How to Tell a Story in English Using Past Tense

Hi, I’m Gina.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this lesson, you can learn how to tell
a story in English.

Stories are powerful.

When you meet someone new, go to a job interview
or take a speaking exam like IELTS, you need

to tell stories, whether you realise that’s
what you’re doing or not.

Becoming a better storyteller will make you
a more convincing speaker.

People are attracted to good stories—it’s
a fundamental part of being human.

Learning how to tell better stories can help
you become a more effective English speaker,

and a better communicator generally.

In this class, you’ll learn how to build
a story, step by step.

You’ll see three different stories, and
you’ll see how you can use the same simple

ideas in almost any story.

If you want to read the stories before the
lesson, make sure you’re watching this on

our website: Oxford Online English dot com.

If you’re watching on YouTube, you can find
a link in the video description.

There, you can read the three stories in full.

We want you to take part in this lesson.

Think of a story you want to tell.

As you go through the lesson, you’ll hear
our stories, but you should also be building

your own story.

So, think of something funny, scary, interesting
or weird that happened to you.

Do you have an idea for a story?

Then let’s begin!

A clear story needs to start with some background.

Think about basic wh- questions: who, when,
where, what?

Start your story with one sentence which gives
some of this information.

For example:

It was summer, and I went with some friends
to a beach in Crimea which you could only

get to by boat.

I was travelling in Kyrgyzstan, and I decided
to go hiking in the mountains.

At university, I shared a flat with three
other guys.

Keep it simple at the beginning: who, when,
where, what?

Next, add one or two more sentences to give
more background details.

You need a balance here: you want to give
enough background details to make your story

feel real, but you also need to get to the
heart of your story quickly.

People will lose interest if you don’t get
to the point.

Let’s see how you can do this.

Look at our first example:

It was summer, and I went with some friends
to a beach in Crimea which you could only

get to by boat.

Think: if you heard this, what questions could
you ask to get more details?

You might ask things like:

Who were your friends?

Why did you go to this beach?

What was the place like?

Were there any other people there?

Answering these questions gives you details
you can add after your opening sentence.

For example:

People had been going there for years, and
there were benches and tables, places to camp,

fire places and so on.

It was kind of a hippy place, with everyone
walking around naked and doing whatever they

felt like.

Here, we’re focusing on one thing—the
place—because it’s the most interesting

and unusual detail.

For a different story, you might focus on
different details:

We were all good friends, but like lots of guys in that situation, we played a lot of pranks on each other.

In this story, the people are more important,
so you would give more details about them.

Okay: your turn!

You need to start your story.

Make an opening sentence.

Remember: who, when, where, what?

Then, add 1-2 sentences giving more background
details.

Focus on the most important elements in your
story.

Pause the video and do it now!

Write it down if you want.

What’s next?

Big question: what makes a story a story?

If I tell you that I went to the shop to buy
some bread, and then I came home and ate the

bread, is that a story?

Not really.

If it is, it’s not a good one.

So, think about it: what makes a story a story?

A story needs two things.

One: there needs to be a goal.

The person or people in the story should want
something.

Two: there needs to be tension.

That means the goal can’t be too easy to
reach.

In this section, let’s look at putting a
goal in your story.

Here’s the question: what do the people
in your story want?

They must want something.

This is the heart of your story.

If the people in your story don’t want anything,
then you don’t have a story.

Let’s do an example together:
On the last day, we had to catch a train in

the evening.

Pause the video if you need extra time to
read.

Here we have a simple goal: we needed to catch
our train.

Let’s do one more:
To reach Issyk-Kul lake, which was the end

of my journey, I had to cross a mountain pass,
almost 4,000m high.

What’s the goal here?

The goal is getting across the mountain pass
to the lake.

The goal in your story can be something big
or something small.

You can see in these two examples that we
have something very easy and simple—catching

a train—and something bigger and more difficult—crossing
a 4,000-metre mountain pass on foot.

What about your story?

What’s the goal?

What do the people in your story want?

Keep this simple.

Just add one sentence to your story, setting
a goal for you or the other people in your

story.

Pause the video, write your sentence, then
we’ll move on to the next part.

Ready?

Ok, remember that we said there are two things
every story needs.

What’s the second?

Every story needs tension.

What does that mean?

Simply, it means that your goal shouldn’t
be too easy to reach.

