text
stringlengths
12
22.5k
Yeah, well, you know, That's, that's the part that, t-, whether my dentist or That's the part that scares me, you know. I mean beginning with this is, this is just for homosexuals, well no, it's for homosexuals and gays, well no, actually, it's, I mean, you know. Did they know that all along? and I heard something the ...
but so what does that, Right. what does that mean for people that you work with and shake hands with and And how is it really transmitted, et cetera. Yeah. Which is, I think, what they also don't know. I mean that's, I think they, they told us what was convenient and felt safe to say, you know. Uh-huh. It was nice to i...
Oh. I mean I don't know. All I'm saying is I think it's scarier than we know. Uh, or maybe they understand but, I think maybe more information should be given out about it. Yeah, and, uh, and then the people that have it, it does seem that there are, are some drugs that are there that, you know, they keep holding back....
Exactly. let them, do it. Yeah. Yeah. And that's what I think they're saying too. Have you had any snow up your way? No, we haven't had any since, uh, oh, just before Christmas and, uh we had a lot before Christmas. Um. The ski resorts were really and, uh, but, now we have, we've had fog, for about forty days in a row ...
I guess there's different parts of the state of Utah that, that, does have some, but not, usually we have up to a hundred and fifty inches up at the ski resorts and they're down between thirty-eight and, uh, forty inches. Um At this time of the year, and we've been in a drought for the last five years and this is the s...
but this year it wasn't bad at all. I guess that's because we had so much rain. I know my son was telling me about the rain down there. He said it was just, and we read in the newspaper, southern part of Texas I flooded out, Oh, yeah. and, uh, Well, my, uh, my sister lives in Houston and they, uh, the river there was, ...
but, uh, that was clear full and up to, up to some of the streets, I guess. It just Yeah, we had a lot of flash floods in the area. We had a few people who ran into, uh, water and a few fatalities, uh, just a few. Uh-huh. Not more than ten but, That's funny that, uh, we can't have it in moderation instead of having eit...
it's, it's, quite southern and it's, it's rare to get real cold in, in El Paso. Uh-huh. The, uh, you'll be flying in there? Yes. Well, uh, take off is, uh, fun from El Paso because you normally, the way the winds are you take off right toward the mountain, the Rockies Yes. and they're towering above you and so you circ...
I hope we can get, uh, get some. There's supposed to be a storm, but it split, went down through, uh, northern Arizona and southern Utah and they're not predicting any for the next, uh, week anyway up here so, Well, I noticed on the weather map on, uh, cable network that there was supposed to be a storm front moving in...
Well, we, uh, had a bad siege last, uh, Christmas a year ago. We went up to visit my wife's, uh, sister who lives in, uh, Calgary, Alberta, Can, Well, the topic's about government. Uh, I'm not altogether sure that that's my best topic. Uh, I thought it was kind of a strange topic about corruption in the government and ...
Perhaps things that we didn't think of before and just concentrated on the lawmaking or the results that would be seen in public works or bills that are passed or, you know, et cetera like that Uh-huh. and we were just not exposed to the personal lives of these persons. Uh-huh. And I couldn't help thinking when that la...
I mean just because you did something in the past doesn't mean he's not a good enough person to be a politician. I, I, I agree with that and, uh, and also that if the results that they're putting out and what they actually seem to be accomplishing by legitimate means is what's, you know, going to the public then, uh, t...
Uh-huh. Oh, yeah I guess it's what sells newspapers, you know. It's a very low way of living. Uh-huh. Uh, so, and, and, and as far as, uh, you know, myself having any particular personal, uh, knowledge or insight into politics or politicians, it, I'm not terribly involved in it. Uh-huh Just in a very cursory way. Right...
Yeah. Uh-huh. Yeah, right. but I don't really play an active role in any kind of politics Yeah, uh, Uh, uh-huh. I'm not, I'm not in there, I'm not one of those, uh, you know, volunteers that's down at headquarters and whatever, uh, although I admire the people that do that and they certainly do get inside information U...
Yeah. Okay. All right. That's a real different topic. I'm not sure I'm familiar with, with what they mean of invasion of privacy. I know. I guess that, I guess you consider just things that every day that would, you would think of about. See, I'm a college student, so I can think of lots of things that my roommate does...
