高英下册课文翻译第一课

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大学高级英语下册翻译.pdf

大学高级英语下册翻译.pdf

Lesson One1.This picture brings back many pleasant memories of her Spanish holiday.2.News and weather forecasts reports are staples of radio programmes.3.By mere accident Tom met in a bar his long-lost brother who was thought tohave been killed in action during the war.4.Bill intuited something criminal in their plan.5.They think that obsessive tidiness in factory is a bad sign .6.Yesterday his mother sold several years’ worth of paper and magazines.7.His heartening speech impelled us to (work with) greater efforts.8.Those who enjoy pulling off a miracle often fail.9.As language students we should have a sense of nuances of plain words andexpressions.10.The rude behavior of Mrs. Taylor’s ado pted son is driving her into a nervousbreakdown.11.I like to see films in general, and American Western and horrors in particular.12.In some sense Mary saw in her aunt a surrogate of her mother.13.My father never equivocated, and he always gave some brief but poignantopinions.14.Though he disabled, he never tries of helping people.15.In any country, those who are remiss in their duty must be severely punished.16.Awareness of the fact that the child was in danger impelled the policeman toaction.Lesson 21. A. The chances are that they will be held up by traffic on their way to the airport.B. the plane takes off at 6:35. It would be a pity if they couldn’t make it.2.Another popular notion which is in fact a misconception is that expensive clothesinvariably raise one’s status.3.Can you imagine what kind of life a man has lived who aspires to excellence andabhors mediocrity?4. A copy of our latest product catalogue will be sent free of charge if you will fillup the form on the reverse of this card and post it.5.It will be an absurdity, if not a catastrophe. If half of the population of this cityabandons their posts and goes in for business.6.Because they want their kids to be somebodies, some well-intentioned parentsexercise enormous pressures on their children and the results all too often prove the reverse.7.The revered professor predicted that these brilliant young people would surelymake their way in the scientific-technical realm in a few years.8.Many writers have quitted writing stories because, as they say there is no marketfor them. Yet Lessing sticks and she would go on even if there really wasn’t any home for them but a private drawer.9.Satire under his pen is only a means to an end, a form to expose social evils.10.It seemed no body at the party, not even the reporters, made special note of thegeneral’s absence which might have aroused the suspicion of his rivals.11.During the first months in the strange land, the new arrivals had to take menialjobs refused by the natives and work like slaves to make a living. Later, having saved enough money, most of them set up small businesses.12.Intellectual sluggards may get rich but they can never make good in the academicfield.13.Schools should make prodigious effort to inculcate the students with a sense ofjustice and the love of truth.14.Yesterday she received a telegram from her cousin in sian to the effect that thelatter would arrive today by the night train instead of the morning train he hadmentioned in his letter.15.All her relatives were under no illusion that her husband could be one of the threelucky survivors in the recent plane crash.16. In the west many people remain single because they don’t want to tie themselvesdown (to be tired down) to responsibility.17.If nothing interferes the school sports meet will be held as scheduled.18.With Vincent playing baseball is a means to an end, the best way to getacquainted with those stars.Lesson Three1.These gifts had got thoroughly mixed up and needed to be sorted into threedifferent sets.2.The Security Council would take issue with the proposals put forward by thewarring states.3.Because of repeated defeated the enemy t roops’ morale sank low and theirdiscipline broke loose.4.In a bid to host the Olympic Games, what really counts is not the winning but thespirit to compete and take part.5.In designing the office building, due attention should be paid to the people whowill work inside it.6.The well-groomed young man is impatient to wait for the bride to arrive and thewedding ceremony to start.7.For several weeks, the city was in a turmoil. The rebels had surrounded the CityHall, hailing stones, wielding sticks, and shouting slogans.8.After the success of the experiment, for several days, he indulged himself in theluxury of sleeping late and getting up late.9.I’m not the type of person who thrives on city life. I am more accusto med to (the )life in the peaceful countryside.10.Having weathered wind and rain for hundreds of years, these buildings ofEuropean style are barely recognizable as they were.11.Before the interviews, the hoary -headed father patted him on the shoulder in anextremely reassuring manner and wished him every success.12.Some people believed that the Monore doctrine means that European nationsshould no longer interfere with American nations or try to acquire more territories in the Western Hemisphere.13.As a remedy for the blight of mediocrity , our society should show greaterrespect for excellence in education.14.The young mother lamented that it was her own lack of concern that had drivenher boy from the house that night.15.His enthusiasm ebbed away when he learned how troublesome it was to gothrough the red tape in order to go abroad for further studies.16.As prices are skyrocketing, workers are determined to go on strike, regardless ofits consequences.17.It is absurd to wear a pair of torn blue jeans at such a formal dinner.18.The educational qualifications of intellectuals should entitle them to highersalaries.Lesson Four1.John remained motionless without even blinking, because he knew who thechairman remark was leveled at /against.2.The message was delivered to the wrong department owing to a mistake onthe part of a clerk.3.It seems that in every attack Dickens makes upon society he always points toa change of spirit rather than a change of social structure.4.Before they covered 2 km in the desert, the explorers had walked themselvesdizzy and exhausted.5.After their seizure of the city, the enemy troops started to despoil all thebuildings.6.He had wandered in the unsavory areas of London and seen for himself theappalling living conditions of the poor.7.Conrad points to a danger that is already apparent in his friend’s writing, thatof alienating his characters from their social context.8.The circumstances of her childhood are not easy to establish; these were factsshe herself wished to forget.9.These pages tell at least as much, if no more was jeopardized.10.Whenever an important decision is made, they defer to (the opinion of) theirdepartment head.11. As he had made bad investments, his fortune was jeopardized.12.All the staff members must be alert to the danger of fire.13.He is a person who will stand up for what he thinks right, no matter what thecost to himself.14.The highest award he won in the international contest testifies to his musicaltalent.15.The peasants in that poverty-stricken area worked hard to try and wrest aliving from the soil.16.He spoke in such a round-about way that we found it hard to fathom his realmotives.17.In the darkness of night, an indescribable fear overlook him when he movedon alone in the jungle.18.The local department responsible for the Hope Project has collectedcontributions of about 2million yuan.Lesson Five1. The first thing to do is to assess the fixed assets of that company.2. His parents bought not a few picture books for him, but now he has outgrownthem.3. The senator is not likely to slant toward this bill out of partisanship.4. To analyze trends of stock market is the project of the would-be economist.5. He is fairly sophisticated, so he can identify at first glance the self-centered peoplein their guises.6. The simplicity and clarity of this analytic approach far outweighs its drawbacks.7. Mrs. Smith was so busily engaged in her writing that she left the disciplining of the children to her husband.8. After the first round of matches, the drawing of lots turned the scale in favor of the Chinese football team.9. He claimed that he was public-spirited as could be seen from what he had done, but his rivals declared that he was a mere humbug.10. As safety in production is neglected inn that factory, a dozen workers have beenmaimed in the past three years.11. In that sea food restaurant, they were so overcharged that they thought it almostdownright robbery.12. John went up to his rival and wanted to give him a hug only to be snubbed by thelatter.13. In downtown Shanghai, not only have the shops undergone a facelift, but manyarresting sculptures have been put up along the streets as well.14. What he left to his descendants as an added asset is his indomitable spirit.15. When he woke up, the early morning sunlight was filtering through the curtainsinto his bedroom.16. After learning about how they had been building their enterprise through arduousefforts, he had a compulsion to write a novel about it.17. In order to maintain the integrity of this ancient building, we should exclude theuse of steel and glass in its renovation.18. With the consciousness that it is a multinational country, the tourists were not atall surprised to find such big differences in the customs at different parts of that country.Lesson Six1.Short of funds, they could not put into practice the plan they hadmade.2.I see her off and on in the school library, but I do not know her name.3.I understand you are in a difficult position, and neither you nor Jackowes me any explanation.4.Mary is very angry with the manager, for he is nonchalant to hersuggestion.5.Their neighbor’s son is always up to some mischief, and the childis quite unbearable.6.He bought a flat last month, and most of his savings were wiped out.7.His insane urge for greater material wealth put him onto the road toruin.8.It’s kind late to start now. You ought to have started two hours ago.9.As the service was poor, the volume of goods sold in that store saggedlast year.10.This morning I came across him on the campus and found that his facewas flooded with anxiety.11.If you find the leather jacket does not fit you, the shop willrefund you the money.12.John’s colleagues covet his promotion very much.13.The firm’s board of directors has decided to lay off engineers and300 workers.14.She intimated to me her intention of going abroad for further studies.15.When the boss heard that his factory was operating at a loss, hefocused his anger on the foreman.Lesson Seven1. A letter of thanks is the verbal expression of one’s gratitude.2.The US automobile industry has come under persistent pressure fromJapanese competition.3.So far, progress of a greater or lesser degree has been made in theresearch on superconductors in various countries.4.We must inculcate in people respect for knowledge and for people oftalent.5.After the outbreak of the French Revolution, many members of thenobility shorn of their wealth fled abroad.6. A special envoy has been sent to find out how things stand in thatcountry tormented by a civil war.7.The social status of women in China today has been enhanced, aswitness the vast number of women holding leading positions.8. A note of desperation in her voice gave her away.9.It is not an exaggeration to say that the quality of the color TVsets made by this factory is better than that of 3 years ago.10.With the improvement in management and administration, the laborproductivity of that factory is higher than it has ever been since China’s adoption of the reform and opening policy.11.Such research as these doctors are doing will have far-reachingsignificance in the field of medicine.12.They have learnt a lot from the lesson of the past. If not their ownthen that of some other people of the same trade.13.To dump unclear waste at sea will seriously affect the environment,and not merely marine life alone.14.At first, he was reluctant to undertake the task, but when he started,he went at it with a will.15.He went against the traffic lights when riding his bicycle. Heexplained to the policeman at length as if the change of the lights from green to red were to blame for his violation of trafficregulations.16.The rewards of their design turned out to be worthy of the time andfunds they had spent.17.The fact that Green mismanaged the factory is sufficient cause fornot appointing him director again.Lesson Eight1.Her many years of laborious efforts culminated in a successfulexhibition of her paintings in Hangzhou last year.2.Known as a child wonder when he was a kid, for he could write beautifulpoems at seven, he did not grow to be a scholar and his literary talent proved only a flash-in- the pan.3.It suddenly dawned on me that Lant was on the verge if bankruptcy.There had been reports that the finance of his business was in a deplorable tangle.4.Wholesale indulgence of the only child in the family actually doesno good but a lot of harm to its growth.5.When we old friends met, we would talk about our career and families.Susan told me that her brother Stephen, now on the bright side of thirty, is a successful lawyer in a southern city. And I learnt that Teddy, on the shady side of forty, recently married a Thai girl.6.An occasional prod is good for children, but too many prods can onlyproduce negative, if not disastrous, effect.7.She can hardly believe that the expensive dress she bought last yearhas already gone out of fashion.8. A Sino-British Exploration team was being organized to cross the vastexpanse of the Taklimakan Desert. When he learned the news , the young reporter could not resist entering for the expedition.9.Jim’s intransigence has proved a handicap to his relations with hiscolleagues.10.Every Saturday those kind-hearted people will go to the ChildrenWelfare Institute and each will bring a child home; and the handicapped child, showered with love, will spend a happy weekend in his new home where he is made to feel to be a member of the family.11.I could visualize my childhood friend, now a rising film star,surrounded by fans, smiling and nodding to everyone who was trying to accost her.12.I am all too familiar with Harry type. He will invariably make a fussover a trivial matter.13.The son played the game both ways successfully, which culminatedin a harmonious relationship between his mother and his wife.14.Somerset Maugham may rightly be referred to as a versatile writer,whose novels, plays, short stories and other works are still extremely popular and are widely read today.15.In the four-star hotel lobby the Chinese artist was accosted by twooverseas Chinese who later hosted a dinner party in his honor.16.Because Jack had a facility for figures he took to accounting likea duck to water.17.In the dusk of the evening the young girl became a little scared whenshe found she was the only person on the country road with a car bogged down.18.Everyone should try to look on the bright side of life even whenmisfortune befalls him.19.You can never imagine what fun the few of us far away from home gotout of spinning yarns after work in those days.20.The Nazis wholesale murder of Jews during World War II is the mostoutrageous crime in human history.Lesson Ten1. The goat is ancient creature that has done much for man. One of thesmall services the goat has rendered to man is in the way of language.For example, some men wear goatees, thin whiskers that hang down their chins like the whiskers on a goat.2. The would-be boss smiled as he came into the reception hall , whichput the employees immediately at ease.3. Some poets want to live in a perpetual lethargy so that their lifecan proceed with the ultimate quiet and freedom and they might compose poems in a semi-somnambulant state.4. Vultures are hovering over the cliff, below which a fierce battlewas fought the night before, and hundreds of dead soldiers are still lying unburied before there.5. The Indians in North America often send news over long distancesby beating out a message on a hollow log.6. The senior journalist sank into his easy chair with greatrelish and began to indulge in recollections of those battles in the war that he had witnessed at first hand.7. In that remote and backward mountain , the tribal chieftains oftenscourged captives with whips and then made them slaves.8. The well-groomed secretary had to run all the way at the news, andyet he arrived with not a hair out of place.9. It is raining cats and dogs outside! I rather sit by the cozy fireand not venture out in the pouring rain.10. The upshot of the young man infatuation with his study of butterfliesmade him so restless with the present job that he asked to be relieved of his duties and later went to Africa.11. At the commencement , everyone was in a fever pf excitement ( a feverof frenzy) Graduating students shook hands with their belovedprofessors, embraced their buddies, and threw their caps into the sky.12. When the war-time hero appeared on the rostrum, the audience gavehim a standing ovation and looked at him with admiration and respect.13. The members of joint exploration team tried their best to save theirslender stock of water for the camels, their ships in the desert.14. In those difficult years, he was sent to Inner Mongolia, where herode herd for a collective farm near the border.15. I should say he is a unique landscape painter, at any rate for someonewho is colorblind.16. Tom was none too happy about the outcome of the election.17. His aloofness has strengthened the estrangement(misunderstanding,barrier) between him and his colleagues.18.The President’s advisors tried their best to prevail upon him tocancel the trip.。

