大学英语考试精读:第六册(UNIT10)
大学英语精读第6册课文全文翻译-中英对照36页
A surprising amount of one's time as a student and professional is spent reporting the results of one's research projects for presentation to teachers, managers, and clients. Indeed, without basic research skills and the ability to present research results clearly and completely, an individual will encounter many obstacles in school and on the job. The need for some research-writing ability is felt nearly equally by college students in all fields, engineering and science as well as business and the humanities. Graduate study often makes great demands on the student's research-writing skills, and most professions continue the demand; education, advertising and marketing, economics and accounting, science and engineering, psychology, anthropology, the arts, and agriculture may all require regular reporting of research data.
大学英语精读第六册答案
第一单元vocabulary work11.ratio2.franklye to his way4.polishing5.gracious6.cheered up7.index8.knows his way round9.germ 10.is preoccupied 11.sink in 12.outlet 13.anyhow panions 15.broaden 16.chaos21.senior2.insame3.at present4.assimilate5.perspectives6.has set his sight for7.soar8.actual9.get over 10.chaos 11.cheer her up 12.made the best of it 13.a coward e to my way31.what with the rain and with the bad hotel,we didn't enjoy our holidays very much.2.that is a great loss to her ,but i don't think it has sunk in to her.3.the duke lost the battle ;to top it off,nearly all his followers ,including those who were thought to be most loyal,left him.4.we may be behind now,but no doubt we will win in the end.5.as for us ,we hace no objection to the convening of the conference ,but we suggest it be put off ot a later date.41.being picked on2.had picked up3.picked at4.pick at5.pick out6.pick up7.pick out8.be picked up9.pick out 10.put away 11.was put forward 12.put up 13.be put down 14.has put out 15.put out 16.put up wotth 17.put up 18.put aside 19.puts up 20.put on 21.put across 22.put down 23.put out 24.put up 25.were put apart-Cloze1.of2.who3.honor4.on5.had6.people7.school8.right9.wonder 10.about 11.out 12.see 13.right 14.give 15.but 16.couble 17.love 18.not 19.question 20.and 21. where 22.through 23.from 24.I 25.second 26.one 27.time 28.for 29.specialize 30.prepare 31.going-Error correction1.resulting--bearing2.on--in3.than--/4.but--than5.which--by which6.although--while7.situation--realms8.have--having9.old--older 10.with --ofTranslationThat year, kate's life is awful. She was stuck in a meaningless job with no friends around her. To top it off, word came that the ship on which John had been working met a storm and foundered. For a while, she cheered up when she heard that there were some survivors on the beach. But soon it was proved that John had died. At this news, she was appalled, and would not get over the fact that such a thing would come John's way. In spite of everything, she still tried to take an a ctive attitude toward life even though she had to face these adversities. it's no wonder that she achieved success in her later life.Reading practice1.d2.c3.b4.a5.c6.b7.b8.d3第二单元vocabulary work11.assurance2.exquisite3.pondered4.dedicated5.if any6.to date7.quest8.likelihood9.assigned 10.quantity 11.premature 12.candidates 13.peer 14.mission 15.Adolescent 16.in a position21.pondered2.assurance3.is crying out for4.quest5.to date6.not in a positon to7.an extraordinary8.dedicated9.remote tely 11.detected 12.appropriate 13.probability 14.so as to31.What do you think of the likelhood that he will agree to your terms?2.His appearance has changed so much that you minght well not recongnize him.3.Because of the premature birth,their twins had to stay in the hospital for a month before they could go home.4.When completely built,the extensive palace and its grounds are larger than the city itself.5.I always keep fruit in the fridge so as to prevent the insects from getting at it.41.carried off2.carried ..back3.be carried out4.carried on5.carried on6.carried away7.was carried off8.carrying ...through9.have been carried down 10.carried ..through 11.carry forward 12.work out 13.work ..in 14.worked up 15.'ve been working away 16.worked out 17.works at 18.is working up 19.are...working on 20.had worked out 21.work off 22.worked inCloze1.in2.discoveries3.already4.like5.because6.ignore7.not8.for9.message 10.which 11.instead 12.both 13.such 14.maturity 15.from 16.likely 17.other 18.that 19.but 20.likelihood 21.solutions 22.growth 23.possible 24.depends.Error corrention1.from--between2.implication--implies3.nearest--the nearest4.more--less5.Upon--At6.they--whether they7.it--them8.alike--similar9.create--creating 10.from--/Translation1.His optimistic attitude toward life often infects his team fellows and creates a positive atmosphere in the team.2.The company is crying out for a large sum of money in equipment renovations and is not in a position to expand at present.3.His wife told him about their difficult condition and wanted him to ponder how many choices were left for them.(or...ponder on the probabilities left for them).4.T he food, music and decorations that she has picked out for the reception imply her noble taste.5.In the future, you may well have just fen chances of travelling abroad, if any, so thought youshould strive for this chance.Reading practice1.c2.c3.b4.d5.a6.d7.a8.d1.仅在我们这个星系,在我们周围就有一千亿颗像太阳这样的恒星。
(完整版)大学英语精读第6册课文全文翻译-中英对照
Problem Section. The first required section of a research report is the statement of the problem with which the research project is concerned. This section requires a precise statement of the underlying question which the researcher has set out to answer. In this same section there should be an explanation of the significance -- social, economic, medical, psychological, educational, etc. -- of the question; in other words, why the investigation was worth conducting. Thus, if we set out, for example, to answer the question "What is the effect of regular consumption of fast foods on the health of the American teenager?" we must explain that the question is thought to have significant relevance to the health of this segment of the population and might lead to some sort of regulations on such foods.
现代大学英语精读6课后答案
现代大学英语精读6课后答案Unitl1. Virtue is ... self-centered.By right action, we mean it must help promote personal interest.1.1.. (Poverty) was a product of their excessive fecundity...The poverty of the poor was caused by their having too many children.3....the rich were not responsible for either its creation or its amelioration.The rich were not to blame for the existence of poverty so they should not be asked to undertake the task of solving the problem.4.It is merely the working out of a law of nature and a law of God.It is only the result or effect of the law of the survival of the fittest applied to nature of to human society. 5. It declined in popularity, and references to its acquired a condemnatory tone.People began to reject Social Darwinism because it seemed to glorify brutal force and oppose treasured values of sympathy, love and friendship. Therefore, when it was mentioned, it was usually the target of criticism. 6. ...the search for a way of getting the poor off our conscience was not at an end; it was only suspended.The desire to find a way to justify the unconcern for the poor had not been abandoned; it had only been put off. 7. ...only rarely given to overpaying for monkey wrenches, flashlights, coffee makers, and toiletseats.Government officials, on the whole, are good; it is very rare that some would pay high prices for office equipment to get kickbacks.8.This is perhaps our most highly influential piece of fiction.It is a very popular story and has been accepted by many but it is not true.9.Belief can be the servant of truth - but even more of convenience.Belief can be useful in the search for truth, but more often than not it is accepted because it is convenient and self-serving.10.George Gilder... Who tells to much applause that the poor must have the cruel spur of their own suffering to ensure effort...George Gilder advances the view that only when the poor suffer from great misery will they be stimulated to make great efforts to change the situation, in other words, suffering is necessary to force the poor to work hard. Phrases1. to reflect on a problem 严重思考一个问题2. intellectual preoccupation有思想有学问的人孜孜不倦思考探索的问题3.to take on the modern form 具有现代形式4.to come up with the formula 提出了这样一种准则5.survival of the fittest 适者生存6.substantial measure of responsibility 在很大程度上负有责任7.unemployment insurance 失业保险8.Medicare and Medicaid医疗照顾和医疗补助9.weapons procurement 武器采购10.supply-side economics 供应学派经济学Incorporate executives企业经理人员12.food stamps 食品券13.Workers’ Compensation 工人(失业)补助金14.subsidized housing 住房补贴15.disability insurance 伤残保险16.social tranquility 社会安定1.An imbalance between the rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailment of republics贫富不均乃共和政体最致命的宿疾2.Their poverty is a temporary misfortune, if they are poor and meek, they eventually will inherit the earth 他们的贫穷只是一种暂时性的不幸,如果他们贫穷但却温顺,他们最终将成为世界的主人3.Couples in love should repair to R H Macy's not their bedroom热恋的夫妇应该在梅西百货商店过夜,而不是他们的新房4.The American beauty rose can be produced in the splendor and fragrance which bring cheer to its beholder only by sacrificing the early buds which grow up around it.and so is in economic life.It's merely the working out of the a law of the nature and a law of god美国这朵玫瑰花以其华贵与芳香让观众倾倒,赞不绝口,而她之所以能被培植就是因为在早期其周围的花蕾被插掉了,在经济生活中情况亦是如此。
现代大学英语 精读6(第二版)BK6 教师用书 Unit 10
Unit 10Thoughts on Reclaiming the American DreamBarack ObamaStructure of the TextPart I (Paras. 1-7)It must be remembered that Obama wrote this book shortly before he declared his intention to run for the White House; it was obviously meant to serve as a public statement of his political platform. Obama must have been well aware that there were formidable obstacles on his road to becoming President. Not only was he an African-American—even the fact of his being American-born was challenged by his opponents. In some quarters, there was suspicion that he was actually a black Muslin. Therefore, for people to accept him as their President, it was a matter of vital importance for Obama to prove his deep understanding of and great faith in the American heritage. With this in mind, it is clear that he could not have chosen a better way to start his essay than by quoting the first paragraph of the Declaration of Independence, generally regarded as the nation’s most important political document.Part II (Paras. 8-12)In this section, Obama points out that Americans are not just individualistic: they also have communal values, which they treasure as well. These two differing sets of values are always in tension, but America has been lucky that the tension has not been as serious as in other countries. When their values collide, Americans have always tried to use these countervailing values to hold excesses in check.Part III (Paras. 13-24)In this section, Obama suggests that sometimes finding the right balance is easy, but sometimes it can be difficult. He explains the reasons and discusses how to solve the problem in the face of competing values.Part IV (Paras. 25-33)In this section, Obama presents his position on the relative importance of cultural factors vs. government policy in determining individual success and social cohesion. He refuses to take an “either-or” attitude, preferring to place himself more or less in the middle. However, he still defines himself as a democrat because, unlike conservatives, he still believes government has a vital role to play—although he admits there is sometimes a danger of government intervention making things worse.Detailed Analysis of the Text1.“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they areendowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”(Para. 1)These simple words by Thomas Jefferson are familiar to us, but it is not easy to see all their implications. Perhaps the teacher could ask his/her students to explain how they understand this paragraph.2.Those simple words…describe not only the foundation of our government but thesubstance of our common creed.(Para. 2)Question: Why does Obama say that these simple words describe the fundamental principle on which U.S. government is based?Because these words state that the government cannot take away people’s right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness because God has given people these rights, not the government.They also state that, since people are all created equal, their natural rights must be equally protected. Government is an institution formed by people to protect their natural rights.These words further imply that government must not exploit or oppress the people and that if government fails to serve the interests of the people, the people have the right to overthrow it.When political scientists talk about popular sovereignty, rule by popular consent, government as a necessary evil, democracy, equality, freedom, civil rights, etc., these concepts are all related to the simple words in this first paragraph. Therefore, Obama refers to these words as “the substance of our common creed” —the basis of our common belief.3.…few… could tra ce the genesis of the Declaration of Independence to its roots in theeighteenth-century liberal and republican thought. (Para. 2)to trace the genesis to its roots: to follow back the origin/beginning to its roots. See Notes to the Text.4.… through ou r own agency we can, and must, make of our lives what we will…(Para. 2)… by relying on our own efforts we can, and must realize our dreams (for God means us to build a Christian commonwealth on earth and therefore it is our duty to succeed). 是否可删除5.It or ients us, sets our course… (Para. 2)It guides us and shows us the way…6.…the value of individual freedom is so deeply ingrained in us that …it is easy to forgetthat at the time of our nation’s founding this idea was entirely radical in its implications, as radical as Martin Luther’s posting on the church door. (Para. 3)Question: Why does Obama say this?He wants to show how proud he is of the great American tradition and of America’s founding fathers.7.In fact, much of my appreciation of our Bill of Rights comes from having spent part ofmy childhood in Indonesia and from still having family in Kenya…, fishing off the island of Lamu. (Para. 4)Here, Obama cleverly turns his family background into a political asset. He is telling the nation that having spent part of his childhood in Indonesia and still having relatives in Kenya have, if anything, made him more profoundly American, not less.visiting my grandmother up-country: visiting my grandmother who lives inland (rather than in the centre of the country)fishing off the island of Lamu: fishing a little way from the island of Lamu8.… Michelle saw how suffocating the demands of family ties and tribal loyalties could be,with distant cousins constantly asking for favors, uncles and aunts showing up unannounced.(Para. 5)米歇尔发现那些亲戚和族人提出的要求真让人受不了,总有那些八杆子打不着的表兄弟姐妹没完没了地要求得到点好处,还有叔叔阿姨会突然不请自来。
现代大学英语精读第六册 第十课课文及翻译
雪莱写道,无论怎样,雪莱相信精神财富是无穷无尽的;他相信我们可以大量地、充满激情的在各种场合表达我们的感情;而且我们无论怎么样表现悲哀和欢乐都不过分。
8.
