(完整版)高级英语第二册第四课课后题答案

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高级英语第二册1、2、3、4、7课paraphrase答案(精选.)

高级英语第二册1、2、3、4、7课paraphrase答案(精选.)

Lesson 11. We're elevated 23 feet. (para3)We're 23 feet above sea level.2. The place has been here since 1915, and no hurricane has ever bothered it. (para 3) The house has been here since 1915, and no hurricane has ever caused any damage to it.3. We can batten down and ride it out. (para 4)We can make the necessary preparations and survive the hurricane without much damage.4. The generator was doused, and the lights went out. (para 9)Water got into the generator and put it out. It stopped producing electricity, so the lights also went out.5. Everybody out the back door to the cars! (para 10)Everybody go out through the back door and run to the cars.6. The electrical systems had been killed by water. (para 11)The electrical systems in the car had been put out by water.7. John watched the water lap at the steps, and felt a crushing guilt. (para17)As John watched the water inch its way up the steps, he felt a strong sense of guilt because he blamed himself for endangering the whole family by deciding not to flee inland.8. Get us through this mess, will you? (para17)Oh God, please help us to get through this storm safely.9. She carried on alone for a few bars; then her voice trailed away. (para 21) Grandmother Koshak sang a few words alone and then her voice gradually grew dimmer and stopped.10. Janis had just one delayed reaction. (para 34)Janis displayed rather late the exhaustion brought about by the nervous tension caused by the hurricane.Lesson 21. The burying-ground is merely a huge waste of hummocky earth, like a derelictbuilding-lot. (para2)The burying-ground is nothing more than a huge piece of wasteland full of mounds of earth looking like a deserted and abandoned piece of land on whicha building was going to be put up.2. All colonial empires are in reality founded upon that fact. (para3)All the imperialists build up their empires by treating the people in the colonies like animals (by not treating the people in the colonies as human beings).3. They rise out of the earth, they sweat and starve for a few years, and then they sink back into the nameless mounds of the graveyard. (para3)They are born. Then for a few years they work, toil and starve. Finally they die and are buried in graves without a name.4. A carpenter sits crosslegged at a prehistoric lathe, turning chair-legs at lighting speed. (para9)Sitting with his legs crossed and using a very old-fashioned lathe, a carpenter quickly gives a round shape to the chair-legs he is making.5. Instantly, from the dark holes all round, there was a frenzied rush of Jews. (para10) Immediately from their dark hole-like cells everywhere a great number of Jews rushed out wildly excited.6. …every one of them looks on a cigarette as a more or less impossible luxury. (para10)Every one of these poor Jews looked on the cigarette as a piece of luxury which they could not possibly afford.7. Still, a white skin is always fairly conspicuous. (para16)However, a white -skinned European is always quite noticeable.8. In a tropical landscape one’s eye takes in everything except the human beings. (para16)If you take a look at the natural scenery in a tropical region, you see everything but the human beings.9. No one would think of running cheap trips to the Distressed Areas. (para17)No one would think of organizing cheap trips for the tourists to visit the poorslum areas (for these trips would not be interesting).10. …for nine-tenths of the people the reality of life is an endless, back-breaking struggle to wring a little food out of an eroded soil. (para17)life is very hard for ninety percent of the people.With hard backbreaking toil they can produce a little food on the poor soil.11.She accepted her status as an old woman, that is to say as a beast of burden.(para19)She took it for granted that as an old woman she was the lowest in the community,that she was only fit for doing heavy work like an animal.12. People with brown skins are next door to invisible. (para21)People with brown skins are almost invisible.13.Their splendid bodies were hidden in reach-me-down khaki uniforms,… (para23) The Senegalese soldiers were wearing ready-made khaki uniforms which hid their beautiful well-built bodies.14. How long before they turn their guns in the other direction? (para25)How much longer before they turn their guns around and attack us? 15.Every white man there had this thought stowed somewhere or other in his mind.(para26)Every white man,the onlookers,the officers on their horses and the white N.C.Os. marching with the black soldiers,had this thought hidden somewhere or other in his mind.Lesson 31.And it is an activity only of human. (para1)And conversation is an activity which is found only among human beings.(Animals and birds are not capable of conversation.) 2.Conversation is not for making a point. (para2)Conversation is not for persuading others to accept our idea or point of view.3.In fact, the best conversationalists are those who are prepared to lose. (para2)In fact a person who really enjoys and is skilled at conversation will not argue to win or force others to accept his point of view.4.Bar friends are not deeply involved in each other’s lives. (para3)People who meet each other for a drink in the bar of a pub are not intimate friends for they are not deeply absorbed or engrossed in each other's lives.5. …it could still go ignorantly on… (para6)The conversation could go on without anybody knowing who was right or wrong.6.There are cattle in the fields, but we sit down to beef (boeuf). (para9)These animals are called cattle when they are alive and feeding in the fields;but when we sit down at the table to eat.we call their meat beef.7. The new ruling class had built a cultural barrier against him by building their French against his own language. (para11)The new ruling class by using French instead of English made it difficult for the English to accept or absorb the culture of the rulers.8.English had come royally into its own. (para13)The English language received proper recognition and was used by the King once more.9. The phrase has always been used a little pejoratively and even facetiously by the lower classes. (para15)The phrase,the King's English,has always been used disrespectfully and jokingly by the lower classes.The working people very often make fun of the proper and formal language of the educated people.10. The rebellion against a cultural dominance is still there. (para15)There still exists in the working people,as in the early Saxon peasants,a spirit of opposition to the cultural authority of the ruling class.11. There is always a great danger that “words will harden into things for us.” (para18)There is always a great danger that we might forget that words are only symbols and take them for things they are supposed to represent.For example,t he word “dog” is a symbol representing a kind of animal.We mustn't regard the word “dog” as being the animal itself.12. Even with the most educated and the most literate, the King’s English slips andslides in conversation. (para18)Even the most educated and literate people do not use standard,formal English all the time in their conversation.Lesson 41. And yet the same revolutionary belief for which our forebears fought is still at issue around the globe... (para2)Our ancestors fought a revolutionary war to maintain that all men were created equal and God had given them certain unalienable rights which no state or ruler could take away from them. But today this issue has not yet been decided in many countries around the world.2. This much we pledge—and more. (para5)This much we promise to do and we promise to do more.3. United, there is little we cannot do in a host of cooperative ventures. (para6) United and working together we can accomplish a lot of things in a great number of joint undertakings.4. But this peaceful revolution of hope cannot become the prey of hostile powers. (para9)We will not allow any enemy country to subvert this peaceful revolution which brings hope of progress to all our countries.5. …our last best hope in an age wh ere the instruments of war have far outpaced the instruments of peace… (para10)The United Nations is our last and best hope of survival in an age where the instruments of war have far surpassed the instruments of peace.6. …to enlarge the area in which its writ may run… (para10)We pledge to help the United Nations enlarge the area in which its authority and mandate would continue to be in effect or in force.7. …before the dark powers of destruction unleashed by science engulf all humanity in planned or accidental self-destruction… (para11)Before the terrible forces of destruction, which science can now release, overwhelm mankind; before this self-destruction, which may be planned orbrought about by an accident, takes place8. …yet both racing to alte r that uncertain balance of terror that stays the hand of mankind’s final war… (para13)Yet both groups of nations are trying to change as quickly as possible this uncertain balance of terrible military power which restrains each group from launching mankind's final war.9. So let us begin anew, remembering on both sides that civility is not a sign of weakness,… (para14)So let us start once again (to discuss and negotiate) and let us remember that being polite is not a sign of weakness. 10. Let both sides try to call forth the wonderful things that science can do for mankind instead of the frightful things it can do.11. …each generation of Americans has been summoned to give testimony to its national loyalty. (para21)Americans of every generation have been called upon to prove their loyalty to their country (by fighting and dying for their country's cause).12. With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of ourdeeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love,… (para27)Let history finally judge whether we have done our task welt or not, but our sure reward will be a good con-science for we will have worked sincerely and to the best of our ability.Lesson 71. …boy and man, I had been through it often before. (para1)As a boy and later when I was a grown-up man, I had often travelled through the region.2. But somehow I had never quite sensed its appalling desolation. (para1)But somehow in the past I never really perceived how shocking and wretched this whole region was.3. … it reduced the whole aspiration of man to a macabre and depressing joke. (para1) This dreadful scene makes all human endeavors to advance and improve theirlot appear as a ghastly, saddening joke.4. The country itself is not uncomely, despite the grime of the endless mills. (para3) The country itself is pleasant to look at, despite the sooty dirt spread by the innumerable mills in this region.5. They have taken as their model a brick set on end. (para3)The model they followed in building their houses was a brick standing upright. / All the houses they built looked like bricks standing upright.6. This they have converted into a thing of dingy clapboards, with a narrow, low-pitched roof. (para3)These brick-like houses were made of shabby, thin wooden boards and their roofs were narrow and had little slope.7. When it has taken on the patina of the mills it is the color of an egg long past all hope or caring. (para4)When the brick is covered with the black soot of the mills it takes on the color of a rotten egg.8. Red brick, even in a steel town, ages with some dignity. (para4)Red brick, even in a steel town, looks quite respectable with the passing of time. / Even in a steel town, old red bricks still appear pleasing to the eye.9. I award this championship only after laborious research and incessant prayer. (para5)I have given Westmoreland the highest award for ugliness after having done a lot of hard work and research and after continuous praying.10. They show grotesqueries of ugliness that, in retrospect, become almost diabolical. ( para5)They show such fantastic and bizarre ugliness that, in looking back, they become almost fiendish and wicked. When one looks back at these houses whose ugliness is so fantastic and bizarre, one feels they must be the work of the devil himself.11. It is incredible that mere ignorance should have achieved such masterpieces of horror. (para6)It is hard to believe that people built such horrible houses just because theydid not know what beautiful houses were like.12. On certain levels of the American race, indeed, there seems to be a positive libido for the ugly,… (para7)People in certain strata of American society seem definitely to hunger after ugly things; while in other less Christian strata, people seem to long for things beautiful.13. They meet, in some unfathomable way, its obscure and unintelligible demands. (para7)These ugly designs, in some way that people cannot understand, satisfy the hidden and unintelligible demands of this type of mind.14. …they made it perfect in their own sight by putting a completely impossible penthouse, painted a staring yellow, on top of it. (para8)They put a penthouse on top of it, painted in a bright, conspicuous yellow color and thought it looked perfect but they only managed to make it absolutely intolerable.15. Out of the melting pot emerges a race which hates beauty as it hates truth. (para9) From the intermingling of different nationalities and races in the United States emerges the American race which hates beauty as strongly as it hates truth.最新文件仅供参考已改成word文本。

