Unit 13 Marriage课文翻译综合教程四

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Unit 13 Marriage Words and Expressions综合教程四

Unit 13 Marriage Words and Expressions综合教程四

UNIT 13 MARRIAGEWords and Expressionsbeset:v.(of a problem or difficulty) trouble (sb. or sth.) persistentlye.g.problems besetting the countryThe maintenance of an effective incomes policy is beset with problems. Collocation:be beset with/bySynonym:afflicte.g. A nightmare afflicts me from time to time.Unemployment afflicts 1.2 million workers in that country.rosy:a.likely to be satisfactory and very successful or enjoyablee.g.rosy prospectsa rosy viewSynonym:hopeful, promisingIdiom:Everything in the garden is rosy.样样称心如意。

/ 一切都满意。

/ 事事如意。

illusion:n. a false idea or belief, esp. about sb. or about a situatione.g.He could no longer distinguish between illusion and reality.It is time for them to cast aside their illusions.Collocation:be under no illusions about sth.have/cherish/entertain/hold illusions about sth.Derivation:illusionary a.e.g.illusionary stage effectsSynonym: vision, delusion, fantasy, misconceptioncynical:a.skepticale.g. a cynical view/smileHe was getting harder and more cynical about life.Derivation:cynicism n.crude: a.rude and offensivee.g. a crude remark/jokecrude interference in another country’s internal affairsthe crude behaviour of schoolchildrenSynonym:vulgarDerivation:crudely ad.crudity n.e.g.The crudity of her language shocked him.reverent: a.showing great respect and admiratione.g. a reverent silencefile past the tomb in a reverent mannergive reverent attention to the sermonSynonym:respectful, adoringDerivation:reverently ad.reverence n.e.g.The crowd knelt in reverence and worshipped.The younger generation lack reverence.refrain:n.(in Paragraph 2) a regularly recurring phrase or verse, esp. at the end of each stanza or division of a poem or song; chorus vigorous and glowingv.(in Paragraph 4) stop oneself from doing sth., esp. sth. that one wants to do Collocation:refrain from (doing) sth.e.g.refrain from laughing/tearsHe has refrained from criticizing the government in public.green: a.young and lacking experiencee.g. a green handThe new trainees are still very green.Antonym: experienced, mature, versedtipsy:a.slightly drunke.g.The wine had made Barton a trifle tipsy.Synonym:tiddlyAntonym: soberrose-coloured:a. used in reference to a naively optimistic or idealistic viewpointe.g. a rose-coloured talk/plana rose-coloured vision of the worldSynonym:rose-tintedreputed:a.generally thought to be sth. or to have done sth., although this is not certain e.g. a man reputed to have worked miraclesHe is the reputed writer of the two epic poems.Synonym:supposedDerivation:reputedly ad.e.g.events that reputedly took place thousands of years agoReputedly, he is very dangerous.henpecked: a. dominated by one’s wifee.g. A henpecked husband always gives in to his wife.repent:v.feel regret or sorrow about one’s wrongdoing or sine.g.repent one’s crimes before a priestBitterly did we repent our decision.Collocation:repent of sth.; repent bitterly; come to repentDerivation:repentance n.e.g.He shows no sign of repentance.repentant a.e.g.She was not in the least repentant.caustic:a.critical in a bitter or sarcastic waye.g.caustic comments/wita caustic tongueSome caustic things have been written about media stars.Collocation:be caustic aboutSynonym: biting, acidscribble: v.write sth. quickly and untidilye.g. I scribbled his phone number in my address book.He scribbled down our names.Word formation:“scrib-” means “to write”e.g. describe, inscribe, prescribe, subscribe, transcribe, postscript, scripturedecoy:v.lure (a person or animal) away from their intended course, typically into a trap e.g.They decoyed him into a dark street.decoy sb. away from the houseSynonym:lure, enticee.g.The child was lured into a car but managed to escape.The bargain prices are expected to entice customers away from other stores. Collocation:decoy intopious: a.having or showing a deep respect for God and religione.g.pious acts/utterancesMrs. Smith was a very pious woman who attended church services regularly. Antonym:impious, profane, undutifulprolong: v. make sth. last longere.g.prolong a visitprolong one’s stay in LondonAll the time people are seeking to prolong life.The operation could prolong his life by two or three years.Synonym:lengthen, extendDerivation:prolongation n.prolonged a.motive: n. a reason for doing sth.e.g.be proper in motiveHe says that he is doing this to help me, but I suspect an ulterior motive. Collocation:motive for sth.ulterior motiveDerivation:motiveless a.e.g. an apparently motiveless murder/attackenviable:a.so desirable as to arouse envye.g.He is in the enviable position of having two job offers to choose from.She learned to speak foreign languages with enviable fluency.Synonym: admirableComparison:enviable & admirablee.g. He has earned himself an enviable position in the bank.Her dedication to her work was admirable.aesthete:n. a person who has a love and understanding of art and beautiful things e.g.Nobody will deny that Wilde is an outstanding aesthete.Derivation:aesthetic a.e.g.an aesthetic appreciation of the landscapeaesthetically ad.e.g.aesthetically pleasing colour combinationsaesthetics n.e.g.the relationship between aesthetics and translationimaginary:a.existing only in your mind or imaginatione.g.imaginary fears/threatsThe story is wholly imaginary.Comparison:imaginary & imaginableimaginary: hypothetical, existing only in one’s mind and not in real lifee.g.The equator is an imaginary line around the earth.imaginable: possible to imaginee.g.These technological developments were hardly imaginable 30 years ago. Blank filling:Even in the ____ danger, we should save the injured by every ____ means. Answer: imaginary, imaginable即使是在虚构的危险当中,我们也应该尽一切可能抢救伤员。

A4 新标准大学英语综合教程4课文翻译1-10单元

A4 新标准大学英语综合教程4课文翻译1-10单元

Unit 1Active reading (1)大学毕业找工作的第一要义:别躺在沙发上做梦今年夏天,超过65万的大学生毕业离校,其中有许多人根本不知道怎么找工作。

