新世纪研究生英语教程综合英语第五版答案
研究生新世纪大学英语视听说教程5练习参考答案Unit4
Lesson B Online dating
Optional Listening
The etiquette of breaking up Here are some words and phrases you will hear in B, C and D. Read them aloud. Language Notes Proper names Love Line Global Radio Harmony Taylor Dr. Richard Hartman Other words and phrases etiquette thoughtful in public make sense instant messaging (IM) handle (vt.)
possible ways of breaking up:
in person __________________________________________________ by letter __________________________________________________
Keys
Lesson A An ideal date
Lesson B Online dating
Optional Listening
The etiquette of breaking up Harmony Taylor, the host of the Love Line program on Global Radio, is talking to Dr. Richard Hartman, author of The Etiquette of Breaking Up. Listen to the talk and note down the methods for breaking up mentioned. (Track 5-4-5) ______________________________________________________ face-to-face phone ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ email or instant messaging avoiding or not contacting someone ______________________________________________________
世纪英语综合教程I(第五版)
世纪英语综合教程I(第五版)教案授课主要内容Unit 1 College Life (1st and 2nd hours)Warm-upTask 1 I am a freshman.Objective: Ss can make a brief self-introduction to the class.Steps:• Ss read Warm-up Task 1.• Ts explain the new words in Task 1.• Ask Ss to introduce themselves according to their own information.Task 2 My study plan in the fresh semester.Objective: Ss can make an English study plan by themselves.Steps:• Ask Ss to make their choices.• Ss give their answers.• Ask Ss to tell the class about their new English study plans.Listening &SpeakingTask 1 Are you Jack Smith from America?Objective: Ss can understand the conversation briefly and fill in the blanks with correct words or phrases. Steps:• Play the tapescript two times.• Ask Ss to listen carefully and fill in the blanks.• Ask Ss to tell the class their answers.Answers: (1) Excuse me (2) I’m (3) Nice to meet you (4) Me, too (5) Thank you very much. Task 2 How are you these days?Objective: Ss can understand the conversation briefly and tick up the correct information.Steps:• Play the tapescript two times.• Ask Ss to tick the correct information and give the answers.Answers: Tick: (1), (2), (4).Task 3 Would you like to have a look at my dorm?Objective: Ss can understand the conversation and complete the answers with correct information. Steps:• Play the tapescript two times.• Ask Ss to listen and understand briefly the conversation and complete the answers.• Ask Ss to give the answers.Answers: 1) have a look at 2) Three 3) small but bright 4) 5th5) No, there isn’tTask 4 Sports club will take in new members.Objective: Ss can understand the conversation and put the five given sentences into correct order. Steps:• Play the tapescript two times.• Ss listen to the conversation and give the correct order.• Ask Ss to give the answers.Answers: ( 3 )----( 1 )----( 5 )----( 2 )----( 4 )Task 5 Don’t use the word “fail”.Objective: Ss can understand the passage and fill in the blanks with correct words or phrases. Steps:• Play the tapescript three times.• Ss listen and give the correct words or phrases.• Ss give the answers, if their answers are not correct, Ts correct them.Answers: (1) examinations (2) allowed (3) suggest (4) unhappy (5) lose heart (6) believe(7) success (8) takeTask 6 My study at college.Objective: Ss can make a conversation about college study.Steps:• Ask Ss to spend several minutes preparing for the conversation.• Ss present their conversations to the class.• Ts give necessary guidelines and help to Ss. Ts first invite those who are better in English learning to present their conversations. If time doesn’t permit, assign the task as after-class assignments. Conversations:Wendy: Hi, Bob! Nice to see you again on the campus. How is everything going on with you?Bob: Fine, thank you. I like this college. I like my new teachers and classmates.Wendy: How about your courses? Do you like them?Bob: Yes, I like them very much.Wendy: What do you major in now?Bob: I major in computer science. At the moment I am learning how to program.Wendy: That sounds really interesting.Bob: Yes, but I feel that it is a little difficult.Wendy: Are you doing well in your classes?Bob: I don’t know because I haven’t received any test results yet. However, I have confidence in myself.Assignments1. Review what has been learned in Listening&Speaking;2. Preview Reading A in this unit.世纪英语综合教程I(第五版)教案授课主要内容Unit 1 College Life (3rd and 4th hours)Reading APreliminary StageSteps:• Ask Ss to answer: what is college life? How can freshmen get along well with their college mates, classmates and roommates?• Ts introduce the background information about college life to students.Reading text learning1. New words and expressionsObjective: Ss can read the new words and expressions correctly; remember these new words and expressions.Steps:• Ss listen to the new words and expressions.• Ask Ss to read the new words and expressions.2. Reading Text AObjective: Ss can understand the reading text, put it into good Chinese and grasp the important words, phrases and sentence patterns in the reading text.Steps:• Ts explain the reading text:Language points:Paragraph 2sense n. a person’s special power of the body to be conscious of somethinge.g. a sense of humor/responsibility/belongings/achievementsHe has a good sense of smell.in a sensee.g. This plan is practical in a sense.make sensee.g. It makes no sense to talk about it in general.c.f. sensible a. reasonable; practicale.g. It is sensible of you to do it.We think the plan sensible.be sensible of:be aware ofe.g. He is sensible of the danger before him.c.f. sensitive a. easily receiving impressions;able to record small changese.g. My skin is sensitive to sunlight.The instrument is sensitive to the earthquake.find out:learn sth. by study, calculation or inquirye.g. Have you found out the source of the rumor?Please find out when we’ll start off tomorrow.share vt. have or use sth. with sb.; have sth. in common1) share sth. with sb.:e.g. When at home, I have to share a bedroom with my younger brother.2) share (in) something:e.g. We two will share (in) the rent.The husband shares (in) his wife’s happiness and sadness.Paragraph 3arise vi. come into existence; present itselfe.g. An unexpected problem arose in our discussion.Different opinions have arisen among the students.be responsible for: having the obligation to make decisions or bear the blame for mistakes e.g. Teachers should be responsible for the safety of pupils when having a spring outing.We think the driver is responsible for the traffic accident.topic n. subject for discussione.g. None of the topics interested me.Good morning, class. Today my topic is on the present situation at home and abroad. Paragraph 4set aside: put aside, lay asidee.g. Every day I set aside half an hour for sports.You’d better set aside some money for a rainy day.Paragraph 5agree: say “yes”, consent1)agree with sb.e.g. You say reading is important in learning English. I can’t agree with you more.2) agree to sth.e.g. All the class agreed to the study plan.3) agree on/upon sth.e.g. Both parties finally agreed on the contract.Paragraph 6avoid vt. keep or get away from; escapeavoid doing sth.e.g. You must learn the lessons from the accident to avoid making the same mistake.avoid being donee.g. I’ll go that way to avoid being seen by the boss.Paragraph 7belongings (pl.) n. one’s possessionse.g. Take all your belongings with you when you get off the train.Personal belongings should be taken good care of.Chinese translation of the reading text:和室友和睦相处1. 当你离开父母和家乡进入大学,将要在新的校园里开始新的生活,你准备好了吗?上大学的首要挑战不在教室,而是在你第一次遇见宿舍室友的时候。
新世纪大学英语综合教程5unit1答案