In the above anecdote, I have figured as a typical Englishman.Iwill now descend from that dizzy and somewhat unfamiliar height, and return to my business of notetaking.Anote on the slowness of the English character.The Englishman appears to be cold and unemotional because he is really slow.When an event happens, he may understand it quickly enough with his mind, but he takes quite a while it to feel it.Once upon a time a coach, containing someEnglishmen and someFrenchmen, was driving over theAlps.The horses ran away, and as they were dashing across a bridge the coach caught on the stonework, tottered, and nearly fell into the ravine below.The Frenchmen were frantic with terror: They screamed and gesticulated and flung themselves about, as Frenchmen would.The Englishmen sat quite calm.An hour later, the coach drew up at an inn to change horses, and by that time the situations were exactly reversed.The Frenchmen had forgotten all about the danger, and were chattering gaily; the Englishmen had just begun to feel it, and one had a nervous breakdown and was obliged to go to bed.We have here a clear physical difference between the two races—a difference that goes deep into character.The Frenchmen responded at once; the Englishmen responded in time.They were slow and they were also practical.Their instinct forbade them to throw themselves about in the coach, because it was more likely to tip over if they did.They had this extraordinary appreciation of fact that we shall notice again and again.When a disaster comes, the English instinct is to do what can be done first, and to postpone the feeling as long as possible.Hence they are splendid at emergencies.No doubt they are brave—no one will deny that—but bravery is partly an affair of the nerves, and the English nervous system is well equipped for meeting a physical emergency.It acts promptly and feels slowly.Such a combination is fruitful, and anyone who possesses it has gone a long way toward being brave.And when the action isover,then the Englishmen can feel.
大学英语精读unit610教学教案
大学英语 IV 课程教案授课时间第 15-16 周课次 3授课方式理论课□ √讨论课□实验课□习题课□其他□课时6〔请打√〕安排授课题目〔教学章、节或主题〕:Unit Six ( Reading and Writing course)Section A: Sam Adams, Industrial Engineer上一课次Review Unit 5 and lead-in of Text A Sam- Adams, Industrial Engineer教学内容提要本课次教学目的、要求〔分掌握、熟悉、了解三个层次〕:教学目标:1. To understand the term of industrial“ engineering 〞 and talk about work efficiency“ 〞;2.To understand the main idea and the humorous narration.3.To understand the structure and writing strategy:4.To master key words and phrases5.To conduct a series of listening and speaking tasks教学要求:1.要求学生掌握本单元的中心思想和文章结构,学会在写作中恰当使用附属连接词。
2.掌握新单词、句型的使用方法;加强相关听说训练:Health 。
3.掌握阅读技巧:快速寻找中心大意。
教学建议:1.在教学过程中启发学生开展关于“工作和学习效率〞的探讨,帮助和鼓励学生发现学习过程中的存在的“效率问题〞,改变自主学习、自我探究的学习方式,掌握必要的学习效率,培养大学校园中处理学习和生活之间关系的能力和效率。
2.提供最新的资料背景知识,如industrial engineering; efficiency; background music等。
大学英语精读六[上海外语教育出版社]
大学英语精读六[上海外语教育出版社]大学英语精读六(上海外语教育出版社)presentation['prezen'tei54n]n.提出,呈递;介绍,报告client['klai4nt]n.委托人,当事人;顾客obstacle['3bst4kl]n.障碍,障碍物,妨害marketing['m2:kiti:6]n.营销economics['i:k4'n3miks]n.经济学;经济accounting[4'kaunti6]n.会计学anthropology[1n7r4'p3l4d9i]n.人类学data['deit4]n.资料,数据,信息element['elim4nt]n.要素intend[in'tend]v t.想要,打算precise[pri'sais]a.精确的,严格的significance[sig'nifik4ns]n.意义,意味;重要性economic[i:k4'n3mik]a.经济的;经济学的consumption[k4n's8mp54n]n.消费(量)teenager['ti:n`eid94]n.13岁到19岁的年轻人relevance['reliv4ns]n.中肯,适当relevant['reliv4nt]a.有关的,贴切的segment['segm4nt]n.切片,部分;段,节regulation['regju'lei54n]n.规则,规章;管理investigate[in'vestigeit]v.调查,调查研究summary['s8m4ri]n.摘要,概要,一览consideration[k4n'sid4'rei54n]n.考虑,思考;体贴assessment n.估定;查定;估计数rhetorical[ri't3:rikl]a.修辞(学)的enhance[in'ha:ns]v t.提高,增加thorough['78r4]a.十分的,彻底的tradition[tr4'di54n]n.传统;惯例;传说description[dis'krip54n]n.描写,形容;种类subject['s8bd9ikt, s8b'd9ekt]n.实验对象,试验品evaluate[i'v1ljueit]v t.评价,估计stroke[str4uk]n.打,击;鸣声;中风factor['f1kt4]n.因素;要素overall['4uv4r3:l]a.全面的duplicate['dju:plikit]v t.复写,复制tendency['tend4nsi]n.趋向,趋势,倾向hypothesis[hai'p37isi:z]n.假设;前提antithetical['1nti'7etikl]a.对立(面)的expectation['ekspek'tei54n]n.期待,期望,预期validity[v4'liditi]n.正确(性);合法(性),有效第1页valid['v1lid]a.有效的;正当的construction[k4n'str8k54n]n.建造;建筑;建筑物federal['fed4r4l]a.(美国)联邦的guideline n.方针approve[4'pru:v]v.赞成,满意;批准,通过skilled a.技术熟练的personnel['p4:s4'nel]n.全体人员,全体职员applicable['1plik4bl]a.可适用的,可应用的formal['f3:m4l]a.形式上的,正式的emphasis['emf4sis]n.强调,重点objection[4b'd9ek54n]n.异议pleasing['pli:zi6]a.令人高兴的,愉快的,合意的accuracy['1kjur4si]n.精确性,正确度clarity['kl1riti]n.清楚,透明draft[dra:ft]n.草稿,草案edit['edit]v t.编辑ensure[in'5u4]v t.保证,担保aid[eid]n.帮助,援助heading['hedi6]n.标题,题词,题名methodical[m4'73dikl]a.有方法的,有系统的eliminate[i'limineit]v t.排除,消除wordy['w4:di]a.冗长的,废话连篇transitional[tr1n'si94nl]a.过渡的,转移的transition[tr1n'si54n]n.转变,变迁;过渡publication['p8bli'kei54n]n.公布;出版;出版物agency['eid94nsi]n.经办;代理;代理处readership['ri:d45ip]n.读者的身份,读者人数visual['vizju4l]a.看的,视觉的format['f3:m1t]n.格式,样式graph[gr1f]n.(曲线)图,图表diagram['dai4gr1m]n.图解,图表,简图mechanical[mi'k1nik4l]a.技巧上的,细节上的preferable['pref4r4bl]a.更可取的,更好的listing n.列表prose[pr4uz]n.散文sacrifice['s1krifais]v t.牺牲;献出specialized a.专业的,专门的pretentious[pri'ten54s]a.矫饰的;做作的jargon['d9a:g4n]n.行话readable['ri:d4bl]a.可读的第2页orderly['3:d4li]a.整齐的;有秩序的framework['freimw4:k]n.框架,构架,结构on the job工作着break down into分成不同种类a variety of种种,各种各样的事物make up弥补,补足,拼凑under consideration在考虑中as such同样的,同量的take on呈现,具有write up详细描写get down从……下来;下车;写下mademoiselle[`m1d4m4'zel]n.[法]小姐shady['5eidi]a.成荫的,多荫的,阴暗的interior[in'ti4ri4]n.内部insane[in'sein]a.患精神病的,精神病患者的anyhow['enihau]a d.无论如何;至少brass[bra:s]n.[sl.] 高级军官;领导人物net[net]v t.净赚slick[slik]n.(用油光纸印制的)通俗杂志frankly['fr16kli]a d.直率地;慷慨地intersession['int4'se54n]n.两个学期之间的时间段beer[bi4]n.啤酒companion[k4m'p1ni4n]n.同伴;共事者;伴侣brassy['br1si]a.厚脸皮的jolly['d93li]v t.使快活,使高兴protagonist[pr4u't1g4nist]n.主角gabby['g1bi]a.饶舌的ratio['rei5i4u]n.比(率)tag[t1g]v t.紧随flirt[fl4:t]n.轻佻的人gracious['grei54s]a.亲切的cute[kju:t]a.聪明的,伶俐的pal[p1l]n.(infml)好朋友,伙伴flip[flip]v i.快速地翻转index['indeks]n.索引;指数;指标polish['p3li5]v t.润色soar[s3:]v i.翱翔;剧增tangible['t1nd94bl]a.实实在在的testimony['testim4ni]n.证明;公开的表明germ[d94:m]n.萌芽,起源第3页editorship n.编辑的地位、职位senior['si:nj4]n.毕业班学生 a.高中或大学毕业班的outlet['aut-let]n.出口,出路perspective[p4:'spektiv]n.观点,看法broaden['br3:dn]v.放宽,变宽,扩大heck[hek]i nt.咒骂(用作程度较轻的咒骂)yearn['j4:n]v i.渴望uproot[8p'ru:t]v t.将……连根拔掉inferiority[infi4ri'2:iti]n.劣势inferior[in'fi4ri4]a.差的;自卑的coward['kau4d]n.胆怯者pellet['pelit]n.小球gang[g16]n.一群(伙,组,套)starry['sta:ri]a.布满星星的sweater['swet4]n.毛线衫,厚运动衫fond[f3nd]a.喜爱……的,慈爱的metaphysical[met4'fizikl]a.哲理的;高度抽象的disorganized a.紊乱的,无组织的preoccupy[pri'3kjupai]v t.使对……全神贯注mechanics[mi'k1niks]n.力学,机械学;(制作的或操作的)手法,技巧assimilate[4'simileit]v t.吸收chaos['kei3s]n.混乱(状态)no doubt无疑地,必定to top it off(通常用于引出令人不快的事情)另外,除此之外be stuck in陷于,困在(某种不利境地)know one's way around/about精通世故地as for至于sink in被完全理解get over克服(困难等)set one's sights for胸怀大志cheer up感到振奋at present现在,目前what with因为,由于,考虑到be preoccupied by/with全神贯注于……make the best of充分利用;尽力而为come one's way碰到,遇上quest[kwest]n.寻求extraterrestrial[`ekstr4t4'restri4l]n.地球外的,宇宙的ponder['p3nd4]v.沉思,考虑muse[mju:z]v.沉思,默想,冥想第4页contemplate['k3ntempleit]v.凝视,沉思exotic[ig'z3utik]a.外国的;异国情调的biology[bai'3l4d9i]n.生物学;一个地区的生物cosmic['k3zmik]a.宇宙的;广大无边的exquisite['ekskwizit]a.精巧的;敏锐的acceptable[4k'sept4bl]a.合意的extraordinary[iks'tr3:din4ri]a.非常的,特别的,非凡的unimaginably a d.不能想象地;不可思议地astronomy[4s'tr3n4mi]n.天文学array[4'rei]n.列阵detector[di'tekt4]n.发觉者,探测器dedicated['dedikeitid]v t.专注的,献身的dedicate['dedikeit]v t.献给;献身于operationally a d.用于操作地;运转地operational['3p4'rei54nl]a.操作上的;可使用的galaxy['g1l4ksi]n.