New Standard English 2B Module 2
青少版新概念2BUnit21.pptx
承诺 度过 车票 付款
到国外 公寓
时装拍摄 成功的
不成功的
有规律的 奇妙的
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Review • 这将是我最后一次时装拍摄。 • This will be my last fashion shoot. • 我要找一份普通的办公室工作。 • I'm going to get an ordinary job in an office. • 我将会有规律的工作时间。 • I'll work regular hours. • 我将每天晚上睡在同一张床上。 • I'll sleep in the same bed every night. • 有一天我会遇到合适的人。 • One day,I'll meet the right man.
今天晚上,雨将会从西南方逐渐来临。
gradually adv.逐渐地
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雨逐渐地大起来了。
The rain is gradually heavy.
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rain shower
n.阵雨
The whole country will have some rain showers in
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• yesterday,last...,...ago,in+过去年份,just now,one day.
• now,look,listen,these days,right now,at the moment.
• tomorrow,the day after tomorrow,next...,soon,this
weather forecast
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forecast
新标准大学英语第二版综合教程2 Unit 2 B篇练习答案及课文翻译
to a prestigious university e 3. trying to comfort someone who has had bad news. s 4. reacting physically when you see that someone is in pain
Text
How empathy unfolds
1 The moment Hope, just nine months old, saw another baby fall, tears welled up in her own eyes and she crawled off to be comforted by her mother, as though it were she who had been hurt. And 15-month-old Michael went to get his own teddy bear for his crying friend Paul; when Paul kept crying, Michael retrieved Paul’s security blanket for him. Both these small acts of sympathy and caring were observed by mothers trained to record such incidents of empathy in action. The results of the study suggest that the roots of empathy can be traced to infancy. Virtually from the day they are born infants are upset when they hear another infant crying – a response some see as the earliest precursor of empathy.
八年级英语外研版上册Module2-Unit3优质课教案(山东省)
Module2 Unit3优质课教案青州市海岱学校薛召荣〖课标分析〗本模块为外研版八年级上册,话题为“家乡”,新课标要求学生:有较明确的英语学习动机和积极主动的学习态度,听懂介绍祖国和家乡的对话。
能比较两个地方的不同,并与同学进行多轮对话。
能参照范例,运用所学语言简单介绍自己的家乡,会向同学介绍并比较两个场所,形成文字,向全班汇报。
能对自己的学习进行评价,注意学习策略共享;教学过程设计时主要体现以下理念:1. 理论基础:英语新课标基本理念:面向全体学生,注重素质教育;整体设计目标,体现灵活开放;突出学生主体,尊重个体差异;采用活动途径,倡导体验参与;注重过程评价,促进学生发展;开发课程资源,拓展学用渠道。
英语多媒体辅助教学为我们提供了一种新的图文并茂、有声有色、生动逼真的教学环境,有效地激发和培养了学生学习英语的兴趣,并调动了学生在课下继续探究学习的强烈欲望。
2. 教师理念:教师在教学过程中,要遵循学生的认知发展规律,各项活动的设计要做到由易到难,层层深入,发挥学生主体作用,尊重学生个体差异,同时要扮演好引导者的角色,激发学生英语学习兴趣和调动学生的积极性,并在多媒体手段和各种资源的协助下,实现师生间的情感共鸣。
〖教材分析〗【教学基本信息】1. 教材:New Standard English, Module 2 My home town and my county Unit 3 Language in use2. 出版社:外语教学与研究出版社3. 年级:八年级上册班级:八年级一班【话题分析】本模块以“家乡”为主要题材,围绕地理位置、地方名胜,地标建筑等内容,通过使用形容词的比较级形式进行各类比较开展听、说、读、写活动。
通过学习,学生能够由简及繁地逐渐感知新的语言,并通过范例学习介绍、比较不同的地方。
本课为第三单元,主要语言项目是形容词的(单音节和部分双音节词)的规则比较级形式及构成。
采用语境结合任务的的交际活动。
新概念英语第2册课文word版
新概念英语第2册最具有背诵价值的课文是(共挑选41篇):lesson 7, lesson 8, lesson 10, lesson 13, lesson 14, lesson 16, lesson 20, l esson 21;lesson 25, lesson 28, lesson 29, lesson 32, lesson 36, lesson 37, lesson 38, lesson39, lesson 40, lesson 43, lesson 45, lesson 47, lesson 48; lesson 49, lesson 51,lesson 52, lesson 54, lesson 55, lesson 56, lesson 58, lesson 61,lesson 64,lesson 65, lesson 69, lesson 71;lesson 73, lesson 78, lesson 80, lesson 83, lesson 85, lesson 89, lesson 93 , lesson 96Lesson 1 A private conversation 私人谈话Last week I went to the theatre. I had a very good seat. The play was very interesting. I did not enjoy it. A young man and a young woman were sitting behind me. They were talking loudly. I got very angry. I could not hear the actors. I turned round. I looked at the man and the woman angrily. They did not pay any attention. In the end, I could not bear it. I turned round again. 'I can't hear a word!' I said angrily. ' It's none of your business,' the young man said rudely. 'This is a private conversation!'.Lesson 2 Breakfast or lunch? 早餐还是午餐?It was Sunday. I never get up early on Sundays. I sometimes stay in bed until lunch time.Last Sunday I got up very late. I looked out of the window. It was dark outside.'What a day!' I thought. 'It's raining again.' Just then, the telephone rang. It was my aunt Lucy.' I've just arrived by train,' she said. 'I'm coming to see you.' 'But I'm still having breakfast,' I said.'What are you doing ?' she asked. ' I'm having breakfast,' I repeated. 'Dear me,' she said. 'Do you always get up so late ? It's one o'clock!''Lesson 3 Please send me a card 请给我寄一张明信片Postcards always spoil my holidays. Last summer, I went to Italy. I visited museums and sat in public gardens. A friendly waiter taught me a few words of Italian. 'Then he lent me a book. I read a few lines, but I did not understand a word. Every day I thought about postcards. My holidays passed quickly, but I did not send any cards to my friends. On the last day I made a big decision. I got up early and bought thirty-seven cards. I spent the whole day in my room, but I did not write a single card !Lesson 4 An exciting trip 激动人心的旅行I have just received a letter from my brother, Tim. He is in Australia. He has been there for six months. Tim is an engineer. He is working for a big firm and he has already visited a great number of different places in Australia. He has just bought an Australian car and has gone to Alice Springs, a small town in the centre of Australia. He will soon visit Darwin. From there, he will fly to Perth.My brother has never been abroad before, so he is finding this trip very exciting.Lesson 5 No wrong numbers 无错号之虞Mr James Scott has a garage in Silbury and now he has just bought another garage in Pinhurst. Pinhurst is only five miles from Silbury, but Mr Scott cannot get a telephone for his new garage, so he has just bought twelve pigeons. Yesterday, a pigeon carried the first message from Pinhurst to Silbury. The bird covered the distance in three minutes. Up to now, Mr Scott has sent a great many requests for spare parts and other urgent messages from one garage to the other. In this way, he has begun his own private telephone service.Lesson 6 Percy Buttons 珀西·巴顿斯I have just moved to a house in Bridge Street. Yesterday a beggar knocked at my door. He asked me for a meal and a glass of beer. In return for this, the beggar stood on his head and sang songs. I gave him a meal. He ate the food and drank the beer. Then he put a piece of cheese in his pocket and went away. Later a neighbour told me about him. Everybody knows him. His name is Percy Buttons. He calls at every house in the street once a month and always asks for a meal and a glass of beer.Lesson 7 Too late 为时太晚The plane was late and detectives were waiting at the airport all morning. They were expecting a valuable parcel of diamond from South Africa. A few hours earlier, someone had told the police that thieves would try to steal the diamonds. When the plane arrived, some of the detectives were waiting inside the main building while others were waiting on the airfield. Two men took the parcel off the plane and carried it into the Customs House. While two detectives were keeping guard at the door, two others opened the parcel. To their surprise, the precious parcel was full of stones and sand! Lesson 8 The best and the worst 最好的和最差的Joe Sanders has the most beautiful garden in our town. Nearly everybody enters for 'The Nicest Garden Competition' each year, but Joe wins every time. Bill Frith's garden is larger than Joe's. Bill works harder than Joe and grows more flowers and vegetables, but Joe's garden is more interesting. He has made neat paths and has built a wooden bridge over a pool. I like gardens too, but I do not like hard work. Every year I enter for the garden competition too, and I always win a little prize for the worst garden in the town!Lesson 9 A cold welcome 冷遇On Wednesday evening, we went to the Town Hall. It was the last day of the year and a large crowd of people had gathered under the Town Hall clock. It would strike twelve in twenty minutes' time. Fifteen minutes passed and then, at five to twelve, the clock stopped. The big minute hand did not move. We waited and waited, but nothing happened. Suddenly someone shouted, 'It's two minutes past twelve! The clock has stopped!' I looked at my watch. It was true. The big clock refused to welcome the New Year. At that moment everybody began to laugh and sing.Lesson 10 Not for jazz 不适于演奏爵士乐We have an old musical instrument. It is called a clavichord(翼琴). It was made in Germany in 1681. Our clavichord is kept in the living-room. It has belong to our family for a long time. The instrument was bought by my grandfather many years ago. Recently it was damaged by a visitor. She tried to play jazz on it! She struck the keys too hard and two of the strings were broken. My father was shocked. Now we are not allowed to touch it. It is being repaired by a friend of my father's.Lesson 11 One good turn deserves another 礼尚往来I was having dinner at a restaurant when Harry Steele came in. Harry worked in a lawyer's office years ago, but he is now working at a bank. He gets a good salary, but he always borrows money from his friends and never pays it back. Harry saw me and came and sat at the same table. He has never borrowed money from me. While he was eating, I asked him to lend me &2. To my surprise, he gave me the money immediately. 'I have never borrowed any money from you,' Harry said, 'so now you can pay for my dinner!'Lesson 12 Goodbye and good luck 再见,一路顺风Our ncighbour, Captain Charles Alison, will sail from Portsmouth tomorrow. We shall meet him at the harbour early in the morning. He will be in his small boat, Topsail.Tapsail is a famous little boat. It has sailed across the Atlantic many times. Captain Alison will set out at eight o'clock so we shall have plenty of time. We shall see his boat and then we shall say good-bye to him. He will be away for two months. We are very proud of him. He will take part in an important race across the Atlantic.Lesson 13 The Greenwood Boys 绿林少年The Greenwood Boys are a group of popular singers. At present, they are visiting all parts of the country. They will be arriving here tomorrow. They will be coming by train and most of the young people in the town will be meeting them at the station. Tomorrow evening they will be singing at the Workers' Club. The Greenwood Boys will be staying for five days. During this time, they will give five performances. As usual, the police will have a difficult time. They will be trying to keep order. It is always the same on these occasions. Lesson 14 Do you speak English? 你会讲英语吗?I had an amusing experience last year. After I had left a small village in the south of France, I drove on to the next town. On the way, a young man waved to me. I stopped and he asked me for a lift. As soon as he had got into the car, I said good morning to him in French and he replied in the same language. Apart from a few words, I do not know any French at all. Neither of us spoke during the journey. I had nearly reached the town, when the young man suddenly said, very slowly, 'Do you speak English?' As I soon learnt, he was English himself!Lesson 15 Good news 佳音The secretary told me that Mr. Harmsworth would see me. I felt very nervous when. I went into his office. He did not look up from his desk when I entered. After I had sat down, he said that business was very bad. He told me that the firm could not afford to pay such large salaries. Twenty people had already left. I knew that my turn had come. 'Mr. Harmsworth,' I said in a weak voice. 'Don't interrupt,' he Said. Then he smiled and told me I would receive an extra &100 a year!Lesson 16 A polite request 彬彬有礼的要求If you park your car in the wrong place, a traffic policeman will soon find it. You will be very lucky if he lets you go without a ticket. However, this does not always happen. Traffic police are sometimes very polite. During a holiday in Sweden, I found this note on my car:' Sir, we welcome you to our city. This is a "No Parking" area. You will enjoy your stay here if you pay attention to our street signs. This note is only a reminder.' If you receive a request like this, you cannot fail to obey it!Lesson 17 Always young 青年常驻My aunt Jennifer is an actress. She must be at least thirty-five years old. In spite of this, she often appears on the stage as a young girl. Jennifer will have to take part in a new play soon. This time, she will be a girl of seventeen. In the play, she must appear in a bright red dress and long black stockings. Last year in another play, she had to wear short socks and a bright, orange-coloured dress. If anyone ever asked her how old she is, she always answers, 'My dear, it must be terrible to be grown up!'lesson18 He often does this!他经常干这种事!After I had had lunch at a village inn, I looked for my bag. I had left it on a chair beside the door and now it wasn't there ! As I was looking for it, the inn-keeper came in. 'Did you have a good meal ?' he asked. 'Yes, thank you,' I answered, 'but I can't pay the bill. I haven't got my bag.' The inn-keeper smiled and immediately went out. In a few minutes he returned with my bag and gave it back to me. 'I'm very sorry,' he said ' My dog had taken it into the garden. He often does this.'Lesson19 Sold out 票已售完'The play may begin at any moment,' I said.'It may have begun already,' Susan answered.'I hurried to the ticket-office. 'May I have two tickets please ?' I asked.'I'm sorry, we've sold out,' the girl said.'What a pity!' Susan exclaimed.Just then, a man hurried to the ticket-office.'Can I return these two tickets?' he asked.'Certainly,' the girl said.'Could I have those two tickets please ?' I asked.'Certainly, 'the girl said, 'but they are for next Wednesday's performance.'I might as well have them,' I said sadly.Lesson20 One man in a boat 独坐孤舟Fishing is my favourite sport. I often fish for hours without catching anything. But this does not worry me. Some fishermen are unlucky. Instead of catching fish, they catch old boots and rubbish. I am even less lucky. I never catch anything-not even old boots. After having spent whole mornings on the river, I always go home with an empty bag. 'You must give up fishing!' my friends say.' It's a waste of time.' But they don't realize one important thing. I'm not really interested in fishing. I am only interested in sitting in a boat and doing nothing at all !Lesson21 Mad or not? 是不是疯了?Aeroplanes are slowly driving me mad. I live near an airport and passing planes can be heard night and day. The airport was built during the war, but for some reason it could not be used then. Last year, however, it came into use. Over a hundred people must have been driven away from their homes by the noise. I am one of the few people left. Sometimes I think this house will be knocked down by a passing plane. I have been offered a large sum of money to go away, but I am determined to stay here. Everybody says I must be mad and they are probably right.Lesson22 A glass envelope 玻璃信封My daughter, Jane, never dreamed of receiving a letter from a girl of her own age in Holland. Last year, we were travelling across the Channel and Jane put a piece of paper with her name and address on it into a bottle. She threw the bottle into the sea. She never thought of it again, but ten months later, she received a letter from a girl in Holland. Both girls write to each other regularly now. However, they have decided to use the post-office. Letters will cost a litt1e more, but they will certainly travel faster.Lesson23 A new house 新居I had a letter from my sister yesterday. She lives in Nigeria. In her letter, she said that she would come to England next year. If she comes, she will get a surprise. We are now living in a beautiful new house in the country. Work on it had begun before my sister left. Thehouse was completed five months ago. In my letter, I told her that she could stay with us. The house has many large rooms and there is a lovely garden. It is a very modern house, so it looks strange to some people. It must be the only modern house in the district.Lesson24 It could be worse 不幸中之万幸I entered the hotel manager's office and sat down. I had just lost &50 and I felt very upset.' I left the money in my room,' I said, 'and it's not there now.' The manager was sympathetic, but he could do nothing. 