跟读练习: Beginner English Speaking Practice | Real Life Situations - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

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Tom, come up here.
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Tom, come up here.
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I found something.
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I'm coming.
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This ladder is shaky. Be careful.
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The attic floor is dusty.
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Wow.
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Nobody's been up here in years.
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Look at that corner, behind the newspapers.
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Is that a box?
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Yes, it's really heavy.
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Help me move it.
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It's covered in dust and spider webs.
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Don't be scared of spiders, Tom.
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I'm not scared.
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I'm just.. aware of them.
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Help me pull it to the middle.
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Okay.
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Wow, this wood is thick.
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Look at the lock.
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It's old.
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Like, really old.
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Do we have a key somewhere downstairs?
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No, I've never seen a key like this in the house.
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It's probably just junk the previous owner left behind.
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If it's junk, why did they lock it?
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Good point.
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Maybe there's something valuable inside.
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Or something personal, something important to them.
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Only one way to find out.
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Should I break the lock?
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No!
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Look at this box!
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The wood is hand-carved.
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Hand-carved?
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You think it's antique.
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Maybe.
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It looks at least 50 years old.
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Then how do we open it?
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There's a locksmith on Oak Street.
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I've seen the sign.
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A locksmith for this old thing?
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He can pick the lock without breaking it.
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Fine, let's take it downstairs, carefully.
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I really want to know what's inside.
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Me too, but I still think it's just old junk.
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Hi, we found this locked box in our attic.
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Let me see.
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Oh, what a beautiful piece.
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Can you open it?
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This lock is old, at least 50 years, maybe more.
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That's what I thought.
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Can you open it without breaking it?
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Yes, I can pick this kind of lock.
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How much would that cost?
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$15.
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Give me about five minutes.
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That's great.
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Please be very careful.
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I've been doing this for 30 years.
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Don't worry.
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30 years?
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That's impressive.
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I started when I was 18.
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My father taught me.
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A family business.
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That's wonderful.
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Three generations.
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My grandfather started this shop in 1962.
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Is this kind of box common?
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Not at all.
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These were made by hand in the 60s and 70s.
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The detail on the wood is really fine.
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Solid oak.
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Someone spent a lot of time on this.
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Someone really cared about this box and whatever's inside.
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That's usually the case.
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People lock away things that matter most.
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Like what, usually?
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Jewelry, love letters, family photos, sometimes cash.
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I wonder what's in this one?
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Let's find out.
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Almost there.
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Is that a special tool you're using?
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It's a pick set.
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Every locksmith has one.
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Sounds like a very interesting job.
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It is.
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Every lock tells a story.
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And… done.
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It's open?
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Already?
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I told you.
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Thirty years.
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Go ahead, take a look.
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I think I'll wait until I get home.
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I want to open it with my husband.
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Good idea.
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Whatever's inside, I hope it's something special.
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Me too.
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Thank you so much.
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Okay, are you ready?
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Open it.
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I've been waiting all day.
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Here goes.
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Oh my God, Tom, look.
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What is it?
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Let me see.
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Photos.
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Old black and white photos.
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These look like they're from the 70s.
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This one is a wedding photo.
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Look at her dress.
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That dress is beautiful.
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Very classic.
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And look at him!
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He's so young and handsome!
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They look so hoppy.
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What else is in there?
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Letters.
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A whole stack of them, tied with a ribbon.
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Love letters?
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Listen to this one.
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My dearest Margaret, I count the days until I see you again.
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Wow, that's really romantic.
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Every night I think of your smile.
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It keeps me going.
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Someone really loved this Margaret.
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There's a date on it.
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June 18, 1974.
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That's 50 years ago.
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Where was he when he wrote this?
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It says Fort Bragg.
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He was in the army.
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A soldier writing love letters to his wife.
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That's beautiful.
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There's more.
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A dried flower, a small ribbon, a ring box.
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Is there a ring inside?
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No, just the empty box.
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But look inside the lid.
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Robert and Margaret Walsh, June 10, 1974.
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That's their wedding date.
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This is their memory box.
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They must have been the previous owners of this house.
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Tom, we have to find them.
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These memories belong to them.
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How?
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We don't even know if they're still alive.
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We can start at the post office.
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They keep forwarding addresses.
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That's smart.
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Let's go tomorrow.
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Hi.
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I need help finding someone.
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Sure.
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What can I do for you?
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I'm trying to find the previous residence of my house.
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What address is your house?
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412 Maple Drive And who are you looking for?
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Robert or Margaret Walsh.
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They lived there before us.
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Can I ask why you're looking for them?
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We found something of theirs in the attic.
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A box with personal items.
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That's very kind of you.
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Let me check the system.
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Do you keep old records?
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We keep forwarding addresses for a few years.
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Walsh.
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W-A-L-S-H.
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Yes, that's right.
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I found something.
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There's a forwarding address from 2019.
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That's great.
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Can you give it to me?
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I'm sorry.
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I can't share the address directly.
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It's our privacy policy.
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I understand.
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Is there another way?
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You can write them a letter.
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We'll forward it for you.
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How long does that take?
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Usually about a week, maybe 10 days if they've moved again.
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That's perfect.
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I'll write the letter right now.
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We have stationery right over there, free for customers.
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Thank you.
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I really appreciate your help.
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I hope you find them.
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It sounds like something special.
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It is.
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50 years of love letters.
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50 years?
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That's incredible.
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Good luck.
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Any mail today?
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You've asked me that every single day this week.
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Can you blame me?
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I want to know.
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You thought it was just junk from the previous owner.
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That was before I read the letters.
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Wait!
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You read them? When?
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Last night, while you were in the shower.
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Which ones did you read?
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The one about their first dance, at their wedding wedding.
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That's my favorite one too.
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He describes every detail.
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He said her eyes were like the ocean.
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And that he forgot his own name when she walked in.
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He was a real poet.
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Maybe I should write you letters like that.
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I would love that.
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I'd save every one.
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Hold on.
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Let me check the mailbox one more time.
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You checked 10 minutes ago.
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And I'm checking again.
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Stay here.
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Well, anything?
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Sarah, Sarah, come here.
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There's a letter.
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A letter?
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Let me see the envelope.
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The return address says Karen Walsh.
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Walsh.
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Oh my God, it worked.