Working with words and expressions 1. 1) beloved, 2) classics 3) survivor 4) workaholic 5) manufacturing 6) odd 7) finances 8) boarded 9) replacement 10) natural 2. 1) asking around 2) straighten out 3) pick out 4) grabbed at 5)look …in the eye 6) and all that Increasing your word power Board 2. 2) board: n. the cost of meals I pay $30 a week for board and lodging. 3) 3) board: board: board: n. n. n. a a a commi ee commi ee commi ee of of of the the the directors directors directors of of of a a a company, company, company, which which which is is responsible for the management of the company Every decision has to be passed by the board of directors. 4) board: v. get of supply meals and lodging for payment She arranged to board some students from the universi es. 5) board: v. get into (a ship or public vehicle) Before boarding the plane, Jenny tried once more to call home. 6)on board: in or on (a ship or public vehicle) Waving goodbye to everyone, she got on board the train. Odd 1) Odd: a. different from what is ordinary or expected Timber? That ’s kind of an odd name for a kid. 2) odd: a. separated from its pair or set He’s got a whole drawer full of odd socks. 3) odd: a. (of a number) that cannot be divided by two The houses on this side of the street have all got odd numbers, and on the other side they ’ve got even numbers. 4) odd: a. not regular; occasional She does some odd jobs but nothing permanent. 5) Odd: a. (a er numbers) rather more than the stated number She looked younger than her 50-odd years. Cloze 1) un l un l 2)interests 2)interests 3)sandwiches 4)overweight 5)beloved 6)boarded 7)workaholic 8)compete 9)finally 10)precisely 11)coronary 12)acquaintances 13)survived 14)inquiring 15)deceased Transla on He died. He worked himself to death, finally and precisely, at 3:00 a.m. Sunday morning, on his day off. his his friends friends friends and and and acquaintances acquaintances acquaintances not not not really really really surprised. surprised. surprised. T o T o them, them, them, He He He was was was a a perfect Type A, a workaholic, a classic. He He worked worked worked six six six days days days a a week, week, five five five of of them them un l un l un l eight eight eight or or nine nine at at at night, night, during a me when his own company had begun the four-day week for everyone but the execu ves. He played a golf game every month but it was work. Other than this, he had no outside “extracurricular interests extracurricular interests””. His survivors included his wife Helen and three children. Helen, forty-eight years old had given up trying to compete with his work years ago. Among his “beloved beloved”” children, the eldest son didn’t know him well, and the daughter had no shared topics with him. Only the youngest son who was twenty, tried to grab at his father and tried to mean enough to him to keep the man at home. At the funeral, deceased had meant much to the company and would be missed. The sixty-year-old company president told the forty-eight-year-old widow that the fi y-one-year-old and would be hard to to replace.replace. By By 5:00 5:00 5:00 p.m. p.m. p.m. the the the a ernoon a ernoon a ernoon of of of the the the funeral, funeral, funeral, the the the company company president had begun to make inquiries about his replacement. 。
综合英语教程第五册 课后答案 课件Unit-09 Kids and Computers
综合教程5(第2版)电子教案
Detailed Reading
KIDS AND COMPUTERS: DIGITAL DANGER Alison Sperry
1. There's a familiar saying, "Play is children's work." Through play, people who study child development tell us, children develop the skills and outlooks that determine the adults they will become. Playing house or school, for example, helps them "try on" the roles of Mom or Dad or teacher. Athletic activities help kids develop coordination, learn to work as part of a group, and gain confidence and a sense of fair play. Even solitary activities like reading connect children with the wider world, encouraging a sense of empathy with the greater human family.
综合英语教程第五册 课后答案 课件Unit-06 How America Lives
综合教程5(第2版)电子教案
Text Introduction | Culture Notes | Author | Structure Puritanism (Paragraph 3) the practices and doctrines of the Puritans who were members of a group of Protestants in 16th- and 17thcentury England and 17th-century America who believed in strict religious discipline and called for the simplification of acts of worship. The movement was an attempt to remove Roman Catholic influences from the Church of England.
综合教程5(第2版)电子教案
Text Introduction | Culture Notes | Author | Structure His other works include Sayonara (1954); Hawaii (1959); Chesapeake (1978); The Covenant (1980); Poland (1982); Texas (1985); and Alaska (1988); The Novel (1991); Recessional (1994); A Miracle in Seville (1995); The Bridge at Andau (1957); Iberia: Spanish Travels and Reflections (1968); A Michener Miscellany: 1950-1970 (1973); Michener's memoir, The World Is My Home (1992).
综合英语教程第五册 课后答案 课件Unit-04-Force of Nature
Text Introduction | Culture Notes | Author | Structure
She is the author of the acclaimed bestsellers Little Gloria…Happy At Last (1980) and Johnson v. Johnson (1987). A trustee of the New York Public Library, Goldቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱmith also serves on the President's Commission on the Celebration of Women in American History.
综合教程5(第2版)电子教案
Text Introduction | Culture Notes | Author | Structure
Marie Curie (Paragraph 1) (1867-1934), Polish-born French chemist who, with her husband Pierre Curie, was an early investigator of radioactivity. The Curies shared the 1903 Nobel Prize in physics with French physicist Antoine Henri Becquerel for fundamental research on radioactivity. Marie Curie went on to study the chemistry and medical applications of radium. She was awarded the 1911 Nobel Prize in chemistry in recognition of her work in discovering radium and polonium and in isolating radium.
研究生英语综合教程课后习题答案
研究生英语综合教程课后习题答案对于研究生来说,英语综合教程的课后习题往往是巩固知识、提升能力的重要途径。
然而,完成这些习题并不总是一帆风顺,有时我们可能会在某些难题上卡壳,这时候课后习题答案就成为了我们的“救星”。
首先,让我们来谈谈为什么课后习题答案如此重要。
一方面,它们能够帮助我们检验自己对知识的掌握程度。
当我们完成习题后,对照答案可以清楚地知道自己哪些地方理解正确,哪些地方存在偏差或错误。
这有助于我们及时发现问题,并有针对性地进行复习和强化。
另一方面,答案能够为我们提供解题思路和方法。
尤其是对于一些较为复杂的题目,答案中的思路和步骤可以引导我们学会如何分析问题、运用所学知识进行解答,从而提高我们的解题能力和思维能力。
但是,我们在使用课后习题答案时也要注意方式方法。
不能仅仅是为了得到一个正确的结果而照抄答案,这样做不仅无法真正掌握知识,还可能养成依赖心理,不利于我们的学习和成长。
正确的做法是,先自己独立思考、认真完成习题,然后再对照答案进行检查和反思。
对于做错的题目,要仔细分析答案中的解题思路,找出自己的错误原因,并加以总结和改进。
接下来,我们来具体看看研究生英语综合教程课后习题的类型和对应的答案特点。
常见的习题类型包括词汇题、语法题、阅读理解题、写作题等。
词汇题的答案通常比较直接和明确。
对于单词的释义、拼写、用法等,答案会给出准确的解释和示例。
比如,在考察某个单词的近义词时,答案会清晰地列出各个选项的含义,并说明为什么正确答案是最合适的。
在做词汇题时,我们不能仅仅记住答案中的单词,还要通过例句和语境来深入理解单词的用法和搭配。
语法题的答案则更加注重对语法规则的解释和运用。
会详细说明每个选项所涉及的语法点,以及为什么某个选项是正确的,其他选项是错误的。
通过对照语法题的答案,我们可以系统地复习和巩固语法知识,了解不同语法结构在实际语境中的应用。
阅读理解题的答案往往需要我们进行深入的分析和理解。
答案不仅会给出文章的主旨大意、段落大意等概括性的内容,还会对每个问题的答案进行详细的解释和推理。
新世纪大学英语综合教程5课后题答案完整版
新世纪大学英语综合教程 5Unit one1)beloved 2) classics 3) survivor 4) workaholic5)manufacturing 6) odd 7) finances 8) boarded 9) replacement 10)natural1.Listed in the box below are some expressions that you have learned in the text。
Complete the sentences with each of them. Change the form where necessary.1)asking around 2) straighten out 3) pick out 4) grabbed at5)look。
in the eye 6) and all thatCloze1)until 2) interests 3) sandwiches 4)overweight 5) beloved6)boarded 7) workaholic 8) compete 9) finally 10) precisely11) coronary 12) acquaintances 13)survived 14) inquiring 15)deceased TranslationTranslate the following passage into English。
He died. He worked himself to death, precisely at 3:00 a。
m. Sunday morning, on his day off.His friends and acquaintances were not really surprised。
To them, he was a perfect Type A, a workaholic, a classic.Phil worked six days a week, five of them until eight or nine at night, during a time when his own company had begun the four—day week for everyone but the executives. He played a golf game every month but it was work。
综合英语教程第五册 课后答案 课件Unit-06 How America Lives
综合教程5(第2版)电子教案
Text Introduction | Culture Notes | Author | Structure balanced system of government (Paragraph 8) The concept refers to the three branches of the United States government — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial — that restrain and stabilize one another through their separated functions. The legislative branch, represented by the Congress, must pass bills before they can become law. The executive branch — namely, the president — can veto bills passed by the Congress, thus preventing them from becoming law. In turn, by a two-thirds vote, the Congress can override the president's veto. The Supreme Court may invalidate acts of the Congress by declaring them contrary to the Constitution of the United States, but the Congress can change the Constitution through the amendment process.
