unit12acaseof“severebias”课文翻译综合教程四
大学英语新课标综合教程4课后翻译
Unit 1If you ask me, real life is not all it’s cracked up to be. Twelve years at school and three years at university, teachers banging on about opportunities in the big wide world beyond our sheltered life as students, and what do I find?Try as I might to stay cheerful, all I ever get is hassle, sometimes with people (especially boys, god, when will they grow up?), but mostly with money. It’s just so expensive out here! Everyone wants a slice off you. The Inland Revenue wants to deduct income tax, the bank manager wants repayments on my student loan,the landlord wants the rent, gas, water, electricity and my mobile bills keep coming in, and all that’s before I’ve had anything to eat. And then some bright spark calls me out of the blue, asking if I’m interested in buying a pension. And this rate, I won’t even last till the end of the year, let alone till I’m 60.依我看,现实生活并没有人们想象的那么美好。
综合教程4课后翻译
1) 这个村子离边境很近,村民们一直担心会受到敌人的攻击。
The village is so close to the border that the villagers lived in constant fear of attacks from the enemy.2) 这个国家仅用了20年的时间就发展成了一个先进的工业强国。
In only twenty years the country was transformed into an advanced industrial power.3) 看到项目顺利完成,那些为此投入了大量时间和精力的人们都感到非常自豪。
Seeing the project successfully completed, those who had invested so much time and energy in it felt very proud.4) 鉴于目前的金融形势,美元进一步贬值是贬值是不可避免的。
Given the current financial situation, it is inevitable that the US dollar will be further devalued.5) 现在的汽车太多了,这个地区的道路几乎无法应对当前的交通状况。
There are so many vehicles nowadays that the roads in this area are barely adequate to cope with the present traffic.6)天气没有出现好转的迹象,所以政府号召我们做好防洪的准备。
The weather showed no signs of getting better so the government called upon us to get prepared for floods.7) 那场车祸以后爱丽丝十几年卧床不起,所以她的康复真是一个奇Alice had been confined to bed for over 10 years after the traffic accident, and so her recovery seemed nothing short of a miracle.8) 这些同学对世界杯十分关注,每天至少花两个小时看比赛的现场直播。
综合教程第四册Unit 12 Text I--A Case of Severe Bias 词汇
A CASE OF “SEVERE BIAS”Patricia Raybon1 This is who I am not. I am not a crack addict. I am not a welfare mother. I am not illiterate. I am not a prostitute. I have never been in jail. My children are not in gangs. My husband doesn’t beat me. My home is not a tenement. None of these things defines who I am, nor do they describe the other black people I’ve known and worked with and loved and befriended over these forty years of my life.◆welfare mother: welfare queen is a pejorative phrase used in the United States to refer to people, usually women, who are accused of collecting excessive welfare payments through fraud or manipulation.◆tenement: n. 1) a large building divided into flats/apartments, especially in a poor area of a city (尤指城市贫困区的)经济公寓,廉价公寓e.g. a tenement block 经济住宅街区2 Nor does it describe most of black America, period.3 Yet in the eyes of the American news media, this is what black America is: poor, criminal, addicted, and dysfunctional. Indeed, media coverage of black America is so one-sided, so imbalanced that the most victimized and hurting segment of the black community -a small segment, at best -is presented not as the exception but as the norm. It is an insidious practice, all the uglier for its blatancy.◆dysfunctional: adj. (technical) not working normally or properly 机能失调的;功能障碍的e.g. children from dysfunctional families 有缺陷家庭的子女◆coverage: n. (U) 1) the reporting of news and sport in newspapers and on the radio andtelevision 新闻报道e.g. media/newspaper/press coverage 媒体/报纸/报刊的报道tonight’s live coverage of the hockey game 今晚曲棍球比赛的现场直播2) the range or quality of information that is included in a book or course of study, ontelevision, etc. (书、课程学习、电视等的)信息范围,信息质量e.g. magazines with extensive coverage of diet and health topics包含大量饮食与健康话题的杂志3) the amount of sth that sth provides; the amount or way that sth covers an idea提供的数量;覆盖范围(或方式)e.g. Immunization coverage against fatal diseases has increased to 99% in some countries.在一些国家致命疾病免疫注射的覆盖面已达到99%。
最新Unit 12 A Case of “Severe Bias”课文翻译综合教程四资料
Unit 12A Case of "Severe Bias"Patricia Raybon1 This is who I am not. I am not a crack addict. I am not a welfare mother. I am not illiterate. I am not a prostitute. I have never been in jail. My children are not in gangs. My husband doesn’t beat me. My home is not a tenement. None of these things defines who I am, nor do they describe the other black people I’ve known and worked with and loved and befriended over these forty years of my life.2 Nor does it describe most of black America, period.3 Yet in the eyes of the American news media, this is what black America is: poor, criminal, addicted, and dysfunctional. Indeed, media coverage of black America is so one-sided, so imbalanced that the most victimized and hurting segment of the black community -a small segment, at best -is presented not as the exception but as the norm. It is an insidious practice, all the uglier for its blatancy.4 In recent months, I have observed a steady offering of media reports on crack babies, gang warfare, violent youth, poverty, and homelessness -and in most cases, the people featured in the photos and stories were black. At the same time, articles that discuss other aspects of American life -from home buying to medicine to technology to nutrition -rarely, if ever, show blacks playing a positive role, or for that matter, any role at all.5 Day after day, week after week, this message -that black America is dysfunctional and unwhole -gets transmitted across the American landscape. Sadly, as a result, America never learns the truth about what is actually a wonderful, vibrant, creative community of people.6 Most black Americans are not poor. Most black teenagers are not crack addicts. Most black mothers are not on welfare. Indeed, in sheer numbers, more white Americans are poor and on welfare than are black. Yet one never would deduce that by watching television or reading American newspapers and magazines.7 Why do the American media insist on playing this myopic, inaccurate picture game? In this game, white America is always whole and lovely and healthy, while black America is usually sick and pathetic and deficient. Rarely, indeed, is black America ever depicted in the media as functional and self-sufficient. The free press, indeed, as the main interpreter of American culture and American experience, holds the mirror on American reality -so much so that what the media say is is, even if it’s not