A Christmas Carol
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Charles Dickens

A Christmas Carol

Page count: 68
Average rating: 4.5 based on 11 votes
Language: English

Votes levels
B1 (Intermediate)
1

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Beginner (A1)
Can understand and use familiar everyday expressions and very basic phrases aimed at the satisfaction of needs of a concrete type. Can introduce him/herself and others and can ask and answer questions about personal details such as where he/she lives, people he/she knows and things he/she has. Can interact in a simple way provided the other person talks slowly and clearly and is prepared to help.
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Words used in the book
Carol
Scrooge
Ghost
Marley
Christmas
Spirits
Cratchit
Fezziwig
Ebenezer
Jacob
Miserly
Cheery
Humbug
Wretched
Ebenezer's
Toil
Morn
Ignorance
Want
Dismal
Glimmering
Treading
Frugal
Avarice
Dismay
Cold
Mantle
Charitable
29

Description

In October 1843, Charles Dickens heavily in debt and obligated to his publisher began work on a book to help supplement his family's meager income. That volume, "A Christmas Carol, "has long since become one of the most beloved stories in the English language. As much a part of the holiday season as holly, mistletoe, and evergreen wreaths, this perennial favorite continues to delight new readers and rekindle thoughts of charity and goodwill.
With its characters exhibiting many qualities as well as failures often ascribed to Dickens himself, the imaginative and entertaining tale relates Ebenezer Scrooge's eerie encounters with a series of spectral visitors. Journeying with them through Christmases past, present, and future, he is ultimately transformed from an arrogant, obstinate, and insensitive miser to a generous, warmhearted, and caring human being. Written by one of England's greatest and most popular novelists, "A Christmas Carol" has come to epitomize the true meaning of Christmas.
Unabridged and unaltered Dover (1991) republication of the text of the first edition (1843, Chapman and Hall, London).
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