loving-and-hating-new-york课后练习答案

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Lesson 14 Loving and Hating New York

Lesson 14 Loving and Hating New York

in the Clavierrubung, which includes: six partitas (1726--1731)~ the Italian Concerto and the Partita in B minor (1735)~ and the Goldberg Variations. The bulk of his work is religious. In addition, he composed an astonishing number of instrumental works, many of them designed for the instruction of his numerous pupils. In his instrumental and choral works he perfected the art of polyphony, displaying an unmatched combination of inventiveness and control in his great, striding fugues. During his lifetime, Bach was better known as an organist than as a composer. For decades after his death his works were neglected, but in the 19th century his genius came to be recognized, particularly by romantic composers such as Mendelssohn and Schumann. Since that time his reputation has grown steadily.

Loving-and-Hating-New-York-补充测试题

Loving-and-Hating-New-York-补充测试题

Loving and Hating New York 补充练习题/testLoving and Hating New YorkⅠ. Reading comprehension1. Many Europeans take New York as their favorite city, because ________.A. They are reassured by the sight of the fashionavenues of Madison and Fifth.B. There are many familiar international names inNew York.C. New York’s charged nervous atmosphere andvulgar dynamism.D. New York city is a cosmopolitan city.2. In author’s eyes, New York is ________.A. a sacred placeB. a mongrel cityC. a international metropolisD. a conventional city3. The signs of how the New York fallen cannot be seen from ________.A. New York never boasted its greatness.B. Many advertising campaigns publicly praiseNew York.C. Many New Yorkers wear T-shirts with a heartdesign and the words: “ I love New York” printed on it.D. New York is trying desperately to regain her lostprivileged status.4. From where the author begins to give an actual description of New York itself.A. The last sentence of paragraph 5.B. The first sentence of paragraph 6.C. From paragraph 1-5.D. The whole essay.5. Which of the following cities is located in New York?A. JerseyB. SohoC. NashvilleD. Beverly HillsⅡ. Determine whether the following statements are true or false. Put “T”, if the statement is true and put an “F”, if false.1. According to the author, New York is no longer the2. New York is a city that resists the prevailing trends of America and it is a place where people can escape from3. Europeans take to New York because they feel reassured when they see so many jewelers, shoes stores and designer shops bearing familiar international names4. The rhetorical device employed in “ Nature constantlyyields to man …” is personification.5. It is the fascination charm of New York as well as the opportunity to be a journalist that attracts the author to6. It is the good living conditions that draw those young7. The sentence “ All have their sovereignties” means all the different ethnic groups have their own little areas8. New York is not longer the banking and9. The newcomers to New York are never fully10. New York regards the United Nations as an unworkable, impractical and hypocriticalⅢ. Point out what figure of speech is used in each of the following sentences:1. While sitcoms cloned and canned in Hollywood, and the Johnny Carson show live, pre-empt the air waves2. Tin Pan Alley has moved to Nashville and4. Nature constantly yields to man in New York: witness those fragile sidewalk trees gamely struggling against5. So much of well-to-do America now lives antiseptically in enclaves, tranquil and luxurious, that7. The defeated are not hidden away somewhere else on8. Characteristically, the city swallows up the United Nations and refuses to take it seriously, regarding it as an unworkable mixture of the idealistic, the impractical, andforeign invaders.Ⅳ.Choose the word or phrase which best completes each sentence.1. He fought back at his tormentors with ________ of a corner red rat.A. dejectionB. depressionC. desperationD. despair2. He monopolized the conversation by ________ of his own prowess at hunting and fishing.A. boastingB. braggingC. crowingD. vaunting3. It was alleged that he was present at the scene of the crime, but he ________ that he was in Europe at the time.A. assertedB. maintainedC. affirmedD. testified4. It has become the ________ for royalty to appears as democratic and “ folksy” as the average politician.A. fashionB. trendC. vogueD. style5. The ________ between Guelphs and Ghibellines in medieval Italy passed from controversy over papal authority to petty was between city states.A. contentionB. frictionC. conflictD. strife6. He was too nervous to speak and had to be ________ .A. promptedB. motivatedD. propelled7. A short cut through the mountain is extremely________ in winter.A. distantB. inaccessibleC. remoteD. dessert8. Australia ________ the Treaty of Peace with Japan on 10th April, 1952; New Zealand on 29th April, 1952.A. confirmedB. sanctionedC. ratifiedD. approved9. He is a poet with ________ imagination.A. luxuriousB. luxuriantC. lusciousD. lustrous10. ________ clod hoppers guffawed at seeing male ballet dancers wearing tights.A. naiveC. unsophisticatedD. provincial11. He felt listless until the sea breeze ________ him and steadied his nerves.A. cheeredB. encouragedC. exhilaratedD. excited12. She endured her illness with great __________A. fortitudeB. forbearanceC. persistenceD. resolution13. Mary is no long willing to meet her husband’s bullying with docile ________.A. patienceB. sufferanceC. toleranceD. forbearance14. The actress was becoming extremely _________ with all the questions they were asking by the uncalled-forinnuendo in the reporter’s questio n.A. outragedB. aggravatedC. exasperatedD. insulted15. It would be ________ of me to have a church wedding when I don’t believe in God.A. hypocriticalB. hypercriticalC. hystericalD. hypothetical16. He balanced the glass ________ on the arm of the chair.A. precociouslyB. precariouslyC. precautionaryD. precipitously17. You can rest ______ that the talented young secretary has been able to confirm what he said in the original report.A. assuredB. ensuredC. insuredD. reassured18. The leader’s speech in defense of the policy didn’t carry much ________.A. convictionB. beliefC. confidenceD. concern19. American revolutionaries who rejected England’s claim of ________ over the colonies.A. sovereigntyB. authorityC. powerD. right20. The public is very _____ about the governor's plans for a tax cut.A. susceptibleB. dubiousC. suspiciousD. deliberate21. The two countries will _____ full diplomatic relations now that they have settled their long standingborder dispute.A. recoveB. restoreC. renovateD. replace22. Everyone in the auditorium was weeping by the time he finished the _____ tale, though it was fabricated obviously.A. pessimisticB. patheticC. patrioticD. melancholyⅤ.Put the following words and phrases into the appropriate blanks in the following sentences.measure up against cut off … from in terms of be reckoned with look up to out of phase with yield to beckon to out of step with swallow upteaching.disadvantages.6. He ________ himself ________ all human7. The figures are not very good8. I watched her walk down the road until sheregarded as an eccentric woman.Ⅵ.Fill in each blank with a suitable verb from the lists below in the proper form.decline decrease diminish drop dwindle lessen reduce1. I hope to obtain your forgiveness,2. His sense of personal initiative is cultivated3. The number of nations allied withbecause of the eradication of malarial mosquitoes.5. Certain medicines are said to be effectivepeople’s weight.6. It is said that her vitality and creativityplayed truant.8. Owing to the strike, coal supplies9. I hope the number of mistakes you make inskeleton.11. My aunt has decided to spend12. Mr. Smith’s hopes ____ as his fortune13. The price of the new products hasproductivity.extravagance and ill-management.border edge fringe marginrim verge15. The proposal was carried by a verycracked.stove.18. Don’t go near theyou may stumble and topple over.along the mountain ridge.20. He pushed the leftovers of the food on21. When writing the composition, be sure to22. When the toy was taken away, the girl23. Professor Hill always writes his commentsOrinoco wilderness, is dominated by a profusion of motor traffic.25. The bond issue, proposed as a way of financing a centennial celebration, failed by a26. The thin detective with thegarden.27. Owing to the poor management, this firm28. At the wedding, though the in-laws on theselves as much as “the privileged group”, the atmosphere was, on the whole, genial and harmonious.29. These recruits are going to be sent to guard the farm on the Chinese side of30. Many young graduates like to work in thepublishing house now not because ofpleasant working environment it provides for all.Ⅶ.For each blank in the following passage, choose the most suitable word from the list of words provided below. Each work can be used once only. Write your choice of words in its proper form in the corresponding blanks in the passage.grudge In the light of willingly freedom knowledge philosophers spiritual comfort measure passers-by measure the only exception in terms of is fully aware of estimate steal occasionally nothing in the open envious of the world of nature beggars sacrifice is free from be paid for human dignity with easeNothing to Sell and Nothing to BuyIt has been said that everyone lives bypeople perform for us. There are times whenpossess to save our lives, yet we mightoffering us precisely this service. The conditions of society are such that skills havepaid for at a shop. Everyone has something togeneral rule. Beggars almost sell themselves as human beings to arouse the pity ofindependence, they do not sacrifice theirHe has deliberately chosen to lead the life hemay never be sure where the next meal isof anxieties which afflict other people. His few material possessions make it possible for himalive; he may even, in times real need, do afreedom. We often speak of tramps with contempt and put them in the same class as beggars, but how many of us can honestly saycare?Ⅷ.TranslationThe Flight of YouthThere are gains for all our losses.There are balms for all our pain:But when youth, the dream, departsIt takes something from our hearts, And it never comes again.We are stronger, and are better,Under manhood’s stern er reign:Still we feel that something sweetFollowed youth, with flying feet,And will never come again.Something beautiful is vanished,And we sigh for it in vain;We behold it everywhere,On the earth, and in the air,But it never comes again!第二册第14课练习答案1-1: /答案:C1-2: /答案:C1-3: /答案:A1-4: /答案:A1-5: /答案:B2-1: /答案:T2-2: /答案:F2-3: /答案:F2-4: /答案:T2-5: /答案:F2-6: /答案:F2-7: /答案:T2-8: /答案:F2-9: /答案:T2-10: /答案:T3-1: /答案:alliteration3-2: /答案:metonymy3-3: /答案:metaphor3-4: /答案:personification3-5: /答案:synecdoche metaphor 3-6: /答案:irony3-7: /答案:euphemism3-8: /答案:personification4-1: /答案:C4-2: /答案:A4-3: /答案:A4-4: /答案:A4-5: /答案:C4-6: /答案:A4-7: /答案:B4-8: /答案:C4-9: /答案:B4-10: /答案:D4-11: /答案:C4-12: /答案:A4-13: /答案:D4-14: /答案:C4-15: /答案:A4-16: /答案:B4-17: /答案:A4-15: /答案:A4-19: /答案:A4-20: /答案:B4-21: /答案:B4-22: /答案:D5-1: /答案:be reckoned with5-2: /答案:looked up to5-3: /答案:out of phase with5-4: /答案:yielded to5-5: /答案:in terms of5-6: /答案:cut off … from5-7: /答案:measure up against 5-8: /答案:swallowed up5-9: /答案:beckoned to5-10: /答案:out of step with6-1: /答案:lessen6-2: /答案:diminished6-3: /答案:decreased6-4: /答案:dropped6-5: /答案:reducing6-6: /答案:declining6-7: /答案:dwindled6-8: /答案:diminishing / decreasing 6-9: /答案:decrease6-10: /答案:reduced6-11: /答案:declining6-12: /答案:diminished, dwindled6-13: /答案:reduced6-14: /答案:diminished / dwindled6-15: /答案:margin6-16: /答案:rim6-17: /答案:edge6-18: /答案:edge6-19: /答案:border6-20: /答案:edge6-21: /答案:margin6-22: /答案:verge6-23: /答案:margins6-24: /答案:fringes6-25: /答案:margin6-26: /答案:rimmed6-27: /答案:verge6-28: /答案:fringes6-29: /答案:border6-30: /答案:fringe7-1: /答案:In the light of7-2: /答案:knowledge7-3: /答案:philosophers7-4: /答案:spiritual comfort7-5: /答案:measure7-6: /答案:in terms of7-7: /答案:estimate7-8: /答案:willingly7-9: /答案:grudge7-10: /答案:be paid for7-11: /答案:the only exception 7-12: /答案:passers-by7-13: /答案:beggars7-14: /答案:nothing7-15: /答案:human dignity7-16: /答案:feel sorry for7-17: /答案:is fully aware of7-18: /答案:is free from7-19: /答案:with ease7-20: /答案:in the open7-21: /答案:the world of nature7-22: /答案:steal occasionally7-23: /答案:sacrifice7-24: /答案:envious of7-25: /答案:freedom8:青春的飞逝/我们失去的一切都能得到补偿/我们所有的痛苦都能得到安慰/可是梦境似的青春一旦消逝/它带走了我们心中某种美好的事物/从此一去不复返回/严峻的成年生活将我们驱使/我们变得日益刚强、更臻完美/可是依然感到某种甜美的东西/已随着青春飞逝/永不再返回/美好的东西已经消失/我们枉自为此叹息/虽然在天地之间/我们到处能看见青春的魅力/可是它永不再返回!。