'Everyone's losing money these days,' he said. He started to complain about this wicked world but was interrupted by a knock at the door. A girl came in and put an envelope on his desk. It contained &5o. 'I found this outside this gentleman's room' she said. 'Well,' I said to the manager, 'there is still some honesty in this world !' lesson25 Do the English speak English? 英国人讲的是英语吗?I arrived in London at last. The railway station was big, black and dark. I did not know the way to my hotel, so I asked a porter. I not only spoke English very carefully, but very clearly as well. The porter, however, could not understand me; I repeated my question several times and at last he understood. He answered me, but he spoke neither slowly nor clearly. 'I am a foreigner,' I said. Then he spoke slowly, but I could not understand him. My teacher never spoke English like that! The porter and I looked at each other and smiled. Then he said something and I understood it. 'You'll soon learn English!' he said. I wonder. In England, each man speaks a different language. The English understand each other, but I don't understand them ! Do they speak English ?lesson26 The best art critics 最佳美术评论家I am an art student and I paint a lot of pictures. Many people pretend that they understand modern art. They always tell you what a picture is 'about'. Of course, many pictures arc not 'about' anything. They are just pretty patterns. We like them in the same way that we like pretty curtain material. I think that young children often appreciate modern pictures better than anyone else. They notice more. My sister is only seven, but she always tells me whether my pictures are good or not. She came into my room yesterday. ' What are you doing ?' she asked. ' I'm hanging this picture on the wall,' I answered. 'It's a new one. Do you like it ?' She looked at itcritically for a moment.' It's all right,' she said, 'but isn't it upside-down ?' I looked at it again. She was right! It was!Lesson27 A wet night 雨夜Late in the afternoon, the boys put up their tent in the middle of a field. As soon as this was done, they cooked a meal over an open fire. They were all hungry and the food smelt good. After a wonderful meal, they told stories and sang songs by the camp fire. But some time later it began to rain. The boys felt tired so they pet out the fire and crept into their tent. Their sleeping-bags were warm and comfortable, so they all slept soundly. In the middle of the night, two boys woke up and began shouting. The tent was full of water! They all leapt out of their sleeping-bags and hurried outside. It was raining heavily and they found that a stream had formed in the field. The stream wound its way across the field and then flowed right under their tent!Lesson28 No parking 禁止停车Jasper White is one of those rare people who believes in ancient myths. He has just bought a new house in the city, but ever since he moved in, he has had trouble with motorists. when he returns home at night, he always finds that someone has parked a car outside his gate. Because of this, he has not been able to get his own car into his garage even once. Jasper has put up' No Parking' signs outside his gate, but these have not had any effect. Now he has put an ugly stone head over the gate. It is one of the ugliest faces I have ever seen. I asked him what it was and he told me that it was Medusa, the Gorgon. Jasper hopes that she will turn motorists to stone. But none of them has been turned to stone yet!Lesson29 Taxi! 出租汽车!Captain Ben Fawcett has bought an unusual taxi and has begun a new service. The 'taxi' is a small Swiss aeroplane called a 'Pilatus Porter'. This wonderful plane can carry seven passengers. The most surprising thing about it, however, is that it can land anywhere: on snow, water, or even on a ploughed field. Captain Fawcett's first passenger was a doctor who flew from Birmingham to a lonely village in the Welsh mountains. Since then, Captain Fawcett has flown passengers to many unusual places. Once he landed on the roof of a block of flats and on another occasion, he landed in a deserted car park. Captain Fawcett has just refused a strange request from abusinessman. The man wanted to fly to Rockall, a lonely island in the Atlantic Ocean, but Captain Fawcett did not take him because the trip was too dangerous.Lesson30 Football or polo? 足球还是水球?The Wayle is a small river that cuts across the park near my home. I like sitting by the Wayle on fine afternoons. It was warm last Sunday, so I went and sat on the river bank as usual. Some children were playing games on the bank and there were some people rowing on the river. Suddenly, one of the children kicked a ball very hard and it went towards a passing boat. Some people on the bank called out to the man in the boat, but he did not hear them. The ball struck him so hard that he nearly fell into the water. I turned to look at the children, but there weren't any in sight: they had all run away! The man laughed when he realized what had happened. He called out to the children and threw the ball back to the bank.Lesson31 Success story 成功者的故事Yesterday afternoon Frank Hawkins was telling me about his experiences as a young man. Frank is now the head of a very large business company, but as a boy he used to work in a small shop. It was his job to repair bicycles and at that time he used to work fourteen hours a day. He saved money for years and in 1938 he bought a small work-shop of his own. During the war Frank used to make spare parts for aeroplanes. At that time he had two helpers. By the end of the war, the small work-shop had become a large factory which employed seven hundred and twenty-eight people. Frank smiled when he remembered his hard early years and the long road to success. He was still smiling when the door opened and his wife came in. She wanted him to repair their son's bicycle!Lesson32 Shopping made easy 购物变得很方便People are not so honest as they once were. The temptation to steal is greater than ever before--especially in large shops. A detective recently watched a well-dressed woman who always went into a large store on Monday mornings. One Monday, there were fewer people in the shop than usual when the woman came in, so it was easier for the detective to watch her. The woman first bought a few small articles. After a little time, she chose one of the most expensive dresses in the shop and handed it to an assistant who wrapped it up for her as quickly as possible. Then the woman simply took the parcel andwalked out of the shop without paying. When she was arrested, the detective found out that the shop-assistant was her daughter. The girl' gave' her mother a free dress once a week !lesson33 Out of the darkness 冲出黑暗Nearly a week passed before the girl was able to explain what had happened to her. One afternoon she set out from the coast in a small boat and was caught in a storm. Towards evening, the boat struck a rock and the girl jumped into the sea. Then she swam to the shore after spending the whole night in the water. During that time she covered a distance of eight miles. Early next morning, she saw a light ahead. She knew she was near the shore because the light was high up on the cliffs. On arriving at the shore, the girl struggled up the cliff towards the light she had seen. That was all she remembered. When she woke up a day later, she found herself in hospital.Lesson34 Quick work 破案“神速”Ted Robinson has been worried all the week. Last Tuesday he received a letter from the local police. In the letter he was asked to call at the station. Ted wondered why he was wanted by the police, but he went to the station yesterday and now he is not worried any more. At the station, he was told by a smiling policeman that his bicycle had been found. Five days ago, the policeman told him, the bicycle was picked up in a small village four hundred miles away. It is now being sent to his home by train. Ted was most surprised when he heard the news. He was amused too, because he never expected the bicycle to be found. It was stolen twenty years ago when Ted was a boy of fifteen !Lesson35 Stop thief! 捉贼!Rov Trenton used to drive a taxi. A short while ago, however, he became a bus-driver and he was not regretted it. He is finding his new work far more exciting. When he was driving along Catford Street recently, he saw two thieves rush out of a shop and run towards a waiting car. One of them was carrying a bag full of money. Roy acted quickly and drove the bus straight at the thieves. The one with the money got such a fright that he dropped the bag. As the thieves were trying to get away in their car, Roy drove his bus into the back of it. While the battered car was moving away, Roy stopped his bus and telephoned the police. The thieves' car was badlydamaged and easy to recognize. Shortly afterwards, the police stopped the car and both men were arrested.Lesson36 Across the Channel 横渡海峡Erna Hart is going to swim across the English Channel tomorrow. She is going to set out from the French coast at five o'clock in the morning. Erna is only fourteen years old and she hopes lo set up a new world record. She is a strong swimmer and many people feel that she is sure to succeed. Erna's father will set out with her in a small boat. Mr Hart has trained his daughter for years. Tomorrow he will be watching her anxiously as she swims the long distance to England. Erna intends to take short rests every two hours. She will have something to drink but she will not eat any solid food. Most of Erna's school friends will be waiting for her on the English coast. Among them will be Erna's mother, who swam the Channel herself when she was a girl.Lesson37 The Olympic Games 奥林匹克运动会The Olympic Games will be held in our country in four years' time. As a great many people will be visiting the country, the government will be building new hotels, an immense stadium, and a fine new swimming pool. 'They will also be building new roads and a special railway-line. The Games will be held just outside the capital and the whole area will be called 'Olympic City'. Workers will have completed the new roads by the end of this year. By the end of next year, they will have finished work on the new stadium. The fine modern buildings have been designed by Kurt Gunter. Everybody will be watching anxiously as the new buildings go up. We are all very excited and are looking forward to the Olympic Games because they have never been held before in this country.Lesson38 Everything except the weather 惟独没有考虑到天气My old friend, Harrison, had lived in the Mediterranean for many years before he returned to England. He had often dreamed of retiring in England and had planned to settle down in the country. He had no sooner returned than he bought a fine house and went to live there. Almost immediately he began to complain about the weather, for even though it was still summer, it rained continually and it was often bitterly cold. After so many years of sunshine, Harrison got a shock. He acted as if he had never lived in England before. In the end, it was more than he could bear. He had hardlyhad time to settle down when he sold the house and left the country. The dream he had had for so many years ended there. Harrison had thought of everything except the weather.Lesson39 Am I all right? 我是否痊愈?While John Gilbert was in hospital, he asked his doctor to tell him whether his operation had been successful, but the doctor refused to do so. The following day, the patient asked for a bedside telephone. When he was alone, he telephoned the hospital exchange and asked for Doctor Millington. When the doctor answered the phone, Mr Gilbert said he was inquiring about a certain patient, a Mr John Gilbert. He asked if Mr Gilbert's operation had been successful and the doctor told him that it had been. He then asked when Mr Gilbert would be allowed to go home and the doctor told him that he would have to stay in hospital for another two weeks. Then Dr Millington asked the caller if he was a relative of the patient.' No,' the patient answered,' I am Mr John Gilbert.'Lesson40 Food and talk 进餐与交谈Last week at a dinner-party, the hostess asked me to sit next to Mrs Rumbold. Mrs Rumbold was a large, unsmiling lady in a tight black dress. She did not even look up when I took my seat beside her. Her eyes were fixed on her plate and in a short time, she was busy eating.I tried to make conversation.' A new play is coming to" The Globe" soon,' I said. 'Will you be seeing it ?' ' No,' she answered. 'Will you be spending your holidays abroad this year ?' I asked. ' No,' she answered.' Will you be staying in England?' I asked. ' No,' she answered.In despair, I asked her whether she was enjoying her dinner.' Young man,' she answered,' if you ate more and talked less, we would both enjoy our dinner !'lesson41 Do you call that a hat? 你把那个叫帽子吗?'Do you call that a hat ?' I said to my wife. 'You needn't be so rude about it,' my wife answered as she looked at herself in the mirror. I sat down on one of those modern chairs with holes in it and waited. We had been in the hat shop for half an hour and my wife was still in front of the mirror.' We mustn't buy things we don't need,' I remarked suddenly. I regretted saying it almost at once.。
新视野大学英语新版第二册Unit2SectionB
随笔
阅读实践
Introduction
课文
自测
Back
Finding Out Word Meanings
5. Sentences before or after a sentence that has a difficult word sometimes explain the meaning of the word.
The Standard for Olympic Excellence
Reading SkillsText BTest Yourself
课文
自测
Reading Skills
Introduction
Like the other skills for your use, the skill introduced in this unit does render you better able in reading.
随笔
阅读实践
Introduction
课文
自测
Back
Context clue: Sentences before or after a sentence containing a difficult word sometimes explain the meaning of the word. Example: The nations of Eastern Europe ... are considered the most polluted of all the world’s industrialized countries. Heavy metals from coal mining have contaminated much of the area’s waters. Rivers, land, and forests are so contaminated that many are now biologically dead.
外研社新标准starter module2 unit2
please touch your head
What did you learn yesterday?
What’s this (in English ) ? 这用英语怎么说? ( ——It’s )a pen .这是一支笔.
What’s this ?这是什么? ——A classroom .一间课室
It is ear
What are these ?
They\These are ears
What is this ?
It is eye
What are these ?
They\These are eyes
What is this ?
It is nose
What is this ?
It is mouth
summary
What are these? 这些是什么? They are eyes. 他们是眼睛 These are feet. 他们是脚
Feet?
脚吗?
This is a nose 这是鼻子
No, it’s an arm 不,这是手臂
将下列短语翻译成英语。 1 触摸你的头 3两个袋 5 我的身体 7 我的脚 9我的教室 11你的鼻子 2一只胳膊 4九把椅子 6八个男孩 8用英语 10 他的头发 12 三把椅子
脚
ear 耳朵
eye 眼睛
nose 鼻子
mouth 嘴 arm 手臂 hand 手
touch 接触、触摸、摸
NOTE
What are these? 这些是什么? They are eyes. 他们是眼睛 These are feet. 他们是脚
Feet?
脚吗?
This is a nose 这是鼻子
新标准大学英语2unit02
Language in Use
3 It wasn’t Lucy’s party, but she stood at the door welcoming everyone.
Language in Use
3 I also love the split-second shocked expression on the
new people, the hasty smiles and their best imitations of what they think of as their “normal faces”. If they do the ritual well enough I turn my head ever so slightly and tuck my hair behind one of my ears, whichever one’s closer to them.
Sylvia closed the door of David’s room, as if / as though it were him that was making the noise.
