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1、【三年級簡單英語故事大全】 三年級英語故事大全
基礎(chǔ)英語教學(xué)以培養(yǎng)和維持學(xué)生學(xué)習(xí)英語的興趣為主,英語故事教學(xué)遵循了學(xué)生的認(rèn)知規(guī)律和科學(xué)的教學(xué)規(guī)律,有利于發(fā)揮故事在基礎(chǔ)英語教學(xué)中的優(yōu)勢。WTT分享三年級簡單英語故事,希望可以幫助大家!
三年級簡單英語故事:The Handyman es
The sinks were leaking. David looked in the local paper and saw an ad for Toby the handyman. David left a message on the answering machine. Two days l
2、ater, he called again. He told Toby that he had left a message two days ago. Toby apologized. He said he hadn??t checked his messages in a couple of days.
David felt like hanging up. Why was it so hard to find a worker who was responsible? Responsible and cleanmany workers were slobs who left messe
3、s for the homeowner to clean up. Toby doesn??t check his machine, David mused. David told Toby that the kitchen, bathroom, and laundry roomfaucets were leaking. Toby said he could e over on Friday; each faucet would cost $20. If he had to buy any parts, that would be extra.
David was pleased. Sixty
4、 dollars was a great price. Of course, if Toby fixed faucets like he checked his messages, maybe the deal wouldn??t be so good. Then again, it was only a $60 risk. David asked Toby if a check was okay. Toby said no; he only accepted cash. David said that was okay, as long as he got an invoice. Toby
5、said he would be over Friday at 1:00 p.m.
At 3:00 p.m., David left a message on Toby??s machine, asking where he was. At 3:30, Toby showed up. David asked if he had brought an invoice. “Oh, jeez, I forgot. I??m sorry,” Toby said. David shook his head in disbelief. But, since Toby was there, he deci
6、ded to let him in. Before Toby walked into Davids house, he wiped his feet very carefully on the mat. David noticed that. Maybe Toby will work out just fine, he thought.
三年級簡單英語故事:Priced to Sell!
It can be a lonely, depressing job. Not for the successful realtors, of course. Their job is almostg
7、lamorous. Some of them, the most successful, work with wealthy people who live in, buy, and sell beautiful houses in beautiful neighborhoods. But for a new realtor, life is hard.
A realtor has to pass a prehensive test, and then take continuing education credit classesannually. He (or she) has to j
8、oin a realty pany and attend meetings regularly. He has to spend hours on the puter researching the latest properties that are being offered for sale. He has to make “cold calls” to potential clients. These cold calls are unfortable for the realtor and annoying to potential clients.
Once a realtor
9、gets a client, he must chauffeur the client from one property to another, patiently explaining this and that while answering questions about these and those. It??s always a contest between the seller trying to get as much as he can for his house and the buyer trying to pay as little as he can for th
10、e same house. Neither one wants to give in. On top of it all, the seller often lies, proclaiming that there are no problems with his house“No, sir, absolutely nonewhatsoever.”
The realtor has to put up with the seller??s lies and the buyer??s cries of poverty, and in the end he hears these same wor
11、ds from the buyer: “I don??t know. Let me think about it.“
三年級簡單英語故事:Betting Big in Vegas
Jaspers parents were going to Las Vegas for a week. The last time they were there was 10 years ago. The city had changed greatly in those 10 years. For one thing, the all you can eat buffetswere $15, instea
12、d of $3. And traffic was much worse, of course. But now Las Vegas had a monorail that stopped at all the major hotels. No more walking in the hot sun (or the bitterly cold wind, if you visited Las Vegas in the winter). Jaspers dad loved the buffets. ”Even at $15, hell still eat $20 or $30 worth,“ Ja
13、spers mom said.
Jasper asked his dad what games he was going to play. Blackjack, he replied, if he could find a $2 table. Jasper told him that he might have to go downtown to a real old casino. Most casinos, he said, require a $5 minimum nowadays. That didnt surprise his dad. After he lost a hundre
14、d dollars, he was finished anyway, he said. He was never one to throw good money after bad.
Jaspers mom had no use for anything except slot machines. She loved the slots, as long as she could find nickel machines and dime machines. ”Are any of those left?&; she asked Jasper. He said he wasnt sure,
15、but there had to be some, somewhere. She said she was going to play differently on this visit: she would wait till someone used a machine for at least 15 minutes. Then she would play that machine when that person got up and left. Maybe, she hoped, the jackpot would hit on the first nickel that she put in. Thats a good idea, Jasper thought. Unfortunately, its the same trick that everyone who plays the slot machines does. And almost everyone goes home broke.
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