that way at all. Themedia are guilty of a severe bias and the problem screams out for correction. It is worse than simply lazy journalism, which is bad enough; it is inaccurate journalism.8 For black Americans like myself, this isn’t just an issue of vanity -of wanting to be seen in a good light. Nor is it a matter of closing one’s eyes to the ve ry real problems of the urban underclass -which undeniably is disproportionately black. To be sure, problems besetting the black underclass deserve the utmost attention of the media, as well as the understanding and concern of the rest of American society.9 But if their problems consistently are presented as the only reality for blacks, any other experience known in the black community ceases to have validity, or to be real. In this scenario, millions of blacks are relegated to a sort of twilight zone, where who we are and what we are isn’t based on fact but an image and perception. That’s what it feels like to be a black American whose lifestyle is outside of the aberrant behavior that the media present as the norm.10 For many of us, life is a curious series of encounters with white people who want to know why we are “different” from other blacks -when, in fact, most of us are only “different” from the now common negative images of black life. So pervasive are these images that they aren’t just perceived as the norm, they’re accepted as the norm.11 I am reminded, for example, of the controversial Spike Lee film Do the Right Thing and the criticism by some movie reviewers that the film’s ghetto neighborhood isn’t populated by addicts and drug pushers -and thus is not a true depiction.12 In fact, millions of black Americans live in neighborhoods where the most common sights are children playing and couples walking their dogs. In my own inner-city neighborhood in Denver -an area that the l ocal press consistently describes as “gang territory” -I have yet to see a recognizable “gang” member or any “gang” activity (drug dealing or drive-by shootings), nor have I been the victim of “gang violence”.13 Yet to students of American culture -in the case of Spike Lee’s film, the movie reviewers - a black, inner-city neighborhood can only be one thing to be real: drug-infested and dysfunctioning. Is this my ego talking? In part, yes. For the millions of black people like myself -ordinary, hard-working, law-abiding, tax-paying Americans -the media’s blindness to the fact that we even exist, let alone to our contributions to American society, is a bitter cup to drink. And as self-reliant as most black Americans are -because we’ve had to be self-reliant -even the strongest among us still crave affirmation.14 I want that. I want it for my children. I want it for all the beautiful, healthy, funny, smart black Americans I have known and loved over the years.15 And I want it for the rest of America, too.16 I want America to know us -all of us -for who we really are. To see us in all of our complexity, our subtleness, our artfulness, our enterprise, our specialness, our loveliness, our American-ness. That is the real portrait of black America -that we’re strong people, surviving people, capable people. That may be the best-kept secret in America. If so, it’s time to let the truth be known.“强烈偏见”之实话实说帕特里夏·雷本1 我不是通常想象的那种黑人。
综合教程4课后翻译原文+答案
Unit 11. 多尔蒂先生和他的家人目前正在农场忙于秋收:Mr. Doherty and his family are currently engaged in getting the autumn harvest in on the farm.2. 我们不能低估敌人,他们装备了最先进的武器:We must not underestimate the enemy. They are equipped with the most sophisticated weapons.3. 菲尔已三个月没有找到工作了,正变得越来越绝望:Having been cut of a job/Not having had a job for 3months, Phil is getting increasingly desperate.4. 作为项目经理,山姆办事果断,工作效率高,且判断准确:Sam, as the project manager, is decisive, efficient, and accurate in his judgment.5. 既然已证实这家化工厂是污染源,村委会决定将其关闭,为此损失了一百个工作岗位:Since the chemical plant was identified as the source of solution, the village neighborhood committee decided to close it down at the cost of 100 jobs.Unit 21. 空气中有一种不寻常的寂静,只有远处响着大炮的声音:There was an unusual quietness in the air, except for the sound of artillery in the distance. 2. 在某些非洲国家城市的扩展已引起生活水平相当大的下降和社会问题的增多:The expansion of urban areas in some African countries has been causing a significant fall in living standards and an increase in social problem.3. 研究表明大气中的二氧化碳的含量与全球温度密切相关:.The research shows that atmospheric carbon dioxide levels are closely correlated with global temperatures.4. 最近公共汽车的车辆行驶频率已有改善,从15分钟缩短到12分钟一班:The frequency of the bus service has been improved from 15 to 12 minutes recently.5. 那位跳水运动员立在跳水板边沿,只等教练发出信号便会立刻跳下:The diver stood on the edge of the diving board, poised to jump at the signal from the coach.Unit 31.尽管在此次紧急迫降中,飞机跑道不够长,但经验老到的飞行员还是让飞机滑行了很短一段时间后就停了下来:Despite the inadequate length of the airstrip in this emergency landing, the veteran pilot managed to stop the plane after taxiing for only a short while.2.在记者反复追问下,该影星终于说漏了嘴,承认自己做过两次整容手术:Grilled by the reporters, the movie star eventually blurted (out) that she hadundergone two plastic surgeries.3.我们有技术,我们的合伙人有资金。
综合教程4课后翻译原文+答案
Unit 11. 多尔蒂先生和他的家人目前正在农场忙于秋收:Mr. Doherty and his family are currently engaged in getting the autumn harvest in on the farm.2. 我们不能低估敌人,他们装备了最先进的武器:We must not underestimate the enemy. They are equipped with the most sophisticated weapons.3. 菲尔已三个月没有找到工作了,正变得越来越绝望:Having been cut of a job/Not having had a job for 3months, Phil is getting increasingly desperate.4. 作为项目经理,山姆办事果断,工作效率高,且判断准确:Sam, as the project manager, is decisive, efficient, and accurate in his judgment.5. 既然已证实这家化工厂是污染源,村委会决定将其关闭,为此损失了一百个工作岗位:Since the chemical plant was identified as the source of solution, the village neighborhood committee decided to close it down at the cost of 100 jobs.Unit 21. 空气中有一种不寻常的寂静,只有远处响着大炮的声音:There was an unusual quietness in the air, except for the sound of artillery in the distance.2. 在某些非洲国家城市的扩展已引起生活水平相当大的下降和社会问题的增多:The expansion of urban areas in some African countries has been causing a significant fall in living standards and an increase in social problem.3. 研究表明大气中的二氧化碳的含量与全球温度密切相关:.The research shows that atmospheric carbon dioxide levels are closely correlated with global temperatures.4. 最近公共汽车的车辆行驶频率已有改善,从15分钟缩短到12分钟一班:The frequency of the bus service has been improved from 15 to 12 minutes recently. 5. 那位跳水运动员立在跳水板边沿,只等教练发出信号便会立刻跳下:The diver stood on the edge of the diving board, poised to jump at the signal from the coach.Unit 31.