Loving and Hating New York译文亦爱亦恨话纽约

Loving and Hating New York译文亦爱亦恨话纽约

亦爱亦恨话纽约那些赞美“大苹果”的广告活动,还有那些印着带有“我爱纽约”字样的心形图案的T恤衫,只不过是它们在绝望中发出悲哀的迹象,只不过是纽约这个非凡的城市日趋衰落的象征。

纽约过去从不自我炫耀,而只让别的城市去这样做,因为自我炫耀显得“小家子气”。

纽约既然是独一无二的、最大的而且是最好的城市,也就没有必要宣称自己是如何与众不同了。

然而,今日的纽约再不是头号城市了。

至少,在开创时尚、领导潮流方面,纽约是再也45配不_卜这个称号了。

今日的纽约非但常常跟不上美国政治前进的步伐,而且往往也合不上美国人生活情趣变化的节拍。

过去有一个时期,它曾是全国流行服装款式方面无可争议的权威,但由于长期抵制越来越流行的休闲服装款式而丧失了,其垄断地位。

纽约已不再是众望所归、纷起仿效的对象了,如今它甚至以成为风行美国的时装潮流的抵制者,以成为摆脱全国清一色的单调局面的一隅逃遁之地而自鸣得意。

纽约无力保持排头兵的地位这一点已是越来越明显了。

有十多座其他城市都已经有了一些在建筑艺术上很富有创造性的建筑物,而纽约最近二十年来所造的任何一幢建筑物都不能与之相比。

曾是托斯卡尼尼全国广播公司交响乐团演出场所的巨人般的曼哈顿电视演播厅,现在经常是空无一人,而好莱坞大量生产出的情景喜剧和约翰尼·卡森节目的实况转播却占满了加利福尼亚的广播电视发送频道。

美国流行歌曲创作发行中心从纽约的廷潘胡同转移到了纳什维尔和好莱坞。

拉斯韦加斯的赌场经常出高薪聘请曼哈顿没有哪一家夜总会请得起的歌手和艺员。

而体育运动方面,那些规模较大的体育馆、比较激动人心的球队以及热情最高的球迷们,往往都出现在纽约以外的地方。

纽约从来都不是召集会议的好场所——因为那儿少友情.不安全,人口拥挤,消费高昂——但现在它似乎正在一定程度上争回其作为旅游胜地的地位。

即便如此,大多数美国人对新奥尔良、旧金山、华盛顿或迪斯尼乐园等地的评价可能还是高于纽约。

人们普遍认为,还有十几座其他城市,包括我的家乡西雅图,都比纽约更适于居住。

Loving and hating New York第3段讲解

Loving and hating New York第3段讲解

inspire、motivate、stimulate 区别
• inspire 多用于勇气、希望、自信、热情等方面 eg. The actors inspired the kids with their enthusiasm. 演员以热情鼓舞着孩子们。
• motivate 特指激励工作努力 eg. She's very good at motivating her students. 她非常擅长 激励她的学生。 • stimulate刺激身体、心理或某人器官只能用stimulate eg. The exhibition has stimulated interest in her work. 展览增进了人们对她作品的兴趣。
曾是托斯卡尼尼全国广播公司交响乐团演出场所的巨人 般的曼哈顿电视演播厅,现在经常是空无一人,而好莱 坞大量生产出的情景喜剧和约翰尼•卡森节目的实况转 播却占满了加利福尼亚的广播电视发送频道。
Manhattan
an island and borough of New York City in New York Bay, between the Hudson River and the East River.
S3: The giant Manhattan television studios where Toscanini’s NBC Symphony once played now sit empty most of the time, while sitcoms cloned and canned in Hollywood, and the Johnny Carson show live, preempt the airways from California.

loving_and_hating_new_york_课文翻译

loving_and_hating_new_york_课文翻译

第十四课亦爱亦恨话纽约托马斯格里非斯那些赞美"大苹果"的广告活动,还有那些印着带有"我爱纽约"字样的心形图案的T恤衫,只不过是它们在绝望中发出悲哀的迹象,只不过是纽约这个非凡的城市日趋衰落的象征。

纽约过去从不自我炫耀,而只让别的城市去这样做,因为自我炫耀显得"小家子气"。

纽约既然是独一无二的、最大的而且是最好的城市,也就没有必要宣称自己是如何与众不同了。

然而,今日的纽约再不是头号城市了。

至少,在开创时尚、领导潮流方面,纽约是再也配不_卜这个称号了。

今日的纽约非但常常跟不上美国政治前进的步伐,而且往往也合不上美国人生活情趣变化的节拍。

过去有一个时期,它曾是全国流行服装款式方面无可争议的权威,但由于长期抵制越来越流行的休闲服装款式而丧失了,其垄断地位。

纽约已不再是众望所归、纷起仿效的对象了,如今它甚至以成为风行美国的时装潮流的抵制者,以成为摆脱全国清一色的单调局面的一隅逃遁之地而自鸣得意。

纽约无力保持排头兵的地位这一点已是越来越明显了。

有十多座其他城市都已经有了一些在建筑艺术上很富有创造性的建筑物,而纽约最近二十年来所造的任何一幢建筑物都不能与之相比。

曾是托斯卡尼尼全国广播公司交响乐团演出场所的巨人般的曼哈顿电视演播厅,现在经常是空无一人,而好莱坞大量生产出的情景喜剧和约翰尼·卡森节目的实况转播却占满了加利福尼亚的广播电视发送频道。