Language in Use
5 Translate the sentences into Chinese.
Language in Use
1 Complete the sentences with the correct form of the words in brackets and the suffix -ant or ancy.
新标准小学英语第二册课文文本
新标准小学英语第二册课文Modale 1Unit 1 Where’s the cat?1. Listen, point and find “Where’s …?”第2页Look at the cats.Where?On the bed.Oh yes. How many cats?One, two, three, four, five, six, seven …Eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve.Twelve cats!Where's the orange cat?I don't know!Is it under the bed?Yes, it is.And the other cats?2. Listen and say.第3页Where's the orange cat?I don't know!Is it under the bed?Yes, it is.3. Practise.第3页Where's the pencil?Is it under the book?Yes, it is.Unit 2 How many green birds?第4页1. Listen and point. 第4页Boy: Look at the tree. So many birds!Girl: How many? Let's count!Boy: One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve. Twelv birds.Girl: How many green birds?Boy: One, two, three, four. Four green birds.2. Look and say. 第4页How many blue birds?One, two, three. Three blue birds.3. Listen and say. Then chant. 第5页Look at the tree. Look at the tree.What can you see up in the tree?Red kites, orange kites, green kites, blue.So many kites for me and you.4. Game: Listen and say.第5页Hello.Is it a boy?No, it isn't. It's a girl.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Modale 2Unit 1 That is my father.1. Listen, point and find “That is my mother”.第6页Look, Daming.That is my mother.That is my father.That is my grandpa and that is my grandma.And this is your sister.And this is my brother.2. Look and say. 第7页This is my father.Hello. Hello.Hi!And this is my mother.Hello.3. Practise. 第7页This is my father.That's my father.Unit 2 He's a doctor 第8页1. Look and say. 第8页This is my mother. She's a teacher.This is my father. He's a doctor.And this is my brother! He's a pupil.And that's me. I'm a pupil, too.2. Point and say. 第8页He's a…She's a…3. Listen and say. Then chant. 第9页Look at the ducks on the water.Mother, father, brother, sister. grandma and daughter.4. Game: Point and say.第9页He's Jack.She's Anna. He's Chris.He's?Chris isn't a boy!Sorry. She's Chris.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Modale 3Unit 1 This is her bag.1. Listen, point and find “his, her, their”.第10页Where's Ms Smart?This is her bag.And this is her book.Where's the doctor?That is his hat.And that is his coat.And the pupils? Look! Their school bags.Look! The teacher, the doctor and the pupils!It's a clown!Hurray!2. Listen and say.第11页This is her bag.And this is her book.That is his hat.And that is his coat.3. Practise. 第11页This is her school bag.And this is his school bag.Unit 2 My mother is a nurse. 第12页1. Listen and say. 第12页My mother is a nurse. Look. This is her dress.And your father, is he a doctor?No, he isn't. He's a driver. That's his bus.2. Match and say. 第12页This is a nurse. And this is her ...4. Game: Jubs.第13页Are you a doctor?Are you a driver?No, I'm not.Yes, I am.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Modale 4Unit 1 That is my head.1. Listen, point and find “my, your ...”第14页Hi, I'm Panpan. This is my head.This is my face.This is my nose.This is your mouth.This is your ear.This is my eye.And this is your eye.My face. My nose. My mouth. My ear. Myeye. My head. Good boy!2. Listen and say. 第15页This is my face.This is your mouth.3. Practise. 第15页This is my head.This is my mouth.This is my nose.This is my ear.Unit 2 These are your legs. 第16页1. Listen and say. 第16页Baby: Mother, what are these?Mother: These are your legs.Baby: So many legs!Mother: How many? Let's count.Baby: One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. Eight legs.Baby: What are these?Mother: These are your eyes.Baby: One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. Eight eyes! Mother: Good spider!2. Point, then ask and answer. 第16页A: What's this? B: This is ...A: What are these? B: These are ...3. Listen and say. Then sing and point. 第17页4. Game.第17页Touch ears! Touch heads! Touch hands!----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Modale 5Unit 1 They're cows.1. Listen, point and find “They're ...”.第18页Hello, boys! This is our farm.Look at these. What are they?They're cows.And look at these. What are they?They're pigs.And these are chickens.So many eggs! Thank you, chickens.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, eleven eggs. 12! Twelve eggs!2. Listen and say. 第19页What are they?They're cows.And look at these. What are they?They're pigs.3. Practise. 第19页Woof, woof! What are they?They're dogs.Mooo! What are they?They're cows.Unit 2 It's thin. 第20页1. Listen and say. 第20页Look at the father pig. It's fat.And this is the mother. It's thin.Look! Six baby pigs.Five are little. And one is big.Two are black and four are pink.2. Look and say. 第20页Look at the father chicken. It's ...3. Listen and say. Then sing. 第21页4. Listen and guess the animals. 第21页-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Modale 6Unit 1 That snake is long.1. Listen, point and find “long, short, tall, big”.第22页Let's go to the zoo!Look. That snake is long.And that snake is short.The giraffes are tall. And I am short!And look at the elephants!Ther're very big!What're they? Lions!2. Look and say. 第23页This snake is long. And that snake is short.The giraffes are tall. And I am short.3. Practise. 第23页This is a lion. It's big.Unit 2 The baby lions are cute.1. Listen and say. 第24页The baby lions are cute.The mother lion isn't cute.It's scary! Yes, it's very scary!2. Look and say. 第24页3. Listen and say. Then chant. 第25页4. Game: Guess the animals. 第25页Are they fat? No, they aren't.Are they tall? Yes, they are.Are they giraffes? Yes, they are.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Modale 7Unit 1 Let's play football !1. Listen, point and find “Let's ...”.第26页Let's play football !Yes! I like football.Let's play basketball !OK! Let's play!Now, let's play ping-pong!No. I'm hot.Let's go swimming!Yes! Let's go!2. Listen and say. 第27页Let's play football ! OK.Let's go swimming! Yes.3. Practise. 第27页Let's go swimming! OK!Unit 2 Let's sing.1. Listen and say. 第28页Let's sing! OK.Let's dance! OK.Let's sing and dance. No. I'm tired. Let's sit down!2. Listen and do. 第28页Stand up! Let's dance!3. Listen and say. Then chant. 第29页Let's play football !Let's play basketball !Let's play ping-pong!Let's dance!And now Let'ssing!4. Game: Play and say. 第29页Let's go swimming!Yes. Let's go swimming!No. Let's dance!---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Modale 8Unit 1 I like football.1. Listen, point and find “like”.第30页I Iike basketball and I Iike football.We like football, too.And they like football.Let's play with your football, Panpan!OK. Let's play together!Where's my football?2. Listen and say. 第31页I like football.We like football.They like football.3. Practise. 第31页I like basketball.Unit 2 What's your favourite sport?1. Listen and say. 第32页What's your favourite colour? Black.It's red. What about you?What's your favourite animat?A panda. What about you? A lion.What's your favourite sport?Ping-pong. What about you?My favourite sport is football.2. Ask and answer. 第32页3. Listen and say. Then sing. 第33页4. Class survey: Favourite things. 第33页-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Modale 9Unit 1 I don't like meat.1. Listen, point and find “I don't like ...”.第34页Noodies for you, Tom.No, no, no! I don't like noodles.Rice? No! I don't like rice.Meat. You like meat, Tom.No! I don't like meat.I like sweets!I like sweets!Tom, sweets are for good boys.Are you a good boy? Yes.You are good children. Sweets for you! Thank you!2. Listen and say. 第35页I don't like noodles.I don't like meat.3. Practise. 第35页I don't like meat.I like meat.Unit 2 I don't like ginger.1. Listen and say. 第36页Meat for you, Sam.Thank you. I like meat.Ahhh! Ginger!I don't like ginger! And onions!I don't like onions!My mouth! My mouth!Sorry, Sam.An ice cream for you!Thank you. I like ice cream.2. Listen and point. 第36页3. Listen and say. Then chant. 第37页Ginger and spice are not very nice.No, no, no!Not very nice!Noodles and rice are very, very nice.Mmm, mmm, mmm!Very, very nice.4. Game: Throw a stone and say. 第37页------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Modale 10Unit 1 Do you like dolls?1. Listen, point and find “Do you like ... ?”.第38页Here's a present for you.Thank you.A doll ! Do you like dolls?No, I don't.Ahh! It's for Amy! Sorry, Sam.Do you like dolls, Amy? Yes, I do.And this present is for you, Sam. It's a car.Do you like cars? Yes, I do. Think you.2. Listen and say. 第39页Do you like dolls? No, I don't.Do you like cars? Yes, I do.3. Practise. 第39页Unit 2 Do they like jigsaws?1. Listen and say. 第40页Let's buy presents for Sam any Amy.Do they like jigsaws?No, they don't.Do they like books?Yes. they do. Let's buy two books!2. Look, then ask and answer. 第40页A: Do they like football?B: Yes, they do.3. Listen and say. Then sing. 第41页4. Say and do. 第41页Do you like cars? Yes, I do.A car for you. Thank you.日不落大庆石化 2011年3月打字完成。
新标准大学英语2课本听力原文unit2
Conversation1Janet: Hi Kate, are you busy?Kate: Yes, I'm just doing an essay. But it's great to see you. So what's new?Janet: Well, nothing much.Kate: You look a bit fed up. What's bugging you?Janet: Well, I had a phone call from my parents and it made me feel homesick. It happens every time they call, and it gets me down.Kate: I'm sorry to hear that. I know how you feel. I love speaking to my mum and dad, but I always feel miserable after the call.Janet: My dad doesn't say much, and I want to speak to him, but I wish I knew what to say.Kate: Don't let it get to you. My dad doesn't say much on the phone either. I call, he answers the phone, and says, "Hi, I'll pass you to your mother." It's really irritating.Janet: But I miss him and my mother a lot, and I like to hear his voice.Kate: Just tell him what you're up to.Janet: Sometimes I feel as if I made a mistake leaving home and coming to Oxford. Sometimes I feel like a moody teenager.Kate: Try not to worry about it, Janet. It's normal to feel like that. I understand how you feel, but I bet everything will be fine next term. You'll get used to it. Hey, why don't you do what I do?Janet: What's that?Kate: When my dad calls, I ask him for more money! He usuallysays no, but at least I get to hear his voice!Janet: Maybe. I'm sorry to take up your time, Kate, but I must go now. Bye!Kate: Wait a minute ...!Conversation2Kate: I think I may have upset Janet last night.Mark: What happened?Kate: She came to see me. I was busy doing an essay but I was really pleased to see her. She'd had a call from home, and said she was feeling homesick.Mark: Poor kid! It must be tough when you guys living so far away from home.Kate: I tried to make her laugh, told her not to worry about it, and that it was normal to feel miserable. Suddenly she looked miserable, and then she got up and said, "I must go now" and left my room. It was really sudden. I felt as if I'd said something wrong.Mark: Maybe she was just being polite. It was probably because she realized you were working and didn't want to disturb you.Kate: I just wonder if she found it difficult to talk about her feelings with me. Maybe I shouldn't have tried to make her laugh? Perhaps she thought I wasn't taking her seriously.Mark: I wouldn't worry about it. Put yourself in her shoes. How would you feel if you were a student at college in China?Kate: I know. That's why I feel bad. If only she had stayed longer!I wish I could have helped her more.Janet: Hey, everyone!Mark: Hi Janet, you look cheerful!Janet: Yes, I've just got my essay back. I got an alpha minus!Kate: What an amazing grade! Well done.Mark: I'm really happy for you, Janet.Janet: I feel on top of the world!Outside viewSebastienHi. I'm Sebastien. I'm from Germany. Um, the idea of IQ of a measure of your brain power has been around for a while, but recently there's been this new idea of the EQ - your emotional quotient. And by now, it's actually almost being regarded as more important. If you look at it, businesses will... Well, they will prefer employing people with great EQ. Well, of course, IQ cannot be disregarded, but um, EQ does have its importance as well. Uh, I believe that, um,... I mean, people, most people will have, um, their basic means of communicating with other people. Most people are somewhat socially adept, and just like most people have, you know, a basic general knowledge. But then, what I think really is the difference between IQ and EQ, I mean, you can have a "brainiac", and they will be great at most things they do, but if you just can't get along with him, if you just can't communicate with him, I mean, you know, he's not really that useful. KimHi. This is Kim. I'm originally from Korea, and I was raised in California. And today, we are going to talk about the differences between IQ and EQ -IQ meaning yourintelligence, EQ meaning your emotions. Now, in ... When I was, when I was a little, little boy in Korea, I had totake ... I think I'd taken like two or three IQ tests before the age often, which is when I moved to California. So, I guess we stress a lot of importance on intelligence, on having great IQ1 scores. But after I moved to the States, I learnt how to associate with people, and along the lines that this word EQ came up, you know, emotional, caring lout... It's basically how you deal with people, how you make people feel, and how people make you feel. think they're equally as, as important, but it seems that in the Eastern world they kind of stress on that a lot more back in the days. But I think again, you know, now that with Internet and people are communicating so much faster, there's a better mixture of the two I link. There's a stress on EQ in Korea as well, and a stress on IQ in the States. Thank you. TedHello. My name is Ted, and I'm from the United States of America. Today, I'm going to talk a little bit about IQ or EQ - which is most important, or which is more important. Now, for a long time when I was growing up, people said, "IQ. What's your IQ? Take an IQ test." But then EQ, your emotions, how you interact with people, that became very important. And I think they're ... that people might be onto something with that, because your EQ - how you deal with people, how you interact with people - is important. Now, a big part of this, in my opinion, is listening. I know I'm talking a lot right now, but if you want to get along well with people, you have to listen to them, so just take a minute, maybe shut your mouth for a minute, and listen to others, and then you can understand and communicate with them in a better way. So, part of EQ, I think, is listening - listening to others - and it can be more important than IQ.Passage1Presenter We're fortunate to have as our guest today Dr Jenna Hudson, who has just written a book about how colours affect us in our surroundings, especially in the world ofadvertising. It's called Market Colours. Dr Hudson, which are the most common colours in advertising and marketing? Dr Hudson Well, of course, it depends what image the marketing team wish to project with their products. So for example, we often think of blue as a cold colour, but it also makes you feel peaceful, quiet, and it doesn't suggest strong emotions. So it's a favourite for banks and insurance companies, who wish to suggest the image that they are trustworthy. And for selling products, it's often used to suggest something is pure and fresh. Presenter What about red?Dr Hudson You can sell almost anything with red.It's a hot colour, which suggests a feeling of energy and even passion. It grabs your attention, and can make people buy almost anything. You often see red on magazine covers. But if you use it too much, it looks cheap and may make people tired. And orange has a similar effect to red, it's upbeat and happy, it suggests pleasant feelings and images. Most people react well to orange, and it's especially popular in advertising and on packaging for baked food.Presenter What about yellow, for instance?Dr Hudson Yellow is the colour of sunshine and it's a positive, happy colour, so it's used a lot in advertising. But it's also often used for warning signs, direction signs, and so on, where you have to read the message quickly and at a distance. Presenter What about less popular colours for advertising?Dr Hudson Surprisingly, green isn't used much in advertising except for garden products, It's friendly and restful. It can be cool and soothing, the colour of apples and mint, but it can also be quite strong and many people associate it with unpleasant ideas of decay or slimy creatures. Presenter But most colours are not primary colours, they're a combination.Dr Hudson Absolutely. So yellow-orange is common, and often used to give an impression of style and class, it looks like gold. But it's not often used in letters because it's not very strong. And yellow-green reminds people of feeling sick. Blue-green works well as a cool colour, suggesting freshness,4and is sometimes used for toothpaste products, bathroom products, food and household cleaning products. It has many of the advantages of blue without the disadvantages of green. Presenter Fascinating. Thank you very much, Dr Hudson. Market Colours by Dr Jenna Hudson is on sale from next week, priced £15.99...passage2Presenter; What makes you embarrassed, Sally?Sally; Oh, I'm easily embarrassed. If anybody notices me or looks at me, I get very embarrassed. When people sing me Happy Birthday on my birthday, I get very embarrassed.Presenter; And what makes you upset?Sally;When people are selfish, people who think only of themselves. And cruelty -I can't bear people who are cruel, especially to animals or children.Presenter; Jake, what makes you depressed?Jake; I hate it when it rains, and I don't like people who look down on me, who think they're superior to me without any reason.Presenter; And what makes you angry?Jake;When people don't behave properly in public, bad behaviour like dropping litter or people pushing each other on the bus or the train.Presenter; Andrew, what makes you cheerful?Andrew I like to see everyone around me being happy and having a positive attitude towards the future, optimistic people.Presenter And what makes you jealous?Andrew Well, to be honest, I just never feel jealous. I can't see the point of it.Presenter Monica, what makes you proud?Monica I'm proud when I'm successful, especially in my work. Being recognized by my boss for what I can do makes me feel really proud. Oh, and my family. I'm very proud of them.Presenter And what makes you nervous?Monica; Every time I teach a new class. The night before I'm very nervous. You don't know what the kids are going to be like and how they might behave, or if they're going to like you. Presenter Anything else?Monica Doing interviews like this.。
青少版新概念2A-2b课文文本