It's like, how do you know my name, where did you get my phone number, and why do you think it's a deal for me? Uh-huh. I mean, those people, they'll call you any time of the day or night with, try to solicit Yeah. and that's an invasion of my privacy, I think. They call late, now, I mean, now there's, I heard that the...
The computer's geared to, to start talking to you on the, on the word Hello. Really? Uh-huh. Huh. I don't know, I think like things that, that I think's like privacy is like, just like, not going through my stuff, like going through, just like my clothes or my drawer, just going through my stuff, basically. Oh, yeah. T...
Man, I'm just glad she can't wear my pants or my skirts or my dresses, you know. Oh, yeah. But still, she'll just take them, and she won't even think about it, and then, I'll like see her that day, and she'll be wearing my clothes, and I'll be like, you know, I don't like to borrow my clothes out, you know, I really do...
I know this, she would think this is like an invasion of her privacy, is like going through her purse, like if you ever needed money and stuff Oh, yeah. we always just give her her purse, you know, and she'll get it out or whatever. Yeah. Uh-huh. I was trying to think, I was thinking that's the only thing I could reall...
That's great. Yeah, so, I guess, privacy is really, and at the work place, I suppose, oh, well, actually yes. I can say definitely, privacy at the work place. Uh-huh. I hate it for people to open up my drawer to my desk See. Yeah. because that was, that was where I kept all my stuff, and I could tell I mean, even if a ...
Uh-huh. and everybody else in my area worked first shift Uh-huh. and our shifts overlapped Uh-huh. so I would come in, and there would be people sitting at my desk, working, and I'm wondering, you know, um, what is this, it's my vitamins, I wonder, what is, you know, yeah, what is, why are they working at my desk, and ...
That's okay. See that would, that would make me really mad, because you can always tell when someone's touched your stuff, just because, I mean, I know I have everything like a certain way and you know how it looks and everything. Oh, yeah. Well, you know how you left it the day before. Uh-huh. child_talking That would...
Uh-huh. You know. That's the only thing I can really think about being an invasion of privacy, like something every day, though. Yeah, well, actually I do know, and I have used it once Uh-huh. and it, it really is an invasion of privacy, but in the library there's a book that you can find out what people's phone number...
I think everybody took piano lessons so, Everybody, sure. I, I started when I was in, uh, third grade, and I've, I still play the piano as of today. Do you? Yes, I do. I started, I think I was in the fifth grade and I played it for maybe three months But, then, again, I was also in, uh, the marching band. I played the ...
so, All right I I enjoy the music, it gives me an out. Yeah. It always sounds like, for my playing the piano when I was depressed and didn't have anything else to do and there was no one to play with I could always go play with the piano, you know. True So, how long did you play? Only for about three months. Three mont...
Yep, they went out and bought us a piano and for three months Oh, bless your heart. Did you ever, did you ever just bang on it or do anything with it at all. Oh, yeah, any time I got bored Oh, okay, but I mean, can you play anything on it, other than wood chuck song? No. No. And Jaws, but I think everybody can. Okay. I...
Yeah. I played uh, concertos and other stuff but, I got to the point where I wasn't really reading music, I was memorizing music, so because of that, I can't read music as well as I used to, but anyway, Yeah. but I enjoy it, though. I find it to be a good out and I still enjoy the marching band and I still enjoy, uh, s...
Yeah. I tried out for choir when I was, think, in the seventh grade and they wouldn't let me in. So, I never tried again. Well, I sing in the choir, I do know if they want me to or not, but at least I do sing in it Yeah, That's pretty good. Well, I never really learned the music or anything. I never learned, I got righ...
enjoy it, but not for profession, no. Yeah. And besides that I kind of learned I wasn't really that good I gave up. Yeah. Course, my mom thought I was, but, uh, you know, Of course, parents always do. Oh, yeah, so, They're nice that way. Yes. Well, what else can we uh, talk about, uh, Uh, well, I don't, so you listen t...