尽管在此次紧急迫降中,飞机跑道不够长,但经验老到的飞行员还是让飞机滑行了很短一段时间后就停了下来:Despite the inadequate length of the airstrip in this emergency landing, the veteran pilot managed to stop the plane after taxiing for only a short while.2.在记者反复追问下,该影星终于说漏了嘴,承认自己做过两次整容手术:Grilled by the reporters, the movie star eventually blurted <out> that she had undergone two plastic surgeries.3.我们有技术,我们的合伙人有资金.一起干,我们就掌握了未来: We have the technology and our partner has the capital. Working together, we’ll have the future in our hands.4.要是我事先知道你会带这么多朋友回家,我会好好准备的.你看,我现有的食品和饮料连小吃一顿都不大够:If I had known beforehand that you would bring so many friends home, I would have made better preparations. You see, I have barely enough food and drinks for a snack. 5. 当人们得知地震灾区将要建造结构更牢固的新校舍时,纷纷慷慨解囊:People gave generously upon learning that new school rooms with stronger structures were to be built in the earthquake-stricken area.常言道,好的开端是成功的一半.在求职时,求职者事先做好充分的准备是非常重要的.我认为,事先作不作准备常常会影响求职者的成功机会.Well begun is half done,as the saying goes.It is extremely important for a job applicant to do his homework while seeking employment.From my standpoint,whether or not one has done his homework clearly makes a difference in his chance of success.Unit 41.因为约翰不看好欧洲经济,所以把资产转移到了欧洲以外的其他地方Due to his pessimistic outlook on the European economy, John has moved his assets from Europe to elsewhere.2.我喜欢雇佣年轻人.他们愿意学习,而且忠于职守:I like hiring young people. They are earnest learners and committed to work.3. 玛丽和她那些以自己孩子为中心的女友们不同,更在意个人成长:Unlike her girl friends who center their lives on their children, Mary cares more about her personal growth.4.有一大批同事们和你意见不合,这是怎么回事:Why is it that a considerable number of colleagues are at odds with you?5.中国政府出台了一系列政策以加强同发展中国家的合作:The Chinese government has introduced a variety of policies to strengthen cooperation with developing countries.Unit 51. 我的直觉是亨利会设法参加这次探险,因为他有一点冒险家的气质:I have an instinct that Henry will seek to join the expedition, because he is something of an adventurer.2.即使置身于一个嘈杂的环境中,他也能坚持做手头的工作:He is capable of sticking to the task at hand, even if he is exposed to noises.3.这个商标是依据迄今有效的法律注册的:The trademark was registered in accordance with the laws hitherto in force.4.奇怪的是,许多人资源帮助组织会议,但是只有少数几人到场:Oddly enough, many people volunteered to help organize the meeting, but only a few turned up.5.老师那充满关爱的话语,以与坦诚的评价改变了迈克对于社会和他自己的看法:The teacher’s affectionate words, along with his candid comments, changed the way Mike perceived the society and himself.亨廷顿〔Huntington〕教授的论文使我深受启发.他认为,在一个多元化社会里,不同意见是不可避免的.关键在于怎样正确对待不同意见,使之发挥建设性、而非破坏性的作用.他还说,在一个多元化社会里,我们必须注重人际关系,强调合作,多从他人视角考虑问题.如果某些群体自视高人一等,不尊重其他种族或##,那么整个社会有可能陷入瘫痪.我相信,要是我们把上述想法付诸实践,那我们就有可能创造出一种新的文明.Professor Huntington's paper greatly inspired me.According to him,in a plural/pluralistic society,there will inevitably be different opinions.The key is to deal with them in such a way that they can play a constructive rather than destructive role. He argues that in a plural society we must attach importance to interpersonal relationships,cooperation,and looking at issues from the perspective of other people.If some groups regard themselves as superior and treat other ethnic groups or religions with disrespect,the whole societymay be paralysed.就我来说,如果要雇个职员我肯定不会单凭他的长相就作出决定.外表往往是靠不住的.比如说吧,要是你凭外表去判断诸如毛姆笔下的爱德华·海德·伯顿这样的人,你就错了.从外表和举止来看,伯顿好像是个浑然一体的人.他个子很小,满头白发,有着一双温和、蔚蓝的眼睛.他文雅坦率,和蔼可亲,许多人都说他是个世上最令人尊敬的人.然而,他对需要他帮助的朋友却很残忍.他侮辱和愚弄山穷水尽的伦尼,让他去做那样的蠢事.更让人吃惊的是,他对伦尼的死全然冷漠无情.毫无疑问,他是个铁石心肠的家伙.For my own part,I should certainly hesitate to hire a clerk on his face/appearance alone.Appearances are all too often deceptive.For instance,you might well commit an error in judgement if you went by appearance only with people like Edward Hyde Burton,the character created by Maugham.As far as appearance and manners were concerned,Burton seemed a man all of a piece.He was a tiny little fellow with white hair and mild blue eyes.Kind,gentle and candid,he was described by many as one of the most respectable people on earth.Nevertheless,he turned out to be cruel to a friend in need of his help.He insulted and fooled Turner who was down and out and made him commit himself to an insane venture.What was still more surprising was that he was completely indifferent to Turner's death.Without doubt,Burton was a man with a heart of stone。
综合教程4课后翻译原文+答案
综合教程4课后翻译原⽂+答案Unit 11. 多尔蒂先⽣和他的家⼈⽬前正在农场忙于秋收:Mr. Doherty and his family are curre ntly en gaged in getti ng the autu mn harvest i n on the farm.2. 我们不能低估敌⼈,他们装备了最先进的武器:We must not un derestimate the en emy. They are equipped with the most sophisticated weap ons.3. 菲尔已三个⽉没有找到⼯作了,正变得越来越绝望:Having bee n cut of a job/Not havi ng had a job for 3mon ths, Phil is gett ing in creas in gly desperate.4. 作为项⽬经理,⼭姆办事果断,⼯作效率⾼,且判断准确:Sam, as the project man ager , is decisive, efficie nt, and accurate in his judgme nt.5. 既然已证实这家化⼯⼚是污染源,村委会决定将其关闭,为此损失了⼀百个⼯作岗位:Since the chemical plant was identified as the source of solution, the village neighborhood committee decided to close it down at the cost of 100 jobs.Unit 21. 空⽓中有⼀种不寻常的寂静,只有远处响着⼤炮的声⾳:There was an unu sual quiet ness in the air , except for the sound of artillery in the dista nee.2. 在某些⾮洲国家城市的扩展已引起⽣活⽔平相当⼤的下降和社会问题的增多:The expa nsion of urba n areas in some Africa n coun tries has bee n caus ing a sig ni fica nt fall in livi ng sta ndards and an in crease in social problem.3. 研究表明⼤⽓中的⼆氧化碳的含量与全球温度密切相关:.The research shows that atmospheric carb on dioxide levels are closely correlated with global temperatures.4. 最近公共汽车的车辆⾏驶频率已有改善,从15分钟缩短到12分钟⼀班:The freque ncy of the bus service has bee n improved from 15 to 12 mi nu tes recen tly.5. 那位跳⽔运动员⽴在跳⽔板边沿,只等教练发出信号便会⽴刻跳下:The diver stood on the edge of the divi ng board, poised to jump at the sig nal from the coach.Un it 31. 尽管在此次紧急迫降中,飞机跑道不够长,但经验⽼到的飞⾏员还是让飞机滑⾏了很短⼀段时间后就停了下来:Despite the in adequate len gth of the airstrip in this emerge ncy landing, the vetera n pilot man aged to stop the pla ne after taxii ng for only a short while.2. 在记者反复追问下,该影星终于说漏了嘴,承认⾃⼰做过两次整容⼿术:Grilled by the reporters, the movie star eve ntually blurted (out) that she had un derg one two plastic surgeries.3. 我们有技术,我们的合伙⼈有资⾦。
(完整版)Unit12ACaseof“SevereBias”课文翻译综合教程四
