小學經典英語故事閱讀
小學英語故事教學旨在讓小學生在生動有趣的英語故事中自然而然地營造英語學習語言交流氛圍,讓學生在故事中感知英語語言的文化特質,激發學生學習語言、運用語言的熱情。小編整理了小學經典英語故事,歡迎閱讀!
小學經典英語故事:把心門敞開
There are two brothers, aged four or five years old, as the bedroom windows are closed all day, and they think the house is too dark to see outside the bright sun, feel envy. Brothers on the discussion, said: "We can put together a little outside in. So the sun."
Thus, the two brothers with a broom and dustpan***簸箕*** to sweep up the sun terrace***平臺,陽臺***. When they moved to the dustpan when the room, which there will be no sunshine. So again and again so many times that the sun or the house did not.
Mom is busy kitchen surprised to see them move, asked: "What are you doing?" They replied: "The room is too dark, and we point to the sun So come." Her mother smiled: "As long as the windows open, the sun come naturally, why should I scan it? "
小學經典英語故事:幸福就是投入
Under the scorching sun, an old man sat by the bank staring at the buoy***浮標*** on the river. From dawn to dusk he still got nothing in his hands. However, the old man was happy at ease. I felt so puzzled about it.
The old man said with a smile,"I’m the fish and the fish is me, I’m fishing and I’m also being fished; like playing chess, the fish and I have such an equal stamina***毅力,精力*** that I have a wonderful time." At this point, an urchin threw a stone into the water. A circle of rippleswafted over. The old man said, "The wind rises."
Life is a chess game while happiness is devotion.
小學經典英語故事:The Nail
A merchant had done good business at the fair; he had sold his wares, and lined his money-bags with gold and silver. Then he wanted to travel homewards, and be in his own house before nightfall. So he packed his trunk with the money on his horse, and rode away.
At noon he rested in a town, and when he wanted to go farther the stable-boy brought out his horse and said, "A nail is wanting, sir, in the shoe of its left hind***後部的*** foot." "Let it be wanting," answered the merchant; "the shoe will certainly stay on for the six miles I have still to go. I am in a hurry."
In the afternoon, when he once more alighted and had his horse fed, the stable-boy went into the room to him and said, "Sir, a shoe is missing from your horse's left hind foot. Shall I take him to the blacksmith?" "Let it still be wanting," answered the man; "the horse can very well hold out for the couple of miles which remain. I am in haste."
He rode forth, but before long the horse began to limp. It had not limped long before it began to stumble***躊躇,蹣跚***, and it had not stumbled long before it fell down and broke its leg. The merchant was forced to leave the horse where it was, and unbuckle***解開*** the trunk, take it on his back, and go home on foot. And there he did not arrive until quite late at night. "And that unlucky nail," said he to himself, "has caused all this disaster."
小學經典英語故事:行如其人
It was a sunny Saturday afternoon in Oklahoma City. My friend and proud father Bobby Lewis was taking his two little boys to play miniature golf. He walked up to the fellow at the ticket counter and said, "How much is it to get in?"
The young man replied, "$3.00 for you and $3.00 for any kid who is older than six. We let them in free if they are six or younger. How old are they?"
Bobby replied, "The lawyer's three and the doctor is seven, so I guess I owe you $6.00."
The man at the ticket counter said, "Hey, Mister, did you just win the lottery or something? You could have saved yourself three bucks. You could have told me that the older one was six; I wouldn't have known the difference." Bobby replied, "Yes, that may be true, but the kids would have known the difference."
As Ralph Waldo Emerson said, "Who you are speaks so loudly I can't hear what you're saying." In challenging times when ethics***道德,倫理*** are more important than ever before, make sure you set a good example for everyone you work and live with.
小學經典英語故事:三個篩子
Grandpa Hodge was the most popular sage***聖人,賢人*** in the village because he was sophilosophic in speaking and doing things that everyone revered him as "Grandpa Wisdom".
One day, a man hurried to Grandpa Wisdom and said, "Grandpa, I have a piece of news to tell you…"
"Wait a moment," Grandpa Hodge stroked his beard and cut him short, "Have you sifted the news you will tell me with three sieves?"
"Three sieves? Which three sieves?" the man asked with puzzlement.
"The first sieve is Truth. Is the news you will tell me true?" Grandpa Hodge asked, narrowing his eyes.
"I don't know because I overhead it from the street."
"Now let's check it with the second sieve***篩,濾***," Grandpa Hodge went on, "If the news you will tell me is not true, it should be friendly."
The man hesitantly answered, "No, just the other way round…"
Grandpa Hodge once again interrupted him, "So let's use the third sieve. Can you tell me if the news that is exciting you is very important?"
"It is not so important," the man answered with embarrassment.
Grandpa Hodge patted the shoulder of the man and said significantly, "Now that the news you will tell me is not true, friendly or important, please don't tell me. Then it won't trouble you and me."
The man took a tumble and never spread the overhead news ever since.
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