Oh, yeah? Yeah. Yeah. So I listen to the radio, I like the pop music. Oh, yeah. I like people like Neil Diamond and all, all the folks that you're not supposed to like, but that's who I go for Oh, yeah, the jeezer music as I call it. Oh, the jeezer music. Yeah. Oh, okay, well, My boss listens to that. We listen to nine...
What what is that? It's more, uh, I don't know how to explain it, kind of pop, you know, rock. Rock. Yeah. Hard rock? Well, not hard Not hard rock. Just kind of, Not like the eagle. Huh? Is that the eagle? Yeah. Okay, I know, I know what the eagle is. It's not too hard, it's, That's not too hard. You know.
But it's not enough to put you to sleep True, true. Which some of the songs on K V I L can. Well, course, see, I listen to K V I L for the contests. I mean Oh, yeah, got the bumper sticker, too? Oh, yes, oh, yes. You can't drive a car without bumper sticker and you know they're going to call you up. Someday. Yeah Well,...
Bye-bye. Bye-bye. Okay Okay Have you done this very long? Uh, well, yeah, for the last, uh, couple of months. Yeah, that's the same with us. Yeah. Well, what kind of car would you buy? Well, it's kind of hard to say, uh, because I don't think we're going to buy another car for about three years. We just bought, uh, a c...
So, uh, probably we'll be in at least a midsize, four door sedan. Okay. What kind do you have now? Uh, we have a, a Mazda nine twenty nine and a Ford Crown Victoria and a little two seater C R X. Oh, okay. Uh, it's rather difficult to, to project what kind of, uh, we'd, look, always look into, uh, consumer reports to s...
Uh-huh. And, uh, they, they, uh, I've been extremely, we've had three Mazdas. We've been extremely pleased with our Mazdas. Oh, really? Yeah. We've always bought American made cars, mostly Oldsmobiles. Yeah, well, we, we've had, uh, let's see, we had, uh, we had a, uh, let me think. ause We had a fifty-three and a, uh,...
we've been real pleased with ours. I think we've had, one, two, three Yeah. and most, we have a Cutlass, we still have a Cutlass Supreme which is like, a seventy-seven. Uh-huh. Then we have a Cutlass Sierra and we've had the ninety-eight. Uh-huh. So, but I don't know, we'll, we're going to be in the market for a car, p...
uh, my son over in Shreveport, uh, sold Porsches, Audis, Mazdas and Volkswagons for ten years and that was one of the deciding factors in getting the Mazdas. Oh. Uh, so, uh, the first foreign car that we had was a, a seventy-seven M G, M G B Oh the, Was British racing green, with real wire wheels and a hard top and a s...
we, uh, we decided that, uh, we had this, uh, sixty-five Oldsmobile and it, and it was just too big, so we, we sold it to a fellow who was coming back to the States and we got a little Fiat, uh, and a, and the little, uh, forty horse power Mazda, four door sedan. Oh. So what do you think about caring for older folks Da...
Uh-huh. and she is only about sixty-four, but she's had some pretty close calls and my daddy has to drive her to dialysis now and so she's phasing out ounds like and, but she's also a very, very, very independent person and doesn't like having having people, uh, not being able to do things for herself when she wants to...
Yeah, but it gets hard. My, my grandmother is in her mid eighties Uh-huh. and she's, uh, suffering from, uh, well, uh, progressive Alzheimer's Disease Uh-huh. so she doesn't remember anybody Right. and, uh, she remembers things, but they are things back whenever she was real young Right. and so, with, she was living by...
Now a friend of mine who was studying social work here in Philadelphia worked for an adult day care program for mostly for patient's with Alzheimer. Do they have anything like that in Dallas. In Dallas, uh, yeah. I've, I've heard of several things and they are really neat programs to be able to do if you can link up wi...
Uh-huh ery faint. Right. and I think that's in a way it's more, some, an area where some of the day care, uh, programs have left off Uh-huh. because you really kind of have to be a little bit mobile to be able to do those. Right to, uh, get there and to participate in the activities. Right. Cause I know, there's one no...
was it your grand mother that was having Alzheimer uh, being able to tell old stories. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. You can perhaps get a group of people that aren't too far along with Alzheimer talking about the old times and enjoying it themselves that way. And they love to recollect. I mean they just, you know, and they will jus...
