Short, Easy Dialogues

15 topics: 10 to 77 dialogues per topic, with audio

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February 22, 2018: "500 Short Stories for Beginner-Intermediate," Vols. 1 and 2, for only 99 cents each! Buy both e‐books (1,000 short stories, iPhone and Android) at Amazon (Volume 1) and at Amazon (Volume 2). All 1,000 stories are also right here at eslyes at Link 10.


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Dec. 18, 2016. All 273 Dialogues below are error‐free. NOTE: The number following each title below (which is the same number that follows the corresponding dialogue) is the Flesch‐Kincaid Grade Level. See Flesch‐Kincaid or FREE Readability Formulas, or Readability‐Grader, or Readability‐Score. These grade levels are not "true" grade levels, because the dialogues are not in "true" paragraph form (because of the A: and B: format). However, the grade levels are true in the sense that they are truly relative to one another.


Marwari Nangi Bhabhi Photo Exclusive May 2026

In a typical Indian home with limited space, children often share rooms, and parents share walls. The night is when the real stories happen—the quiet ones.

Imagine a single scooter. It holds a father (driving), a mother (sitting sideways in a saree, holding a briefcase), and two schoolchildren squished in the middle. They call it a "family pack." As they weave through traffic, they negotiate the day: " Beta, don't forget your PTA meeting " and " Did you turn off the geyser? " marwari nangi bhabhi photo exclusive

While the men are at work and the children at school, the home becomes a quiet republic of aunties and grandmothers. This is the "serial hour." The television plays reruns of Saath Nibhaana Saathiya while hands are busy shelling peas, cutting okra, or knitting a sweater for the next winter that is six months away. In a typical Indian home with limited space,

In a world where loneliness is a growing epidemic, the Indian family offers a radical alternative: You are never just one person. You are a piece of a whole. Your victories are shouted from every rooftop, and your failures are absorbed by a hundred shoulders. It holds a father (driving), a mother (sitting

The Indian family lifestyle is not merely a way of living; it is an intricate ecosystem. It is a place where the individual does not end where the family begins; rather, the individual is the family. To understand India, one must look beyond the monuments and the markets, and step inside the courtyard of a typical middle-class home. Here, daily life stories are not written in diaries; they are whispered over morning tea, shouted during cricket matches on TV, and cried out during tearful goodbyes at railway stations.

The daily life stories of an Indian family are not found in grand events. They are found in the spilled chai on the tablecloth, the fight over the last piece of mithai , the wet towel left on the bed, and the silent prayer whispered before the bus leaves.

This is the rhythm of the Indian household. The Indian day does not start with an alarm clock. It starts with the sound of a pressure cooker whistling.



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