高级英语下册第一课text and notes

高级英语下册第一课text and notes

Lesson 1Pub Talk and the King’s EnglishHenry Fairlie1 Conversation is the most sociable of all human activities. And it is an activity only of humans. However intricate the ways in which animals communicate with each other, theydo not indulge in anything that deserves the name of conversation.2 The charm of conversation is that it does not really start from anywhere, and no one has any idea where it will go as it meanders or leaps and sparkles or just glows. The enemy of good conversation is the person who has "something to say." Conversation is not for making a point. Argument may often be a part of it, but the purpose of the argument is not to convince. There is no winning in conversation. In fact, the best conversationalists are those who are prepared to lose. Suddenly they see the moment for one of their best anecdotes, but in a flash the conversation has moved on and the opportunity is lost. They are ready to let it go.3 Perhaps it is because of my up-bringing in English pubs that I think bar conversation has a charm of its own. Bar friends are not deeply involved in each other's lives. They are companions, not intimates. The fact that their marriages may be on the rocks, or that their love affairs have been broken or even that they got out of bed on the wrong side is simply not a concern. They are like the musketeers of Dumas who, although they lived side by side with each other, did not delve into,each other's lives or the recesses of their thoughts and feelings.4 It was on such an occasion the other evening, as the conversation moved desultorily here and there, from the most commonplace to thoughts of Jupiter, without any focus and with no need for one, that suddenly the alchemy of conversation took place, and all at once there was a focus. I do not remember what made one of our companions say it--she clearly had not come into the bar to say it, it was not something that was pressing on her mind--but her remark fell quite naturally into the talk.5 "Someone told me the Other day that the phrase, 'the King's English' was a term of criticism, that it means language which one should not properly use."6 The glow of the conversation burst into flames. There were affirmations and protests and denials, and of course the promise, made in all such conversation, that we would look it up on the morning. That would settle it; but conversation does not need to be settled; it could still go ignorantly on.7 It was an Australian who had given her such a definition of "the King's English," which produced some rather tart remarks about what one could expect from the descendants of convicts. We had traveled in five minutes to Australia. Of course, there would be resistance to the King's English in such a society. There is always resistance in the lower classes to any attempt by an upper class to lay down rules for "English as it should be spoken."8 Look at the language barrier between the Saxon churls and their Norman conquerors. The conversation had swung from Australian convicts of the 19th century to the English peasants of the 12th century. Who was right, who was wrong, did not matter. The conversation was on wings.9 Someone took one of the best-known of examples, which is still always worth the reconsidering. When we talk of meat on our tables we use French words; when we speak of the animals from which the meat comes we use Anglo-Saxon words. It is a pig in its sty ; it is pork(porc) on the table. They are cattle in the fields, but we sit down to beef (boeuf). Chickens become poultry (poulet), and a calf becomes veal (veau). Even if our menus were not wirtten in French out of snobbery, the English we used in them would still be Norman English. What all this tells us is of a deep class rift in the culture of England after the Norman conquest.10 The Saxon peasants who tilled the land and reared the animals could not afford the meat, which went to Norman tables. The peasants were allowed to eat the rabbits that scampered over their fields and, since that meat was cheap, the Norman lords of course turned up their noses at it. So rabbit is still rabbit on our tables, and not changed into some rendering of lapin.11 As we listen today to the arguments about bilingual education, we ought to think ourselves back into the shoes of the Saxon peasant. The new ruling class had built a cultural barrier against him by building their French against his own language. There must have been a great deal of cultural humiliation felt by the English when they revolted under Saxon leaders like Hereward the Wake. "The King's English"--if the term had existed then--had become French. And here in America now, 900 years later, we are still the heirs to it.12 So the next morning, the conversation over, one looked it up. The phrase came into use some time in the 16th century. "Queen's English" is found in Nash's "Strange Newes of the Intercepting Certaine Letters" in 1593, and in 1602, Dekker wrote of someone, "thou clipst the Kinge's English." Is the phrase in Shakespeare? That would be the confirmation that it was in general use. He uses it once, when Mistress Quickly in "The Merry Wives of Windsor" says of her master coming home in a rage, "... here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the King's English," and it rings true.13 One could have expected that it would be about then that the phrase would be coined. After five centuries of growth, o1f tussling with the French of the Normans and the Angevins and the Plantagenets and at last absorbing it, the conquered in the end conquering the conqueror. English had come royally into its own.14 There was a King's (or Queen' s) English to be proud of. The Elizabethans blew on it as on a dandelion clock, and its seeds multiplied, and floated to the ends of the earth. "The King's English" was no longer a form of what would now be regarded as racial discrimination.15 Yet there had been something in the remark of the Australian. The phrase has always been used a little pejoratively and even facetiously by the lower classes. One feels that even Mistress Quickly--a servant--is saying that Dr. Caius--her master--will lose his control and speak with the vigor of ordinary folk. If the King's English is "English as it should be spoken," the claim is often mocked by the underlings, when they say with a jeer "English as it should be spoke." The rebellion against a cultural dominance is still there.16 There is always a great danger, as Carlyle put it, that "words will harden into things for us." Words are not themselves a reality, but only representations of it, and the King's English, like the Anglo-French of the Normans, is a class representation of reality. Perhaps it is worth trying to speak it, but it should not be laid down as an edict , and made immune to change from below.17 I have an unending love affair with dictionaries-Auden once said that all a writer needs isa pen, plenty of paper and "the best dictionaries he can afford"--but I agree with the person who said that dictionaries are instruments of common sense. The King's English is a model—a rich and instructive one--but it ought not to be an ultimatum.18 So we may return to my beginning. Even with the most educated and the most literate, the King's English slips and slides in conversation. There is no worse conversationalist than theone who punctuates his words as he speaks as if he were writing, or even who tries to use words as if he were composing a piece of prose for print. When E. M. Forster writes of " the sinister corridor of our age," we sit up at the vividness of the phrase, the force and even terror in the image. But if E. M. Forster sat in our living room and said, "We are all following each other down the sinister corridor of our age," we would be justified in asking him to leave.19 Great authors are constantly being asked by foolish people to talk as they write. Other people may celebrate the lofty conversations in which the great minds are supposed to have indulged in the great salons of 18th century Paris, but one suspects that the great minds were gossiping and judging the quality of the food and the wine. Henault, then the great president of the First Chamber of the Paris Parlement, complained bitterly of the "terrible sauces " at the salons of Mme. Deffand, and went on to observe that the only difference between her cook and the supreme chef, Brinvilliers , lay in their intentions.20 The one place not to have dictionaries is in a sit ting room or at a dining table. Look the thing up the next morning, but not in the middle of the conversation. Other wise one will bind the conversation, one will not let it flow freely here and there. There would have been no conversation the other evening if we had been able to settle at one the meaning of "the King's English." We would never hay gone to Australia, or leaped back in time to the Norman Conquest.21 And there would have been nothing to think about the next morning. Perhaps above all, one would not have been engaged by interest in the musketeer who raised the subject, wondering more about her. The bother about teaching chimpanzees how to talk is that they will probably try to talk sense and so ruin all conversation.(from The Washington Post (华盛顿邮报), May 6, 1979)NOTES1. Fairlie: Henry Fairlie (1924--) is a contributing editor to The New Republic as well as a contributor to other journals. He is author of: The Kennedy Promise ; The Life of Politics ; and The Spoiled Child of the Western World.2. The Washington Post: an influential and highly respected U.S. newspaper with a national distribution3. pub: contracted from "public house" ; in Great Britain a house licensed for the sale of alcoholic drinks4. musketeers of Dumas: characters created by the French novelist, Alexandre Dumas (1802--1870) in his novel The Three Musketeers5. Jupiter: referring perhaps to the planet Jupiter and the information about it gathered by a U.S. space probe6. descendants of convicts: in 1788 a penal settlement was established at Botany Bay, Australia by Britain. British convicts, sentenced to long term imprisonment, were often transported to this penal settlement. Regular settlers arrived in Australia about 1829.7. Saxon churls: a farm laborer or peasant in early England; a term used pejoratively by the Norman conquerors to mean an ill-bred, ignorant English peasant8. Norman conquerors: the Normans, under William I, Duke of Normandy (former territory of N. France) conquered England after defeating Harold, the English king, at the Battle of Hastings (1066).9. lapin: French word for "rabbit"10.Hereward the Wake: Anglo-Saxon patriot and rebel leader. He rose up against the Normanconquerors but was defeated and slain (1071).11.Nash: Thomas Nash (1567--1601), English satirist. Very little is known of his life .Although his first publications appeared in 1589,it was not until Pierce Penniless His Supplication to the Devil (1592),a bitter satire on contemporary society ,that his natural and vigorous style was fully developed .His other publications include: Summer' s Last Will and Testament; The Unfortunate Traveler; and The Isle of Dogs.12.Dekker: Thomas Dekker (1572.'? --16327), English dramatist and pamphleteer. Little is known of his life except that he frequently suffered from poverty and served several prison terms for debt. Publications: The Shoe- maker' s Holiday ; The Seven Deadly Sins of London ; The Gull' s Hand- book; etc.13...here will be an old abusing: "old" here means "great, plentiful"; from Shakespeare's "The Merry Wives of Windsor", Act 1, Scene 4, lines5--614.Angevins and Plantagenets: names of ruling Norman dynasties in England (1154--1399), sprung from Geoffrey, Count of Anjou (former province of W. France)15.Elizabethans: people, especially writers, of the time of Queen Elizabeth I of England (1533--1603)16.(dandelion) clock: the downy fruiting head of the common dandelion17.Auden: W.H. Auden (1907--73), British-born poet, educated at Oxford. During the Depression of the 1930' s he was deeply affected by Marxism. His works of that period include Poems (1930) and The Orators (1932), prose and poetry, bitter and witty, on the impending collapse of British middle-class ways and a coming revolution. Auden went to the U.S. in 1939 and became an American citizen in 1946. In the 1940's he moved away from Marxism and adopted a Christian existential view.18. Forster: Edward Morgan Forster (1879--1970), English author, one of the most important British novelists of the 20th century. Forster's fiction, conservative in form, is in the English tradition of the novel of manners. He explores the emotional and sensual deficiencies of the English middle class, developing his themes by means of irony, wit, and symbolism. Some of his well known novels are: Where Angels Fear to Tread ; The Longest Journey ; A Room with a View ; Howard' s End ; and A Passage to India.19. Henault: Jean-Francois Henault (? --1770), president of the Paris Parlement, and lover of Mme Deffand20. Paris Parlement: the "sovereign" or "superior" court of judicature under the ancien regime in France. It was later divided into several chambers.21. Mme. Deffand: Deffand, Marie De Vichy-Chamrond, Marquisse Du (1679--1780), a leading figure in French society, famous for her letters to the Duchesse de Choiseul, to Voltaire and to Horace Walpole. She was married at 21 to her kinsman, Jean Baptiste de la lande, Marquis du Deffand, from whom she separated in 1722. She later became the mistress of the regent, Philippe, duc d' Orleans. She also lived on intimate terms with Jean- Francois Henault, president of the Parlement of Paris till his death in 1770.。