And in Sweden they have socialized medicine. And so I saw some of the good and also I saw some of the bad that results from such a program. Uh-huh. Uh, some of the, some of the good obviously that nobody has to worry about health care. Right. So it's a very, it's a very, uh, comfortable, I mean our people are very comf...
I remember this one row of houses and they were, uh, row houses or townhouses, all connected together so it was like lower middle-class housing. Uh-huh. Well, it would be lower middle-class housing here. It's probably middle-class housing there. Uh-huh. Um, and there was a taxi driver that lived in one of these and the...
that is, uh, that is something I've heard. Uh, I had a friend, uh, that I worked with that was from Sweden and that was, uh, probably the, the major concern I have is that, you know, we are leading in the technology realm of, of medicine just because it is such a great incentive to, to get into, uh, the medical field, ...
And I don't think that is, that is, uh, abnormal in any means to be doing things like that. And, You don't think it's abnormal? I don't think it's abnormal for hospitals to be doing that at all Oh, I see. You're not saying it's right, you're just saying it's common. yeah. And so it's, I think, to me I think, uh, someth...
Yes. and I think that's something that if, if they could work on the cause of that and, it's, uh, I'll start off here. Uh, I don't know. I get, probably, most of my information either from the newspaper or from C N N. Uh, I like C N N because it, uh, you know, repeats it, well HEADLINE NEWS repeats every half hour but ...
and, and I like, uh, C N N because you get some world, world events too uh, which is not too common on, on the other format, newspapers, and so forth. Uh-huh. Right. Yeah. I know, the, my only major objection is that, uh, I don't think American media spends enough, uh, attention on, on our closest neighbors like Mexico...
I'm, I'm currently living in Dallas and it, it won't even give it the back section <laughter>. You just, never see, you just never see anything about it, uh, which is a shame because you go to other countries, uh, and, and they carry quite a bit about the U S on the other hand. And if you go up to, uh, Canada, those pe...
and that's the only way you can tell what's going on at all <laughter>. There's not much in the way of television in some of those places. Right. Uh, but that's a good point about, about the neighboring countries. I hadn't really thought about it but I guess you don't think about it cause you don't hear it. Right. Exac...
Or, or, that's just something, uh, I'd say ninety percent of the people here would never have heard of and I think that I heard of it about the first time when I was up in Calgary a couple of years ago and, you know, picked up a, a paper and started reading a little bit more detail about it. And, and came it was a big ...
I've caught it a few times and they, they do some pretty good news. Uh, seemingly unbiased news broadcasts. Uh uh, the, the title of the network is sort of surprising. Uh-huh. You'd think it would carry mostly religious but it, it doesn't seem to. So I'll flip through and listen to it once in awhile too, uh, and catch ...
Fourth birthday. Yeah, and we got him when he was about eight weeks old and, uh, he's pretty okay, we like him. Does he shed a lot? He does. That's the one thing we don't like about him. In fact, we threaten him in the summertime that we might just shave all of his hair off. He'd probably look pretty funny if we did th...
He is. It's, uh, just me and my wife and, uh, he's kind of our temporary substitute for having kids. We treat him like our kid right now so he's spoiled rotten. Yeah, I can understand that Because I, Get away with that a little bit more with pets than you can with kids Uh-huh. How about you? Well, we have a cat who's a...
Uh, have you ever had a Retriever before? No, but my husband had one when he was growing up. Because I, I find that they're good around other animals like cats and other dogs. They don't tend to get real jealous or territorial. They like to play. Um. Especially with the kids. They love to play with kids. Is, is your do...
but he does not like to be tied outside. He'll, he'll just bark and bark and bark. Um, when he gets outside, does, in, does he run away and then eventually come back? No, he's, uh, taken to the training pretty well and, uh, he knows where our yard is and we have a pretty small yard, but he seems to know the boundaries....
Did you bring him to a doggy obedience school or just train him on your own No we never did. and, I, I trained him on my own and, uh, this is the first dog I've had all my own as an adult. Uh-huh. We've had kid, or we've had dogs when I was a kid, but this, this is the first one that I, uh, took in, so I wasn't sure if...
