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《标准英语》征求意见稿


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Standard English (SE) - Book One (Lessons 1–30)

Lesson 1 — First Meeting

John: Excuse me. Is this seat free?

Li Ming: Yes, it is.

John: Thank you.

Li Ming: You're welcome.

John: I'm John.

Li Ming: I'm Li Ming.

John: Nice to meet you.

Li Ming: Nice to meet you too.

John: Is this your first time here?

Li Ming: Yes. I feel a little lost.

John: Me too.

Li Ming: Good. Then we are the same.

They shake hands.

Lesson 2 — The Elevator

Maria: Going up?

Mr. Chen: Yes. Floor eight.

Maria: Me too.

Mr. Chen: Busy morning?

Maria: Always. Mondays are hard.

Mr. Chen: I just moved here.

Maria: Welcome to the building.

Mr. Chen: Thank you. People seem friendly.

Maria: Wait until winter.

Mr. Chen: Why?

Maria: You'll see.

Lesson 3 — Coffee Line

David Wong: Is this the line?

Kelly Huang: Yes. It moves slowly.

David Wong: Good. I need time to decide.

Kelly Huang: First time here?

David Wong: Yes. Too many choices.

Kelly Huang: I always order the same thing.

David Wong: Safe strategy.

Kelly Huang: Or lazy.

David Wong: I respect consistency.

Kelly Huang: Then you will like this city.

Lesson 4 — Lost Phone

Ahmed: Excuse me. Is this your phone?

Lucy: Oh! Yes! Thank you!

Ahmed: It was on the chair.

Lucy: I didn't even notice.

Ahmed: That happens.

Lucy: You saved my day.

Ahmed: Just good timing.

Lucy: Can I buy you coffee?

Ahmed: No need. Maybe next time.

Lucy: Then I hope we meet again.

Ahmed: Cities are small sometimes.

Lesson 5 — Bus Stop

Anna: Does this bus go downtown?

Mr. Park: Yes, but slowly.

Anna: Slowly?

Mr. Park: Many stops.

Anna: I am not in a hurry.

Mr. Park: Good attitude.

Anna: Are you from here?

Mr. Park: No. I came thirty years ago.

Anna: Do you like it now?

Mr. Park: Now it feels like home.

Anna: I hope I can say that one day.

Lesson 6 — The Wrong Door

Nora: Excuse me… is this apartment 3B?

Carlos: No, this is 3A.

Nora: Oh! I’m sorry.

Carlos: Looking for someone?

Nora: My friend just moved here.

Carlos: New building. Everyone gets lost.

Nora: I already knocked twice downstairs.

Carlos: That explains the confused faces.

Nora: I should check the number again.

Carlos: Good plan.

Nora: Thank you for being kind.

Carlos: Welcome to the maze.

Lesson 7 — Sharing a Table

Elena: Is anyone sitting here?

Tom: No, please.

Elena: The café is full today.

Tom: Rain brings everyone inside.

Elena: Do you mind if I work here?

Tom: Not at all.

Elena: I type quietly.

Tom: That’s a useful skill.

Elena: I learned in libraries.

Tom: Then this place is easy for you.

Elena: Except for the music.

Tom: Yes… thinking music for someone else.

Lesson 8 — Small Talk

Ali: Cold today.

Mrs. Green: Very cold.

Ali: I thought spring started.

Mrs. Green: Weather disagrees.

Ali: People talk about weather a lot here.

Mrs. Green: Safe topic.

Ali: Smart tradition.

Mrs. Green: You learn quickly.

Ali: I listen more than I speak.

Mrs. Green: That is why you understand.

Lesson 9 — The Supermarket Line

Jin: Is this line open?

Cashier: Yes, you’re next.

Jin: Thank you.

Woman Behind: You forgot your apples.

Jin: Oh! I almost escaped without them.

Woman Behind: Happens to me every week.

Jin: Too many thoughts, not enough hands.

Woman Behind: That’s adulthood.

Jin: I just arrived yesterday.

Woman Behind: Then welcome to real life.

Jin: It starts at the supermarket?

Woman Behind: It often does.

Lesson 10 — Waiting for a Friend

Leo: Are you waiting for someone?

Fatima: Yes. He said five o’clock.

Leo: It’s already five?ten.

Fatima: I know.

Leo: Will you call him?

Fatima: No. I’ll wait a little more.

Leo: You are patient.

Fatima: Or hopeful.

Leo: There is a difference?

Fatima: Sometimes you learn it later.

Leo: I hope he arrives soon.

Fatima: Me too.

Lesson 11 — The Late Bus

Samir: Has the bus passed already?

Helen: No, it’s late again.

Samir: Again?

Helen: Every Tuesday.