高级英语第一,二课的课后翻译

高级英语第一,二课的课后翻译

UNIT ONE: Face to face with the Hurricane Camille Translation1) Every plane must be checked out strictly before taking off.2) The residents are strongly against constructing a waste incineration plant nearby (in their neighborhood 表示‘在附近’更地道),because they are concerned about the air pollution caused by emissions(排放物).3) Investment in ecological projects must up to billions of yuan in this area.4) The dried-up river is strewn with stones of all sizes.5) Although the huge losses the war had brought to the country, the local cultural tradition did not perish.6) In order to construct modern high buildings, many ancient with ethnic cultural features had to be demolished.7) The main structure of most poor-quality houses went disintegrated in the earthquake.8) His beautiful dreams vanished into the air at last; despite he made great efforts to achieve the goal.UNIT TWO: Hiroshima -----the “liveliest” city in JapanTranslation1) There is no one in the hall.The meeting must have been put off.2) The modern construction looks very much like UFO.3) As for the northerners, Sichuan dialect sounds much the same as Hubei dialect. It is sometimes difficult to tell one from the other.4) The very sight of the monument reminds me of my good friend who was killed in the battle.5) He was so deep in thought that he was oblivious of what his friends were talking about.6) What he did had nothing to do with her.7) She couldn't fall asleep as her daughter's illness was very much on her mind.8) I have had the matter on my mind for a long time.9) He loves such gatherings at which he rubs shoulders with young people and exchange opinions with them on various subjects.10) It was only after a few minutes that his words sank in.11) The soil smells of fresh grass.12) Could you spare me a few minutes?13) Could you spare me a ticket?14) That elderly grey-haired man is a coppersmith by trade.。

综合教程第二版何兆熊主编 高英1-7单元课文翻译

综合教程第二版何兆熊主编 高英1-7单元课文翻译

Unit 1 一课千金(一语抵千金)成长在二战期间战火连天的曼彻斯特意味着生活艰辛,金钱紧缺,整日焦虑不安,当铺成了大多数家庭经常去的地方,当然也包括我家。

然而,我不能对已经很有进取心和积极乐观的父母有更多的要求了。

他们艰辛地工作,用尊严和快乐来支撑着这个家庭。

我刚毅而又智慧的父亲几乎无所不能,而且从不缺木匠和手工艺活。

为了满足家庭开支,他甚至参加了非法组织的拳击比赛。

至于我的母亲,她勤劳节约,极爱干净。

即使条件艰苦,在母亲的照料下,她的五个孩子总能吃得饱饱地,穿得干干净净地去学校。

尽管我的衣服熨得很平整,鞋子擦得发亮,还是不符合学校的着装标准。

尽管妈妈勤俭持家,想办法为我们做衣服,但是我还是没有学校指定的蓝色校服和帽徽。

由于战争,政府实施定量配给制。

很多学校都放宽了对学生着装的要求,因为他们知道在那个时候弄到衣服是一件很困难的事情。

尽管如此,我所在的女子学校对着装的要求依旧很严格,每个学生必须要穿学校指定的校服。

所以,每天主持校会的副校长就把教我一个人如何着装当成了他的工作。

虽然我努力地向老师说明我不能遵守的理由,并且事实上,我也在努力地改进,但是每天老师都会把我从队伍中拉出来,然后让我站到台上,作为不穿校服到学校的学生的典型。

每天,当我独自一人尴尬地站在同学们的面前时,我都会强忍住泪水。

为了惩罚我,老师甚至不允许我参加体操队,也不允许我参加我最喜欢的每周一次的交易舞会。

我多么希望在这所可怕的学校里,能有这样一位老师,他会睁开双眼,然后看看我会做什么,而不是不断地告诉我不能做什么。

然而,在我十二岁的记忆中,除了接受惩罚我别无选择。

不要让我善良的母亲知晓这种惯例的惩罚对我而言是很重要的,我不敢冒险让她来学校为我说情,因为我知道心胸狭隘、不讲情面的教员会同样地使她难堪,那意味着我们俩都会不愉快、会有失颜面。

千万不要啊,如果她告诉我父亲的话,他将会立即为我大动干戈。

后来有一天,我们家赢得了一个报刊比赛,可以免费照相。

高级英语第二册第一课课文翻译

高级英语第二册第一课课文翻译

第一课中东的集市中东的集市仿佛把你带回到了几百年、甚至几千年前的时代。

此时此刻显现在我脑海中的这个中东集市,其入口处是一座古老的砖石结构的哥特式拱门。

你首先要穿过一个赤日耀眼、灼热逼人的大型露天广场,然后走进一个凉爽、幽暗的洞穴。

这市场一直向前延伸,一眼望不到尽头,消失在远处的阴影里。

赶集的人们络绎不绝地进出市场,一些挂着铃铛的小毛驴穿行于这熙熙攘攘的人群中,边走边发出和谐悦耳的叮当叮当的响声。

市场的路面约有十二英尺宽,但每隔几码远就会因为设在路边的小货摊的挤占而变窄;那儿出售的货物各种各样,应有尽有。

你一走进市场,就可以听到摊贩们的叫卖声,赶毛驴的小伙计和脚夫们大着嗓门叫人让道的吆喝声,还有那些想买东西的人们与摊主讨价还价的争吵声。

各种各样的噪声此伏彼起,不绝于耳,简直叫人头晕。

随后,当往市场深处走去时,人口处的喧闹声渐渐消失,眼前便是清静的布市了。

这里的泥土地面,被无数双脚板踩踏得硬邦邦的,人走在上面几乎听不到脚步声了,而拱形的泥砖屋顶和墙壁也难得产生什么回音效果。

布店的店主们一个个都是轻声轻气、慢条斯理的样子;买布的顾客们在这种沉闷压抑的气氛感染下,自然而然地也学着店主们的榜样,变得低声细语起来。

中东集市的特点之一是经销同类商品的店家,为避免相互间的竞争,不是分散在集市各处,而是都集中在一块儿,这样既便于让买主知道上哪儿找他们,同时他们自己也可以紧密地联合起来,结成同盟,以便保护自己不受欺侮和刁难。

例如,在布市上,所有那 1些卖衣料、窗帘布、椅套布等的商贩都把货摊一个接一个地排设在马路两边,每一个店铺门面前都摆有一张陈列商品的搁板桌和一些存放货物的货架。

讨价还价是人们习以为常的事。

头戴面纱的妇女们迈着悠闲的步子从一个店铺逛到另一个店铺,一边挑选一边问价;在她们缩小选择范围并开始正儿八经杀价之前,往往总要先同店主谈论几句,探探价底。

对于顾客来说,至关重要的一点是,不到最后一刻是不能让店主猜到她心里究竟中意哪样东西、想买哪样东西的。

高级英语课文翻译(下册)

高级英语课文翻译(下册)

Lesson OneThe Company in Which I Work我工作的公司约瑟夫·海勒我工作的公司里,每个人都至少害怕一个人。

职位越低,所惧怕的人越多。

所有的人都害怕那十二位顶层上司,他们帮助创建了这个公司,而且现在仍然大权在握。

所有这十二位都已经上了年纪,而且岁月的沧桑和对成功的执著追求使他们心力交瘁。

他们中很多人在这儿干了一辈子。

当我在大厅里遇见他们时,他们看上去非常友善、沉稳而心满意足,而且他们与别人一起乘坐公共电梯时又总是彬彬有礼、沉默不语。

他们不再努力工作。

他们主持会议,决定别人的晋升,任凭别人在准备发布的通告中使用他们的名字,没有人知道谁真正经营这家公司(甚至连人们认为现在经营着这家公司的那些人都不知道),然而公司的确在运转。

在平常的工作日里,我很害怕杰克·格林,这是因为我所在的部门属于他的部门,而杰克·格林是我的上司。

格林害怕我则是因为我的部门的绝大部分工作是为销售部所做的,而销售部比他的部门更重要,而且同他相比,我与迪·卡葛勒以及销售部的其他人员的关系更加密切。

格林偶尔也对我不信任,他有时会向我表示他希望我的部门的每一项工作在其他部门知道前要先让他知道。

我知道这不是他真正的意思,他自己的工作非常忙,根本就无暇顾及我们所有的工作。

我会将大部分工作绕过格林并直接交给需要它们的人,而不愿意占他的时间。

毕竟我们部门绝大部分工作只是微不足道的。

但是每当其他部门赞扬我们部门的工作时,格林就会变得不安,如果他从未看见或听到过的话,就更是恼羞成怒。

在我的部门里,有六个人害怕我,其中一个小秘书害怕我们所有的人。

有一个为我工作的人,他对任何人都毫不惧怕,甚至连我也不怕,我真想尽快把他解雇掉,然而我害怕他……公司里非常惧怕大多数人的人是销售人员,他们都生活和工作在极大压力之下,当情况不好时,对销售人员来说就会更糟。

而当情况较好时,他们也不会好到哪儿去。

高英第一课 第二课和第四课翻译

高英第一课 第二课和第四课翻译

第一课迎战卡米尔号飓风小约翰。

柯夏克已料到,卡米尔号飓风来势定然凶猛。

就在去年8月17日那个星期天,当卡米尔号飓风越过墨西哥湾向西北进袭之时,收音机和电视里整天不断地播放着飓风警报。

柯夏克一家居住的地方一—密西西比州的高尔夫港——肯定会遭到这场飓风的猛烈袭击。

路易斯安那、密西西比和亚拉巴马三州沿海一带的居民已有将近15万人逃往内陆安全地带。

但约翰就像沿海村落中其他成千上万的人一样,不愿舍弃家园,要他下决心弃家外逃,除非等到他的一家人一—妻子詹妮丝以及他们那七个年龄从三岁到十一岁的孩子一一眼看着就要灾祸临头。

为了找出应付这场风灾的最佳对策,他与父母商量过。

两位老人是早在一个月前就从加利福尼亚迁到这里来,住进柯夏克一家所住的那幢十个房间的屋子里。

他还就此征求过从拉斯韦加斯开车来访的老朋友查理?希尔的意见。

约翰的全部产业就在自己家里(他开办的玛格纳制造公司是设计、研制各种教育玩具和教育用品的。

公司的一切往来函件、设计图纸和工艺模具全都放在一楼)。

37岁的他对飓风的威力是深有体会的。

四年前,他原先拥有的位于高尔夫港以西几英里外的那个家就曾毁于贝翠号飓风(那场风灾前夕柯夏克已将全家搬到一家汽车旅馆过夜)。

不过,当时那幢房子所处的地势偏低,高出海平面仅几英尺。

“我们现在住的这幢房子高了23英尺,,’他对父亲说,“而且距离海边足有250码远。

这幢房子是1915年建造的。

至今还从未受到过飓风的袭击。

我们呆在这儿恐怕是再安全不过了。

”老柯夏克67岁.是个语粗心慈的熟练机械师。

他对儿子的意见表示赞同。

“我们是可以严加防卫。

度过难关的,”他说?“一但发现危险信号,我们还可以赶在天黑之前撤出去。

”为了对付这场飓风,几个男子汉有条不紊地做起准备工作来。

自米水管道可能遭到破坏,他们把浴盆和提俑都盛满水。

飓风也可能造成断电,所以他们检查r手提式收音机和手电筒里的电池以及提灯里的燃料油。

约翰的父亲将一台小发电机搬到楼下门厅里.接上几个灯泡。

高级英语课文翻译(下册)