人教版高中英语必修第二册课后习题 UNIT 4 Section Ⅱ

人教版高中英语必修第二册课后习题 UNIT 4 Section Ⅱ

SectionⅡReadingandThinking课后·训练提升一、单句语法填空1.Every failure one meets with (add) to one’s experience in the future.2.If you want to know his telephone number,you may referthe telephone directory.3.He took away the bag not (belong) to him by mistake.4.The father as well as his three children (go) skating on the frozen river every Sunday afternoon in winter.5.Only in this way can we live in more comfortable and beautiful (surround).6.The poor old lady had her money (steal) on the bus when coming home.7.I broke away him and rushed into the corner to cry.8.I still find this story he wrote both (fascinate) and unbelievable.二、选词填空1.As one of the most deadly natural disasters in theworld,earthquakes often many people being injured or killed.2.Some animals are put in danger when peopletheir habitats.3.My interest in stamp collectingmy schooldays.4.If you ,you will make few mistakes.5. going to the movies and football matches with my friends,I spend a lot of time with my pets.6.Money is yours but resources(资源) the whole society.7.Facing up to your problems rather thanthem is the best approach to working things out.8.After his wife gave birth,he and his family the others in White Bird Canyon the south.三、阅读理解People from all over the world have different wedding traditions and marriage customs.The one thing that all wedding ceremonies commonly seem to have is the commitment(承诺) of love for all time during a public ceremony.Everyone at a wedding hopes for great happiness between the wedding couple.Wedding traditions are usually a way of showingsigns of the hope for great happiness.Some of these traditions are very interesting.In Sweden,the traditional bride will wear three rings by the end of the wedding ceremony.The first is the engagement(订婚) ring that she entered the ceremony with.The second,the wedding ring,is added to the first.A final ring,however,is added as well.This ring is known as the “motherhood” ring.This is said to show that marriage is about more than just love.It is about building a family.Wedding traditions in the Philippines include the Pandango,a dance which can last for hours.During the Pandango,guests pin(用大头针别住) money to the bride’s dress to pay for their honeymoon.A traditional Irish bride may wear a blue wedding dress—believing blue to be a lucky color.English Lavender(薰衣草) is often mixed with her wedding flowers.It is traditional for the bride to braid her hair(梳发辫)—as it is considered a good way to bring luck to the new couple.There are many wedding traditions around the world which may differ from what they are used to,but if you are about to plan a wedding,you may find it interesting to include some of these traditions in your own wedding.1.What do all wedding ceremonies seem to have in common?A.The commitment of love for all time.B.Happiness between the wedding couple.C.An interesting life.D.Building a happy family.“Theonethingthatallweddingceremoniescommonlyseemtohaveisthecom mitmentofloveforalltimeduringapublicceremony.”可知,答案为A项。

高中英语(新人教版)必修第二册课后习题:UNIT 4 Section A(课后习题)【含答案及解析】

高中英语(新人教版)必修第二册课后习题:UNIT 4 Section A(课后习题)【含答案及解析】

UNIT4HISTORY AND TRADITIONSSection A Listening and Speaking课后篇巩固提升必备知识基础练Ⅰ.短语填空1.China,as one of the world’s oldest cradles of civilization, its etiquette.2.I have been invited to with my classmates at the university.3.Their school ours,but ours is much more beautiful.4.Sometimes I would my thoughts and feelings and share them with my father.5.I didn’t concentrate my attention on my study,which my failure in the exam.Ⅱ.完成句子1.就我而言,保护历史建筑和文化传统非常重要。

In my opinion,it is very important to and cultural traditions.2.我想和你们一起分享我在英国学习的经历。

I would like to my experiences when I was studying in the UK.3.通过上网,你可以了解更多不同文化的情况。

By surfing the Internet,you can different cultures.4.孔子是中国历史上最伟大的哲学家之一。

Confucius is one of in the history of China.5.他的名字被记录在了家谱上。

His name is recorded .Ⅲ.选词填空One day Confucius,with his disciples (门徒),went to the Jin State to give lectures.When passing by a city,they 1. by a seven-year-old boy.“Better make a detour (绕道走) by passing round the city,” said the boy.“Young boy,let us 2.,” Confucius got off his carriage and said.“I’m going to the Jin State to give lectures.Let us pass by,please!” begged Confucius.“Are you going to give lectures?A teacher should be rich in 3..What do you know?”“I know a little about astronomy and geography,”answered Confucius,4. one hand stroking his beard (捋胡子).“Really?” the boy laughed.“Do you know the number of hair that makes up your beard?”“I can’t see my own beard.How can I 5. it?”“Then the stars in the sky can be seen.Do you know 6. many stars there are in the sky?”added the boy.“There are innumerable (无数的) stars in the sky that I can’t count them,” said Confucius in embarrassment.“But there is only one sun in the sky.Do you know how 7. it is from us?”Confucius could say nothing.“My wisdom is so 8..I really don’t know the things you asked.I’m 9. to take you as my teacher.” With these words,Confucius bowed to the boy.From 10. on,Confucius often told his disciples,“Among any three people,there must be one who can be my teacher.”2.pass3.knowledge4.with5.count6.how7.far8.little9.willing10.then关键能力提升练Ⅳ.阅读理解A(2020·四川遂宁月考)New Zealand is one of the best countries in the world to experience how life might have been in prehistoric times.New Zealand is a nature lover’s paradise(乐园) with its conservation reserves.Kaharoa ConservationThe Kaharoa Conservation is home to a number of endangered birds and the North Island Kokako is just one of them.The Kokako is possibly New Zealand’s most beautiful songbird with such a variety of whistles,clicks,buzzes and whirrs in its sound range,one bird sounds like a chorus!Mokaihaha Ecological AreaRich in Maori history,the Mokaihaha Ecological Area has high conservation and scientificvalue.Birdlife features this natural wonderland with the symphony including such stars as theTui,Kereru,Fantail,Bellbird and the endangered Kokako.Whakarewarewa Forest Conservation ParkIf mountain biking is your thing,then this is the place for you!The Whakarewarewa Forest provides a network of tracks through exceptionally impressive scenery that has made Rotorua famous for its mountain biking.Maungatautari Ecological IslandA project of great ecological importance is being undertaken by a community aimed at the restoration of Maungatautari volcano forest.The volcano forest has sustained the lives of its wildlife for hundreds of years but since the introduction of European pests such as deer,rabbits,goats,pigs and rats,the native varieties of mammals,birds and plants have been facing threats.The aim of the courageous project is to get rid of all introduced pests from the 3363 hectares of forest.Luckily,life in the forest of Maungatautari is beginning to awaken again.【语篇解读】本文是一篇应用文。