青少版新概念2A-2B 课文文本Unit 1-30Unit 1: Linda comes to LondonLINDA: Hi, Karen! Where are you?KAREN: I'm in the coffee bar next to the Arrivals, exit. I'm waiting for you, and I'm having a cup of coffee.KAREN: Where are you, and what are you doing?LINDA: I'm in the Baggage Hall. I'm waiting for my suitcase.LINDA: Ah, I can see it! It's coming round now! There it is!LINDA: Oh, Karen! Is Paul with you?KAREN: Yes, of course he is. He's standing here beside me. I'm giving him my phone now.KAREN: Here you are, Paul! Talk to your mother!PAUL: Hello, Mum!LINDA: Hello, Paul! I've got my suitcase, and I'm coming out now!Unit 2:Good luck on Sunday!REPORTER: My name's Tom French. I'm speaking to you from the ExCel Centre in London's Docklands. We are visiting this year's MarathonExpo.REPORTER: This is the Trade Fair of the London Marathon. It's very noisy! There are hundreds of exhibitors and thousands of visitors here. REPORTER: This is a big international event. But it's like a village!People are talking and laughing like old friends.REPORTER: I'm standing with one of the competitors. Let me introduce Paul Bruce. Hi, Paul!PAUL: Hi, Tom!REPORTER: Paul, please tell our listeners. This is your first Marathon, isn't it? PAUL: Yes, it is.REPORTER: Are you looking forward to Sunday?PAUL: Yes, I am.REPORTER: That's the spirit, Paul! Good luck on Sunday!Unit 3JACK: That's strange. What's this note in my pocket?It isn't mine. Is it yours, Daisy?DAISY: No, it isn't mine. Let me see. Oh, it belongs to Paul.The handwriting is his.JACK: So why is it in my pocket?DAISY: I don't know. It looks like Paul's 'to-do' list. Let me read it.JACK: HMM. Give it to me, Daisy. Yes, it is Paul's, isn't it?DAISY: Yes, Jack. Put it back.Unit 4:The top three percentVOLUNTEER: Congratulations! Two hours and fifty-nine minutes.•That's fantastic! What's your name?PAUL: Paul. Paul Bruce.VOLUNTEER: Well done, Paul! How are you feeling?PAUL: I'm OK. Thanks.VOLUNTEER: Good! Now, Paul. Here's your foil jacket. Put it on.You mustn't get cold.PAUL: Yes. Thanks.VOLUNTEER: Just a hundred and seventy-nine minutes! Paul, you're a hero!PAUL: Thanks!VOLUNTEER: Now, Paul, walk this way. Pick up your medal. It's yours!VOLUNTEER: There are thirty-five thousand runners in this race, and you're in the top three percent! Congratulations!Unit 5: All about ants!ROBERT: Look at this webpage, Mum. It's about ants.KAREN: Ants? Why are you looking up ants?ROBERT: Why not? Ants are really interesting. They do really interesting things.KAREN: What kind of things?ROBERT: Well, they usually live in dry places. But they can survive under water for two weeks.KAREN: Really?ROBERT: Oh, Mum, how about this? Ants always stretch their legs in the morning.KAREN: You're joking!ROBERT: NO, really!KAREN: DO they usually yawn in the morning, too?ROBERT: Well, funnily enough, they do!Unit 6:An elegant sizePOLLY: You're looking very elegant today, Annie!ANNIE: Yes, I'm on my way to my accountant's. I always put on a nice outfit for him.SO I'm going by bus.POLLY: What do you mean, Annie?ANNIE: Well, I usually walk into town. But today I'm going by bus. It's my shoes, you see.POLLY: Your shoes?ANNIE: Yes, my shoes. They're size six.POLLY: They're perfect with your outfit.ANNIE: Thanks. I like them, too.ANNIE: My feet are size five in the morning, and size six in the afternoon. I can't walk in these shoes before lunch.ANNIE: But I can't walk in them in the morning. They're fine in the afternoon.Unit 7: A good exampleROBERT: How about this, Dad?'Twenty-two percent of people in Britain never eat breakfast.’‘Sixteen percent eat breakfast at work.'WILLIAM: It's true. My assistant has her breakfast at work every day.It's a waste of time, really.KAREN: Poor girl! She works very hard.WILLIAM: She goes out with friends nearly every night. Then she gets up late, and rushes to work late.WILLIAM: Then she has breakfast at her desk! It doesn't look good.KAREN: She works late twice a week,too.WILLIAM: Well, we all do that. Goodness, is that the time?WILLIAM: I must rush.KAREN: But what about your breakfast?WILLIAM: That's all right. I can get some breakfast at work.Unit 8: A nice quiet afternoon.MR. FORD: What are you going to do now, Paul?PAUL: I'm going to take it easy this morning! Then I'm going to meet Claire for lunch.MR. FORD: Where? Here in Barnet?PAUL: NO, at an Indian restaurant in Canary Wharf. Her mother recommends it.MR. FORD: Very nice. Have a good lunch. Eat a double portion of rice.You need the carbohydrate.MR. FORD: And have a dessert. Why not have two desserts? But no alcohol, of course!Have a nice quiet afternoon.PAUL: We're going to walk along the river.MR. FORD: Make it a short walk. And walk today—don't run!PAUL: Claire's going to like that. She hates running, especially after a big lunch.Unit 9:Do your own thingsPAUL: It's going to be a very early start on Sunday morning, Claire.We're going to leave home at about 5.30.CLAIRL: 5.30! That is early!PAUL: So what do you want to do? Do you want to come with us, or not?CLAIRE: I'm not sure, Paul. What do you want me to do?PAUL: I want you to do your own thing. You can come to the National Stadium with the team.CLAIRE: But what are you going to do there?PAUL: You can't come with us into the Red Zone. And I don't want you to get bored,on your own all day.CLAIRE: But it's obvious, Paul!The National Athletics Championships are a photographer's dream!What am I going to do? I'm going to take hundreds of photographs, of course!Unit 10: Tomorrow's another day!Do you remember Nina? She's a fashion model.She usually works with Daisy, but she works with other photographers, too.Her jobs take her all over the world. She often stays in expensive hotels.Her life seems very glamorous. But she often feels lonely.Nina isn't feeling lonely this evening.She's sitting in a bar in Central Londonwith some friends. They are all old friends,and they're having a good gossip.The bar is becoming very noisy.Nina is laughing. She's having a really good time.Why can't things be like this every evening?That's an interesting question!This idea is a new one. Nina must think about her life.She's going to think about it in the morning.But just now, she's having a good time.Nina's going to make a decision tomorrow —but tomorrow's another day.Unit 11 We all have our troublesJACK: Anna, I want you to call Pierre in Paris.I'm going to Paris first thing tomorrow.I want to meet with him at 8 o'clock.Can you set it up, please?And can you get me some coffee?ANNA: Yes, sir. Straight away.Paris! Again! He was in Paris last week!JANEY: Wasn't he in Washington last week?ANNA: No, he was in Washington the week before last. Some people have all the luck!Yes, I know. I want to travel, but I'm always here at my desk.I was here yesterday. I was here the day before yesterday.ANEY: We're going to be here tomorrow, and the day after tomorrow ...ANNA: And next week, and next month!JACK: Anna, Janey, I'M sorry for you both.But we all have our troubles in life. And I'm looking forward to my coffee.Unit 12: The London busThe new buses in London are just 'buses'. They aren't 'London buses'. The real 'London bus' was the old Routemaster. This was our favourite bus for fifty-one years. Itwas a design classic.Were Routemasters really dangerous? The back of the bus was an open platform with no doors. Perhaps this wasn't very safe — but Londoners like to do their own thing. And the Routemasters were fast in the traffic.Modern buses are safe, but they are slow. Passengers hate the doors. Car drivers hate the buses. The bus drivers have a hard time.The first Routemasters were on our roads in 1954. The last official Routemaster journey was on Route Number 9, on 15th February 2006. That was some years ago.Today, Londoners remember the Routemaster's name. They remember the designer's name: Douglas Scott.The new buses don't have a name. How can we love them ?Unit 13: The KalenjinTake a look at the records of international running events in the last fifty years. Before 1980, the winners of distance races were usually from North America and Europe. There were some winners from other countries, but there weren't very many of them. There were no African names among the winners then, but things are very different now.Today, the stars of the race track are the Kalenjin. The Kalenjin are an African people from the borders of North West Kenya and Ethiopia. Their homeland is a hot, dry plateau, about 2,500 metres above sea level. These people are natural athletes. They have long, thin legs. Their heart rate is unusually slow. There are only three million of them.Twelve of the world's top twenty marathon runners are now Kalenjin. Every year, they win 40 percent of the top honours in all international distance 25 races. And it's not just the men.A few years ago, there weren't any distance races for women. These days, there are lots of them. Kalenjin women win all their events as well.Unit 14: Chocolate heavenLUCY: I'm going out, Mum. Please can I get some chocolate?We had some sweets last weekend, but we didn't have any chocolate.And we didn't have much chocolate the weekend before last.KAREN: You and your chocolate! OK. But you must share it with everyone else!LUCY: I'm back. Mum! These are the chocolates! They didn't have any nice boxes at the supermarket. These chocolates are from Marconi's. They're really special.ROBERT: But chocolate is chocolate,isn't it? Why does a fancy box make it special?KAREN: Good question. Listen to this. 'This chocolate contains fifty percent cocoa. Marconi's chocolate uses only pure cocoa butter.There are no non-cocoa vegetable fats in Marconi's chocolate.'Mm! This is chocolate heaven! It feels different in your mouth. Chocolate heaven is expensive. It feels different in your pocket, too!Unit 15: It’s a mystery to me!DAISY: Welcome home, Jack! Did you have a good trip?JACK: It was OK. But it was all about babies and food!DAISY: Babies? How many babies?JACK: Two. Marcel's deputy had a baby two months ago.And Pierre's secretary is going to have a baby in June.JACK: They have nine months off work each time!DAISY: Well, it happens. That's life!JACK: True.JACK: And then there's the food. I had lunch with Marcel. I didn't want a three-hour lunch, but lunch is a serious business in Paris.DAISY: Yes, it is. I like the French attitude to food. It's very civilised.JACK: I agree with you, Daisy. They're nice people. They're also very efficient.JACK: But how do they do it?How do they have time for a civilised life and for work as well?It's a mystery to me!Unit 16: What’s your middle name?WILLIAM: Is there something wrong Karen?KAREN: It's OK. I'm being silly.WILLIAM: That's impossible .You're never silly.KAREN: Oh, but I am! I'm silly all the time. Believe me!KAREN: I did something very silly this morning.I picked up some shopping in town.KAREN: I arrived home at about 10 o'clock, and parked the car in the drive.I unlocked the house with my house keys.KAREN: Then, Daisy called me on my mobile, and we talked about the weekend.We discussed plans for Sunday. Then we finished the call.KAREN: Then I looked for my car keys.I looked in my bag, in my coat, in the kitchen, everywhere.WILLIAM: And where were they?KAREN: They were in my hand! The key-ring was on my little finger.William, 'Silliness' is my middle name!Unit 17: A cuckoo in the nestPaul's father, Ken Bruce is an engineer. He's also an enthusiastic birdwatcher.Last spring, two little birds appeared in his garden. Ken installed a webcam, and invited his neighbours to log on. Everyone watched enthusiastically. Soon, there was alittle nest. Then, another bird arrived. It was a cuckoo. The cuckoo watched patiently. Three little eggs appears in the nest.The cuckoo waited. Suddenly, she had her chance. The mother wasn't there. The cuckoo darted to the nest. In two seconds, there was a fourth egg beside the other three.After twelve days, the young cuckoo hatched. The little birds hurried to get food for the baby cuckoo.Ken's neighbours watched excitedly. The baby cockoo picked up the other eggs easily with its back, and pushed them out of the nest. The birds returned and pushed food into its mouth. After twenty days, the cuckoo was enormous! On 6th May, it opened its wings. In a moment, the nest was empty. The show was over.Ken's neighbours are all enthusiastic birdwatchers now, of course.Unit 18: Read this label!LUCY: Do you want one of these, Vikki?VIKKI: No, thanks! I ate some of those about a year ago. Once was enough!LUCY: Why? What happened?VIKKI: I missed breakfast that morning, because I did my piano practice before school. Mum gave me my lunchbox, and I went for the bus.VIKKI: On the school bus I felt a bit sick. I always feel sick on buses, anyway.VIKKI: I need to eat something. I looked in my lunchbox and discovered the Crispy Trolls.VIKKI: I ate four Crispy Trolls, one after another.At the same time I read the label on the packet.VIKKI: Then I felt really sick! Yuk! Honestly, Lucy, this stuff isn't food. It's chemistry. Read the label!Unit 19: A problem with squirrelsPOLLY: Did you see my new bird feeder Annie?ANNIE: Yes, I did. I saw it last weekPOLLY: Well, I bought it because of the label. It said, 'This bird feeder is squirrel-proof'.ANNIE: Yes, you told me that.POLLY: Well, I brought it home. I put lots of nuts in it.And I hung it outside the kitchen window.POLLY: That night, a squirrel broke into the 'squirrel-proof' bird feeder.It ate all the nuts. The squirrel's tummy became enormous.ANNIE: Oh, no! Don't tell me!POLLY: The next day, I went into the kitchen. What did I see?A dead squirrel in my bird feeder, outside my kitchen window!ANNIE: That's awful! What did you do?POLLY: I cut it down, and put it in a bag. Then I took it back to the shop.They gave me my money back.ANNIE: But what's the use of that?POLLY: I wanted a squirrel-proof bird feeder, and I haven't got one!Unit 20: An ordinary lifeNina: I want to tell you something,Daisy: What is it, Nina?Nina: This will be my last fashion shoot. I'm going to get an ordinary job in an office.Daisy : But why, Nina? You're a very successful model.Why do you want to change?Nina: I'm successful now. But I won't always be successful.And I want an ordinary life.NINA: In an office job, I'll work regular hours. I'll go home in the evening.NINA: I'll cook beautiful meals and eat them with my friends.And I'll sleep in the same bed every night.NINA: And maybe, one day, I'll meet the right man.And we'll have an ordinary life together. It'll be wonderful!Unit 21:The weather forecastANNOUNCER: And now it's five to nine, and time for the weather forecast.Let's go over to Carla Dane at the London Weather Centre,Carla.WEAT: Thanks John, and good morning!Last month was unusually cold and dry. But all that will change in the next few days.From today, the wind will blow from the south west.It will bring in warm air from the Atlantic. And we'll have some rain.Rain will come in gradually from the south west this evening.The whole country will have some rain showers in the next three days.Some of them will be heavy.Temperatures will rise to 12 degrees Celsius in the day.Night temperatures will fall to 4 degrees Celsius.It will feel cold over the hills. And the outlook for next weekend: the three w's- warm,wet and windy. And that's your weather forecast.Back to John at the studio.Unit 22 I always behave myselfLUCY: Dad, there was a dance at school last month, and I didn't go.There'll be another one next Friday night. Can I go?WILLIAM: Who'll be at the dance?LUCY: It'll be a school event. There will be some French student,but there won't be any outsiders. And our teachers will be there, tooWILLIAM: That sounds reasonable. What time will it start?LUCY: At half past seven.WILLIAM: And how long will it last?LUCY: For two and a half hours. It'll finish at 10.WILLIAM: All right, Lucy. Your mother will take you there, and I'll pick you up.Be at the school gates at 10 o'clock sharp. Is that clear?LUCY: Yes. Dad. Thanks;WILLIAM: And Lucy, you will behave yourself, won't you?LUCY: Of course, Dad. I always do!Unit 23 Quite tall … and quite striking!DAISY: ….... So, Cleo, that's the news.Can you send me your New Faces file?....... CLEO: Of course. Daisy. I’11 send a messenger.CLBO: How far is it to your house from here?DAISY: It's about 45 miles.CLBO: That's not far. You'll have the pictures by two o'clock.DAISY: Good. What are they like?CLEO: Well, all the girls are quite young. One of them is very young.Her mother comes with her.DAISY: I get the picture. Is there anyone special?CLEO: That's Sandy. She's quite tall.DAISY: How tall?CLEO: She's one metre eighty-two.DAISY: What height is that? Just a moment…OK, it's about five foot eleven. That's very tall.CLBO: Yes, she's quite striking. I'll send the file now.DAISY: Thanks. Cleo. I'll have a look.I'll call you tomorrow.CLEO: Thanks, Daisy. Bye!Unit 24 A quizROBERT: Lucy, I'm writing a quiz for my class, and I want to try it out.Can I try it out on you, please?LUCY: OK.ROBERT: Which is the highest mountain in the British Isles?LUCY : It's Ben Nevis, of course!ROBERT: What's the longest river in the world?LUCY: I'm not sure. Is it the Nile, or the Amazon?ROBERT: It's the Nile. I looked it up yesterday.The Nile is longer than the Amazon.LUCY: Is it?ROBERT: Yes. They're both long rivers. It isn't obvious, is it?LUCY: No. It's a good question.ROBERT: Which continent has the lowest population density?LUCY: Goodness, Robert! I don't know! Australia?ROBERT: No! It's a trick question.Australia's a continent, and it has only six people to the square mile.But obviously, the answer is 'Antarctica'!Unit 25 Karen saves some moneyKAREN: Which of these two suits do you prefer, William?The one on the right, or the one on the left?WILLIAM: They're both the same. They're both the same size.They're both the same colour. And they're both the same style.KAREN: They both look the same, but they're very different in quality.One is made of linen, and the other is made of microfibre.The microfibre one is cheaper than the linen one.WILLIAM: Which one do you prefer, Karen?KAREN: I'll have the microfibre one. It isn't as expensive as the linen one.WILLIAM: Are you sure? I can't tell the difference,but you can. I want you to be happy with it.KAREN: That's OK. I'm saving money on the suit.So now I want to buy a pair of shoes to go with it.Unit 26 School reportsFLORA: What's your report like, Vikki?VIKKI: It's all right.FLORA: Can I have a look?VIKKI: OK.FLORA: WOW, Vikki!Listen to this, Lucy! English excellent, French excellent,Maths excellent, Music excellent, Geography excellent……Everything is excellent!LUCY: I know! Vikki's report is always better than mine.FLORA: And your report is always better than mine.LUCY: Your reports are quite good, Flora.FLORA: But not as good as yours and Vikki's.You're both cleverer than me.LUCY: Well, Vikki always comes top.She's the cleverest girl in the school.VIKKI: You're the best gymnast, Flora.I always come bottom in Sports.Look! ‘Sports: Vikki tries hard.'VIKKI: It's a joke! Of course I try hard. But obviously not hard enough!Unit 27 Pocket moneyLUCY: Have you got any money, Robert?ROBERT: A little. Why?LUCY: Can you lend me some? Just for a week.ROBERT: How much do you want?LUCY: Just a few pounds. Well, ten pounds, actually.ROBERT: Ten pounds! That's a lot! Why haven't you got your own money?We both get the same every month.LUCY: Yes, but you've always got more money than me.ROBERT: YOU always spend your pocket money at the beginning of the month.LUCY: I know! And you always save yours. You're a good boy, and I'm a bad girl!LUCY: Please, Robert! I'll pay you back on Saturday.ROBERT: All right then. But only for a few days.LUCY: Thanks! You're the best!Unit 28 She doesn't even existROBERT: Why do you have all these posters in your room. Lucy?LUCY: Because I like them.ROBERT: Look at that big face! It's silly. Why did you put it on the ceiling?LUCY: Because I like it.ROBERT: Who's this, anyway?LUCY: It's Jonno. He's the best singer in the world. And he's the most handsome.ROBERT: That's silly.LUCY: No, it isn't!LUCY: Anyway, who's your favourite?ROBERT: Leena Lang. She's the most beautiful girl in the world, and the cleverest.LUCY: Lecna Lang! That's crazy! She's just someone in a computer game.ROBERT: I don't care. She's the best detective and the best martial arts master.LUCY: But she isn't real! She doesn't even exist!ROBERT: She does. She's as real as Jonno any day!Unit 29 No one’s better than Paul!CLAIRE: Paul is a fantastic athlete. Linda. He comes first in everything. LINDA: He was always a strong runner.CLAIRE: In the Championships last year,the '800 metres' was a very fast race. But Paul ran the fastest. He was 15 seconds faster than his nearest rival.LINDA: There were a lot of his friends in the Championships, weren't there? CLAIRE: Oh, yes! They all did very well indeed.CLAIRE: Tom won the high jump. He jumped 1.49 metres.That was 3 centimetres higher than all the others.CLAIRE: And Phil came first in the long jump.He jumped further than anyone . He broke his personal record.CLAIRE: They're all fantastic, really!LINDA: Yes, they are. But no one's better than our Paul!Unit 30 A giant squidROBERT: I bought New Scientist magazine this week. Dad.WILLIAM: Did you? I'll give you the money for that.How much did you pay for it?ROBERT: It cost £3.70 (three pounds seventy)]WILLIAM: Here you are. I enjoy New Scientist.I'll read it after you.ROBERT: There's a piece in it about a giant squid.It's on show at the Natural History Museum.ROBERT: It’s 9 metres long.William: Nine metres ... that's about 30 feet .That’s as long as a London bus!ROBERT: I know. Its eyes are as big as plates, and its suckers are at big as a man's leg.WILLIAM: That's amazing.ROBERT: Can we go and see it. Dad?WILLIAM: Yes. of course. We'll go on Sunday morning.The rest of the family will be at the athletics.。
2B Module 2 Unit 2
Hello! Who are you? I’m _______. I’m __________. My _____ is ______. My _____ are _____. I can ____________. What do you like eating?