美国流行歌曲创作发行中心从纽约的廷潘胡同转移到了纳什维尔和好莱坞。

拉斯韦加斯的赌场经常出高薪聘请曼哈顿没有哪一家夜总会请得起的歌手和艺员。

而体育运动方面,那些规模较大的体育馆、比较激动人心的球队以及热情最高的球迷们,往往都出现在纽约以外的地方。

纽约从来都不是召集会议的好场所--因为那儿少友情.不安全,人口拥挤,消费高昂--但现在它似乎正在一定程度上争回其作为旅游胜地的地位。

即便如此,大多数美国人对新奥尔良、旧金山、华盛顿或迪斯尼乐园等地的评价可能还是高于纽约。

loving and hating new york 课文和翻译

loving and hating new york 课文和翻译

Loving and Hating New YorkThomas Griffith1 Those ad campaigns celebrating the Big Apple, those T-shirts with a heart design proclaiming “I love New York,” are signs, pathetic in their desperation, of how the mighty has fallen. New York City used to leave the bragging to others, for bragging was “bush” Being unique, the biggest and the best, New York didn’t have to assert how special it was.2 It isn’t the top anymore, at least if the top is measured by who begets the styles and sets the trends. Nowadays New York is out of phase with American taste as often as it is out of step with American politics. Once it was the nation’s undisputed fashion authority, but it too long resisted the incoming casual style and lost its monopoly. No longer so looked up to or copied, New York even prides itself on being a holdout from prevailing American trends, a place to escape Common Denominator Land.3 Its deficiencies as a pacesetter are more and more evident. A dozen other cities have buildings more inspired architecturally than any built in New York City in the past twenty years. The giant Manhattan television studios where Toscanini’s NBC Symphony once played now sit empty most of the time, while sitcoms cloned and canned in Hollywood, and the Johnny Carson show live, preempt the airways from California. Tin Pan Alley has moved to Nashville and Hollywood. Vegas casinos routinely pay heavy sums to singers and entertainers whom no nightspot in Manhattan can afford to hire. In sports, the bigger superdomes, the more exciting teams, the most enthusiastic fans, are often found elsewhere.4 New York was never a good convention city – being regarded as unfriendly, unsafe, overcrowded, and expensive – but it is making something of a comeback as a tourist attraction. Even so, most Americans would probably rate New Orleans, San Francisco, Washington, or Disneyland higher. A dozen other cities, including my hometown of Seattle, are widely considered better cities to live in.5 Why, then, do many Europeans call New York their favorite city? They take more readily than do most Americans to its cosmopolitan complexities, its surviving, aloof, European standards, its alien mixtures. Perhaps some of these Europeans are reassured by the sight, on the twin fashion avenues of Madison and Fifth, of all those familiar international names – the jewelers, shoe stores, and designer shops that exist to flatter and bilk the frivolous rich. But no; what most excites Europeans is the city’s charged , nervous atmosphere, its vulgar dynamism .6 New York is about energy, contention, and striving. And since it contains its share of articulate losers, it is also about mockery, the put-down , the loser’s shrug (“whaddya gonna do?”). It is about constant battles for subway seats, for a cabdriver’s or a clerk’s or a waiter’s attention, for a foothold , a chance, a better address, a larger billing. To win in New York is to be uneasy; to lose is to live in jostling proximity to the frustrated majority.7 New York was never Mecca to me. And though I have lived there more than half my life, you won’t find me wearing an “I Love New York” T-shirt. But all in all, I can’, t think of many places in the world I’d rather li, ve. It’, s not easy to define why.8 Nature’s pleasures are much qualified in N, ew York, . You nev er see a star-filled sky; the city’s bright glow arrogantly obscures the heavens. Sunsets can be spectacular: oranges and reds tinting the sky over the Jersey meadows and gaudily reflected in a thousand windows on Manhattan’s jagged skyline. Nature constantly yields to man in New York: witness those fragile sidewalk trees gamely struggling against encroaching cement and petrol fumes. Central Park, which Frederick Law Olmsted designed as lungs for the city’s poor, is in places grassless and filled with trash, no longer pristine yet lively with the noise and vivacity of people, largely youths, blacks, and Puerto Ricans, enjoying themselves. On park benches sit older people, mostly white, looking displaced. It has become less a tranquil park than an untidy carnival.9 Not the glamour of the city, which never beckoned to me from a distance, but its opportunity –to practice the kind of journalism I wanted –drew me to New York. I wasn’t even sure how I’d measure up against others who had been more soundly educated at Ivy League schools, or whether I could compete against that tough local breed, those intellectual sons of immigrants, so highly motivated and single-minded, such as Alfred Kazin, who for diversion (for heaven’t sake!) played Bach’s Unaccompanied Parti tas on the violin.10 A testing of oneself, a fear of giving in to the most banal and marketable of one’s talents, still draws many of the young to New York. That and, as always, the company of others fleeing something constricting where they came from. Together these young share a freedom, a community of inexpensive amusements, a casual living, and some rough times. It can’t be the living conditions that appeal, for only fond memory will forgive the inconvenience, risk, and squalor. Commercial Broadway may be inaccessible to them, but there is off- Broadway, and then off-off-Broadway. If painters disdain Madison Avenue’s plush art galleries, Madison Avenue dealers set up shop in the grubby precincts of Soho. But the purity of a bohemian dedication can be exaggerated. The artistic young inhabit the same Greenwich Village and its fringes in which the experimentalists in the arts lived during the Depression, united by a world against them. But the present generation is enough of a subculture to be a source of profitable boutiques and coffeehouses. And it is not all that estranged.11 Manhattan is an island cut off in most respects from mainland America, but in two areas it remains dominant. It is the banking and the communications headquarters for America. In both these roles it ratifies more than it creates. Wall Street will advance the millions to make a Hollywood movie only if convinced that a bestselling title or a star name will ensure its success. The networks’ news centers are here, and the largest book pu blishers, and the biggest magazines –and therefore the largest body of critics to appraise the films, the plays, the music, the books that others have created. New York is a judging town, and often invokes standards that the rest of the country deplores o r ignores. A market for knowingness exists in New York that doesn’t exist for knowledge.12 The ad agencies are all here too, testing the markets and devising the catchy jingles that will move millions from McDonald’s to Burger king, so that the ad agency’s “creative director” can lunch instead in Manhattan’s expense-account French restaurants. The bankers and the admen. The marketing specialists and a thousand well-paid ancillary service people, really set the city’s brittle tone— catering to a wide American public whose numbers must be respected but whose tastes do not have to shared. The condescending view from the fiftieth floor of the city’s crowds below cuts these people off from humanity. So does an attitude which sees the public only in terms of large, malleable numbers— as impersonally as does the clattering subway turnstile beneath the office towers.13 I am surprised by the lack of cynicism, particularly among the younger ones, of those who work in such fields. The television generation grew up in the insistent presence of hype, delightsin much of it, and has no scruples about practicing it. Men and woman do their jobs professionally, and, like the pilots who from great heights bombed Hanoi, seem unmarked by it. They lead their real lives elsewhere, in the Village bars they are indistinguishable in dress or behavior from would-be artists, actors, and writers. The boundaries of “art for art’s sake” aren’t so rigid anymore; art itself is less sharply defined, and those whose paintings don’t sell do il lustrations; those who can’ get acting jobs do commercials; those who are writing ambitious novels sustain themselves on the magazines. Besides, serious art often feeds in the popular these days, changing it with fond irony.14 In time the newcomers find or from their won worlds; Manhatten is many such words, huddled together but rarely interaction. I think this is what gives the city its sense of freedom. There are enough like you, whatever you are. And it isn’t as necessary to know anything about an apart ment neighbor- or to worry about his judgment of you- as it is about someone with an adjoining yard. In New York, like seeks like, and by economy of effort excludes the rest as stranger. This distancing, this uncaring in ordinary encounters, has another side: in no other American city can the lonely be as lonely.15 So much more needs to be said. New Your is a wounded city, declining in its amenities . Overloaded by its tax burdens. But it is not dying city; the streets are safer than they were five years age; Broadway, which seemed to be succumbing to the tawdriness of its environment, is astir again.16 The trash-strewn streets, the unruly schools, the uneasy feeling or menace, the noise, the brusqueness- all confirm outsiders in their conviction that they wouldn’t live here if you gave them the place. Yet show a New Yorker a splendid home in Dallas, or a swimming pool and cabana in Beverly Hills, and he will be admiring but not envious. So much of well-to-do America now lives antiseptically in enclaves, tranquil and luxurious, that shut out the world. Too static, the New Yorker would say. Tell him about the vigor of your outdoor pleasures; he prefers the unhealthy hassle and the vitality of urban life. He is hopelessly provincial. To him New York- despite i ts faults, which her will impatiently concede (“so what else is new?”) — is the spoiler of all other American cities.17 It is possible in twenty other American cities to visit first-rate art museums, to hear good music and see lively experimental theater, to meet intelligent and sophisticated people who know how to live, dine, and talk well; and to enjoy all this in congenial and spacious surroundings. The New Yorkers still wouldn’t want to live there.18 What he would find missing is what many outsiders find oppressive and distasteful about New York – its rawness, tension, urgency; its bracing competitiveness; the rigor of its judgments; and the congested, democratic presence of so many other New Yorkers, encased in their own worlds, the defeated are not hidden away somewhere else on the wrong side of town. In the subways, in the buses, in the streets, it is impossible to avoid people whose lives are harder than yours. With the desperate, the ill, the fatigued, the overwhelmed, one learns not to strike up conversation (which isn’t wanted ) but to make brief, sympathetic eye contact, to include them in the human race. It isn’t much, but it is the fleeting hospitality of New Yorkers, each jealous of his privacy in the crowd. Ever helpfulness is often delivered as a taunt: a man, rushing the traffic light, shouts the man behind him. “ You want to be wearing a Buick with Jersey plates?” — great scorn in the word Jersey, home of drivers who don’t belong here.19 By Adolf Hitler’s definition, New York is mongrel ci ty. It is in fact the first truly international metropolis. No other great city- not London, Paris, Rome or Tokyo- plays host (or hostage) to so many nationalities. The mix is much wider- Asians, Africans, Latins - that when that tumultuous variety of European crowded ashore at Ellis Island. The newcomers are never fully absorbed, but are added precariously to the undigested many.20 New York is too big to be dominated by any group, by Wasps or Jews or blacks, or by Catholics of many origins — Irish, Italian, Hispanic. All have their little sovereignties, all are sizable enough to be reckoned with and tough in asserting their claims, but none is powerful enough to subdue the others. Characteristically, the city swallows up the United Nations and refuses to take it seriously, regarding it as an unworkable mixture of the idealistic, the impractical, and the hypocritical. But New Yorkers themselves are in training in how to live together in a diversity of races- the necessary initiation into the future.21 The diversity gives endless color to the city, so that walking in it is constant education in sights and smells. There is wonderful variety of places to eat or shop, and though the most successful of such places are likely to touristy hybrid compromises, they too have genuine roots. Other American cities have ethnic turfs jealously defended, but not, I think, such an admixture of groups, thrown together in such jarring juxtapositions . In the same way, avenues of high-rise luxury in New York are never far from poverty and mean streets. The sadness and fortitude of New York must be celebrated, along with its treasures of art and music. The combination is unstable; it produces friction, or an uneasy forbearance that sometimes becomes a real toleration.22 Loving and hating New York becomes a matter of alternating moods, often in the same day. The place constantly exasperates , at times exhilarates . To me it is the city of unavoidable experience. Living there, one has the reassurance of steadily confronting life.第十四课亦爱亦恨话纽约托马斯格里非斯那些赞美"大苹果"的广告活动,还有那些印着带有"我爱纽约"字样的心形图案的T恤衫,只不过是它们在绝望中发出悲哀的迹象,只不过是纽约这个非凡的城市日趋衰落的象征。