Here’s a story:

There was a monster which liked to eat people.

A hero killed the monster.

Everyone was safe.

The end.

Good story?

Obviously not!

If the goal in your story is too easy, then
your story will be very short and boring.

There needs to be tension.

As they listen to you, people should be thinking:
what’s going to happen next?

Will everything be ok?

How are they going to get out of this problem?

The goal needs to be difficult.

There need to be problems.

People need to doubt whether you’re going
to succeed or fail.

This is tension.

For example:
On the third day, I had to cross a mountain

pass, almost 4,000m high.

It was so hard, because the air is thin up
there and I was carrying a very heavy pack.

It seemed to take forever, but finally I got
close to the top… and then a storm boiled

over the ridge and landed right on my head.

There was lightning all around me, even below
me!

The noise was unbelievable.

First, you hear how difficult it was, even
before the storm hit.

Then, the storm arrives.

What’s going to happen?

Did I make it over the pass?

Did I get hurt?

Let’s look at one more example:
One weekend, I was going home to visit my

parents.

I said bye to my flatmates, and told them
not to do anything to my room.

“Don’t worry, we won’t.

Have a good weekend,” they said.

I knew they were going to do something, but
I couldn’t believe what they actually did:

This is a very different kind of story, but
the structure is the same.

I have a goal, which is to visit my parents
and come back without my friends doing anything

to my room.

You also have some tension.

You hear sentences like this:

I told them not to do anything to my room.

I knew they were going to do something.

When you hear these, you know they’re going
to do something to my room, but you don’t

know what.

This is called foreshadowing.

You know something bad is going to happen,
but you aren’t sure exactly what.

That’s where the tension comes from.

What did they actually do?

Hopefully, you want to know what happened
next.

Now, think about your story.

How can you add some tension?

One way is to add problems or difficulties:
things that get between you and your goal.

Another way is to use foreshadowing, like
our story above.

Pause the video and add tension to your story.

This is an important part of your story, so
think about it carefully.

Aim to write 2-3 sentences, and start again
when you’re done.

Okay?

Now, you’re ready to think about the end
of your story.

To finish your story, you need to resolve
the tension.

At this point, the people listening to your
story should want to know what comes next.

You’ve created some tension.

They aren’t sure what’s going to happen,
but they want to know.

So, finishing your story is simple: explain
what happened in the end, and whether you

(or whoever) reached your goal or not.

Let’s finish the three stories you’ve
seen in this lesson:

Remember that you can pause if you need more
time to read or review the story.

Let’s read the end together.

We loaded our stuff onto a kayak and swam
almost a kilometre around the cliffs.

A naked hippy paddled the kayak, which was
piled high with our things and looked like

it could sink at any minute.

We made it to land, and after several hours
of hitchhiking and walking, we caught our

train.

It was stressful at the time, but looking
back now it makes a good story!

You can see that the ending does two things.

In this story, we have tension: there’s
a mine in the harbour and we can’t leave

by boat.

How did we solve it?

By swimming for a kilometre, with a naked
hippy transporting our stuff in an overloaded

kayak.

Secondly, the ending explains whether we reached
our goal or not.

In this case, happily, we caught the train!

What about our second story?

I forgot how tired I was and ran down the
slopes to get to safety.

I stayed the night lower down and tried again
the next day.

I made it over the pass, but it was a very
frightening experience.

Again, the ending resolves the tension—I
ran below the storm and tried again the next

day—and also explains whether I reached
my goal or not.

Finally, what did happen to my room at university?

They made my room into a jungle!

I’m not kidding: there were flowers, plants,
three whole trees, jungle animals made from

paper, and a ‘sounds of the forest’ mix
playing on my stereo.

It took me three hours to clean up, and also
I have hay fever—an allergy to pollen—so

I was sneezing and blowing my nose the whole
time.

For my flatmates, that just made it funnier…

It’s the same pattern: we resolve the tension
by answering the question: what did my flatmates

do to my room?

We also find out whether I reached my goal
or not (I didn’t).

Now you’ve seen the three stories; can you
see what each one has right at the end?

Each story ends with a retrospective comment.

Retrospective means ‘looking back’.

A retrospective comment tells people how you
feel now about the story, or how other people

felt.

For example:

It was stressful at the time, but looking
back now it makes a good story!

It was a very frightening experience.