星系assign[4'sain]v 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t.脱掉respectful[ris'pektful]a.恭敬的,尊敬的,尊重人的unbookish[8n'buki5]a.不想读书的patron['peitr4n]n.庇(保)护人;赞助人optical['3ptik4l]a.视觉的,光学的suspicious[s4s'pi54s]a.可疑的,怀疑的suspicion[s4s'pi54n]n.怀疑,疑心,猜疑duck[d8k]v t.闪避bold[b4uld]a.大胆的pointedly a d.尖锐地doubtful['dautful]a.可疑的,不确的,疑心的title['taitl]n.标题;书名;头衔thumb[78m]v i.以拇指翻书页frown[fraun]v i.皱眉(表示不满)pork[p3:k]n.猪肉bean[bi:n]n.豆;豆科植物jar[d9a:]v t.震动,刺激sweeping['swi:pi6]a.扫荡的,彻底的raging['reid9i6]a.狂怒的rage[reid9]v i.大怒demon['di:m4n]n.魔鬼,恶魔slash[sl15]v t.乱砍;鞭打;抨击extol[iks't3l]v t.极度称赞;颂扬mock[m3k]v t.嘲弄reality[ri'1liti]n.真实,事实weapon['wep4n]n.武器;斗争手段club[kl8b]n.棍棒;球棒;俱乐部conviction[k4n'vik54n]n.深信,确信revel['revl]v i.狂欢crude[kru:d]a.天然的,未加工的surge[s4:d9]v i.汹涌,澎湃hunger['h86g4]v i.欲望,渴望disbelieve['disbi'li:v]v t.不相信第8页novel['n3v4l]n.小说,长篇故事lug[l8g]v t.拖,拉golf[g3lf]n.高尔夫球mythical['mi7ikl]a.神话的,虚构的revive[ri'vaiv]v t.(使)苏醒vivid['vivid]a.生动的;明亮的naturalism['n1t54r4liz4m]n.自然主义mood[mu:d]n.心情,情绪;语气ream[ri:m]n.令(纸张的计数单位)sufficiently a d.充分地,足够地ignorance['ign4r4ns]n.无知,愚昧Jim Crow〈贬〉黑人aside from除……以外on earth究竟call down招致out of the question不可能fit into适合refer to提到,谈到address oneself to专注于;致力于on errands外出办事slip up疏忽be clear of避开危险的call up打电话给……under one's breath小声地right off立刻,马上be through完事,做完be consumed with被……吞噬;因……而变得憔悴run across偶遇look up(在词典参考书中)查寻surge up汹涌,澎湃hunger for渴望nothing less than不亚于beyond one's reach无法达到地,力所不能及地strategy['str1tid9i]n.战略,策略,计谋paradox['p1r4d3ks]n.似非而是,自相矛盾paradoxical['p1r4'd3ksik4l]a.荒谬的discontented['disk3n'tentid]a.不满意的statistics[st4'tistiks]n.统计(资料)institution['insti'tju:54n]n.风俗,制度,惯例popular['p3pjul4]a.流行的;受欢迎的第9页desirable[di'zai4r4bl]a.值得要的,合意的liability['lai4'biliti]n.责任,义务;不利条件asset['1set]n.资产,宝贵的东西anymore a d.不再,再也不yarn[ja:n]n.绳子electrical[i'lektrik4l]a.电的,有关电的plug[pl8g]n.塞子,插头bond[b3nd]n.联结物;联系functional['f86k54nl]a.功能的affectional[4'fek54n4l]a.情感上的,爱情的affection[4'fek54n]n.慈爱,爱;爱慕desertion[di'z4:54n]n.抛弃,遗弃overcome['4uv4'k8m]v t.战胜,克服,胜过order['3:d4]n.序;整齐intimacy['intim4si]n.亲密;熟悉;秘密dissatisfaction['dis's1tis'f1k54n]n.不满,不平improvement[im'pru:vm4nt]n.改进,改善;改进处way[wei]a d.远远地,大大地familiarity[f4'mili'1riti]n.熟悉,通晓religious[ri'lid94s]a.宗教的;虔诚的plot[pl3t]v t.绘图incidence['insid4ns]n.发生率participative a.参与的layman['leim4n]n.门外汉,外行passive['p1siv]a.被动的,守势的contemporary[k4n'temp4r4ri]a.当代的,同时代的changer n.改变者medium['mi:dj4m]n.媒体activism['1ktivizm]n.行动(第一)主义;激进主义rebellion[ri'belj4n]n.谋反,叛乱engender[in'd9And4]v t.产生;酿成assess[4'ses]v t.估计,估价;评估gradual['gr1dju4l]a.逐渐的,逐步的increment['inkrim4nt]n.增量,递增resist[ri'zist]v t.抵抗,反抗mobilize['m4ubilaiz]v t.动员organizational a.组织的reform[ri'f3:m]n.改革;改良;革除arrangement[4'reind9m4nt]n.排列,安排component[k4m'p4un4nt]n.组成部分;成分;组件第10页romance[r4u'm1ns]n.浪漫文学,浪漫故事esthetic[es'7etik]a.(审)美的victimize['viktimaiz]v t.牺牲environment[in'vai4r4nm4nt]n.环境,外界;围绕fulfill[ful'fil]v t.完成;满足;履行frontier['fr8ntj4]n.尚待开发的领域exploration['ekspl3:'rei54n]n.考察;勘探;探查seemingly a d.表面上地limitless['limitlis]a.无限的,无界限的when it comes to一谈到……;就……而论for that matter讲到那件事,关于那一点the other way round相反in terms of按照;用……的话;在……方面bring about使发生,致使can't help but无可奈何只有……,只能take (great) pains (with/to do)努力做……monster['m3nst4]n.怪物;畸形的动植物undersized a.较一般为小的,不够大的sickly['sikli]a.有病的,苍白agony['1g4ni]n.苦恼,极大痛苦coarse[k3:s]a.粗糙的,粗鄙的delusion[di'lu:94n]n.欺骗;幻觉;迷惑grandeur['gr1nd94]n.庄严,伟大dramatist['dr1m4tist]n剧作家;戏曲家composer[k4m'p4uz4]n.作曲家compose[k4m'p4uz]v t.创作(乐曲)conversationalist[k3nv4'sei54nlist]n.健谈者,善于谈话的人monologue['m3n4l3g]n.独白maddeningly a d.令人发狂地,使人恼火地tiresome['tai4s4m]a.无聊的,烦人的mania['meinj4]n.狂热,癖好hint[hint]n.暗示,迹象trivial['trivi4l]a.琐细的,价值不高的harangue[h4'r16]n.大声疾呼的演说volubility[v3lju'biliti]n.流利;滔滔不绝deafen['defn]v t.使聋;使隔音vegetarianism[ved9i'te4ri4nizm]n.素食主义pamphlet['p1mflit]n.小册子expense[iks'pens]n.费用,代价opera['3p4r4]n.歌剧(院)第11页summon['s8m4n]v t.传唤(被告等),命令applause[4'pl3:z]n.喝彩;夸奖,称赞needless['ni:dlis]a.不必要的,无用的eminent['emin4nt]a.显赫的,杰出的vocalist['vouk4list]n.声乐家,歌手rave[reiv]v i.胡言乱语;咆哮suicidal[su:4'saidl]a.自杀的,自取灭亡的gloom[glu:m]n.阴暗,阴沉darkly['da:kli]a d.暗黑;暗中Buddhist['budist]a. & n.佛教的;佛教徒monk[m86k]n.和尚,僧侣,修道士grief[gri:f]n.悲痛,忧伤pet[pet]n.爱畜;宠物;受宠爱的人callous['k1l4s]a.无感觉的;无情的emperor['emp4r4]n.皇帝,君主shudder['58d4]v i.战慄;发抖incapable[in'keip4bl]a.无能力的;无资格的grovel['gr3vl]v i.卑躬屈膝,奴颜婢膝loftily['l3ftili]a d.崇高地,傲慢地benefactor['beni'f1kt4]n.施主;捐助人mortally['m3:t4li]a d.致命地offend[4'fend]v t.得罪,使……不愉快recipient[ri'sipi4nt]n.接受者legal['li:gl]a.法律的,法定的rajah['r2:d94]n.(印)王侯,王公prospective[pr4s'pektiv]a.预期的;未来的royalty['r3i4lti]n.版税pressing['presi6]a.紧急的jail[d9eil]n.监狱;监禁unscrupulous[8n'skru:pjul4s]a.肆无忌惮的;不道德的endless['endlis]a.无止境的,无穷的infidelity[infi'deliti]n.不忠admirer[4d'mai4r4]n.赞美者,羡慕者wealthy['wel7i]a.富裕的,富庶的selfish['selfi5]a.自私的,利己的devotion[di'v4u54n]n.献身;忠诚;专心lessen['lesn]v.减少,减轻autobiography[3:t4bai'3gr4fi]n.自传disagreeable['dis4'gri4bl]a.令人不悦的stupendous[stju:'pend4s]a.惊人的;巨大的第12页musical['mju:zik4l]a.音乐的,和谐悦耳的genius['d9i:nj4s]n.天才unquestionably[8n'kwest54n4bl]a d.无疑地,无可非议地rank[r16k]v.排列,把……分等musico-dramatic a.音乐剧的masterpiece['ma:st4pi:s]n.杰作headache['hedeik]n.头痛;使人头痛的事loot[lu:t]v t.掠夺 n.掠夺物,战利品trilogy['tril4d9i]n.(小说、戏剧等的)三部曲faithless['fei7lis]a.背信弃义的,不忠的compromise['k3mpr4maiz]v i.背弃;妥协downright['daunrait]a d.彻底grand[gr1nd]a.显赫的,高傲的forgive[f4'giv]v.原谅,饶恕scratch[skr1t5]v.抓;擦;乱涂shriek[5ri:k]v i.尖声喊叫miracle['mir4kl]n.奇迹in relation to关于,涉及in one's eyes根据某人的观点,意见in support of支持at sb's expense归某人付费needless to say不必说out of sorts不高兴地under obligation (to do)有责任(义务)做good for有效的;有益于lay one's hands on逮住,抓住;找到,得到run up抬高on record记录在案connection[k4'nek54n]n.连接,关系-stricken(后缀)表示被打中的,遭殃的,患病的ice-encased a.(像)放在冰箱的hysterical[his'terik4l]a.歇斯底里的lick[lik]v t.舔subsequently a d.其后,其次,接着hind[haind]a.后面的,后部的follow-up a.接着的,后续的dispatch[dis'p1t5]n.急件disappearance['dis4'pi4r4ns]n.消失,消散;失踪rescue['reskju:]v t.拯救,营救,挽救nap[n1p]n.(白天)打瞌睡,打盹第13页defrost[di:'fr3:st]v.除霜,解冻unfair['8n'fA4]a.不公平的luckless['l8klis]a.不幸的,坏运气的indisputably a d.无争论余地地;无可置疑地exorbitant[ig'z3:bit4nt]a.过度的,过高的,昂贵的storage['st3:rid9]n.贮藏,保管;仓库facility[f4'siliti]n.设备;容易;便利row[r4u]n.吵嚷substantial[s4b'st1n54l]a.很多的;大量的refund[ri:'f8nd]n.归还,偿还额,退款publicity[p8b'lisiti]n.宣传,广告enterprise['ent4praiz]n.艰巨的事业;企业;事业心whimper['wimp4]n.牢骚,怨声fee[fi:]n.酬金;费ironclad[ai4n'kl1d]a.装甲的,打不破的,坚硬的mainstay a.支柱,中流砥柱admirable['1dm4r4bl]a.令人倾佩的,值的赞美的chamber['t5eimb4]n.室,房间hue and cry追捕犯人时的叫喊声;(表示反对的)叫嚷crime[kraim]n.罪,罪行;犯罪haul[h3:l]n.获得量anonymity[1n4'nimiti]n.匿名enforcement[in'f3:sm4nt]n.实施,执行agent['eid94nt]n.代理人;工具;力量fugitive['fju:d9itiv]n.逃亡者,亡命者illegal[i'li:g4l]a.不合法的,非法的diligently a d.勤勉地,坚持不懈地bizarre[bi'z2:]a.奇怪的unparalleled[8n'p1r4leld]a.举世无双的liquidate['likwideit]v t.清算;偿付yacht[j3t]n.游艇,快艇arduous['a:dju4s]a.费劲的goodly a.颇大的,颇多的pensioner['pen54n4]n.领年金者proportion[pr4'p3:54n]n.比率,比例;大小inexhaustible[inig'z3:st4bl]a.无穷无尽的insupportable[ins4'p3:t4bl]a.忍耐不住的,不能忍受的marital['m1ritl]a.婚姻的confession[k4n'fe54n]n.坦白;忏悔incarcerate[in'kars4'ret]v t.幽闭;监禁第14页unamiable['8n'eimj4bl]a.不和蔼的,不友好的spouse[spauz]n.配偶scheme[ski:m]n.计划,规划;诡计visit['vizit]v t.惩罚;降罪于lifework n.一生的工作,毕生的事业fanatically a d.狂热地,盲信地meticulous[m4'tikjul4s]a.细致的,过细的double-check n.重新检察或检查;证实shrewd[5ru:d]a.机敏的,精明的dissatisfy[dis's1tisfai]v t.使感觉不满、不满足greed[gri:d]n.贪心,贪婪greedy['gri:di]a.贪吃的;贪婪的expand[iks'p1nd]v.使膨胀,详述,扩张grievance['gri:v4ns]n.不平;冤情;抱怨immature[im4'tju4]a.不成熟的,未完全发展的frivolous['friv4l4s]a.不严肃的,轻浮的foresee[f3:'si:]v t.预见,预知slip[slip]n.犯过失,出错elapse[i'l1ps]v i.过去,消逝awesome['3:s4m]a.引起敬畏的sweetheart['swi:tha:t]n.心肝,宝贝accusation['1kju:'zei54n]n.罪名,谴责rumor['ru:m4]n.谣言;传闻freezer['fri:z4]n.冷冻箱mandatory['m1nd4't4uri]a.