Libros nivelados con audio y traducción
Los libros graduados son una forma agradable y efectiva de practicar y mejorar tu inglés. Están adaptados a diferentes niveles de competencia, permitiendo que incluso los principiantes puedan leer en inglés y familiarizarse con el idioma. Con audio nativo y historias interesantes, estos libros te ayudan a progresar en tu aprendizaje mientras practicas lectura, comprensión auditiva y pronunciación. Una vez que comienzas a leer en inglés, es una experiencia que no podrás dejar.
. Nivel A1 Davy Crockett - D. B. Gina Zorro Sally - M. Stockton The Rocking Horse Winner - D. H. Lawrence The boy who couldn't sleep - Foreman Peter Nivel A2 Sleeping Beauty - Charles Perrault The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle - A. Conan Doyle The Cask of Amontillado - Edgar Allan Poe The Final Problem - A. Conan Doyle Nivel B1 Romeo and Juliet - Willian Shakespeare The Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas The Sign of Four - Conan Doyle The curious case of Benjamin Button - F. Scott Fitzgerald Nivel B2 Great Speeches - John Bookworm Moby Dick - Herman Melville The War of The Worlds - H. G. Wells A midsummer Nights Dream - Willian Shakespeare Nivel C1 The Coral Island - R. M. Ballantyne Les Miserables - Victor Hugo Macbeth - William Shakespeare Madame Bovary - Gustave Flaubert
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Áudio
Muhammad Ali
Who is Muhammad Ali? Why is he famous? Why did he have two names, Cassius Clay in his early years, and later Muhammad Ali? And what is he doing now?
Muhammad Ali was, of course, a famous boxer, a world champion. But he fought for black Americans, too. He stopped boxing in 1981 because he was sick. But today he is fighting for peace in the world.
The Red and White Bike
The story starts with a boy’s new red and white bike.
It is 1954. Joe Martin is a policeman in Louisville Kentucky, but he teaches boxing in a gym in the evenings, too.
One-day two young black boys come into the gym. One of them sees Joe.
“Excuse me,” he says. “Are you Joe Martin, the policeman?”
“That’s right.” Joe says. “What’s your problem?”
“It’s my new bike,” the boy says. “It’s red and white. It was in front of this building, and now it’s not there.”
The young boy is unhappy and very angry.
“I’m going to find the boy with my bike. Then I’m going to whup him!” he says again and again.
Joe Martin smiles. The boy is about twelve years old. He is tall with long legs, and he is thin.
“Can you box?” Joe asks.
“No, I can’t box,” the boy says, “But I want to whup that boy,”
Joe smiles again “Come here to the gym first. Maybe I can teach you.”
“OK,” the boy says. “I’d like that.”
“Good,” Joe says. “What’s your name?”
“Cassius,” the boy says. “Cassius Clay.”
Joe doesn’t know it, but in only ten years that young black boy is going to be a world boxing champion!
After that, Cassius went to Joe Martin’s gym six days a week. He was strong and quick on his feet, and he started boxing with the other boys in the gym. He didn’t box tor money, of course. He boxed because he liked it. He usually won his fights. He was good!
But he wasn’t a good student at school. He had a lot of problems. He was a good boy from a good family. He was friendly and his teachers liked him. But school work was very difficult for him. The only important thing in the world for him then was boxing.
In six years, he had 108 fights and he won 100 of them.
Then in 1960, he went to Rome and boxed for the United States.
The Olympic Games
In 1960, Cassius was only eighteen years old. He was in Rome for the Olympic Games. He beat every opponent and he won an Olympic medal for the United States. He was an Olympic boxing champion. And he didn’t take off his Olympic medal for weeks-night or day.
At home in Louisville, he was famous. But he was black. And in Louisville in the 1960s there were places for white people and places for black people.
In many hotels, theaters, stores, and buses, black people didn’t sit with white people. One day, Cassius wanted to buy a drink in a “white” store. It was a problem. “Whites only,” they said.
“But I’m the Olympic boxing champion – I’m famous,” Cassius said.
“Whites only,” they answered. “Go away!”
Cassius was very unhappy about that. “I’m going to be the World Champion,” he said. “I’m going to be important. Then white people are going to sit down with me and listen to me.”
After the Olympic Games Cassius started to fight for money. Boxing wasn’t a game now. It was his work. He moved from Louisville to Miami. He went to a new gym in Miami, and he had new friends. One of them was Angelo Dundee. He worked with Cassius in the gym and was always with him for his fights.
The First Fight with Sonny Liston
In 1964, Cassius Clay was twenty-two years old. He was tall and strong. After nineteen fights and nineteen wins, he wanted to fight the world champion, Sonny Liston….
Fin del texto de demostración.