Unit 12A Case of "Severe Bias"Patricia Raybon1 This is who I am not. I am not a crack addict. I am not a welfare mother. I am not illiterate. I am not a prostitute. I have never been in jail. My children are not in gangs. My husband doesn’t beat me. My home is not a tenement. None of these things defines who I am, nor do they describe the other black people I’ve known and worked with and loved and befriended over these forty years of my life.2 Nor does it describe most of black America, period.3 Yet in the eyes of the American news media, this is what black America is: poor, criminal, addicted, and dysfunctional. Indeed, media coverage of black America is so one-sided, so imbalanced that the most victimized and hurting segment of the black community -a small segment, at best -is presented not as the exception but as the norm. It is an insidious practice, all the uglier for its blatancy.4 In recent months, I have observed a steady offering of media reports on crack babies, gang warfare, violent youth, poverty, and homelessness -and in most cases, the people featured in the photos and stories were black. At the same time, articles that discuss other aspects of American life -from home buying to medicine to technology to nutrition -rarely, if ever, show blacks playing a positive role, or for that matter, any role at all.5 Day after day, week after week, this message -that black America is dysfunctional and unwhole -gets transmitted across the American landscape. Sadly, as a result, America never learns the truth about what is actually a wonderful, vibrant, creative community of people.6 Most black Americans are not poor. Most black teenagers are not crack addicts. Most black mothers are not on welfare. Indeed, in sheer numbers, more white Americans are poor and on welfare than are black. Yet one never would deduce that by watching television or reading American newspapers and magazines.7 Why do the American media insist on playing this myopic, inaccurate picture game? In this game, white America is always whole and lovely and healthy, while black America is usually sick and pathetic and deficient. Rarely, indeed, is black America ever depicted in the media as functional and self-sufficient. The free press, indeed, as the main interpreter of American culture and American experience, holds the mirror on American reality -so much so that what the media say is is, even if it’s not that way at all. Themedia are guilty of a severe bias and the problem screams out for correction. It is worse than simply lazy journalism, which is bad enough; it is inaccurate journalism.8 For black Americans like myself, this isn’t just an issue of vanity -of wanting to be seen in a good light. Nor is it a matter of closing one’s eyes to the very real problems of the urban underclass -which undeniably is disproportionately black. To be sure, problems besetting the black underclass deserve the utmost attention of the media, as well as the understanding and concern of the rest of American society.9 But if their problems consistently are presented as the only reality for blacks, any other experience known in the black community ceases to have validity, or to be real. In this scenario, millions of blacks are relegated to a sort of twilight zone, where who we are and what we are isn’t based on fact but an image and perception. That’s what it feels like to be a black American whose lifestyle is outside of the aberrant behavior that the media present as the norm.10 For many of us, life is a curious series of encounters with white people who want to know why we are “different” from other blacks -when, in fact, most of us are only “different” from the now common negative images of black life. So pervasive are these images that they aren’t just perceived as the norm, they’re accepted as the norm.11 I am reminded, for example, of the controversial Spike Lee film Do the Right Thing and the criticism by some movie reviewers that the film’s ghetto neighborhood isn’t populated by addicts and drug pushers -and thus is not a true depiction.12 In fact, millions of black Americans live in neighborhoods where the most common sights are children playing and couples walking their dogs. In my own inner-city neighborhood in Denver -an area that the local press consistently describes as “gang territory” -I have yet to see a recognizable “gang” member or any “gang” activity (drug dealing or drive-by shootings), nor have I been the victim of “gang violence”.13 Yet to students of American culture -in the case of Spike Lee’s film, the movie reviewers - a black, inner-city neighborhood can only be one thing to be real: drug-infested and dysfunctioning. Is this my ego talking? In part, yes. For the millions of black people like myself -ordinary, hard-working, law-abiding, tax-paying Americans -the media’s blindness to the fact that we even exist, let alone to our contributions to American society, is a bitter cup to drink. And as self-reliant as most black Americans are -because we’ve had to be self-reliant -even the strongest among us still crave affirmation.14 I want that. I want it for my children. I want it for all the beautiful, healthy, funny, smart black Americans I have known and loved over the years.15 And I want it for the rest of America, too.16 I want America to know us -all of us -for who we really are. To see us in all of our complexity, our subtleness, our artfulness, our enterprise, our specialness, our loveliness, our American-ness. That is the real portrait of black America -that we’re strong people, surviving people, capable people. That may be the best-kept secret in America. If so, it’s time to let the truth be known.“强烈偏见”之实话实说帕特里夏·雷本1 我不是通常想象的那种黑人。
全新版大学英语综合教程4a和b课文翻译
全新版大学英语综合教程4A和B课文翻译(总28页)--本页仅作为文档封面,使用时请直接删除即可----内页可以根据需求调整合适字体及大小--全新版大学英语综合教程4 A和B课文翻译Appendix ⅠChinese Translations of Texts A (Units 1-8)参考译文第一单元与自然力量抗争课文A人道是骄兵必败。
就拿拿破仑和希特勒两人来说吧,他们所向披靡,便以为自己战无不胜,不可阻挡。
但俄罗斯的冰雪卫士证明他们错了。
冰雪卫士奈拉B斯密斯1812年,法国皇帝拿破仑波拿巴率大军入侵俄罗斯。
他准备好俄罗斯人民会为保卫祖国而奋勇抵抗。
他准备好在俄罗斯广袤的国土上要经过长途跋涉才能进军首都莫斯科。
但他没有料到在莫斯科他会遭遇劲敌——俄罗斯阴冷凄苦的寒冬。
1941年,纳粹德国元首阿道夫希特勒进攻当时被称作苏联的俄罗斯。
希特勒的军事实力堪称无敌。
他的战争机器扫除了欧洲绝大部分地区的抵抗。
希特勒希望速战速决,但是,就像在他之前的拿破仑一样,他得到的是痛苦的教训。
仍是俄罗斯的冬天助了苏维埃士兵一臂之力。
拿破仑发起的战役1812年春,拿破仑在俄国边境屯兵60万。
这些士兵受过良好训练,作战力强,装备精良。
这支军队被称为大军。
拿破仑对马到成功充满自信,预言要在5个星期内攻下俄国。
不久,拿破仑的大军渡过涅曼河进入俄国。
拿破仑期盼着的速决速胜迟迟没有发生。
令他吃惊的是,俄国人并不奋起抵抗。
相反,他们一路东撤,沿途焚毁庄稼和民居。
大军紧追不舍,但它的长驱直入很快由于粮草运输缓慢而停顿下来。
到了8月,法俄两军在斯摩棱斯克交战,这一战役中,双方各有上万人阵亡。
可是,俄国人仍能在自己的国土上继续后撒。
拿破仑未能取得决定性的胜利。
此刻他面临着一个重要抉择。
是继续追击俄国,军队,还是把军队驻扎在斯摩棱斯克,在那儿度过将到的冬天?拿破仑孤注一掷,决定向远在448公里之外的莫斯科进发。
1812年9月7日,法俄两军在莫斯科以西112公里外的鲍罗季诺激战。
综合教程4课后翻译
1) 这个村子离边境很近,村民们一直担心会受到敌人的攻击。
The village is so close to the border that the villagers lived in constant fear of attacks fromthe enemy.2) 这个国家仅用了 20 年的时间就发展成了一个先进的工业强国。
In only twenty years the country was transformed into an advanced industrial power.3) 看到项目顺利完成,那些为此投入了大量时间和精力的人们都感到非常自豪。