研究生新世纪大学英语视听说教程5练习参考答案unit
Ask & Answer
What do you think of Corinne Maier’s opinions about work? Do you agree or disagree with her ideas? Why?
Lesson A Work issues
Lesson B Job choices
1. Pretend to be a smoker. 2. Hide a magazine inside a work manual. 3. Be nice to temporary workers. 4. Never accepted a position of responsibility. 5. Go for the most useless position. 6. ____________________________. 7. ____________________________.
culinary arts
specialize in deli an opportunity in disguise
I have butterflies in my stomach.
lead to
be open to
thrill
come around
apron turn over
so to speak can’t stand
Lesson A Work issues
Lesson B Job choices
Optional Listening
Your true calling
Listen to the first part of the interview. Then choose the correct answer to complete each sentence below.
新世纪研究生英语教程综合英语第五版答案
U1 Free Falling1.What is the main subject introduced in paragraph one?It is the description of the effect of saying farewell to his parents, friends and folks on the author.2.How is the story organized?The story is chronologically organized (following the time sequence in which the event unfolded itself).3.How did Weckerly feel before the day of his departure?He felt eager and excited to wait for the day to come.4.How did his mood change when the day had really come?At the very beginning he became sentimental about saying good-bye to many people around him. Facing the reality of becoming independent, he began to feel afraid and uncertain .5.What do you think about the ending of the story?It is very impressive. Weckerly ends the story with a metaphor which catches the essence of the particular moment accurately. He compares himself to a rookie skydiver preparing for his first plunge, which leads to possible outcomes: sheer excitement or eventual death. The last sentence "He closes his eyes, takes a deep breath, and jumps" symbolizes the fact that from that day on the author jumps into the future of being independent no matter how long and complicated the road to it is.U6 The myth of the paperless office1. What are the disadvantages of paper according to the author?Paper takes up precious space, can be in only one place at a time, is extremely hard to index or search through, and lacks all the interactivity and linking ability of hypertext.2. What are the major categories of files in an office?In the office, files can be mainly classified into hot files, documents to be acted on immediately; warm files, still active but of less urgency and cold files, docements that don’t need immediate attention.3. Why is it unpleasant to read something on a computer screen?Because there are such annoyances as the relatively fuzzy type, glare, the need to scrollrepeatedly, the screen’s relatively fixed position and so forth.4. What are the essential problems in using computers in polices departments?First, the police found they spent so much time dealing with the computer interface that they fell short in listening and talking to victims, an essential activity both for offering comfort and for picking up subtle clues to what exactly had happened. Second, the goal of prompt reporting was compromised by the fact that police kept revising their reports after filing them.5. What are the reasons for people’s chimera of going paperless according to the author? Firstly, people who can profit from the idea keep selling it to us. Secondly, all technologies come down to our trying to get what we want, what we desire. And much of what we desire comes down to taking control of ourlives, doing what we please without being overwhelmed by what we don’t please.6.Why cannot computers replace paper in an office?First, paper has some hidden advantages over computers especially in the following three aspects—reading, writing and personal satisfaction in delivery. Furthermore, computers can’t replace paper completely in some activities such as air-traffic control and writing up police reports.U7 Competition is destructive1. Why is competition destructive according to the author? (para. 3)According to the author, competition is destructive because it undermines self-esteem, poisons relationships and holds us back from doing our best.2. What are the purposes of the games devised or collected by Orlick and others? (para.6)The idea of the games devised or collected by Orlick and others is for each person on the field to make a specified contribution to the goal, or for all the players to reach a certain score, or f or everyone to work with their partners against a time limit.3. What is the difference between teamwork and team competition? (para. 8)The difference between teamwork and team competition is that in teamwork everyone on the field is working together for a common goal, while in team competition a given player works with and is encouraged to feel warmly toward only half of those present.4. Why do most kinds of fun require competition? (para. 10, 11, 12)First of all, people don't know any other way or people have never tasted the alternative. Secondly, we overlook the psychological costs of competition: it causes self-doubt and feelings of self-worth become dependent on external sources of evaluation.5. Who is to blame for competition?It is the structure of the game itself thatis to blame rather than the individuals, since it sets competition at the very beginning.U10 Why we strive for status1. What is the writer's attitude in the sentence "The drive for dominance skews our perception, colors our friendships, shapes our moods and affects our health"? (para. 2) The author takes a negative attitude. Usually, the verbs color, shape and affect are neutral in indicating meanings, but in this context they express negative meanings.2. How do you understand the sentence "If the tendency showed up only in certain societies, it would be easier to dismiss as something we learn"? (para. 4)If the relentless one-upmanship were only limited within very few sample groups, it would be easily neglected because we could only regard that as an exception.3. In which way do zoologists support the anthropological point on the biologically endowed one-upmanship?Anthropologists point out that the same pattern can be seen everywhere while the zoologists show a wide variety of animals inferior and superior which illustrate the same pattern too.4. What are the differences between men being powerful and powerless?Men who achieve high status enjoy more sex with more partners wheresas men who are just u nemployed may lose their marriages as well as self-esteem.5. In which ways are modern men the same as, and also different from Genghis Khan? Modern men are the same as Genghis Khan in that they all strive for high status, but different in that modern men tend to rule by consent and try to avoid fighting.6. Do males always have to fight for power? Why or why not?Not necessarily, for the most durable leaders are the ones who govern by consent and try to av oid fighting.U13 Giving credit where debt is due1. How many credit cards does the average American have?4.2. What is a "sub-prime" borrower?People who have a bad credit history.3. What were the spending habits of people in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuri es?People regarded debt in a very negative way. They always tried to pay off their debts in a tim ely manner.4. How has credit card spending changed in the United States since the 1960s?In the 1960s most borrowers paid off their credit card balances monthly. Since then, many pe ople have amassed credit card debt.1.Only twenty-seven new members had been ____________ since the Leeds Congress, and the total member ship still stood at less than one hundred. (B) B. enrolled2.You could go for advertising ____________, the catchy floor displays or the flashy packagi ng. (C) C. hype3.The desk was ____________ with files, but the chair behind it was vacant. (A) A. cluttered4.