I like eating _____. _____! _____! That’s my favourite!
Hello! Who are you? I’m Little Cat. I’m small and yellow. My ears are small. My tail is long. I can climb the trees. What do you like eating? I like eating fish. Fish! Fish! That’s my favourite!
Oxford English Book 2B Module 2 Unit 2
My name is Sunshine. I’m from Mars(火星). I’m ten years old. I’m small and green. My head is big. My eyes are big, too. I can fly the spaceship.
______ likes eating ______.
______ likes eating ______.
I don’t like eating food.
I like sunshine. I am ET.
1. Read and tell the story. 2. Write the diary.
I like _________.
I like _________.
青少版新概念2A-2b课文文本之欧阳治创编
青少版新概念2A-2B 课文文本 Unit 1-30Unit 1: Linda comes to LondonLINDA: Hi, Karen!Where are you?KAREN: I'm in the coffee bar next to the Arrivals, exit.I'm waiting for you,and I'm having a cupof coffee.KAREN: Where are you,and what are you doing? LINDA: I'm in the Baggage Hall.I'm waiting for my suitcase.LINDA: Ah, I can see it!It's coming round now!There it is!LINDA: Oh, Karen!Is Paul with you?KAREN: Yes, of course he is.He's standing here beside me.I'm giving him my phone now. KAREN: Here you are, Paul!Talk to your mother! PAUL: Hello, Mum!LINDA: Hello, Paul!I've got my suitcase,and I'm coming out now!Unit 2: Good luck on Sunday!REPORTER: My name's Tom French.I'm speaking toyoufrom the ExCel Centrein London'sDocklands.We are visitingthis year'sMarathon Expo.REPORTER: This is the Trade Fairof the London Marathon.It's very noisy!There are hundreds of exhibitors and thousands of visitors here.REPORTER: This is a big international event.But it's like a village!People are talking and laughing like old friends.REPORTER: I'm standingwith one of thecompetitors.Let me introduce PaulBruce.Hi, Paul!PAUL: Hi, Tom!REPORTER: Paul, please tell our listeners. This is yourfirst Marathon, isn't it?PAUL: Yes, it is.REPORTER: Are you looking forward toSunday? PAUL: Yes, I am.REPORTER: That's the spirit, Paul! Good luck on Sunday!Unit 3JACK: That's strange.What's this note in my pocket?It isn't mine.Is it yours, Daisy?DAISY:No, it isn't mine.Let me see.Oh, it belongs to Paul.The handwriting is his.JACK: So why is it in my pocket?DAISY: I don't know.It looks like Paul's 'to-do' list.Let me read it.JACK: HMM. Give it to me, Daisy.Yes, it is Paul's, isn't it?DAISY: Yes, Jack. Put it back.Unit 4: The top three percentVOLUNTEER: Congratulations!Two hours and fifty-nineminutes.• That's fantastic!What's your name? PAUL: Paul. Paul Bruce.VOLUNTEER: Well done, Paul!How are you feeling? PAUL: I'm OK. Thanks.VOLUNTEER: Good! Now, Paul. Here's your foil jacket. Put it on.You mustn't get cold.PAUL:Yes. Thanks.VOLUNTEER: Just a hundred andseventy-nine minutes!Paul, you're a hero!PAUL: Thanks!VOLUNTEER: Now, Paul, walk this way. Pick up your medal. It's yours!VOLUNTEER: There are thirty-five thousand runnersin this race, and you're in the top threepercent!Congratulations!Unit 5: All about ants!ROBERT: Look at this webpage, Mum.It's about ants. KAREN: Ants?Why are you looking up ants? ROBERT: Why not?Ants are really interesting. They doreally interesting things.KAREN: What kind of things?ROBERT: Well, they usually livein dry places.But they can surviveunder water for two weeks. KAREN: Really?ROBERT: Oh, Mum, how about this?Ants always stretch their legsin the morning.KAREN: You're joking!ROBERT: NO, really!KAREN: DO they usually yawnin the morning, too? ROBERT: Well, funnily enough, they do!Unit 6:An elegant sizePOLLY: You're looking very eleganttoday, Annie! ANNIE: Yes, I'm on my wayto my accountant's.I always put on a nice outfitfor him.SO I'm going by bus.POLLY: What do you mean, Annie?ANNIE: Well, I usually walk into town.But today I'm going by bus.It's my shoes, you see.POLLY: Your shoes?ANNIE: Yes, my shoes.They're size six.POLLY: They're perfect with your outfit.ANNIE: Thanks. I like them, too.ANNIE: My feet are size five in the morning, and size six in the afternoon. I can't walk in these shoesbefore lunch.ANNIE: But I can't walk in them in the morning. They're fine in the afternoon.Unit 7: A good exampleROBERT: How about this, Dad?'Twenty-two percent ofpeople in Britain never eatbreakfast.’‘Sixteen percent eat breakfastat work.' WILLIAM: It's true.My assistant has her breakfastat work every day.It's a waste of time, really.KAREN: Poor girl!She works very hard.WILLIAM: She goes out with friendsnearly every night.Then she gets up late,and rushes to work late.WILLIAM: Then she has breakfastat her desk!It doesn't look good.KAREN: She works late twice a week,too. WILLIAM: Well, we all do that.Goodness, is that the time?WILLIAM: I must rush.KAREN: But what about your breakfast? WILLIAM: That's all right.I can get some breakfastat work.Unit 8: A nice quiet afternoon.MR. FORD: What are you going to do now,Paul? PAUL: I'm going to take it easythis morning!Then I'm going to meet Clairefor lunch.MR. FORD: Where? Here in Barnet?PAUL: NO, at an Indian restaurantin Canary Wharf.Her mother recommends it.MR. FORD: Very nice.Have a good lunch.Eat a double portion of rice.You need the carbohydrate.MR. FORD: And have a dessert.Why not have twodesserts?But no alcohol, of course!Have a nice quiet afternoon.PAUL: We're going to walkalong the river.MR. FORD: Make it a short walk.And walk today—don't run!PAUL: Claire's going to like that. She hates running, especially after a big lunch.Unit 9: Do your own thingsPAUL: It's going to be a very early starton Sunday morning, Claire.We're going to leave homeat about 5.30. CLAIRL: 5.30! That is early!PAUL: So what do you want to do?Do you want to come with us, or not?CLAIRE: I'm not sure, Paul. What do you want me to do?PAUL: I want you to do your own thing.You can come to the National Stadium with the team.CLAIRE: But what are you going to do there?PAUL: You can't come with usinto the Red Zone.And Idon't want you to get bored,on your own all day.CLAIRE: But it's obvious, Paul!The National Athletics Championshipsare a photographer's dream!What am I going to do?I'm going to takehundreds of photographs, of course!Unit 10: Tomorrow's another day!Do you remember Nina?She's a fashion model.She usually works with Daisy,but she works with other photographers, too.Her jobs take her all over the world.She often stays in expensive hotels.Her life seems very glamorous.But she often feels lonely. Nina isn't feeling lonely this evening.She's sitting in a bar in Central Londonwith some friends. They are all old friends,and they're having a good gossip.The bar is becoming very noisy.Nina is laughing. She's having a really good time.Why can't things be like this every evening?That's an interesting question!This idea is a new one. Nina mustthink about her life. She's going tothink about it in the morning.But just now, she's having a good time.Nina's going to make a decision tomorrow —but tomorrow's another day.Unit 11 We all have our troublesJACK: Anna, I want you to call Pierre in Paris.I'm going to Paris first thing tomorrow.I want to meet with him at 8 o'clock.Can you set it up, please?And can you get me some coffee?ANNA: Yes, sir. Straightaway.Paris! Again!He was in Paris last week!JANEY: Wasn't he in Washington last week?ANNA: No, he was in Washingtonthe week before last.Some people have all the luck!Yes, I know.I want to travel,but I'm always here at my desk.I was here yesterday.I was here the day before yesterday.ANEY: We're going to be here tomorrow,and the day after tomorrow ...ANNA: And next week, and next month!JACK: Anna, Janey, I'M sorry for you both.But we all have our troubles in life.And I'm looking forward to my coffee.Unit 12: The London busThe new buses in London are just 'buses'.They aren't 'London buses'. The real 'London bus' was the old Routemaster. This was our favourite bus for fifty-one years. It was a design classic.Were Routemasters really dangerous? The back of the bus was an open platform with no doors. Perhaps this wasn't very safe —but Londoners like to do their own thing. And the Routemasters were fast in the traffic.Modern buses are safe, but they are slow. Passengers hate the doors. Car drivers hate the buses. The bus drivers have a hard time.The first Routemasters were on our roads in 1954. The last official Routemaster journey was on Route Number 9, on 15th February 2006. That was some years ago. Today, Londoners remember the Routemaster's name. They remember the designer's name: Douglas Scott. The new buses don't have a name. How can we love them ?Unit 13: The KalenjinTake a look at the records ofinternational running events in the lastfifty years. Before 1980, the winnersof distance races were usually fromNorth America and Europe. Therewere some winners from othercountries, but there weren't verymany of them. There were no Africannames among the winners then, butthings are very different now. Today, the stars of the race track arethe Kalenjin. The Kalenjin are anAfrican people from the borders ofNorth West Kenya and Ethiopia. Theirhomeland is a hot, dry plateau, about2,500 metres above sea level. Thesepeople are natural athletes. They havelong, thin legs. Their heart rate isunusually slow. There are only threemillion of them.Twelve of the world's top twenty marathon runners are now Kalenjin. Every year, they win 40 percent of the top honours in all international distance 25 races. And it's not just the men.A few years ago, there weren't any distance races for women. These days, there are lots of them. Kalenjin women win all their events as well.Unit 14: Chocolate heavenLUCY: I'm going out, Mum.Please can I get some chocolate?We had some sweets last weekend,but we didn't have any chocolate.And we didn't have much chocolatethe weekend before last.KAREN: You and your chocolate!OK. But you must share itwith everyone else!LUCY: I'm back. Mum!These are the chocolates!They didn't have any nice boxesat the supermarket.These chocolates arefrom Marconi's.They're really special.ROBERT: But chocolate is chocolate,isn't it?Why does a fancy boxmake it special?KAREN: Good question. Listen to this. 'This chocolate contains fifty percent cocoa. Marconi'schocolate uses only pure cocoa butter.There are no non-cocoa vegetable fats in Marconi's chocolate.'Mm! This is chocolate heaven! It feels different inyour mouth. Chocolate heaven is expensive. Itfeels different in your pocket, too!Unit 15: It’s a mystery to me!DAISY: Welcome home, Jack!Did you have a good trip? JACK: It was OK.But it was all about babies and food! DAISY: Babies? How many babies?JACK: Two.Marcel's deputy had a babytwo months ago.And Pierre's secretaryis going to have a baby in June.JACK: They have nine monthsoff work each time! DAISY: Well, it happens.That's life!JACK: True.JACK: And then there's the food. I had lunch with Marcel. I didn't want a three-hour lunch, butlunch is a serious business in Paris.DAISY: Yes, it is.I like the French attitude to food.It's very civilised.JACK: I agree with you, Daisy.They're nice people.They're also very efficient.JACK: But how do they do it?How do they have timefor a civilised lifeand for work as well?It's a mystery to me!Unit 16: What’s your middle name?WILLIAM: Is there something wrong Karen? KAREN: It's OK. I'm being silly.WILLIAM: That's impossible .You're never silly. KAREN: Oh, but I am! I'm silly all the time. Believe me! KAREN: I did something very silly this morning.I picked up some shopping in town. KAREN: I arrived home at about 10 o'clock, and parked the car in the drive.I unlocked the house with my house keys. KAREN: Then, Daisy called me on my mobile, and we talked about the weekend.We discussed plans for Sunday. Then we finished the call.KAREN: Then I looked for my car keys.I looked in my bag, in my coat, in the kitchen, everywhere.WILLIAM: And where were they?KAREN: They were in my hand! The key-ring was on my little finger.William, 'Silliness' is my middle name!Unit 17: A cuckoo in the nestPaul's father, Ken Bruce is an engineer. He's also an enthusiastic birdwatcher.Last spring, two little birds appeared in his garden. Ken installed a webcam, and invited his neighbours to log on. Everyone watched enthusiastically. Soon, there was a little nest. Then, another bird arrived. It was a cuckoo. The cuckoo watched patiently. Three little eggs appears in thenest.The cuckoo waited. Suddenly, she had her chance. The mother wasn't there. The cuckoo darted to the nest. In two seconds, there was a fourth egg beside the other three. After twelve days, the young cuckoo hatched. The little birds hurried to get food for the baby cuckoo.Ken's neighbours watched excitedly. The baby cockoo picked up the other eggs easily with its back, and pushed them out of the nest. The birds returned and pushed food into its mouth. After twenty days, the cuckoo was enormous! On 6th May, it opened its wings. In a moment, the nest was empty. The show was over.Ken's neighbours are all enthusiastic birdwatchers now, of course.Unit 18: Read this label!LUCY: Do you want one of these, Vikki?VIKKI: No, thanks! I ate some of those about a year ago. Once was enough!LUCY: Why? What happened?VIKKI: I missed breakfast that morning, because I didmy piano practice before school. Mum gaveme my lunchbox, and I went for the bus. VIKKI: On the school bus I felt a bit sick. I always feel sick on buses, anyway.VIKKI: I need to eat something. I looked in my lunchbox and discovered the Crispy Trolls.VIKKI: I ate four Crispy Trolls, one after another.At the same time I read the label on the packet. VIKKI: Then I felt really sick! Yuk! Honestly, Lucy, this stuff isn't food. It's chemistry. Read the label! Unit 19: A problem with squirrelsPOLLY: Did you see my new bird feeder Annie? ANNIE: Yes, I did. I saw it last weekPOLLY: Well, I bought it because of the label. It said, 'This bird feeder is squirrel-proof'.ANNIE: Yes, you told me that.POLLY: Well, I brought it home. I put lots of nuts in it.And I hung it outside the kitchen window. POLLY: That night, a squirrel broke into the 'squirrel-proof' bird feeder. It ate all the nuts. Thesquirrel's tummy became enormous. ANNIE: Oh, no! Don't tell me!POLLY: The next day, I went into the kitchen. What did I see?A dead squirrel in my bird feeder,outside my kitchen window!ANNIE: That's awful! What did you do?POLLY: I cut it down, and put it in a bag. Then I took it back to the shop.They gave me my money back.ANNIE: But what's the use of that?POLLY: I wanted a squirrel-proof bird feeder, and I haven't got one!Unit 20: An ordinary lifeNina: I want to tell you something,Daisy: What is it, Nina?Nina: This will be my last fashion shoot.I'm going to get an ordinary jobin an office.Daisy : But why, Nina? You're a very successful model.Why do you want to change?Nina: I'm successful now. But I won't always be successful.And I want an ordinary life.NINA: In an office job, I'll work regular hours. I'll go home in the evening.NINA: I'll cook beautiful mealsand eat them with my friends.And I'll sleep in the same bed every night. NINA: And maybe, one day, I'll meet the right man.And we'll have an ordinary life together. It'll be wonderful!Unit 21: The weather forecastANNOUNCER: And now it's five to nine,and time for the weather forecast.Let's go over to Carla Dane at the London Weather Centre,Carla.WEAT: Thanks John, and good morning!Last month was unusually cold and dry.But all that will change in the next few days.From today, the wind will blow from the southwest.It will bring in warm air from the Atlantic. And we'll have some rain.Rain will come in gradually from the south