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Talking About Feelings — Beginner English Dialogue Shadowing

Practice a short, simple English dialogue about talking about being happy or worried. You shadow easy lines like “You look happy today.”, “I just heard I passed my physics exam.”, and “Congratulations.”. It covers noticing feelings and sharing good and worried news. Because the dialogue is short and clear, it's ideal for beginners — you speak along with both roles until the exchange feels natural.

11 sentences
Dialogue 7.

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What this dialogue trains

Make these easy lines automatic: “You look happy today.”, “I just heard I passed my physics exam.”, “Congratulations.”, “What's the matter?”.

Language note: “You look happy,” “Congratulations,” and “What's the matter?” for feelings.

Say this everyday vocabulary clearly: happy, passed, congratulations, worried.

Copy the natural intonation on “What's the matter?” so even simple lines sound real.

Learning goals

  • Handle talking about being happy or worried in simple, correct English.
  • Speak short everyday dialogue lines with natural rhythm.
  • Shadow both roles so you can start and reply.
  • Build beginner confidence through short, repeatable practice.

About this practice

This is a short, classic everyday dialogue about talking about being happy or worried, ideal for beginner shadowing.

At A1 level it is a quick, complete exchange you can repeat until it's automatic.

Practice tips

  1. 1Shadow out loud slowly first, then speed up to natural pace.
  2. 2Drill the vocabulary (happy, passed, congratulations) until it's clear.
  3. 3Shadow both speakers so you can lead as well as respond.

Frequently asked questions

Is this good for beginners?

Yes — the dialogue is short and uses simple, high-frequency English, which makes it ideal for early speaking practice.

How should I use a short dialogue like this?

Shadow it several times across a few days until both roles feel automatic, rather than drilling it once.

How do I react to good news?

You practice “Congratulations” and to worry, “What's the matter?” — simple, natural reactions.

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