强制性的choke[t54uk]v t.哽,噎;阻塞transport[tr1ns'p3:t]n.运输;运输工具Congress['k36gres]n.立法机构,如美国国会warehouse['wA4haus' 'wA4hauz]n.仓库dehydrate[di:'haidreit]v t.使脱水in brief简言之;以简洁的形式as far as就……来说,一直到……的程度for one举个例子说dry off弄干stop dead in one's tracks猛地停下来be bound up with与……有密切关系first and last总的说来,主要地put away放好,储存……备用die down变弱,逐渐停止,渐渐消失on the track of追踪,得到……线索第15页make a living谋生at that另外,而且还是be caught in被缠住、绊住;被雨淋,被风吹to the point where到……程度play around玩耍settle down定居,平静下来take with a grain of salt对……持怀疑态度;有所保留go through被通过genre[92:6r]n.(文艺作品的)体裁,样式;类型controversial['k3ntr4'v4:54l]a.争论的,争议的forecast['f3:ka:st]v t.预想,预测planetwide a.遍布整个星球的humankind['hju:m4nkaind]n.人类probable['pr3b4bl]a.很可能的,大概的inevitable[in'evit4bl]a.不可避免的,必然的mode[m4ud]n.方式,模式spaceship['speis5ip]n.太空船,宇宙飞船flexibility['flAks4'bil4ti]n.灵活性,柔韧性tabular['t1bjul4]a.制成表的gimmick['gimik]n.别致的玩意儿;新奇的发明robot['r4ub3t]n.机器人;自动机sorrow['s3r4u]n.悲哀,悲伤;遗憾prehistoric['pri:hi'st3:rik]a.史前的,古老的formula['f3:mjul4]n.公式,规则decisive[di'saisiv]a.决定性的;果断的exterior[eks'ti4ri4]a.外部的,外在的 n.外部,表面clash[kl15]n.冲突lurk[l4:k]v i.埋伏;潜伏;隐藏joint[d93int]a.共同的,联合的headline['hedlain]n.大字标题;新闻提要hectic['hAktik]a.忙乱的badger['b1d94]v t.纠缠,使困恼tragedy['tr1d9idi]n.悲剧historian[his't3:ri4n]n.历史学家craft[kra:ft]n.工艺;手艺,行业covertly['k8v4tli]a d.偷偷摸摸地poetry['p4uitri]n.诗,作诗法endeavor[in'dAv4]n.努力,尽力sober['s4ub4]a.冷静的plodding['pl3di6]a.沉重缓慢的,单调乏味的第16页phalanx['f1l16ks]n.方阵,密集的人群(兽群、东西) soulless['soulis]a.没有精神的,没有灵魂的electromagnetism[ilektr4u'm1gnitiz(4)m]n.电磁(学) slice[slais]n.薄片,切片electronics[ilek'tr3niks]n.电子学stolid['st3:lid]a.不易激动的awe[3:]n.敬畏underarm['8nd4r'2:m]a.手臂下的,腋下deodorant[di:'oud4r4nt]n.除臭剂deride[di'raid]v t.嘲笑,愚弄fuzzy['f8zi]a.模糊的,失真的egghead['eghed]n.有知识者,受过高等教育的人,理论家minority[mai'n3riti]n.少数(民族);少数tuck[t8k]v t.存放于安全地;储藏site[sait]n.地点,地基;场所Pacific[p4'sifik]a.太平洋的atoll['1t3:l]n.环礁,环状珊瑚礁humanist['hju:m4nist]n.人道主义者,人文主义者humanistic[hju:m4'nistik]a dj.人文主义的glorification[gl2:ifi'kei54n]n.赞颂chaotic[kei'3tik]a.混乱的celebrate['selibreit]v t.庆贺,庆祝;表扬,赞美tidal['taidl]a.潮水的unperturbed[8np4't4:bd]a.泰然自若的mythology[mi'73l4d9i]n.神话集;神话学manfully a d.男子气概地,雄伟地geological[d9i4'l3d9ik4l]a.地质学的,地质的politician['p3li'ti54n]n.政治家;[贬]政客preach[pri:t5]v.说教,布道;鼓吹gospel['g3sp4l]n.信条;教义archaic[a:'keik]a.古老的,古代的,陈旧的fruitful['fru:tful]a.富有成效的interpreter[in't4:prit4]n.翻译interpret['in't4:prit]v i.解释,说明evangelize[i'v1nd9ilaiz]v t.传福音,使信基督教farthermost['f2:04moust]a.最远的knowledgeable a.有见识的come out被出版;被刊行bit by bit渐渐,一点一点lean on靠着第17页feel for同情in one's hands在……控制之下on the ground that因为;由于think out仔细考虑back up支持tuck away藏起来take thought寻思,考虑rusty['r8sti]a.生锈的lining['laini6]n.衬里inheritable[in'herit4bl]a.可继承的,会遗传的worrier['w4:l4]n.爱担心的人,常发愁的人glum[gl8m]a.阴郁的,阴沉的gene[d9i:n]n.基因reflower[ri:'flau4]v i.再开花,使再开花all-purpose a.通用的,多用途的suck[s8k]v t.吸vogue[v4ug]n.时髦(品);风气fad[f1d]n.(infml)时尚celestial[si'lestj4l]a.天空的,天的UFO飞碟,不明飞行物ominously a d.不吉祥地worrisome['w4:is4m]a.令人不安的polar['p4ul4]a.两极的,极地的submerge[s8b'm4:d9]v.浸没,淹没tasty['teisti]a.好吃的,可口的inexorably a d.无情地,冷酷地riddle['ridl]v t.刺出无数窟窿,打排孔wreck[rek]n.遇难船的残骸quaint[kweint]a.离奇的;有奇趣的transient['tr1nzi4nt]a.短暂的,瞬时的manageable['m1nid94bl]a.易控制的,可应付的rust[r8st]v.(使)生锈terror['ter4]n.恐怖,令人恐怖的事surrender[s4'rend4]v.交出;引渡;放弃optimist['3ptimist]n.乐观主义者inspiration['insp4'rei54n]n.灵感eastern['i:st4n]a.东方的;朝东的posture['p3st54]n.姿势trump[tr8mp]v t.胜过antique[1n'ti:k]n.古物,古董第18页inundation[in8n'dei54n]n.洪水,泛滥;水灾overdue['4uv4'dju:]a.过期(未付)的warning['w3:ni6]n.警告;前兆canal[k4'n1l]n.运河;(人体内)导管pedestrian[pi'destri4n]n.步行者,行人a.(fig.)单调的,平凡的,枯燥的immemorial['imi'm3ri4l]a dj.古老的,远古的,无法追忆的cryogenically a d.使用冷冻地toe[t4u]n.趾,脚趾relocate[ri:'loukeit]v.重新部署self-cancelling a.自相抵消的enlarge[in'la:d9]v.扩大,放大rink[ri6k]n.溜冰场dud[d8d]n.哑弹, 无用物, (sl.) 失败的人或事digest[di'd9est, 'daid9est]v t.消化;领会spit[spit]v t.吐出flash[fl15]n.(火焰等)一闪,闪亮chinch bug麦虱menopause['men4p3:z]n.绝经期endorse[in'd3:s]v t.认可,签署suck up吸收,抽取but then但另一方面,不过at hand即将到来turn back往回走look up to尊敬,仰望get through到达;完成;接通电话drop dead倒毙,猝死make room of为……提供场地run out of用完,耗尽ease off缓和,减轻burn out烧掉,烧尽play a part参与debate[di'beit]n. & vt.争论;辩论unknowable[8n'nou4bl]a.不可知的puzzlement['p8zlm4nt]n.迷惑turbulence['t4:bjul4ns]n.骚动subside[s4b'said]v i.减退,衰减package['p1kid9]v t.组装glimpse[glimps]n.一瞥,一看incomprehension[in'k3mpri'hen5n]n.不了解,不领悟reconfirm['ri:k4n'di54n]v t.再次证实,再次确认第19页。
现代大学英语精读6课文翻译《1(10课》)-
现代大学英语精读6课文翻译《1(10课》)-4. 我的猪舍设在房屋后面一座旧果园的最南端。
我养的猪就住在一座破败的屋子里,原先是一座冰窖。
那屋有个可以让猪自由活动的十分可爱的院子,院子低矮的栅栏边上长着一棵苹果树,苹果树伞盖遮蔽着院落。
作为猪,它不可能再有奢求了——无论如何,不能再有非分之想了。
木屑铺垫在地上,可供猪用鼻子拱地,暖暖地躺着睡觉。
然而,当猪病了,这木屑的作用就存有疑问了。
我的一位邻居说,猪要是生活在新地上,也许会更好些——其道理与种土豆是一样的。
他说,也许木屑含有什么有害的东西,他对木屑从来就没有好感。
5. 下午四点钟光景,我开始发现猪有点不对劲儿。
它没来食槽吃晚餐。
当有猪(或孩子)拒绝用餐,那一家人或者说一冰窖的人就会担忧万分。
猪伸腿躺在屋子的木屑里,我检查了它之后,就去摇了四次电话。
达默隆先生来接的电话。
我问,“猪病了,该怎么办?”(在乡间电话上,从来不用报名道姓;从声音和问题的性质上便能明白打电话的人是谁。
)“我不知道。
我从来没诊治过病猪,”达默隆先生说,“但是我很快就可以知道。
你挂上电话。
我给亨利打电话。
”6. 达默隆先生五分钟之后便打来电话。
“亨利说,让猪仰面躺着,给它灌两盎司的篦麻油或橄榄油,要是那不管用,给它打一针肥皂水。
他说,他肯定猪囤食了,即使他错了,对猪也没害处。
”7. 我感谢了达默隆先生。
但我没有径直前往猪那里去。
我跌坐进一张椅子里,****了好几分钟,默想我遭遇的麻烦。
然后,我站起来,向猪舍走去,瞧瞧那儿还需要我做些什么。
我于不知不觉中推迟了一小时去做那将正式宣告我养猪失败的事;我不想在日常喂养中,在发育成长中,甚至在日复一日的连续性中发生中断现象。
我不想要中断,不想要篦麻油,不想有任何节外生枝的事。
我只想将猪饲养下去,一顿一顿地喂养它,从春天直到夏日和秋季。
我甚至不知道家中是否有两盎司的篦麻油。
8. 五点过后不久,我想起那晚有人邀我们赴晚宴,要是我给猪喂药,就没有时间了。
大学英语精读第六册
大学英语精读第六册 Unit 01Phrase & Expressionson the job: while working; at work 在上班,在工作岗位上,忙碌break down into: separate into different kinds; divide into types分为………项,分类a variety (of): a number or collection of different sorts of the same general type多种多样的,品种多样的make up : form as a whole; constitute 组成, 构成as a whole:普遍说来, 一般地说,整体来看under consideration: being discussed; begin given thoughtful attention在考虑中,考虑中as such: as being what is indicated or suggested; in itself or in themselves依其身份、资格或名义等; 本身,take on: begin to have; assume 具有(特征等),呈现,呈现某种特性write up: rewrite in a fuller, better organized way; give a full written account of 整理好写成文章, 全部写出, 详细描写get down: write, record (usu. quickly or with difficulty) 写下; 记下,记录下live by:make a living from(sth.or doing sth.) 靠……谋生live for:have as a reason for living;give most attention to为…而生活, 以…为生活目的,极注意live on:have as one’s only food;live at the cost of(sb.else)靠………为生live out:live till the end of 活过,活到live through:remain alive in spite of or through the time of(sth.)经历过; 经历…而未死,经受过,经历过,熬过live up to: act according to;do(what is expected or promised)根据………做live with:learn to accept(sth.unpleasant);put up with学会接受,忍受get across:(cause to)become understood or accepted 使理解,接受get along:advance;form or have a friendly relationship(with sb.)进展,相处得好,相处融洽get around/round:(of news)spread;move freely,travel传播开,自由移动,走动,旅行get around/round to: find time for(sth.or doing sth.)有时间做get at: mean;reach and discover 意味着,意思是,够得着,发现get by:pass;continue to live,often in spite of difficulties经过,度日, 继续存在get down: record(sth.)in writing 写下; 记下,记录下get down to: begin to give serious attention to 开始认真注意get over: recover from;deal with;control 痊愈,处理,解决,控制get through: reach(sb.)by telephone;finish 接通电话,完成TranslationTranslate the following sentences into English:1.当你面临的某项任务显得太大时,将其分解成若干项较小的、更容易对付的任务也许会有所助益。
现代大学英语精读6(1-10课)课文翻译
现代大学英语精读6(1-10课)课文翻译现代大学英语精读6课文翻译1如何使我们不为穷人的存在而内疚约翰·肯尼斯·高伯瑞(加尔布雷斯)1. 我很愿意严肃地考虑一种人类最古老的活动,这项活动持续了多年,实际上已经超过了几个世纪,那就是尝试怎样使我们不为穷人的存在而内疚。
2. 贫穷和富有从一开始就共生在一起,彼此很不愉快有时还充满危险。
普鲁塔克曾说,“贫富失衡乃共和政体最致命的宿疾。
”富有和贫穷持续共存产生的问题,特别是如何证明在其他人还贫穷时我们富有是有道理的这一问题,成为有思想有学问的人几百年来孜孜不倦地思考探索的问题。
直至当代状况依然如此。
3. 《圣经》提出了最初的解决之道,在现世遭受贫穷的人来世会得到更好的回报。
他们的贫穷是暂时的灾难,如果贫穷但却能顺从,他们将来就会成为世界的主人。
在某种程度上这就是最理想的解决办法。
由此,富人就可以一边嫉妒穷人的美好前途一边享受他们的财富。
4. 很长时间之后,即在1776年《国富论》发表的二三十年之后——在英国工业革命开始之后,贫富不均的问题及其解决办法开始具有了现代的形式。