west this evening.The whole country will have some rain showers in the next three days.Some of them will be heavy.Temperatures will riseto 12 degrees Celsius in the day.Night temperatures will fall to 4 degrees Celsius.It will feel cold over the hills.And the outlook for next weekend: the three w's- warm,wet and windy.And that'syour weather forecast.Back to John at the studio.Unit 22 I always behave myselfLUCY: Dad, there was a dance at school last month, and I didn't go.There'll be another one next Friday night.Can I go?WILLIAM: Who'll be at the dance?LUCY: It'll be a school event.There will be some French student,but there won't be any outsiders.Andour teachers will be there, tooWILLIAM: That sounds reasonable.What time will it start?LUCY: At half past seven.WILLIAM: And how long will it last?LUCY: For two and a half hours.It'll finish at 10. WILLIAM: All right, Lucy.Your mother will take you there,and I'll pick you up.Be at the school gatesat 10 o'clock sharp.Is that clear?LUCY: Yes. Dad. Thanks;WILLIAM: And Lucy,you will behave yourself, won't you?LUCY: Of course, Dad. I always do!Unit 23 Quite tall … and quite st riking!DAISY: ….... So, Cleo, that's the news.Can you send meyour New Faces file?.......CLEO: Of course. Daisy.I’11 send a messenger.CLBO: How far is it to your housefrom here? DAISY: It's about 45 miles.CLBO: That's not far. You'll have the picturesby two o'clock.DAISY: Good. What are they like?CLEO: Well, all the girls are quite young. One of them is very young.Her mother comes with her.DAISY: I get the picture.Is there anyone special? CLEO: That's Sandy.She's quite tall.DAISY: How tall?CLEO: She's one metre eighty-two.DAISY: What height is that?Just a moment…OK, it's about five foot eleven.That's very tall. CLBO: Yes, she's quite striking. I'll send the file now. DAISY: Thanks. Cleo. I'll have a look.I'll call you tomorrow.CLEO: Thanks, Daisy. Bye!Unit 24 A quizROBERT: Lucy, I'm writing a quiz for my class, and Iwant to try it out.Can I try it out on you, please?LUCY: OK.ROBERT: Which is the highest mountain in the British Isles?LUCY : It's Ben Nevis, of course!ROBERT: What's the longest riverin the world? LUCY: I'm not sure.Is it the Nile, or the Amazon? ROBERT: It's the Nile.I looked it up yesterday.The Nile is longerthan the Amazon.LUCY: Is it?ROBERT: Yes. They're both long rivers.It isn't obvious, is it?LUCY: No. It's a good question.ROBERT: Which continent has the lowest population density?LUCY: Goodness, Robert! I don't know! Australia? ROBERT: No! It's a trick question.Australia's a continent, and it has only six people to the square mile.But obviously, the answer is 'Antarctica'!Unit 25 Karen saves some moneyKAREN: Which of these two suits do you prefer, William?The one on the right, or the one on the left? WILLIAM: They're both the same.They're both the same size.They're both the same colour.And they're both the samestyle.KAREN: They both look the same, but they're very different in quality.One is made of linen, and the otheris made of microfibre.The microfibre one is cheaper than the linen one.WILLIAM: Which one do you prefer, Karen? KAREN: I'll have the microfibre one. It isn't as expensive as the linen one.WILLIAM: Are you sure?I can't tell the difference,but you can.I want you to be happy with it.KAREN: That's OK.I'm saving money on the suit.So now I want to buy a pair of shoes to go with it. Unit 26 School reportsFLORA: What's your report like, Vikki?VIKKI: It's all right.FLORA: Can I have a look?VIKKI: OK.FLORA: WOW, Vikki!Listen to this, Lucy!English excellent, French excellent,Maths excellent, Music excellent,Geography excellent……Everything is excellent!LUCY: I know!Vikki's report is alwaysbetter than mine. FLORA: And your report is alwaysbetter than mine. LUCY: Your reports are quite good, Flora.FLORA: But not as good as yours and Vikki's.You're both cleverer than me.LUCY: Well, Vikki always comes top.She's the cleverest girl in the school.VIKKI: You're the best gymnast, Flora.I always come bottom in Sports.Look!‘Sports: Vikki tries hard.'VIKKI: It's a joke!Of course I try hard.But obviously not hard enough!Unit 27Pocket moneyLUCY: Have you got any money, Robert?ROBERT: A little. Why?LUCY: Can you lend me some? Just for a week. ROBERT: How much do you want?LUCY: Just a few pounds.Well, ten pounds, actually. ROBERT: Ten pounds! That's a lot! Why haven't you got your own money?We both get the same every month. LUCY: Yes, but you've always got more money than me. ROBERT: YOU always spend your pocket money at the beginning of the month.LUCY: I know!And you always save yours. You're a good boy, and I'm a bad girl!LUCY: Please, Robert! I'll pay you back on Saturday.ROBERT: All right then.But only for a few days. LUCY: Thanks! You're the best!Unit 28 She doesn't even existROBERT: Why do you have all these postersin your room. Lucy?LUCY: Because I like them.ROBERT: Look at that big face!It's silly.Why did you put it on the ceiling?LUCY: Because I like it.ROBERT: Who's this, anyway?LUCY: It's Jonno.He's the best singer in the world. And he's the most handsome.ROBERT: That's silly.LUCY: No, it isn't!LUCY: Anyway, who's your favourite?ROBERT: Leena Lang.She's the most beautiful girl in the world, and the cleverest.LUCY: Lecna Lang! That's crazy! She's just someonein a computer game.ROBERT: I don't care. She's the best detective and thebest martial arts master.LUCY: But she isn't real!She doesn't even exist! ROBERT: She does.She's as real as Jonno any day!Unit 29 No one’s better than Paul!CLAIRE: Paul is a fantastic athlete. Linda. He comes first in everything.LINDA: He was always a strong runner.CLAIRE: In the Championships last year,the '800 metres' was a very fast race.But Paul ran the fastest.He was 15 seconds fasterthan his nearest rival.LINDA: There were a lot of his friends in the Championships, weren't there?CLAIRE: Oh, yes! They all did very well indeed. CLAIRE: Tom won the high jump. He jumped 1.49 metres.That was 3 centimetres higher than all the others. CLAIRE: And Phil came first in the long jump.He jumped further than anyone .He broke his personal record.CLAIRE: They're all fantastic, really!LINDA: Yes, they are.But no one's betterthan our Paul! Unit 30 A giant squidROBERT: I bought New Scientist magazinethis week. Dad.WILLIAM: Did you?I'll give you the money for that.How much did you pay for it? ROBERT: It cost £3.70 (three pounds seventy)] WILLIAM: Here you are.I enjoy New Scientist.I'll read it after you.ROBERT: There's a piece in itabout a giant squid.It's on showat the Natural History Museum. ROBERT: It’s 9 metres long.William: Nine metres ... that's about 30 feet .That’s as long as a London bus!ROBERT: I know.Its eyes are as big as plates,and its suckersare at big as a man's leg.WILLIAM: That's amazing.ROBERT: Can we go and see it. Dad?WILLIAM: Yes. of course.We'll go on Sunday morning.欧阳治创编 2021.03.10 欧阳治创编 2021.03.10The rest of the family will be at the athletics.欧阳治创编 2021.03.10 欧阳治创编 2021.03.10。
青少版新概念2A-2b课文文本之欧阳语创编
青少版新概念2A-2B 课文文本 Unit 1-30Unit 1: Linda comes to LondonLINDA: Hi, Karen!Where are you?KAREN: I'm in the coffee bar next to the Arrivals, exit.I'm waiting for you,and I'm having acup of coffee.KAREN: Where are you,and what are you doing? LINDA: I'm in the Baggage Hall.I'm waiting for my suitcase.LINDA: Ah, I can see it!It's coming round now!There it is!LINDA: Oh, Karen!Is Paul with you?KAREN: Yes, of course he is.He's standing here beside me.I'm giving him my phone now. KAREN: Here you are, Paul!Talk to your mother! PAUL: Hello, Mum!LINDA: Hello, Paul!I've got my suitcase,and I'm coming out now!Unit 2: Good luck on Sunday!REPORTER: My name's Tom French.I'm speaking to youfrom the ExCel Centrein London'sDocklands.We are visitingthis year'sMarathon Expo.REPORTER: This is the Trade Fairof the London Marathon.It's very noisy!There are hundreds of exhibitors and thousands of visitors here.REPORTER: This is a big international event.But it's like a village!People are talking and laughing like old friends.REPORTER: I'm standingwith one of thecompetitors.Let me introduce PaulBruce.Hi, Paul!PAUL: Hi, Tom!REPORTER: Paul, please tell our listeners. This is your first Marathon, isn't it?PAUL: Yes, it is.REPORTER: Are you looking forward toSunday? PAUL: Yes, I am.REPORTER: That's the spirit, Paul! Good luck on Sunday!Unit 3JACK: That's strange.What's this note in my pocket?It isn't mine.Is it yours, Daisy?DAISY:No, it isn't mine.Let me see.Oh, it belongs to Paul.The handwriting is his.JACK: So why is it in my pocket?DAISY: I don't know.It looks like Paul's 'to-do' list.Let me read it.JACK: HMM. Give it to me, Daisy.Yes, it is Paul's, isn't it?DAISY: Yes, Jack. Put it back.Unit 4: The top three percentVOLUNTEER: Congratulations!Two hours and fifty-nineminutes.• That's fantastic!What's your name? PAUL: Paul. Paul Bruce.VOLUNTEER: Well done, Paul!How are you feeling? PAUL: I'm OK. Thanks.VOLUNTEER: Good! Now, Paul. Here's your foil jacket.Put it on.You mustn't get cold.PAUL:Yes. Thanks.VOLUNTEER: Just a hundred andseventy-nine minutes!Paul, you're a hero!PAUL: Thanks!VOLUNTEER: Now, Paul, walk this way. Pick up your medal. It's yours!VOLUNTEER: There are thirty-five thousand runnersin this race, and you're in the top threepercent!Congratulations!Unit 5: All about ants!ROBERT: Look at this webpage, Mum.It's about ants. KAREN: Ants?Why are you looking up ants? ROBERT: Why not?Ants are really interesting. They do really interesting things.KAREN: What kind of things?ROBERT: Well, they usually livein dry places.But they can surviveunder water for two weeks. KAREN: Really?ROBERT: Oh, Mum, how about this?Ants always stretch their legsin the morning.KAREN: You're joking!ROBERT: NO, really!KAREN: DO they usually yawnin the morning, too? ROBERT: Well, funnily enough, they do!Unit 6:An elegant sizePOLLY: You're looking very eleganttoday, Annie! ANNIE: Yes, I'm on my wayto my accountant's.I always put on a nice outfitfor him.SO I'm going by bus.POLLY: What do you mean, Annie?ANNIE: Well, I usually walk into town.But today I'm going by bus.It's my shoes, you see.POLLY: Your shoes?ANNIE: Yes, my shoes.They're size six.POLLY: They're perfect with your outfit.ANNIE: Thanks. I like them, too.ANNIE: My feet are size five in the morning, and size six in the afternoon. I can't walk in theseshoes before lunch.ANNIE: But I can't walk in them in the morning. They're fine in the afternoon.Unit 7: A good exampleROBERT: How about this, Dad?'Twenty-two percent ofpeople in Britain never eatbreakfast.’‘Sixteen percent eat breakfastat work.' WILLIAM: It's true.My assistant has her breakfastat work every day.It's a waste of time, really.KAREN: Poor girl!She works very hard.WILLIAM: She goes out with friendsnearly every night.Then she gets up late,and rushes to work late.WILLIAM: Then she has breakfastat her desk!It doesn't look good.KAREN: She works late twice a week,too. WILLIAM: Well, we all do that.Goodness, is that the time?WILLIAM: I must rush.KAREN: But what about your breakfast? WILLIAM: That's all right.I can get some breakfastat work.Unit 8: A nice quiet afternoon.MR. FORD: What are you going to do now,Paul?PAUL: I'm going to take it easythis morning!Then I'm going to meet Clairefor lunch.MR. FORD: Where? Here in Barnet?PAUL: NO, at an Indian restaurantin Canary Wharf.Her mother recommends it.MR. FORD: Very nice.Have a good lunch.Eat a double portion of rice.You need the carbohydrate.MR. FORD: And have a dessert.Why not have two desserts?But no alcohol, of course!Have a nice quiet afternoon.PAUL: We're going to walkalong the river.MR. FORD: Make it a short walk.And walk today—don't run!PAUL: Claire's going to like that. She hates running, especially after a big lunch.Unit 9: Do your own thingsPAUL: It's going to be a very early starton Sunday morning, Claire.We're going to leave homeat about 5.30. CLAIRL: 5.30! That is early!PAUL: So what do you want to do?Do you want tocome with us, or not?CLAIRE: I'm not sure, Paul. What do you want me to do?PAUL: I want you to do your own thing.You can come to the National Stadium with the team.CLAIRE: But what are you going to do there? PAUL: You can't come with usinto the Red Zone.And I don't want you to get bored,on your own all day.CLAIRE: But it's obvious, Paul!The National Athletics Championshipsare a photographer's dream!What am I going to do?I'm going to takehundreds of photographs, of course!Unit 10: Tomorrow's another day!Do you remember Nina?She's a fashion model.She usually works with Daisy,but she works with other photographers, too.Her jobs take her all over the world.She often stays in expensive hotels.Her life seems very glamorous.But she often feels lonely.Nina isn't feeling lonely this evening.She's sitting in a bar in Central Londonwith some friends. They are all old friends,and they're having a good gossip.The bar is becoming very noisy.Nina is laughing. She's having a really good time. Why can't things be like this every evening?That's an interesting question!This idea is a new one. Nina mustthink about her life. She's going tothink about it in the morning.But just now, she's having a good time.Nina's going to make a decision tomorrow —but tomorrow's another day.Unit 11 We all have our troublesJACK: Anna, I want you to call Pierre in Paris.I'm going to Paris first thing tomorrow.I want to meet with him at 8 o'clock.Can you set it up, please?And can you get me some coffee?ANNA: Yes, sir. Straightaway.Paris! Again!He was in Paris last week!JANEY: Wasn't he in Washington last week?ANNA: No, he was in Washingtonthe week before last.Some people have all the luck!Yes, I know.I want to travel,but I'm always here at my desk.I was here yesterday.I was here the day before yesterday.ANEY: We're going to be here tomorrow,and the day after tomorrow ...ANNA: And next week, and next month!JACK: Anna, Janey, I'M sorry for you both.But we all have our troubles in life.And I'm looking forward to my coffee.Unit 12: The London busThe new buses in London are just 'buses'.They aren't 'London buses'. The real 'London bus' was the old Routemaster. This was our favourite bus for fifty-one years. It was a design classic.Were Routemasters really dangerous? The back of the bus was an open platform with no doors. Perhaps this wasn't very safe — but Londoners like to do their own thing. And the Routemasters were fast in the traffic. Modern buses are safe, but they are slow. Passengershate the doors. Car drivers hate the buses. The bus drivers have a hard time.The first Routemasters were on our roads in 1954. The last official Routemaster journey was on Route Number 9, on 15th February 2006. That was some years ago.Today, Londoners remember the Routemaster's name. They remember the designer's name: Douglas Scott. The new buses don't have a name. How can we love them ?Unit 13: The KalenjinTake a look at the records ofinternational running events in the lastfifty years. Before 1980, the winnersof distance races were usually fromNorth America and Europe. Therewere some winners from othercountries, but there weren't verymany of them. There were no Africannames among the winners then, butthings are very different now.Today, the stars of the race track arethe Kalenjin. The Kalenjin are anAfrican people from the borders ofNorth West Kenya and Ethiopia. Theirhomeland is a hot, dry plateau, about2,500 metres above sea level.Thesepeople are natural athletes. They havelong, thin legs. Their heart rate isunusually slow. There are only threemillion of them.Twelve of the world's top twenty marathon runners are now Kalenjin. Every year, they win 40 percent of the top honours in all international distance 25 races. And it's not just the men.A few years ago, there weren't any distance races for women. These days, there are lots of them. Kalenjin women win all their events as well.Unit 14: Chocolate heavenLUCY: I'm going out, Mum.Please can I get some chocolate?We had some sweets last weekend,but we didn't have any chocolate.And we didn't have much chocolatethe weekend before last.KAREN: You and your chocolate!OK. But you must share itwith everyone else!LUCY: I'm back. Mum!These are the chocolates!They didn't have any nice boxesat the supermarket.These chocolates arefromMarconi's.They're really special.ROBERT: But chocolate is chocolate,isn't it?Why does a fancy boxmake it special?KAREN: Good question. Listen to this. 