时间:2019-01-28 作者:英语课 分类:英语博客 A cup of English


英语课

  Beginners.

The other day, I was looking in the kitchen for a cookie. It was mid-afternoon and I was having a 'snack attack'. I opened the cupboard hoping to find a few oatmeal cookies (my favorites), or perhaps chocolate chip cookies. Unfortunately there were none, just a few crumbs 1 where the last packet had been. I had nothing to dip in my cup of tea. I thought, "Why don't I quickly make some?" Immediately, I realized that I didn't have any chocolate chips; we were out of them. I didn't want to jump in the car and go to the shops just for a bag of chocolate; it would be easier to buy a packet of cookies. As I was thinking, I rememered an embarrassing accident I had many years ago because of chocolate chips. My husband was making cookies. "Anna, we're out of chocolate chips. Can you run down to the store to buy some?" So, I did. I parked the car, his pick-up Chevy truck, outside the supermarket, and ran in. There were just a few people in the store. I bought the chocolate and walked out towards the truck. It wasn't where I had parked. It was about five meters away, and right next to a car. There was a group of people around it. U-oh. I understood what had happened. I had not put the truck in 'park' before turning it off. So, when I was shopping, it had rolled backwards 2 and hit a car. I was in big trouble.

Grammar notes.

Related vocabulary: cookie, snack-attack, cupboard, chocolate chips, crumbs.

Typical expressions: to run to (by car).

Ex: I ran to the store and bought a jacket (means by car).

We made a quick run to the library.

To jump in (the car)/ on (the bike).

Ex: He jumped on his bike and got to school on time.

You're going to be late! Jump in the car and get going!

Advanced.

So, you heard about my oops incident. It was a nightmare 3, truly. The funny thing was, I had just learned to drive, and I was very proud of my effort to go to the store by myself in this Chevy truck. I thought that I had done very well to drive on the other side of the road; in England we drive on the left. It was a pleasant *Autumn evening, already dark, and the supermarket was quite empty. I quickly found the cooking aisle 4, chose the bag of chocolate chips, and went to the cashier to check out. Over the loud speaker I suddenly heard, "Could the owner of the green and tan Chevy truck please report to customer services." A bad, sinking feeling rose is my stomach, but I convinced myself that there must be one other person in the store who drove a green and tan truck just like ours. There wasn't. I finished with the cashier clerk and went outside to find the truck. I was horrified 5 at what I saw. My truck had rolled backwards quite a few feet, and hit a parked car. At the time, a man was napping in the car, waiting for his wife who was shopping. Eek! The poor man must have had quite a shock. Fancy being hit by an empty car when you are parked in a parking lot! My first instinct was to walk straight past the two cars and the crowd that had gathered around them. But how could I do that? I had to confess, and call and let my husband know about the incident. That bag of chocolate chips ended up being a lot more expensive than ususal. That's why I prefer oatmeal cookies.

Grammar notes.

Common expressions: Oops! Eek! What a shock! Fancy that! Fancy + gerund, the poor man/woman/thing/etc, a sinking feeling.

Verbs (plu-perfect): I had just learned (how) to drive.

The car had gone off the road and crashed into a tree.

She had not studied enough for the final exam, so she felt nervous.

Hadn't he had enough fighting for one day?



adv.往回地,向原处,倒,相反,前后倒置地
  • He turned on the light and began to pace backwards and forwards.他打开电灯并开始走来走去。
  • All the girls fell over backwards to get the party ready.姑娘们迫不及待地为聚会做准备。
n.恶梦,可怕的事物,无法摆脱的恐惧
  • I was glad to awake from such a nightmare.我庆幸终于从噩梦中醒来了。
  • I had a nightmare last nightand,lost sleep.昨夜我作了个恶梦,失眠了。
n.(教堂、教室、戏院等里的)过道,通道
  • The aisle was crammed with people.过道上挤满了人。
  • The girl ushered me along the aisle to my seat.引座小姐带领我沿着通道到我的座位上去。
a.(表现出)恐惧的
  • The whole country was horrified by the killings. 全国都对这些凶杀案感到大为震惊。
  • We were horrified at the conditions prevailing in local prisons. 地方监狱的普遍状况让我们震惊。
学英语单词
accuracy of map
acetyl benzoyl peroxide
anticosti island
aquare matrix
backscatter laser Doppler velocimeter
betacam
billet shears
bog rose
bright as as the light
buried thermometer
carriage over
casu marzu
ceili
channel of infection
Chilas
chipping of chilled car wheel
chirality element
circrlar compressed connection
compound chalk powder
couple-beggar
cryptodidymus
cupping glasses
current-limit relay
derect
dextrobenzetimide
disposal operation
Duponol
eagen
Eagle Peak
earnings growth
EDI message
feedwater header
fluorescent magnetic inspection
foot-holds
Garza County
Gazmones
hairy ape
hardware virtual memory
Harenberg
Herkimer County
hideway
Hoegtveitite
hoot a speaker down
immersed transom area
incarnatus
indeterminate network state
keyseat sticking
Khami
Kingsoft TypeEasy
likable
line of striction
linear friction
local transmission network
loss on clearing warehouse
machine netting
macrogauze
Mainaschaff
marine pharmacognosy
micro computer
noncloned imsplex
nonguided
opening session
ornithoscopist
oxyporus cervinogilvus
P-type transistor
paging-in
panelinha
phronemophobia
pick-up boat
pickup-truck
playg
Polunochnoye
prime-number
primitive subsystem
program overlay structure
pumpellyite (fe)
radi
red iron oxide in lump
reflection-seismics
rotary scrubber
rule-follower
s-n dewaxing
secondary sodium
self-management
separating wall
skull plate screw driver
sledging
Sobieski's Shield
source program modification
Taylor, Maxwell Davenport
the wrong side out
theaflavine
tiger moms
transmission wire
triple auxotroph
unfaithful
unguiculatas
upper temperature limit
vestiges
weakening
zeylanicuss
zwicky