在当今金融危机的背景下,做父母的该如何激励他们?七月,你看着21岁英俊的儿子穿上学士袍,戴上四方帽,骄傲地握着优等学士学位证书,拍毕业照。

这时,记忆中每年支付几千英镑,好让儿子吃好、能偶尔参加聚会的印象开始消退。

但现在,你又不得不再考虑钱的问题。

等到暑假快要结束,全国各地的学生正在为新学期做准备的时候,你发现大学毕业的儿子还歪躺在沙发上看电视。

他只是偶尔走开去发短信,浏览社交网站Facebook,去酒吧喝酒。

这位前“千禧一代”的后裔一夜之间变成了“哼哼一代”的成员。

他能找到工作吗?这就是成千上万家庭所面临的景象:今年夏天,超过65万大学生毕业,在当今金融危机的背景下他们中的大多数人不知道自己下一步该做什么。

父母只会唠叨,而儿女们则毫无缘由地变成了叛逆者,他们知道自己该找份工作,但却不知道如何去找。

来自米德尔塞克斯郡的杰克·古德温今年夏天从诺丁汉大学政治学系毕业,获得二级一等荣誉学士学位。

他走进大学就业服务中心,又径直走了出来,因为他看见很多人在那里排长队。

跟他一起住的另外5个男孩也都跟他一样,进去又出来了。

找工作的压力不大,虽然他所认识的大多数女生都有更明确的计划。

他说:“我申请政治学研究工作,但被拒了。

他们给的年薪是1万8千镑,交完房租后所剩无几,也就够买一罐煮豆子,可他们还要有研究经历或硕士学位的人。

然后我又申请了公务员速升计划,并通过了笔试。

但在面试时,他们说我‘太冷漠’了,谈吐‘太像专家治国论者’。

我觉得自己不可能那样,但我显然就是那样的。

”打那以后他整个夏天都在“躲”。

他能够轻松复述《交通警察》中的若干片段,他白天看电视的时间太多,已经到了影响健康的地步。

跟朋友谈自己漫无目标的日子时,他才发现他们的处境和自己的并没有两样。

Unit 13 Marriage习题答案综合教程四

Unit 13 Marriage习题答案综合教程四

Unit 13 MarriageKey to the ExercisesText comprehensionI. Decide which of the following best states the author's purpose of writing.BJudge, according to the text, whether the following statements are true or false. II.T (Refer to Paragraph 1. The conventional people didn't have the falsely optimistic 1. enthusiastic their which easy, can be seen from expectation that marriage would be response to the Don't advice which Punch gave to those about to marry.)of horrors the nineteenth century, the said F (Refer to Paragraph 2. It is that in 2. rare, there still were songs, though marriage were depicted especially cruelly, but occasionally sung about happily married people, which could bring respectful silence to the drunken husbands. )that would only say here 4. It is indicated that the clergy F 3. (Refer to Paragraph marriage was made in Heaven, but it wouldn't necessarily end in Heaven, too.)4. T (Refer to Paragraph 7. Dr. Johnson's quote shows that he believes that marriage is not something natural for man and woman, so however they try, it is still hardly enough to keep them together.)5. T (Refer to Paragraph 8, which tells us that almost everybody seems to have painted the troubles of marriage in the darkest colours. And it is also mentioned that in modern times nearly everybody, single or married, is imagined to be unhappy.)6. T (Refer to Paragraph 9, which argues that, though it is believed that the ostrich can do them sand, in the actually many of his never escape pursuers by burying his head advisable will the difficulties be the this survive by practice. It suggests that ignoring practice for all the married people.)Answer the following questions. III.Refer to Paragraph 1. By denying the existence of the conventional people as depicted 1. in Bertrand Russell's quotation who like to pretend that difficulties in regard to marriage that agrees this to show that everyone in world the are a new thing, author intends marriage is difficult, from as early as the beginning of human society to the present day. Refer to Paragraph 2. According to the songs sung in music-halls, marriage was like a 2. and twin sister by couple where the married were constantly troubled the wife's hell mother.Refer to Paragraphs 2?. The humour in comic papers, songs in music-halls, and plays 3. Thenmarriage. of situation horrible that illustrate to examples all are novels andquotations of reputed philosophers, writers, scientists and essayists are used to prove that even the wise painted marriage in the darkest colours.4. Refer to Paragraphs 5?. By %unconventional people, the author refers to philosophers, writers and scientists, who have knowledge, talents and wisdom. What they thought of marriage could be derived from the essence of human experience.5. Refer to Paragraph 8. Since social reformers are keen to maintain the positive development of society, of which marriage and family are the most important building stones, they try to convince people to pursue happiness in marriage by recommending changes in their lives; while thinkers and seekers of beauty are more realistic about the chances of achieving what one desires, and they explore the essence of life through meditating over its miseries and difficulties.6. Refer to Paragraph 9. The ostrich, when pursued, hides its head in the sand and believes itself to be unseen. The logic in the ostrich's practice is that one can avoid danger or difficulty by refusing to face it. The author hopes that someday a naturalist will find out the ostrich's logic is valid, so that people can follow this practice by ignoring the difficulties in marriage, or pretending that they never exist. The metaphor is used to propose that, to a difficulty-conscious generation who are too much burdened with the thought of difficulty, it will be advisable to pretend in its non-existence. Otherwise, they will never enjoy the rosy side of marriage. If marriage is really both Heaven and Hell, one will never be in Heaven because of his fear of Hell.IV. Explain in your own words the following sentences.1.From the way they enthusiastically received the Don't advice given in the magazine Punch, we can tell that they adopted a sceptical attitude to marriage.2. Although the humor might sound offensively rude, it was readily accepted by peoplein the Victorian era.3. The marriage state, whether there is love involved or not, is a combination of the happiness and misery we may encounter in life.Structural analysis of the textThe text falls into three parts: in Part 1 (Paragraph 1), the author, after quoting Russell on the subject, puts forward his own argument that difficulties in regard to marriage have been an old issue for centuries. In Part 2 (Paragraphs 2?), the author analyzes the roots of such difficulties by listing quotations from famous literary works and famous people. In Part 3 (Paragraphs 8?), the author assigns the causes of unhappy marriages to the excessive consciousness of difficulties in human beings, and encourages people to face the difficulties in marriage bravely.Rhetorical features of the text卼he reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, ...Burton is far from encouraging!Pepys scribbled in his diary ?The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss.The sentimental and optimistic Steele ?Dr. Johnson, ?devoted husband though he was, ?Vocabulary exercisesI. Explain the underlined part in each sentence in your own words. inexperienced; unsophisticated; immature1.2. troubled3. welcome; response4. rude; harsh5. calamity; disaster6. lengthen in durationII. Fill in the blank in each sentence with a word or phrase from the box in its appropriate form.1. standing2. make answer to3. under no illusions4. In regard to5. beset6. went home to his heart7. prolong8. hithertoFill in the blanks with the appropriate forms of the given words. III.2. exaggeration 1. comedian4. repentant 3. reputation6. desirous5. poker8. imaginary7. civilizationssentence the replace underlined each part in can phrase word Choose IV. the or that without changing its original meaning.1. D2. C 4. B3. A8. D5. B6. A7. CGive a synonym or an antonym of the word underlined in each sentence in the sense V.it is used.1.Synonym: ordinary (commonplace, conformist)2. Antonym: impious (profane, undutiful)3. Synonym: withhold (abstain, restrain)4. Synonym: write (scrawl, scrabble)5. Synonym: sarcastic (biting, scornful)6. Antonym: dispassionate (unemotional, hard-hearted, pragmatic)7. Synonym: restriction (control, limit)8. Antonym: real (genuine, factual)VI. Explain the meaning of the underlined part in each sentence.1. discontinuation2. form3. economically4. wrong5. in an awkward position6. professionalGrammar exercisesI.Explain the meaning of the words in italics in the following sentences.1. result2. enumeration3. addition4. exemplification5. contrast6. concession8. addition7. contrastComplete the sentences with appropriate conjuncts in the box. II.1. above all2. still3. all in all4. moreover5. However6. in other words7. On the other hand8. RatherIII. Correct the errors in the following sentences.You see lots of trees in Oregon. Yet, there are few in Arizona.1.We took the extra class. As a result, we understood the material completely. 2.3. I saw the movie although I wouldn't recommend it to most people.4. Crystal glasses are very fragile. In contrast, plastic glasses are stronger.5. If he tells me how to get there, I will follow his directions.John has always been a top math student. However, he failed history this quarter. 6.7. A planned economy does not produce new jobs. On the contrary, the existingempirical data strongly argues that the exact opposite occurs.8. Malaysia and Indonesia rely on open markets for forest and fishery products. Conversely, some Asian countries are highly protectionist.IV. Choose the most appropriate contrastive sentence connector for each sentencebelow.1. However2. Conversely3. Alternatively4. Nevertheless5. By contrast6. On the other handSelect the correct word from those given in brackets. V.1. clean2. cleanly4. highly 3. high6. directly 5. direct8. sharply 7. sharpMake sentences of your own after the sentences given below, keeping the underlined VI. parts in your sentences.(Reference version)the cure, of stopping hope at least the possibility, if not the of have 1.Some drugsspread of the virus.2. On the whole, I think it was quite right to act as he did.Translation exercisesI. Translate the following sentences into Chinese.在哪里能见到这些像常人一样思考或者假装像常人一1.我忍不住想问,当我读这句话时,样思考的常人。