高级英语第二册1----4课课后答案

高级英语第二册1----4课课后答案

高级英语第二册1----4课课后答案-CAL-FENGHAI.-(YICAI)-Company One1第一课位于高尔夫港以西的帕斯克里斯琴镇几乎被夷为平地。

住在该镇那座豪华的黎赛留公寓度假的几位旅客组织了一次聚会,从他们所居的有利地位观赏飓风的壮观景象,结果像是有一个其大无比的拳头把公寓打得粉碎,26人因此丧生。

柯夏克家的屋顶一被掀走,约翰就高喊道:“快上楼一一到卧室里去!数数孩子。

”在倾盆大雨中,大人们围成一圈,让孩子们紧紧地挤在中间。

柯夏克老奶奶哀声切切地说道:“孩子们,咱们大家来唱支歌吧!”孩子们都吓呆了,根本没一点反应。

老奶奶独个儿唱了几句,然后她的声音就完全消失了。

客厅的壁炉和烟囱崩塌了下来。

弄得瓦砾横飞。

眼看他们栖身的那间卧室电有两面墙壁行将崩塌,约翰立即命令大伙:“进电视室去!”这是离开风头最远的一个房间。

约翰用手将妻子搂了一下。

詹妮丝心里明白了他的意思。

由于风雨和恐惧,她不住地发抖。

她一面拉过两个孩子紧贴在自己身边,一面默祷着:亲爱的上帝啊,赐给我力量,让我经受住必须经受的一切吧。

她心里怨恨这场飓风。

我们一定不会让它得胜。

柯夏克老爹心中窝着一团火,深为自己在飓风面前无能为力而感到懊丧。

也说不清为什么,他跑到一问卧室里去将一只杉木箱和一个双人床垫拖进了电视室。

就在这里,一面墙壁被风刮倒了,提灯也被吹灭。

另外又有一面墙壁在移动,在摇晃。

查理.希尔试图以身子撑住它,但结果墙还是朝他这边塌了下来,把他的背部也给砸伤了。

房子在颤动摇晃,已从地基上挪开了25英尺。

整个世界似乎都要分崩离析了。

“我们来把床垫竖起来!”约翰对父亲大声叫道。

“把它斜靠着挡挡风。

让孩子们躲到垫子下面去,我们可以用头和肩膀把垫子大一点的孩子趴在地板上,小一点的一层层地压在大的身上,大人们都弯下身子罩住他们。

地板倾斜了。

装着那一窝四只小猫的盒子从架上滑下来,一下子就在风中消失了。

斯普琪被从一个嵌板书柜顶上刮走而不见踪影了。

高级英语第二册1----4课课后答案

高级英语第二册1----4课课后答案

第一课位于高尔夫港以西的帕斯克里斯琴镇几乎被夷为平地。

住在该镇那座豪华的黎赛留公寓度假的几位旅客组织了一次聚会,从他们所居的有利地位观赏飓风的壮观景象,结果像是有一个其大无比的拳头把公寓打得粉碎,26人因此丧生。

柯夏克家的屋顶一被掀走,约翰就高喊道:“快上楼一一到卧室里去!数数孩子。

”在倾盆大雨中,大人们围成一圈,让孩子们紧紧地挤在中间。

柯夏克老奶奶哀声切切地说道:“孩子们,咱们大家来唱支歌吧!”孩子们都吓呆了,根本没一点反应。

老奶奶独个儿唱了几句,然后她的声音就完全消失了。

客厅的壁炉和烟囱崩塌了下来。

弄得瓦砾横飞。

眼看他们栖身的那间卧室电有两面墙壁行将崩塌,约翰立即命令大伙:“进电视室去!”这是离开风头最远的一个房间。

约翰用手将妻子搂了一下。

詹妮丝心里明白了他的意思。

由于风雨和恐惧,她不住地发抖。

她一面拉过两个孩子紧贴在自己身边,一面默祷着:亲爱的上帝啊,赐给我力量,让我经受住必须经受的一切吧。

她心里怨恨这场飓风。

我们一定不会让它得胜。

柯夏克老爹心中窝着一团火,深为自己在飓风面前无能为力而感到懊丧。

也说不清为什么,他跑到一问卧室里去将一只杉木箱和一个双人床垫拖进了电视室。

就在这里,一面墙壁被风刮倒了,提灯也被吹灭。

另外又有一面墙壁在移动,在摇晃。

查理.希尔试图以身子撑住它,但结果墙还是朝他这边塌了下来,把他的背部也给砸伤了。

房子在颤动摇晃,已从地基上挪开了25英尺。

整个世界似乎都要分崩离析了。

“我们来把床垫竖起来!”约翰对父亲大声叫道。

“把它斜靠着挡挡风。

让孩子们躲到垫子下面去,我们可以用头和肩膀把垫子大一点的孩子趴在地板上,小一点的一层层地压在大的身上,大人们都弯下身子罩住他们。

地板倾斜了。

装着那一窝四只小猫的盒子从架上滑下来,一下子就在风中消失了。

斯普琪被从一个嵌板书柜顶上刮走而不见踪影了。

那只狗紧闭着双眼,缩成一团。

又一面墙壁倒塌了。

水拍打着倾斜的地板。

约翰抓住一扇还连在壁柜墙上的门,对他父亲大声叫道:“假若地板塌了,咱们就把孩子放到这块门板上面。

高级英语第二册Lesson4课后练习13

高级英语第二册Lesson4课后练习13

5、And if a beachhead of co-operation may push back the jungle of suspicion...(para19)
And if the first co-operation can lessen the deep suspicion that exists on both sides...
The energy, the faith, the devotion which we bring to this endeavor will inspire not only the United States and her people but also the whole world.
3、And let every other power know that this hemisphere intends to remain the master of its own house. (para 9) And let every other power know that this hemisphere will not tolerate any interference in their affairs by countries outside this hemisphere.
2、But this peaceful revolution of hope cannot become the prey of hostile powers. (para 9) We will not allow any enemy country to destroy this peaceful revolution that brings hope of progress in this hemisphere.

高中英语(新人教版)必修第二册课后习题:UNIT 4 Section C(课后习题)【含答案及解析】

高中英语(新人教版)必修第二册课后习题:UNIT 4 Section C(课后习题)【含答案及解析】

UNIT4HISTORY AND TRADITIONSSection C Discovering Useful Structures&Listening and Talking课后篇巩固提升必备知识基础练Ⅰ.单句填空1.I was wondering if I could speak to whoever is charge of the project.2.Before long,the bell rang,(announce) the end of the English class.3.At the meeting they discussed three different (approach) to the study of mathematics.4.A great number of immediate measures have been taken (ensure) people’s lives and safety.5.I’d like to express my gratitude to you for your (generous) during my stay there.6.How many adults,who complain about the long drives to work,(eager) drove for hours at a time when they first got the licenses?7.In the museum,we saw an old stone which was said to be a scraper used by our (ancestor).8.Art and culture are so important in Glasgow life that (gallery) and museums are great in number.Ⅱ.短语填空1.Even if we start reducing carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases,the climate is going to keep on warming for decades or centuries.2.Only by increasing doctors by 50 percent can the patients be treated.3.Rather than take the aeroplane ,they decided to take a train to Vancouver.4. the cinema there was a crowd pushing to get in.5.The old man carefully the wounded soldiers day and night.6.The clever boy the blackboard and answered the questions.Ⅲ.语法专练1.The island,(join) to the mainland by a bridge,is easy to go to.2.Tsinghua University,(found) in 1911,is home to a great number of outstanding figures.3.Even the best writers sometimes find themselves (lose) for words.4.Michael put up a picture of Yao Ming beside the bed to keep himself (remind) of his own dreams.5.Claire had her luggage (check) an hour before her plane left.6.The players (choose) from the whole country are expected to bring us honour in this summer game.7.I need a new passport so I will have to have my photographs (take).8.The producer comes regularly to collect the cameras (return) to our shop for quality problems.9.The (puzzle) expression on his face showed that the question was puzzling.10.Most colleges now offer first-year students a course specially (design) to help them succeed academically and personally.关键能力提升练Ⅳ.完形填空One morning when I was sending a package to a poor woman,I noticed a little dog in her yard.He was 1 from a terrible case of mange (疥癣).I asked her if he was her dog and she said yes.I asked why she didn’t 2 him and she told me there was nothing she could do about it for being short of money.My heart broke as I watched him slowly trying to stand his 3 from the illness.I asked her if she would mind if I tried to 4 him.I told her I would try to get some 5 to make him feel comfortable.Instead of going to a regular chemist’s shop,I went to the local animal doctor and told him what the dog 6 like and he told me what I needed.When I 7 to the woman’s home I asked her if she would be sure to 8 the dog in the medicine liquid every day until it was 9.I made her promise because I knew I could not 10 every day to make sure it was done.Two weeks later when I returned to the house,this 11 little ball of dog with red fur 12 me at the door.It was him,shaking his tail 13.I smiled and told the woman she did a great 14.I asked her if I could call him Firecracker (爆竹) because his fur was so red and lively.She 15 her head yes with tears in her eyes too.Every time I went to her home Firecracker always greeted me with a wave of his tail.That was the best $16 I ever spent.【语篇解读】本文是一篇记叙文。