For my flatmates, that just made it funnier…

You don’t have to put a retrospective comment
at the end of your story, but it’s a good

way to finish.

Most of all, a retrospective comment sounds
like an ending.

That’s useful, especially if you’re speaking,
because it shows your listener that you’ve

finished speaking.

Now, you need to finish your story.

Pause the video and write an ending.

Remember that you need to do two things: resolve
the tension, and explain whether or not you

reached your goals.

Let’s review: to tell a good story, you
need to:

  • Set the scene and give some background information.

  • Establish a goal for the person or people
    in your story.

  • Add some tension, so that people aren’t
    sure what will happen in the end.

  • Finish the story and add a retrospective
    comment.

Of course, there are other things which are
important in a story.

Adding interesting details and descriptions
can make your story more lifelike.

Adding jokes and humour can improve many stories.

Giving some background on the people and their
personalities can bring the people in your

stories to life.

But, nothing is more important than structure,
and that’s what you’ve seen in this lesson.

A story without good structure isn’t really
a story.

Get the structure right first.

Maybe you’re thinking, “I don’t have
the vocabulary to tell stories like that.”

Not true: I’ve heard very powerful stories
from students who spoke very basic English.

Vocabulary doesn’t make a good story.

Structure and emotion make a good story.

Focus on structure and practise what you’ve
learned in this lesson.

You can tell great stories in English, too!

Do you have a story you’d like to share?

Please post it in the comments.

You can see the sample stories we used in
this lesson in the full lesson on our website:

Oxford Online English dot com.

We also have many other free English lessons
which you can watch and study from.

That’s all for this lesson.

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!

你好,我是吉娜。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

在本课中,您可以学习如何
用英语讲故事。

故事很强大。

当你结识新朋友、参加工作面试
或参加雅思等口语考试时,你

需要讲故事,无论你是否意识到这
是你在做的事情。

成为一个更好的讲故事的人会让你
成为一个更有说服力的演讲者。

人们被好故事所吸引——这
是做人的基本组成部分。

学习如何讲更好的故事可以帮助
你成为一个更有效的英语演讲者,

以及一个更好的沟通者。

在本课程中,您将逐步学习如何
构建故事。

你会看到三个不同的故事,
你会看到如何

在几乎任何故事中使用相同的简单想法。

如果您想在课前阅读这些故事
,请确保您在

我们的网站上观看:Oxford Online English dot com。

如果您在 YouTube 上观看,可以
在视频说明中找到链接。

在那里,您可以完整阅读这三个故事。

我们希望您参加本课程。

想一个你想讲的故事。

随着课程的进行,您会听到
我们的故事,但您也应该构建

自己的故事。

所以,想想发生在你身上的有趣、可怕、有趣
或奇怪的事情。

你有一个故事的想法吗?

那么让我们开始吧!

一个清晰的故事需要从一些背景开始。

想想基本的 wh- 问题:谁、何时、
何地、什么?

用一句话开始你的故事,它提供了
一些信息。

例如

:那是夏天,我和一些朋友
去了克里米亚的一个海滩,你

只能乘船到达。

我在吉尔吉斯斯坦旅行,我决定
去山里远足。

在大学里,我和另外三个人合租了一套公寓

在开始时保持简单:谁,何时,
何地,什么?

接下来,添加一两个句子以提供
更多背景细节。

您需要在这里取得平衡:您希望提供
足够的背景细节以使您的故事

感觉真实,但您还需要
快速触及故事的核心。

如果你没有抓住重点,人们就会失去兴趣

让我们看看如何做到这一点。

看看我们的第一个例子

:那是夏天,我和一些朋友
去了克里米亚的一个海滩,你

只能乘船到达。

想一想:如果你听到这个,你会问什么问题
来获得更多细节?

你可能会问这样的问题:

你的朋友是谁?

你为什么去这个海滩?

那个地方是什么样的?

那里还有其他人吗?

回答这些问题为您提供了
可以在开场白之后添加的详细信息。

例如:

人们已经去那里很多年了,
那里有长凳和桌子,有露营的地方,有

火的地方等等。

这是一个嬉皮士的地方,每个人都
赤身裸体地走来走去,做任何

他们想做的事。

在这里,我们专注于一件事——这个
地方——因为它是最有趣

和最不寻常的细节。

对于不同的故事,你可能会关注
不同的细节:

我们都是好朋友,但就像很多人在那种情况下一样,我们互相玩了很多恶作剧。

在这个故事中,人更重要,
所以你会提供更多关于他们的细节。

好:轮到你了!