综合教程4Unit1-Unit4课文翻译

综合教程4Unit1-Unit4课文翻译

Unit 1Never Give In, Never, Never, NeverWinston ChurchillAlmost a year has passed since I came down here at your Head Master's kind invitation in order to cheer myself and cheer the hearts of a few of my friends by singing some of our own songs. The ten months that have passed have seen very terrible catastrophic events in the world—ups and downs, misfortunes—but can anyone sitting here this afternoon, this October afternoon, not feel deeply thankful for what has happened in the time that has passed and for the very great improvement in the position of our country and of our home? Why, when I was here last time we were quite alone, desperately alone, and we had been so for five or six months. We were poorly armed. We are not so poorly armed today; but then we were very poorly armed. We had the unmeasured menace of the enemy and their air attack still beating upon us, and you yourselves had had experience of this attack; and I expect you are beginning to feel impatient that there has been this long lull with nothing particular turning up!But we must learn to be equally good at what is short and sharp and what is long and tough. It is generally said that the British are often better at the last. They do not expect to move from crisis to crisis; they do not always expect that each day will bring up some noble chance of war; but when they very slowly make up their minds that the thing has to be done and the job put through and finished, then, even if it takes months—if it takes years—they do it.Another lesson I think we may take, just throwing our minds back to our meeting here ten months ago and now, is that appearances are often very deceptive, and as Kipling well says, we must "... meet with Triumph and Disaster. And treat those two impostors just the same."You cannot tell from appearances how things will go. Sometimes imagination makes things out far worse than they are; yet without imagination not much can be done. Those people who are imaginative see many more dangers than perhaps exist; certainly many more will happen; but then they must also pray to be given that extra courage to carry this far-reaching imagination. But for everyone, surely, what we have gone through in this period—I am addressing myself to the school—surely from this period of ten months this is the lesson: never give in, never give in, never, never, never, never—in nothing, great or small, large or petty—never give in except to convictions of honour and goodsense. Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. We stood all alone a year ago, and to many countries it seemed that our account was closed, we were finished. All this tradition of ours, our songs, our school history, this part of the history of this country, were gone and finished and liquidated.Very different is the mood today. Britain, other nations thought, had drawn a sponge across her slate. But instead our country stood in the gap. There was no flinching and no thought of giving in; and by what seemed almost a miracle to those outside these islands, though we ourselves never doubted it, we now find ourselves in a position where I say that we can be sure that we have only to persevere to conquer.You sang here a verse of a school song: you sang that extra verse written in my honour, which I was very greatly complimented by and which you have repeated today. But there is one word in it I want to alter—I wanted to do so last year, but I did not venture to. It is the line: "Not less we praise in darker days."I have obtained the Head Master's permission to alter darker to sterner. "Not less we praise in sterner days."Do not let us speak of darker days: let us speak rather of sterner days. These are not dark days; these are great days—the greatest days our country has ever lived; and we must all thank God that we have been allowed, each of us according to our stations, to play a part in making these days memorable in the history of our race.绝不屈服,绝不,绝不,绝不温斯顿·丘吉尔1 将近一年前,应贵校校长盛情邀请,我来到这里唱了几首我们自己的歌曲,既为自己加油,也为一些朋友打气。

综合英语第四册Unit 13 Marriage教案

综合英语第四册Unit 13 Marriage教案

教案
2019-2020学年第2学期
系部(中心)外语系课程名称基础英语学时数6节/周专业班级英教181 主讲教师
教案
编号:13
参考书目:
[1] 胡文仲、祝钰、马元曦、李贺.《大学英语》.北京:外语教学与研究出版社,1997
[2] L.G. Alexander, He Qishen. New Concept English.北京:外语教学与研究出版
社,1997
[3] 胡文仲、祝钰、马元曦、李贺.《大学英语教程》(Book I.II).北京:外语教学与研究出版社,2001
[4] 王佐良、祝珏、李品伟、高厚主编.《欧洲文化入门》.北京:外语教学与研究出版社,2004
[5] 黄源深,虞苏美等主编.《综合英语教程》(1-4册).北京:高等教育出版社,1998
[6] 杨立民主编.《现代大学英语》.北京:外语教学研究出版社,2001
[7] 李观仪主编.《新编英语教程》.上海:上海外语教育出版社,1999
[8] 高等学校外语专业教学指导委员会英语组编.《高等学校英语专业英语教学大纲》. 北京:外语教学研究出版社,2000
[9] Jack C. Richards.《剑桥国际英语教程》.北京:外语教学研究出版社,2000
[10] 《朗文当代英语词典》.北京:外语教学研究出版社,1995
[11] 《柯林斯高阶英语学习词典》.北京:中国对外翻译出版公司,2001。