高级英语第二册Lesson 4课后练习

高级英语第二册Lesson 4课后练习

《高级英语》第二册练习Lesson FourInaugural AddressI. Choose the one which is equal to the word given blow:1. inauguralA. holy and sacred place in a churchB. formal speech made by a person on taking officeC. shelter from trouble, dangerD. talk for the purpose of teaching2. sovereignA. self-governingB. self-sufficientC. self-centeredD. self-respected3. subversionA. rebuildingB. successionC. destroyingD. salvage4. invectiveA. beautiful wordsB. facial expressionsC. convincing speechD. abusive language5. invokeA. call forthB. take downC. put upD. take the form of6. prescribeA. order or directB. produceC. protectD. agree7. tribulationA. contributionB. deliveryC. distributionD. great difficulty or trouble8. adversaryA. a person who gives adviceB. a friendC. an enemyD. a listener9. civilityA. rough mannersB. polite behaviourC. polite citizenD. rude person10. engulfA. swallow upB. consider aboutC. clean upD. imprint on11. heedA. rise on feetB. strike on the headC. give new life and strengthD. pay attention to12. shieldA. person or thing that protectsB. a court order prohibiting or ordering a given actionC. a person or animal inhabiting a specified placeD. an apparatus used in inhaling medicinal vapors13. asunderA. from belowB. apart in direction or positionC. in or to a low placeD. from an upright position14. belabourA. ask sb. to work hardB. set upon with too much talkC. furnish with powerD. force upon others15. eradicateA. cut into many small partsB. go round in circleC. draw together into a small spaceD. put an end to; destroy16. observeA. celebrateB. preserveC. orateD. help17. almightyA. intensiveB. all-powerfulC. instructiveD. all-round18. symbolizeA. make signB. show pityC. representD. present19. undoingA. showingB. lazinessC. coverD. destruction20. permitA. fill inB. consentC. get intoD. explain21. commitA. pledgeB. omitC. refrainD. repeat22. hostA. a fewB. multitudeC. houseD. exclusion23. allianceA. dominationB. transactionC. disintegrationD. association24. castA. insertB. fallC. throwD. leap25. preyA. victimB. requireC. addressD. beg26. aggressionA. defenceB. invasionC. injuryD. disclosure27. outpaceA. fall behindB. step outC. walk outsideD. surpass28. anewA. once moreB. strangeC. famousD. weary29. testimonyA. evidenceB. witnessC. liberationD. trial30. inspectionA. predictionB. warm speechC. expectationD. examination6. to take an oath s10. to do away with completely athe horizon. h12. a group of persons gathered together for a common reason, as for a legislative,religious, educational, or social purpose. awithout proof s16. to call together s18. be delighted r20. ardent, often selfless affection and dedication dboon b24. to give warning to a26. to have meaning or importance sor a sacred object as witness o30. an adversary; an opponent fIV. Reading Comprehension:1. The real thesis of this piece of exposition is _______A. Pub talk and the King’s EnglishB. Conversation is the most sociable of all human activitiesC. Bar conversation has a charm of its ownD. The King’s English2. This piece of exposition is _____ in style.A. formalB. informalC. sarcasticD. serious3. One of the reasons for him to like bar conversation is that ______.A. He was a sociable person and enjoyed talking with others.B. e was brought up in the English pubs.C. He was deeply involved in bar-goers’ lives.D. He was a frequenter of the English pubs4. “The King’s English ” came into being in ______.A. 16th centuryB. 17th centuryC. 15th centuryD. 18th century5. The worst conversationalist is the person who ______.A. is not making a pointB. is prepared to looseC. is trying to talk senseD. slips and slides in conversationVII. Translation:1. 他们的友谊是在困难时期由于同甘苦共患难而结成的。

高级英语BOOK 2 Unit 4 Inaugural Address 课后答案

高级英语BOOK 2 Unit 4 Inaugural Address 课后答案

高级英语BOOK 2 Unit 4 Inaugural Address 课后答案Ⅰ.John F. Kennedy(1917--1963),35th President of the United StatesA. His family backgroundJohn Kennedy, whose ancestors came from Ireland, was the first Roman Catholic to become president of the United States. At 43 he was also the youngest man ever elected to the highest office of his country, although he was not the youngest to serve in it. Theodore Roosevelt was not quite 43 when the assasination of President McKinley elevated him to the Presidency. John Fitzgerald Francis Kennedy was born on May 29,1917, in Brookline, Massachusetts. Brookline was the suburb of Boston where his grandfather had been elected to many public offices. Joseph P. Kennedy, father of the future presi- dent, was at 25 the youngest bank president in the country. He was to build one of the great private fortunes of his time. He and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy raised a family of nine children. John was the second born.When the first Kennedy child, Joseph, Jr. , was born, father Joe was reported to have said, "He' 11 be the first Kennedy to become president of the United States. " But he was killed while piloting a bomber in World War Ⅱ , and the leadership of the rising Kennedy generation passed to John.Thus young John Kennedy, often called Jack, inherited a background of polities, wealth and determination. The family circle was close and warm. The boys learned competition first in sports. They played hard to win, a family trait in sports and politics all their lives. Young Kennedy attended private schools in Brookline and New York City; and then, in 1931, he entered Choate School, in Wallingford, Connecticut to prepare for college. Young Kennedy, after a short spell at the London School of Economics and Princeton, entered Harvard. In 1940 he graduated from Harvard cure laude.B. His political career and election as presidentIn 1945 the Hearst newspapers hired Kennedy to cover the United Nations preliminary conference in San Francisco. He covered the British elections that year, then decided he had had enough of journalism. He did not know whether he would like politics, but decided to try it. In 1946 he ran for Congress as a Democrat, in a Boston district. Though he did not live there, Kennedy, by hard compaigning, defeated a large field of rivals. He was re-elected twice. Then he tried for election to the United States Senate against Republican Henry Cabot Lodge, who was supposed to be unbeatable in Massachusetts. It was a big Republican year in 1952, in Massachusetts and elsewhere, but Jack Kennedy beat Lodge by 70,000 votes.On September 12, 1953, Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier were married at Newport, Rhode Island. They had three children—Caroline; John, Jr. , whom his father called John-John; and Patrick Bouvier, who lived but a few days.Kennedy missed being nominated for vice-president by a few votes in 1956. But he gained an introduction to millions of Americans who watched the Chicago Democratic Convention on television. When he decided to run for president in1960, his name was widely known. Many thought that his religion and his youthful appearance would handicap him. Kennedy faced the religion issue frankly. He declared his firm belief in the separation of church and state. His wealth enabled him to assemble a staffand to get around the country in a private plane.Kennedy’ s four television debates with Republican candidate, Richard M. Nixon, were a highlight of the 1960 campaign. The debates probably were important in Kennedy’s close victory electoral votes to 219 fo r Nixon. The popular vote was breathtakingly close Kennedy received only18,574 more votes than Nixon--a fraction of 1 precent of the total vote. (excerpts from the New Book of Knowledge)C. AssasinationIn November 1963, President Kennedy journeyed to Texas for a speech-making tour. In Dallas on November 22, he and his wife were cheered enthusiastically as their open car passed through the streets. Suddenly, at 12"30 in the after-noon, an assassin fired several shots, striking the president twice, in the base of the neck and the head, and seriously wounding John Connally, the governor of Texas, who was riding with the Kennedys. The president was rushed to Park-land Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead about a' half hour later. Within two hours, Vice President Johnson took the oath as president. On November 24, amid national and worldwide mourning, the President’s body lay in state on the rotunda of the U. S. Capitol. The next day, leaders of 92 nations attended the state funeral, and a million persons lined the route as a horsedrawn caisson bore the body to St. Matthew’s Cathedral for a requiem mass. While millions of Americans watched the ceremonies on television, the president was buried on an open slope in Arlington National Cemetry. There an eternal flame, lighted by his wife, marks the grave.On the day of the assasination, the police arrested Lee Harvey Oswald, a 24-year-old ex-marine, for the president’s murder. Oswald, who had lived for a time in the Soviet Union, killed Dallas policeman J. D. Tippit while resisting at-rest. Two days later, in the station, Oswald himself was basement of the Dallas police fatally shot by Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner. On November 29, President Johnson appointed a seven- member commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren, to conduct a thorough investigation of the assassination and report to the nation. The commission’s report made public on Sept. 27, 1964, held that Oswald fired the shots that killed the president. Further, to allay suspicions that the murder was a conspiratorial plot, it stated that the committee "found no evidence" that either Oswald or Ruby "was part of any conspiracy, domestic or foreign, to assassinate President Kennedy".Ⅱ. 1. Kennedy thinks the world is different now because man has made great progress in science and technology and has not only the power (scientific farming, speedy transportation, mass production, etc. ) to abolish poverty, but also the power(missiles,H_bombs,etc.)to destroy all forms of human life.I agree with him. 2.According to Kennedy,the belief still at issue around the globe is the belief that all man are created equal and God has given them certain inalienable rights which no state or ruler can take away from them.3.Kennedy considers as friends:a)the old allies of the U.S., such as Britain,Canada,Australia,New Zealand and the western European countries; b) the countries in South America and;c)many of the developing countries in Asia and Africa that rely on U.S.aid.He considersall socialist countries as foes(all that time the socialist camp headed by the Soviet Union)and those developing countries preparing to take the socialist road.4. Britain,Canada,Australia,New Zealand.and in a wider sense one may also include France.5.Many new nations were born after World WarⅡ.especially in Africa. In 1 960 alone,just one year before Kennedy’s inaugural speech, the following countries in Africa declared their independence:The Republic of Cen—tral Africa,The Republic of Chad,The Republic of Da-homey,The Peop le’s Republic of the Congo。