Invisible what? Invisible fencing, have you heard of that? No, what is that? It's, uh, it's a system you can put in your yard where you bury these little, uh, transducers or emitters in your yard at the perimeter Oh. and then they wear a collar with a special little attachment on it and if they get too close to that pe...
Yeah, and so, I, I don't take too well to, to those sorts of training techniques. Um. I don't think they're always necessary. If you put enough patience into, Yeah, just be consistent and diligent with it Uh-huh. and, um, It's, uh, is your cat an indoor cat or an outdoor cat? Yeah he's indoor and all declawed because I...
Quite a difference. Yeah. What, uh, what kind of climate do you have? Well, uh, it's, we just moved recently so now we're in the, uh, Dallas area and it's very very nice Oh. and, The only experience I have, I don't have any children but I've, uh, I was a baby-sitter in high school. And then, just recently, after we wer...
Yeah. Having to pick up the kid by, you know, six o'clock or it's five dollars for every minute you're late. And stuff like that Uh-huh. Which is understandable. I mean, these people can't, you know, stay there till eight o'clock because somebody has to work late Just sit around That that's true. but See the lady I did...
Yeah. Yeah. That's pretty bad. The only time I baby-sat was in high school and it, you know, of course you don't I didn't pay taxes on that, so. Right. It was easy, you know, go over to some, uh, it was these people that lived in our neighborhood and I'd just go over there. Every Thursday night, they went to the theate...
I'd go over there and there would be like, uh, you know, there's, we have these videos over here. Watch, whatever you want. And there's some Oreos in the, in the cupboard. And there's some Coke and you know, just help yourself to anything. So it was, it was, you know, the best, Wow. that was a long time ago and that wa...
I was just like but I'm wasting my time. Yeah. I really liked the little girl and everything but I thought ... She does take up, and they do take up a lot of your time. That ... Yeah. Yeah, I ... They're very demanding Uh-huh. Well, and she was really spoiled. They didn't make her eat anything she didn't want or anythi...
My mom would be like, uh eat it or don't eat anything. Eat this or <laughter>. That's right. So, I can see the concerns on what different people want. Yeah. Because some, I mean, you know, if I was setting up a daycare, there would be so many needs you would have to customize your service to. Yeah. Uh-huh. Cause some p...
But I just don't trust people now. There's too many lawsuits. Yeah. I just, I think it's a bigger risk than ... More than what it's worth? Yeah. Yeah. It would scare me. With, I don't know, cause I'm sure some of them have good reason to sue but I think a lot of them are just, you know, they're negligent and they get h...
Uh-huh. Oh, yeah. And that's just, you know, you can't watch that many little kids getting into things at one time That's impossible. You know, you never know what they're going to get into. I have a girlfriend that works at a daycare and she takes her little girl with her and, I mean, she told me about half the people...
Yeah. That's yeah, that's a hard thing about it. If, I mean, I I can't foresee myself getting married but if, you know, if I ever wanted to have a kid, how could I work. I mean, I don't think I could trust somebody with my kid either. Unless it was a friend that, you know, did it in ounds like an airplane their house t...
It turns out that, uh, I work at TEKTRONIX and it's a very, uh, low key place as far as dress goes. Uh-huh. You just wear, uh, let's see. When I first came here, I wore suits but after a while I got, uh, found out that that wasn't all that important. I'm an engineer. Oh, I see. And, uh, so, I get to wear just, uh, how ...
Well actually right now I'm a full time college student so my dress code is very, very (( )). Oh, okay. Yeah, I usually wear jeans and stuff to classes or shorts in the summertime. But over the summers I've had a job, internships with the newspaper. Uh-huh. And that's so, generally then I dress, you know, nicer. Usuall...
uh, like I said, most of the people at, at this company don't wear suits. Uh, most of the engineers and technical people are just very casual, almost the same clothes that, that you'd wear to school. Wow. That must be nice atmosphere then. Well, it has been. Although the new president and C E O of the company is from a...