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Someone answered.
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Open it.
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Quick.
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I can't wait.
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Okay, here's what it says.
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Read it out loud.
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It says, Dear Sarah and Tom,
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my name is Karen Walsh.
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Walsh.
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Same last name.
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Who is she?
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I am the daughter of Robert and Margaret Walsh.
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Their daughter?
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Is Margaret still alive?
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Let me keep reading.
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Thank you for your kind letter.
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Does she mention her mother?
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It says, my mother is alive and well.
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She's 82 years old.
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82. That's wonderful.
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It says she lives at Sunny Meadows Nursing Home, room 204. And Robert?
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What about her father?
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It says my father passed away three years ago, peacefully at home.
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Oh, I'm sorry to hear that.
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Me too.
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But there's more.
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Listen.
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What else does she say?
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It says, my mother talks about the old house every day.
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Every day?
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It says she always wondered what happened to her memory box.
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She remembers the box?
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It says she thought it was lost forever.
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Please, please bring it to her.
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Karen sounds really emotional in this letter.
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It says she was crying when she wrote it.
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When should we go visit?
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This weekend, Saturday morning.
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I'll drive, and we should bring flowers.
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Good idea.
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Something classic and elegant.
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For an 82-year-old lady who lost her husband.
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And her memories until we found them.
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Good morning.
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I need flowers for a very special visit. Of course.
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What's the occasion?
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We're visiting an elderly woman in a nursing home.
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That's really sweet.
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What's the visit for?
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We found something that belongs to her.
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A memory box from her old house.
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Oh my goodness.
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That must mean so much to her.
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We hope so.
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She's 82.
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Her husband passed away.
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I'm so sorry.
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What kind of flowers do you think she'd like?
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Something classic.
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Not too big, not too bright.
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How about soft pink roses with white baby's breath?
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That sounds perfect.
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Elegant, but simple.
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I'll make a small bouquet.
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Very tasteful.
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Can you add a card?
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Absolutely.
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What would you like it to say?
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From your old house with love, Tom and Sarah.
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That's one of the most beautiful messages I've ever written.
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How much for everything?
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$25 for the bouquet, card included.
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Here you go.
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She's going to love these.
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I hope so.
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Wish us luck.
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Hi.
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We're here to visit Margaret Walsh in room 204.
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Are you family members?
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No, we live in her old house.
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We found something that belongs to her.
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Oh, you must be Tom and Sarah.
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Karen told us about you.
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She did?
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That's great.
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Karen has been counting the days since Karen told her.
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Really?
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That makes me happy and nervous.
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Don't be nervous.
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She already talks about you like your family.
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She does?
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We've never even met.
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She knows you found her box.
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That's enough for her.
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How is her health?
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Is she doing well?
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Very good for 82.
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Sharp mind, great sense of humor.
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Does she get many visitors?
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Karen comes every Sunday, but today is extra special for her.
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We brought flowers.
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I hope she likes roses.
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She loves flowers.
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She even has a little garden behind the building.
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That's so lovely.
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I can't wait to meet her.
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Fair warning, though.
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Once she starts talking, she won't stop.
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I'm looking forward to it.
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Please sign in here, both of you,
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and write your ID numbers.
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Done.
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Which way to her room?
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Down this hall, turn left.
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Room 204 is the third door.
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Thank you so much.
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Mrs. Walsh, I'm Tom.
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This is my wife, Sarah.
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Tom and Sarah, thank you for coming.
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Thank you so much. Of course.
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We're happy to be here.
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Karen told me everything.
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You found my box in the attic.
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Yes, it was behind some old newspapers, hidden in the corner.
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I can't believe it was there all this time.
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We took it to a locksmith.
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He opened it very carefully.
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You didn't break it.
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Oh, thank you.
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Not a scratch.
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Here, it's all yours.
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My hands are shaking.
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I've been waiting for this all week.
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Take your time, Mrs. Walsh.
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Oh, oh, Tom.
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Our wedding photo.
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Look at us.
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You look beautiful in that photo.
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That was the happiest day of my life.
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June 10th, 1974. And the letters?
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Robert wrote them from the army?
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Every week from Fort Bragg for two years.
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Every week for two years?
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That's incredible.
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And I wrote him back every single day.
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Every day?
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That's even more than he wrote.
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I couldn't wait a whole week.
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I had too much to tell him.
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That's real love, Mrs. Walsh.
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My dearest Margaret, I count the days until I see you again.
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You still remember his words?
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Every single word.
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These letters got me through the hardest time.
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We're so glad we found them for you.
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I thought they were gone forever.
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Robert looked for them after we moved.
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He went back to the house?
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Twice, but the new owners had changed the locks.
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That's so sad.
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He never got them back.
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It broke his heart.
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But now, here they are, fifty years later.
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Look, there's a dried flower, too.
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That's from my wedding bouquet.
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A little faded, but still beautiful.
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Mrs. Walsh, we also planted roses in the front yard.
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Roses?
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Robert planted the first rosebush there.
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We had no idea.
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We've been taking care of them.
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He would be so happy to hear that.
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We promised to take good care of your house.
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You already have.
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And you brought me back my Robert.
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We brought you back his letters.
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Same thing.
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His love is in every word.
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Now stay.
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I'll call for tea.
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We'd love that, Mrs. Walsh.
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We have all the time in the world.
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I can't stop thinking about her face. Which moment?
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When she saw his handwriting, her whole face changed.
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Fifty years of love, all in that box.
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She told us the story of how they met.
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Do you remember?
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At a dance, she was 19, he was 20.
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And he was too shy to ask her to dance.
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So she asked him.
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She was always the brave one.
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She said he wrote her a letter every week from the army.
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Every single week.
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For two years.
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And she kept every letter, even after 50 years.
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But then they forgot the box in the attic when they moved.
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Robert went back to look for it,
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but the new owners had changed the locks.
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That's so sad.
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He never got it back.
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Until us, 20 years later.
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I'm so glad we didn't throw it away.
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I'm glad you stopped me from breaking the lock.
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And I'm glad we went to the post office.
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You know what, Sarah?
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That box changed me.
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How?
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I thought it was junk,
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but it was the most valuable thing in our house.
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Love letters and memories.
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That's the real treasure.
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Should we start our own memory box?
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I already bought one.
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It's on the kitchen table.
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You're always one step ahead.
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I put our wedding photo inside and a note.
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What does the note say?
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Fifty years from now, someone will find this and they'll know.
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Know what?
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That we loved each other too.
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That's the best thing anyone has ever said to me.