____________ is a meal typically eaten late in the morning as a combination of a late break fast and an early lunch. (B) B. Brunch5.The improvement of the highway will _________pressure on the trains to some extent. (B)B. relieve6.John's hands were ____________ as he put down his papers and started his speech at the fir st time. (A) A. quivering7.His mood was an explosive mixture of ____________ self-pity and forced gaiety, the latter predominating as he got drunk. (A) A. maudlin8.Because of the economic slowdown, the government changed its policy to ____________ re venue by limiting commerce. (C) C. diminish9.In women's magazines and educational material the apple ____________ good food and health. (B) B. conjures10.It is the opinion of a(n) ____________ tourist that no price would be too great to pay, the n ovelist declared. (D) D. sentimental1.According to the opinion poll, the Socialists were predominant in the last parliament. (D)D. dominant2.He exerted himself, during his sojourn among this simple and well-disposed people, to inculcate, as far as he was able, the gentle and humanizing precepts of the Christian faith. (B)B. infuse3.A domestic unit consists of the members of a household who live together along with non-relatives such as servants. (A) A. family4.It was clear that a man after seventeen years of wedlock did not leave his wife without certa in occurrences which must have led her to suspect that all was not well with their married life.(B) B. marriage5.Several common reasons that lead couples to decide to cohabit: wanting to test compatibilit y or establish financial security before marrying. (A) A. live together6.The studies show that most delinquent boys have a non-conventional orientated self-concept, while other boys who are not involved in the peer group, have a school orientated sel f-concept. (C) C. offensive7.They are a fierce and intractable people, though capable of forming most devoted friendshi ps when their confidence has once been gained. (C) C. unmanageable8."Your religion," says he, "serves you only for an excuse for your faults, but is no incentive t o your virtue." (B) B. inducement9.The real estate investors have tempered to meet the investor's needs. (A) A. adjusted10.To penalize a yacht in proportion to the fineness of her performance is unfair to the craft a nd to her men. (D) D. punish1. Advocates of organic foods frequently proclaim that such products are safer and more nutritious than others. (A) A. announce2. If I may venture an opinion, I’d say the plan needs closer examination. (C) C. express3. These photographs capture the essence of working-class life at the turn of the century. (A)A. describe4. There was a preponderance of female teachers in the English department. (B)B. dominance5. Clarence had only a few fuzzy memories of his grandparents. (C) C. obscure6. What he has achieved is an extraordinary feat that would be impossible to duplicate. (B)B. equal7. He’s stopped taking drugs now, but he may revert to taking them again. (C) C. restore8. As often as not, people tend to scream under such circumstances. (D) D. quite often9. What is even more important is the fact that the astronauts’ photographs have uncovered many things not evident at close range. (D) D. revealed10. The disposition of the troops on the battlefield is of paramount importance. (A)A. arrangement1. In particular, the relationship is becoming increasingly bedeviled by the issue of anti-missile defence. (C) C. plagued2. The universe offers no such categories or simplifications; only flux and infinite variety. (B)B. change3. The news of the wedding was plastered all over the morning papers. (A) A. covered4. Perhaps you should tweak that line or paragraph that throws the structure off before sending in the report. (C) C. revise5. The daily news stories of the worsening economy unnerved the nation. (A)A. discouraged6. She allowed her steady gaze to flicker from the glass which she had been holding for hours.(C) C. shine unsteadily7. Self-awareness of roles and of the feelings evoked in interpersonal encounters is increasingly critical for the nimble entrepreneur. (B) B. agile8. I have always tried to live by my faith but it’s sometimes unexpectedly difficult to achieve.(C) C. act on9. What we’ve got here is a half-baked proposal that still needs a great deal of work. (D)D. unthoughtful10. For the next four years they defied convention by living as man and wife when they were not. (A) A. tradition1.She has been eliminated from the swimming race because she did not win any of the practice races. (C) C. got rid of2.One of the major flaws in the existing system is that the prosecutor has immunity from law suits claiming malicious prosecution. (B) B. spiteful3.They define a good patient as one who accepts their statements and their actions uncritically and unquestioningly. (A) A. characterize4.Roberts' poor physical condition combined with nagging injuries prevented him from playi ng more than 51 games in the past four seasons. (A) A. troubling5.Constant correction by a teacher is often counterproductive, as the student may become afr aid to speak at all. (C) C. unfavorable6.For centuries we women have gloated over the one negative aspect of aging more evident i n men than women: balding. (B) B. felt maliciously satisfied with7.In the conducive atmosphere around the fort, General Bradley immediately found out about the plot. (D) D. favorable8.It's a story of a harmful dynamic between white prejudice and black autonomy. (C)C. competing or conflicting system9.Gandhi rejects outright claims made concerning the superior or inferior status of religions.(B) B. direct10.My first boss was a really nasty person, who seemed to enjoy making life difficult for ever yone. (C) C. ugly1.To put a kid like Delia in eight-hour isolation for accepting a cigarette from a friend is bizarre and outrageous. (B) B. violen t2.Depression remains one of the most prevalent health disorders in the US. (A) A. common3.The next version of the software will have the edge over its competitors. (C)C. advantage4.He's managed to create a niche for himself in local politics. (B) B. right position5.There is nothing in the intrinsic nature of the work that makes it more suitable for women.(C) C. essential6.She addressed her young guest with civilities suitable for a personage of advanced years and uncertain appetite. (D) D. politeness7.That cannot be promised here, though a holistic perspective is taken on literary stylistics inaddressing science fiction. (C) C. overall8.Many observers suggest that this transfer has had mainly adverse effects on the population concerned. (D) D. unfavorable9.Instead, justice is a commodity designed by a hierarchy of judges still dedicated to the inter ests of Power. (B) B. devoted10.The university suspended the club for two years, during which it could not hold social or a thletic activities. (A) A. stopped1.The man amassed a great fortune during the war, but later lost all of it almost overnight.(A)A. collected2.Ten federal researchers were listed as contributors, but seven of them quickly disavowed an y connection with it. (D) D. denied3.Industrial labour was at last being regulated, water supplies purified, hospitals sanitised and prisons reformed. (D) D. controlled4.The investment remains beyond reach for many, but the choices today are much broader and more viable than 10 years ago. (D) D. feasible5.There is no resolution to this conflict and two sides seem to go to war. (B) B. disagreement6.The small island is now visited by millions of tourists for its natural endowments of white s andy beaches and clean water. (C) C. gifts7.Indeed, the logic of commercialism may lead the enterprise to pursue activities at odds with other government objectives. (B) B. run after8.First introduced in 1989, Adopt-a-Pet aims to highlight the plight of abandoned animals and encourage more responsible pet o wnership.