New Rules for Digital Money

Introduction

The U.S. Senate wants to make new laws for digital money.

Main Body

The Senate Banking Committee will meet on May 14. They want to decide who controls digital money. This is very important for companies in the U.S. Some people disagree about stablecoins. Banks think these coins are dangerous for the money system. Digital money companies think the rules are not fair. Some leaders do not agree on the law. They want better rules to stop crime. They also want to stop politicians from making money with these coins.

Conclusion

The Senate must now decide if they can make a law that everyone likes.

Learning

🧩 The 'Want' Pattern

In this text, we see a very useful word for A2 students: Want.

It shows what people desire or plan to do. Look at how it changes based on who is talking:

  • The Senate wants →\rightarrow (One group/singular)
  • They want →\rightarrow (Many people/plural)

How to build your own sentences: Person + want/wants + to + Action

Examples from the story:

  1. They want to decide... →\rightarrow (Their goal is deciding)
  2. They want better rules... →\rightarrow (They desire a thing)

Quick Tip: Use "want to" when you are talking about your future plans. It is the simplest way to express a goal in English.

Vocabulary Learning

new (adj.)
Recent or not old
Example:She bought a new car.
rules (n.)
Guidelines or instructions
Example:The teacher explained the classroom rules.
digital (adj.)
Related to computers or electronic
Example:He uses a digital camera.
money (n.)
Currency or funds
Example:She saved her money.
law (n.)
A rule made by a government
Example:The law requires a license.
people (n.)
Human beings
Example:Many people attended the event.
banks (n.)
Financial institutions
Example:She deposited money in the banks.
coins (n.)
Small pieces of metal used as money
Example:He collected rare coins.
dangerous (adj.)
Risky or harmful
Example:The cliff is dangerous.
fair (adj.)
Just or unbiased
Example:The judge made a fair decision.