高级英语第二册课后答案(精品文档)

高级英语第二册课后答案(精品文档)

张汉熙版《高级英语》第二册 lesson 1 课后练习答案习题全解I.Las Vegas. Las Vegas city is the seat of Clark County in South Nevada. In 1970 it had a population of 125,787 people. Revenue from hotels, gambling, entertainment and other tourist-oriented industries forms the backbone of Las Vegas's economy, Its nightclubs and casinos are world famous. The city is also the commercial hub of a ranching and mining area. In the 19th century Las Vegas was a watering place for travelers to South California. In 1.855-1857 the Mormons maintained a fort there, and in 1864 Fort Baker was built by the U. S. army. In 1867, Las Vegas was detached from the Arizona territory and joined to Nevada. (from The New Columbia Encyclopedia )Ⅱ.以下内容需要回复才能看到1. He didn' t think his family was in any real danger, His former house had been demolished by Hurricane Betsy for it only stood a few feet above sea level. His present house was 23 feet above sea level and 250 yards away from the sea. He thought they would be safe here as in any place else. Besides, he had talked the matter over with his father and mother and consulted his longtime friend, Charles Hill, before making his decision to stay and face the hurricane.2. Magna Products is the name of the firm owned by John Koshak. It designed and developed educational toys and supplies.3. Charlie thought they were in real trouble because salty water was sea water. It showed the sea had reached the house and they were in real trouble for they might be washed into the sea by the tidal wave.4. At this Critical moment when grandmother Koshak thought they might die at any moment, she told her husband the dearest and the most precious thing she could think of. This would help to encourage each other and enable them to face death with greater serenity.5.John Koshak felt a crushing guilt because it was he who made the final decision to stay and face the hurricane. Now it seemed they might all die in the hurricane.6.Grandmother Koshak asked the children to sing because she thought this would lessen tension and boost the morale of everyone.7.Janis knew that John was trying his best to comfort and encourage her for he too felt there was a possibility of their dying in the storm.Ⅲ.1.This piece of narration is organized as follows. .introduction, development, climax, and conclusion. The first 6 paragraphs are introductory paragraphs, giving the time, place, and background of the conflict-man versus hurricanes. These paragraphs also introduce the characters in the story.2. The writer focuses chiefly on action but he also clearly and sympathetically delineates the characters in the story.3. John Koshak, Jr. , is the protagonist in the story.4. Man and hurricanes make up the conflict.5. The writer builds up and sustains the suspense in the story by describing in detail and vividly the incidents showing how the Koshaks and their friends struggled against each onslaught of the hurricane.6. The writer gives order and logical movement to the sequence of happenings by describing a series of actions in the order of their occurrence.7. The story reaches its climax in paragraph 27.8. I would have ended the story at the end of Paragraph 27,because the hurricane passed, the main characters survived, and the story could come to a natural end.9. Yes, it is. Because the writer states his theme or the purpose behind his story in the reflection of Grandmother Koshak: "We lost practically all our possessions, but the family came through it. When I think of that, I realize we lost nothing important.Ⅳ.1. We' re 23 feet above sea level.2. The house has been here since 1915, and no hurricane has ever caused any damage to it.3. We can make the necessary preparations and survive the hurricane without much damage.4. Water got into the generator and put it out. It stopped producing electricity, so the lights also went out.5. Everybody go out through the back door and run to the cars.6. The electrical systems in the car had been put out by water.7. As John watched the water inch its way up the steps, he felt a strong sense of guilt because he blamed himself for endangering the whole family by deciding not to flee inland.8. ()h God, please help us to get through this storm safely.9. Grandmother Koshak sang a few words alone and then her voice gradually grew dimmer and stopped.10. Janis displayed rather late the exhaustion brought about by the nervous tension caused by the hurricane.Ⅴ.See the translation of the text.Ⅵ.1. main: a principal pipe or line in a distributing system for water, gas, electricity, etc.2.sit out: stay until the end ofe by;(American English) pay a visit4.blow in:burst open by the storm.5.douse:put out(a light,fire,generator。

大学英语第二册第4课课文及课后答案

大学英语第二册第4课课文及课后答案

北京工商大学专升本会计学专业大学英语2 电子版复习课件整理:王和平QQ 359076395 如果有发现错误或补充请XXX我.谢谢大家所有资料bbb://wangli12a.blog.163aaa 都可以下载UNIT 4XXX想在上大学之前先挣点钱,便申请了一份教学工作。

可是面试情况却越来越糟…我的第一份工作在我等着进大学时,我从一家当地报纸上看到一则伦敦郊区的一所学校要招聘一名教师的广告,此地离我的住处大约十英里远。

因为很缺钱花,又想做一点有益的事情。

于是我提出了申请,与此同时,我也很担心,因为即没有文凭,又没有教学经验,看来要想得到这份工作,机会渺茫。

可是,三天后来了一封信,让我去克洛伊顿面试。

那是一次令人难受的旅程。

搭火车到克洛伊顿车站,然后坐十分钟的汽车,最后至少再走四分之一英里。

结果,我在一个炎热的六月的早晨到了,因为太沮丧而没感到紧张。

学校是一座红砖房子,大大的窗子。

前面的宅院是铺着砾石的正方形,四个角落都各生一丛灌木,它们挣扎着求生于来自一条繁忙大道的烟雾,尘灰。

很显然开门的是校长本人。

他又矮又胖,留着沙色的小胡子,前额上布满皱纹,头发几乎秃光。

他带着一种吃惊的、不满的神情看着我,就像是一位上校看着一名没系鞋带的列兵一样,“哦,对”他咕哝着说“你最好到里面来。

”狭窄、阴暗的走廊里散发出放久的卷心菜的霉味,让人很不舒服,墙上墨迹斑斑,很脏;到处一片沉寂。

从地毯上的面包屑判断,他的书房也是他的餐室。

“你最好坐下,他说道,接着又问我了一连串的问题,为了得到普通中学毕业证书我学了哪些科目,多大了,玩些什么游戏,这时他突然用那双满是血丝的眼睛盯着我,问我是否认为游戏对于孩子的教育起着重大的作用。