(B) B. deserted9.As the King got older, he became convinced that his family were scheming against him. (A)A . plotting10.The Chinese football team outscored its opponent by two balls. (A) A. overcame1.Clinton also asked Glickman to report back within 30 days with recommendations to help alleviate debt problems afflicting cattle producers. (A) A. ease2.There was plenty to do on your own doorstep-to look further was a cop-out. (B)B. avoiding responsibility3.Then, too, repeated visits to cultural monuments doubtless palled in time, natural curiosity withered by sheer surfeit. (C) C. over-doing4.For example, Wilson wanted new recipients to be eligible for aid or only one year, but Democrats wanted two years. (B) B. qualified to be chosen5.It's up to him to show some grit in an uncertain world. (D) D. firm courage6.You can tell me if there's anything that's worrying you or getting you down. (C)C. making you depressed7.Farmers still have the problem of overcoming the stigma which all too often young people attach to working on the land. (A) A. deep feeling of losing face8.At decision-making time these consequences are simply left unmentioned, allowing organizational leaders to feign surprise when qualitative costs finally assert themselves. (A)A. give a false appearance of9.Anything less than this is a measure of the extent to which the research falls short of scienti fic standards. (B) B.is less than10.The second was that its atoms of uranium were transmuting themselves into atoms of a di fferent element whose atomic mass was lower. (D) D. changing themselves completely1.For these the primary schools provided a gentle haven before they transferred to the local se condary modern school. (D) D. sanctuary2.It also makes specialty parts and accessories, which can be used to spruce up the performan ce and appearance of existing automobiles. (B) B. smarten up3.I knew that faking the tears would make her get a sense of gratification and end the punish ment, but I refused. (A) A. satisfaction4.The stigma may not result from associating her language with ignorance, but the unkindnes s is just as real. (C) C. disgrace5.Her eyebrow had received the blow from the torch and had begun to throb; she could feel a trickle of blood. (B) B. movement6.You should not tell your client to expect that they will automatically experience an aversion response to the imagery of drinking. (D) D. antipathy7.Some economists are now predicting the danger of runaway inflation and they see it as a force that human can no longer control. (C) C. uncontrolled8.Anyone who studied at the college joined an elite band of well-connected lawyers, doctors and businessmen. (A) A. excellent9.Liz had a more robust notion of the self, and took another line on the individual's place in t he structure. (D) D. potent10.His friendship with Fujimori gives him unusual access to a president with a tiny circle of a dvisers and a penchant for secrecy. (B) B. preference1.Firstly, we need to ease the problems of cash shortage and credit crunch to maintain a stable banking system. (B) B. deficiency2.Wholesale markets for agricultural products shall have transaction regulations. (C)C. dealing3.The board has decided to withhold part of their grant money from certain students. (B)B. reserve4.The remainder of their school time is devoted to music theory, instrumental lessons and pr actice. (D) D. residue5.We will reimburse the expenses of the advertising for the representative. (A) A. recoup6.Any application for such extension of contract period shall be made six months before the expiration of the contract. (C) C. termination7.If you work in a company, you usually don't have to go to the tax bureau because your com pany will deduct it from your salary. (A) A. subtract8.What he said and did involved the bystanders in his dispute with the police. (D)D. disagreement9.You are advised to deposit your valuables in the hotel safe. (C) C. lodge10.She fumbled her purse which contained the address slip. (D) D. paper。
世纪英语综合教程I(第五版)
世纪英语综合教程I(第五版)教案授课主要内容Unit 1 College Life (1st and 2nd hours)Warm-upTask 1 I am a freshman.Objective: Ss can make a brief self-introduction to the class.Steps:• Ss read Warm-up Task 1.• Ts explain the new words in Task 1.• Ask Ss to introduce themselves according to their own information.Task 2 My study plan in the fresh semester.Objective: Ss can make an English study plan by themselves.Steps:• Ask Ss to make their choices.• Ss give their answers.• Ask Ss to tell the class about their new English study plans.Listening &SpeakingTask 1 Are you Jack Smith from America?Objective: Ss can understand the conversation briefly and fill in the blanks with correct words or phrases. Steps:• Play the tapescript two times.• Ask Ss to listen carefully and fill in the blanks.• Ask Ss to tell the class their answers.Answers: (1) Excuse me (2) I’m (3) Nice to meet you (4) Me, too (5) Thank you very much. Task 2 How are you these days?Objective: Ss can understand the conversation briefly and tick up the correct information.Steps:• Play the tapescript two times.• Ask Ss to tick the correct information and give the answers.Answers: Tick: (1), (2), (4).Task 3 Would you like to have a look at my dorm?Objective: Ss can understand the conversation and complete the answers with correct information. Steps:• Play the tapescript two times.• Ask Ss to listen and understand briefly the conversation and complete the answers.• Ask Ss to give the answers.Answers: 1) have a look at 2) Three 3) small but bright 4) 5th5) No, there isn’tTask 4 Sports club will take in new members.Objective: Ss can understand the conversation and put the five given sentences into correct order. Steps:• Play the tapescript two times.• Ss listen to the conversation and give the correct order.• Ask Ss to give the answers.Answers: ( 3 )----( 1 )----( 5 )----( 2 )----( 4 )Task 5 Don’t use the word “fail”.Objective: Ss can understand the passage and fill in the blanks with correct words or phrases. Steps:• Play the tapescript three times.• Ss listen and give the correct words or phrases.• Ss give the answers, if their answers are not correct, Ts correct them.Answers: (1) examinations (2) allowed (3) suggest (4) unhappy (5) lose heart (6) believe(7) success (8) takeTask 6 My study at college.Objective: Ss can make a conversation about college study.Steps:• Ask Ss to spend several minutes preparing for the conversation.• Ss present their conversations to the class.• Ts give necessary guidelines and help to Ss. Ts first invite those who are better in English learning to present their conversations. If time doesn’t permit, assign the task as after-class assignments. Conversations:Wendy: Hi, Bob! Nice to see you again on the campus. How is everything going on with you?Bob: Fine, thank you. I like this college. I like my new teachers and classmates.Wendy: How about your courses? Do you like them?Bob: Yes, I like them very much.Wendy: What do you major in now?Bob: I major in computer science. At the moment I am learning how to program.Wendy: That sounds really interesting.Bob: Yes, but I feel that it is a little difficult.Wendy: Are you doing well in your classes?Bob: I don’t know because I haven’t received any test results yet. However, I have confidence in myself.Assignments1. Review what has been learned in Listening&Speaking;2. Preview Reading A in this unit.世纪英语综合教程I(第五版)教案授课主要内容Unit 1 College Life (3rd and 4th hours)Reading APreliminary StageSteps:• Ask Ss to answer: what is college life? How can freshmen get along well with their college mates, classmates and roommates?• Ts introduce the background information about college life to students.Reading text learning1. New words and expressionsObjective: Ss can read the new words and expressions correctly; remember these new words and expressions.Steps:• Ss listen to the new words and expressions.• Ask Ss to read the new words and expressions.2. Reading Text AObjective: Ss can understand the reading text, put it into good Chinese and grasp the important words, phrases and sentence patterns in the reading text.Steps:• Ts explain the reading text:Language points:Paragraph 2sense n. a person’s special power of the body to be conscious of somethinge.g. a sense of humor/responsibility/belongings/achievementsHe has a good sense of smell.in a sensee.g. This plan is practical in a sense.make sensee.g. It makes no sense to talk about it in general.c.f. sensible a. reasonable; practicale.g. It is sensible of you to do it.We think the plan sensible.be sensible of:be aware ofe.g. He is sensible of the danger before him.c.f. sensitive a. easily receiving impressions;able to record small changese.g. My skin is sensitive to sunlight.The instrument is sensitive to the earthquake.find out:learn sth. by study, calculation or inquirye.g. Have you found out the source of the rumor?Please find out when we’ll start off tomorrow.share vt. have or use sth. with sb.; have sth. in common1) share sth. with sb.:e.g. When at home, I have to share a bedroom with my younger brother.2) share (in) something:e.g. We two will share (in) the rent.The husband shares (in) his wife’s happiness and