關(guān)于父母的英語(yǔ)對(duì)話閱讀
關(guān)于父母的英語(yǔ)對(duì)話閱讀
英語(yǔ)教學(xué)是教學(xué)中最重要的組成部分,而英語(yǔ)對(duì)話教學(xué)是整個(gè)英語(yǔ)教學(xué)中一個(gè)必不可少的重要組成部分,其不僅可以有效地提高學(xué)生的英語(yǔ)口語(yǔ)表達(dá)能力,還可以培養(yǎng)學(xué)生良好的英語(yǔ)應(yīng)用習(xí)慣。學(xué)習(xí)啦小編整理了關(guān)于父母的英語(yǔ)對(duì)話,歡迎閱讀!
關(guān)于父母的英語(yǔ)對(duì)話一
A. How many people are there in your family, Susan?
蘇珊,你家有幾口人啊?
B. Four, my father, my mother, my brother and I. We are getting on very well.
四口人,我爸爸媽媽,我哥哥和我。我們相處得很融洽。
A. What do your parents do?
你父母是做什么的?
B. My father is professor, he is strict with us. My mother works in a hotel, and she loves us a lot.
我爸爸是教授,他對(duì)我們可嚴(yán)了,我媽媽在酒店工作,她很愛(ài)我們。
A. How old is your brother?
你哥哥多大了?
B. He is twenty five, three years older than I am. He is a soldier.
我哥哥25歲,比我大3歲,他是當(dāng)兵的。
A. Do you have any grandparents?
你有爺爺奶奶嗎?
B. My grandpa on my father side is still living. But he doesn’t live with us.
我爺爺還健在,但不跟我們住一起。
關(guān)于父母的英語(yǔ)對(duì)話二
A: Sam, I've always had the feeling that it is hard being a teenager, but dealing with a cultural clash(文化差異) makes it even more difficult.
B: What's making you seem so thoughtful?
A: I have some problem with my family. I was so confused and angry with my parents.
B: Could you be more specific?
A: Well, you see, I overheard my mother's complaint one day. She said, “What should we do with her? Every day she is becoming more like her friends. She is not American and she has to realize that.”
B: Was it all because of your Chinese traditional values?
A: Exactly. This question would not even exist if I had not moved to America ten years ago. I would still be an innocent little girl in China, enjoying life without taking risks(冒險(xiǎn)) or trying anything new.
B: But now you are here in America, not in China.
A: Yes, now I'm here in America.I have tried to ignore my background by replacing it with American ways of thinking and acting. But, I have been unsuccessful because my parents are a constant reminder(提醒,提示) of who I am and where I came from.
關(guān)于父母的英語(yǔ)對(duì)話三
Akane: Ruth, what do you think about stay-at-home parents?
Ruth: Do you mean like one parent staying at home with a child?
Akane: Yeah, one parent staying at home and the other one working?
Ruth: Ah, I think it's really bad if a child stays at home with one parent actually.
Akane: Really, why would you say that?
Ruth: I think children who are brought up like that generally don't know how to socialize with other people except for their parents.
Akane: Oh, well, why would you think that?
Ruth: Well, they're really not given the opportunity to interact with different people, I mean, they spend pretty much all day, every day, with that one parent, and I think it's a real shame. They don't learn how to share or, you know, how to get along with and talk to different people.
Akane: Well, I think that the child will actually get more interaction if there's a stay at homeparent because the parent will be able to take them to different activities and to other houses to have playmates and at the same time, they'll be able to spend more time with that parent and have socializing time with family members.
Ruth: But I think children could get those same experiences from different people who look after them. It wouldn't necessarily have to be there family who looked after them surely.
Akane: Well, sure but, I think that it's different when a person who is not related takes care of a child. I'm sure that they do their best but the love is not there. The caretaker would not love the child as much as the parent would and at the same time if there's one person taking care of ten different children at the same time I would wonder about the amount of attention that the child would get,and safety issues as well.
Ruth: But I think you've got to look at the practical aspect of this. It's not always practical for people who don't have much money to have one parent staying at home all of the time.
Akane: That's true. I really agree about that.
Ruth: Oh, good we agree on one thing.
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