高级英语课文翻译(下册)

�下�L e s s o n O n e T h e C o m p a n y i n W h i c h I w o r k我工作的公司B y J o s e p h H e l l e rI n t h e c o m p a n y i n w h i c h I w o r k,e a c h o f u s i s a f r a i d o f a t l e a s t o n e p e r s o n.6我工作的公司里�每个人都至少害怕一个人。

T h e l o w e r y o u r p o s i t i o n i s,t h e m o r e p e o p l e y o u a r e a f r a i d o f.职位越低�所惧怕的人越多。

A n d a l l t h e p e o p l e a r e a f r a i d o f t h e t w e l v e m e n a t t h e t o p w h o h e l p e d f o u n d a n d b u i l d t h e c o m p a n y a n d n o w o w n a n d d i r e c t i t.所有的人都害怕那十二位顶层上司�他们帮助创建了这个公司�而且现在仍然大权在握。

A l l t h e s e t w e l v e m e n a r e e l d e r l y n o w a n d d r a i n e d b y t i m e歲月滄桑a n d s u c c e s s o f e n e r g y a n d a m b i t i o n.所有这十二位都已经上了年纪�而且岁月的沧桑和对成功的执著追求使他们心力交瘁。

M a n y h a v e s p e n t t h e i r w h o l e l i v e s h e r e.T h e y s e e m f r i e n d l y,s l o w,a n d c o n t e n t w h e n I c o m e u p o n t h e m i n t h e h a l l s a n d a l w a y s c o u r t e o u s(有禮貌的)a n d m u t e沉默不語的�w h e n t h e y r i d e w i t h o t h e r s i n t h e p u b l i c e l e v a t o r s.他们中很多人在这儿干了一辈子。

高级英语课文翻译——第一课中东集市

高级英语课文翻译——第一课中东集市

高级英语课文翻译——第一课中东集市The Middle Eastern bazaar takes you back hundreds --- even thousands --- of years. The one I am thinking of particularly is entered by a Gothic - arched gateway of aged brick and stone. You pass from the heat and glare of a big, open square into a cool, dark cavernwhich extends as far as the eye can see, losing itself in the shadowy distance. Little donkeys with harmoniously tinkling bells thread their way among the throngsof people entering and leaving the bazaar. The roadway is about twelve feet wide, but it is narrowed every few yards by little stalls where goods of every conceivable kind are sold. The din of the stall-holder; crying their wares, of donkey-boys and porters clearing a way for themselves by shouting vigorously, and of would-be purchasers arguing and bargaining is continuous and makes you dizzy.Then as you penetrate deeper into the bazaar, the noise of the entrance fades away, and you come to the muted cloth-market. The earthen floor, beaten hard by countless feet, deadens the sound of footsteps, and the vaulted mud-brick walls and roof have hardly any sounds to echo. The shop-keepers speak in slow, measured tones, and the buyers, overwhelmed by the sepulchral atmosphere, follow suit .One of the peculiarities of the Eastern bazaar is that shopkeepers dealing in the same kind of goods do not scatter themselves over the bazaar, in order to avoid competition, but collect in the same area, so that purchasers can know where to find them, and so that they can form a closely knit guild against injustice or persecution . In the cloth-market, for instance, all the sellers of material for clothes, curtains, chair covers and so on linethe roadway on both sides, each open-fronted shop having a trestle trestle table for display and shelves for storage. Bargaining is the order of the cay, and veiled women move at a leisurely pace from shop to shop, selecting, pricing and doing a little preliminary bargaining before they narrow down their choice and begin the really serious business of beating the price down.It is a point of honour with the customer not to let the shopkeeper guess what it is she really likes and wants until the last moment. If he does guess correctly, he will price the item high, and yield little in the bargaining. The seller, on the other hand, makes a point of protesting that the price he is charging is depriving him of all profit, and that he is sacrificing this because of his personal regard for the customer. Bargaining can go on the whole day, or even several days, with the customer coming and going at intervals .One of the most picturesque and impressive parts of the bazaar is the copper-smiths' market. As you approach it, a tinkling and banging and clashing begins to impinge on your ear. It grows louder and more distinct, until you round a corner and see a fairyland of dancing flashes, as the burnished copper catches the light of innumerable lamps and braziers . In each shop sit the apprentices – boys and youths, some of them incredibly young –hammering away at copper vessels of all shapes and sizes, while the shop-owner instructs, and sometimes takes a hand with a hammer himself. In the background, a tiny apprentice blows a bi-, charcoal fir e with a huge leather bellowsworked by a string attached to his big toe -- the red of the live coals glowing, bright and then dimming rhythmicallyto the strokes of the bellows.Here you can find beautiful pots and bowls engrave withdelicate and intricate traditional designs, or the simple, everyday kitchenware used in this country, pleasing in form, but undecorated and strictly functional. Elsewhere there is the carpet-market, with its profusion of rich colours, varied textures and regional designs -- some bold and simple, others unbelievably detailed and yet harmonious. Then there is the spice-market, with its pungentand exotic smells; and the food-market, where you can buy everything you need for the most sumptuous dinner, or sit in a tiny restaurant with porters and apprentices and eat your humble bread and cheese. The dye-market, the pottery-market and the carpenters' market lie elsewhere in the maze of vaulted streets which honeycomb this bazaar. Every here and there, a doorway gives a glimpse of a sunlit courtyard, perhaps before a mosque or a caravanserai , where camels lie disdainfully chewing their hay, while the great bales of merchandise they have carried hundreds of miles across the desert lie beside them.Perhaps the most unforgettable thing in the bazaar, apart from its general atmosphere, is the place where they make linseed oil. It is a vast, sombre cavern of a room, some thirty feet high and sixty feet square, and so thick with the dust of centuries that the mudbrick walls and vaulted roof are only dimly visible. In this cavern are three massive stone wheels, each with a huge pole through its centre as an axle. The pole is attached at the one end to an upright post, around which it can revolve, and at the other to a blind-folded camel, which walks constantly in a circle, providing the motive power to turn the stone wheel. This revolves in a circular stone channel, into which an attendant feeds linseed. The stone wheel crushes it to a pulp, which is then pressed to extract the oil .The camels are the largest and finest I have everseen, and in superb condition – muscular, massive and stately.The pressing of the linseed pulp to extract the oil is done by a vast ramshackle apparatus of beams and ropes and pulleys which towers to the vaulted ceiling and dwarfs the camels and their stone wheels. The machine is operated by one man, who shovels the linseed pulp into a stone vat, climbs up nimbly to a dizzy height to fasten ropes, and then throws his weight on to a great beam made out of a tree trunk to set the ropes and pulleys in motion. Ancient girders girders creak and groan , ropes tighten and then a trickle of oil oozes oozes down a stone runnel into a used petrol can. Quickly the trickle becomes a flood of glistening linseed oil as the beam sinks earthwards, taut and protesting, its creaks blending with the squeaking and rumbling of the grinding-wheels and the occasional grunts and sighs of the camels.(from Advanced Comprehension and Appreciation pieces, 1962 )Metaphor:dark cavern, fairyland, maze, honeycomb, etcform a closely knit guild...Simile:a vast sombre cavern of a roomOnomatopoeia:creak, squeak, rumble, grunt, sigh, groan, etc.tinkling, banging, clashingPersonification:The Middle Easter bazaar takes you...dancing flashesThe beam sinks…taut and protestingHyperbole:takes you ...hundreds even thousands of yearsevery conceivable, innumerable lamps, incredibly young, with the dust of centuries。

高英第一课翻译

高英第一课翻译
“休斯顿。”我的阿姨啜泣着说。“休斯顿,你为什么不过来得到救赎呢?上帝的小羊羔啊,你为什么不过来呢?”
现在天真的黑了。我开始惭愧,是自己把他们拖得这么晚。我开始想上帝会怎么认为威斯特里。他当然也没有看见主,但现在正骄傲地坐在圣坛上,晃着灯笼裤的褪,露齿嘲笑我。周围围着一群跪着祈祷的老妇人。上帝并没有因为他亵渎神灵或在教堂里撒谎而惩罚他。所以我决定也许为了省去更多的麻烦,我最好也撒谎,说耶稣已经来了,然后站起来,得到救赎。
但那天晚上我却哭了。那是我一生倒数第二次哭泣,因为我已经是个12岁的大男孩了。我独自一人躺在床上,哭泣不已。担心里德阿姨会听到,我把头埋在被子下面。她还是醒了,告诉我的叔叔说:“我哭是因为神圣的上帝进入了我的生命,因为我看见了耶稣。但是我哭的真正原因是我羞于告诉她我撒谎了,我骗了教堂里所有人。我没有看见耶稣,我也不再相信有一个耶稣,因为他没有来拯救我。
布道师祷告,富有节奏,非常精彩。呻吟、喊叫、寂寞的呼喊,还有地狱中令人恐怖的画面。然后他唱了一首赞美诗。诗中描述了99只羊都安逸的待在圈里,唯有一只被冷落在外。唱完后他说道:“难道你不来吗?不来到耶稣身旁吗?小羊羔们,难道你们不来吗?”他向坐在祷告席上的小忏悔者们打开了双臂,小女孩们开始哭了,她们中有一些很快跳了起来,跑了过去。我们大多数仍然坐在那里。
在我快13岁那年,我的灵魂得到了拯救,然而并不是真正意义上的救赎。事情是这样的。那时我的阿姨里德所在的教堂正在举行一场盛大的宗教复兴晚会。数个星期以来每个夜晚,人们在那里讲道,唱诵,祈祷。连一些罪孽深重的人都获得了耶稣的救赎,教堂的成员一下子增多了。就在复兴晚会结束之前,他们为孩子们举行了一次特殊的集会——把小羊羔带回羊圈。里德阿姨数日之前就开始和我提这件事。那天晚上,我和其他还没有得到主宽恕的小忏悔者们被送去坐在教堂前排,那是为祷告的人安排的座椅。

高英第一课和第二课英语课文逐句翻译和复习要点

高英第一课和第二课英语课文逐句翻译和复习要点

Lesson One Rock Superstars摇滚乐关于我们和我们的社会,他们告诉了我们些什么?What Do They Tell Us About Ourselves and Our Society?摇滚乐是青少年叛逆的音乐。

——摇滚乐评论家约相•罗克韦尔Rock is the music of teenage rebellion.--- John Rockwell, rock music critic知其崇拜何人便可知其人。

——小说家罗伯特•佩恩•沃伦By a man‟s heroes ye shall know him.--- Robert Penn Warren, novelist1972年6月的一天,芝加哥圆形剧场挤满了大汗淋漓、疯狂摇摆的人们。

It was mid-June, 1972, the Chicago Amphitheater was packed, sweltering, rocking.滚石摇滚乐队的迈克•贾格尔正在台上演唱“午夜漫步人”。

Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones was singing “Midnight Rambler.”演唱结束时评论家唐•赫克曼在现场。

Critic Don Heckman was there when the song ended.他描述道:“贾格尔抓起一个半加仑的水罐沿舞台前沿边跑边把里面的水洒向前几排汗流浃背的听众。

听众们蜂拥般跟随着他跑,急切地希望能沾上几滴洗礼的圣水。

“Jagger,” he said, “grabs a half-gallon jug of water and runs along the front platform, sprinkling its contents over the first few rows of sweltering listeners. They surge to follow him, eager to be touched by a few baptismal drops”.1973年12月下旬的一天,约1.4万名歌迷在华盛顿市外的首都中心剧场尖叫着,乱哄哄地拥向台前。