So people, uh, how shall I say it, made a, made much more effort to notice you, acknowledge your presence, say hello and, uh, things like that, so. That's interesting. It's like a mini, little study there Yeah. That's really interesting. And so this dress for success thing, I think is, uh, by and large I've, I'm kind o...
now I, I know eastern, now the other thing we do here, of course, is a single, not quite a single climate. We have, uh, we do have some snow in the wintertime and it can be quite warm in the summertime. Uh-huh. Not hot like, uh, I lived in the midwest for a while. Oh. And I know that, uh, you know, it can be freezing c...
Low twenties, let's say, and then the summer gets up to eighties, nineties so, You interested in woodworking? Yeah. Actually, I, uh, I guess I am Um, it just seems kind of funny that this is a topic of discussion. Uh, I do, uh, some, uh, woodworking myself Uh, in fact, I'm in the middle of a project right now making a ...
Oh, he'll be delighted. Oh, yeah. Uh-huh. Now I just have to finish it though. I got, uh, it got delayed for a little bit and, uh, because of work and now, uh, I've got to jump back in and finish the, because I've got it all cut out, it's all, uh, I've done most of the coloring but I've got to go a second layer with th...
Our local schools have adult education in the evening Oh. uh, and I use their tools and, some of their guidance. I'm an artist. Oh, okay. And I'm very handy and, you know, if I touch it, it turns into something <laughter> us-, usually. That's great. What, what type of art do you focus on? I have a Master's degree and, ...
well no, actually, I get good enough to sell it or have people say oh wow, you didn't buy it, you made it. That's great! And then I, it's like well the thrill is gone so let's do something else. Right. You want to, uh, explore a new field or, or, Well, yeah, I, I'm signed up for a class in pottery making because I've n...
and that way I have time for my kids too. And I've been fortunate that I can afford to work part-time. I don't know how long that's going to last Oh, yeah. And, uh, they're cutting back, so I don't go in all that often but I've been real interested in some of those cute country, country kind of things. Uh, I see stuff ...
And I made a necklace that I saw in a gallery for three hundred twenty dollars It took me a lot of time but it didn't, Oh, yeah. but if it cost me twenty dollars, you know, and then I, And your time, then you're that much farther ahead Yeah. Then I saw a, one of these country looking wood watermelons. It was a solid w...
I don't know if you've heard of it. I went and I got two six foot inch thick boards turned into a watermelon. Yes. We have one. I had to cut into slabs and build up this big square and turn it on the lath and cutting that wedge out was no joke Huh. Oh, I'm, I'm sure. We did it on a, I had a, uh, I did it through Adult ...
that was the plan here Right. So we did get the wedge cut out by building some kind of a cradle for it. A cradle for it. Yeah, so you can steady it and then, you used a handsaw or a backsaw? Well, it, the instructions in the book I had said use a coping saw but there's no coping saw big enough to, for a fourteen inch w...
Now did you cut a quarter wedge in this? Uh, I'd say it's about an eighth. You know Well, I, I'm envisioning, uh, uh, a a watermelon like a log and then, uh, what I've seen of this kind before is you have the, uh, the, uh, it's, uh, if you're looking at adding on you have, Up here in Rochester, uh, we're the second cle...
so why should we have to worry. Yeah. I've, I've, uh, was in Los Angeles once and that was quite a difference as far as pollution goes. I mean you couldn't really see that much Every once in a while we have these air inversions, the weather inversions Oh, yes nothing, and then it gets hazy around here but they're reall...
it wasn't really pollution, just the steamy weather <laughter>. Oh absolutely, yeah, just muggy. So, yes I think, yeah, I think you're right. Our most pollute substance down here is just water. But I I, I, I think, you know, the biggest causes even then a lot of times are, uh, uh, like when I was up in Boston just all ...