杰罗米·边沁,这位与亚当·斯密几乎是同时代的人,提出了这样一种准则,在某种程度上,美国人认为这一准则在英国几乎50年来一直影响显著。
这就是实用主义学说。
“通过实用的原则,”边沁在1789年指出,“也就是通过这一原则来赞成或否定任何一种应运而生的看来似乎必定会增加或减少政党幸福的行为或做法,尽管政党的利益总是在讨论之中。
”实用,实际上一定是以自我为中心的。
然而,社会中只有少数人拥有大量财富,却有更多人没有财富。
只要遵循边沁的话——“最大的利益给最多的人”,就能够解决社会问题。
社会尽力满足更多的人,人们接受对于很多利益没被满足的人来说,结果极其不幸。
5. 在19世纪30年代,一种新的准则成为使我们不为穷人的存在感到内疚的有效办法,迄今为止它的影响也丝毫没有减弱。
大学英语精读第6册课文全文翻译-中英对照
Some scientists working on the question of extraterrestrial intelligence, myself among them, have attempted to estimate the number of advanced technical civilizations -- defined operationally as societies capable of radio astronomy -- in the Milky Way Galaxy. Such estimates are little better than guesses. They require assigning numerical values to quantities such as the numbers and ages of stars; the abundance of planetary systems and the likelihood of the origin of life, which we know less well; and the probability of the evolution of intelligent life and the lifetime of technical civilizations, about which we know very little indeed.
大学英语第六册课文及翻译
大学英语第六册unit1AThe Pursuit of Happiness(The Pursuit of Happiness)The right to pursue happiness is promised to Americans by the US Constitution, but no one seems quite sure which way happiness runs. It may be we are issued a hunting license but offered no game. Jonathan Swift conceived of happiness as "the state of being well-deceived", or of being "a fool among idiots ", for Swift saw society as a land of false goals.It is, of course, un-American to think in terms of false goals. We do, however, seem to be dedicated to the idea of buying our way to happiness. We shall all have made it to Heaven when we possess enough.And at the same time the forces of American business are hugely dedicated to making us deliberately unhappy. Advertising is one of our major industries, and advertising exists not to satisfy desires but to create them — and to create them faster than anyone's budget can satisfy them. For that matter, our whole economy is based on addicting us to greed. We are even told it is our patriotic duty to support the national economy by buying things.Look at any of the magazines that cater to women. There advertising begins as art and slogans in the front pages and ends as pills and therapy in the back pages. The art at the front illustrates the dream of perfect beauty. This is the baby skin that must be hers. This, the perfumed breath she must breathe out. This, the sixteen-year-old figure she must display at forty, at fifty, at sixty, and forever. This is the harness into which Mother must strap herself in order to display that perfect figure. This is the cream that restores skin, these are the tablets that melt away fat around the thighs, and these are the pills of perpetual youth.Obviously no reasonable person can be completely persuaded either by such art or by such pills and devices. Yet someone is obviously trying to buy this dream and spending billions every year in the attempt. Clearly the happiness-market is not running out of customers, but what is it they are trying to buy?Defining the meaning of "happiness" is a perplexing proposition: the best one can do is to try to set some extremes to the idea and then work towards the middle. To think of happiness as achieving superiority over others, living in a mansion made of marble, having a wardrobe with hundreds of outfits, will do to set the greedy extreme. To think of happiness as the joy of a holy man of India will do to set the spiritual extreme. He sits completely still, contemplating the nature of reality, free even of his own body. If admirers bring him food, he eats it; if not, he starves. Why be concerned? What is physical is trivial to him. To contemplate is his joy and he achieves complete mental focus through an incredibly demanding discipline, the accomplishment of which is itself a joy to him.Is he a happy man? Perhaps his happiness is only another sort of illusion. But who can take it from him? And who will dare say it is more false than happiness paid for through an installment plan?Although the holy man's concept of happiness may enjoy considerable prestige in the Orient, I doubt the existence of such motionless happiness. What is certain is that his way of happiness would be torture to almost anyone of Western temperament. Yet these extremes will still serve to define the area within which all of us must find some sort of balance. Thoreau had his own firm sense of that balance: save on the petty in order to spend on the essential.Possession for its own sake or in competition with the rest of the neighborhood would have been Thoreau's idea of the petty. The active discipline of raising one's perception of what is eternal in nature would have been his idea of the essential. Time saved on the petty could be spent on the essential. Thoreau certainly didn't intend to starve, but he would put into feeding himself only as much effort as would keep him functioning for more important efforts.Effort is the essence of it: there is no happiness except as we take on challenges. Short of the impossible, the satisfactions we get from a lifetime depend on how high we place our difficulties. The mortal flaw in the advertised version of happiness is in the fact that it claims to be effortless.We demand difficulty even in our diversions. We demand it because without difficulty there can be no game; a game is a way of making something hard for the fun of it. The rules of the game are an arbitrary addition of difficulty. It is easier to win at chess if you are free to change the rules, but the fun is in winning within the rules. If we could mint our own money, even building a fortune would become boring. No difficulty, no fun.Those in advertising seem too often to have lost their sense of the pleasure of difficulty. And the Indian holy man seems dull to us, I suppose, because he seems to be refusing to play anything at all. The Western weakness may be in the illusion that happiness can be bought. Perhaps the oriental weakness is in the idea that there is such a thing as perfect happiness.Happiness is never more than partial. Whatever else happiness may be, it is neither in having nor in being, but in becoming. What the writers of the Constitution declared for us as an inherent right was not happiness but the pursuit of happiness. What the early patriots might have underlined, could they have foreseen the happiness-market, is the cardinal fact that happiness is in the pursuit itself, in the pursuit of what is engaging and life-changing, which is to say, in the idea of becoming. A nation is not measured by what it possesses or wants to possess, but by what it wants to become.(Words: 1,005)追求幸福美国宪法赋予美国人民追求幸福的权利,但是似乎谁也说不清幸福跑到哪里去了。
现代大学英语精读6lesson 10 Notes on the English Character
Saint George
St George is the
patron saint of England and among the most famous of Christian figures. Presented in an armor killing the dragon.
Saint George
John Bull
first appears as a
character in a series of satires by John Arbuthnot (1667-1735). He satired Whig policy (1712) and introduced "John Bull" as the typical Englishman -- "an honest plain-dealing fellow, choleric, bold, and of a very inconstant temper"
rest on
Rest on/upon: (1) to depend on or be
based on sth. 依赖,取决于,以… 为依据。 E.g. Success in management ultimately rests on good judgement. (2) eyes rest on …..目光落在… Rest with: sb. is responsible for sth. 有(某 人 )负责。 E.g. The final decision rests with the President.