Samir: Then why do people still wait calmly?

Helen: Because complaining doesn’t move buses.

Samir: Logical.

Helen: You’ll get used to it.

Samir: I just arrived last week.

Helen: Then this is your first lesson in patience.

Samir: Free education.

Helen: The city provides many lessons.

Lesson 12 — Borrowing a Pen

Mina: Excuse me, may I borrow a pen?

Robert: Of course.

Mina: Thank you. I forgot mine.

Robert: Important meeting?

Mina: Yes, and I feel unprepared.

Robert: Everyone feels that way.

Mina: Even you?

Robert: Especially me.

Mina: That helps strangely.

Robert: Confidence is often shared.

Mina: I’ll return the pen.

Robert: Keep it. Consider it good luck.

Lesson 13 — The Quiet Neighbor

Omar: Good evening.

Ms. Taylor: Good evening.

Omar: I hope my music wasn’t too loud yesterday.

Ms. Taylor: I didn’t hear anything.

Omar: Really?

Ms. Taylor: I use headphones most nights.

Omar: That solves many problems.

Ms. Taylor: Peace is easier than complaints.

Omar: I appreciate your kindness.

Ms. Taylor: We are neighbors. Life is long.

Lesson 14 — A Different Opinion

Yuki: This restaurant is amazing.

Daniel: It’s good.

Yuki: Only good?

Daniel: I prefer quieter places.

Yuki: Ah, too crowded for you.

Daniel: Yes, but people seem happy here.

Yuki: Happiness makes noise.

Daniel: That’s a fair argument.

Yuki: Maybe next time we choose your place.

Daniel: Then both opinions win.

Lesson 15 — The Park Bench

Grace: Beautiful afternoon.

Victor: Perfect for doing nothing.

Grace: Doing nothing is difficult for me.

Victor: Then call it resting.

Grace: That sounds more productive.

Victor: Words change feelings.

Grace: Are you a philosopher?

Victor: No, just tired.

Grace: I understand that language.

Lesson 16 — First Name

Professor Allen: Hello, I’m Mark.

Wei: Mark?

Professor Allen: Yes.

Wei: Should I say Professor Allen?

Professor Allen: Mark is fine.

Wei: In my country we use titles.

Professor Allen: Here first names feel friendly.

Wei: I worry about respect.

Professor Allen: Respect is in attitude, not title.

Wei: Then… thank you, Mark.

Professor Allen: Perfect.

Lesson 17 — Personal Question

Lina: Your apartment is very nice.

Susan: Thank you.

Lina: How much rent do you pay?

Susan: Oh… it’s a bit expensive.

Lina: Too expensive?

Susan: Maybe we talk about the neighborhood instead.

Lina: Ah… private question?

Susan: Yes, a little.

Lina: I understand now.

Susan: Every culture learns slowly.

Lesson 18 — Making Plans

Diego: We should have dinner sometime.

Ken: That sounds good.

Diego: Tomorrow?

Ken: Tomorrow is difficult.

Diego: Friday?

Ken: Friday works.

Diego: Six o’clock?

Ken: Perfect.

Diego: I like clear plans.

Ken: Me too. Otherwise “sometime” never comes.

Lesson 19 — Standing in Line

Mrs. Brown: The line starts back there.

Hao: Oh! I didn’t see it.

Mrs. Brown: No problem.

Hao: In my hometown people move forward quickly.

Mrs. Brown: Here we trust the line.

Hao: Even if it is slow?

Mrs. Brown: Especially when it is slow.

Hao: Interesting rule.

Mrs. Brown: It keeps peace among strangers.

Lesson 20 — Saying No Politely

Emma: Would you like more cake?

Raj: It looks wonderful, but I’m full.

Emma: Are you sure?

Raj: Yes, thank you very much.

Emma: Okay. I didn’t want to seem rude by not offering.

Raj: And I didn’t want to seem rude by refusing.

Emma: Then we both succeeded.

Raj: Good communication.

Lesson 21 — Too Honest

Peter: How do you like my presentation?

Mei: It was… very direct.

Peter: Direct is good, right?

Mei: Yes. In my country we speak more carefully.

Peter: Did I sound rude?

Mei: Not rude. Just confident.

Peter: I was nervous actually.

Mei: Interesting. Confidence and nervousness look the same here.

Peter: I learned something today.

Mei: Me too.

Lesson 22 — The Smile

Sara: The cashier smiled at me.

Igor: That is normal.

Sara: She doesn’t know me.

Igor: People smile at strangers here.

Sara: Why?

Igor: Maybe to say, “You are safe.”

Sara: In my country strangers look serious.

Igor: Different ways to be polite.

Sara: I am still learning the meaning of smiles.