我含含糊糊地说些别把游戏看得那么重要之类的话。

他哼了哼。

我的话不正确。

我和那位校长显然没什么共同点。

他说,学校包括一个有二十四个男孩子的班级,年龄范围是七至十三岁。

我必须教所有的课程,除了美术由他自己教外。

(完整版)高级英语第二册第四课课后题答案

(完整版)高级英语第二册第四课课后题答案

高级英语(D1002001) > 看看课程文档> ADVANCED ENGLISH BOOK II > UNIT 4 INAUGURAL ADDRESS > 第四单元习题答案第四单元习题答案第四单元习题答案Ⅰ.John F. Kennedy(1917--1963),35th President of the United StatesA. His family backgroundJohn Kennedy, whose ancestors came from Ireland, was the first Roman Catholic to become president of the United States. At 43 he was also the youngest man ever elected to the highest office of his country, although he was not the youngest to serve in it. Theodore Roosevelt was not quite 43 when the assasination of President McKinley elevated him to the Presidency. John Fitzgerald Francis Kennedy was born on May 29,1917, in Brookline, Massachusetts. Brookline was the suburb of Boston where his grandfather had been elected to many public offices. Joseph P. Kennedy, father of the future presi- dent, was at 25 the youngest bank president in the country. He was to build one of the great private fortunes of his time. He and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy raised a family of nine children. John was the second born.When the first Kennedy child, Joseph, Jr. , was born, father Joe was reported to have said, "He' 11 be the first Kennedy to become president of the United States. " But he was killed while piloting a bomber in World War Ⅱ, and the leadership of the rising Kennedy generation passed to John.Thus young John Kennedy, often called Jack, inherited a background of polities, wealth and determination. The family circle was close and warm. The boys learned competition first in sports. They played hard to win, a family trait in sports and politics all their lives. Young Kennedy attended private schools in Brookline and New York City; and then, in 1931, he entered Choate School, in Wallingford, Connecticut to prepare for college. Young Kennedy, after a short spell at the London School of Economics and Princeton, entered Harvard. In 1940 he graduated from Harvard cure laude.B. His political career and election as presidentIn 1945 the Hearst newspapers hired Kennedy to cover the United Nations preliminary conference in San Francisco. He covered the British elections that year, then decided he had had enough of journalism. He did not know whether he would like politics, but decided to try it. In 1946 he ran for Congress as a Democrat, in a Boston district. Though he did not live there, Kennedy, by hard compaigning, defeated a large field of rivals. He was re-elected twice. Then he tried for election to the United States Senate against Republican Henry Cabot Lodge, who was supposed to be unbeatable in Massachusetts. It was a big Republican year in 1952, in Massachusetts and elsewhere, but Jack Kennedy beat Lodge by 70,000 votes.On September 12, 1953, Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier were married at Newport, Rhode Island. They had three children—Caroline; John, Jr. , whom his father called John-John; and Patrick Bouvier, who lived but a few days.Kennedy missed being nominated for vice-president by a few votes in 1956. But he gained an introduction to millions of Americans who watched the Chicago Democratic Convention on television. When he decided to run for president in1960, his name was widely known. Many thought that his religion and his youthful appearance would handicap him. Kennedy faced the religion issue frankly. He declared his firm belief in the separation of church and state. Hiswealth enabled him to assemble a staff and to get around the country in a private plane.Kennedy’s four television debates with Republican candidate, Richard M. Nixon, were a highlight of the 1960 campaign. The debates probably were important in Kennedy’s close victory electoral votes to 219 for Nixon. The popular vote was breathtakingly close Kennedy received only18,574 more votes than Nixon--a fraction of 1 precent of the total vote. (excerpts from the New Book of Knowledge)C. AssasinationIn November 1963, President Kennedy journeyed to Texas for a speech-making tour. In Dallas on November 22, he and his wife were cheered enthusiastically as their open car passed through the streets. Suddenly, at 12"30 in the after-noon, an assassin fired several shots, striking the president twice, in the base of the neck and the head, and seriously wounding John Connally, the governor of Texas, who was riding with the Kennedys. The president was rushed to Park-land Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead about a' half hour later. Within two hours, Vice President Johnson took the oath as president. On November 24, amid national and worldwide mourning, the President’s body lay in state on the rotunda of the U. S. Capitol. The next day, leaders of 92 nations attended the state funeral, and a million persons lined the route as a horsedrawn caisson bore the body to St. Matthew’s Cathedral for a requiem mass. While millions of Americans watched the ceremonies on television, the president was buried on an open slope in Arlington National Cemetry. There an eternal flame, lighted by his wife, marks the grave.On the day of the assasination, the police arrested Lee Harvey Oswald, a 24-year-old ex-marine, for the president’s murder. Oswald, who had lived for a time in the Soviet Union, killed Dallas policeman J. D. Tippit while resisting at-rest. Two days later, in the station, Oswald himself was basement of the Dallas police fatally shot by Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner. On November 29, President Johnson appointed a seven-member commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren, to conduct a thorough investigation of the assassination and report to the nation. The commission’s report made public on Sept. 27, 1964, held that Oswald fired the shots that killed the president. Further, to allay suspicions that the murder was a conspiratorial plot, it stated that the committee "found no evidence" that either Oswald or Ruby "was part of any conspiracy, domestic or foreign, to assassinate President Kennedy".Ⅱ. 1. Kennedy thinks the world is different now because man has made great progress in science and technology and has not only the power (scientific farming, speedy transportation, mass production, etc. ) to abolish poverty, but also the power(missiles,H_bombs,etc.)to destroy all forms of human life.I agree with him.2.According to Kennedy,the belief still at issue around the globe is the belief that all man are created equal and God has given them certain inalienable rights which no state or ruler can take away from them.3.Kennedy considers as friends:a)the old allies of the U.S.,such as Britain,Canada,Australia,New Zealand and the western European countries;b) the countries in South America and;c)many of the developing countries in Asia and Africa that rely on U.S.aid.He considers all socialist countries as foes(all that time the socialist camp headed by the Soviet Union)and those developing countries preparing to take the socialist road.4.Britain,Canada,Australia,New Zealand.and in a wider sense one may also includeFrance.5.Many new nations were born after World WarⅡ.especially in Africa.In 1 960 alone,just one year before Kennedy’s inaugural speech,the following countries in Africa declared their independence:The Republic of Cen—tral Africa,The Republic of Chad,The Republic of Da-homey,The People’s Republic of the Congo。

人教版高中英语必修第二册课后习题 UNIT 4 Section Ⅳ

人教版高中英语必修第二册课后习题 UNIT 4 Section Ⅳ

SectionⅣListeningandTalking&ReadingforWriting课后·训练提升一、单句语法填空1.Whenever I visit my grandparents in the countryside,they always greet me a hug.2.I was sure that television does have some bad influence children.3.From stamps you can usually learn about the(custom),places and money of foreign countries.4.Her eyes are her most (strike) feature.5.She was afraid alone and she often fell asleep with the light (burn).6. is said that the president of that company will visit our school next week.7.If you go out in this rain without an umbrella,you are likely (get) wet.8. (have) a chance of experiencing this,stop by a village pub and relax with a glass of wine or a local beer.二、完成句子1.He (渴望) get back to work as soon as possible.2.His work(对……产生了巨大的影响) many modern writers.3.I couldn’t tell her the secret(有她母亲站在旁边).4. (这是不足为奇)that he’s had so many accidents,for he’s got no road sense.5.And down by the sea,the roar of the ocean waves and cries of the seabirds (组成) the music of the coast.三、阅读理解Hundreds of years ago,a Norman army came north from England to make war on Scotland.The Scots,a brave people,love their country.They fought hard to drive the enemy out of Scotland.But there were too many of the Normans.It looked as if the Normans would win.One night,the leader of the Scots marched his soldiers to the top of a hill.“We will rest here tonight,my men,” hesaid.“Tomorrow we will fight one more battle.We must win,or we will die.”They were all very tired so they ate their supper quickly and fell asleep.There were four guards on duty,but they were very tired,too,and one by one,also fell asleep.The Normans were not asleep.Quickly they gathered at the foot of the hill.Slowly they went up the hill.Closer they came to the sleeping Scots.They were almost at the top.A few minutes more the war would be over.Suddenly,one of them put his foot on athistle(蓟).He cried out and his sudden cry woke the Scots.In a minute,they were on their feet and ready for a battle.The fightingwas hard,but it did not last long.The Scots wiped out the Normans and saved Scotland.The thistle is not a beautiful plant.It has sharp needles all over it.Few people liked it.But the people of Scotland liked it so much that they made it their national flower.1.At first it looked as if the Normans would win because .A.the Scots were not braveB.the Norman army was so strongC.the Scots did not have a good leaderD.the Normans had the support from the Scottish“ButthereweretoomanyoftheNormans.ItlookedasiftheNormanswouldwi n.”可知选B项。