Seeing the project successfully completed, those who had invested so muchtime and energy in it felt very proud.4) 鉴于目前的金融形势,美元进一步贬值是贬值是不可避免的。
Given the current financial situation, it is inevitable that the US dollar will befurther devalued.5) 现在的汽车太多了,这个地区的道路几乎无法应对当前的交通状况。
There are so many vehicles nowadays that the roads in this area are barely adequate to cope with the present traffic.6)天气没有出现好转的迹象,所以政府号召我们做好防洪的准备。
The weather showednosigns of gettingbetter sothe government calleduponus to get prepared for floods.7) 那场车祸以后爱丽丝十几年卧床不起,所以她的康复真是一个奇迹。
Unit 12 A Case of “Severe Bias”Teaching plan综合教程四
UNIT 12 A CASE OF “SEVERE BIAS”Cultural background1. The black middle classThe black middle class, within the United States, refers to African Americans who occupy a middle class status within the American class structure, those who own their own home or small business, and by the strictest definition, those with a degree from college.2. Challenges facing the black middle class●Downward mobility: 45% of children from a black middle class family end up “nearpoor”, while16% of children from a white middle class family end up “near poor”.●Financial crisis: 33% of the black middle class was in danger of falling out of themiddle class atthe start of the recession.3. Comments● The best guarantee of durable, amicable race relations in America is the continued growth of a strong, self-confident black middle class.—The Times ●There is little doubt that middle-class black America is 30-40 years ahead of us back inBlighty (a slang referring to Britain).—The Guardian Text IA CASE OF “SEVERE BIAS”Patricia RaybonGlobal ReadingI. IntroductionThis selection originally appeared in Newsweek, 1989. In the text the author contrasts media images of black Americans with the reality of their lives, emphasizing what black Americans are not.II. Structural analysis of the textThe text can be divided into the following three parts:Part I (Paragraphs 1 – 3): This part brings up the topic that the media have distorted the image of black Americans out of a severe bias, and most blacks, including the author herself, are not at all like what is depicted in the media.Part II (Paragraphs 4 –13):This part gives a detailed description of the fact that the media have presented a biased image of black America and transmitted it to the whole country as the norm.Part III (Paragraphs 14 – 16): The author calls for action to correct the distorted media image of blacks and make blacks and their contributions to American society recognized. Detailed ReadingQuestions1. What is the image of black people in the American news media? (Paragraph 3)Answer: They are depicted as poor, criminal, addicted and dysfunctional.2. Why do the American media insist on playing this myopic, inaccurate picture game? (Paragraph 7)Answer: Because they have a severe bias against black people and create a bad image of them.3. What are the problems of the urban black underclass? (Paragraph 8)Answer: Poverty, crime, addiction and dysfunctional relationships.4. What does the author mean by the phrase “twilight zone”? (Paragraphs 9)Answer: “Twilight zone” refers to a gray area, a border in-between two or more things that is unclearly defined, a border that is hard to define or even impossible to define. Here the author means that the image of blacks remains unclear, because of the discrepancy between the image depicted by the media and the image in reality.5. Why does the author think it is necessary to have a real portrait of black America? (Paragraphs 16)Answer: It is because black people deserve an objective and truthful evaluation of their contribution to American society and history. They can no longer bear a distorted image based on a severe racial bias.Text IITHAT WORD BLACKLangston HughesLead-in Questions1)What does the word “black” mean to you?a.unlucky, unfortunate, such as “the black Friday”b.evil, malicious, such as “black-hearted”c.good, fortunate, such as “the black figure”d.nothing special2)Can you recall some important figures fighting for the equality of African Americans?e.g. Martin Luther King, Barack Hussein Obama IIMain ideaNotes1. About the text -It is taken from Simple Speaks His Mind (1950), Hughes’s most popular and beloved fictional creation.2. About the author-James Mercer Langston Hughes (1902-1967) was an Americanpoet, novelist, playwright, short story writer, and columnist. He is best-known for his work during the Harlem Renaissance.3. But what you really ought to have is a soap-box out on the corner of 126th and Lenox where the rest of the orators hang out. (Paragraph 2) -But what you really need is to go to the corner of 126th street and Lenox to express your opinions on a temporary platform, along with the other speakers there.4. the N.A.A.C.P.(Paragraph 3) -the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, a civil rights organization for ethnic minorities in the U.S.5. Don’t let one cross your path!(Paragraph 3) -Don’t allow bad luck befall you! Black cats have been historically referred to as symbols of bad luck and portents of doom and destruction.6. a blacklist (Paragraph 4) -a list of people who are considered to be unacceptable and should not be trusted7. blackballed (Paragraph 4) -excluded by a negative vote8. If you kept a skeleton in your closet, you might get blackmailed. (Paragraph 4) -If you had a personal secret, you might be forced to give others money or do something for others.9. … no wonder there ain’t no equal rights for the black man (Paragraph 4) -…no wonder there are no equal rights for the American blacks.10. Black Hand Society (Paragraph 5) -a crime organization which obtains money byblackmailing others. The term “Black Hand” came into use because the extortion letters usually contained a drawing of a black hand and other evil symbols such as a dagger and skull and crossbones.11. Jim Crow (Paragraph 8) -the laws and policies formerly used in the U.S. to treatblack people unfairly and to keep them apart from white people. Here it is used as a verb.12. basketball fix (Paragraph 8) -secretly bribing players to lose a match13. F. D. (Paragraph 10) -Defender of the Faith, a title of English monarchs since HenryVIII, who received it from Pope Leo X as a reward for writing against Luther Additional notes1.the corner of 126th and Lenox(Paragraph 2) -Lenox Avenue, an extension ofSixth Avenue, has always played an important role in the history of Harlem. On the corner of 125th Street and Lenox Avenue, black leaders like Marcus Garvey and Malcolm X would share their message of change with passing Harlemites. Back during Harlem’s heyday, an impromptu Sunday parade would take place from 125th Street to 135th Street.2.black magic(Paragraph 5) -a type of magic that is believed to use invisible evilspirits to do harmful things3.