你需要开始你的故事。

做一个开场白。

记住:谁、何时、何地、什么?

然后,添加 1-2 句提供更多背景
细节的句子。

专注于故事中最重要的元素

暂停视频并立即执行!

如果你愿意,把它写下来。

下一步是什么?

大问题:是什么让故事成为故事?

如果我告诉你我去商店买了
一些面包,然后我回家吃了

面包,这是一个故事吗?

并不真地。

如果是的话,那可不是什么好东西。

所以,想一想:是什么让一个故事成为故事?

一个故事需要两件事。

一:要有目标。

故事中的一个或多个人应该想要
一些东西。

二:要有张力。

这意味着目标不能太容易
达到。

在本节中,让我们看看
在你的故事中设定一个目标。

问题是:
你故事中的人想要什么?

他们一定想要一些东西。

这是你故事的核心。

如果你故事中的人什么都不想要,
那么你就没有故事。

我们一起举个例子
:最后一天,我们晚上要

赶火车。

如果您需要额外的时间阅读,请暂停视频

在这里,我们有一个简单的目标:我们需要赶上
我们的火车。

让我们再做一个:
为了到达伊塞克湖,这

是我旅程的终点,我必须穿过一个
高近 4,000 米的山口。

这里的目标是什么?

目标是穿过山口
到达湖边。

你故事中的目标可以是大的,也可以
是小的。

你可以在这两个例子中看到,我们
有一些非常容易和简单的事情——

赶火车——还有一些更大更困难的事情
——步行穿越 4000 米的山口。

你的故事呢?

目标是什么?

你故事里的人想要什么?

保持简单。

只需在您的故事中添加一句话,
为您或您故事中的其他人设定一个目标

暂停视频,写下你的句子,然后
我们将继续下一部分。

准备好?

好的,请记住,我们说过
每个故事都需要两件事。

第二个是什么?

每个故事都需要张力。

这意味着什么?

简而言之,这意味着您的目标不
应该太容易实现。

这是一个故事:

有一个喜欢吃人的怪物。

一个英雄杀死了怪物。

每个人都很安全。

结束。

好故事?

明显不是!

如果你的故事目标太简单,那么
你的故事就会很短很无聊。

需要有紧张感。

当他们听你讲话时,人们应该在想:
接下来会发生什么?

一切都会好吗?

他们将如何摆脱这个问题?

目标必须是困难的。

需要有问题。

人们需要怀疑你是否
会成功或失败。

这是紧张。

例如:
第三天,我要穿过一个

山口,差不多有 4000 米高。

太难了,因为那里的空气很稀薄
,而且我背着一个很重的包。

这似乎需要很长时间,但最终我
接近了山顶……然后一场风暴

在山脊上沸腾,直接落在了我的头上。

闪电在我周围,甚至在
我的下方!

噪音令人难以置信。

首先,即使在暴风雨袭来之前,您也会听到这有多困难

然后,暴风雨来临。

会发生什么?

我过关了吗?

我受伤了吗?

让我们再看一个例子:
一个周末,我要回家探望

父母。

我和室友道了再见,并告诉他们
不要对我的房间做任何事情。

“别担心,我们不会的。

周末愉快,”他们说。

我知道他们会做某事,但
我不敢相信他们实际上做了什么:

这是一个非常不同的故事,
但结构是一样的。

我有一个目标,就是去看望我的父母
,然后在我的朋友们对我的房间不做任何事情的情况下回来

你也有些紧张。

你会听到这样的句子:

我告诉他们不要对我的房间做任何事情。

我知道他们会做点什么。

当你听到这些时,你知道他们
会对我的房间做些什么,但你不

知道是什么。

这叫做预兆。

你知道会发生一些不好的事情,
但你不确定到底是什么。

这就是紧张的来源。

他们实际上做了什么?

希望你想知道接下来发生了什么

现在,想想你的故事。

你怎么能增加一些紧张感?

一种方法是添加问题或困难:
在你和你的目标之间发生的事情。

另一种方法是使用伏笔,就像
我们上面的故事一样。

暂停视频并为您的故事增添张力。

这是您故事的重要组成部分,因此请
仔细考虑。

目标是写2-3个句子,写完后重新
开始。

好的?