高级英语2 lesson 6 loving and hating New York

高级英语2 lesson 6 loving and hating New York


In 1664, Great Britain's Duke of York sent a fleet that quietly seized the settlement from the and Dutch rechristened the colony in honor of the duke.
Stock Exchange
Statue of Liberty
pedestal


左手:美国独立宣言 的书板 右手:12米长的火炬 脚上:被挣断的铁链
Liberty Enlightening the World
世界著名的自由女神像,位于纽约湾的利勃坦岛上, 像高约46公尺。自由女神像内部中空,可搭电梯直 达神像头部。 自由女神像(Liberty Enlightening the World ) 法国在1876年赠送给美国独立100周年的礼物。 美国的自由女神像坐落于美国纽约州纽约市附近的 自由岛,是美国重要的观光景点。 铜像内部的钢铁支架是由建筑师约维雷勃杜克和以 建造巴黎艾菲尔铁塔闻名于世的法国工程师艾菲尔 设计制作的。

Control of New York passed to the young U.S. at the end of the Revolutionary ______________ War, and George Washington was inaugurated president in New York's old City Hall.
1) Thomas Griffith 2) New York City 3) Statue of Liberty

Thomas Griffith

高英2第14课Loving and Hating New York

高英2第14课Loving and Hating New York


enclave:

数派集团
孤立地区
tranquil:
adj. 安静的,平静的;安宁的;稳定的 peaceful, pacific, quiet, calm
Loving and Hating New York
Para 16-18

So much well-to-do America now lives antiseptically in enclaves, tranquil and luxurious, that shut out the world.
rigor: harshness or severity严厉
• the congested, democratic presence of so many other New Yorkers, encased in their own worlds. • congested: crowed 拥堵的,拥挤的 • democratic: treating people of all classes in the same way; not snobbish. • encase: to cover or surround something completely
advertising center (P.12)






New Yorker who sees all the faults of the city still prefer to live in New York. New York’s faults: — trash-strewn streets — unruly school — uneasy feeling or menace — the noise — the brusqueness

Loving_and_Hating_New_York-2014

Loving_and_Hating_New_York-2014




Monthly
New York
Five Boroughs
Detailed Study of the Text
The Big Apple
An old saying in show business was “there
are many apples on the tree but when you pick New York City you picked the Big Apple ”



Today isn’t any more out of phase with ______ as out of step with ______. lost its undisputed leadership no longer so



— — — — —
Building Manhattan television studios Tin Pan Alley Hiring singers and entertainers Sports

----Europeans are more readily attracted than Americans by New York because the Europeans like the complex situation brought about by so many nationalities living together, the European standards that still exist in this city apart and removed from the standards of the rest of the States, and the mixture of so many foreigners.

Lesson 6 Loving and Hating New York 爱恨纽约

Lesson 6 Loving and Hating New York 爱恨纽约

Background Knowledge
• About New York City • How much do you know about New York? The general impression well-known architecture, places
New York City--The general impression
1)immigrants 2) unemployment 3) air pollution, 4)traffic jams 5)crime, 6)drug 7)racial conflicts 8)the ever-increasing cost of living in the city.
New York
• (2)pathetic: sorrowful; pitiful • (3)desperation: hopelessness and despair • Many advertising campaigns publicly praise N.Y. and many New Yorkers wear T-shirt with a heart design and the words “I love New York” printed on it . These actions only show how far New York has fallen. It is pitiful to see how desperately New York is trying to regain her lost prestige and status.
• Part 2: (Paras. 6-21 ) • Detailed description of New York and the life and

loving_and_hating_new_york_课文和翻译

loving_and_hating_new_york_课文和翻译

Loving and Hating New YorkThomas Griffith1 Those ad campaigns celebrating the Big Apple, thoseT-shirts with a heart design proclaiming “I love New York,” are signs, pathetic in their desperation, of how the mighty has fallen. New York City used to leave the bragging to others, for bragging was “bush” Being unique, the biggest and the best, New York didn’t have to assert how special it was.2 It isn’t the top anymore, at least if the top is measured by who begets the styles and sets the trends. Nowadays New York is out of phase with American taste as often as it is out of step with American politics. Once it was the nation’s undisputed fashion authority, but it too long resisted the incoming casual style and lost its monopoly. No longer so looked up to or copied, New York even prides itself on being a holdout from prevailing American trends, a place to escape Common Denominator Land.3 Its deficiencies as a pacesetter are more and more evident. A dozen other cities have buildings more inspired architecturally than any built in New York City in the past twenty years. Thegiant Manhattan television studios where Toscanini’s NBC Symphony once played now sit empty most of the time, while sitcoms cloned and canned in Hollywood, and the Johnny Carson show live, preempt the airways from California. Tin Pan Alley has moved to Nashville and Hollywood. Vegas casinos routinely pay heavy sums to singers and entertainers whom no nightspot in Manhattan can afford to hire. In sports, the bigger superdomes, the more exciting teams, the most enthusiastic fans, are often found elsewhere.4 New York was never a good convention city – being regarded as unfriendly, unsafe, overcrowded, and expensive – but it is making something of a comeback as a tourist attraction. Even so, most Americans would probably rate New Orleans, San Francisco, Washington, or Disneyland higher. A dozen other cities, including my hometown of Seattle, are widely considered better cities to live in.5 Why, then, do many Europeans call New York their favorite city? They take more readily than do most Americans to its cosmopolitan complexities, its surviving, aloof, European standards, its alien mixtures. Perhaps some of these Europeans are reassured by the sight, on the twin fashionavenues of Madison and Fifth, of all those familiar international names – the jewelers, shoe stores, and designer shops that exist to flatter and bilk the frivolous rich. But no; what most excites Europeans is the city’s charged , nervous atmosphere, its vulgar dynamism .6 New York is about energy, contention, and striving. And since it contains its share of articulate losers, it is also about mockery, the put-down , the loser’s shrug (“whaddya gonna do?”). It is about constant battles for subway seats, for a cabdriver’s or a clerk’s or a waiter’s attention, for a foothold , a chance, a better address, a larger billing. To win in New York is to be uneasy; to lose is to live in jostling proximity to the frustrated majority.7 New York was never Mecca to me. And though I have lived ther e more than half my life, you won’t find me wearing an “I Love New York” T-shirt. But all in all, I can’, t think of many places in the world I’d rather li, ve. It’, s not easy to define why.8 Nature’s pleasures are much qualified in N, ew York, . You never see a star-filled sky; the city’s bright glow arrogantly obscures the heavens. Sunsets can be spectacular: orangesand reds tinting the sky over the Jersey meadows and gaudily reflected in a thousand windows on Manhattan’s jagged skyline. Nature constantly yields to man in New York: witness those fragile sidewalk trees gamely struggling against encroaching cement and petrol fumes. Central Park, which Frederick Law Olmsted designed as lungs for the city’s poor, is in places grassless and filled with trash, no longer pristine yet lively with the noise and vivacity of people, largely youths, blacks, and Puerto Ricans, enjoying themselves. On park benches sit older people, mostly white, looking displaced. It has become less a tranquil park than an untidy carnival.9 Not the glamour of the city, which never beckoned to me from a distance, but its opportunity – to practice the kind of journalism I wanted –drew me to New York. I wasn’t even sure how I’d measure up against others who had been more soundly educated at Ivy League schools, or whether I could compete against that tough local breed, those intellectual sons of immigrants, so highly motivated and single-minded, such as Alfred Kazin, who for diversion (for heaven’t sake!) played Bach’s Unaccompanied Parti tas on the violin.10 A testing of oneself, a fear of giving in to the most banal and marketable of one’s talents, still draws many of the young to New York. That and, as always, the company of others fleeing something constricting where they came from. Together these young share a freedom, a community of inexpensive amusements, a casual living, and some rough times. It can’t be the living