高级英语第二册课后习题答案

高级英语第二册课后习题答案

高级英语第二册答案Lesson OneFace to Face with Hurricane CamilleI.Las Vegas. Las Vegas city is the seat of Clark County in South Nevada. In 1970 it had a population of 125,787 people. Revenue from hotels, gambling, entertainment and other tourist-oriented industries forms the backbone of Las Vegas's economy, Its nightclubs and casinos are world famous. The city is also the commercial hub of a ranching and mining area. In the 19th century Las Vegas was a watering place for travelers to South California. In 1.855-1857 the Mormons maintained a fort there, and in 1864 Fort Baker was built by the U. S. army. In 1867, Las Vegas was detached from the Arizona territory and joined to Nevada. (from The New Columbia Encyclopedia )Ⅱ.1. He didn' t think his family was in any real danger, His former house had been demolished by Hurricane Betsy for it only stood a few feet above sea level. His present house was 23 feet above sea level and 250 yards away from the sea. He thought they would be safe here as in any place else. Besides, he had talked the matter over with his father and mother and consulted his longtime friend, Charles Hill, before making his decision to stay and face the hurricane.2. Magna Products is the name of the firm owned by John Koshak. It designed and developed educational toys and supplies.3. Charlie thought they were in real trouble because salty water was sea water. It showed the sea had reached the house and they were in real trouble for they might be washed into the sea by the tidal wave.4. At this Critical moment when grandmother Koshak thought they might die at any moment, she told her husband the dearest and the most precious thing she could think of. This would help to encourage each other and enable them to face death with greater serenity.5.John Koshak felt a crushing guilt because it was he who made the final decision to stay and face the hurricane. Now it seemed they might all die in the hurricane.6.Grandmother Koshak asked the children to sing because she thought this would lessen tension and boost the morale of everyone.7.Janis knew that John was trying his best to comfort and encourage her for he too felt there was a possibility of their dying in the storm.Ⅲ.1.This piece of narration is organized as follows. .introduction, development, climax, and conclusion. The first 6 paragraphs are introductory paragraphs, giving the time, place, and background of the conflict-man versus hurricanes. These paragraphs also introduce the characters in the story.2. The writer focuses chiefly on action but he also clearly and sympathetically delineates the characters in the story.3. John Koshak, Jr. , is the protagonist in the story.4. Man and hurricanes make up the conflict.5. The writer builds up and sustains the suspense in the story by describing in detail andvividly the incidents showing how the Koshaks and their friends struggled against each onslaught of the hurricane.6. The writer gives order and logical movement to the sequence of happenings by describinga series of actions in the order of their occurrence.7. The story reaches its climax in paragraph 27.8. I would have ended the story at the end of Paragraph 27,because the hurricane passed, the main characters survived, and the story could come to a natural end.9. Yes, it is. Because the writer states his theme or the purpose behind his story in the reflection of Grandmother Koshak: "We lost practically all our possessions, but the family came through it. When I think of that, I realize we lost nothing important.Ⅳ.1. We' re 23 feet above sea level.2. The house has been here since 1915, and no hurricane has ever caused any damage to it.3. We can make the necessary preparations and survive the hurricane without much damage.4. Water got into the generator and put it out. It stopped producing electricity, so the lights also went out.5. Everybody go out through the back door and run to the cars.6. The electrical systems in the car had been put out by water.7. As John watched the water inch its way up the steps, he felt a strong sense of guilt because he blamed himself for endangering the whole family by deciding not to flee inland.8. ()h God, please help us to get through this storm safely.9. Grandmother Koshak sang a few words alone and then her voice gradually grew dimmer and stopped.10. Janis displayed rather late the exhaustion brought about by the nervous tension caused by the hurricane.Ⅴ.See the translation of the text.Ⅵ.1. main: a principal pipe or line in a distributing system for water, gas, electricity, etc.2.sit out: stay until the end ofe by;(American English) pay a visit4.blow in:burst open by the storm.5.douse:put out(a light,fire,generator。

高级英语第二册paraphrase部分答案

高级英语第二册paraphrase部分答案

IV. 1. The buring-ground is nothing more than a huge piece of wasteland full of mounds of earth looking like a deserted and abandoned piece of land on which a building was going to be put up.2. All the imperialists build up their empires by treating the people in the colonies like animals (by not treating the people in the colonies as human beings).3. They are born. Then for a few years they work, toil and starve. Finally they die and are buried in graves without a name.4. Sitting with his legs crossed and using a very old-fashioned lathe, a carpenter quickly gives a round shape to the chair-legs he is making.5. Immediately from their dark hole-like cells everywherea great number of Jews rushed out wildly excited.6. Every one of these poor Jews looked on the cigarette asa piece of luxury which they could not possibly afford.7. However, a white-skinned European is always quite noticeable.8. If you take a look at the natural scenery in a tropical region, you see everything but the human beings.9. No one would think of organizing cheap trips for thetourists to visit the poor slum areas (for these trips 42V.Ⅵ.Ⅶ. would not be interesting).10.life is very hard for ninety percent of the people.With hard backbreaking toil they can produce a little food on the poor soil.11.She took it for granted that as an old woman she was the lowest in the community,that。

高级英语第二册课后答案.doc

高级英语第二册课后答案.doc

张汉熙版《高级英语》第二册lesson 1课后练习答案习题全解1.Las Vegas. Las Vegas city is the seat of Clark County in South Nevada. In 1970 it had a population of 125, 787 people. Revenue from hotels, gambling, entertainment and other tourist-oriented industries forms the backbone of Las Vegas' s economy, Its nightclubs and casinos are world famous. The city is also the commercial hub of a ranching and mining area. In the 19th century Las Vegas was a watering place for travelers to South California. In 1. 855-1857 the Mormons maintained a fort there, and in 1864 Fort Baker was built by the U. S. army. Tn 1867, Las Vegas was detached from the Arizona territory and joined to Nevada, (from The New Columbia Encyclopedia )II・以下内容需要回复才能看到1.He did rf t thi nk his family was in any real dan ger, His former house had been demolished by Ilurricane Betsy for it only stood a few feet above sea level. His present house was 23 feet above sea level and 250 yards away from the sea. He thought they would be safe here as in any place else. Besides, he had talked the matter over with his father and mother and consul ted his longtime friend, Charles Hill, before mak i ng his decisi on to stay and face the hurricane.2.Magna Products is the name of the firm owned by John Koshak. It designed and developed educational toys and supplies.3.Charlie thought they were in real trouble because salty water was sea water. Tt showed the sea had reached the house and they were in real trouble for they might be washed into the sea by the tidal wave.4.At this Critical momcnt when granclmother Koshak thought they might die at dny moment, she told her husband the clearest and the most precious thing she could think of. This would help to encourage each other and enable them to face death with greater serenity.5.John Koshak felt a crushing gu订t because it was he who made the final decision to stay and face the hurricane. Now it seemed they might all die in the hurricane.6.Grandmother Koshak asked the children to sing because she thought this would lessen tensi on and boost the morale of everyone.7.Janis knew that John was trying his best to comfort eind encourage her for he too felt there was a possibility of their dying in the storm>Ill.1.This piece of narration is organized as follows. . introduction, development, climax, and conclusion. The first 6 paragraphs are introductory paragraphs, giving the time, place, and background of the conf1ict-man versus hurricanes. These paragraphs al so introduce the characters in the story.2.The writer focuses chiefly on action but he also clearly and sympathetically delineates the characters in the story.3.Jobn Koshak, Jr. , is the protagonist in the story.4.Man and hurricanes make up the conf1ict.5.The writer builds up and sustains the suspensc in the story by describing in detail and vividly the incidents showing how the Koshaks and their friends struggled against each onslaught of the hurricane.6.The writer gives order and logical movement to the sequenee of happenings by describing a series of actions in the order of their occurrcnco.7.The story reaches its climax in paragraph 27.8.I would have ended the story at the end of Paragraph 27, because the hurricane passed, the main characters survived, and the story could come to a natural end.9.Yes, it is. Because the writer states his theme or the purposebehind his story in the reflection of Grandmother Koshak: lost practically all our possessions, but the family came through it. When I think of that, I realize we lost nothing important.IV.1.We" re 23 feet above sea level.2.The house has been here since 1915, and no hurricane has ever caused any damage to it.3.We can make the necessary preparations and survive the hurricane wi thout much damage.4.Water got into the generator and put it out. It stopped producing electricity, so the lights also went out.5.Everybody go out through the back door and run to the cars.6.The electrical systems in the car had been put out by water.7.As Jobn watched the water inch its way up the steps, he felt a strong sense of gu订t because he blamed himself for endangering the whole family by deciding not to flee inland.8.()h God, please help us to get through this storm safely.9.Grandmother Koshak sang a few words alone and then her voice gradual 1y grew dimmer and stopped.10.Janis displayed rdther late the exhaustion brought about by the nervous tension caused by the hurricane.See the translation of the text.VI.1.main: a principal pipe or line in a distributing system for water, gas, electricity, etc.2.sit out: stay until the end ofe by; (American English) pay a visit4.blow in: burst open by the storm.5.douse:put out (a light, fire, generator。

