以下是为大家整理的常用英语口语练习:关于铤而走险的话的文章,希望大家能够喜欢! 本单元是关于铤而走险的对话 Alice: Are you enjoying yourself, Helen? Helen: Do you know what? I'm having a really good time. Thanks for dragging me out, guys. Tim: It's just nice to see you smiling, Helen. Helen: Hey, is that Paul over there? Tim: Hey yeah, it is him, isn't it? Helen: It is, you know, but who's that with him? Are they his kids? Alice? Has Paul got children? Alice: Yes, he's got two children actually. Tim: So that means he's got a wife. Alice: They're not together any more, and they're getting a divorce. Tim: Are you sure about that? Alice: Well, that's what he told me, and I believe him. He's a good man. Helen: Ooh, Alice, you're skating on very thin ice. Alice: Maybe I am Helen, but I can't let him go. Helen: You really love him, don't you? Alice: Helen, I really do. Vocabulary 字汇 dragging me out 勉强带出去 making me go out with you even though I didn't really want to divorce (n) 离婚 a fomp3al, legal separation of husband and wife skating on very thin ice (idiom) 冒险 taking a big risk 本单元的语言点是关于 ice 的习语,请看下面的解释和例句 Idioms with 'ice' Idioms 习惯用语 Idioms use language metaphorically. This means that the meaning of an idiom is not the same as the meanings of the individual words in the idiom. For example, if you 'go down memory lane' it means you think about the past (the metaphorical meaning), not that you walk down a street called 'memory Lane' (the literal meaning). |