¬y¦æ¬ü»y²Ä88½Ò
¡@
¤µ¤ÑLarry©MLi Hua¤@°_¥´«OÄÖ²y¡ALi Hua·|¾Ç¨ì¨âÓ±`¥Î»y¡Gsnap©Mspaced out.
(SFX of bowling alley)
LL: Hey, Li Hua, you look nervous. Have you ever bowled before?
LH: No, §Ú±q¨Ó¨S¥´¹L«OÄÖ²y¡A©Ò¥H·íµMºò±i°Õ¡I
LL: Don't worry, Li Hua, bowling is a snap. You'll figure it out in no time.
LH: §A»¡bowling¬O¤°»ò - a snap? To snap¤£¬O¹ï§O¤HÄWÄW¡B»¡¸ÜºA«×«Ü¥ûªº·N«ä¶Ü¡H
LL: That's right. "To snap at someone" is to speak rudely, but snap can also be used as a noun. If we say something is a "snap" that means it's very easy and can be learned quickly.
LH: ¾¾¡A§ÚÀ´¤F¡Asnap¥Î§@°Êµüªº®ÉÔ¡A·N«ä´N¬O¹ï¤H«Ü¥û¡A¤£¹L§Aè¤~»¡ªºsnap¬O¥Î°µ¦Wµü¡An¬O§ÚÌ»¡something is a snap, ·N«ä´N¬O«Ü®e©ö´N¯à¾Ç·|ªº¨Æ¡A«u¡A¨º¤£´N¬O§Ṳ́¤¤åùةһ¡ªº¡§¤pµæ¤@ºÐ¡¨¶Ü¡H
LL: Yes. So, now you'll understand what I meant by saying "bowling is a snap!"
LH: §A»¡¡§«OÄÖ²y®e©ö¾Ç¡¨¡H¥i¬O¡A§Ú«ç»òı±o®¼Ãøªº©O¡H
LL: Well, if you think bowling is hard, then what do you think is a snap?
LH: Åý§Ú·Q·Q -- ÃM¦Û¦æ¨®®¼®e©öªº¡C§Ú¤@Ó¤U¤È´N¾Ç·|¤F¡C
LL: So you think riding a bike is a snap -- I agree, once you learn how to ride a bike, it's a snap. Hey, Li Hua, you know what else is a snap?
LH: No, what else?
LL: Beating you at bowling is a snap. Look, I'm 50 points ahead of you.
LH: ³o¤Ó¤£¤½¥¤F¡I§Ú¥H«e±q¨Ó´N¨S¦³¥´¹L«OÄÖ²y¡A§A¥i¯à¤w¸g¥´¹L´X¦Ê¦¸¤F¡I§Ú¯à¥´¨ì¨º»ò¦hªºpins´Nºâ¤£¿ù¤F¡C
LL: You're right, Li Hua. It's not fair. Here, I'll teach you. Then you'll see what a snap it is.
(Sound of ball being thrown)
******
LL: Li Hua, did you enjoy bowling?
LH: Yes, «OÄÖ²y®¼¦nª±ªº¡A¥i¬O¤]®¼²Ö¤Hªº¡C
LL: Yeah, I agree. I feel kind of spaced out.
LH: §A»¡§Aı±o«ç»ò¼Ë¤F - spaced out? Larry, §A¬O¨Å餣µÎªA¶Ü¡H
LL: No, no. Feeling spaced out means feeling kind of detached and unfocused. I sometimes feel spaced out when I'm tired.
LH: ¾¾¡A§ÚÀ´¤F¡Afeeling spaced out·N«ä´N¬O¡§Ä±±o©ü©ü¨I¨Iªº¡Aª`·N¤OÃø¥H¶°¤¤¡¨¡C´N¬O°Ú¡A¤@Ó¤H¤Ó²Öªº®ÉÔ¬O·|·P¨ì©ü©ü¨I¨I¡A©P³òµo¥Í¤°»ò¨Æ³£¤£ª¾¹D¡C
LL: Yeah, but sometimes it might be for no reason. For instance, I might feel spaced out at class - I would be thinking about baseball, instead of listening to the teacher.
LH: §A¤W½Òªº®ÉÔÁÙ·|·Q°_´Î²yÁɧr¡I«u§r¡A¨º§A¨«¯«¨à¤]¨«±o¤Ó¼F®`¤F§a¡I
LL: All right, Li Hua. Now don't tell me you've never felt spaced out yourself.
LH: §Ú·íµM¤]¦³°g½kªº®ÉÔ°Õ¡A¤ñ¦p¤W¬P´Á¡A§Ú¤ß¤£¦b²j¦a¥h¤W½Ò¡Aµ²ªG¨«¿ù¤F±Ð«Ç¡C
LL: Last week, I was really stressed over the exams. I was so spaced out that I forgot my father's birthday. I felt terrible.
LH: ¤°»ò¡A¦]¬°n¦Ò¸Õ¡A§Aºò±i±o³s§Aª¨ª¨ªº¥Í¤é¤]§Ñ°O°Õ¡H¨º§Aª¨ª¨ªÖ©w«Ü¥Í®ðù¡H
LL: No, he knows me very well - bowling is a snap for me; but exams always make me very nervous.
¤µ¤Ñ§õµØ±qLarry¨º¨à¾Ç¨ì¨âÓ±`¥Î»y¡Csnap¥Î§@¦Wµü¡A·N«ä¬O¡§»´¦Ó©öÁ|ªº¨Æ¡¨¡CSpaced out´N¬O¡§©ü©ü¨I¨I¡Bª`·N¤O¤£¶°¤¤¡¨¡C
|
| Ápµ¸§ÚÌ | ^»y±Ð¾Ç | ¬ü»y©@°Ø«Î | ²ßºD¥Î»y | ¬y¦æ¬ü»y | ³»ºÝ | ¥D¶ | |