I mean, yeah, that's what's in, you know, Los Angeles is, I think that's biggest problem because when I was in Los Angeles for a time, it's all, you know, from Los Angeles to San Diego it's like all city. Right. And there's really, there's nowhere for this to be absorbed, really. Uh, tree planting sometimes can handle,...
no. and sit down. there a napkin. they are napkins yes. turn around and finish your lunch. I think you'd better finish your lunch and then we'll go. take a nap. right. Mom where my new blanket? your new clean blanket's up in your bed. in bed sleeping. it's not sleeping. it's just laying there. Eve is it a clean new bla...
our living room. [Mother says Eve is just beginning to use "our"] [tells Colin about "our car"] green are. green are what? car. green car? yeah. where's the green car? on t v. on t v? six little taxis standing in a row. [there had been six colored taxis on TV that morning] there was a green one. was a green one. there ...
yeah. okay. = = = childes/CHILDES_NA/Brown/Eve/010800.cha = = = more grape juice. more? no. didn't think so. no Eve play bouillon cube. you must put the blocks in the box first before you can play with the bouillon cubes... put the blocks away first. a block first. what's this? [pointing at jug] [follows along in book...
taperecorder. Fraser taperecorder floor. it's on the floor. that's right. Mom get red bicycle. [3-4 name of book] get the red bicycle? where is it? where are they? here. say music Eve. music. say music Eve. music. did you find the bicycle? did you find the little red bicycle? yep. [has the book.] where's the little red...
uhhuh. Cromer. no. when's Cromer coming? on Wednesday. on Wednesday. that's right. Eve jump Mommy kitchen. you're jumping in Mommy's kitchen? why don't you jump in the living room? go and jump in the living room. go jump living room. yes you jump in the living room. jump living room. [not clear what this means] jump li...
Eve make tapioca. no I'm almost finished. I'm almost finished. you stay in the living room. Eve making tapioca. but I'm almost finished. tapioca. [insistent, half crying] do you wanna help me turn? yeah. [Mother says "sit by me" same as "sit by you", though sometimes correct, no apparent pattern to it. "me" used rather...
and cool yes. by the time you have lunch it'll be cool. that? what is that? vanilla. vanilla. vanilla. vanilla. vanilla. Eve play bouillon cube. you can play with the bouillon cubes if you put the blocks back in the box. cmon I'll help. help me. yes I'll help. you help me put them in the box. you can help me put them i...
alright. tinkertoy. no it doesn't belong in that box. it belongs in the tinkertoy box. there. there. there's one by the rocking chair. by. [Eve doesn't seem to look at rocking chair.] by the rocking chair there's one. the rocking chair. by rockchair. get it. that's right. now are there any more? yeah. where? there's on...
under the chair by the couch. I seed it. you see it? okay. now what? Eve play bouillon cube. alright. now we'll play with the bouillon cubes. thank you. thank you. yes. Eve play the bouillon cube. there. Mom open. ask Fraser if he'll open it for you. [she dropped it.]. what do you want me to do? what do I hafta do? op'...
yes. [push lost can back into view]. [Mother says Eve has often been told that someone will come back. she is impressed when he does.] come back. [Mother says Eve has often been told that someone will come back. she is impressed when he does.] Eve find top. what? Eve find top. where do you find the top? where is it? hm...
what top is it you're looking for? want find top. no a top. the top for what? what top? no. where is it? it's right there on the floor. you see it? see it. that one has a top. xxx see it. here's the other top. right there. that's the other one. that other one. yes. get back. what doing Mommy? I'm making orange peel. or...
what? Eve sit Mom lap. you wanna sit on my lap? oh but I'm very busy... you can sit on my lap later. Eve sit on Mommy lap. you can sit out here by me on the other stool. by me. yes on the stool. but you'd better get the big stool Eve. not the little stool the big one. big one. [puts down little stool] the big one. the ...
no the big stool. like this one. the big stool like I'm sitting on. Eve stool. right by the taperecorder. right taperecorder. the big stool. big xxx stool. right. by taperecorder. that one. that a one. the banjo. I know it's your banjo. come back. there. are you gonna sit down on the stool? Eve sit down. well this is m...
you're gonna have some for lunch. that? it's an orange peel. orange peel. Mommy's gonna make a goodie. make cookie. make a goodie. that? that's more orange peel. make a gookie. goodie uhhuh. Eve sit bottom. you sit on your bottom? alright. Mommy sit bottom. Mommy's sitting on her bottom. right. that? the cooker. that? ...