บทเรียน 4: Travellers' tales
เลือกบทเรียน
- 1Pop-ups
- 2Hidden talents
- 3Can't buy me love
- 4Travellers' tales
- 5The colleague from hell
- 6Jurassic mystery: unpacking the past
- 7Career changes
- 8Art
- 9Project management
- 10The dog ate my homework!
- 11The diary of a double agent
- 12Fashion forward
- 13Flat pack skyscrapers
- 14Extreme sports
- 15Food fads
- 16Me, my selfie and I
- 17Endangered animals
- 18A nip and a tuck: cosmetic surgery
- 19I'm really sorry...
- 20Telling stories
- 21Fakes and phrasals
- 22Looking to the future
- 23Becoming familiar with things
- 24From rags to riches
- 25Against the odds
- 26Our future on Mars?
- 27Where is it illegal to get a fish drunk?
- 28Dodgy dating
- 29Annoying advice
- 30I'll have been studying English for thirty weeks
คำศัพท์จากบทเรียน
6 Minute Vocabulary
gonna – going to
I’m gonna watch a DVD.
wanna – want to
Do you wanna watch too?
whatcha – what are you
Whatcha doing?
dunno - don’t know
I dunno.
gotta – got to (or got a)
I’ve gotta go now.
hafta – have to
Do you hafta go already?
gimme – give me
Gimme a call tomorrow.
lemme – let me
Lemme know what you think.
kinda – kind of
She’s kinda nice.
Session 3
dumped
(here) suddenly ended a relationship
spare
extra
all-inclusive trip
a trip where the room and all the food and drink you have is included in the price
give up (something)
(here) stop hoping for (something)
put (something) up
make (something) available
auction
a public sale in which goods or property are sold to the highest bidder
overwhelmed
very impressed
looking up
going well
jilted
rejected by a lover or partner
pulled out
didn't complete something that was promised
breaking up with (someone)
ending a relationship with someone
blossom
(here) develop in a pleasing or promising way
complete stranger
someone you have never met before and know nothing about
thoroughly
very much
not on the cards (idiom)
not possible or likely
Session 4
Tips for making complaints:
1) Tell a story: Give some background before mentioning your complaint. But keep it short!
- I've just checked into room 401. It's a lovely room, but the problem is that I was really desperate for a drink and the mini-bar's empty.
2) Soften your tone: Use seem to and appear to to make your language softer. They're often used with be. In the negative, you need an auxiliary like can't or don't
- Sorry, there seems to be a problem with the radio.
- Excuse me, there appears to be a problem with your ticket.
- I can't seem to get the TV to work.
- There don't appear to be any slippers in the room.
Drama
suspect
a person who the police or other people believe to be responsible for a crime
bother
(here) make a effort to do something
desperate
ready to behave in a dangerous or violent way, to escape from a very bad situation
magistrate
a person who decides in a law court if someone is guilty of a minor crime
damn!
a swear word that expresses anger
reputation
opinion people have about a person or place
disgrace
(here) in very bad condition
evidence
objects or information that prove that something is true