Sound
(4) in good condition E.g. The bodywork is sound but the engine needs replacing. (5) physically and mentally healthy. E.g. as sound as a bell.十分健康的。 a sound mind.心智健全的。
大学英语精读:第六册UNIT10
Do animals think? How could the earth show so many signs of design and purpose and yet be random? Our best scientists are heatedly debating both sides of these and other scientific questions. In the following essay, the author takes a look at science education and argues that as well ass telling students the facts and theories that have already been proved and accepted, science teacher should spend more time introducing their students to the many mysteries that remain unsolved and the arguments taking place between scientists. What better way, he argues, to stimulate their interest in thing scientific? DEBATING THE UNKNOWABLELewis Thomas The greatest of all the accomplishment of twentieth-century science has been the discovery of human ignorance. We live, as never before, in puzzlement about nature, the universe, and ourselves most of all. It is a new experience for the species. A century ago, after the turbulence caused by Darwin and Wallace had subsided and the central idea of natural selection had been grasped and accepted, we thought we knew everything essential about evolution. In the eighteenth century there were no huge puzzles; human reason was all you needed in order to figure out the universe. And for most of the earlier centuries, the Church provided both the questions and the answers, neatly packaged. Now, for the first time in human history, we are catching glimpses of our incomprehension. We can still make up stories to explain the world, as we always have, but now the stories have to be confirmed and reconfirmed by experiment. This is the scientific method, and once started on this line we cannot turn back. We are obliged to grow up in skepticism, requiring proofs for every assertion about nature, and there is no way out except to move ahead and plug away, hoping for comprehension in the future but living in a condition of intellectual instability for the long time. It is the admission of ignorance that leads to progress, not so much because the solving of a particular puzzle leads directly to a new piece of understanding but because the puzzle —— if it interests enough scientists —— leads to work. There is a similar phenomenon in entomology know as stigmergy, a term invented by Grasse, which means "to incite to work." When three or four termites are collected together in a chamber they wander about aimlessly, but when more termites are added, they begin to build. It is the presence of other termites, in sufficient numbers at close quarters, that produces the work: they pick up each other's fecal pellets and stack them in neat columns, and when the columns are precisely the right height, the termites reach across and turn the perfect arches that form the foundation of the termitarium. No single termite knows how to do any of this, but as soon as there are enough termites gathered together they become flawless architects, sensing their distances from each other although blind, building an immensely complicated structure with its own air-conditioning and humidity control. They work their lives away in this ecosystem built by themselves. The nearest thing to a termitarium that I can think of in human behavior is the making of language, which we do by keeping at each other all our lives, generation after generation, changing the structure by some sort of instinct. Very little is understood about this kind of collective behavior. It is out of fashion these days to talk of "superorganisms", but there simply aren't enough reductionist details in hand to explain away the phenomenon of termites and other social insects: some very good guesses can be made about their chemical signaling systems, but the plain fact that they exhibit something like a collective intelligence is a mystery, or anyway an unsolved problem, that might contain important implications for social life in general. This mystery is the best introduction I can think of to biological science in college. It should be taught for its strangeness, and for the ambiguity of its meaning. It should be taught to premedical students, who need lessons early n their careers about the uncertainties in science. College students, and for that matter high school students, should be exposed very early, perhaps at the outset, to the big arguments currently going on among scientists. Big arguments stimulate their interest, and with luck engage their absorbed attention. Few things in life are as engrossing as a good fight between highly trained and skilled adversaries. But the young students are told very little about the major disagreements of the day; they may be taught something about the arguments between Darwinians and their opponents a century ago, but they do not realize that similar disputes about other matters, many of them touching profound issues for our understanding of nature, are still going on and, indeed, are an essential feature of the scientific process. There is, I fear, a reluctance on the part of science teachers to talk about such things, based on the belief that before students can appreciate what the arguments are about they must learn and master the "fundamentals". I would be willing to see some experiments along this line, and I have in mind several examples of contemporary doctrinal dispute in which the drift of the argument can be readily perceived without deep or elaborate knowledge of the subject. There is, for one, the problem of animal awareness. One school of ethologists devoted to the study of animal behavior has it that human beings are unique in the possession of consciousness, differing from al other creatures in being able to think things over, capitalize on past experience, and hazard informed guesses at the future. Other, "lower", animals (with possible exceptions made for chimpanzees, whales, and dolphins) cannot do such things with their minds; they live from moment to moment with brains that are programmed to respond, automatically or by conditioning, to contingencies in the environment, Behavioral psychologists believe that this automatic or conditioned response accounts for human mental activity as well, although they dislike that word "mental". On the other side are some ethologists who seems to be more generous-minded, who see no compelling reasons to doubt that animals in general are quite capable of real thinking and doquite a lot of it —— thinking that isn't as dense as human thinking, that is sparser because of the lack of language and the resultant lack of metaphors to help the thought along, but thinking nonetheless. The point about this argument is not that one side or the other is in possession of a more powerful array of convincing facts; quite the opposite. There are not enough facts to sustain a genuine debate of any length; the question of animal awareness is an unsettled one. Another debatable question arises when one contemplates the whole biosphere, the conjoined life of the earth. How could it have turned out to possess such stability and coherence, resembling as it does a sort of enormous developing embryo, with nothing but chance events to determine its emergence? Lovelock and Margulis, facing this problem, have proposed the Gaia Hypothesis, which is, in brief, that the earth is itself a form of life, "a complex entity involving the Earth's biosphere, atmosphere, oceans and soil; the totality constituting a feedback or cybernetic system which seeks an optimal physical and chemical environment for life on this planet." Lovelock postulates, in addition, that "the physical and chemical condition of the surface of the Earth, of the atmosphere, and of the oceans has been an is actively made fit and comfortable by the presence of life itself." This notion is beginning to stir up a few signs of storm, and if it catches on, as I t h i n k i t w i l l , w e w i l l s o o n f i n d t h e b i o l o g i c a l c o m m u n i t y s p l i t i n t o f u m i n g f a c t i o n s , o n e s i d e s a y i n g t h a t t h e e v o l v e d b i o s p h e r e d i s p l a y s e v i d e n c e s o f d e s i g n a n d p u r p o s e , t h e o t h e r d e c r y i n g s u c h h e r e s y . I b e l i e v e t h a t s t u d e n t s s h o u l d l e a r n a s m u c h a s t h e y c a n a b o u t t h e a r g u m e n t . / p > p b d s f i d = " 1 1 1 " > 0 0 O n e m o r e c u r r e n t b a t t l e i n v o l v i n g t h e u n k n o w n i s b e t w e e n s o c i o b i o l o g i s t s a n d a n t i s o c i o b i o l o g i s t s , a n d i t i s a m a r v e l f o r s t u d e n t s t o b e h o l d . T o o b s e r v e , i n o p e n - m o u t h e d a s t o n i s h m e n t , o n e g r o u p o f h i g h l y i n t e l l i g e n t , b e a u t i f u l l y t r a i n e d , k n o w l e d g e a b l e , a n d i m a g i n a t i v e s c i e n t i s t s m a i n t a i n i n g t h a t a l l b e h a v i o r , a n i m a l a n d h u m a n , i s g o v e r n e d e x c l u s i v e l y b y g e n e s , a n d a n o t h e r g r o u p o f e q u a l l y t a l e n t e d s c i e n t i s t s a s s e r t i n g t h a t a l l b e h a v i o r s i s s e t a n d d e t e r m i n e d b y t h e e n v i r o n m e n t o r b y c u l t u r e , i s a n e d u c a t i o n a l e x p e r i e n c e t h a t n o c o l l e g e s t u d e n t s h o u l d b e a l l o w e d t o m i s s . T h e e s s e n t i a l l e s s o n t o b e l e a r n e d h a s n o t h i n g t o d o w i t h t h e r e l a t i v e v a l i d i t y o f t h e f a c t s u n d e r l y i n g t h e a r g u m e n t . I t i s t h e a r g u m e n t i t s e l f t h a t i s t h e e d u c a t i o n : w e d o n o t y e t k n o w e n o u g h t o s e t t l e s u c h q u e s t i o n s . / p > p b d s f i d = " 1 1 2 " > 0 0 N e w W o r d s / p > p b d s f i d = " 1 1 3 " > 0 0 d e b a t e / p >。
精读6 unit10课本
B6U10B6U10T1TEXT1EuphemismNeil PostmanPRECLASS WORKI.Think about the following questions and discuss them with your classmates.1. Do you know the meaning of the word “euphemism"? If not, try to find it out. The author of the textcites some examples of euphemism in English such as “culturally different children”, “senior citizens", and "mentalinstitutions". What do you think they mightmean?2. Euphemism is universal; it can be found in all languages. Can you give some examples of it inChinese?II.Search whatever sources available for the meaning of each of the following words as they are used in the text.1. exalted(l.1)2. down-to-earth(l.2),4. expunge(l.8)5. hideous(l.9)6, amiss(l.14)7. in the same vein(l.348. alienate(l.49)t•9. perspective(l.56)10. incongruous(l.66)11.categorically(l.75)III.Tell, without consulting a dictionary, how the italicized words below are to be properly interpreted in the context in which they are used.1.A euphemism is commonly defined as(I.1)2.is something else(l.48)3.that such changes never amount to anything*(J.69)4.that people who use earthy* language(I.75)TEXTA euphemism is commonly defined as an auspicious or exalted term(like “sanitation engineer")that is used in place of a moredown-to-earth term(like “garbageman").People who are partial to euphemisms stand accused of being “phony" or trying to hidewhat it is they are really talking about. And there is nodoubt that in some situations the accusations is entirely proper. For example, one of the moredetestableeuphemism I havecome across in recent years is the term"Operation Sunshine". which is the name the U.S. Government gave to some experiments it conducted with the hydrogen bomb in the South Pacific. It is obvious that the government, in choosing this name, was trying to expungethe hideous imagery that the bomb evokes and in so doingcommitted, as I see it, an immoralact. This sort of process—giving pretty names to essentially ugly realities—iswhat has given euphemizing such a bad name. And people like George Orwell havedone valuable work for all of us in calling attention to how the process works. But there is another side to euphemizing that is worth mentioning, and a few words here To begin with, we must keep in mind that things do not have “real" names, althoughmany people believe that they do. A garbage man is not “really" a"garbageman,"anymore than he is reallya “sanitation engineer." And a pig is not called a “pig" because it isso dirty, nor a shrimp a “shrimp" because it is so small. There are things, and then there arethe names of things, and it is considered a fundamental error in all branches of semanticsto assume that a name and a thing are one and the same. It is true, of course, that a nameis usually so firmly associated with the thing it denotes that it is extremely difficult toseparate one from the other. That is why, for example, advertising is so effective. Perfumesare not given names like “Bronx Odor," and an automobile will never be called “TheLumbering Elephant. “Shakespeare was only half right in saying that a rose by any othername would smell as sweet. Whatwe call thing affects how we will perceive them. It isnot only harder to sell someone a" horse mackerel" sandwich than a “tuna fish" sandwich,but even though they are the “same" thing, we are likely to enjoy the taste of tuna more thanthat of the horse mackerel. It would appear that human beings almost naturally come to identify names with things, which is one of our more fascinating illusions. But there issome substance to this illusion. For if you change the names of things, you change howpeople will regard them, and that is as good as changing the nature of the thing itself.Now, all sorts of scoundrels know this perfectly well and can make us love almost anything by getting us to transfer the charm of a name to whatever worthless thing theyare promoting. But at the same time and in the same vein, euphemizing is a perfectly intelligent method of generating new and useful ways ofperceiving things. The man whowants us to call him a “sanitation engineer" instead of a “garbage man" is hoping we willtreat him with more respect than we presently do. He wants us to see that he is of some importance to our society. His euphemism is laughable only if we think that he is not deserving of such notice or respect. The teacher who prefers us to use the term “culturally differentchildren" instead of “slum children" is euphemizing, all right l, but doing it to encourage us to see aspects of a situstion that might otherwise not be attended to The point I