sadness.Paragraph 3arise vi. come into existence; present itselfe.g. An unexpected problem arose in our discussion.Different opinions have arisen among the students.be responsible for: having the obligation to make decisions or bear the blame for mistakes e.g. Teachers should be responsible for the safety of pupils when having a spring outing.We think the driver is responsible for the traffic accident.topic n. subject for discussione.g. None of the topics interested me.Good morning, class. Today my topic is on the present situation at home and abroad. Paragraph 4set aside: put aside, lay asidee.g. Every day I set aside half an hour for sports.You’d better set aside some money for a rainy day.Paragraph 5agree: say “yes”, consent1)agree with sb.e.g. You say reading is important in learning English. I can’t agree with you more.2) agree to sth.e.g. All the class agreed to the study plan.3) agree on/upon sth.e.g. Both parties finally agreed on the contract.Paragraph 6avoid vt. keep or get away from; escapeavoid doing sth.e.g. You must learn the lessons from the accident to avoid making the same mistake.avoid being donee.g. I’ll go that way to avoid being seen by the boss.Paragraph 7belongings (pl.) n. one’s possessionse.g. Take all your belongings with you when you get off the train.Personal belongings should be taken good care of.Chinese translation of the reading text:和室友和睦相处1. 当你离开父母和家乡进入大学,将要在新的校园里开始新的生活,你准备好了吗?上大学的首要挑战不在教室,而是在你第一次遇见宿舍室友的时候。
新世纪大学英语综合教程5课后题答案完整版
新世纪大学英语综合教程 5Unit one1)beloved 2) classics 3) survivor 4) workaholic5)manufacturing 6) odd 7) finances 8) boarded 9) replacement 10) natural 1.Listed in the box below are some expressions that you have learned in the text. Complete the sentences with each of them. Change the form where necessary.1)asking around 2) straighten out 3) pick out 4) grabbed at5)look...in the eye 6) and all thatCloze1)until 2) interests 3) sandwiches 4)overweight 5) beloved6)boarded 7) workaholic 8) compete 9) finally 10) precisely11) coronary 12) acquaintances 13)survived 14) inquiring 15)deceased TranslationTranslate the following passage into English.He died. He worked himself to death, precisely at 3:00 a.m. Sunday morning, on his day off.His friends and acquaintances were not really surprised. To them, he was a perfect Type A, a workaholic, a classic.Phil worked six days a week, five of them until eight or nine at night, during a time when his own company had begun the four-day week for everyone but the executives. He played a golf game every month but it was work. Other than this, he had no outside "extracurricular interests."His survivors included his wife Helen and three children. Helen, forty-eight years old, had given up trying to compete with his work years ago. Among his "beloved" children, the eldest son didn't know him well, and the daughter had no shared topics with him. Only the youngest son who was twenty, tried to grab at his father and tried to mean enough to him to keep the man at home.At the funeral, the sixty-year-old company president said that the fifty-one-year-old deceased had meant much to the company and would be missed and would be hard to replace. And by 5:00 p.m. The afternoon of the funeral, the company president had begun to make inquiries about the replacement.Unit twoIncreasing your language proficiencyWorking with words and expressions1. 1) ill-fitting 2) stain 3) devoured 4) rotting 5) cracked 6) chronic 7) dripping 8) sore 9) enslaved 10) corrective2. Listed in the box below are some expressions that you have learned in the text. Complete the sentences with each of them. Change the form where necessary.1) wears away/eats away 2) come off 3) help out 4) eats away 5) goingup 6) at best 7) off and onCloze (page 34)1) smell 2) marriage 3) chronic 4) smelly 5) unemployment 6) mattress 7) cornbread 8) malnutrition 9) cracked 10) luxuries 11) insects 12) deapers 13) future 14) alcohol 15) barsTranslationTranslate the following passage into English.What is poverty? Read the story of a single mother of three, and you'll understand what it means.She was married once, but later her husband lost his job and life became increasingly difficult. After giving birth to the last baby, her marriage came to an end.In order to save her children from suffering, she summoned up her courage and went to ask for help.She got seventy-eight dollars a month for the four of them. After the rent, most of the rest went for food.There was no money left to get the refrigerator fixed and the milk went sour; no money for hot water, and even in winter she had to do washing in icy old water. She had chronic anemia caused from poor diet, a bad case of worms, and needed a corrective operation, but there was no money for iron pills, or better food, or worm medicine, to say nothing of having an operation. She had no money for grannies; no money for paper handkerchiefs and her children were seen with runny noses all the time, she tried her best to use only the minimum electricity. She stayed up all night on cold night, because she had to watch the fire, for fear that one spark on the newspaper covering the walls would cause a fire and the sleeping children would die in flames.She saw no bright future. Sooner or later, the boys would end up behind the bars of their prison or turn to the freedom of alcohol or drugs and find themselves enslaved. And what awaited the daughter was, at best, a life like that of the mother.Indeed, poverty is an acid that drips on pride until all pride is worn away. Poverty is a chisel that chips on honor until honor is worn away. Unit threePage 52Increasing your language proficiencyWorking with words and expressions1. 1)pray 2) escorted 3) swirled 4) grin 5) deceived 6) punctuated 7) wail 8) rejoicing 9) moans 10) serenely2. Listed in the box below are some expressions that you have learned in the text. Complete the sentences with each of them. Change the form where necessary.1) by leaps and bounds 2) a sea of 3) holding out 4) take his name in vain 5) held up 6) an ashamed ofCloze page 551) congregation 2) souls 3) escorted 4) revival 5) sinners 6) sermon 7)rocking 8) altar 9) surrounded 10) whisper 11) serenely 12) ashamed 13) name 14) burst 15) rejoicedTranslationTranslate the following passage into English.When Hughes was going on thirteen, his aunt took him to the church for a revival meeting, hoping that his soul would be saved by Jesus Christ. His aunt told him that when he was saved, he would see a light, and something would happen to him inside. She also said he could see and hear and feel Jesus in his soul. Young Hughes believed in the literal meaning of these words. He sat there calmly in the hot, crowded church, waiting for Jesus to come to him.After the sermon by the preacher, all the children went to the altar one after another. This meant that they were saved. But Hughes kept sitting there. He was still waiting for Jesus to come, wanting something to happen to him. Now the whole congregation was praying for him alone. The pressure on him was increasing and he began to feel ashamed of himself, holding everything up so long. In order to save further trouble, Hughes decided to lie and say that Jesus had come. So he got up and was saved finally. That night, lying in bed, Hughes cried in agony. He felt guilty because he had lied in public and he didn't believe in Jesus any more.Unit fourPage 71Increasing your language proficiencyWorking with words and expressions11) grin 2) browse 3) shivered 4) hearty 5) nerves 6) courtship 7) pinching 8) napping 9) blinking 10) bragging2. Listed in the box below are some expressions that you have learned in the text. Complete the sentences with each of them. Change the form where necessary.1)live off 2) cut loose 3) shot out 4) were weighed down 5) stopped shot of 6) washing them down with 7) shake...out 8) come up to 9) hosing down Cloze page 751) cracking 2) living 3) refrigerator 4) quart 5) change 6) porch 7) race 8) cleaning 9) casually 10) hearty 11) Eventually 12) saw 13) browsing 14) scared 15) courtshipTranslationTranslate the following passage into English.Life is full of miracles. Sometimes, a chance meeting can lead to a happy marriage.When he was twenty, he was college poor. One day, he went to buy some beer and on his way back he saw his neighbor, a Japanese woman, cracking