Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - Life Scene English Piggy Peggy Season 1 1 Set Mud Pit

Life Scene English Piggy Peggy Season 1 1 Set Mud Pit

The first episode of the story:

After the rain cleared, Peggy and George went out to jump in the mud pit and jumped all over. When he got home, after Father Pig cleaned them up, Page invited his parents to jump around in the mud pit in the garden. He was very happy.

I. Vocabulary and phrases

Muddy puddle

Care and nursing

Have fun, have fun.

dirty and messy

Clean up

Second, true expression.

Original dialogue:

Come on, George. Let's go and show it to dad.

Come on, George, let's go and show dad.

Dad: Oh, my God.

Dad: Oh, my God!

"Come on" is very common in spoken English, which can be understood as "hurry up", "please" (showing disdain) and "come on".

Come on! We'll be late. (Come on: Hurry up)

Come on! It's just a puppy. (Please: Please)

Grammar: the present perfect continuous tense

Original dialogue:?

Dad. Dad. Guess what we are doing.

Dad, dad, guess what we were doing just now.

Dad: Let me see ... Have you been watching TV?

Dad: Let me guess. Were you watching TV just now?

No, no, dad.

No, no, dad.

Dad: Did you just take a shower?

Dad: Did you just take a shower?

No, no.

Page: No, no, no.

Dad: I know. You've been jumping around in a muddy puddle.

Dad: I see, you have been jumping in the mud.

Yes Yes Dad. We have been jumping in muddy puddles.

Page: Yes, yes, Dad. We have been jumping in the mud just now.

Dad: Wow. House. Look at your situation.

Dad: Hey hey, look how dirty you are.

Page: Oh ...

Page: Oh. ...

The present perfect continuous tense consists of subject+auxiliary verb (have/has)+bee+ verb present participle+other components. It means that the action started at a certain time and has been going on until now, or it has just ended, or it may continue.

Have you been watching TV? I have been watching TV just now, but I don't watch it now.

It has been raining for two days.

Use the present perfect continuous tense to emphasize the action, and inform the result when the present perfect tense is used.

I'm very tired. I have been repairing the car.

I'm very tired. I have repaired the car.

Fourth, talk about it.

At first glance, Father Pig clearly saw that Peggy and George had jumped into the mud, but he still played a "guessing" game with the little pigs to remind them that when they were dirty, they also had a good time. The atmosphere of the whole conversation was very relaxed and pleasant.

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