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为什么要通过这个视频练习口语?

练习口语是提升英语能力的关键,尤其是在真实生活情境中。这个视频展示了两个角色在阁楼中发现一个锁着的箱子,他们如何通过对话相互交流。这样的场景让学习者能够体验到日常交流的实用性和趣味性。通过模仿他人的对话,学习者可以掌握实用的英语表达,提高英语发音和流利度,逐步增强在社交场合中的自信心。利用这种 shadow speech技术,学习者可以随时随地重复句子,帮助记忆和理解.

语法和表达在情境中的运用

视频中的对话包含许多实用的语法结构和表达方式,学习者可以从中汲取灵感,以提高英语口语能力:

  • 动词短语:“come up here”、“help me move it”等,展示了在要求他人帮助时可以使用的自然表达。
  • 形容词使用:“shaky”、“dusty”、“heavy”等,使用这些形容词可以使描述更加生动,为情境添加细节。
  • 疑问句:“Is that a box?”、“Do we have a key somewhere downstairs?”等,这些问题表达方式在日常交流中非常常见,帮助学习者发掘交流中的细节。
  • 条件句:“If it's junk, why did they lock it?”,这种表达方式有助于学习者理解如何在对话中探讨不同的假设。

常见发音难点

在视频中,有几个单词和短语可能会对学习者的发音造成挑战:

  • “attic”:这个词的发音相对复杂,特别是这个音节的强弱,可以通过重复和模仿来掌握。
  • “lock”:这个词的发音需要注意舌头的位置和气流控制,特别是在快速对话中。
  • “heavy”和“beautiful”:在这些单词中,重音的位置以及元音的清晰度是发音中的关键,学习者可以通过 雅思口语练习强化这些词汇的正确发音。

借助这种 shadowspeak 的练习方式,学习者能够有效提高英语发音和会话能力,掌握真实情境下的交流技巧。

什么是跟读法?

跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。

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