高英下册课文翻译第一课

高英下册课文翻译第一课

.Face to Face with Hurricane CamilleJoseph P. Blank1 John Koshak, Jr., knew that Hurricane Camille would be bad. Radio and television warnings had sounded throughout that Sunday, last August 17, as Camille lashed northwestward across the Gulf of Mexico. It was certain to pummel Gulfport, Miss., where the Koshers lived. Along the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, nearly 150,000 people fled inland to safer ground. But, like thousands of others in the coastal communities, john was reluctant to abandon his home unless the family -- his wife, Janis, and their seven children, abed 3 to 11 -- was clearly endangered.2 Trying to reason out the best course of action, he talked with his father and mother, who had moved into the ten-room house with the Koshaks a month earlier from California. He also consulted Charles Hill, a long time friend, who had driven from Las Vegas for a visit.3 John, 37 -- whose business was right there in his home ( he designed and developed educational toys and supplies, and all of Magna Products' correspondence, engineering drawings and art work were there on the first floor) -- was familiar with the power of a hurricane. Four years earlier, Hurricane Betsy had demolished undefined his former home a few miles west of Gulfport (Koshak had moved his family to a motel for the night). But that house had stood only a few feet above sea level. "We' re elevated 23 feet," he told his father, "and we' re a good 250 yards from the sea. The place has been here since 1915, and no hurricane has ever bothered it. We' II probably be as safe here as anyplace else."4 The elder Koshak, a gruff, warmhearted expert machinist of 67, agreed. "We can batten down and ride it out," he said. "If we see signs of danger, we can get out before dark."5 The men methodically prepared for the hurricane. Since water mains might be damaged, they filled bathtubs and pails. A power failure was likely, so they checked out batteries for the portable radio and flashlights, and fuel for the lantern. John's father moved a small generator into the downstairs hallway, wired several light bulbs to it and prepared a connection to the refrigerator.6 Rain fell steadily that afternoon; gray clouds scudded in from the Gulf on the rising wind. The family had an early supper. A neighbor, whose husband was in Vietnam, asked if she and her two children could sit out the storm with the Koshaks. Another neighbor came by on his way in-land — would the Koshaks mind taking care of his dog?7 It grew dark before seven o' clock. Wind and rain now whipped the house. John sent his oldest son and daughter upstairs to bring down mattresses and pillows for the younger children. He wanted to keep the group together on one floor. "Stay away from the windows," he warned, concerned about glass flying from storm-shattered panes. As the wind mounted to a roar, the house began leaking- the rain seemingly driven right through the walls. With mops, towels, pots and buckets the Koshaks began a struggle against the rapidly spreading water. At 8:30, power failed, and Pop Koshak turned on the generator.8 The roar of the hurricane now was overwhelming. The house shook, and the ceiling in the living room was falling piece by piece. The French doors in an upstairs room blew in with an explosive sound, and the group heard gun-like reports as other upstairs windows disintegrated. Water rose above their ankles.9 Then the front door started to break away from its frame. John and Charlie put their shoulders against it, but a blast of water hit the house, flinging open the door and shoving them down the hall. The generator was doused, and the lights went out. Charlie licked his lips andshouted to John. "I think we' re in real trouble. That water tasted salty." The sea had reached the house, and the water was rising by the minute!10 "Everybody out the back door to the cars!" John yelled. "We' II pass the children along between us. Count them! Nine!"11 The children went from adult to adult like buckets in a fire brigade. But the cars wouldn't start; the electrical systems had been killed by water. The wind was too Strong and the water too deep to flee on foot. "Back to the house!" john yelled. "Count the children! Count nine!"12 As they scrambled back, john ordered, "Every-body on the stairs!" Frightened, breathless and wet, the group settled on the stairs, which were protected by two interiorwalls. The children put the cat, Spooky, and a box with her four kittens on the landing. She peered nervously at her litter. The neighbor's dog curled up and went to sleep.13 The wind sounded like the roar of a train passing a few yards away. The house shuddered and shifted on its foundations. Water inched its way up the steps as first- floor outside walls collapsed. No one spoke. Everyone knew there was no escape; they would live or die in the house.14 Charlie Hill had more or less taken responsibility for the neighbor and her two children. The mother was on the verge of panic. She clutched his arm and kept repeating, "I can't swim, I can't swim."15 "You won't have to," he told her, with outward calm. "It's bound to end soon."16 Grandmother Koshak reached an arm around her husband's shoulder and put her mouth close to his ear. "Pop," she said, "I love you." He turned his head and answered, "I love you" -- and his voice lacked its usual gruffness.17 John watched the water lap at the steps, and felt a crushing guilt. He had underestimated the ferocity of Camille. He had assumed that what had never happened could not happen. He held his head between his hands, and silently prayed: "Get us through this mess, will You?"18 A moment later, the hurricane, in one mighty swipe, lifted the entire roof off the house and skimmed it 40 feet through the air. The bottom steps of the staircase broke apart. One wall began crumbling on the marooned group.19 Dr. Robert H. Simpson, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Fla., graded Hurricane Camille as "the greatest recorded storm ever to hit a populated area in the Western Hemisphere." in its concentrated breadth of some 70 miles it shot out winds of nearly 200 m.p.h. and raised tides as high as 30 feet. Along the Gulf Coast it devastated everything in its swath: 19,467 homes and 709 small businesses were demolished or severely damaged. it seized a 600, 000-gallon Gulfport oil tank and dumped it 3.5 miles away. It tore three large cargo ships from their moorings and beached them. Telephone poles and 20-inch-thick pines cracked like guns as the winds snapped them.20 To the west of Gulfport, the town of Pass Christian was virtually wiped out. Several vacationers at the luxurious Richelieu Apartments there held a hurricane party to watch the storm from their spectacular vantage point. Richelieu Apartments were smashed apart as if by a gigantic fist, and 26 people perished.21 Seconds after the roof blew off the Koshak house, john yelled, "Up the stairs -- into our bedroom! Count the kids." The children huddled in the slashing rain within the circle of adults. Grandmother Koshak implored, "Children, let's sing!" The children were too frightened to respond. She carried on alone for a few bars; then her voice trailed away.22 Debris flew as the living-room fireplace and its chimney collapsed. With two walls in theirbedroom sanctuary beginning to disintegrate, John ordered, "Into the television room!" This was the room farthest from the direction of the storm.23 For an instant, John put his arm around his wife. Janis understood. Shivering from the wind and rain and fear, clutching two children to her, she thought, Dear Lord, give me the strength to endure what I have to. She felt anger against the hurricane. We won't let it win.24 Pop Koshak raged silently, frustrated at not being able to do anything to fight Camille. Without reason, he dragged a cedar chest and a double mattress from a bed-room into the TV room. At that moment, the wind tore out one wall and extinguished the lantern. A second wall moved, wavered, Charlie Hill tried to support it, but it toppled on him, injuring his back. The house, shuddering and rocking, had moved 25 feet from its foundations. The world seemed to be breaking apart.25 "Let's get that mattress up!" John shouted to his father. "Make it a lean-to against the wind. Get the kids under it. We can prop it up with our heads and shoulders!"26 The larger children sprawled on the floor, with the smaller ones in a layer on top of them, and the adults bent over all nine. The floor tilted. The box containing the litter of kittens slid off a shelf and vanished in the wind. Spooky flew off the top of a sliding bookcase and also disappeared. The dog cowered with eyes closed. A third wall gave way. Water lapped across the slanting floor. John grabbed a door which was still hinged to one closet wall. "If the floor goes," he yelled at his father, "let's get the kids on this."27 In that moment, the wind slightly diminished, and the water stopped rising. Then the water began receding. The main thrust of Camille had passed. The Koshaks and their friends had survived.28 With the dawn, Gulfport people started coming back to their homes. They saw human bodies -- more than 130 men, women and children died along the Mississippi coast- and parts of the beach and highway were strewn with dead dogs, cats, cattle. Strips of clothing festooned the standing trees, and blown down power lines coiled like black spaghetti over the roads.29 None of the returnees moved quickly or spoke loudly; they stood shocked, trying to absorb the shattering scenes before their eyes. "What do we do?" they asked. "Where do we go?"30 By this time, organizations within the area and, in effect, the entire population of the United States had come to the aid of the devastated coast. Before dawn, the Mississippi National Guard and civil-defense units were moving in to handle traffic, guard property, set up communications centers, help clear the debris and take the homeless by truck and bus to refugee centers. By 10 a.m., the Salvation Army's canteen trucks and Red Cross volunteers and staffers were going wherever possible to distribute hot drinks, food, clothing and bedding.31 From hundreds of towns and cities across the country came several million dollars in donations; household and medical supplies streamed in by plane, train, truck and car. The federal government shipped 4,400,000 pounds of food, moved in mobile homes, set up portable classrooms, opened offices to provide low-interest, long-term business loans.32 Camille, meanwhile, had raked its way northward across Mississippi, dropping more than 28 inches of rain into West Virginia and southern Virginia, causing rampaging floods, huge mountain slides and 111 additional deaths before breaking up over the Atlantic Ocean.33 Like many other Gulfport families, the Koshaks quickly began reorganizing their lives, John divided his family in the homes of two friends. The neighbor with her two children went to a refugee center. Charlie Hill found a room for rent. By Tuesday, Charlie's back had improved, andhe pitched in with Seabees in the worst volunteer work of all--searching for bodies. Three days after the storm, he decided not to return to Las Vegas, but to "remain in Gulfport and help rebuild the community."34 Near the end of the first week, a friend offered the Koshaks his apartment, and the family was reunited. The children appeared to suffer no psychological damage from their experience; they were still awed by the incomprehensible power of the hurricane, but enjoyed describing what they had seen and heard on that frightful night, Janis had just one delayed reaction. A few nights after the hurricane, she awoke suddenly at 2 a.m. She quietly got up and went outside. Looking up at the sky and, without knowing she was going to do it, she began to cry softly.35 Meanwhile, John, Pop and Charlie were picking through the wreckage of the home. It could have been depressing, but it wasn't: each salvaged item represented a little victory over the wrath of the storm. The dog and cat suddenly appeared at the scene, alive and hungry.36 But the blues did occasionally afflict all the adults. Once, in a low mood, John said to his parents, "I wanted you here so that we would all be together, so you could enjoy the children, and look what happened."37 His father, who had made up his mind to start a welding shop when living was normal again, said, "Let's not cry about what's gone. We' II just start all over."38 "You're great," John said. "And this town has a lot of great people in it. It' s going to be better here than it ever was before."39 Later, Grandmother Koshak reflected : "We lost practically all our possessions, but the family came through it. W hen I think of that, I realize we lost nothing important.”(from Rhetoric and Literature by P. Joseph Canavan)第一课迎战卡米尔号飓风约瑟夫?布兰克小约翰。

高级英语下册的课文中英文翻译

高级英语下册的课文中英文翻译

(下)Lesson One The Company in Which I work 我工作的公司*In the company in which I work , each of us is afraid of at least one person .我工作的公司里,每个人都至少害怕一个人。

*The lower your position is , the more people you are afraid of . 职位越低,所惧怕的人越多。

*And all the people are afraid of the twelve men at the top who helped found and build the company and now own and direct it .所有的人都害怕那十二位顶层上司,他们帮助创建了这个公司,而且现在仍然大权在握。

*All these twelve men are elderly now and drained by time 歲月滄桑and success of energy and ambition . 所有这十二位都已经上了年纪,而且岁月的沧桑和对成功的执著追求使他们心力交瘁。

*Many have spent their whole lives here .They seem friendly ,slow , and content when I come upon them in the halls and always courteous(有禮貌的) and mute 沉默不語的)when they ride with others in the public elevators . 他们中很多人在这儿干了一辈子。

当我在大厅里遇见他们时,他们看上去非常友善、沉稳而心满意足,而且他们与别人一起乘坐公共电梯时又总是彬彬有礼、沉默不语*Nobody is sure anymore who really runs the company ( not even the people who are credited with running it ) , but the company does run . 没有人知道谁真正经营这家公司(甚至连人们认为现在经营着这家公司的那些人都不知道),然而公司的确在运转。