… she did not burn no black candles (Paragraph 6) -(Black English) she did notburn black candles. In vernacular Black English, double negation is used to express negation.4. a black mark (Paragraph 7) -(informal) a mark made when people notice andremember something which one has done wrong or failed to do5.Wait till my day comes. (Paragraph 9) -Wait till I have my say over how thingsshould be.6.He did not make us no badder than the rest of the folks. (Paragraph 10) -Wewere created equal to the rest of the folks.Questions for discussion1.What does Hughes mean by saying “But what you really ought to have is a soap-box outon the corner of 126th and Lenox where the rest of the orators hang out”?2.How are the examples of black related to the theme of the article?3.Why did Simple want to replace all the expressions including black with white?4.Why does the writer end the article with a question “What is wrong with black”?5.Do you think blacks still suffer from prejudice in the U.S. today?Key to questions for discussion1. He wants to make it clear to the readers that the issues of American blacks should bemade well known to everyone in the country, including the whites.2. These examples, though superficially unrelated to the theme that the American black isprejudiced against, are actually deep-rooted conceptions of American culture. They are also used to show that the word black itself is innocent, and it is the people who associate this word with negative implications that are guilty.3. Simple’s logic is just as simple as his name. He thinks that with the change of words, theblack can be equal with the white.4. By asking this question at the end of the article, the author wants to draw the readers’attention to the theme of the article once more: black people still suffer from racial discrimination even though they have gained equal rights on paper.5. Open to discussion.Memorable quotesPrejudices are what fools use for reason.-Voltaire François-Marie Arouet (1694-1778), better known by the pen name Voltaire, was a French Enlightenment writer, historian and philosopher famous for his wit and for his advocacy of civil liberties, including freedom of religion and free trade.All colours will agree in the dark.-Francis Bacon Francis Bacon, (1561-1626) was an English philosopher, statesman, scientist, lawyer, jurist and author. He was extremely influential through his works, especially as philosophical advocate and practitioner of the scientific method during the scientific revolution.Questions for discussion:1)Share the possible prejudices you may hold with your classmates and discuss them.2)No color bears a definitely positive or negative meaning. Share with your classmates yourknowledge about different colors, particularly the culture indication behind them. Guidance1)Prejudices are very difficult to be discovered. First talk about someone or something youhate and then let your classmates judge whether you are holding a prejudice or not.e.g. Traffic congestion in Beijing is the worst in China. People spend much more time toand from work on the way in this city. What do you think?2)Colors bear a lot of meanings both in China and western countries. You can use this as anentry point for the question.e.g. I believe, generally speaking, the color “red” has more positive meanings in Chinesethan it does in English. In China, we have phrases like “red lantern”, “red egg” while in western countries they have “red hand”, “red ink”, etc.。
Unit 12 A Case of “Severe Bias”Words and Expressions综合教程四
UNIT 12 A CASE OF “SEVERE BIAS”Words and Expressionsilliterate: a.(1) not able to read or writee.g.You must be illiterate if you’ve never heard of Marx.He is musically illiterate.addicted:a.(1) unable to stop taking or using sth. as a habite.g. become addicted to drugs, alcohol, tobacco, etc.(2) strongly interested in sth. as a hobby or pastimee.g. He is addicted to TV soap operas.dysfunctional: a.abnormally functioninge.g.Children from a dysfunctional family is more likely to be shy.Antonym:functionale.g.After repairs, the railroad is functional again.I’m hardly functional if I don’t get eight hours’ sleep!insidious:a.spreading or acting gradually and unnoticed but with harmful effectse.g.He had insidiously wormed his way into her affections.The leaflets were a more insidious form of propaganda.Synonym: sinister, menacinge.g. a sinister motive/actionThere was something cold and sinister about him.a menacing face/toneAt night, the dark streets become menacing.warfare: n.(1) the activity of fighting a war, especially using particular weapons or methodse.g. There were many countries engaged in warfare.(2) the activity of competing in an aggressive way with another group, company, etc.e.g. The debate soon degenerated into open warfare.Comparison:warfare & warwarfare: the activity of fighting in a war, used esp. when talking about particular methods of fightinge.g.diplomatic/economic warfarewar: fighting between two or more countries or opposing groups within a country, involving large numbers of soldiers and weaponse.g. If a war breaks out, many other countries will be affected.on welfare:the state of receiving money paid by the government to support one’s lifee.g.More and more people are living on welfare as a result of the financial crisis. deduce: v.arrive at (facts, a theory, etc.) by reasoning; infer sth.e.g.Detectives deduced from the clues who had committed the crime.We deduce from his behavior that he is trying to gain attention.Derivation:deductione.g.It’s an obvious deduction that she is guilty.The dividend will be paid without the deduction of tax.myopic: a.(1) [medical] unable to see things clearly that are far awaye.g.He thinks that Dolly is myopic and should see a good doctor.(2) unwilling or unable to think about the futuree.g.He is politically myopic.The government still has a myopic attitude to public spending.Synonym:short-sightede.g.He was too short-sighted to focus on the object.Until this short-sighted policy is reversed we shall never make any progress. pathetic: a.