现在,你已经准备好考虑
你的故事的结局了。

要完成你的故事,你需要
解决紧张局势。

在这一点上,听你
故事的人应该想知道接下来会发生什么。

你制造了一些紧张。

他们不确定会发生什么,
但他们想知道。

所以,完成你的故事很简单:解释
最后发生了什么,以及你

(或任何人)是否达到了你的目标。

让我们完成您
在本课中看到的三个故事:

请记住,如果您需要更多
时间阅读或复习该故事,您可以暂停。

一起来读一读结尾吧。

我们把东西装上皮划艇,
在悬崖边游了近一公里。

一个赤身裸体的嬉皮士划着皮艇,皮艇上
堆满了我们的东西,

看起来随时可能下沉。

我们成功着陆,经过几个小时
的搭便车和步行,我们赶上了

火车。

当时压力很大,但
现在回想起来,这是一个很好的故事!

你可以看到结尾做了两件事。

在这个故事中,我们很紧张:
港口有一个矿井,我们不能

乘船离开。

我们是如何解决的?

游泳一公里,赤身裸体的
嬉皮士用超载的皮划艇运送我们的东西

其次,结局说明了我们是否达到
了目标。

在这种情况下,我们很高兴地赶上了火车!

我们的第二个故事呢?

我忘记了自己有多累,跑下
斜坡去安全。

我住了一晚
,第二天又试了一次。

我成功了,但这是一次非常
可怕的经历。

再一次,结局化解了紧张——我
跑下风暴,第二天又试了一次

——也解释了我是否达到了
我的目标。

最后,我在大学的房间发生了什么?

他们把我的房间变成了丛林!

我不是在开玩笑:有花、植物、
三棵整棵树、用纸做的丛林动物

,还有我的立体声音响上播放的“森林之声”混音

我花了三个小时才清理干净,而且
我还患有花粉热——对花粉过敏——所以

我一直在打喷嚏和
擤鼻涕。

对于我的室友来说,这只是让它变得更有趣……

这是相同的模式:我们
通过回答这个问题来解决紧张局势:我的

室友对我的房间做了什么?

我们还查明我是否达到了目标
(我没有)。

现在你已经看过这三个故事了; 你能
看到每个人最后都有什么吗?

每个故事都以回顾性评论结束。

回顾的意思是“回顾”。

回顾性评论告诉人们你
现在对这个故事的感受,或者其他人的

感受。

例如

:当时压力很大,但
现在回想起来,这是一个很好的故事!

这是一次非常可怕的经历。

对于我的室友来说,这只是让它变得更有趣……

你不必在故事的结尾发表回顾性评论
,但这是一个很好的

结束方式。

最重要的是,回顾性评论听起来
像是一个结局。

这很有用,尤其是在你说话的时候,
因为它向你的听众表明你已经

说完了。

现在,你需要完成你的故事。

暂停视频并写一个结尾。

请记住,您需要做两件事:
解决紧张局势,并说明您是否

达到了目标。

让我们回顾一下:要讲一个好故事,您
需要:

  • 设置场景并提供一些背景信息。

  • 为故事中的一个人或多个人设定一个目标

  • 增加一些紧张感,让人们
    不确定最后会发生什么。

  • 完成故事并添加回顾性
    评论。

当然,故事中还有其他
重要的事情。

添加有趣的细节和描述
可以使您的故事更加逼真。

添加笑话和幽默可以改善许多故事。

提供一些关于人物及其
个性的背景信息可以让

故事中的人物栩栩如生。

但是,没有什么比结构更重要的了
,这就是您在本课中所看到的。

没有良好结构的故事并不是真正
的故事。

先把结构搞好。

也许你在想,“我没有足够
的词汇量来讲述这样的故事。”

不正确:我
从说非常基本的英语的学生那里听到了非常有说服力的故事。

词汇不是一个好故事。

结构和情感构成了一个好故事。

专注于结构并练习您
在本课中学到的内容。

你也可以用英语讲好故事!

你有什么想分享的故事吗?

请在评论中发布。

您可以
在我们的网站上的完整课程中查看我们在本课中使用的示例故事:

Oxford Online English dot com。

我们还有许多其他免费的英语课程
可供您观看和学习。

这就是本课的全部内容。

感谢收看!

下次见!