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.


Riyal Sexy Mms Hit Hot ~upd~ (2026)

In the world of modern storytelling, we are used to certain archetypal obstacles keeping lovers apart. The class divide. The jealous ex. The war. The misunderstanding at the 80% mark of a rom-com. But in 2024 and 2025, a new, silent villain has crept into the narrative architecture of romance—both real and fictional. It is not a person. It is not a rival. It is the exchange rate.

When the riyal hits, relationships are tested not by fire, but by forex. And the romantic storylines that emerge are not about princes or grand gestures. They are about two people staring at a bank notification on a phone screen, holding their breath, and asking: Can we still afford us? riyal sexy mms hit hot

The storytelling genius lies in how the “hit” changes their dynamic. Fahad begins working double shifts, missing calls. Laila, too proud to ask for more money, starts selling her furniture. Their love language shifts from emojis to spreadsheets. In one wrenching scene, they calculate their future on a WhatsApp audio call— If you send 500 extra riyals, I can keep the apartment. But you’ll sleep four hours a night. Is that love or sacrifice? In the world of modern storytelling, we are

Critics have called it “the most honest romance of the decade” because it refuses to pretend that love alone pays the bills. The riyal hit becomes a character—silent, statistical, and devastating. Fiction mirrors reality. In expatriate communities across the Gulf, relationship counselors report a dramatic rise in “currency-induced separations” since 2022. A therapist in Dubai, who asked to remain anonymous (clients’ privacy), shared this pattern: “Couples where one party is in a riyal-pegged country and the other in a depreciating currency—say, Turkey, Nigeria, Pakistan, Lebanon—face a unique strain. The ‘riyal hit’ doesn’t just devalue money. It devalues time. Every hour spent on a call is an hour not earning. Every romantic gesture (flowers sent via app, a surprise flight) is recalculated in real-time. I’ve seen engagements break because the cost of a marriage license in the home country doubled in six months.” This has given rise to a new kind of romantic storyline in real life: the pragmatic breakup . Unlike classic heartbreak, there is no betrayal. There is no third party. Just a quiet, mutual agreement that the exchange rate has made their future geometrically impossible. The war

By Julian Croft, Culture & Economics Desk

For the uninitiated, a “riyal hit” refers to the sudden, painful devaluation of currencies pegged to or traded against the Saudi riyal, Qatari riyal, or Omani rial. When expatriates send money home, or when a family’s savings are held in a volatile currency while expenses are in riyals, a “hit” means losing 10%, 20%, or even 30% of your purchasing power overnight. But beyond the economics, there is a human cost. And that cost is rewriting the blueprint of modern love.

The first three episodes are classic long-distance romance: video calls, promises, a countdown to his annual leave. But episode four introduces the crisis: the Egyptian pound is devalued by 20% against the Saudi riyal overnight. Laila’s rent doubles in real terms. Her mother needs surgery. Fahad’s remittance, once generous, now evaporates.



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