(1) causing one to feel pity or sadnesse.g.The pathetic sight of starving children made her burst into cry.(2) extremely inadequate; contemptiblee.g.His answers were pathetically inadequate.interpreter: n.(1) a person whose job is to translate what sb. is saying into another languagee.g. Speaking through an interpreter, the President said that the talks were going well.(2) a person who performs a piece of music or a role in a play in a way that clearly shows its meaninge.g.She was considered one of the finest interpreters of Debussy’s music.Comparison: interpreter & translatorinterpreter: a person who interprets, esp. one who translates speech orallye.g.He spoke very little English, so I talked to him through an interpreter.translator: a person who translates writing or speech into a different language.e.g. His love of language inclined him towards a career as a translator.(be) guilty of:having done sth. illegal; (being) responsible for sth. bad that has happened e.g.The jury found the defendant not guilty of the offence.We’ve all been guilty of selfishness at some time in our lives.in a good light:(1) with a proper lighting conditione.g.Read in a good light lest it should hurt your eyes.(2) from a positive perspectivee.g.Optimists tend to see things in a good light.underclass: n.the lowest social class, consisting of people who are very poor and who are not likely to be able to improve their situatione.g.As an urban underclass, he has very limited access to health care.The long-term unemployed are becoming a new underclass.Synonym:lower classe.g. I am from one of the lower classes and I’m proud of it.beset: v.surround (sb./sth.) on all sides; trouble constantly; threatene.g.The voyage was beset with dangers.The team was beset by injury all season.validity:n.(1) the state of being legally or officially acceptablee.g.The period of validity of the agreement has expired.(2) the state of being logical and truee.g.We had doubts about the validity of their argument.Synonym:soundness, legitimacye.g.He now enjoys soundness of mind and body.I doubt the soundness of the theory.the legitimacy of the governmentIt is difficult to judge the legitimacy of the child.scenario:n.(1) a situation that could possibly happene.g.Imagine a scenario where only 20% of people have a job.(2) written outline of a film, play, etc. with details of the scenes and plote.g.It looked ominously like we were about to repeat the earlier scenario.be relegated to:be given a lower or less important position, rank, etc. than beforee.g.I have been relegated to the role of a mere assistant.Synonym:be downgraded to, be reduced toe.g.She’s been downgraded from principal to deputy.The embassy will be downgraded to a trade office.They were reduced to begging or starving.Every building in this area was reduced to rubble.twilight zone:a gray area, a border in-between two or more things that is unclearly defined, a border that is hard to define or even impossible to definee.g.Wrestling is in a twilight zone between sport and entertainment.aberrant:a.not following the normal or correct waye.g.aberrant behavior/ideasan rocket on an aberrant courseAntonym:anomalous, deviante.g.He is in an anomalous position as the only part-time worker in the firm.These beliefs are labeled deviant by the majority.pervasive:a.existing in all parts of a place or thinge.g. A sense of social change is pervasive in her novels.infest:v.live in (a place) persistently and in large numberse.g.Our garden is infested with weeds.Collocation: infest sth. (with/by sth.)e.g.The Strait of Malacca was infested with pirates.The streets are infested with drug dealers.let alone:not to mentione.g.There isn’t enough room for us, let alone six dogs and a cat.He hasn’t enough money for food, let alone amusements.affirmation: n. a positive assertione.g.The poem is a joyous affirmation of the power of love.portrait: n.(1) painted picture, drawing or photograph of (esp. the face of) a person or an animale.g.She had her portrait painted.(2) description in wordse.g.The book contains a fascinating portrait of life at the court of Henry VIII. Comparison:portrait & paintingportrait: a painting, drawing, or photograph of a persone.g.The portrait of her mother was her most prized possession.painting: a picture that has been painted。
新标准大学英语综合教程4课后习题翻译参考答案汉译英英译汉
If you ask me, real life is not all it's cracked up to be. Twelve years at school and three years at university, teachers banging on about opportunities in the big wide world beyond our sheltered life as students, and what do I find?Try as I might to stay cheerful, all I ever get is hassle, sometimes with people (especially boys, god, when will they grow up?), but mostly with money. It's just so expensive out here! Everyone wants a slice off you. The Inland Revenue wants to deduct income tax, the bank manager wants repayments on my student loan, the landlord wants the rent, gas, water, electricity and my mobile bills keep coming in, and all that's before I've had anything to eat. And then some bright spark calls me out of the blue, asking if I'm interested in buying a pension. At this rate, I won't even last till the end of the year, let alone till I'm 60。
综合教程4(第二版)课后翻译答案
Unit 1一、英译汉1、B ut we must lear n tobe eq ually good at w hat i s sho rt an d sha rp an d wha t islongand t ough.但我们必须同样善于应付短暂而干脆与漫长而艰难的局面。
2、It is gene rally said that theBriti sh ar e bet ter a t the last. 人民普遍认为英国人最终会胜出。
3、Brita in,ot her n ation s tho ught,haddrawn a sp ongeacros s the slat e. 其他国家认为英国被彻底的征服了。
4、Westood allalone a ye ar ag o,and to m any c ountr ies i t see med t hat o ur ac count wasclose d.一年前我们孤军作战,许多国家都以为我们被彻底打败了。
二、汉译英1、我安排他们在小酒吧见面,但那个小伙子一直都没有来。
I hav e arr anged forthemto me et ea ch ot her a t the pub,but t he yo ung m an ne ver t urned up.2、你无法尽凭表象判断形势是否会变得对我们不利。
You c an'ttellmerel y fro m app earan ces w hethe r thi ngs w ill t urn o ut .3、那个士兵每次打仗都冲锋在前,从而赢得了国家的最高荣誉。
综合教程4课后翻译
It was not until after he had graduated from university and started to work that Zhang Lei became aware of the pleasure of reading. Reflecting on his undergraduate studies, he lamented that he, unlike his classmates who had immersed themselves in various interesting books they were able to lay hands on from the library or bookshop, had only read textbooks, none of which was really worthwhile, or could be read in one sitting. He was deprived of the privilege of gaining access to the writers’ fantastic worlds through the windows their books have opened, so to speak.