conditions that appeal, for only fond memory will forgive the inconvenience, risk, and squalor. Commercial Broadway may be inaccessible to them, but there is off- Broadway, and then off-off-Broadway. If painters disdain Madison Avenue’s plush art galleries, Madison Avenue dealers set up shop in the grubby precincts of Soho. But the purity of a bohemian dedication can be exaggerated. The artistic young inhabit the same Greenwich Village and its fringes in which the experimentalists in the arts lived during the Depression, united by a world against them. But the present generation is enough of a subculture to be a source of profitable boutiques and coffeehouses. And it is not all that estranged.11 Manhattan is an island cut off in most respects from mainland America, but in two areas it remains dominant. It is the banking and the communications headquarters forAmerica. In both these roles it ratifies more than it creates. Wall Street will advance the millions to make a Hollywood movie only if convinced that a bestselling title or a star name will ensure its success. The networks’ news centers are here, and the largest book publishers, and the biggest magazines –and therefore the largest body of critics to appraise the films, the plays, the music, the books that others have created. New York is a judging town, and often invokes standards that the rest of the country deplores or ignores. A market for knowingness exists in New York that doesn’t exist for knowledge.12 The ad agencies are all here too, testing the markets and devising the catchy jingles that will move millions from McDonald’s to Burger king, so that the ad agency’s “creative director” can lunch instead in Manhattan’s expense-account French restaurants. The bankers and the admen. The marketing specialists and a thousand well-paid ancillary service people, really set the city’s brittle tone— catering to a wide American public whose numbers must be respected but whose tastes do not have to shared. The condescending view from the fiftieth floor of the city’s crowds below cuts these people off from humanity. So does an attitude which sees thepublic only in terms of large, malleable numbers— as impersonally as does the clattering subway turnstile beneath the office towers.13 I am surprised by the lack of cynicism, particularly among the younger ones, of those who work in such fields. The television generation grew up in the insistent presence of hype, delights in much of it, and has no scruples about practicing it. Men and woman do their jobs professionally, and, like the pilots who from great heights bombed Hanoi, seem unmarked by it. They lead their real lives elsewhere, in the Village bars they are indistinguishable in dress or behavior from would-be artists, actors, and writers. The boundaries of “art for art’s sake” aren’t so rigid anymore; art itself is less sharply defined, and those whose paintings don’t sell do il lustrations; those who can’ get acting jobs do commercials; those who are writing ambitious novels sustain themselves on the magazines. Besides, serious art often feeds in the popular these days, changing it with fond irony.14 In time the newcomers find or from their won worlds; Manhatten is many such words, huddled together but rarely interaction. I think this is what gives the city its sense offreedom. There are enough like you, whatever you are. And it isn’t as necessary to know anything about an apart ment neighbor- or to worry about his judgment of you- as it is about someone with an adjoining yard. In New York, like seeks like, and by economy of effort excludes the rest as stranger. This distancing, this uncaring in ordinary encounters, has another side: in no other American city can the lonely be as lonely.15 So much more needs to be said. New Your is a wounded city, declining in its amenities . Overloaded by its tax burdens. But it is not dying city; the streets are safer than they were five years age; Broadway, which seemed to be succumbing to the tawdriness of its environment, is astir again.16 The trash-strewn streets, the unruly schools, the uneasy feeling or menace, the noise, the brusqueness- all confirm outsiders in their conviction that they wouldn’t live here if you gave them the place. Yet show a New Yorker a splendid home in Dallas, or a swimming pool and cabana in Beverly Hills, and he will be admiring but not envious. So much of well-to-do America now lives antiseptically in enclaves, tranquil and luxurious, that shut out the world. Too static, the New Yorker would say. Tell him about the vigor of your outdoor pleasures;he prefers the unhealthy hassle and the vitality of urban life. He is hopelessly provincial. To him New York- despite its faults, which her will impatiently concede (“so what else is new?”) — is the spoiler of all other American cities.17 It is possible in twenty other American cities to visitfirst-rate art museums, to hear good music and see lively experimental theater, to meet intelligent and sophisticated people who know how to live, dine, and talk well; and to enjoy all this in congenial and spacious surroundings. The New Yorkers still wouldn’t want to live there.18 What he would find missing is what many outsiders find oppressive and distasteful about New York – its rawness, tension, urgency; its bracing competitiveness; the rigor of its judgments; and the congested, democratic presence of so many other New Yorkers, encased in their own worlds, the defeated are not hidden away somewhere else on the wrong side of town. In the subways, in the buses, in the streets, it is impossible to avoid people whose lives are harder than yours. With the desperate, the ill, the fatigued, the overwhelmed, one learns not to strike up c onversation (which isn’t wanted ) but to make brief, sympathetic eye contact, to include them in the humanrace. It isn’t much, but it is the fleeting hospitality of New Yorkers, each jealous of his privacy in the crowd. Ever helpfulness is often delivered as a taunt: a man, rushing the traffic light, shouts the man behind him. “ You want to be wearing a Buick with Jersey plates?” — great scorn in the word Jersey, home of drivers who don’t belong here.19 By Adolf Hitler’s definition, New York is mongrel ci ty. It is in fact the first truly international metropolis. No other great city- not London, Paris, Rome or Tokyo- plays host (or hostage) to so many nationalities. The mix is much wider- Asians, Africans, Latins - that when that tumultuous variety of European crowded ashore at Ellis Island. The newcomers are never fully absorbed, but are added precariously to the undigested many.20 New York is too big to be dominated by any group, by Wasps or Jews or blacks, or by Catholics of many origins —Irish, Italian, Hispanic. All have their little sovereignties, all are sizable enough to be reckoned with and tough in asserting their claims, but none is powerful enough to subdue the others. Characteristically, the city swallows up the United Nations and refuses to take it seriously, regarding it as an unworkablemixture of the idealistic, the impractical, and the hypocritical. But New Yorkers themselves are in training in how to live together in a diversity of races- the necessary initiation into the future.21 The diversity gives endless color to the city, so that walking in it is constant education in sights and smells. There is wonderful variety of places to eat or shop, and though the most successful of such places are likely to touristy hybrid compromises, they too have genuine roots. Other American cities have ethnic turfs jealously defended, but not, I think, such an admixture of groups, thrown together in such jarring juxtapositions . In the same way, avenues of high-rise luxury in New York are never far from poverty and mean streets. The sadness and fortitude of New York must be celebrated, along with its treasures of art and music. The combination is unstable; it produces friction, or an uneasy forbearance that sometimes becomes a real toleration.22 Loving and hating New York becomes a matter of alternating moods, often in the same day. The place constantly exasperates , at times exhilarates . To me it is the city ofunavoidable experience. Living there, one has the reassurance of steadily confronting life.第十四课亦爱亦恨话纽约托马斯格里非斯那些赞美"大苹果"的广告活动,还有那些印着带有"我爱纽约"字样的心形图案的T恤衫,只不过是它们在绝望中发出悲哀的迹象,只不过是纽约这个非凡的城市日趋衰落的象征。