高级英语(下)课文翻译

高级英语(下)课文翻译

日志[转]高级英语(下)课文翻译2012-2-23 23:12阅读(5)转载自月光#湖面下一篇:梁山108将简介|返回日志列表•赞(2)赞(2)赞(2)赞(2)•转载(242)•分享(1)•评论•复制地址•更多Module 1 The Film Maker一段小说节选(选自《美好工作》)“这就是,”威尔科克斯说,”我们唯一的一台电脑数控机器。

”“什么?”“电脑数码控制的机器。

看看它换工具有多快?”罗玢从一个有机玻璃窗里往里凝视,看着一些东西像突然抽了筋一样转来转去,进进出出,喷出一种看上去像牛奶咖啡似的液体给机器加油润滑。

“这是干什么?”“机制汽缸盖。

很美,对吧?”“我倒不喜欢这样形容。

”在罗玢的眼里,这台机器运动突然,猛烈,但受控制地向前一冲,又往后一退,真有点儿刁钻古怪,甚至流里流气,活像某种钢铁爬虫在吞食猎物。

“总有一天,”威尔科克斯说,”将会出现摆满这种机器的无灯工厂。

”“干吗是无灯的呢?”“机器不需要灯光,机器是瞎子。

一旦你建起一座全电脑化的工厂,你就可以拆除灯,关上门,由它去制造引擎或者吸尘器,或者任何东西,一切独自在黑暗里进行。

一天二十四小时都在工作。

”“这个主意叫人头皮发麻。

”“在美国,在斯堪的纳维亚,人家早已有了。

”“那经理呢?他也成了一台电脑,坐在黑暗的办公室里?”威尔科克斯对这个问题认真考虑了一下。

”不,电脑不会思想。

总得有人来管理,起码有一个人,决定做什么,怎样做。

不过这些工作”——他把头一扬,眼睛对着一排排工作台瞥了一圈——”不会再有了。

这里的这台机器正在干去年十二个人干的工作。

”“美好的新世界哟,”罗玢说,“那里只有经理们才有工作。

”这一回威尔科克斯没有忽略她的反讽。

”我不喜欢把工人当做冗员裁掉,”他说,”可我们也处于两难的困境。

如果不现代化,我们就失去竞争优势,只好裁减冗员,如果搞现代化,我们还得裁减冗员,因为我们不再需要。

”“我们应当做的事情就是花更多的钱给人们做好创造性休闲的准备,”罗玢说。

高英第二册第一课中英对照

高英第二册第一课中英对照

Face to Face with Hurricane Camille迎战飓风卡米尔Joseph P. Blank约瑟夫·P·布兰克John Koshak, Jr., knew that Hurricane Camille would be bad. Radio and television warnings had sounded throughout that Sunday, last August 17, as Camille lashed northwestward across the Gulf of Mexico. It was certain to pummel Gulfport, Miss., where the Koshers lived. Along the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, nearly 150,000 people fled inland to safer ground. But, like thousands of others in the coastal communities, john was reluctant to abandon his home unless the family -- his wife, Janis, and their seven children, aged 3 to 11 -- was clearly endangered.小约翰·柯夏克知道飓风卡米尔将会来势凶猛。

早在去年8月17号那个周日 当卡米尔席卷墨西哥海湾西北方向时 收音机和电视便不断地发出飓风警报。

柯夏克—家所居住的地方——密西西比州的海港湾必将遭到重袭。

路易斯安娜、密西西比和亚拉巴马州沿海—带的将近15万居民逃往内陆更为安全的地方。

但是 与沿海地区其他成千上万的居民—样 约翰不愿意放弃自己的家园 除非他的家人——妻子詹尼斯和七个从三岁到十一岁的孩子——生命明显受到了威胁。

大学高级英语下册翻译.pdf

大学高级英语下册翻译.pdf

Lesson One1.This picture brings back many pleasant memories of her Spanish holiday.2.News and weather forecasts reports are staples of radio programmes.3.By mere accident Tom met in a bar his long-lost brother who was thought tohave been killed in action during the war.4.Bill intuited something criminal in their plan.5.They think that obsessive tidiness in factory is a bad sign .6.Yesterday his mother sold several years’ worth of paper and magazines.7.His heartening speech impelled us to (work with) greater efforts.8.Those who enjoy pulling off a miracle often fail.9.As language students we should have a sense of nuances of plain words andexpressions.10.The rude behavior of Mrs. Taylor’s ado pted son is driving her into a nervousbreakdown.11.I like to see films in general, and American Western and horrors in particular.12.In some sense Mary saw in her aunt a surrogate of her mother.13.My father never equivocated, and he always gave some brief but poignantopinions.14.Though he disabled, he never tries of helping people.15.In any country, those who are remiss in their duty must be severely punished.16.Awareness of the fact that the child was in danger impelled the policeman toaction.Lesson 21. A. The chances are that they will be held up by traffic on their way to the airport.B. the plane takes off at 6:35. It would be a pity if they couldn’t make it.2.Another popular notion which is in fact a misconception is that expensive clothesinvariably raise one’s status.3.Can you imagine what kind of life a man has lived who aspires to excellence andabhors mediocrity?4. A copy of our latest product catalogue will be sent free of charge if you will fillup the form on the reverse of this card and post it.5.It will be an absurdity, if not a catastrophe. If half of the population of this cityabandons their posts and goes in for business.6.Because they want their kids to be somebodies, some well-intentioned parentsexercise enormous pressures on their children and the results all too often prove the reverse.7.The revered professor predicted that these brilliant young people would surelymake their way in the scientific-technical realm in a few years.8.Many writers have quitted writing stories because, as they say there is no marketfor them. Yet Lessing sticks and she would go on even if there really wasn’t any home for them but a private drawer.9.Satire under his pen is only a means to an end, a form to expose social evils.10.It seemed no body at the party, not even the reporters, made special note of thegeneral’s absence which might have aroused the suspicion of his rivals.11.During the first months in the strange land, the new arrivals had to take menialjobs refused by the natives and work like slaves to make a living. Later, having saved enough money, most of them set up small businesses.12.Intellectual sluggards may get rich but they can never make good in the academicfield.13.Schools should make prodigious effort to inculcate the students with a sense ofjustice and the love of truth.14.Yesterday she received a telegram from her cousin in sian to the effect that thelatter would arrive today by the night train instead of the morning train he hadmentioned in his letter.15.All her relatives were under no illusion that her husband could be one of the threelucky survivors in the recent plane crash.16. In the west many people remain single because they don’t want to tie themselvesdown (to be tired down) to responsibility.17.If nothing interferes the school sports meet will be held as scheduled.18.With Vincent playing baseball is a means to an end, the best way to getacquainted with those stars.Lesson Three1.These gifts had got thoroughly mixed up and needed to be sorted into threedifferent sets.2.The Security Council would take issue with the proposals put forward by thewarring states.3.Because of repeated defeated the enemy t roops’ morale sank low and theirdiscipline broke loose.4.In a bid to host the Olympic Games, what really counts is not the winning but thespirit to compete and take part.5.In designing the office building, due attention should be paid to the people whowill work inside it.6.The well-groomed young man is impatient to wait for the bride to arrive and thewedding ceremony to start.7.For several weeks, the city was in a turmoil. The rebels had surrounded the CityHall, hailing stones, wielding sticks, and shouting slogans.8.After the success of the experiment, for several days, he indulged himself in theluxury of sleeping late and getting up late.9.I’m not the type of person who thrives on city life. I am more accusto med to (the )life in the peaceful countryside.10.Having weathered wind and rain for hundreds of years, these buildings ofEuropean style are barely recognizable as they were.11.Before the interviews, the hoary -headed father patted him on the shoulder in anextremely reassuring manner and wished him every success.12.Some people believed that the Monore doctrine means that European nationsshould no longer interfere with American nations or try to acquire more territories in the Western Hemisphere.13.As a remedy for the blight of mediocrity , our society should show greaterrespect for excellence in education.14.The young mother lamented that it was her own lack of concern that had drivenher boy from the house that night.15.His enthusiasm ebbed away when he learned how troublesome it was to gothrough the red tape in order to go abroad for further studies.16.As prices are skyrocketing, workers are determined to go on strike, regardless ofits consequences.17.It is absurd to wear a pair of torn blue jeans at such a formal dinner.18.The educational qualifications of intellectuals should entitle them to highersalaries.Lesson Four1.John remained motionless without even blinking, because he knew who thechairman remark was leveled at /against.2.The message was delivered to the wrong department owing to a mistake onthe part of a clerk.3.It seems that in every attack Dickens makes upon society he always points toa change of spirit rather than a change of social structure.4.Before they covered 2 km in the desert, the explorers had walked themselvesdizzy and exhausted.5.After their seizure of the city, the enemy troops started to despoil all thebuildings.6.He had wandered in the unsavory areas of London and seen for himself theappalling living conditions of the poor.7.Conrad points to a danger that is already apparent in his friend’s writing, thatof alienating his characters from their social context.8.The circumstances of her childhood are not easy to establish; these were factsshe herself wished to forget.9.These pages tell at least as much, if no more was jeopardized.10.Whenever an important decision is made, they defer to (the opinion of) theirdepartment head.11. As he had made bad investments, his fortune was jeopardized.12.All the staff members must be alert to the danger of fire.13.He is a person who will stand up for what he thinks right, no matter what thecost to himself.14.The highest award he won in the international contest testifies to his musicaltalent.15.The peasants in that poverty-stricken area worked hard to try and wrest aliving from the soil.16.He spoke in such a round-about way that we found it hard to fathom his realmotives.17.In the darkness of night, an indescribable fear overlook him when he movedon alone in the jungle.18.The local department responsible for the Hope Project has collectedcontributions of about 2million yuan.Lesson Five1. The first thing to do is to assess the fixed assets of that company.2. His parents bought not a few picture books for him, but now he has outgrownthem.3. The senator is not likely to slant toward this bill out of partisanship.4. To analyze trends of stock market is the project of the would-be economist.5. He is fairly sophisticated, so he can identify at first glance the self-centered peoplein their guises.6. The simplicity and clarity of this analytic approach far outweighs its drawbacks.7. Mrs. Smith was so busily engaged in her writing that she left the disciplining of the children to her husband.8. After the first round of matches, the drawing of lots turned the scale in favor of the Chinese football team.9. He claimed that he was public-spirited as could be seen from what he had done, but his rivals declared that he was a mere humbug.10. As safety in production is neglected inn that factory, a dozen workers have beenmaimed in the past three years.11. In that sea food restaurant, they were so overcharged that they thought it almostdownright robbery.12. John went up to his rival and wanted to give him a hug only to be snubbed by thelatter.13. In downtown Shanghai, not only have the shops undergone a facelift, but manyarresting sculptures have been put up along the streets as well.14. What he left to his descendants as an added asset is his indomitable spirit.15. When he woke up, the early morning sunlight was filtering through the curtainsinto his bedroom.16. After learning about how they had been building their enterprise through arduousefforts, he had a compulsion to write a novel about it.17. In order to maintain the integrity of this ancient building, we should exclude theuse of steel and glass in its renovation.18. With the consciousness that it is a multinational country, the tourists were not atall surprised to find such big differences in the customs at different parts of that country.Lesson Six1.Short of funds, they could not put into practice the plan they hadmade.2.I see her off and on in the school library, but I do not know her name.3.I understand you are in a difficult position, and neither you nor Jackowes me any explanation.4.Mary is very angry with the manager, for he is nonchalant to hersuggestion.5.Their neighbor’s son is always up to some mischief, and the childis quite unbearable.6.He bought a flat last month, and most of his savings were wiped out.7.His insane urge for greater material wealth put him onto the road toruin.8.It’s kind late to start now. You ought to have started two hours ago.9.As the service was poor, the volume of goods sold in that store saggedlast year.10.This morning I came across him on the campus and found that his facewas flooded with anxiety.11.If you find the leather jacket does not fit you, the shop willrefund you the money.12.John’s colleagues covet his promotion very much.13.The firm’s board of directors has decided to lay off engineers and300 workers.14.She intimated to me her intention of going abroad for further studies.15.When the boss heard that his factory was operating at a loss, hefocused his anger on the foreman.Lesson Seven1. A letter of thanks is the verbal expression of one’s gratitude.2.The US automobile industry has come under persistent pressure fromJapanese competition.3.So far, progress of a greater or lesser degree has been made in theresearch on superconductors in various countries.4.We must inculcate in people respect for knowledge and for people oftalent.5.After the outbreak of the French Revolution, many members of thenobility shorn of their wealth fled abroad.6. A special envoy has been sent to find out how things stand in thatcountry tormented by a civil war.7.The social status of women in China today has been enhanced, aswitness the vast number of women holding leading positions.8. A note of desperation in her voice gave her away.9.It is not an exaggeration to say that the quality of the color TVsets made by this factory is better than that of 3 years ago.10.With the improvement in management and administration, the laborproductivity of that factory is higher than it has ever been since China’s adoption of the reform and opening policy.11.Such research as these doctors are doing will have far-reachingsignificance in the field of medicine.12.They have learnt a lot from the lesson of the past. If not their ownthen that of some other people of the same trade.13.To dump unclear waste at sea will seriously affect the environment,and not merely marine life alone.14.At first, he was reluctant to undertake the task, but when he started,he went at it with a will.15.He went against the traffic lights when riding his bicycle. Heexplained to the policeman at length as if the change of the lights from green to red were to blame for his violation of trafficregulations.16.The rewards of their design turned out to be worthy of the time andfunds they had spent.17.The fact that Green mismanaged the factory is sufficient cause fornot appointing him director again.Lesson Eight1.Her many years of laborious efforts culminated in a successfulexhibition of her paintings in Hangzhou last year.2.Known as a child wonder when he was a kid, for he could write beautifulpoems at seven, he did not grow to be a scholar and his literary talent proved only a flash-in- the pan.3.It suddenly dawned on me that Lant was on the verge if bankruptcy.There had been reports that the finance of his business was in a deplorable tangle.4.Wholesale indulgence of the only child in the family actually doesno good but a lot of harm to its growth.5.When we old friends met, we would talk about our career and families.Susan told me that her brother Stephen, now on the bright side of thirty, is a successful lawyer in a southern city. And I learnt that Teddy, on the shady side of forty, recently married a Thai girl.6.An occasional prod is good for children, but too many prods can onlyproduce negative, if not disastrous, effect.7.She can hardly believe that the expensive dress she bought last yearhas already gone out of fashion.8. A Sino-British Exploration team was being organized to cross the vastexpanse of the Taklimakan Desert. When he learned the news , the young reporter could not resist entering for the expedition.9.Jim’s intransigence has proved a handicap to his relations with hiscolleagues.10.Every Saturday those kind-hearted people will go to the ChildrenWelfare Institute and each will bring a child home; and the handicapped child, showered with love, will spend a happy weekend in his new home where he is made to feel to be a member of the family.11.I could visualize my childhood friend, now a rising film star,surrounded by fans, smiling and nodding to everyone who was trying to accost her.12.I am all too familiar with Harry type. He will invariably make a fussover a trivial matter.13.The son played the game both ways successfully, which culminatedin a harmonious relationship between his mother and his wife.14.Somerset Maugham may rightly be referred to as a versatile writer,whose novels, plays, short stories and other works are still extremely popular and are widely read today.15.In the four-star hotel lobby the Chinese artist was accosted by twooverseas Chinese who later hosted a dinner party in his honor.16.Because Jack had a facility for figures he took to accounting likea duck to water.17.In the dusk of the evening the young girl became a little scared whenshe found she was the only person on the country road with a car bogged down.18.Everyone should try to look on the bright side of life even whenmisfortune befalls him.19.You can never imagine what fun the few of us far away from home gotout of spinning yarns after work in those days.20.The Nazis wholesale murder of Jews during World War II is the mostoutrageous crime in human history.Lesson Ten1. The goat is ancient creature that has done much for man. One of thesmall services the goat has rendered to man is in the way of language.For example, some men wear goatees, thin whiskers that hang down their chins like the whiskers on a goat.2. The would-be boss smiled as he came into the reception hall , whichput the employees immediately at ease.3. Some poets want to live in a perpetual lethargy so that their lifecan proceed with the ultimate quiet and freedom and they might compose poems in a semi-somnambulant state.4. Vultures are hovering over the cliff, below which a fierce battlewas fought the night before, and hundreds of dead soldiers are still lying unburied before there.5. The Indians in North America often send news over long distancesby beating out a message on a hollow log.6. The senior journalist sank into his easy chair with greatrelish and began to indulge in recollections of those battles in the war that he had witnessed at first hand.7. In that remote and backward mountain , the tribal chieftains oftenscourged captives with whips and then made them slaves.8. The well-groomed secretary had to run all the way at the news, andyet he arrived with not a hair out of place.9. It is raining cats and dogs outside! I rather sit by the cozy fireand not venture out in the pouring rain.10. The upshot of the young man infatuation with his study of butterfliesmade him so restless with the present job that he asked to be relieved of his duties and later went to Africa.11. At the commencement , everyone was in a fever pf excitement ( a feverof frenzy) Graduating students shook hands with their belovedprofessors, embraced their buddies, and threw their caps into the sky.12. When the war-time hero appeared on the rostrum, the audience gavehim a standing ovation and looked at him with admiration and respect.13. The members of joint exploration team tried their best to save theirslender stock of water for the camels, their ships in the desert.14. In those difficult years, he was sent to Inner Mongolia, where herode herd for a collective farm near the border.15. I should say he is a unique landscape painter, at any rate for someonewho is colorblind.16. Tom was none too happy about the outcome of the election.17. His aloofness has strengthened the estrangement(misunderstanding,barrier) between him and his colleagues.18.The President’s advisors tried their best to prevail upon him tocancel the trip.。