新世纪大学英语综合教程4课文翻译

新世纪大学英语综合教程4课文翻译

新世纪大学英语综合教程4课文翻译
以下是新世纪大学英语综合教程4第一课的课文翻译:
毕业典礼
在某个夏季的一天,我走进了一个双层楼的建筑,充满了兴奋和期待。

十年的学习和努力终于让我获得学士学位,现在我将参加毕业典礼,接受我在大学里所取得的成就。

随着人们进入礼堂,我的心情变得愈发激动。

我坐在座位上,看着舞台上整齐排列的空座位,想象着不久后将会有人出现在这里。

每个座位上都摆放着一个毕业帽,象征着我们的成长和蜕变。

典礼开始了。

校长激动地致辞,表达着对我们的鼓励和祝福。

我们起立鼓掌,感受着他的话语在空气中回响。

然后,每一个系的系主任开始挨个宣布毕业生的名字。

当我的名字被宣布时,我站起来、向舞台走去,在校长手中接过我的毕业证书。

我感到一种骄傲和荣耀充满了整个身体。

毕业典礼结束后,我和我的同学们聚在一起,留下一些珍贵的瞬间。

我们互相祝贺并拍照留念,记录下这个重要的时刻。

在我们离开校园的前夜,我们聚在一起举行了一个盛大的庆祝晚会,庆祝我们的毕业与新的人生阶段的到来。

这个毕业典礼将会永远留在我的记忆中。

我明白,在大学的这段时光里我不仅仅是接受了知识,我也收获了成长和友谊。


要感谢我的导师和朋友们,在这段旅程中他们给予了我无尽的支持和鼓励。

现在,我准备迎接新的挑战,展开人生的下一章。

(完整版)Unit 13 Marriage课文翻译综合教程四

(完整版)Unit 13 Marriage课文翻译综合教程四

Unit 13MarriageRobert Lynd1“Conventional people,” says Mr. Bertrand Russell, “like to pretend that difficulties in regard to marriage are a new thing.” I could not help wondering, as I read this sentence, where one can meet these conventional people who think, or pretend to think, as conventional people do. I have known hundreds of conventional people, and I cannot remember one of them who thought the things conventional people seem to think. They were all, for example, convinced that marriage was a state beset with difficulties, and that these difficulties were as old, if not as the hills, at least as the day on which Adam lost a rib and gained a wife. A younger generation of conventional people has grown up in recent years, and it may be that they have a rosier conception of marriage than their ancestors; but the conventional people of the Victorian era were under no illusions on the subject.Their cynical attitude to marriage may be gathered from the enthusiastic reception they gave to Punch’s advice to those about to marry -“Don’t.”2I doubt, indeed, whether the horrors of marriage were ever depicted more cruelly than during the conventional nineteenth century. The comic papers and music-halls made the miseries a standing dish. “You can always tell whether a man’s married or single from the way he’s dressed,” said the comedian. “Look at the single man: no buttons on his shirt. Look at the married man: no shirt.” The humour was crude; but it went home to the honest Victorian heart. If marriage were to be judged by the songs conventional people used to sing about it in the music- halls, it would seem a hell mainly populated by twins and leech-like mothers-in-law.The rare experiences of Darby and Joan were, it is true, occasionally hymned, reducing strong men smelling strongly of alcohol to reverent silence; but, on the whole, the audience felt more normal when a comedian came out with an anti- marital refrain such as:O why did I leave my little back roomIn Bloomsbury,Where I could live on a pound a weekIn luxury(I forget the next line).But since I have married Maria,I’ve jumped out of the frying-panInto the blooming fire.3No difficulties? Why, the very nigger-minstrels of my boyhood used to open their performance with a chorus which began:Married! Married! O pity those who’re married.Those who go and take a wife must be very green.4It is possible that the comedians exaggerated, and that Victorian wives were not all viragos with pokers, who beat their tipsy husbands for staying out too late. But at least they and their audiences refrained from painting marriage as an inevitable Paradise. Even the clergy would go no farther than to say that marriages were made in Heaven. That they did not believe that marriage necessarily ended there is shown by the fact that one of them wrote a “best-seller” bearing the title How to Be Happy Though Married.5I doubt, indeed, whether common opinion in any age has ever looked on marriage as an untroubled Paradise. I consulted a dictionary of quotations on the subject and discovered that few of the opinions quoted were rose-coloured. These opinions, it may be objected, are the opinions of unconventional people, but it is also true that they are opinions treasured and kept alive by conventional people. We have the reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, for example, when asked whether it was better to marry or no t: “Whichever you do, you will repent.” We have Montaigne writing: “It happens as one sees in cages. The birds outside despair of ever getting in; those inside are equally desirous of getting out.” Bacon is no more prenuptial with his caustic quotation: “H e was reputed one of the wise men that made answer to the question when a man should marry: ‘A young man not yet; an elder man not at all.’” Burton is far from encouraging! “One was never married, and that’s his hell; another is, and that’s his plague.” Pe pys scribbled in his diary: “Strange to say what delight we married people have to see these poor folk decoyed into our condition.”6The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss.“Marriage,” he declared, “hath in it less of be auty and more of safety than the single life -it hath more care but less danger; it is more merry and more sad; it is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys.” The sentimental and optimistic Steele can do no better than: “The marriage state, with and without the affection suitable to it, is the completest image of Heaven and Hell we are capable of receiving in this life.”7Rousseau denied that a perfect marriage had ever been known. “I have oftenthought,” he wrote, “that if only one could prolong the joy of love in marriage we should have paradise on earth. That is a thing which has never been hitherto.” Dr.Johnson is not quoted in the dictionary; but everyone will remember how, devoted husband though he was, he denied that the state of marriage was natural to man.“Sir,” he declared, “it is so far from being natural for a man and woman to live in a state of marriage that we find all the motives which they have for remaining in that connexion and the restraints which civilised society imposes to prevent separation are hardly sufficient to keep them together."8When one reads the things that have been said about marriage from one generation to another, one cannot but be amazed at the courage with which the young go on marrying. Almost everybody, conventional and unconventional, seems to have painted the troubles of marriage in the darkest colours. So pessimistic were the conventional novelists of the nineteenth century about marriage that they seldom dared to prolong their stories beyond the wedding bells. Married people in plays and novels are seldom enviable, and, as time goes on, they seem to get more and more miserable. Even conventional people nowadays enjoy the story of a thoroughly unhappy marriage. It is only fair to say, however, that in modern times we like to imagine that nearly everybody, single as well as married, is unhappy. As social reformers we are all for happiness, but as thinkers and aesthetes we are on the side of misery.9The truth is that we are a difficulty-conscious generation. Whether or not we make life even more difficult than it would otherwise be by constantly talking about our difficulties I do not know. I sometimes suspect that half our difficulties are imaginary and that if we kept quiet about them they would disappear. Is it quite certain that the ostrich by burying his head in the sand never escapes his pursuers?I look forward to the day when a great naturalist will discover that it is to thispractice that the ostrich owes his survival.婚姻罗伯特·林德1伯特兰·罗素先生说:“凡人百姓喜欢假装说婚姻中遇到的困难是新鲜事。

综合教程4Unit1-Unit4课文翻译.

综合教程4Unit1-Unit4课文翻译.

综合教程4Unit1-Unit4课文翻译.Unit 1Never Give In, Never, Never, NeverWinston ChurchillAlmost a year has passed since I came down here at your Head Master's kind invitation in order to cheer myself and cheer the hearts of a few of my friends by singing some of our own songs. The ten months that have passed have seen very terrible catastrophic events in the world—ups and downs, misfortunes—but can anyone sitting here this afternoon, this October afternoon, not feel deeply thankful for what has happened in the time that has passed and for the very great improvement in the position of our country and of our home? Why, when I was here last time we were quite alone, desperately alone, and we had been so for five or six months. We were poorly armed. We are not so poorly armed today; but then we were very poorly armed. We had the unmeasured menace of the enemy and their air attack still beating upon us, and you yourselves had had experience of this attack; and I expect you are beginning to feel impatient that there has been this long lull with nothing particular turning up!But we must learn to be equally good at what is short and sharp and what is long and tough. It is generally said that the British are often better at the last. They do not expect to move from crisis to crisis; they do not always expect that each day will bring up some noble chance of war; but when they very slowly make up their minds that the thing has to be done and the job put through and finished, then, even if it takes months—if it takes years—they do it.Another lesson I think we may take, just throwing our minds back to our meeting here ten months ago and now, is that appearances are often very deceptive, and as Kipling well says, we must "... meet with Triumph and Disaster. And treat those two impostors just the same."You cannot tell from appearances how things will go. Sometimes imagination makesthings out far worse than they are; yet without imagination not much can be done. Those people who are imaginative see many more dangers than perhaps exist; certainly many more will happen; but then they must also pray to be given that extra courage to carry this far-reaching imagination. But for everyone, surely, what we have gone through in this period—I am addressing myself to the school—surely from this period of ten months this is the lesson: never give in, never give in, never, never, never, never—in nothing, great or small, large or petty—never give in except to convictions of honour and good sense. Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy. We stood all alone a year ago, and to many countries it seemed that our account was closed, we were finished. All this tradition of ours, our songs, our school history, this part of the history of this country, were gone and finished and liquidated.Very different is the mood today. Britain, other nations thought, had drawn a sponge across her slate. But instead our country stood in the gap. There was no flinching and no thought of giving in; and by what seemed almost a miracle to those outside these islands, though we ourselves never doubted it, we now find ourselves in a position where I say that we can be sure that we have only to persevere to conquer.You sang here a verse of a school song: you sang that extra verse written in my honour, which I was very greatly complimented by and which you have repeated today. But there is one word in it I want to alter—I wanted to do so last year, but I did not venture to. It is the line: "Not less we praise in darker days."I have obtained the Head Master's permission to alter darker to sterner. "Not less we praise in sterner days."Do not let us speak of darker days: let us speak rather of sterner days. These are not dark days; these are great days—the greatest days our country has ever lived; and we must all thank God that we have been allowed, each of us according to our stations, to play a part in making these days memorable in the history of our race.绝不屈服,绝不,绝不,绝不温斯顿·丘吉尔1 将近一年前,应贵校校长盛情邀请,我来到这里唱了几首我们自己的歌曲,既为自己加油,也为一些朋友打气。