'This chocolate contains fifty percent cocoa. Marconi'schocolate uses only pure cocoa butter.There are no non-cocoa vegetable fats in Marconi's chocolate.'Mm! This is chocolate heaven! It feels differentin your mouth. Chocolate heaven is expensive. Itfeels different in your pocket, too!Unit 15: It’s a mystery to me!DAISY: Welcome home, Jack!Did you have a good trip?JACK: It was OK.But it was all about babies and food! DAISY: Babies? How many babies?JACK: Two.Marcel's deputy had a babytwo months ago.And Pierre's secretaryis going to have a baby in June.JACK: They have nine monthsoff work each time! DAISY: Well, it happens.That's life!JACK: True.JACK: And then there's the food. I had lunch with Marcel. I didn't want a three-hour lunch, butlunch is a serious business in Paris.DAISY: Yes, it is.I like the French attitude to food.It's very civilised.JACK: I agree with you, Daisy.They're nice people.They're also very efficient.JACK: But how do they do it?How do they have timefor a civilised lifeand for work as well?It's a mystery to me!Unit 16: What’s your middle name?WILLIAM: Is there something wrong Karen? KAREN: It's OK. I'm being silly.WILLIAM: That's impossible .You're never silly. KAREN: Oh, but I am! I'm silly all the time. Believe me!KAREN: I did something very silly this morning.I picked up some shopping in town. KAREN: I arrived home at about 10 o'clock, and parked the car in the drive.I unlocked the house with my house keys. KAREN: Then, Daisy called me on my mobile, and we talked about the weekend.We discussed plans for Sunday. Then we finished the call.KAREN: Then I looked for my car keys.I looked in my bag, in my coat, in the kitchen, everywhere.WILLIAM: And where were they?KAREN: They were in my hand! The key-ring was on my little finger.William, 'Silliness' is my middle name!Unit 17: A cuckoo in the nestPaul's father, Ken Bruce is an engineer. He's also an enthusiastic birdwatcher.Last spring, two little birds appeared in his garden. Ken installed a webcam, and invited his neighbours to log on. Everyone watched enthusiastically. Soon, there was a little nest. Then, another bird arrived. It was a cuckoo. The cuckoo watched patiently. Three little eggs appears in the nest.The cuckoo waited. Suddenly, she had her chance. Themother wasn't there. The cuckoo darted to the nest. In two seconds, there was a fourth egg beside the other three.After twelve days, the young cuckoo hatched. The little birds hurried to get food for the baby cuckoo. Ken's neighbours watched excitedly. The baby cockoo picked up the other eggs easily with its back, and pushed them out of the nest. The birds returned and pushed food into its mouth. After twenty days, the cuckoo was enormous! On 6th May, it opened its wings. In a moment, the nest was empty. The show was over.Ken's neighbours are all enthusiastic birdwatchers now, of course.Unit 18: Read this label!LUCY: Do you want one of these, Vikki?VIKKI: No, thanks! I ate some of those about a year ago. Once was enough!LUCY: Why? What happened?VIKKI: I missed breakfast that morning, because I did my piano practice before school. Mum gaveme my lunchbox, and I went for the bus.VIKKI: On the school bus I felt a bit sick. I always feel sick on buses, anyway.VIKKI: I need to eat something. I looked in my lunchbox and discovered the Crispy Trolls.VIKKI: I ate four Crispy Trolls, one after another.At the same time I read the label on the packet.VIKKI: Then I felt really sick! Yuk! Honestly, Lucy, this stuff isn't food. It's chemistry. Read the label! Unit 19: A problem with squirrelsPOLLY: Did you see my new bird feeder Annie? ANNIE: Yes, I did. I saw it last weekPOLLY: Well, I bought it because of the label. It said, 'This bird feeder is squirrel-proof'.ANNIE: Yes, you told me that.POLLY: Well, I brought it home. I put lots of nuts in it.And I hung it outside the kitchen window. POLLY: That night, a squirrel broke into the 'squirrel-proof' bird feeder. It ate all the nuts. Thesquirrel's tummy became enormous. ANNIE: Oh, no! Don't tell me!POLLY: The next day, I went into the kitchen. Whatdid I see?A dead squirrel in my bird feeder,outside my kitchen window!ANNIE: That's awful! What did you do?POLLY: I cut it down, and put it in a bag. Then I took it back to the shop.They gave me my money back.ANNIE: But what's the use of that?POLLY: I wanted a squirrel-proof bird feeder, and I haven't got one!Unit 20: An ordinary lifeNina: I want to tell you something,Daisy: What is it, Nina?Nina: This will be my last fashion shoot.I'm going to get an ordinary jobin an office.Daisy : But why, Nina? You're a very successful model.Why do you want to change?Nina: I'm successful now. But I won't always be successful.And I want an ordinary life.NINA: In an office job, I'll work regular hours. I'll go home in the evening.NINA: I'll cook beautiful mealsand eat them with my friends.And I'll sleep in the same bed every night. NINA: And maybe, one day, I'll meet the right man.And we'll have an ordinary life together. It'll be wonderful!Unit 21: The weather forecastANNOUNCER: And now it's five to nine,and time for the weather forecast.Let's go over to Carla Dane at the London Weather Centre,Carla.WEAT: Thanks John, and good morning!Last month was unusually cold and dry.But all that will change in the next few days.From today, the wind will blow from the south west.It will bring in warm air from the Atlantic. And we'll have some rain.Rain will come in gradually from the south west this evening.The whole country will have some rain showers in the next three days.Some of them will be heavy.Temperatures will riseto 12 degrees Celsius in the day. Night temperatures will fall to 4 degrees Celsius.It will feel cold over the hills.And the outlook for next weekend: the three w's- warm,wet and windy.And that'syour weather forecast.Back to John at the studio.Unit 22 I always behave myselfLUCY: Dad, there was a dance at school last month, and I didn't go.There'll be another one next Friday night.Can I go?WILLIAM: Who'll be at the dance?LUCY: It'll be a school event.There will be some French student,but there won't be anyoutsiders.And our teachers will be there, too WILLIAM: That sounds reasonable.What time will it start?LUCY: At half past seven.WILLIAM: And how long will it last?LUCY: For two and a half hours.It'll finish at 10. WILLIAM: All right, Lucy.Your mother will take youthere,and I'll pick you up.Be at the school gatesat 10 o'clock sharp.Is that clear?LUCY: Yes. Dad. Thanks;WILLIAM: And Lucy,you will behave yourself, won't you?LUCY: Of course, Dad. I always do!Unit 23 Quite tall … and quite s triking!DAISY: ….... So, Cleo, that's the news.Can you send meyour New Faces file?.......CLEO: Of course. Daisy.I’11 send a messenger. CLBO: How far is it to your housefrom here? DAISY: It's about 45 miles.CLBO: That's not far. You'll have the picturesby two o'clock.DAISY: Good. What are they like?CLEO: Well, all the girls are quite young. One of them is very young.Her mother comes with her.DAISY: I get the picture.Is there anyone special? CLEO: That's Sandy.She's quite tall.DAISY: How tall?CLEO: She's one metre eighty-two.DAISY: What height is that?Just a moment…OK, it's about five foot eleven.That's very tall. CLBO: Yes, she's quite striking. I'll send the file now. DAISY: Thanks. Cleo. I'll have a look.I'll call you tomorrow.CLEO: Thanks, Daisy. Bye!Unit 24 A quizROBERT: Lucy, I'm writing a quiz for my class, and I want to try it out.Can I try it out on you, please?LUCY: OK.ROBERT: Which is the highest mountain in the British Isles?LUCY : It's Ben Nevis, of course!ROBERT: What's the longest riverin the world? LUCY: I'm not sure.Is it the Nile, or the Amazon? ROBERT: It's the Nile.I looked it up yesterday.The Nile is longerthan the Amazon.LUCY: Is it?ROBERT: Yes. They're both long rivers.It isn't obvious, is it?LUCY: No. It's a good question.ROBERT: Which continent has the lowest population density?LUCY: Goodness, Robert! I don't know! Australia? ROBERT: No! It's a trick question.Australia's a continent, and it has only six people to the square mile.But obviously, the answer is 'Antarctica'!Unit 25 Karen saves some moneyKAREN: Which of these two suits do you prefer, William?The one on the right, or the one on the left?WILLIAM: They're both the same.They're both the same size.They're both the same colour.And they're both the samestyle.KAREN: They both look the same, but they're very different in quality.One is made of linen, and the otheris made of microfibre.The microfibre one is cheaper than the linenone.WILLIAM: Which one do you prefer, Karen? KAREN: I'll have the microfibre one. It isn't as expensive as the linen one.WILLIAM: Are you sure?I can't tell the difference, but you can.I want you to be happy with it. KAREN: That's OK.I'm saving money on the suit.So now I want to buy a pair of shoes to go with it.Unit 26 School reportsFLORA: What's your report like, Vikki?VIKKI: It's all right.FLORA: Can I have a look?VIKKI: OK.FLORA: WOW, Vikki!Listen to this, Lucy!English excellent, French excellent,Maths excellent, Music excellent,Geography excellent……Everything is excellent!LUCY: I know!Vikki's report is alwaysbetter than mine. FLORA: And your report is alwaysbetter than mine.LUCY: Your reports are quite good, Flora.FLORA: But not as good as yours and Vikki's.You're both cleverer than me.LUCY: Well, Vikki always comes top.She's the cleverest girl in the school.VIKKI: You're the best gymnast, Flora.I always come bottom in Sports.Look!‘Sports: Vikki tries hard.'VIKKI: It's a joke!Of course I try hard.But obviously not hard enough!Unit 27Pocket moneyLUCY: Have you got any money, Robert?ROBERT: A little. Why?LUCY: Can you lend me some? Just for a week. ROBERT: How much do you want?LUCY: Just a few pounds.Well, ten pounds, actually. ROBERT: Ten pounds! That's a lot! Why haven't you got your own money?We both get the same every month. LUCY: Yes, but you've always got more money than me.ROBERT: YOU always spend your pocket money atthe beginning of the month.LUCY: I know!And you always save yours. You're a good boy, and I'm a bad girl!LUCY: Please, Robert! I'll pay you back on Saturday. ROBERT: All right then.But only for a few days. LUCY: Thanks! You're the best!Unit 28 She doesn't even existROBERT: Why do you have all these postersin your room. Lucy?LUCY: Because I like them.ROBERT: Look at that big face!It's silly.Why did you put it on the ceiling?LUCY: Because I like it.ROBERT: Who's this, anyway?LUCY: It's Jonno.He's the best singer in the world. And he's the most handsome.ROBERT: That's silly.LUCY: No, it isn't!LUCY: Anyway, who's your favourite?ROBERT: Leena Lang.She's the most beautiful girl in the world, and the cleverest.LUCY: Lecna Lang! That's crazy! She's just someoneina computer game.ROBERT: I don't care. She's the best detective and the best martial arts master.LUCY: But she isn't real!She doesn't even exist! ROBERT: She does.She's as real as Jonno any day! Unit 29 No one’s better than Paul!CLAIRE: Paul is a fantastic athlete. Linda. He comes first in everything.LINDA: He was always a strong runner.CLAIRE: In the Championships last year,the '800 metres' was a very fast race.But Paul ran the fastest.He was 15 seconds fasterthan his nearest rival.LINDA: There were a lot of his friends in the Championships, weren't there?CLAIRE: Oh, yes! They all did very well indeed. CLAIRE: Tom won the high jump. He jumped 1.49 metres.That was 3 centimetres higher than all the others.CLAIRE: And Phil came first in the long jump.He jumped further than anyone .He broke hispersonal record.CLAIRE: They're all fantastic, really!LINDA: Yes, they are.But no one's betterthan our Paul! Unit 30 A giant squidROBERT: I bought New Scientist magazinethis week. Dad.WILLIAM: Did you?I'll give you the money for that.How much did you pay for it? ROBERT: It cost £3.70 (three pounds seventy)] WILLIAM: Here you are.I enjoy New Scientist.I'll read it after you.ROBERT: There's a piece in itabout a giant squid.It's on showat the Natural History Museum. ROBERT: It’s 9 metres long.William: Nine metres ... that's about 30 feet .That’s as long as a London bus!ROBERT: I know.Its eyes are as big as plates,and its suckersare at big as a man's leg.WILLIAM: That's amazing.ROBERT: Can we go and see it. Dad?WILLIAM: Yes. of course.We'll go on Sunday morning.The rest of the family will be at the athletics.。
新标准第二册Module 2
Module 2 Unit 1 That is my father.主要语言功能:熟悉家庭成员的英语表达及如何向别人介绍;介绍某人的职业。
主要学习任务:This is your sister. That is my mother.She’s a teacher. He’s a doctor. (听、说、认读)主要词汇:mother father grandpa grandma sister(brother friend ) teacher doctor pupilhe’s=he is she’s =she is (听、说、认读)water daughter duck (听、说、理解)学习策略:对所学内容能主动练习和实践,积极与他人合作,共同完成学习任务。
文化意识: 熟悉家庭成员的英语表达及如何向别人介绍;介绍某人的职业。
情感态度:逐步培养学生用英语交流的好习惯。
教育学生要懂礼貌、讲文明。
培养学生对英语的喜爱。
第一课时主要语言功能:熟悉家庭成员的英语表达及如何向别人介绍;介绍某人的职业。
主要学习任务:This is your sister. That is my mother.She’s a teacher. He’s a doctor. (听、说、认读)主要词汇:mother father grandpa grandma sister学习策略:对所学内容能主动练习和实践,积极与他人合作,共同完成学习任务。
文化意识: 熟悉家庭成员的英语表达及如何向别人介绍;介绍某人的职业。
情感态度:逐步培养学生用英语交流的好习惯。
教育学生要懂礼貌、讲文明。
培养学生对英语的喜爱。
教学准备:Multimedia,Card,Tape recorder,Book,pictures教学过程:一、free talk1.练习This is my _______. (用第一册学过的词汇和句型练习说身边的物品。
)2.小竞赛:看谁认识的多This is /That is (人物名字或动物名称) . (用已经学过的人物、动物图片让学生介绍第一册所出现的小朋友和小动物,复习巩固句型后引出新词mother/ father/friend)(图中人物动物图片都在一幅当中,可以让学生进行分辨远近来介绍)二、Presentation1.今天Sam一家和Daming他们一起去郊游了,让我们听一听他们都说了些什么?2.听第一遍录音:请用This is / That is______.及新授的单词介绍所看到的人物。
新概念第二册二单元原文