高英课文翻译

高英课文翻译

第一课迎战卡米尔号飓风1 小约翰。

柯夏克已料到,卡米尔号飓风来势定然凶猛。

就在去年8月17日那个星期天,当卡米尔号飓风越过墨西哥湾向西北进袭之时,收音机和电视里整天不断地播放着飓风警报。

柯夏克一家居住的地方一—密西西比州的高尔夫港——肯定会遭到这场飓风的猛烈袭击。

路易斯安那、密西西比和亚拉巴马三州沿海一带的居民已有将近15万人逃往内陆安全地带。

但约翰就像沿海村落中其他成千上万的人一样,不愿舍弃家园,要他下决心弃家外逃,除非等到他的一家人一—妻子詹妮丝以及他们那七个年龄从三岁到十一岁的孩子一一眼看着就要灾祸临头。

2 为了找出应付这场风灾的最佳对策,他与父母商量过。

两位老人是早在一个月前就从加利福尼亚迁到这里来,住进柯夏克一家所住的那幢十个房间的屋子里。

他还就此征求过从拉斯韦加斯开车来访的老朋友查理?希尔的意见。

3 约翰的全部产业就在自己家里(他开办的玛格纳制造公司是设计、研制各种教育玩具和教育用品的。

公司的一切往来函件、设计图纸和工艺模具全都放在一楼)。

37岁的他对飓风的威力是深有体会的。

四年前,他原先拥有的位于高尔夫港以西几英里外的那个家就曾毁于贝翠号飓风(那场风灾前夕柯夏克已将全家搬到一家汽车旅馆过夜)。

不过,当时那幢房子所处的地势偏低,高出海平面仅几英尺。

“我们现在住的这幢房子高了23英尺,,’他对父亲说,“而且距离海边足有250码远。

这幢房子是1915年建造的。

至今还从未受到过飓风的袭击。

我们呆在这儿恐怕是再安全不过了。

”4 老柯夏克67岁.是个语粗心慈的熟练机械师。

他对儿子的意见表示赞同。

“我们是可以严加防卫。

度过难关的,”他说?“一但发现危险信号,我们还可以赶在天黑之前撤出去。

”为了对付这场飓风,几个男子汉有条不紊地做起准备工作来。

自米水管道可能遭到破坏,他们把浴盆和提俑都盛满水。

飓风也可能造成断电,所以他们检查r手提式收音机和手电筒里的电池以及提灯里的燃料油。

约翰的父亲将一台小发电机搬到楼下门厅里.接上几个灯泡。

高级英语(下)课文翻译

高级英语(下)课文翻译

Module 1 The Film Maker一段小说节选(选自《美好工作》)“这就是,”威尔科克斯说,”我们唯一的一台电脑数控机器。

”“什么?”“电脑数码控制的机器。

看看它换工具有多快?”罗玢从一个有机玻璃窗里往里凝视,看着一些东西像突然抽了筋一样转来转去,进进出出,喷出一种看上去像牛奶咖啡似的液体给机器加油润滑。

“这是干什么?”“机制汽缸盖。

很美,对吧?”“我倒不喜欢这样形容。

”在罗玢的眼里,这台机器运动突然,猛烈,但受控制地向前一冲,又往后一退,真有点儿刁钻古怪,甚至流里流气,活像某种钢铁爬虫在吞食猎物。

“总有一天,”威尔科克斯说,”将会出现摆满这种机器的无灯工厂。

”“干吗是无灯的呢?”“机器不需要灯光,机器是瞎子。

一旦你建起一座全电脑化的工厂,你就可以拆除灯,关上门,由它去制造引擎或者吸尘器,或者任何东西,一切独自在黑暗里进行。

一天二十四小时都在工作。

”“这个主意叫人头皮发麻。

”“在美国,在斯堪的纳维亚,人家早已有了。

”“那经理呢?他也成了一台电脑,坐在黑暗的办公室里?”威尔科克斯对这个问题认真考虑了一下。

”不,电脑不会思想。

总得有人来管理,起码有一个人,决定做什么,怎样做。

不过这些工作”——他把头一扬,眼睛对着一排排工作台瞥了一圈——”不会再有了。

这里的这台机器正在干去年十二个人干的工作。

”“美好的新世界哟,”罗玢说,“那里只有经理们才有工作。

”这一回威尔科克斯没有忽略她的反讽。

”我不喜欢把工人当做冗员裁掉,”他说,”可我们也处于两难的困境。

如果不现代化,我们就失去竞争优势,只好裁减冗员,如果搞现代化,我们还得裁减冗员,因为我们不再需要。

”“我们应当做的事情就是花更多的钱给人们做好创造性休闲的准备,”罗玢说。

“就像搞妇女研究?”“还有别的。

”“男人喜欢工作。

说来可笑,可他们就是喜欢。

每个周一早上他们也许会发牢骚讲怪话,他们也许会鼓励缩短工时,增加假期,但他们需要工作以赢得自尊。

”“那不过是个适应问题。

高级英语第二册第一课课文翻译对照(修订版)

高级英语第二册第一课课文翻译对照(修订版)

第一课迎战卡米尔号飓风1小约翰。

柯夏克已料到,卡米尔号飓风来势定然凶猛。

就在去年8月17日那个星期天,当卡米尔号飓风越过墨西哥湾向西北进袭之时,收音机和电视里整天不断地播放着飓风警报。

柯夏克一家居住的地方一—密西西比州的高尔夫港——肯定会遭到这场飓风的猛烈袭击。

路易斯安那、密西西比和亚拉巴马三州沿海一带的居民已有将近15万人逃往内陆安全地带。

但约翰就像沿海村落中其他成千上万的人一样,不愿舍弃家园,要他下决心弃家外逃,除非等到他的一家人一—妻子詹妮丝以及他们那七个年龄从三岁到十一岁的孩子一一眼看着就要灾祸临头。