大学体验英语综合教程4课文翻译和课后翻译

大学体验英语综合教程4课文翻译和课后翻译

Unit 1The Unsung Heroes: What About Working Dads?On our first "date" after our twin daughters were born, my husband and I went to see the movie Toy Story. We enjoyed it, but afterward my husband asked, "Where was the dad?" At first, it seemed petty to criticize an entertaining family movie because of one small point. The more I thought about it, however, the more glaring an omission it seemed. Not only was dad not around, he wasn't even mentioned —despite the fact that there was a baby in the family, so dad couldn't have been that long gone. It was as if the presence— or absence — of a father is a minor detail, not even requiring an explanation.This is only one example of the media trend toward marginalizing fathers, which mirrors enormous social changes in the United States. David Blankenhorn, in his book Fatherless America, refers to this trend as the "unnecessary father" concept. We are bombarded by stories about the struggles of working mothers (as opposed to non-working mothers, I suppose). Meanwhile, a high proportion of media stories about fathers focus on abusive husbands or deadbeat dads. It seems that the only time fathers merit attention is when they are criticized for not helping enough with the housework (a claim that I find dubious anyway, because the definition of "housework" rarely includes cleaning the gutters, changing the oil in the car or other jobs typically done by men) or when they die. When Mr. Blankenhorn surveyed fathers about the meaning of the term "good family man," many responded that it was a phrase they only heard at funerals.One exception to the "unnecessary father" syndrome is the glowing media attention that at-home dads have received. I do not mean to imply that at-home dads do not deserve support for making this commitment. I only mean to point out the double standard at work when at-home dads are applauded while at-home mothers and breadwinner fathers are given little, if any, cultural recognition.The very language we use to discuss men's roles (i.e., deadbeat dads) shows a lack of appreciation for the majority of men who quietly yet proudly fulfill their family responsibilities. We almost never hear the term "working father," and it is rare that calls for more workplace flexibility are considered to be for men as much as for women. Our society acts as if family obligations are not as important to fathers as they are to mothers —as if career satisfaction is what a man's life is all about. Even more insulting is the recent media trend of regarding at-home wives as "status symbols" —like an expensive car —flaunted by the supposedly few men who can afford such a luxury. The implication is that men with at-home wives have it easier than those whose wives work outside the home because they have the "luxury" of a full-time housekeeper. In reality, however, the men who are the sole wage earners for their families suffer a lot of stresses. The loss of a job — or even the threat of that happening — is obviously much more difficult when that job is the sole source of income for a family. By the same token, sole wage earners have less flexibility when it comes to leaving unsatisfying careers because of the loss of income such a job change entails. In addition, many husbands work overtime or second jobs to make more money needed for their families. For these men, it is the family that the job supportsthat makes it all worthwhile. It is the belief that having a mother at home is important to the children, which makes so many men gladly take on the burden of being a sole wage earner.Today, there is widespread agreement among researchers that the absence of fathers from households causes serious problems for children and, consequently, for society at large. Yet, rather than holding up "ordinary" fathers as positive role models for the dads of tomorrow, too often society has thrown up its hands and decided that traditional fatherhood is at best obsolete and at worst dangerously reactionary. This has left many men questioning the value of their role as fathers.As a society, we need to realize that fathers are just as important to children as mothers are —not only for financial support, but for emotional support, education and discipline as well. It is not enough for us merely to recognize that fatherlessness is a problem — to stand beside the grave and mourn the loss of the "good family man" and then try to find someone to replace him (ask anyone who has lost a father to death if that is possible). We must acknowledge how we have devalued fatherhood and work to show men how necessary, how important they are in their children's lives.Those fathers who strive to be good family men by being there every day to love and support their families —those unsung heroes —need our recognition and our thanks for all they do. Because they deserve it无名英雄:职业父亲意味着什么?在我们的孪生女儿出生后的第一次"约会”时,我和丈夫一起去看了一部名为《玩具故事》的电影。

UnitMarriage习题答案综合教程四

UnitMarriage习题答案综合教程四

UnitMarriage习题答案综合教程四UnitMarriage 习题答案综合教程四Document number [980KGB-6898YT-769T8CB-246UT-18GG08]that marriage is difficult, from as early as the beginning of human society to the present day.2.Refer to Paragraph 2. According to the songs sung in music- halls, marriage was likea hell where the married couple were constantly troubled by the wife's twin sister and mother.3.Refer to Paragraphs 2?. The humour in comic papers, songs in music-halls, and plays and novels are all examples to illustrate that horrible situation of marriage. Then quotations of reputed philosophers, writers, scientists and essayists are used to prove that even the wise painted marriage in the darkest colours.4.Refer to Paragraphs 5?. By z unconvent ional people, " the author refers to philosophers, writers and scientists, who have knowledge, talents and wisdom. What they thought of marriage could be derived from the essence of human experience.5.Refer to Paragraph 8. Since social reformers are keen to maintain the positive development of society, of which marriage and family are the most important building stones, they try to convince people to pursue happiness in marriage by recommending changes in their lives; while thinkers and seekers of beauty are more realistic about the chances of achieving what one desires, and they explore the essence of life through meditating over its miseries and difficulties.6.Refer to Paragraph 9. The ostrich, when pursued, hides its headin the sand and believes itself to be unseen. The logic in the ostrich's practice is that one can avoid danger or difficulty by refusing to face it. The author hopes that someday a naturalist will find out the ostrich's logic is valid, so that people can follow this practice by ignoring the difficulties in marriage, or pretending that they never exist. The metaphor is used to propose that, to a difficulty-conscious generation who are too thought of difficulty, it will be advisable existence. Otherwise, they will never enjoy If marriage is really both Heaven and Hell, Heaven because of his fear of Hell.IV. Explain in your own words the following sentences.1.From the way they enthusiastically received the "Don't" advice given in the magazine Punch, we can tell that they adopted a sceptical attitude to marriage. much burdened with the to pretend in its non- the rosy side of marriage, one will never be inhumor might sound offensively rude, it was readily in the Victorian era. state, whether there is happiness and misery we Structural analysis of the textThe text falls into three parts : in Part 1 after quoting Russell on the subject, puts that difficulties in regard to marriage have been an old issue for centuries. In Part 2 (Paragraphs 2?), the author analyzes the roots of such difficulties by listing quotations from famous literary works and famous people. In Part 3 (Paragraphs 8?), the author assigns the causes of unhappy marriages to the excessive consciousness of difficulties in human beings, and encourages people to face the difficulties in marriage bravely.Rhetorical features of the text1& he reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, Burton isfar from encouraging! Pepys scribbled in his diary ?The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss.The sentimental and optimistic Steele ?Dr. Johnson, ?devoted husband though he was, ? Vocabulary exercisesI.Explain the underlined part in each sentence in your own words. 1.inexperienced; unsophisticated; immature 2.troubled 3. welcome; response4. rude: harsh5. calamity; disaster6. lengthen in durationII. Fill in the blank in each sentence with a word or phrase fromthe box in its appropriate form.1. standing2. make answer to3. under no illusions4. In regard to5. beset6. went home to his heart 2.Although the accepted by people 3. The marriage combination of thelove involved or not, is a mayencounter in life. (Paragraph 1), the author, forward his own argument。

全新版大学英语综合教程4课文翻译

全新版大学英语综合教程4课文翻译

全新版大学英语综合教程4课文翻译.doc本文提供大学英语综合教程4中所有课文的翻译,方便学生学习。

Unit 1Lesson 1 A Social Survey 社会调查社会学家经常进行社会调查以了解人们对各种社会问题的看法和态度。

这篇短文来自一个调查,统计了人们对学生选择大学专业的看法。

在此调查中,人们倾向于支持大学生选择他们所热衷和擅长的专业。

Lesson 2 The Search for Our Human Ancestors 人类祖先的搜索由于人类进化的历史悠久而复杂,因此研究人类进化历史是一个充满挑战和充满机遇的领域。

这篇文章介绍了一些人类祖先的发现和研究,包括露西、哈耶克和阿尔迪。

这些发现为我们提供了更深入的了解人类进化的历史和过程。

Lesson 3 Cultural Differences and Communication 文化差异和交流文化差异是人类在不同地理和历史条件下演变而来的独特特征。