PreviewEnvironmental awareness takes second place to economic development in most nations of the world. As damage to our environment increases, however, some nations are developing programs to protect their natural resources. The first passage in this unit describes some of these national programs. The second passage tells us how some cities have begun to increase the amount of green space for their citizens. The third passage emphasizes the essential nature of water to our living planet and how we upset the balance of nature by polluting our water supply. Read more to learn how we must live in balance with nature or we will destroy the earth home we share.IntroductionIn most parts of the world, environmental awareness does not exist. The great majority of nations concern themselves with economic development, regardlessof its effect on the globalecology. But in recent years, as environmental damage has increased, signs of change have sprungup in various pockets around the world. The following are a few examples of countries undertaking new environmental initiatives.CanadaWhen European explorers first came to the New World, the fishing grounds off what would become eastern Canada and New England held abundantcod and other species. The area, called the GrandBanks, was the most abundant fishing ground in the world.Now, 500 years later, excessive fishing has reduced the number of fish to dangerously low levels. In response, Canada has closed the area to cod fishing and set strict limits on catches of other species.When Canada took similar measuresto protect the supply of herring in the 1970s, the fish eventually recovered. But experts say that some species today have been so wasted, they may never recover. The government also faces protests from Canadian fishermen. About 40,000 are now unemployed asaresultof the fishing bans and loss of their fish supply.CostaRicaThis Central American country has one of the most ambitious programs in the world to reserve the ecological diversity of its tropical rain forests. Much of the country has already been clear-cut, and soil erosion has been extensive. But a series of new environmental laws, together with the creation of parks and nature preserves that cover one quarter of the country, are aimedat protecting Costa Rica’s remaining forests.BrazilBrazil is home to the world’s largest jungle rain forest, the Amazon. For decades, the government sought to colonize and develop the Amazon, bringing severe environmental disaster to the area and its people.But in 1991, under pressure from environmentalists around the world, Brazil reversed course. It ended tax favors that had encouraged clearing of the Amazon rain forest, and agreedto a plan to finance new forest protection projects.Cattle farmers, miners, and settlers have protested the move and continue to destroy the forests, although at a slower pace than before. The conflict enlarged last year when miners killed a group of Amazon Indians in order to seize their land. The government promises it will protect the region’snative people, but questions remain as to its true level of commitment.Eastern EuropeThe nations of Eastern Europe, including Poland, Hungary, and the Czech and Slovak Republics, are considered the most polluted of all the world’s industrialized countries. Heavy metals from coal mining have contaminated much of the area’s waters. Rivers, land, and forests are so contaminated that many are now biologically dead.In a special series of treaties, Eastern European countries and other nations, including the United States, have setup special funds for environmental cleanups and improving the region’s power plants. In addition, Germany and the Czech Republic have signed a treaty to protect the ElbeRiver from further contamination. Experts say the treaty could serve as a model for protecting other rivers in the region, including the Oder and Danube.GhanaGhana’s population has been growing by 3.2 percent a year. This explosive growth has ledtoremoval of forests in much of the country, and excessive use of existing farmland. Forests have been cut down at the rate of 278 square miles a year.In response, the government has urged local villages to create more shared farmland. It has sponsored the growing of cashcrops such as cassava, maize, cotton, and the planting of trees to regenerate waste land. Observers say the program has succeeded in strengthening the country’s agricultural base and bringing a new source of wealth to villagers. But it remains to be seen whether these measures will have enough impact to slow the rate of removing the forests. IndonesiaIndonesians have traditionally favored large families, and their major religion, Islam, frowns on birthcontrol. But with 188 million people, the country is now struggling to provide enough food, shelter, and employment for its people. In recent years, the government has waged a massivead campaign to encourage birth control, offering inducements such as free trips to Mecca, the birthplace of Islam in SaudiArabia.The government has succeeded in increasing use of birth control from 10 percent of the population 20 years ago to 49 percent today. As a result, the average number of births has been cut from 5.6 children per woman to 3. The government hopes to reduce this average to 2.1 children per woman by 2005. But with such a large population base, the country must still convert millions more to the idea of birth control if it is to reach its population targets.Words: 796Where do children play? Years ago, any openfield, any vacant lot, any group of trees -- these were the places where children played. As families left family farms, small towns, and the countryside, and moved into cities, the places for their children to play in became rarer. Children in the cities had few options, fewer choices of places to play.Infact, all people's lives change a lot when they move to the city. In cities, homes are built ontopof one another -- in enormous apartment buildings. The feeling of private space and ownership no longer exists in houses literally piled one on the other.Psychologists have been studying the changes people experience when they leave rural areas and move into urban environments. One clear finding from their studies is that people need greenspaces for better mental health. Children can play on paved playgrounds. That's true. However, they just don't have as much fun as children in small towns. Without grass and trees and bushes and, yes, dirt and mud to get dirty in, children miss an important part of childhood. The human soul, it seems, needs to stay close to its roots.Adults can plant lots of things like bulbs in window boxes and large containers. However, tending window boxes isn't the same as being an amateurgardener and growing peas, tomatoes and salad greens in a backyard garden. The lack of green space is now recognized and understood as a problem.City planners -- the people who design neighborhoods -- have begun to workon a solution. They want to build more parks, but land in cities is quite costly. So they look for land that no one else wants. Along rivers, under powerlines, near ditches and highways -- these are the spaces that no one uses and they are everywhere. Why not use these unused spaces for green areas? Neighborhood groups have coordinatedtheireffortstocleanup the trash or garbage. Soil from new building projects in the city has been trucked by lorries into these areas. This soil has been dumped along the sides of rivers, and strong walls have been erected to hold it there. Trees and bushes have been planted; the roots of these plants will hold the soil, too, and the green leaves make the area beautiful."People in and near cities have little opportunity to experience parks or unprotected open spaces, and that's becoming a problem," says MisterErnestCook, a senior vice president of the Trust for Public Land (TPL). This organization was started over twenty-one years ago. Its purpose is to protect land and public resources for people. In the past nineteen years, TPL has completed upto a thousand conservation projects in Canada and the United States.In Portland, Maine, the land along the old train tracks near the coast has become a green belt of trails between areas characterized by housing developments and those characterized by downtown businesses. To Mister CharlesJordan, the director of the Portland Parks and Recreation Department, it's just a beginning. Jordan has plans for an environmental university -- a huge urban park (5,000 acres). It will include different environments, from canals and wetlands to forests. Jordan's plans include a network of trails and paths for people to use for excursions all over the city. He also wants to build a green belt from Portland, across Canada and the United States, all the way back to the Pacific Ocean. Communities across the continent could be connected by such a green belt. Other cities have comparable projects. In Phoenix, Arizona, forinstance, the sides of the Salt River bed that have washedaway are becoming a park. In Baltimore, a long strip of land (which was used for dumping garbage) is becoming a series of biking and walking trails. These trails will link a dozen neighborhoods and the downtown business areas. In some cities, the bicycle paths connect every area to every other area. In Flagstaff, Arizona, a thousand miles of bike trails leadinto the San Francisco Peaks, the highest summit in the state.In other areas, planners have made places for bicycle trails and playgrounds, for public gardens and private garden plots, and paths for walking and running excursions. The costly result is a growing greenness in the cities and a healthier environment for all the civilians who live there.Words: 730Earth looks like a big blue marble (玻璃球); from high above the Earth and from the moon, the planet gleams and shines. The blue water in the oceans and seas of the Earth makes a dramatic image. The white clouds above the Earth add beauty to the picture. Water is the source of this beauty and the source of life on Earth. It is the reason people can live on this planet. Water is everywhere. It is in the air that people breathe. It is in the soil, the ground that grows the food. Water is in rock deep under the ground, in natural holding areas -- in storage. In a real sense, water keeps Earth alive.Nature has an unchanging amount of water. Nature has a perfect system for recycling water. Water is used again and again. It falls as rain. Then it goes to one of three places. It might sink slowly through the soil into the natural holding areas in the rock. It might disappear into the air quickly -- by becoming vapor, or gas. It might run off into streams, rivers and oceans. By itself, nature can keep the balance and provide plenty of clean water for us. Nature recycles water.However, people cause problems for this natural recycling system. Nature's recycling system can work well only if people work with the system and not against it. Some ways that people upset nature are easy to understand. For example, dirty sewage (污水沟系统) water from homes and factories must not mix with drinking water. People get sick from drinking contaminated water. Sometimes water from factories goes into streams and rivers. It enters into the groundwater. It can flow into lakes too. This kind of contamination from industry (waste water from factories) can be dangerous for people. If water contains poisons and chemicals, it is poison. Poison makes people sick; some poisons kill people as well as birds and animals. Without knowing, people can upset nature's recycling system.Lakes and rivers add beauty to the world. People enjoy water for entertainment purposes, too. People enjoy swimming and playing in the cool water of a lake in the summer. They like to ride on boats on rivers. Many people enjoy catching fish in the rivers. They fish for food and for sport. However, in some places, the water of the lakes and rivers is no longer safe. These rivers and lakes are contaminated. The fish are dying because of the chemicals from farms and factories. People cannot swim in the polluted water.There are other ways that people disturb nature. Some of these ways are not easy to understand. For example, of what use is a wet land? No one can plant crops on it. No one can build a house on it. Therefore, engineers have removed the water from some wet-lands in order to make useful land. Many shopping centers stand on dry land today, land that was once wet and full of marshes. Yet the soft and wet ground of a marsh serves an important purpose in nature. In a marsh, the surface water can sink slowly down through the soil into the rock below. Nature's holding area fills slowly with that clean, filtered water.Housing developments and shopping centers cover much of the Earth with paved and concrete surfaces. Water cannot sink through these hard surfaces. Rainwater cannot sink into the ground because of the buildings, roads, and parking lots. So it floods parking lots and flows into basements. Engineers build huge storm pipes or sewers (污水沟) to carry the storm water away, but these cause another problem. They carry all of the water away. Not much water can sink into the holding areas under the ground. The once unlimited supply of fresh, clean water is now limited. Nature's recycling system is in danger.Because of water, Earth is a living planet. People can live here because of water. They build large dams to store water in huge man-made lakes. The water in these lakes can water farmland and provide water for cities. Water from the dams can make electricity, called hydroelectricity since it is made from water power. These hydroelectric (水电的) projects produce electricity for the people of nearby cities and towns. However, these dams also cause problems. In some places, the holding areas behind thedams have destroyed the environment for animals, birds, and plants.One thing is certain -- the balance of nature on this water planet is easily upset. And upsetting the natural water cycle (循环) on Earth makes significant problems for its inhabitants. All of us share these problems. Water gives life to our planet. We must learn to live in balance with nature, or our shining planet Earth will die.Words: 797。
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New Standard English 2B Module 2
【教学内容】
New Standard English 2B Module 2
Unit 1 They’re monkeys.
【教学目标】
1、知识目标
(1)词汇:they, monkey, lion, elephant, tiger, big, small, fat, thin. (2)句型:What’s this? It’s a tiger. What are they? They’re monkey. They’re small.
(3)灵活运用:It’s a… It’s big. They’re… they’re small.
2、能力目标
(1)在学习和应用本课知识的过程中,培养学生的发散思维、创新思维,从而提高学生的自学能力。
(2)小组合作讨论、交流,让学生感受到把所学知识融会到实际交往中的乐趣,从而激发学生的学习兴趣。
【教学重难点】
识别并描述动物。
【教学准备】
多媒体课件,教材配套录音带,单词卡片,动物图片,动物玩具
【教学过程】
1 、热身、复习 (Warm-up/Revision)
老师热情地和学生打招呼问好,带领学生唱字母歌“ABC song”.
2、呈现新课 (Presentation)
(1)游戏:猜动物。
T: Listen to me, children. Guess what it is.
It has a long nose. It has two big ears and a short tail. It’s gray. 教师在说谜语时,可适当配合一些手势或动作。
引导学生说出动物名称后出示相应单词
“elephant”并教学。
(2)请一组学生到教室前面借助肢体动作和声音扮演一群猴子。
T:“What are they?”
S:They are monkeys.
(3)老师再请几组学生到前面扮演其他动物。
老师引导全班提问:“What are they?”并回答:“They’re …”比一比看哪组表演最生动、最形象。
(4)T: You will see a beautiful picture. Look at it carefully and tell us:
What’s in it?/What are they? 说完教师播放课件,快速展示系列动物图片:elephant, lion, monkey , tiger, panda。
学生根据看到的图片说说动物单词,培养观察力和记忆力。
(5)继续展示图片:An elephant and a monkey. 对比大象和猴子。
T: What are they? They are an elephant and a monkey. Oh, Look! The elephant is very big. But the monkey is very small. 教师强调big 和small 。
此时,教师可播放动画课件, 将鼠标移到elephant 的图案上,图案elephant的下面出现单词big 。
将鼠标移到monkey 的图案上,图案monkey的下面出现单词small。
接着学生两人一组比较学习用品的大小,例如:“My bag is big. Your bag is small.用同样的方法教授“fat”和“thin”。
注意:单词small 中[ l ] 的发音,教师提示学生舌头要上卷。
(6)完整播放动画, 学生跟读学习单词; 教师也可关闭声音, 让学生看动画读单词。
(7)教师播放录音,提出问题:“What animals are big? What animals are
small? What animals are fat?”学生听两遍后回答问题。
老师对回答正确的学生给予表扬。
(8)再次播放录音,请学生跟读课文,并分角色表演课文。
鼓励学生在表演中使用夸张的语气,运用丰富的表情。
3、趣味操练
(1)请学生看AB Unit1 练习1中的图,并找出图中隐藏的动物并给它涂上
颜色。
请学生对所看到的动物及颜色进行描述,例如:“It’s a tiger. It’s yellow.”然后请学生两人一组练习2的活动,学生轮流指着练习1中的动物图进行问答。
(2)教师再次播放课件,让学生看到什么动物就学什么动物的动作并模仿其声音。
4 、课堂评价 (Assessment)
完成运用任务3,请学生识别练习3中的五幅图,并理解题意。
仔细听音,判断所听到录音是否与图画一致,画上相应的钩或叉。
5 、扩展性活动(Add-activities)
让学生说出他们知道的动物名称,如:panda, , duck, cat, dog, tiger, elephant, monkey, loin 。
随后,让学生分小组将自己准备好的动物玩具拿出,用形容词来描述动物。
如:The panda is very fat. The elephant has a long
nose.还可以告诉学生,颜色词也是在形容事物,鼓励学生将一种事物的样子和颜色都说说,如:The panda has two black eyes.
6、课后作业
请学生画一幅动物园的图,用英文描述每种动物的特征,下节课向全班同学展示。
【板书设计】
Unit 1 They’re monkeys
small big fat thin
(图片和词卡)。