| A: | Oh, I don't know if you heard, but someone moved into that old house down the road. |
| |
| B: | Yeah, I know. I met the owner of the house yesterday as he was moving in. His name is Armand. |
| |
| A: | Really? What's he like? You have to fill me in. |
| |
| B: | Actually, he's a bit strange. I don't know... I've got a bad feeling about him. |
| |
| A: | Really? Why? |
| |
| B: | Well, yesterday I brought over a housewarming gift, but Armand started acting really weird, and then he practically kicked me out! I tried to, sort of, peek into his house, but everything was so dark inside that I couldn't really get a good look. |
| |
| A: | Well, you'll never guess what I saw this morning. A delivery truck pulled into his driveway, and it dropped off a long, rectangular box. It almost looked like a coffin! |
| |
| B: | You see! Why would he... |
| |
| C: | Hello ladies... |
| |
| B: | Ah, Armand! You scared the heck out of me! This is my friend Doris. |
| |
| C: | A pleasure to meet you...If you are not doing anything tonight, I would like to have you both for dinner. I mean...I would like to have you both over for dinner. |
| |
| I don't know if you heard | phrase | phrase used to introduce a piece of information |
| fill me in | phrase | tell me about it |
| a bad feeling | phrase | a sense or feeling that something bad is going to happen |
| weird | Adjective | strange, unusual |
| kick out | principle verb, past simple | make or force someone leave when they don't want to |
| creep me out | phrase | make me feel uncomfortable and a bit scared |
| you'll never guess | phrase | phrase used to introduce a piece of news |
| scare the heck out of me | phrase | cause someone to feel a lot of fear |