, she's not. How old is John? He's thirty-eight. Is Susan twenty-five?
Yes, she is.
Now repeat.
is not isn't are not aren't
No, she is not. No, she isn't. No, they are not. No, they aren't.
Sam, are John and Susan married?
No, they aren't. Is John twenty¬five?
No, he isn't. Is Susan thirty¬eight?
No, she isn't. Listen.
SUSAN: JOHN: SUSAN: JOHN: SUSAN: JOHN:
Hi. Hi.
Are you OK? Yes, fine. Really?
No, I'm not fine.
Let's do that again.
hotdog
OK, good.
Now, repeat after me.
good great delicious
Is delicious a difficult word? Try it again.
delicious beautiful handsome important cold
All right. Now listen to the two sentences. Then make one sentence.
Rome is a city. Rome is old.
F: Rome is an old city.
N: Right. Rome is an old city.
Now you. Listen to the two sentences. Then make one sentence, like this:
Rome is a city. It's old.
F: Rome is an old city.
N: Rome is a city. Rome is old.
Rome is an old city. This is a taco. It's delicious.
This is a delicious taco. Robert Redford is an actor. He's handsome.
Robert Redford is a handsome actor. Paris is a city. It's beautiful.
Paris is a beautiful city.
OK. Now some true-or-false sentences.
An example sentence: Paris is in France. True or false?
M: True.
N: Yes. True. Paris is in France.
Again, true or false? Paris is in
China.
M: False. N: False. Paris isn't in China. Paris
is in France.
Now you, Sam. True or false?
Loy Chung is a Chinese cook.
M: True.
N: Mexicans eat tacos.
Mi: True.
N: Pierre's Cafe is a Chinese
restaurant.
M: False.
N: Pierre's Cafe is a French
restaurant.
M: True.
N: True. Pierre's Cafe is a French restaurant.
Now listen to this information.
F: The Caribe Restaurant is on
Hudson Avenue.
M: Amsterdam's Restaurant isn't
open for breakfast.
N: Is John OK? No, not really. He's not OK, he's not fine.
Now, Sam, you are John. You are not really fine. Repeat John's words. Listen to Susan and John,
and repeat after John.
F: Hi.
M: Hi.
F: Are you OK?
M: Yes, fine.
F: Really?
M: No, I'm not fine.
N: Too bad. And now, the same conversation, but you're Susan.
First, think about your words.
F: Hi. Are you OK? Really?
N: Now speak to John. Try to remember Susan's words, and
speak to John. Say "Hi."
M: Hi. Yes, fine. No, I'm not fine.
N: No. John's not really fine. Too bad. This is the end of Lesson Five.