am making is that there is nothing in the process of euphemizing itselfthatis contemptible. Euphemizing is contemptible when a name makes us see something thatis not true or diverts our attention from something that is. The hydrogen bomb kills. Thereis nothing else that it does. And when you experiment with it, you are trying to find outhow widely and well it kills. Therefore, to call such an experiment “Operation Sunshine"is to suggest a purpose for the bomb that simply does not exist. But to call “slum children”"culturallydifferent"is something else. It calls attention, for example, to legitimatereasons why such children might feel alien ted om what goes on inschool.I grant that sometimes such euphemizing does not have the intended effect. It ispossible for a teacher to use the term “culturally different" but still be controlled by the term"slumchildren"(which the teacher may believe is their “real" name)."Oldpeople"may be called “senior citizens", and nothing might change. And “lunatic asylums" maystill be filthy, primitive prisons though they are called “mental institutions". Nonetheless, euphemizing may be regarded as one of our more important intellectual resources forcreating new perspectives on a subject. The attempt to rename “oldpeople” “senior citizens" was obviously motivated by a desire to give them a political identity, whichthey not only warrant but which may yet have important consequences. In fact, thefate ofeuphemisms is very hard to predict. A new and seemingly silly name may replace an old one(let us say, “chairpersonfor “chairman") and for years no one will think or actany differently because of it. And then, gradually, as people begin to assume that “chairperson" is the “real" and proper name(or “senior citizen" or “tuna fish" or “sanitation engineer")their attitudes begin to shift, and they will approach things in a slightly different frameof mind. There is a danger, of course, in supposing that a new namecan change attitudes quickly or always. There must be some authentic tendency or drift in the culture to lend support to the change, or the name will remain incongruous andmay even appear ridiculous. To call a teacher a “facilitator" would be such an example. To eliminate the distinction between “boys" and “girls" by calling them “child persons" would be another.But to suppose that such changes never amount to anything" is to underestimate thepower of names. I have been astounded not only by how rapidly the name “blacks" has replaced"Negroes"(a kind of euphemizing in reverse21) but also by now significantly perceptions and attitudes have shifted as an accompaniment to thechange.The key idea here is that euphemisms are a means through which a culture may alterits imagery and by so doing subtly change its style, its priorities, and its values. I reject categoricallythe idea that people who use earthy" language are speaking more directlyor with more authenticity than people who employ euphemisms. Saying that someone is"dead" is not to speak more plainly or honestly than saying he has “passed away." Itis rather, to suggest a different conception of what the event means. To ask wherethe "Shithouse" is, is no more to the point than to ask where the “restroom" is. But in the difference between the two words, there is expressed a vast difference in one’s attitudetoward privacy and propriety. I am saying is that the process of euphemizing hasno moral content. The moral dimensions24 are supplied by what the words in question express, what they want us to value and to see. A nation that calls experiments withbombs"OperationSunshine" is very frightening. On the other hand, a people who call"garbagmen” “sanitationengineers “can’t be all bad.From: Ray et al, pp.154--158B6U10T1NNOTESThe Author—- Neil Postman(1931—2003) was an American author, media theorist and Cultural critic, who is best known by the general public for his1985 book about television Amusing Ourselves to Death. For more than40 years he was associated with New York University. Postman was a humanist, who believed that “new technology can never substitute for human values." He wrote18 books and more than200 magazine and newspaper articles for such periodicals as The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, Harper’s, Time Magazine, His books include: Exploring Your Language(1966); Language and Reality(1966), Teaching as a SubversiveActivity(1969), Teaching as a Conserving Activity(1979), Surrender of Culture to Technology(1992) and The End of Education: Redefining the Value of School(1995).1. People who are partial to euphemisms stand accused of bein g “phony"—people whofavourthe use of euphemisms are charged with being “pretentious"stand accused of— be charged withNote that the verb stand is used as a semi-link verb here, to be followed by an adjective as a subject complement.e.g.1) The magistrate stood accused of embezzlement of public funds.2) The naughty boy stood speechless when scolded by his father for playing truant.2. to expunge the hideous imagery that the bomb evokes — to remove the repulsive or dreadful image produced by the hydrogen bombexpunge— remove(sth. unpleasant) completelye.g. He tried every means to expunge his failure from his mind.hideous— dreadful, repulsive, shockingThe joke he cracked was simply hideous.evoke(formal) produce or call up(a memory or feeling)e.g. The song she sang evoked memories of my schooldays.3. George Orwell(1903-1950)— An English novelist, essayist and journalist, a political andsocial writer. He is best known for two satirical novels: Animal Farm(1945) and NineteenEighty-four(1949). A writer of remarkable clarity, Orwell’s credo was that fine prose shouldbe transparent, “like a windowpane". In his essay, “Politics and the English Language",he asserts that dishonest politics and slipshod language are inseparably connected evils.Orwell's direct, honest, precise use of language can be seen in almost any passage from "Politics and the English Language"(1947). The following quotation is a good example.In our time, politics and speech and writing are largely the defenceOf the indefensible. Things like the continuance of British rule in India, the Russian Purgesand deportations, the dropping of the atom bomb on Japan, can indeed bedefendedbut only by arguments which are too brutal for most people to face.…Thus politicallanguage has to consist largely of euphemism, question-begging and sheer cloudy vagueness.... One cannot change this all in a moment, but one can at least changeone’s own habits, and...send more worn-out and useless phrase …into the into the dustbin where it belongs.into the dustbin4. a few words... will not be amiss — a few words... will be suitableamiss— inappropriate or out of placee.g. There’s nothing amiss in his talk.5."BronxOdor","The LumberingElephant"— Apparently these terms Will repel, rather than attract, prospective customers.6. Shakespearewas only half right in saying that a rose by any other name would smell as sweet —The lines about rose are as follows"What's in a name? That which we call a roseBy any other name would smell as sweet.”From: Romeo and Juliet, Act I, scene27. horse mackerel— blue-fin tuna8. by getting us to transfer the charm of a name to whatever worthless thing they are promoting —by making us give attractive names to all the useless things they advertise or try to sell Transfer—1) move sb. or sth.from one place to anothere.g. The Main Library transferred several sets of reference books to theReference Room.2) move to another group, occupation, etc.e.g. She has been transferred to the Information Technology Department.3) change another means of transport during a journeye.g. In Suzhou he transferred from the train to a bus.Charm in this context means “attractiveness".promote—1)(in this context) give publicity to sth. so as to increase salese.g. They tried every means to promote their new product.2) advance or raise sb. to a higher positione.g. His brother was recently promoted to Head of the Department.9. in the same vein— in the same stylevein—(in this context) a distinctive stylee.g. He responded to our question in a humorous vein.10.he is not deserving of such notice or respect he has not the qualities which make him Worthy of being noticed or respectedThe phrase deserve of is a formal use.11.all right—(informal) beyond doubt, certainlye.g.you don’t park your car in the parking lot, you’ll be fined all right11.that might not be attended to that might not be given attention toe.g. The needs of the children orphaned in the earthquake were fully attended to.13. contemptible— disgusting; shameful; deserving to be treated with disrespecte.g. Telling lies is most contemptible.cf. contemptuous— disrespectful; haughty, arrogante.g. It is wrong to be contemptuous of blue-collar workers.14. legitimate reasons why such children might feel alienated from what goes on in school sound or valid reasons why such children might feel separated or isolated from normal school life legitimate—1)(in this context) sound or valid; accepted by law, custom, or common belief e.g. He had no legitimate reason to leave the office early every Friday afternoon.2) conforming to the lawe.g. Generally speaking, amonarch's eldest son is the legitimate successor to the throne. alienate— emotionally or intellectually separated from what one would normally be linked e.g. The child from the countryside did not at all feel alienated in thecity's school."— but is still under the influence of the15. but still be controlled by the term “slum children term “slum children". In other words, the teacher still thinks that the term “slum children" is quite appropriate.16. a political identity— a political status, i.e. who they are politically17. which they not only warrant— which they not only have a good reason to havewarrant(v.)— justify(a certain course of action)e.g. The tiny population of the town does not warrant such a big opera house.18. chairperson —a person who presides over a meeting or who directs the work of a committee or organization. This term is preferred to “chairman" by people who support the feminist movement. These people do not like the use of words such as “chairman" or “spokesman" to refer to both sexes. They also dislike the use of these words to refer to women.Instead, they prefer to use words which can refer to both men and women.19. There must be some authentic tendency or drift in the culture to lend support to the change— There must be some genuine or true inclination within the culture which approves of the changelend support to— give support toe.g. The residents in the community lent full support to the renovation plan.20. To call a teacher a “facilitator"—Some educationists think that the teacher should be the “facilitator", that is, a person who helps his students to make progress. But, of course, the term “facilitator" has not been used in place of “teac her".21. a kind of euphemizing in reverse— an opposite way of euphemizing, i.e. Negroes could have been a euphemism for blacks.。
现代大学英语第六册精读课后题答案全
Lesson 11. Virtue is......self-centered.By right action, we mean it must help promote personal interest.2. ... (poverty) was a product of their excessive fecundity...The poverty of the poor was caused by their having too many children.3....the rich were not responsible for either its creation or its amelioration.The rich should not be asked to solve the problem of the poverty as it is not their fault for the existence of poverty.4. It is merely the working out of a law of nature and a law of God.It is only the result or effect of the law of the survival of the fittest applied to nature or to human society.5. It declined in popularity, and references to it acquired a condemnatory tone.People began to reject and criticize Social Darwinism because it seemed to glorify brutal force and oppose treasured values of sympathy, love and friendship6. ...the search for a way of getting the poor off our conscience was not at an end; it was only suspended.The desire to find a way to justify the unconcern for the poor had not been abandoned; it had only been put off.7. ...only rarely given to overpaying for monkey wrenches, flashlights, coffee makers, and toilet seats.Government officials, on the whole, are good; it is very rare that some would pay high prices for office equipment to get kickbacks.8. This is perhaps our most highly influential piece of fiction.It is a very popular story and has been accepted by many but it is not true.9. Belief can be the servant of truth--but even more of convenience.Belief can be useful in the search for truth. But more often than not it is accepted because it is convenient and self-serving.10. George Gilder...who tells to much applause that the poor must have the cruel spur of their own suffering to ensure effort...George Gilder advances the view that suffering is necessary to motivate and force the poor to work hard.1. An imbalance between the rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailment of republics.贫富不均乃共和政体最致命疾.2. Their poverty is a temporary misfortune, if they are poor and meek, they eventually will inherit the earth.他们的贫穷只是一种暂时性的不幸,如果他们贫穷但却温顺,他们最终将成为世界的主人.3. Couples in love should repair to R H Macy’s not their bedrooms.热恋的夫妇应该在梅西百货商店过夜,而不是他们的新房4. The American beauty rose can be produced in the splendor and fragrance which bring cheer to its beholder only by sacrificing the early buds which grow up around it. And so is in economic life. It’s merely the working out of a law of the nature and a law of God. 美国这朵玫瑰花以其华贵与芳香让观众倾倒,赞不绝口,而她之所以能被培植就是因为在早期其周围的花蕾被插掉了,在经济生活中情况亦是如此。