loving-and-hating-new-york课后练习答案

loving-and-hating-new-york课后练习答案

Loving and Hating New York 练习题答案/answerⅠ.1. Olmsted : Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. ( 1870 -- 1975 ), American landscape architect. A Harvard graduate (1894),he studied under his father, Fredcrick Law Olmsted, and began practice as landscape architect in 1895. He was landscape architect for the Metropolitan Park System of Boston,1898--1920; Baltimore Park and Park Commission, 1902--1917; member of the National Capital Park and Planning Commission in 1929, and again from 1945. He acted in consulting capacity for and designed portions of the parks or other public improvements of many towns and cities and numerous instiutions, land subdivisions, and private properties. Among his designs in Washington D.C. were those for Rock Creek and Ana-costia Parks, the Mall, and the White House grounds. He wrote numerous articles and reports on professional subjects.2. Bach. John Sebastian Bach (1685--1750),German composer and organist, one of the greatest and most influential composers of the Western World. He brought poly- phonic baroque music to its culmination, creating masterful and vigorous works in almost every musical form known in his period. Born into a gifted family, Bach was devoted to music from childhood; he was taught by his father and later by his brother Johann cristoph. His education was acquired largely through independent studies.Since few of Bach's many works were published in his lifetime, exact dates cannot be fixed for all of them, but most can be placed with some certainty in the periods of his life. At Arnstadt and Miihlhausen he began a series of organ compositions that culminated in the great works of the Weimar period; the Passacaglia and Fugue in C Mi-nor. At Cothen he concentrated on instrumental compositions, especially keyboard works: the Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue; the English Suites; and Book I of the celebrated 7"heWell-Tempered-Clavier. He also wrote several un- accompainied violinSonatas and cellosuites, and the Brandenburg Concertos, recognised as the best concertigrossiever composed. As musical director of St Thomas atLeipzig, he composed many of his superb religious compositions, the Christmas Oratorio, the St. ]~lat hew Passion, etc. The principal keyboard works of this period were Book Ⅱof The Well-Tempered Clavier and the four books of clavier pieces in the Clavier Cibung, which includes: six partitas (1726--1731)~ the Italian Concerto and the Partita in B minor (1735)~ and the Goldberg Variations.The bulk of his work is religious. In addition, he composed an astonising number of instrumental works, many of them designed for the instruction of his numerous pupils. In his instrumental and choral works he perfected the art of polyphony, displaying an unmatched combination of inventiveness and control in his great, striding fugues. During his lifetime, Bach was better known as an organist than as a composer. For decades after his death his works were neglected, but in the 19th century his genius came to be recognized, particularly by romantic composers such as Mendelssohn and Schumann. Since that time his reputation has grown steadily.Ⅱ.1. N0, his hometown is Seattle, a seaport in west central Washington State on Puget Sound. See paragragh 4.2. These signs show that New York is no longer the leading city in the United States.3. New York no longer begets the styles and sets the trends.It is no longer a paeesetter.4. Other cities have buildings more inspired architecturally. The center of music and sports have also shifted to other cities. As a tourist attraction it is inferior to New Orlcans, San Francisco, Washington or Disneyland. Finally, there are many beter cities to live in than New York.5. The Europeans call New York their favorite city because they like its cosmopolitan complexities, its surviving European standards and its alien mixtures. Perhaps some of these are reassured by the international names of jewelers, shoe stores and designer shops. But what most excites Europeans isthe city's charged, nervous atmosphere, its vulgar dynamism.6. Tim writer went to New York because he likes to live there and he could practice the kind of journalism he wanted in that city.7. The young people go to New York to test themselves and to avoid giving in to the most banal and marketable of their talents. In New York they also find the company of many other young people similarly fleeing from the constricting atmosphere of smaller cities.8. New York is still the banking and communications head- quarters for America. The networks' news centres, the largest book publishers, the biggest magazines, the ad agencies are all here, appraising and ratifying the films, the plays, the music, the books that others have created.9. Newcomers can find or form their little groups and, though these groups lie close to each other, there is no contact or intercourse between groups. This gives the city its sense of freedom.10. Despite all the faults of the city, a New Yorker still prefers to live in New York because he prefers the unhealthy hassle and vitany of urban life. What he finds attractive about New York is its rawness, tension, urgency; its bracing competitiveness the rigor of its judgements; and the congested, democratic presence of so many other New Yorkers, encased in their own worlds.11. It is in fact the first truly international metropolits because here one findsa much wider mixture of nationalities Asians, Africans, Latins and all varieties of Europeans.Ⅲ.1.This article is a piece of expository writing. The main theme or thesis is stated by the title "Loving and Hating New York", or more specifically, by the first sentence of the last paragraph: “Loving and hating New York becomes a matter of alternating moods, often in the same day. "2. Griffith develops his main thesis by both objective and emotional description of New York and the life and struggle of New Yorkers. It is very effective. (See the answer to 4.)3. This article is full of American English terms, phrases and constructions. Such as T-shirt, hassle, plush, holdout, comeback, putdown, measure up,expense-account, etc.4. The writer states that he both loves and hates New York, but the reader fails to see where or why he hates New York. It is clear that Griffith loves New York and feels exhilarated living there. He may sometimes feel exasperated but this feeling is never strong enough to turn to hate. The writer shows his love for New York with the words such as energy, contention striving, etc.5. The first five paragraphs act as a general introduction, set- ting forth the present status of New York city in the Unit- ed States and in the eyes of foreigners. The last sentence of paragraph 5 also acts as a transition to the "actual de- scriptions of New York city itself: "the charged, nervous atmosphere, its vulgar dynamism" of the last line of paragraph 5 leads to the "energy, contention, and striving" in the first line of paragraph6.6. The topic sentence of paragraph 8 is the first sentence. "Nature~ s pleasures are much qualified in New York. " The writer uses many examples to develop this paragraph and to back up the statement made in the topic sentence.7. In New York, a shrewd understanding or ability to appraise things is appreciated and paid for, and skill and learning by themselves are not considered valuable. 8. Free. Student’s ch oice.Ⅳ.1. Nowadays New York cannot understand nor follow the taste of the American people.2. New York boasts that it is a city that resists the prevailing trends (styles, fashion)of America.3. Situation comedies made in Hollywood and the actual performance of Johnny Carson now replace the scheduled radioand TV programs for California.4. New York is regaining somewhat its status as a city that attracts tourists.5. A person who wins in New York is constantly disturbed by fear and anxiety (because he is afraid of losing what he has won in the fierce competition).6. The chance to enjoy the pleasures of nature is very limited.7. At night the city of New York is aglow with lights and seems proudly and haughtily to darken the night sky.8. But a pure and wholehearted devotion to a Bohemian life style can be exaggerated.9. In both these roles of banking and communications head- quarters, New York starts or originates very few things but gives its stamp of approval to many things created by people in other parts of the country.10. The television generation was constantly and strongly influenced by extravagant promotional advertising.11. Authors writing long serious novels earn their living in the meantime by also writing articles for popular magazines.12. Broadway, which seemed unable to resist the cheap, gaudy shows put on in the surrounding areas, is once again busy and active.13. (If you tell a New Yorker about the vigor of outdoor pleasures, he will reply that) he prefers the unhealthy turmoil and animated life of a city.14. Those who failed in the struggle of life, the down-and-outs, are not hidden away in slums or ghettoes where other people can't see them.15. New York constantly irritates and annoys very much but at times it also invigorates and stimulates.Ⅴ. See the translation of the text.Ⅵ.1. holdout: (Americanism) a place that holds out; hold out= continue resistance; stand firm; not yield2. live: transmitted during the actual performance3. charged : tense ; intense4. put-down: (American slang) a belittling remark or crushing retort5. foothold: a secure position from which it is difficult to be dislodged6. measure up: (Americanism) prove to be competent or qualified7. jingle: a verse that jingles; jingling arrangement of words or syllables8. expense-account. (Americanism) an arrangement whereby certain expenses of an employee in connection with his work are paid for by hisemployer9. illustration= a picture, design, diagram, etc. used to decorate or explain something10. commercial: (radio and TV) a paid advertisement11. distancing: be reserved or cool toward; treat aloofly12. democratic: treating persons of all classes in the same way; not snobbish13, jealous : very watchful or careful in guarding or keeping14. high-rise: (Americanism) designating or of a tall apartment house, office buil ding, etc., of many stories /(noun) a high-rise building15. mean: poor in appearance; shabby.Ⅶ.1. skyline: noun+ noun=noun Examples: bookcase; teacup; skyrocket; sealskin; sea port ; pigsty2. pacesetter : noun + verb + er = noun Examples : shareholder ; leaseholder ; pathfinder ; painstaker ;watchmaker3. trash-strewn : noun + past participle = adjective Examples: homespun; bloodstained; landlocked; henpecked ; homemade4. international: a combining form+ adjective=adjective Examples: inter American; interchangeable; interdepartmental ; interplanetary ; intersectional5. anti-septically : prefix 4-adverb = adverb Examples : preemptively; preeminently; predominantly; prefiguratively ; prehistorically6. juxtaposition: a combining form+ noun=noun Examples: photochemistry; photocopy; phonograph; telephone ; television7. NBC: composed of initials N+B+C from National Broadcasting Company Examples: BBC -- British Broadcasting Corporation; NCO -- noncommissioned officer; UN -- United Nations; MIA -- missing in action; PFLI -- Peking Foreign Languages Institute8. Wasp: an acronym from white Anglo-Saxon protestant Examples: Awacs -- airborne warning and control system (a sophisticated surveillance plane); UFO -- unidentified flying object; Nato -- North Atlantic Treaty Organization; Asean -- Association of South-east Asian Nations; Anzac -- (a soldier in the)Australian and New Zealand Army Corps9.ad:a shortening of “advertisement” Examples:auto(automobile);kilo(kilogram);exam(examination);gent(gentleman);pram(perambulator) 1 0.Cabana:a loan word from Spanish Examples:blitz (German);judo (Japanese);discontheque (French);kolkhoz (Russian);solo (Italian) 11.sitcom:a blend word from “sit(uation)+corn(edy)” Examples:smog—sm(oke)+(f)og;smaze—sm (oke)+(h)aze;brunch—br(eakfast)+(1)unch;moped…mo(tor)+ped(a1);motel-mo(tor)+ (ho)tel12.Buick:a trade name for a car Examples:Omega(a watch);Kodak(a camera):Boeing(an airplane);Fiat(a car);Biro(a ball point pen)Ⅷ.1.assert指带着极大的信心,但却没有经客观证实的一种明确的陈述。

Loving and hating New York第3段讲解

Loving and hating New York第3段讲解

Las Vegas, also Vegas a city in the desert in the US state of Nevada, famous for its casinos.
Las Vegas also has many Chapels ( 小教堂)where people can get married immediately, and is a popular place for people to spend their honeymoon.
曾是托斯卡尼尼全国广播公司交响乐团演出场所的巨人 般的曼哈顿电视演播厅,现在经常是空无一人,而好莱 坞大量生产出的情景喜剧和约翰尼•卡森节目的实况转 播却占满了加利福尼亚的广播电视发送频道。
Manhattan
an island and borough of New York City in New York Bay, between the Hudson River and the East River.
S5:Vegas casinos routinely pay heavy sums to singers and entertainers whom no nightspot in Manhattan can afford to hire.
拉斯韦加斯的赌场经常出高薪聘请 曼哈顿没有哪一家夜总会请得起的 歌手和艺员。
Company (U.S.)美国全国广播公司
NBC: National Broadcasting
sitcoms: situation comedy
情景喜剧 a funny television program in which the same characters appear in different situations each week.

