标签:Storytime 相关文章
What do you do at weekends, Su Hai? 苏海,你在周末做什么? I usually visit my grandparents. 我通常去看望我的祖父母。 Su Yang and I like playing with their cat Kitty very much. 我和苏扬非常喜欢和他们的猫基蒂玩。
Good morning, Miss Li. Good morning, Mike. 早上好,李老师。早上好,迈克。 Hi, Mike. Hi. 你好,迈克。 你们好。 Hello. Hello, Mike. 你好。 你好,迈克。 Good afternoon, class. Good afternoon, Miss Li. 下午好,同学们
Do you like your new home, Su Hai? 苏海,你喜欢你的新家吗? Yes! It's very big. I like it very much, but it's far from school. 喜欢!新家很大,我非常喜欢。但是,它离学校有点远。 Where do you live now? 你现在住在
I have a pineapple. 我有一个菠萝。 I have a mango and an orange. 我有一个芒果和一个橘子。 Do you have any bananas, Yang Ling? 杨玲,你有一些香蕉吗? No, I don't. I have some grapes. 不,我没有。我有一些葡萄。
What does your father do, Mike? 迈克,你父亲是做什么的? My father is a teacher. 我的父亲是一名老师, He teaches English. 他教英语, He has a lot of students. 他有很多学生。 That's nice. 那很好啊。 What about yo
I like playing basketball and football. 我喜欢打篮球,踢足球。 I can play basketball well, but I am not good at football. 我打篮球打得很好,但是我不擅长足球。 I like drawing too. I usually draw in the park with my brother
Did Ben Franklin really discover electricity with a kite? 本.富兰克林真的靠一只风筝发现了电吗? Everybody has heard the famous story of how pioneering experimenterand part-time founding fatherBen Franklin tied a key to a kite string
Look at my skirt. It's orange. 看我的裙子。是橙色的。 What colour is my skirt now? It's green. 现在我的裙子是什么颜色的?是绿色的。 What colour is it now? It's red and yellow. 它现在是什么颜色的?它是红黄相间
It is six o'clock in the evening. Liu Tao comes home from a football game. 现在是晚上六点。刘涛踢完足球后回家。 His parents are cooking dinner in the kitchen. 他的父母正在厨房做饭。 That smells nice, Mum. Are you cooking
Laurent: So Im confused . Whos David again? Bethany: David is my roommates friends brother. Havent you been listening? Laurent: I have, but how am I supposed to keep all of these people straight ? Your stories are always so convoluted , with too many
This is absolutely breath taking, it is actually quite hard to believe in some ways the Egyptians did what they did when they did it, at a time when the rest of the planet, or most of it anyway was in intellectual darkness, the Egyptians were creatin
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) DAVID GREENE, HOST: It's Friday and time for StoryCorps - and today, a story about a woman who was attacked in public and who found support from an unlikely source. In 2015, Asma Jama was out to dinner with her family at an Apple
SCOTT SIMON, HOST: Take a touch of Hitchcock and of Gone Girl. Add a mysterious author and rumors of a huge price tag, and you come up with that rare bird, a debut novel that hit No. 1 on The New York Times' best-seller list in its first week on the
Third Coast International Audio Festival Crowns 2016 Award Winners play pause stop mute unmute max volume 00:0007:35repeat repeat off Update Required To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Fla
SCOTT SIMON, HOST: Christine Hyung-Oak Lee woke up with a hell of a headache for New Year's Eve in 2006. She was 33, and within a day, her world had turned upside down. At least, that's how it truly looked to her. She could hold things in her mind fo
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) RACHEL MARTIN, HOST: It's Friday, which means it's time for StoryCorps. This weekend marks the 70th anniversary of President Franklin Roosevelt's executive order that sent Japanese-Americans to internment camps during World War I
It Took A Decade, But Portman 'Just Had To Make' Her Latest Film ARI SHAPIRO, HOST: The movie A Tale Of Love And Darkness is based on the memoir of the same title by Israeli author Amos Oz. Told in Hebrew, it's a story of his childhood in Jerusalem d
AUDIE CORNISH, HOST: A chat room for bird lovers, a summit on genocide, a superstore with an abandoned baby - these are the settings for just a few of the short stories in A.M. Homes' new collection, her first in more than 15 years. It's called Days
MICHEL MARTIN, HOST: And, finally today, Oakland, Calif., means different things to different people, but for many, it's the birthplace of groundbreaking art and politics. But Oakland, like many major cities across the country, is changing. That's th
In 'Capernaum,' The Chaos Of Lebanon From A Homeless Child's Perspective LULU GARCIA-NAVARRO, HOST: OK. This is the time of year when film critics announce their best of lists. Among the Hollywood titles, there is one film from the Middle East that r