这篇文章探讨了不同文化背景下的交流问题,包括直率性、表达方式、沟通方式和语言障碍。

正确认识和理解文化差异是促进跨文化交流的关键。

Unit 2Lesson 1 A World Language 一种世界语言英语是当今世界上最广泛使用的语言之一。

这篇文章介绍了英语的历史和地位,以及它在全球化时代中的重要性。

同时,这篇文章还提到了一些争议和挑战,如英语在文化多样性和语言歧视方面的影响。

Lesson 2 Cultural Identity 文化认同文化认同是一个人感到自己属于哪个文化群体的意识和认知。

这篇文章讨论了文化认同的重要性、影响因素和表现形式。

同时,文化认同也是如今世界上一些热点问题的根源,如移民、文化冲突和文化多样性。

Lesson 3 Economic Development 经济发展经济发展是国家和地区发展的一个核心因素。

这篇文章介绍了经济发展的重要性、影响因素和不同国家的经济体系。

同时,也提到了一些与经济发展相关的挑战和问题,如全球化、环境问题和贫困问题。

UnitMarriage习题答案综合教程四

UnitMarriage习题答案综合教程四

UnitMarriage 习题答案综合教程四Document number [980KGB-6898YT-769T8CB-246UT-18GG08]that marriage is difficult, from as early as the beginning of human society to the present day.2.Refer to Paragraph 2. According to the songs sung in music- halls, marriage was likea hell where the married couple were constantly troubled by the wife's twin sister and mother.3.Refer to Paragraphs 2?. The humour in comic papers, songs in music-halls, and plays and novels are all examples to illustrate that horrible situation of marriage. Then quotations of reputed philosophers, writers, scientists and essayists are used to prove that even the wise painted marriage in the darkest colours.4.Refer to Paragraphs 5?. By z unconvent ional people, " the author refers to philosophers, writers and scientists, who have knowledge, talents and wisdom. What they thought of marriage could be derived from the essence of human experience.5.Refer to Paragraph 8. Since social reformers are keen to maintain the positive development of society, of which marriage and family are the most important building stones, they try to convince people to pursue happiness in marriage by recommending changes in their lives; while thinkers and seekers of beauty are more realistic about the chances of achieving what one desires, and they explore the essence of life through meditating over its miseries and difficulties.6.Refer to Paragraph 9. The ostrich, when pursued, hides its headin the sand and believes itself to be unseen. The logic in the ostrich's practice is that one can avoid danger or difficulty by refusing to face it. The author hopes that someday a naturalist will find out the ostrich's logic is valid, so that people can follow this practice by ignoring the difficulties in marriage, or pretending that they never exist. The metaphor is used to propose that, to a difficulty-conscious generation who are too thought of difficulty, it will be advisable existence. Otherwise, they will never enjoy If marriage is really both Heaven andHell, Heaven because of his fear of Hell.IV. Explain in your own words the following sentences.1.From the way they enthusiastically received the "Don't" advice given in the magazine Punch, we can tell that they adopted a sceptical attitude to marriage. much burdened with the to pretend in its non- the rosy side of marriage, one will never be inhumor might sound offensively rude, it was readily in the Victorian era. state, whether there is happiness and misery we Structural analysis of the textThe text falls into three parts : in Part 1 after quoting Russell on the subject, puts that difficulties in regard to marriage have been an old issue for centuries. In Part 2 (Paragraphs 2?), the author analyzes the roots of such difficulties by listing quotations from famous literary works and famous people. In Part 3 (Paragraphs 8?), the author assigns the causes of unhappy marriages to the excessive consciousness of difficulties in human beings, and encourages people to face the difficulties in marriage bravely.Rhetorical features of the text1& he reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, Burton is far from encouraging! Pepys scribbled in his diary ?The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss.The sentimental and optimistic Steele ?Dr. Johnson, ?devoted husband though he was, ? Vocabulary exercisesI.Explain the underlined part in each sentence in your own words. 1.inexperienced; unsophisticated; immature 2.troubled 3. welcome; response4. rude: harsh5. calamity; disaster6. lengthen in durationII. Fill in the blank in each sentence with a word or phrase fromthe box in its appropriate form.1. standing2. make answer to3. under no illusions4. In regard to5. beset6. went home to his heart 2.Although the accepted by people 3. The marriage combination of thelove involved or not, is a mayencounter in life. (Paragraph 1), the author, forward his own argument。

新标准大学英语综合教程4课文翻译1-10单元

新标准大学英语综合教程4课文翻译1-10单元

Unit 1the paragraph into English我认为,选修第二专业并不适合每一位本科生。

我大学本科主修英语专业,大一时就开始辅修经济学了。

无疑,我是班里最用功的学生。

我竭尽全力想同时达到两个不同专业的要求,但还是有不及格的时候。

因为经济学需要良好的数学基础,我不得不花大量时间钻研数学,因而忽略了英语学习。

the paragraph into Englishyou ask me, taking a second major isn’t good for every under graduate. In my freshman year as an English major, I took economics as my minor. By all odds, I was the most hard-working student in my class. But try as I might to meet the requirements of the two different subjects, I still couldn’t do well enough to pas s all the exams. Given that the study of economics required a good command of mathematics, I had to spend so much time on math that I neglected my English.the paragraph into English第二学期,《英国文学》及《宏观经济学》两门课不及格给我敲响了警钟,这可是我一生中第一次考试不及格,这大大打击了我的自信心。