loving and hating new york 课文和翻译

loving and hating new york 课文和翻译

Loving and Hating New YorkThomas Griffith1 Those ad campaigns celebrating the Big Apple, those T-shirts with a heart design proclaiming “I love New York,” are signs, pathetic in their desperation, of how the mighty has fallen. New York City used to leave the bragging to others, for bragging was “bush” Being unique, the biggest and the best, New York didn’t have to assert how special it was.2 It isn’t the top anymore, at least if the top is measured by who begets the styles and sets the trends. Nowadays New York is out of phase with American taste as often as it is out of step with American politics. Once it was the nation’s undisputed fashion authority, but it too long resisted the incoming casual style and lost its monopoly. No longer so looked up to or copied, New York even prides itself on being a holdout from prevailing American trends, a place to escape Common Denominator Land.3 Its deficiencies as a pacesetter are more and more evident. A dozen other cities have buildings more inspired architecturally than any built in New York City in the past twenty years. The giant Manhattan television studios where Toscanini’s NBC Symphony once played now sit empty most of the time, while sitcoms cloned and canned in Hollywood, and the Johnny Carson show live, preempt the airways from California. Tin Pan Alley has moved to Nashville and Hollywood. Vegas casinos routinely pay heavy sums to singers and entertainers whom no nightspot in Manhattan can afford to hire. In sports, the bigger superdomes, the more exciting teams, the most enthusiastic fans, are often found elsewhere.4 New York was never a good convention city – being regarded as unfriendly, unsafe, overcrowded, and expensive – but it is making something of a comeback as a tourist attraction. Even so, most Americans would probably rate New Orleans, San Francisco, Washington, or Disneyland higher. A dozen other cities, including my hometown of Seattle, are widely considered better cities to live in.5 Why, then, do many Europeans call New York their favorite city? They take more readily than do most Americans to its cosmopolitan complexities, its surviving, aloof, European standards, its alien mixtures. Perhaps some of these Europeans are reassured by the sight, on the twin fashion avenues of Madison and Fifth, of all those familiar international names – the jewelers, shoe stores, and designer shops that exist to flatter and bilk the frivolous rich. But no; what most excites Europeans is the city’s charged , nervous atmosphere, its vulgar dynamism .6 New York is about energy, contention, and striving. And since it contains its share of articulate losers, it is also about mockery, the put-down , the loser’s shrug (“whaddya gonna do?”). It is about constant battles for subway seats, for a cabdriver’s or a clerk’s or a waiter’s attention, for a foothold , a chance, a better address, a larger billing. To win in New York is to be uneasy; to lose is to live in jostling proximity to the frustrated majority.7 New York was never Mecca to me. And though I have lived there more than half my life, you won’t find me wearing an “I Love New York” T-shirt. But all in all, I can’, t think of many places in the world I’d rather li, ve. It’, s not easy to define why.8 Nature’s pleasures are much qualified in N, ew York, . You nev er see a star-filled sky; the city’s bright glow arrogantly obscures the heavens. Sunsets can be spectacular: oranges and reds tinting the sky over the Jersey meadows and gaudily reflected in a thousand windows on Manhattan’s jagged skyline. Nature constantly yields to man in New York: witness those fragile sidewalk trees gamely struggling against encroaching cement and petrol fumes. Central Park, which Frederick Law Olmsted designed as lungs for the city’s poor, is in places grassless and filled with trash, no longer pristine yet lively with the noise and vivacity of people, largely youths, blacks, and Puerto Ricans, enjoying themselves. On park benches sit older people, mostly white, looking displaced. It has become less a tranquil park than an untidy carnival.9 Not the glamour of the city, which never beckoned to me from a distance, but its opportunity –to practice the kind of journalism I wanted –drew me to New York. I wasn’t even sure how I’d measure up against others who had been more soundly educated at Ivy League schools, or whether I could compete against that tough local breed, those intellectual sons of immigrants, so highly motivated and single-minded, such as Alfred Kazin, who for diversion (for heaven’t sake!) played Bach’s Unaccompanied Parti tas on the violin.10 A testing of oneself, a fear of giving in to the most banal and marketable of one’s talents, still draws many of the young to New York. That and, as always, the company of others fleeing something constricting where they came from. Together these young share a freedom, a community of inexpensive amusements, a casual living, and some rough times. It can’t be the living conditions that appeal, for only fond memory will forgive the inconvenience, risk, and squalor. Commercial Broadway may be inaccessible to them, but there is off- Broadway, and then off-off-Broadway. If painters disdain Madison Avenue’s plush art galleries, Madison Avenue dealers set up shop in the grubby precincts of Soho. But the purity of a bohemian dedication can be exaggerated. The artistic young inhabit the same Greenwich Village and its fringes in which the experimentalists in the arts lived during the Depression, united by a world against them. But the present generation is enough of a subculture to be a source of profitable boutiques and coffeehouses. And it is not all that estranged.11 Manhattan is an island cut off in most respects from mainland America, but in two areas it remains dominant. It is the banking and the communications headquarters for America. In both these roles it ratifies more than it creates. Wall Street will advance the millions to make a Hollywood movie only if convinced that a bestselling title or a star name will ensure its success. The networks’ news centers are here, and the largest book pu blishers, and the biggest magazines –and therefore the largest body of critics to appraise the films, the plays, the music, the books that others have created. New York is a judging town, and often invokes standards that the rest of the country deplores o r ignores. A market for knowingness exists in New York that doesn’t exist for knowledge.12 The ad agencies are all here too, testing the markets and devising the catchy jingles that will move millions from McDonald’s to Burger king, so that the ad agency’s “creative director” can lunch instead in Manhattan’s expense-account French restaurants. The bankers and the admen. The marketing specialists and a thousand well-paid ancillary service people, really set the city’s brittle tone— catering to a wide American public whose numbers must be respected but whose tastes do not have to shared. The condescending view from the fiftieth floor of the city’s crowds below cuts these people off from humanity. So does an attitude which sees the public only in terms of large, malleable numbers— as impersonally as does the clattering subway turnstile beneath the office towers.13 I am surprised by the lack of cynicism, particularly among the younger ones, of those who work in such fields. The television generation grew up in the insistent presence of hype, delightsin much of it, and has no scruples about practicing it. Men and woman do their jobs professionally, and, like the pilots who from great heights bombed Hanoi, seem unmarked by it. They lead their real lives elsewhere, in the Village bars they are indistinguishable in dress or behavior from would-be artists, actors, and writers. The boundaries of “art for art’s sake” aren’t so rigid anymore; art itself is less sharply defined, and those whose paintings don’t sell do il lustrations; those who can’ get acting jobs do commercials; those who are writing ambitious novels sustain themselves on the magazines. Besides, serious art often feeds in the popular these days, changing it with fond irony.14 In time the newcomers find or from their won worlds; Manhatten is many such words, huddled together but rarely interaction. I think this is what gives the city its sense of freedom. There are enough like you, whatever you are. And it isn’t as necessary to know anything about an apart ment neighbor- or to worry about his judgment of you- as it is about someone with an adjoining yard. In New York, like seeks like, and by economy of effort excludes the rest as stranger. This distancing, this uncaring in ordinary encounters, has another side: in no other American city can the lonely be as lonely.15 So much more needs to be said. New Your is a wounded city, declining in its amenities . Overloaded by its tax burdens. But it is not dying city; the streets are safer than they were five years age; Broadway, which seemed to be succumbing to the tawdriness of its environment, is astir again.16 The trash-strewn streets, the unruly schools, the uneasy feeling or menace, the noise, the brusqueness- all confirm outsiders in their conviction that they wouldn’t live here if you gave them the place. Yet show a New Yorker a splendid home in Dallas, or a swimming pool and cabana in Beverly Hills, and he will be admiring but not envious. So much of well-to-do America now lives antiseptically in enclaves, tranquil and luxurious, that shut out the world. Too static, the New Yorker would say. Tell him about the vigor of your outdoor pleasures; he prefers the unhealthy hassle and the vitality of urban life. He is hopelessly provincial. To him New York- despite i ts faults, which her will impatiently concede (“so what else is new?”) — is the spoiler of all other American cities.17 It is possible in twenty other American cities to visit first-rate art museums, to hear good music and see lively experimental theater, to meet intelligent and sophisticated people who know how to live, dine, and talk well; and to enjoy all this in congenial and spacious surroundings. The New Yorkers still wouldn’t want to live there.18 What he would find missing is what many outsiders find oppressive and distasteful about New York – its rawness, tension, urgency; its bracing competitiveness; the rigor of its judgments; and the congested, democratic presence of so many other New Yorkers, encased in their own worlds, the defeated are not hidden away somewhere else on the wrong side of town. In the subways, in the buses, in the streets, it is impossible to avoid people whose lives are harder than yours. With the desperate, the ill, the fatigued, the overwhelmed, one learns not to strike up conversation (which isn’t wanted ) but to make brief, sympathetic eye contact, to include them in the human race. It isn’t much, but it is the fleeting hospitality of New Yorkers, each jealous of his privacy in the crowd. Ever helpfulness is often delivered as a taunt: a man, rushing the traffic light, shouts the man behind him. “ You want to be wearing a Buick with Jersey plates?” — great scorn in the word Jersey, home of drivers who don’t belong here.19 By Adolf Hitler’s definition, New York is mongrel ci ty. It is in fact the first truly international metropolis. No other great city- not London, Paris, Rome or Tokyo- plays host (or hostage) to so many nationalities. The mix is much wider- Asians, Africans, Latins - that when that tumultuous variety of European crowded ashore at Ellis Island. The newcomers are never fully absorbed, but are added precariously to the undigested many.20 New York is too big to be dominated by any group, by Wasps or Jews or blacks, or by Catholics of many origins — Irish, Italian, Hispanic. All have their little sovereignties, all are sizable enough to be reckoned with and tough in asserting their claims, but none is powerful enough to subdue the others. Characteristically, the city swallows up the United Nations and refuses to take it seriously, regarding it as an unworkable mixture of the idealistic, the impractical, and the hypocritical. But New Yorkers themselves are in training in how to live together in a diversity of races- the necessary initiation into the future.21 The diversity gives endless color to the city, so that walking in it is constant education in sights and smells. There is wonderful variety of places to eat or shop, and though the most successful of such places are likely to touristy hybrid compromises, they too have genuine roots. Other American cities have ethnic turfs jealously defended, but not, I think, such an admixture of groups, thrown together in such jarring juxtapositions . In the same way, avenues of high-rise luxury in New York are never far from poverty and mean streets. The sadness and fortitude of New York must be celebrated, along with its treasures of art and music. The combination is unstable; it produces friction, or an uneasy forbearance that sometimes becomes a real toleration.22 Loving and hating New York becomes a matter of alternating moods, often in the same day. The place constantly exasperates , at times exhilarates . To me it is the city of unavoidable experience. Living there, one has the reassurance of steadily confronting life.第十四课亦爱亦恨话纽约托马斯格里非斯那些赞美"大苹果"的广告活动,还有那些印着带有"我爱纽约"字样的心形图案的T恤衫,只不过是它们在绝望中发出悲哀的迹象,只不过是纽约这个非凡的城市日趋衰落的象征。