Lesson 23 — Bringing Food

Mrs. Kim: I brought some food for you.

Emily: Oh, you didn’t have to!

Mrs. Kim: I wanted to help.

Emily: Thank you very much.

Mrs. Kim: Will you eat it now?

Emily: Later tonight.

Mrs. Kim: Is something wrong with it?

Emily: No, no! I just finished dinner.

Mrs. Kim: Ah… timing matters across cultures.

Emily: Yes, but kindness always works.

Lesson 24 — The Invitation

Lucas: We should meet sometime.

Chen Yu: Yes, when?

Lucas: Oh… I mean generally.

Chen Yu: Not a real plan?

Lucas: More like a friendly idea.

Chen Yu: I see. Words can be invitations without dates.

Lucas: Exactly.

Chen Yu: English requires interpretation.

Lucas: Life does too.

Lesson 25 — Silence at Dinner

Anna: Is the food okay?

Mohammed: Yes, very good.

Anna: You are quiet.

Mohammed: I was taught not to talk while eating.

Anna: Here dinner is for conversation.

Mohammed: Then I must learn two skills at once.

Anna: Eating and talking.

Mohammed: Dangerous combination.

Anna: You are doing well already.

Lesson 26 — The Bill

Waiter: Together or separate?

Laura: Separate, please.

Hui: Oh… I can pay this time.

Laura: Thank you, but I prefer separate.

Hui: In my country one person pays.

Laura: Here friends often share.

Hui: Does it mean less friendship?

Laura: No. Just more independence.

Hui: I am learning new mathematics.

Lesson 27 — Weekend Question

Mark: Any plans for the weekend?

Rina: Not yet.

Mark: That sounds relaxing.

Rina: In my culture, no plan means something is wrong.

Mark: Here it means freedom.

Rina: Freedom feels unfamiliar.

Mark: Give it time. Weekends teach slowly.

Rina: Then I will study weekend culture.

Lesson 28 — Office Door

Daniel: Your door was closed, so I didn’t come in.

Elif: You could knock.

Daniel: I didn’t want to disturb you.

Elif: Closed door means working, not hiding.

Daniel: Good to know.

Elif: Open door means conversation.

Daniel: Offices have their own language.

Elif: Yes, without words.

Lesson 29 — Compliment

James: I like your jacket.

Soo-jin: Oh, it’s old.

James: Still looks great.

Soo-jin: Thank you. I never know how to answer compliments.

James: Just accept them.

Soo-jin: That feels proud.

James: Here it feels honest.

Soo-jin: Different comfort levels.

Lesson 30 — Being On Time

Eva: You arrived early.

Luis: I thought six meant exactly six.

Eva: Most people come a little later.

Luis: Then I worried for nothing.

Eva: Early is never wrong.

Luis: In my country late is normal.

Eva: Every clock has culture inside it.

Luis: Today I meet a new clock.


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  • 中国现代哲学家学会

    骂的好!水平就是如此,没办法。不过这完全是Chatgpt 写的,因为我觉得我还不如它呢! (我是幼儿园水平了)

    屏蔽 举报回复
  • 山货郎
    这是你编的英语教程?扯臊!中国小学生的英语都比你强。

    如果没记错,你是英语科班出生,又在美国混了几十年,英语语感还是如此糟糕?

    “ Tom opens his door.” ??? 这种说法极其罕见,美国人通常说 "He opens THE door." 只有在强调所有权的罕见语境下,也许会用代词来表示所有关系,比如劫匪在砸门,丈夫把妻儿护在身后,端起来福枪,打开卧室的门,准备和劫匪拼命时,才会说”The husband opened his door, blasted...“

    ”Max jumps happily。。。“???  Max 是狗,当狗欢迎主人或客人时,不是jumps happily, 而是摇晃它的尾巴,或者把前爪搭在客人身上以示亲热: ”Max is wiggline its butt " 或者 “ Max puts its front paw onto the guest to show its welcome.."

    "Tom gives her money"??  这里的money是特指买旧钟的两块钱,因为是特指,所以要加上冠词 ”the", "Toms gives her THE money." 

    “I always forget which button to press,” he says.

    Kelly points.

    “Press this one.”

    这段话更扯淡,Kelly points to what??  "point to" 是一个及物动词词组,后面必须有谓语,正确的说法应该是“ Kelly points to the red button and says, " press this one."

    这样的例子比比皆是,就不一一指正了,

    语感不是语法,语感是自己读一遍,看看是否顺口。任何语言都是这样,”不顺口“就表示要么语法有误,要么不符合习惯说法。 语感好的英文犹如拉稀,一泻千里,语感差的英文犹如老年便秘,断断续续,结结巴巴。

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