虽然我不是一个容易向命运低头的人,在暑假结束的时候,我还是决定放弃经济学,以免两个专业都难以完成。

当我只需修一个专业的时候,一切似乎又回到了正规。

Unit 13 Marriage课文翻译综合教程四

Unit 13 Marriage课文翻译综合教程四

Unit 13MarriageRobert Lynd1 “Conventional people,” says Mr. Bertrand Russell, “like to pretend thatdifficulties in regard to marriage are a new thing.” I could not help wondering, as I read this sentence, where one can meet these conventional people who think, or pretend to think, as conventional people do. I have known hundreds of conventional people, and I cannot remember one of them who thought the things conventional people seem to think. They were all, for example, convinced that marriage was a state beset with difficulties, and that these difficulties were as old, if not as the hills, at least as the day on which Adam lost a rib and gained a wife. A younger generation of conventional people has grown up in recent years, and it may be that they have a rosier conception of marriage than their ancestors; but the conventional people of the Victorian era were under no illusions on the subject.Their cynical attitude to marriage may be gathered from the enthusiastic reception they gave to Punch’s a dvice to those about to marry -“Don’t.”2 I doubt, indeed, whether the horrors of marriage were ever depicted morecruelly than during the conventional nineteenth century. The comic papers and music-halls made the miseries a standing dish. “You can always tell whether a man’s married or single from the way he’s dressed,” said the comedian. “Look at the single man: no buttons on his shirt. Look at the married man: no shirt.” The humour was crude; but it went home to the honest Victorian heart. If marriage were to be judged by the songs conventional people used to sing about it in the music-halls, it would seem a hell mainly populated by twins and leech-like mothers-in-law. The rare experiences of Darby and Joan were, it is true, occasionally hymned, reducing strong men smelling strongly of alcohol to reverent silence; but, on the whole, the audience felt more normal when a comedian came out with an anti-marital refrain such as:O why did I leave my little back roomIn Bloomsbury,Where I could live on a pound a weekIn luxury(I forget the next line).But since I have married Maria,I’ve jumped out of the frying-panInto the blooming fire.3 No difficulties? Why, the very nigger-minstrels of my boyhood used to opentheir performance with a chorus which began:Married! Married! O pity those who’re married.Those who go and take a wife must be very green.4 It is possible that the comedians exaggerated, and that Victorian wives were notall viragos with pokers, who beat their tipsy husbands for staying out too late. But at least they and their audiences refrained from painting marriage as an inevitable Paradise. Even the clergy would go no farther than to say that marriages were made in Heaven. That they did not believe that marriage necessarily ended there is shown by the fact that one of them wrote a “best-seller” bearing the title How to Be Happy Though Married.5 I doubt, indeed, whether common opinion in any age has ever looked onmarriage as an untroubled Paradise. I consulted a dictionary of quotations on the subject and discovered that few of the opinions quoted were rose-coloured. These opinions, it may be objected, are the opinions of unconventional people, but it is also true that they are opinions treasured and kept alive by conventional people. We have the reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, for example, when asked whether it was better to marry or not: “Whichever you do, you will repent.” We have Montaigne writing: “It happens as one sees in cages. The birds outside despair of ever getting in; those inside are equally desirous of getting out.” Bacon is no more prenuptial with his caustic quotation: “He was reputed one of the wise men that made answer to the question when a man should marry: ‘A young man not ye t; an elder man not at all.’” Burton is far from encouraging! “One was never married, and that’s his hell; another is, and that’s his plague.” Pepys scribbled in his diary: “Strange to say what delight we married people have to see these poor folk decoyed into our condition.”6 The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss.“Marriage,” he declared, “hath in it less of beauty and more of safety than the single life -it hath more care but less danger; it is more merry and more sad; it is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys.” The sentimental and optimistic Steele can do no better than: “The marriage state, with and without the affection suitable to it, is the complet est image of Heaven and Hell we are capable of receiving in this life.”7 Rousseau denied that a perfect marriage had ever been known. “I have oftenthought,” he wrote, “that if only one could prolong the joy of love in marriage we should have parad ise on earth. That is a thing which has never been hitherto.” Dr.Johnson is not quoted in the dictionary; but everyone will remember how, devoted husband though he was, he denied that the state of marriage was natural to man.“Sir,” he declared, “it is so far from being natural for a man and woman to live in a state of marriage that we find all the motives which they have for remaining in that connexion and the restraints which civilised society imposes to prevent separation are hardly sufficient to keep them together."8 When one reads the things that have been said about marriage from onegeneration to another, one cannot but be amazed at the courage with which the young go on marrying. Almost everybody, conventional and unconventional, seems to have painted the troubles of marriage in the darkest colours. So pessimistic were the conventional novelists of the nineteenth century about marriage that they seldom dared to prolong their stories beyond the wedding bells. Married people in plays and novels are seldom enviable, and, as time goes on, they seem to get more and more miserable. Even conventional people nowadays enjoy the story of a thoroughly unhappy marriage. It is only fair to say, however, that in modern times we like to imagine that nearly everybody, single as well as married, is unhappy. As social reformers we are all for happiness, but as thinkers and aesthetes we are on the side of misery.9 The truth is that we are a difficulty-conscious generation. Whether or not wemake life even more difficult than it would otherwise be by constantly talking about our difficulties I do not know. I sometimes suspect that half our difficulties are imaginary and that if we kept quiet about them they would disappear. Is it quite certain that the ostrich by burying his head in the sand never escapes his pursuers?I look forward to the day when a great naturalist will discover that it is to thispractice that the ostrich owes his survival.婚姻罗伯特·林德1 伯特兰·罗素先生说:“凡人百姓喜欢假装说婚姻中遇到的困难是新鲜事。

【9A文】研究生英语读写译教程-Marriage原文翻译及课后答案

【9A文】研究生英语读写译教程-Marriage原文翻译及课后答案

婚姻何以失败安·洛芙[1]如今,以离婚告终的婚姻如此之多,我们最神圣的誓约听上去都不再真实了。

“从此永远幸福地生活着”和“直到死神将我们分开”这类话语似乎快过时了。

夫妻长相守何以变得如此困难?哪儿出了问题?我们到底怎么了,竟然有差不多半数的婚姻注定要以离婚法庭为终点?有42%的儿童将在单亲家庭中长大,我们怎么把社会弄成这样了呢?如果统计数字能测量出孤独、懊悔、痛苦、失去自信和对未来恐惧的程度,这些数字会大得惊人。

[2]虽然破裂的婚姻各有其独特的情况,但我们还是能找到致使婚姻无法维持下去的共同因素,即常见的危险。

凡婚姻都有其危机时刻,都要考验持久力、考验既能亲密相处又善应对变化的能力。

外部压力,如失业、疾病、不育、抚育孩子、赡养年迈的父母,以及生活中其他种种烦恼,都会如飓风横扫海岸那样对婚姻带来打击。

有些婚姻经受住了这些风暴,有些则不然。

但婚姻失败并不是简单地由外部天气造成的,而是由于内部气候变得过热或过冷,变得过于狂暴或过于麻木造成的。

[3]如果我们来看一下自己如何挑选配偶,看一下在爱情最初的温柔、浪漫阶段有着怎样的期待,婚姻触礁的一些原因便显而易见了。

无意中我们都精确地选中了能和我们一起重建我们第一个家庭的情感模式的伴侣。

婚姻心理治疗专家、威斯康星大学精神病学荣誉退职教授卡尔·A·威塔科尔解释说:“从幼年起,我们每一个人心里就对婚姻、女性气质、男性气质、为人母、为人父,以及其他各种家庭角色有了自己的模式。

”我们每一个人都爱上具有自己父母气质的伴侣,能帮助我们在心理上重温以往生活中的欢乐与苦难的伴侣。

我们或许会以为自己找的男人与爸爸不同,可是到头来,就像爸爸那样,他酗酒,或者吸毒,或者一次又一次失业,或者就像爸爸那样一言不发地坐在电视机前。

男人或许会选择一个像自己母亲一样不喜欢孩子的女人,或者一个像自己母亲一样把家里的钱全都赌光的女人。

或者他会选择一个苗条的妻子,与体态臃肿的母亲看上去似乎不一样,可结果发现那女子有其他的嗜好,这就毁了双方的幸福。

综合英语教程第四册 第13单元

综合英语教程第四册 第13单元

Brainstorming
4. Expressions of similarities: --n. similarity, affinity, analogy, comparability, closeness , resemblance, likeness, equivalence, parallel, uniformity (in) --v. match, look like, be alike, resemble --adj. similar, identical, equal, comparable, indistinguishable, same, equivalent The French and Italian languages have many affinities with each other. There are some interesting parallels between the author and the hero of the novel.
Do you often daydream? Exchange your daydreams with your group members What are the benefit and dangers of having a rich fantasy life? Have you thought carefully about your past and your future? Do you think this kind of thinking is necessary in life? What would you do if the reality fails to meet fantasy?
Inner and Outer Worlds

Unit 13 Marriage 综合教程四

Unit 13 Marriage 综合教程四

Audiovisual supplement
Cultural background
3) The way they spend their time together Of course, you and your spouse have individual needs and interests. However, you and your spouse should focus on the time you spend together, instead of the activity itself.
Audiovisual supplement
Cultural background
2. Stuttered speech
1) Money Money is a sensitive area and your household finances need to be properly structured. You and your spouse should define your core values. Try to come to an understanding about what you both care the most about spending money on.
General analysis
Structural analysis
Rhetorical features
In this text the author often makes comments on the people he quotes or what is said by those people so as to express his own opinions. Listed below are the comments made by the author in Paragraphs 5 - 7: … the reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, ... . (Paragraph 5) Burton is far from encouraging! (Paragraph 5) Pepys scribbled in his diary ... (Paragraph 5) The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss. (Paragraph 6) The sentimental and optimistic Steele … (Paragraph 6) Dr. Johnson, … devoted husband though he was … (Paragraph 7)

综合英语教程(第三版)BOOK4-课文译文 13.第十三单元

综合英语教程(第三版)BOOK4-课文译文 13.第十三单元

第十三单元TEXT永不停息的战斗最近接受电视采访回答问题时,我表达了自己对困扰人们的迷信的蔑视。

采访者问:“可是,既然如您所承认的那样,大多数人们相信这种迷信的东西,并能从中得到安慰,为什么你还要人们放弃他们的信仰呢?镜头前,在可利用的短暂时间里,我尽可能地做了最好的回答。