北师大版高中英语选择性必修第二册课后习题 Unit 4 Humour Section Ⅲ

北师大版高中英语选择性必修第二册课后习题 Unit 4 Humour Section Ⅲ

SectionⅢWritingWorkshop,ViewingWorkshop&ReadingClub一、用适当的介词或副词填空1.There is a huge demand quality books to children.2.As the friends did not show interest in participating,the brothers went off their own.3.The disease is deadly for elder people,malesparticular.4.He screamed her to go away.5.The matter is considered relatively unstable a certain degree.6.You need to live independently instead of being dependent your parents.7.The movie was based a true story and adapted by a famous writer.8.We hope the authority can deal the matter in a considerate way.二、用方框中所给短语的正确形式填空1.Sometimes people make a jokeby .2.The research the origin of the virus and was highly thought of.3.It doesn’t for him to agree to the arrangement because he didn’t show up at all.4.Songs were sung to the patients to .5.They fled to the remote village and by fishing.6. ,there is no point discussing it.7.The man decided to a free tutor to the twins,as their parents were struggling financially.8.She wouldn’t even tell me her phone number, her address.三、完形填空Mary was always dreaming of graduating from college in cap and gown,accepting her diploma and ready to start a career.Since Mary came from a low-income family,her dream seemed out of 1 .There would never be enough money to send Mary to college. 2 ,no member of her family had ever gone to college.But Mary 3 that thought.In secondary school she studied hard,and spoke 4 of her dream to teachers and friends.When her 5 day at school came,her principal called her into his office.“I have a(n) 6 for you,” he said.It contained a scholarship to a nearby college.The power of a thought had 7 its first bonus.But the scholarship could cover only part of her college 8 .Mary took every part-time job she could find.Mary’s dream came true when she graduated from college.Then she took a course in insurance.When she 9 herself to a local insurance company for a job,she was 10 .She applied again.The answer was no.She kept going back until the manager 11 her.Twenty-five years later,Mary Crowe’s colleagues in that company 12 at a special dinner in her honour,recognising her for her outstanding achievements as an insurance saleswoman.“Each of us is constantly in a state of becoming,” she said,giving her secret to 13 .“Through 14 and faith you can become what you think.Not that your life will be without problems,but along the way problems will be 15 .Ask and believe;dream and believe;work and believe.”1.A.control B.questionC.reachD.thought2.A.However B.InsteadC.ThereforeD.Besides3.A.held on to B.took pride inC.made up forD.came up with4.A.selfishly B.freelyC.unwillinglyD.jokingly5.A.first B.formalC.finalD.unique6.A.book B.envelopeC.souvenirD.test7.A.joined B.wastedC.consumedD.produced8.A.ees D.ambitions9.A.limited B.relatedC.accustomedD.introduced10.A.picked up B.put asideC.turned downD.taken in11.A.believed B.praisedC.acceptedD.noticed12.A.gathered B.declaredC.fledD.parted13.A.reputation B.independenceC.responsibilityD.success14.A.analysis B.enthusiasmC.politenessD.conclusion15.A.corrected B.overcomeC.forgottenD.collected四、选词创境请用本单元重点词汇写一篇小短文。

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高级英语(D1002001) > 看看课程文档> ADVANCED ENGLISH BOOK II > UNIT 4 INAUGURAL ADDRESS > 第四单元习题答案第四单元习题答案第四单元习题答案Ⅰ.John F. Kennedy(1917--1963),35th President of the United StatesA. His family backgroundJohn Kennedy, whose ancestors came from Ireland, was the first Roman Catholic to become president of the United States. At 43 he was also the youngest man ever elected to the highest office of his country, although he was not the youngest to serve in it. Theodore Roosevelt was not quite 43 when the assasination of President McKinley elevated him to the Presidency. John Fitzgerald Francis Kennedy was born on May 29,1917, in Brookline, Massachusetts. Brookline was the suburb of Boston where his grandfather had been elected to many public offices. Joseph P. Kennedy, father of the future presi- dent, was at 25 the youngest bank president in the country. He was to build one of the great private fortunes of his time. He and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy raised a family of nine children. John was the second born.When the first Kennedy child, Joseph, Jr. , was born, father Joe was reported to have said, "He' 11 be the first Kennedy to become president of the United States. " But he was killed while piloting a bomber in World War Ⅱ, and the leadership of the rising Kennedy generation passed to John.Thus young John Kennedy, often called Jack, inherited a background of polities, wealth and determination. The family circle was close and warm. The boys learned competition first in sports. They played hard to win, a family trait in sports and politics all their lives. Young Kennedy attended private schools in Brookline and New York City; and then, in 1931, he entered Choate School, in Wallingford, Connecticut to prepare for college. Young Kennedy, after a short spell at the London School of Economics and Princeton, entered Harvard. In 1940 he graduated from Harvard cure laude.B. His political career and election as presidentIn 1945 the Hearst newspapers hired Kennedy to cover the United Nations preliminary conference in San Francisco. He covered the British elections that year, then decided he had had enough of journalism. He did not know whether he would like politics, but decided to try it. In 1946 he ran for Congress as a Democrat, in a Boston district. Though he did not live there, Kennedy, by hard compaigning, defeated a large field of rivals. He was re-elected twice. Then he tried for election to the United States Senate against Republican Henry Cabot Lodge, who was supposed to be unbeatable in Massachusetts. It was a big Republican year in 1952, in Massachusetts and elsewhere, but Jack Kennedy beat Lodge by 70,000 votes.On September 12, 1953, Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier were married at Newport, Rhode Island. They had three children—Caroline; John, Jr. , whom his father called John-John; and Patrick Bouvier, who lived but a few days.Kennedy missed being nominated for vice-president by a few votes in 1956. But he gained an introduction to millions of Americans who watched the Chicago Democratic Convention on television. When he decided to run for president in1960, his name was widely known. Many thought that his religion and his youthful appearance would handicap him. Kennedy faced the religion issue frankly. He declared his firm belief in the separation of church and state. Hiswealth enabled him to assemble a staff and to get around the country in a private plane.Kennedy’s four television debates with Republican candidate, Richard M. Nixon, were a highlight of the 1960 campaign. The debates probably were important in Kennedy’s close victory electoral votes to 219 for Nixon. The popular vote was breathtakingly close Kennedy received only18,574 more votes than Nixon--a fraction of 1 precent of the total vote. (excerpts from the New Book of Knowledge)C. AssasinationIn November 1963, President Kennedy journeyed to Texas for a speech-making tour. In Dallas on November 22, he and his wife were cheered enthusiastically as their open car passed through the streets. Suddenly, at 12"30 in the after-noon, an assassin fired several shots, striking the president twice, in the base of the neck and the head, and seriously wounding John Connally, the governor of Texas, who was riding with the Kennedys. The president was rushed to Park-land Memorial Hospital, where he was pronounced dead about a' half hour later. Within two hours, Vice President Johnson took the oath as president. On November 24, amid national and worldwide mourning, the President’s body lay in state on the rotunda of the U. S. Capitol. The next day, leaders of 92 nations attended the state funeral, and a million persons lined the route as a horsedrawn caisson bore the body to St. Matthew’s Cathedral for a requiem mass. While millions of Americans watched the ceremonies on television, the president was buried on an open slope in Arlington National Cemetry. There an eternal flame, lighted by his wife, marks the grave.On the day of the assasination, the police arrested Lee Harvey Oswald, a 24-year-old ex-marine, for the president’s murder. Oswald, who had lived for a time in the Soviet Union, killed Dallas policeman J. D. Tippit while resisting at-rest. Two days later, in the station, Oswald himself was basement of the Dallas police fatally shot by Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner. On November 29, President Johnson appointed a seven-member commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren, to conduct a thorough investigation of the assassination and report to the nation. The commission’s report made public on Sept. 27, 1964, held that Oswald fired the shots that killed the president. Further, to allay suspicions that the murder was a conspiratorial plot, it stated that the committee "found no evidence" that either Oswald or Ruby "was part of any conspiracy, domestic or foreign, to assassinate President Kennedy".Ⅱ. 1. Kennedy thinks the world is different now because man has made great progress in science and technology and has not only the power (scientific farming, speedy transportation, mass production, etc. ) to abolish poverty, but also the power(missiles,H_bombs,etc.)to destroy all forms of human life.I agree with him.2.According to Kennedy,the belief still at issue around the globe is the belief that all man are created equal and God has given them certain inalienable rights which no state or ruler can take away from them.3.Kennedy considers as friends:a)the old allies of the U.S.,such as Britain,Canada,Australia,New Zealand and the western European countries;b) the countries in South America and;c)many of the developing countries in Asia and Africa that rely on U.S.aid.He considers all socialist countries as foes(all that time the socialist camp headed by the Soviet Union)and those developing countries preparing to take the socialist road.4.Britain,Canada,Australia,New Zealand.and in a wider sense one may also includeFrance.5.Many new nations were born after World WarⅡ.especially in Africa.In 1 960 alone,just one year before Kennedy’s inaugural speech,the following countries in Africa declared their independence:The Republic of Cen—tral Africa,The Republic of Chad,The Republic of Da-homey,The People’s Republic of the Congo。

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