loving_and_hating_new_york

loving_and_hating_new_york
etc.,of another),esp. in a gradual or sneaking way 侵占,占用(别人的时间);侵犯(别人的权力、财产等)
pristine:
still pure or untouched;uncorrupted; unspoiled质 朴的;纯洁的;未受腐蚀的
vivacity:
very keen to do something or achieve something, especially because you find it interesting or exciting
The students are all highly motivated . The key to a successful modern economy is a
the quality or state 0f being vivacious;liveliness to pint;animation快活;活泼;充满生命力;有生 气
displaced:
homeless
tranquil:
quiet
carnival:
a noisy outdoor event at which you can ride on special machines and play games for prizes
jostle for
Followers of the president jostled for position in front of the TV cameras.
[intransitive] to compete for something such as attention or a reward 争夺
The new show will open on Broadway next month.
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Loving and Hating New York 练习题答案/answerⅠ.1. Olmsted : Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. ( 1870 -- 1975 ), American landscape architect. A Harvard graduate (1894),he studied under his father, Fredcrick Law Olmsted, and began practice as landscape architect in 1895. He was landscape architect for the Metropolitan Park System of Boston,1898--1920; Baltimore Park and Park Commission, 1902--1917; member of the National Capital Park and Planning Commission in 1929, and again from 1945. He acted in consulting capacity for and designed portions of the parks or other public improvements of many towns and cities and numerous instiutions, land subdivisions, and private properties. Among his designs in Washington D.C. were those for Rock Creek and Ana-costia Parks, the Mall, and the White House grounds. He wrote numerous articles and reports on professional subjects.2. Bach. John Sebastian Bach (1685--1750),German composer and organist, one of the greatest and most influential composers of the Western World. He brought poly- phonic baroque music to its culmination, creating masterful and vigorous works in almost every musical form known in his period. Born into a gifted family, Bach was devoted to music from childhood; he was taught by his father and later by his brother Johann cristoph. His education was acquired largely through independent studies.Since few of Bach's many works were published in his lifetime, exact dates cannot be fixed for all of them, but most can be placed with some certainty in the periods of his life. At Arnstadt and Miihlhausen he began a series of organ compositions that culminated in the great works of the Weimar period; the Passacaglia and Fugue in C Mi-nor. At Cothen he concentrated on instrumental compositions, especially keyboard works: the Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue; the English Suites; and Book I of the celebrated 7"heWell-Tempered-Clavier. He also wrote several un- accompainied violinSonatas and cellosuites, and the Brandenburg Concertos, recognised as the best concertigrossiever composed. As musical director of St Thomas atLeipzig, he composed many of his superb religious compositions, the Christmas Oratorio, the St. ]~lat hew Passion, etc. The principal keyboard works of this period were Book Ⅱof The Well-Tempered Clavier and the four books of clavier pieces in the Clavier Cibung, which includes: six partitas (1726--1731)~ the Italian Concerto and the Partita in B minor (1735)~ and the Goldberg Variations.The bulk of his work is religious. In addition, he composed an astonising number of instrumental works, many of them designed for the instruction of his numerous pupils. In his instrumental and choral works he perfected the art of polyphony, displaying an unmatched combination of inventiveness and control in his great, striding fugues. During his lifetime, Bach was better known as an organist than as a composer. For decades after his death his works were neglected, but in the 19th century his genius came to be recognized, particularly by romantic composers such as Mendelssohn and Schumann. Since that time his reputation has grown steadily.Ⅱ.1. N0, his hometown is Seattle, a seaport in west central Washington State on Puget Sound. See paragragh 4.2. These signs show that New York is no longer the leading city in the United States.3. New York no longer begets the styles and sets the trends.It is no longer a paeesetter.4. Other cities have buildings more inspired architecturally. The center of music and sports have also shifted to other cities. As a tourist attraction it is inferior to New Orlcans, San Francisco, Washington or Disneyland. Finally, there are many beter cities to live in than New York.5. The Europeans call New York their favorite city because they like its cosmopolitan complexities, its surviving European standards and its alien mixtures. Perhaps some of these are reassured by the international names of jewelers, shoe stores and designer shops. But what most excites Europeans isthe city's charged, nervous atmosphere, its vulgar dynamism.6. Tim writer went to New York because he likes to live there and he could practice the kind of journalism he wanted in that city.7. The young people go to New York to test themselves and to avoid giving in to the most banal and marketable of their talents. In New York they also find the company of many other young people similarly fleeing from the constricting atmosphere of smaller cities.8. New York is still the banking and communications head- quarters for America. The networks' news centres, the largest book publishers, the biggest magazines, the ad agencies are all here, appraising and ratifying the films, the plays, the music, the books that others have created.9. Newcomers can find or form their little groups and, though these groups lie close to each other, there is no contact or intercourse between groups. This gives the city its sense of freedom.10. Despite all the faults of the city, a New Yorker still prefers to live in New York because he prefers the unhealthy hassle and vitany of urban life. What he finds attractive about New York is its rawness, tension, urgency; its bracing competitiveness the rigor of its judgements; and the congested, democratic presence of so many other New Yorkers, encased in their own worlds.11. It is in fact the first truly international metropolits because here one findsa much wider mixture of nationalities Asians, Africans, Latins and all varieties of Europeans.Ⅲ.1.This article is a piece of expository writing. The main theme or thesis is stated by the title "Loving and Hating New York", or more specifically, by the first sentence of the last paragraph: “Loving and hating New York becomes a matter of alternating moods, often in the same day. "2. Griffith develops his main thesis by both objective and emotional description of New York and the life and struggle of New Yorkers. It is very effective. (See the answer to 4.)3. This article is full of American English terms, phrases and constructions. Such as T-shirt, hassle, plush, holdout, comeback, putdown, measure up,expense-account, etc.4. The writer states that he both loves and hates New York, but the reader fails to see where or why he hates New York. It is clear that Griffith loves New York and feels exhilarated living there. He may sometimes feel exasperated but this feeling is never strong enough to turn to hate. The writer shows his love for New York with the words such as energy, contention striving, etc.5. The first five paragraphs act as a general introduction, set- ting forth the present status of New York city in the Unit- ed States and in the eyes of foreigners. The last sentence of paragraph 5 also acts as a transition to the "actual de- scriptions of New York city itself: "the charged, nervous atmosphere, its vulgar dynamism" of the last line of paragraph 5 leads to the "energy, contention, and striving" in the first line of paragraph6.6. The topic sentence of paragraph 8 is the first sentence. "Nature~ s pleasures are much qualified in New York. " The writer uses many examples to develop this paragraph and to back up the statement made in the topic sentence.7. In New York, a shrewd understanding or ability to appraise things is appreciated and paid for, and skill and learning by themselves are not considered valuable. 8. Free. Student’s ch oice.Ⅳ.1. Nowadays New York cannot understand nor follow the taste of the American people.2. New York boasts that it is a city that resists the prevailing trends (styles, fashion)of America.3. Situation comedies made in Hollywood and the actual performance of Johnny Carson now replace the scheduled radioand TV programs for California.4. New York is regaining somewhat its status as a city that attracts tourists.5. A person who wins in New York is constantly disturbed by fear and anxiety (because he is afraid of losing what he has won in the fierce competition).6. The chance to enjoy the pleasures of nature is very limited.7. At night the city of New York is aglow with lights and seems proudly and haughtily to darken the night sky.8. But a pure and wholehearted devotion to a Bohemian life style can be exaggerated.9. In both these roles of banking and communications head- quarters, New York starts or originates very few things but gives its stamp of approval to many things created by people in other parts of the country.10. The television generation was constantly and strongly influenced by extravagant promotional advertising.11. Authors writing long serious novels earn their living in the meantime by also writing articles for popular magazines.12. Broadway, which seemed unable to resist the cheap, gaudy shows put on in the surrounding areas, is once again busy and active.13. (If you tell a New Yorker about the vigor of outdoor pleasures, he will reply that) he prefers the unhealthy turmoil and animated life of a city.14. Those who failed in the struggle of life, the down-and-outs, are not hidden away in slums or ghettoes where other people can't see them.15. New York constantly irritates and annoys very much but at times it also invigorates and stimulates.Ⅴ. See the translation of the text.Ⅵ.1. holdout: (Americanism) a place that holds out; hold out= continue resistance; stand firm; not yield2. live: transmitted during the actual performance3. charged : tense ; intense4. put-down: (American slang) a belittling remark or crushing retort5. foothold: a secure position from which it is difficult to be dislodged6. measure up: (Americanism) prove to be competent or qualified7. jingle: a verse that jingles; jingling arrangement of words or syllables8. expense-account. (Americanism) an arrangement whereby certain expenses of an employee in connection with his work are paid for by hisemployer9. illustration= a picture, design, diagram, etc. used to decorate or explain something10. commercial: (radio and TV) a paid advertisement11. distancing: be reserved or cool toward; treat aloofly12. democratic: treating persons of all classes in the same way; not snobbish13, jealous : very watchful or careful in guarding or keeping14. high-rise: (Americanism) designating or of a tall apartment house, office buil ding, etc., of many stories /(noun) a high-rise building15. mean: poor in appearance; shabby.Ⅶ.1. skyline: noun+ noun=noun Examples: bookcase; teacup; skyrocket; sealskin; sea port ; pigsty2. pacesetter : noun + verb + er = noun Examples : shareholder ; leaseholder ; pathfinder ; painstaker ;watchmaker3. trash-strewn : noun + past participle = adjective Examples: homespun; bloodstained; landlocked; henpecked ; homemade4. international: a combining form+ adjective=adjective Examples: inter American; interchangeable; interdepartmental ; interplanetary ; intersectional5. anti-septically : prefix 4-adverb = adverb Examples : preemptively; preeminently; predominantly; prefiguratively ; prehistorically6. juxtaposition: a combining form+ noun=noun Examples: photochemistry; photocopy; phonograph; telephone ; television7. NBC: composed of initials N+B+C from National Broadcasting Company Examples: BBC -- British Broadcasting Corporation; NCO -- noncommissioned officer; UN -- United Nations; MIA -- missing in action; PFLI -- Peking Foreign Languages Institute8. Wasp: an acronym from white Anglo-Saxon protestant Examples: Awacs -- airborne warning and control system (a sophisticated surveillance plane); UFO -- unidentified flying object; Nato -- North Atlantic Treaty Organization; Asean -- Association of South-east Asian Nations; Anzac -- (a soldier in the)Australian and New Zealand Army Corps9.ad:a shortening of “advertisement” Examples:auto(automobile);kilo(kilogram);exam(examination);gent(gentleman);pram(perambulator) 1 0.Cabana:a loan word from Spanish Examples:blitz (German);judo (Japanese);discontheque (French);kolkhoz (Russian);solo (Italian) 11.sitcom:a blend word from “sit(uation)+corn(edy)” Examples:smog—sm(oke)+(f)og;smaze—sm (oke)+(h)aze;brunch—br(eakfast)+(1)unch;moped…mo(tor)+ped(a1);motel-mo(tor)+ (ho)tel12.Buick:a trade name for a car Examples:Omega(a watch);Kodak(a camera):Boeing(an airplane);Fiat(a car);Biro(a ball point pen)Ⅷ.1.assert指带着极大的信心,但却没有经客观证实的一种明确的陈述。

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