但是现在我能做出更完善的回答,因为有更多的时间可供我支配。

实际上,下面才是我想说的。

原因有两个。

首先,我有义务这么做,有义务指出迷信的无用之处。

毋庸置疑,每个人都易于相信有神论者,当他们说他们有义务宣讲关于上帝世界的看法,并因拥有如此高尚的布道活动而赢得众人恭顺、尊敬时,那么,为什么我宣扬关于理智世界的观点就该遭到取笑呢?关于什么是理性,该怎样清楚地看世界,我有自己的看法。

与有神论者不同,我不会用地狱之火威胁任何人,即使他们拒绝接受我所说的每个字;我也不会企图用永久的幸福之类的鬼话来贿赂他们,只要他们认同我的每一句话。

相反地,我布道的世界里没有威逼,没有贿赂,只是纯粹为了认识而需努力去了解的东西。

与有神论者不同,我不会宣称拥有通往超自然力量的途径,也不断言有绝对的真理和关于过去、现在和将来问题的始终不变的答案。

相反地,我只是作为一个易犯错误的人,竭尽所能地改进自己对世界的认识,这种认识从某种程度上讲是代代相传的。

我只要求给我一个机会,谦逊而自由地表达见解。

其次,有人说迷信和伪科学给人们带来了安慰,缓解了痛苦,这并不能为迷信和伪科学辩护。

因此自认为杰出人物的我们不应该宣称知道得更多,从而剥夺人们纯洁的信仰。

如果说舒适是我们判断事物价值的标准,那么请想一想:香烟让吸烟者快乐;酒精让嗜酒者沉醉;各种各样的毒品让吸毒者沉溺;纸牌、跑马让赌博者兴奋;暴力给反社会的人带来快感。

只以此作标准,没有任何行为我们可以干涉。

诚然,所有这些都很容易给染上恶习的人们带来伤害,但是难道我们不可以就此质疑:人们从造成自身伤害的行为中得到快乐,真的如他们所认为的那样,只不过是他们自己的选择,仅与他们自己的身体健康、生命安全有关。

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Unit 13MarriageRobert Lynd1 “Conventional people,” says Mr. Bertrand Russell, “like to pretend thatdifficulties in regard to marriage are a new thing.” I could not help wondering, as I read this sentence, where one can meet these conventional people who think, or pretend to think, as conventional people do. I have known hundreds of conventional people, and I cannot remember one of them who thought the things conventional people seem to think. They were all, for example, convinced that marriage was a state beset with difficulties, and that these difficulties were as old, if not as the hills, at least as the day on which Adam lost a rib and gained a wife. A younger generation of conventional people has grown up in recent years, and it may be that they have a rosier conception of marriage than their ancestors; but the conventional people of the Victorian era were under no illusions on the subject. Their cynical attitude to marriage may be gathered from the enthusiastic reception they gave to Punch’s a dvice to those about to marry -“Don’t.”2 I doubt, indeed, whether the horrors of marriage were ever depicted morecruelly than during the conventional nineteenth century. The comic papers and music-halls made the miseries a standing dish. “You can always tell whethera man’s married or single from the way he’s dressed,” said the comedian.“Look at the single man: no buttons on his shirt. Look at the married man: no shirt.” The humour was crude; but it went home to the honest Victorian heart.If marriage were to be judged by the songs conventional people used to sing about it in the music-halls, it would seem a hell mainly populated by twins and leech-like mothers-in-law. The rare experiences of Darby and Joan were, it is true, occasionally hymned, reducing strong men smelling strongly of alcohol to reverent silence; but, on the whole, the audience felt more normal when a comedian came out with an anti-marital refrain such as:O why did I leave my little back roomIn Bloomsbury,Where I could live on a pound a weekIn luxury(I forget the next line).But since I have married Maria,I’ve jumped out of the frying-panInto the blooming fire.3 No difficulties Why, the very nigger-minstrels of my boyhood used to opentheir performance with a chorus which began:Married! Married! O pity those who’re married.Those who go and take a wife must be very green.4 It is possible that the comedians exaggerated, and that Victorian wives werenot all viragos with pokers, who beat their tipsy husbands for staying out too late. But at least they and their audiences refrained from painting marriage as an inevitable Paradise. Even the clergy would go no farther than to say that marriages were made in Heaven. That they did not believe that marriage necessarily ended there is shown by the fact that one of them wrote a “best-seller” bearing the title How to Be Happy Though Married.5 I doubt, indeed, whether common opinion in any age has ever looked onmarriage as an untroubled Paradise. I consulted a dictionary of quotations on the subject and discovered that few of the opinions quoted were rose-coloured.These opinions, it may be objected, are the opinions of unconventional people, but it is also true that they are opinions treasured and kept alive by conventional people. We have the reputed saying of the henpecked Socrates, for example, when asked whether it was better to marry or not: “Whichever you do, you will repent.” We have Montaigne writing: “It happens as one sees in cages.The birds outside despair of ever getting in; those inside are equally desirous of getting out.” Bacon is no more prenuptial with his caustic quotation: “He was reputed one of the wise men that made answer to the question when a man should marry: ‘A young man not yet; an elder man not at all.’” Burton is far from encouraging! “One was never married, and that’s his hell; another is, and that’s his plague.” Pepys scribbled in his diary: “Strange to say what delight we married people have to see these poor folk decoyed into our condition.”6 The pious Jeremy Taylor was as keenly aware that marriage is not all bliss.“Marriage,” he declared, “hath in it less of beauty and more of safety than the single life - it hath more care but less danger; it is more merry and more sad; it is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys.” The sentimental and optimistic Steele can do no better than: “The marriage state, with and withoutthe affection suitable to it, is the completest image of Heaven and Hell we are capable of receiving in this life.”7 Rousseau denied that a perfect marriage had ever been known. “I have oftenthought,” he wrote, “that if only one could prolong the joy of love in marriage we should have paradise on earth. That is a thing which has never been hitherto.” Dr. Johnson is not quoted in the dictionary; but everyone will remember how, devoted husband though he was, he denied that the state of marriage was natural to man. “Sir,” he declared, “it is so far from being natural for a man and woman to live in a state of marriage that we find all the motives which they have for remaining in that connexion and the restraints which civilised society imposes to prevent separation are hardly sufficient to keep them together."8 When one reads the things that have been said about marriage from onegeneration to another, one cannot but be amazed at the courage with which the young go on marrying. Almost everybody, conventional and unconventional, seems to have painted the troubles of marriage in the darkest colours. So pessimistic were the conventional novelists of the nineteenth century about marriage that they seldom dared to prolong their stories beyond the wedding bells. Married people in plays and novels are seldom enviable, and, as time goes on, they seem to get more and more miserable. Even conventional people nowadays enjoy the story of a thoroughly unhappy marriage. It is only fair to say, however, that in modern times we like to imagine that nearly everybody, single as well as married, is unhappy. As social reformers we are all for happiness, but as thinkers and aesthetes we are on the side of misery.9 The truth is that we are a difficulty-conscious generation. Whether or notwe make life even more difficult than it would otherwise be by constantly talking about our difficulties I do not know. I sometimes suspect that half our difficulties are imaginary and that if we kept quiet about them they would disappear. Is it quite certain that the ostrich by burying his head in the sand never escapes his pursuers I look forward to the day when a great naturalist will discover that it is to this practice that the ostrich owes his survival.婚姻罗伯特·林德1 伯特兰·罗素先生说:“凡人百姓喜欢假装说婚姻中遇到的困难是新鲜事。

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