walnuts on her front porch. He walked slowly and she looked up, smiling. He smiled back and said hello, and returned with the beer to his apartment, his heart still with the girl.So he raced his heart downstairs, but stopped short of her house, because he didn't know what to say. After a while, with studied casualness he walked past the girl who was cleaning up the shells, but he only came up with a hearty hello and walked away. He was troubled by his own decision. The he returned, walking past her again. They smiled to each other, but again nothing was said before he returned to his apartment.Later, they began to talk, sit together on the porch, and snack on the sweet bread she baked personally. Then they held hands. Eventually, he married the woman he found cracking walnuts on an afternoon.Had he not gone for the beer, or had he met someone else instead of her, his life would have been totally different.Unit fivePage 111Increasing your language proficiencyWorking with words and expressions1.1)delight 2) ducked 3) thrust 4) strained 5) resentful 6) distressed 7) alarmed 8) contradicting 9) intent 10) hovered 11) perched 12) wrestling 2. Listed in the box below are some expressions that you have learned in the text. Complete the sentences with each of them. Change the form where necessary.1) went out for 2) pin him down 3) hold back 4) now and then 5) throwinga glance 6) scrambled to my feet 7) There's no point in 8) bent down Cloze1) master 2) ease 3) burn 4) bewilderment 5) baffled 6) swept 7) gasping 8) perched 9) grinned 10) give 11) prostrate 12) queer 13) lurked 14) pounce 15) cubTranslationTranslate the following passage into English.When he was little, his father would bend down from his great height to sweep him into the air. But he was never afraid, not with his father's hands holding him. To him, no one in the world was as strong, or as wise, as his father.As he grew, he would lurk behind the kitchen door when it was time for his father to come home at night. He would leap out when his father asked about him.After he went to school, they would wrestle on the floor together. Every time, his father would master him with ease, leaving him half resentfuland half mirthful.In high school he was surprised to find that there was so much more of him, and he could look down on his mother. But when it came to wrestling, he was still no equal of his father.One night, he suddenly found that his father didn't look nearly as tall as he used to. He could even look his father straight in the eyes now. He challenged his father once more and this time, it was his father who said,"I give." His mother helped his father to rise, and there was baffled pain in her eyes.His father spoke of a next time, and his mother did not contradict, because the three of them knew that there would never be a next time.He ran through the kitchen door, stood on the steps and let tears burn his eyes and run down his cheeks.Unit sixPage 134Increasing your language proficiencyWorking with words and expressions1. Listed in the box are some of the words you have learned in the text. Complete the following sentences with them. Change the form where necessary.1) rusted 2) dwarfs 3) dwell 4) possessions 5) intensity 6) assembled 7) alert 8) probed 9) fingering 10) awkwardly2. Listed in the box below are some expressions that you have learned in the text. Complete the sentences with each of them. Change the form where necessary.1) spy on 2) watching for 3) presented itself 4) came loose 5) drew back 6) out of the reach 7) making his rounds 8)by accident 9) No wonder 10) empty ofCloze1) frosted 2) missing 3)rotting 4) intensity 5) cast 6) sickroom 7) cards 8) impressive 9) ordered 10)instead 11) palm 12) threw 13) discus 14) laugh 15) wayTranslationTranslate the following passage into English.The patient in Room 542 was unusual. He had the look of vigor and good health, but he was blind, legless, and his deteriorating body was like a rotting log. His life was like a candle in the wind, about to be blown out at any moment. His body was not whole, but he was still impressive. He had been suffering physical pain beyond imagination, but he was always quiet. He always ordered scrambled eggs for breakfast but he never ate them. Instead, he would throw the breakfast plate against the wall earnestly as if it were a discus. He had no feet but he repeatedly asked the doctor to bring him a pair of shoes. The room he dwelled in was emptyof all possessions----no get-well cards, flowers, slippers, none of the usual kickshaws of the sickroom. He seemed to have been cast upon a wild island. Finally, he left the world quietly, with no one beside him. Lying in his bed, his face was relaxed, grave and dignified. Upon his death, was he remembering a time when he was whole? Did he dream of the feet he used to have?Unit sevenPage 156Increasing your language proficiencyWorking with words and expressions1.Listed in the box are some of the words you have learned in the text. Complete the following sentences with them. Change the form where necessary.1)craned 2)striking 3)grand 4)dense 5)assume 6)roar 7)clutch 8)shattering 9)fluttering 10)brisk2. Listed in the box below are some expressions that you have learned in the text. Complete the sentences with each of them. Change the form where necessary.1)struggling with 2) pay your respects 3) has come up with 4) lining up 5) backed up 6) has in mind 7) in line 8) fill up 9) it never occurred to 10) took effectCloze (page 181)1)thousands 2) financial 3) respects 4) lost 5) nothing 6) adjusted 7) visible 8) around 9) come 10)images 11) devastation 12) imagined 13) motivated 14) grief 15) emptinessTranslationTranslate the following passage into English.Talking about the disaster at the World Trade Centre, people usually have in mind images from television and newspaper pictures: the collapsing buildings, the running office workers, the black plume of smoke against a bright blue sky. However, when one goes around what used to be the World Trade Center, there is nothing to see, except the wide emptiness. Then, when the eyes have adjusted to what they are looking at, one begins to notice what is around.Suddenly there are the firefighters, the waiting ambulance on the other side of the pit, the police on every corner. Suddenly there is the enormous cross made of two rusted girders. Suddenly there is the little cemetery attached to a nearby chapel. The fence is a welter of wreaths, poems and photographs, and American flags everywhere.So, what is not there becomes visible and absence begins to assume a material form. So, emptiness becomes meaningful and expressive. What seems to be nothing actually says everything.Unit eightPage 178Increasing your language proficiencyWorking with words and expressions1. Listed in the box are some of the words you have learned in the text. Complete the following sentences with them. Change the form where necessary.1) pinched 2) convenience 3) rage 4) endured 5) jointly 6) marvelous 7)scary 8) ardor2. Listed in the box below are some expressions that you have learned in the text. Complete the sentences with each of them. Change the form where necessary.1) beyond (a) doubt 2) bare their souls 3) worried sick 4) keeping score 5) is inCloze (page 181)1) conducted 2) functions 3) mutual 4) maintain 5) distance 6)intimate 7)jointly 8) varieties 9) past 10)revived 11)part 12) contexts 13)generations 14)defined 15)mediumTranslationTranslate the following passage into English.From a broad point of view, friends come in different types. There is sufficient value to be found in each variety of friendship and they can meet our different needs.Convenience friends can make our lives more convenient and special-interest friends can bring more fun to what we study and when we play. But we would not come too close or tell too much with these two types of friends.Historical friends and crossroads friends represent particular periods in our past lives. We only need to connect occasionally, and the dormant intimacy would be instantly revived. From a friendship that forms across generations the younger person gets the benefit of the other's experience while the older person gets a youthful perspective. Man-woman friendships can bring to the two parties pleasures different from friendships formed with the same sex.Of course, what attracts us most are the best of friends, who totally love and support and trust each other, bare to each other the secrets of their souls, run----no questions asked----to help each other, and tell harsh truths to each other when they must be told. Best friends needn't agree about everything and should be able to tolerate each other's point of view. Best friends will be there to comfort our sorrows and to celebrate our joys.。