2为了找出应付这场风灾的最佳对策,他与父母商量过。

两位老人是早在一个月前就从加利福尼亚迁到这里来,住进柯夏克一家所住的那幢十个房间的屋子里。

他还就此征求过从拉斯韦加斯开车来访的老朋友查理?希尔的意见。

3约翰的全部产业就在自己家里(他开办的玛格纳制造公司是设计、研制各种教育玩具和教育用品的。

公司的一切往来函件、设计图纸和工艺模具全都放在一楼)。

37岁的他对飓风的威力是深有体会的。

四年前,他原先拥有的位于高尔夫港以西几英里外的那个家就曾毁于贝翠号飓风(那场风灾前夕柯夏克已将全家搬到一家汽车旅馆过夜)。

不过,当时那幢房子所处的地势偏低,高出海平面仅几英尺。

“我们现在住的这幢房子高了23英尺,,’他对父亲说,“而且距离海边足有250码远。

这幢房子是1915年建造的。

至今还从未受到过飓风的袭击。

我们呆在这儿恐怕是再安全不过了。

”4老柯夏克67岁.是个语粗心慈的熟练机械师。

他对儿子的意见表示赞同。

“我们是可以严加防卫。

度过难关的,”他说?“一但发现危险信号,我们还可以赶在天黑之前撤出去。

”5 为了对付这场飓风,几个男子汉有条不紊地做起准备工作来。

自米水管道可能遭到破坏,他们把浴盆和提俑都盛满水。

飓风也可能造成断电,所以他们检查r手提式收音机和手电筒里的电池以及提灯里的燃料油。

约翰的父亲将一台小发电机搬到楼下门厅里.接上几个灯泡。

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.Face to Face with Hurricane CamilleJoseph P. Blank1 John Koshak, Jr., knew that Hurricane Camille would be bad. Radio and television warnings had sounded throughout that Sunday, last August 17, as Camille lashed northwestward across the Gulf of Mexico. It was certain to pummel Gulfport, Miss., where the Koshers lived. Along the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, nearly 150,000 people fled inland to safer ground. But, like thousands of others in the coastal communities, john was reluctant to abandon his home unless the family -- his wife, Janis, and their seven children, abed 3 to 11 -- was clearly endangered.2 Trying to reason out the best course of action, he talked with his father and mother, who had moved into the ten-room house with the Koshaks a month earlier from California. He also consulted Charles Hill, a long time friend, who had driven from Las Vegas for a visit.3 John, 37 -- whose business was right there in his home ( he designed and developed educational toys and supplies, and all of Magna Products' correspondence, engineering drawings and art work were there on the first floor) -- was familiar with the power of a hurricane. Four years earlier, Hurricane Betsy had demolished undefined his former home a few miles west of Gulfport (Koshak had moved his family to a motel for the night). But that house had stood only a few feet above sea level. "We' re elevated 23 feet," he told his father, "and we' re a good 250 yards from the sea. The place has been here since 1915, and no hurricane has ever bothered it. We' II probably be as safe here as anyplace else."4 The elder Koshak, a gruff, warmhearted expert machinist of 67, agreed. "We can batten down and ride it out," he said. "If we see signs of danger, we can get out before dark."5 The men methodically prepared for the hurricane. Since water mains might be damaged, they filled bathtubs and pails. A power failure was likely, so they checked out batteries for the portable radio and flashlights, and fuel for the lantern. John's father moved a small generator into the downstairs hallway, wired several light bulbs to it and prepared a connection to the refrigerator.6 Rain fell steadily that afternoon; gray clouds scudded in from the Gulf on the rising wind. The family had an early supper. A neighbor, whose husband was in Vietnam, asked if she and her two children could sit out the storm with the Koshaks. Another neighbor came by on his way in-land — would the Koshaks mind taking care of his dog?7 It grew dark before seven o' clock. Wind and rain now whipped the house. John sent his oldest son and daughter upstairs to bring down mattresses and pillows for the younger children. He wanted to keep the group together on one floor. "Stay away from the windows," he warned, concerned about glass flying from storm-shattered panes. As the wind mounted to a roar, the house began leaking- the rain seemingly driven right through the walls. With mops, towels, pots and buckets the Koshaks began a struggle against the rapidly spreading water. At 8:30, power failed, and Pop Koshak turned on the generator.8 The roar of the hurricane now was overwhelming. The house shook, and the ceiling in the living room was falling piece by piece. The French doors in an upstairs room blew in with an explosive sound, and the group heard gun-like reports as other upstairs windows disintegrated. Water rose above their ankles.9 Then the front door started to break away from its frame. John and Charlie put their shoulders against it, but a blast of water hit the house, flinging open the door and shoving them down the hall. The generator was doused, and the lights went out. Charlie licked his lips andshouted to John. "I think we' re in real trouble. That water tasted salty." The sea had reached the house, and the water was rising by the minute!10 "Everybody out the back door to the cars!" John yelled. "We' II pass the children along between us. Count them! Nine!"11 The children went from adult to adult like buckets in a fire brigade. But the cars wouldn't start; the electrical systems had been killed by water. The wind was too Strong and the water too deep to flee on foot. "Back to the house!" john yelled. "Count the children! Count nine!"12 As they scrambled back, john ordered, "Every-body on the stairs!" Frightened, breathless and wet, the group settled on the stairs, which were protected by two interiorwalls. The children put the cat, Spooky, and a box with her four kittens on the landing. She peered nervously at her litter. The neighbor's dog curled up and went to sleep.13 The wind sounded like the roar of a train passing a few yards away. The house shuddered and shifted on its foundations. Water inched its way up the steps as first- floor outside walls collapsed. No one spoke. Everyone knew there was no escape; they would live or die in the house.14 Charlie Hill had more or less taken responsibility for the neighbor and her two children. The mother was on the verge of panic. She clutched his arm and kept repeating, "I can't swim, I can't swim."15 "You won't have to," he told her, with outward calm. "It's bound to end soon."16 Grandmother Koshak reached an arm around her husband's shoulder and put her mouth close to his ear. "Pop," she said, "I love you." He turned his head and answered, "I love you" -- and his voice lacked its usual gruffness.17 John watched the water lap at the steps, and felt a crushing guilt. He had underestimated the ferocity of Camille. He had assumed that what had never happened could not happen. He held his head between his hands, and silently prayed: "Get us through this mess, will You?"18 A moment later, the hurricane, in one mighty swipe, lifted the entire roof off the house and skimmed it 40 feet through the air. The bottom steps of the staircase broke apart. One wall began crumbling on the marooned group.19 Dr. Robert H. Simpson, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Fla., graded Hurricane Camille as "the greatest recorded storm ever to hit a populated area in the Western Hemisphere." in its concentrated breadth of some 70 miles it shot out winds of nearly 200 m.p.h. and raised tides as high as 30 feet. Along the Gulf Coast it devastated everything in its swath: 19,467 homes and 709 small businesses were demolished or severely damaged. it seized a 600, 000-gallon Gulfport oil tank and dumped it 3.5 miles away. It tore three large cargo ships from their moorings and beached them. Telephone poles and 20-inch-thick pines cracked like guns as the winds snapped them.20 To the west of Gulfport, the town of Pass Christian was virtually wiped out. Several vacationers at the luxurious Richelieu Apartments there held a hurricane party to watch the storm from their spectacular vantage point. Richelieu Apartments were smashed apart as if by a gigantic fist, and 26 people perished.21 Seconds after the roof blew off the Koshak house, john yelled, "Up the stairs -- into our bedroom! Count the kids." The children huddled in the slashing rain within the circle of adults. Grandmother Koshak implored, "Children, let's sing!" The children were too frightened to respond. She carried on alone for a few bars; then her voice trailed away.22 Debris flew as the living-room fireplace and its chimney collapsed. With two walls in theirbedroom sanctuary beginning to disintegrate, John ordered, "Into the television room!" This was the room farthest from the direction of the storm.23 For an instant, John put his arm around his wife. Janis understood. Shivering from the wind and rain and fear, clutching two children to her, she thought, Dear Lord, give me the strength to endure what I have to. She felt anger against the hurricane. We won't let it win.24 Pop Koshak raged silently, frustrated at not being able to do anything to fight Camille. Without reason, he dragged a cedar chest and a double mattress from a bed-room into the TV room. At that moment, the wind tore out one wall and extinguished the lantern. A second wall moved, wavered, Charlie Hill tried to support it, but it toppled on him, injuring his back. The house, shuddering and rocking, had moved 25 feet from its foundations. The world seemed to be breaking apart.25 "Let's get that mattress up!" John shouted to his father. "Make it a lean-to against the wind. Get the kids under it. We can prop it up with our heads and shoulders!"26 The larger children sprawled on the floor, with the smaller ones in a layer on top of them, and the adults bent over all nine. The floor tilted. The box containing the litter of kittens slid off a shelf and vanished in the wind. Spooky flew off the top of a sliding bookcase and also disappeared. The dog cowered with eyes closed. A third wall gave way. Water lapped across the slanting floor. John grabbed a door which was still hinged to one closet wall. "If the floor goes," he yelled at his father, "let's get the kids on this."27 In that moment, the wind slightly diminished, and the water stopped rising. Then the water began receding. The main thrust of Camille had passed. The Koshaks and their friends had survived.28 With the dawn, Gulfport people started coming back to their homes. They saw human bodies -- more than 130 men, women and children died along the Mississippi coast- and parts of the beach and highway were strewn with dead dogs, cats, cattle. Strips of clothing festooned the standing trees, and blown down power lines coiled like black spaghetti over the roads.29 None of the returnees moved quickly or spoke loudly; they stood shocked, trying to absorb the shattering scenes before their eyes. "What do we do?" they asked. "Where do we go?"30 By this time, organizations within the area and, in effect, the entire population of the United States had come to the aid of the devastated coast. Before dawn, the Mississippi National Guard and civil-defense units were moving in to handle traffic, guard property, set up communications centers, help clear the debris and take the homeless by truck and bus to refugee centers. By 10 a.m., the Salvation Army's canteen trucks and Red Cross volunteers and staffers were going wherever possible to distribute hot drinks, food, clothing and bedding.31 From hundreds of towns and cities across the country came several million dollars in donations; household and medical supplies streamed in by plane, train, truck and car. The federal government shipped 4,400,000 pounds of food, moved in mobile homes, set up portable classrooms, opened offices to provide low-interest, long-term business loans.32 Camille, meanwhile, had raked its way northward across Mississippi, dropping more than 28 inches of rain into West Virginia and southern Virginia, causing rampaging floods, huge mountain slides and 111 additional deaths before breaking up over the Atlantic Ocean.33 Like many other Gulfport families, the Koshaks quickly began reorganizing their lives, John divided his family in the homes of two friends. The neighbor with her two children went to a refugee center. Charlie Hill found a room for rent. By Tuesday, Charlie's back had improved, andhe pitched in with Seabees in the worst volunteer work of all--searching for bodies. Three days after the storm, he decided not to return to Las Vegas, but to "remain in Gulfport and help rebuild the community."34 Near the end of the first week, a friend offered the Koshaks his apartment, and the family was reunited. The children appeared to suffer no psychological damage from their experience; they were still awed by the incomprehensible power of the hurricane, but enjoyed describing what they had seen and heard on that frightful night, Janis had just one delayed reaction. A few nights after the hurricane, she awoke suddenly at 2 a.m. She quietly got up and went outside. Looking up at the sky and, without knowing she was going to do it, she began to cry softly.35 Meanwhile, John, Pop and Charlie were picking through the wreckage of the home. It could have been depressing, but it wasn't: each salvaged item represented a little victory over the wrath of the storm. The dog and cat suddenly appeared at the scene, alive and hungry.36 But the blues did occasionally afflict all the adults. Once, in a low mood, John said to his parents, "I wanted you here so that we would all be together, so you could enjoy the children, and look what happened."37 His father, who had made up his mind to start a welding shop when living was normal again, said, "Let's not cry about what's gone. We' II just start all over."38 "You're great," John said. "And this town has a lot of great people in it. It' s going to be better here than it ever was before."39 Later, Grandmother Koshak reflected : "We lost practically all our possessions, but the family came through it. W hen I think of that, I realize we lost nothing important.”(from Rhetoric and Literature by P. Joseph Canavan)第一课迎战卡米尔号飓风约瑟夫?布兰克小约翰。

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