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Unit 12A Case of "Severe Bias"Patricia Raybon1 This is who I am not. I am not a crack addict. I am not a welfare mother. I am not illiterate. I am not a prostitute. I have never been in jail. My children are not in gangs. My husband doesn’t beat me. My home is not a tenement. None of these things defines who I am, nor do they describe the other black people I’ve known and worked with and loved and befriended over these forty years of my life.2 Nor does it describe most of black America, period.3 Yet in the eyes of the American news media, this is what black America is: poor, criminal, addicted, and dysfunctional. Indeed, media coverage of black America is so one-sided, so imbalanced that the most victimized and hurting segment of the black community - a small segment, at best - is presented not as the exception but as the norm. It is an insidious practice, all the uglier for its blatancy.4 In recent months, I have observed a steady offering of media reports on crack babies, gang warfare, violent youth, poverty, and homelessness - and in most cases, the people featured in the photos and stories were black. At the same time, articles that discuss other aspects of American life - from home buying to medicine to technology to nutrition - rarely, if ever, show blacks playing a positive role, or for that matter, any role at all.5 Day after day, week after week, this message -that black America is dysfunctional and unwhole - gets transmitted across the American landscape. Sadly, as a result, America never learns the truth about what is actually a wonderful, vibrant, creative community of people.6 Most black Americans are not poor. Most black teenagers are not crack addicts. Most black mothers are not on welfare. Indeed, in sheer numbers, more white Americans are poor and on welfare than are black. Yet one never would deduce that by watching television or reading American newspapers and magazines.7 Why do the American media insist on playing this myopic, inaccurate picture game In this game, white America is always whole and lovely and healthy, while black America is usually sick and pathetic and deficient. Rarely, indeed, is black America ever depicted in the media as functional and self-sufficient. The free press, indeed, as the main interpreter of American culture and American experience, holds the mirror on American reality - so much so that what the media say is is, even if it’s notthat way at all. The media are guilty of a severe bias and the problem screams out for correction. It is worse than simply lazy journalism, which is bad enough; it is inaccurate journalism.8 For black Americans like myself, this isn’t just an issue of vanity - of wanting to be seen in a good light. Nor is it a matter of closing one’s eyes to the very real problems of the urban underclass -which undeniably is disproportionately black. To be sure, problems besetting the black underclass deserve the utmost attention of the media, as well as the understanding and concern of the rest of American society.9 But if their problems consistently are presented as the only reality for blacks, any other experience known in the black community ceases to have validity, or to be real. In this scenario, millions of blacks are relegated to a sort of twilight zone, where who we are and what we are isn’t based on fact but an image and perception. That’s what it feels like to be a black American whose lifestyle is outside of the aberrant behavior that the media present as the norm.10 For many of us, life is a curious series of encounters with white people who want to know why we are “different” from other blacks - when, in fact, most of us are only “different” from the now common negative images of black life. So pervasive are these images that they aren’t just perceived as the norm, they’re accepted as the norm.11 I am reminded, for example, of the controversial Spike Lee film Do the Right Thing and the criticism by some movie reviewers that the film’s ghetto neighborhood isn’t populated by addicts and drug p ushers - and thus is not a true depiction.12 In fact, millions of black Americans live in neighborhoods where the most common sights are children playing and couples walking their dogs. In my own inner-city neighborhood in Denver - an area that the local press consistently describes as “gang territory” -I have yet to see a recognizable “gang” member or any “gang” activity (drug dealing or drive-by shootings), nor have I been the victim of “gang violence”.13 Yet to students of American culture - i n the case of Spike Lee’s film, the movie reviewers - a black, inner-city neighborhood can only be one thing to be real: drug-infested and dysfunctioning. Is this my ego talking In part, yes. For the millions of black people like myself -ordinary, hard-working, law-abiding, tax-paying Americans -the media’s blindness to the fact that we even exist, let alone to our contributions to American society, is a bitter cup to drink. And asself-reliant as most black Americans are -because we’ve had to be self-reliant - even the strongest among us still crave affirmation.14 I want that. I want it for my children. I want it for all the beautiful, healthy, funny, smart black Americans I have known and loved over the years.15 And I want it for the rest of America, too.16 I want America to know us - all of us - for who we really are. To see us in all of our complexity, our subtleness, our artfulness, our enterprise, our specialness, our loveliness, our American-ness. That is the real portrait of black America -that we’re strong people, surviving people, capable people. That may be the best-kept secret in America. If so, it’s time to let the truth be known.“强烈偏见”之实话实说帕特里夏·雷本1 我不是通常想象的那种黑人。