Neil: | Hello and welcome to The English We Speak, I'm Neil (demonic laughter). |
Li: | And I'm Li. (scream) |
Neil: | It's Halloween time, so we have a special, scary edition of the programme today (more demonic laughter). |
Li: | That's right. It wouldn't be Halloween without something scary for you. (More screaming). |
Neil: | Today we want to give you the creeps! |
Li: | Give them what?! |
Neil: | The creeps. To give somebody the creeps. |
Li: | To give somebody the creeps. This means to make someone feel nervous or scared. |
Neil: | (More demonic laughter) |
Li: | Stop it Neil! You're giving me the creeps. |
|
Man: | (whispering) What's that noise?
Woman: What noise?
Man: Those footsteps ... shh ... listen ...
Woman: I can't hear anything. Stop it! You're giving me the creeps. |
|
Li: | That man thought he could hear footsteps in the house they're in. It made the woman scared. She said 'You're giving me the creeps.' |
Neil: | What gives you the creeps, Li? |
Li: | Oh I hate horror films. Some people find them entertaining but they just scare me. |
Neil: | Yeah, they always give me the creeps too. |
Li: | What else gives you the creeps, Neil? |
Neil: | I really, really hate cockroaches. The way they disappear when you turn a light on. And the fact it's so hard to kill them. They just give me the creeps. |
Li: | Oh no, I don't like cockroaches either.. |
Neil: | Urgh ... just thinking about them gives me the creeps. |
Li: | I'm scared of spiders! They give me the creeps. |
Neil: | This music gives me the creeps. |
Li: | Yeah and that laugh gives me the creeps (demonic laughter). |
Neil: | That scream gives me the creeps (scream). |