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洛基英语,中国在线英语教育领导品牌Do animals think? How could the earth show so many signs of design and purpose and yet be random? Our best scientists are heatedly debating both sides of these and other scientific questions. In the following essay, the author takes a look at science education and argues that as well ass telling students the facts and theories that have already been proved and accepted, science teacher should spend more time introducing their students to the many mysteries that remain unsolved and the arguments taking place between scientists. What better way, he argues, to stimulate their interest in thing scientific?DEBATING THE UNKNOWABLELewis ThomasThe greatest of all the accomplishment of twentieth-century science has been the discovery of human ignorance. We live, as never before, in puzzlement about nature, the universe, and ourselves most of all. It is a new experience for the species. A century ago, after the turbulence caused by Darwin and Wallace had subsided and the central idea of natural selection had been grasped and accepted, we thought we knew everything essential about evolution. In the eighteenth century there were no huge puzzles; human reason was all you needed in order to figure out the universe. And for most of the earlier centuries, the Church provided both the questions and the answers, neatly packaged. Now, for the first time in human history, we are catching glimpses of our incomprehension. We can still make up stories to explain the world, as we always have, but now the stories have to be confirmed and reconfirmed by experiment. This is the scientific method, and once started on this line we cannot turn back. We are obliged to grow up in skepticism, requiring proofs for every assertion about nature, and there is no way out except to move ahead and plug away, hoping for comprehension in the future but living in a condition of intellectual instability for the long time.It is the admission of ignorance that leads to progress, not so much because the solving of a particular puzzle leads directly to a new piece of understanding but because the puzzle ——if it interests enough scientists ——leads to work. There is a similar phenomenon in entomology know as stigmergy, a term invented by Grasse, which means "to incite to work." When three or four termites are collected together in a chamber they wander about aimlessly, but when more termites are added, they begin to build. It is the presence of other termites, in sufficient numbers at close quarters, that produces the work: they pick up each other's fecal pellets and stack them in neat columns, and when the columns are precisely the right height, the termites reach across and turn the perfect arches that form the foundation of the termitarium. No single termite knows how to do any of this, but as soon as there are enough termites gathered together they become flawless architects, sensing their distances from each other although blind, building an immensely complicated structure with its own air-conditioning and humidity control. They work their lives away in this ecosystembuilt by themselves. The nearest thing to a termitarium that I can think of in human behavior is the making of language, which we do by keeping at each other all our lives, generation after generation, changing the structure by some sort of instinct.Very little is understood about this kind of collective behavior. It is out of fashion these days to talk of "superorganisms", but there simply aren't enough reductionist details in hand to explain away the phenomenon of termites and other social insects: some very good guesses can be made about their chemical signaling systems, but the plain fact that they exhibit something like a collective intelligence is a mystery, or anyway an unsolved problem, that might contain important implications for social life in general. This mystery is the best introduction I can think of to biological science in college. It should be taught for its strangeness, and for the ambiguity of its meaning. It should be taught to premedical students, who need lessons early n their careers about the uncertainties in science.College students, and for that matter high school students, should be exposed very early, perhaps at the outset, to the big arguments currently going on among scientists. Big arguments stimulate their interest, and with luck engage their absorbed attention. Few things in life are as engrossing as a good fight between highly trained and skilled adversaries. But the young students are told very little about the major disagreements of the day; they may be taught something about the arguments between Darwinians and their opponents a century ago, but they do not realize that similar disputes about other matters, many of them touching profound issues for our understanding of nature, are still going on and, indeed, are an essential feature of the scientific process. There is, I fear, a reluctance on the part of science teachers to talk about such things, based on the belief that before students can appreciate what the arguments are about they must learn and master the "fundamentals". I would be willing to see some experiments along this line, and I have in mind several examples of contemporary doctrinal dispute in which the drift of the argument can be readily perceived without deep or elaborate knowledge of the subject.There is, for one, the problem of animal awareness. One school of ethologists devoted to the study of animal behavior has it that human beings are unique in the possession of consciousness, differing from al other creatures in being able to think things over, capitalize on past experience, and hazard informed guesses at the future. Other, "lower", animals (with possible exceptions made for chimpanzees, whales, and dolphins)cannot do such things with their minds; they live from moment to moment with brains that are programmed to respond, automatically or by conditioning, to contingencies in the environment, Behavioral psychologists believe that this automatic or conditioned response accounts for human mental activity as well, although they dislike that word "mental". On the other side are some ethologists who seems to be more generous-minded, who see no compelling reasons to doubt that animals in general are quite capable of real thinking and do quite a lot of it ——thinking that isn't as dense as human thinking, that is sparser because of the lack of language and the resultant lack of metaphors to help the thought along, but thinking nonetheless.The point about this argument is not that one side or the other is in possession ofa more powerful array of convincing facts; quite the opposite. There are not enough facts to sustain a genuine debate of any length; the question of animal awareness is an unsettled one.Another debatable question arises when one contemplates the whole biosphere, the conjoined life of the earth. How could it have turned out to possess such stability and coherence, resembling as it does a sort of enormous developing embryo, with nothing but chance events to determine its emergence? Lovelock and Margulis, facing this problem, have proposed the Gaia Hypothesis, which is, in brief, that the earth is itself a form of life, "a complex entity involving the Earth's biosphere, atmosphere, oceans and soil; the totality constituting a feedback or cybernetic system which seeks an optimal physical and chemical environment for life on this planet." Lovelock postulates, in addition, that "the physical and chemical condition of the surface of the Earth, of the atmosphere, and of the oceans has been an is actively made fit and comfortable by the presence of life itself."This notion is beginning to stir up a few signs of storm, and if it catches on, as I think it will, we will soon find the biological community split into fuming factions, one side saying that the evolved biosphere displays evidences of design and purpose, the other decrying such heresy. I believe that students should learn as much as they can about the argument.One more current battle involving the unknown is between sociobiologists and antisociobiologists, and it is a marvel for students to behold. To observe, in open-mouthed astonishment, one group of highly intelligent, beautifully trained, knowledgeable, and imaginative scientists maintaining that all behavior, animal and human, is governed exclusively by genes, and another group of equally talented scientists asserting that all behaviors is set and determined by the environment or by culture, is an educational experience that no college student should be allowed to miss. The essential lesson to be learned has nothing to do with the relative validity of the facts underlying the argument. It is the argument itself that is the education: we do not yet know enough to settle such questions.New Wordsdebatevt. argue about (sth.)with sb., discussn. a discussion about a subject on which people have different viewsunknowablea. beyond comprehension, esp. beyond human comprehensionpuzzlementn. bewilderment, perplexityturbulencen. agitation; great disturbance 骚动,纷乱turbulenta.subsidevi. sink to a lower or more normal level; become lesspackagevt. wrap or seal in a container, wrappings, etc. to attract purchasersglimpsen. a quick view or lookincomprehensionn. lack of comprehension; inability to understandreconfirmvt. confirm anewskepticismn. a doubting state or habit of mind; doubtassertionn. a positive statement; firm declarationassertvt. state positively; declare firmlyinstabilityn. lack of firmness; being unstableadmissionn. (an)act of accepting the truth (of sth.)entomologyn. the branch of zoology that deals with insects 昆虫学incitevt. cause or encourage sb. to a strong feeling or action; provoketermiten. an insect that looks somewhat like white ants and eats the wood of buildings and furniture 白蚁fecala. having to do with feces (waste matter discharged from the intestines)粪便的,排泄物的columnn. a long, thin, upright structure; pillar; postarchn. a curved structure capable of bearing the weight of the material above it 拱termitariumn. nest of termitesflawlessa. without a flaw; perfectflawn. a fault or weakness that makes sth. imperfect 瑕疵air-conditioningn. the system that uses machines to control the temperature of the air in a room or buildinghumidityn. moisture, esp. of the air 湿气;湿度ecosystemn. an ecological system which relates all the plants, animals and people in anarea to their surroundings, considered as a whole 生态系(统)fashionn. the popular way of dressing or behaving at a certain timesuperorganismn. a group of organisms (as of social insects)that function as a social unit reductionista. having to do with a procedure or theory that reduces complex data or phenomena to simple termsreductionn.insectn. a small animal with six les, a body divided into three main parts, and often wings 昆虫exhibitvt. show demonstratemysteryn. sth. that is not known or understoodunsolveda. not solved or explainedintroductionn. a written or spoken explanation at the beginning of a book or speechambiguityn. the possibility of two or more meanings; vagueness 模棱两可;意义不明确ambiguousa. having more than one possible meaning, permitting more than one possible interpretation or explanationpremedicala. preparing for the study of medicineoutsetn. the beginningengrossvt. take up all of; absorbengrossinga. (not of a person)very interestingadversaryn. a person or group to whom one is opposed; opponent or enemyadversea. hostile; unfavorableDarwiniana. of Charles Darwin or his theory of evolutiondisputen. a quarrel, disagreementfeaturen. an important part or qualityreluctancen. unwillingnessreluctanta.doctrinala. of or having to do with doctrinedoctrinen. a principle or set of principles (esp. of a religious or political kind)that is taught 主义;教条,学说readilyad. without difficulty, easily; without delay, quicklyperceivevt. become aware of by seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling or touching; get an understanding ofawarenessn. the quality or state of being awareethologistn. a person who studies ethology (the individual and comparative study of animal behavior, including that of man)(个体)生态学家;行为学家consciousnessn. the condition being aware and able to understand what is happening; awarenesscreaturen. a living person or animalcapitalizevi. (on)profit by; use to one's own advantage includedhazardvt. venture; riskexceptionn. the fact of being left out; (a cause of)not being includedchimpanzeen. a small African ape with dark hair黑猩猩whalen. a large sea animal that resembles fish but breathes air 鲸dolphinn. a sea animal that has a snout like a beak 海豚contingencyn. a chance happening; uncertain eventautomatica. done or produced by the body without thought or controlautomaticallyad.dislikevt. consider unpleasant; not likegenerousa. willing to give or share; unselfish 慷慨的generous-mindeda.sparsea. thin; thinly scatteredresultanta. happening as an effect; resultingmetaphorn. a figure of speech in which two things are compared without using "like" or "as"nonethelessad. in spite of that; neverthelesssustainvt. maintain or keep (sth.)going; confirmgenuinea. real or true; not falseunsettleda. not yet settleddebatablea. lending itself to formal debate; having strong points on both sidesbiospheren. the part of the world in which life can exist 生命层;生物圈conjoinvt. cause to join together or unitecoherencen. natural or reasonable connection; consistency 连贯;一致性coherenta.resemblevt. be like or similar toembryon. the young of any creature in its first state before birth, or before coming out of an egg 胚胎emergencen. the act or fact or emergingentityn. sth. That has a real and separate existence; being; existence 实体;存在totalityn. the state of being whole; completenessfeedbackn. a process in which the factors that produce a result are themselves modified, corrected, strengthened, etc. by that result 反馈cybernetica. of, relating to, or involving cybernetics (控制论)optimala. most favorable; bestoptimumn., a.postulatevt. assume without proof as a basis of reasoning; take for grantednotionn. an idea, belief or opinion in one's mind; conceptfumevi. give off vapor, gas or smoke; show anger or irritationfactionn. a group or party within a large group 派别evolvev. develop gradually by a long continuous process 演化decryvt. express strong disapproval; cry out againstheresyn. a belief different from the accepted belief of a church, school, profession or other group 异教;异端sociobiologistn. one who studies the biological basis for animal and human social behaviorantisociobiologistn.beholdvt. have in sight; seeastonishmentn. great surprise; amazementastonishvt.imaginativea. having or showing a strong imaginationgovernvt. direct or manage; rule; controlPhrases & Expressionsmove aheadgo forwardplug awaywork persistentlyat close quartersvery near or near togetherout of fashionnot popular or approved ofexplain awaygive a satisfactory reason for; remove objection to by means of a convincing argumentat the outsetat the beginningon the part ofof or by (sb.)have it (that)maintain, assert (that)think overthink carefully about; consider; studycapitalize onprofit by; make full use of (sth.)in possession ofhaving; owingstir upexcite; stimulate; provokecatch onbecome popular or fashionableProper NamesLewis Thomas刘易斯.托马斯Darwin达尔文Walace华莱士Grasse格拉斯Lovelock洛夫洛克Margulis马古利斯Gaia盖亚“成千上万人疯狂下载。