研究生英语综合教程课后答案
研究生英语综合教程课后答案Unit 1Large-scale academic collaboration has taken place successfully in the past; the Manhattan Project and contemporaneous radar research, and numerous experimental particle projects, to cite just a few examples, are not perhaps academic in the purest sense, but they demonstrate that academic scientists can play well with others. More recently, new systems biology studies are bringing a sense of teamwork into academic life science labs, but there have been some growing pains. Still, in most of academic science—including the life science—the lone wolf still rules.独立性抗相互依存关系的问题已被写入经常定期介绍在学术和工业两个世界科学的用人的主要问题,几十年来,学术界一直口惠合作的想法,但激励和奖励制度迟迟没有调整。
尽管在协作的广泛兴趣和其明显的价值在学术环境中,合作仍然是非正式的,实际上是由任期过程,其中学者处罚共享的信用为自己与他人的工作劝阻。
过去已经发生过成功的大规模的学术合作;曼哈顿计划和当时雷达的研究,以及众多的实验粒子项目,仅举几个例子也许不是纯粹意义上的学者,但他们证明,学术科学家可以与其他人合作得很好。
新世纪大学英语系列教程综合教程5Unit3课后答案Word版
新世纪大学英语系列教程综合教程5Unit3课后答案Word版Unit 31.1) pray2) escorted3) swirled4) grin5) deceived6) punctuated7) wail8) rejoicing9) moans10) serenely2.1) by leaps and bounds2) a sea of3) holding out4) take his name in vain5) held up6) am ashamed ofIncreasing Your Word Power1. 1) In 1915, Piaget received his bachelor’s degree from theuniversity when he was going on 18.2) The rescue site rocked with prayer and song upon news of his survival.3) The team broke into a sea of shouting when they finally topped the peak after two days’ climbing.4) Waves of rejoicing swept the theatre when the stars appeared on stage one by one.5) The girls held hands and leaped in the air when they met again after two years of separation.6) She knelt down and prayed that her little son would be blessed in the name of God.7) The joyous singing filled the room, where a children’s birthday party was held.8) 1 was so disappointed that I buried my head under the quilts and cried myself to sleep that night.2. 1) coded2) wooded3) gifted4) coloured5) gloved6) moneyed7) curved8) diseasedSAVE2) s a v e: v. m a k e(something) safe from destructionWe tried to save our marriage, but in the end we decided we couldn’t live together.3) save: v. keep and add to an amount of money for later use She planned to work until she had saved enough money to at tenda nursing school.4) save: v. prevent or avoid the waste of (time)We can save a lot of time by taking the expressway.5) save: v. keep for future useDon’t throw the wrapping paper awayI am going to save it and use it again.6) save: v. make unnecessary forIf you lend me a pound, it will save mc from having to go to the bank.Cloze1) congregation2) souls3) escorted4) revival5) sinners6) sermon7) rocking8) altar9) surrounded10) whisper11) serenely12) ashamed13) name14) burst15) rejoicedTRANSLATIONWhen Hughes was going on thirteen, his aunt took him to the church for a revival meeting, hoping that his soul would be saved by Jesus Christ. His aunt told him that when he was saved, he would see a light, and something would happen to him inside! She also said he could see and hear and feel Jesus in his soul. Young Hughes believed in the literal meaningthe hot, crowded church, waiting for Jesus to come to him. After the sermon by the preacher, all the children went to the altar one after another. This meant that they were saved. But Hughes kept sitting there. He was still waiting for Jesus to come, wanting something to happen to him. Now the whole congregation was praying for him alone. The pressure on him was increasing and he began to feel ashamed of himself, holding everything up so long. In order toavoid further trouble, Hughes decided to lieand say that Jesus had come. So he got up and was saved finally. That night, lying in bed, Hughes cried in agony. He felt guilty because he had lied in public and he didn’t believe in Jesus any more.WRITINGSample Essay:My First Experience as a TeacherIt was a Sunday morning. I got up early and dressed myself in my Sunday best. It was my first day as a part-time teacher of English. It won’t be a difficult job teaching a group of child ren some basic English,?I thought to myself as I was walking towards a private kindergarten. The manager, a friend of mine, had informed me that this Sunday English Learning Program was initiated at the request of the parents, who wished to expose their pre-school children to some English.We don’t have textbooks an d you may plan your teaching as you see fit,? the manager had assured mc.As I entered the kindergarten, I heard a mighty wail of shouts and cries coming out a classroom. That must be the classroom,?I said to myself andquickened my steps. I was shocked to see some 20 naughty and noisy kids talking and laughing. Some were chasing after each other while others were standing on their chairs singing. Strangely, when they saw me,they all quieted down and returned to their seats. In a hushed silence, punctuated by a few giggles from some girls, I introduced myself. Then I asked them in Chinese what they would like to learn and they all said that they wanted to learn an English song.I did not prepare for that, but I still remembered the “ABCSong”? that I learne d when I was a kid. ? sang the song from memory and the expressions on their faces told mc that they liked it a lot. So ? wrote the 26 English letters on the blackboard and we started learning and singing together. it was fun, indeed.Then, I thought I’d b etter teach some sentences as I had planned. So I wrote on the blackboard HOW ARE YOU? and HOW OLD ARE YOU? making a point that they got to know the Chinese meaning of each word separately. By reading after me they were learning fast.Suddenly, a little boy rose to his feet and accused me of teaching them the wrong thing. Pointing his finger at the blackboard, he translated the sentences word for word into Chinese:zenme shi ni? zenme lao shi ni??The whole room then broke into a sea of shouting and waves o f rejoicing swept over everyone’s face.My first teaching experience was a success and I learned a lesson, too: It is no easy job to teach.(注:可编辑下载,若有不当之处,请指正,谢谢!)。
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U1 Free Falling1.What is the main subject introduced in paragraph one?It is the description of the effect of saying farewell to his parents, friends and folks on the author.2.How is the story organized?The story is chronologically organized (following the time sequence in which the event unfolded itself).3.How did Weckerly feel before the day of his departure?He felt eager and excited to wait for the day to come.4.How did his mood change when the day had really come?At the very beginning he became sentimental about saying good-bye to many people around him. Facing the reality of becoming independent, he began to feel afraid and uncertain .5.What do you think about the ending of the story?It is very impressive. Weckerly ends the story with a metaphor which catches the essence of the particular moment accurately. He compares himself to a rookie skydiver preparing for his first plunge, which leads to possible outcomes: sheer excitement or eventual death. The last sentence "He closes his eyes, takes a deep breath, and jumps" symbolizes the fact that from that day on the author jumps into the future of being independent no matter how long and complicated the road to it is.U6 The myth of the paperless office1. What are the disadvantages of paper according to the author?Paper takes up precious space, can be in only one place at a time, is extremely hard to index or search through, and lacks all the interactivity and linking ability of hypertext.2. What are the major categories of files in an office?In the office, files can be mainly classified into hot files, documents to be acted on immediately; warm files, still active but of less urgency and cold file s, docements that don’t need immediate attention.3. Why is it unpleasant to read something on a computer screen?Because there are such annoyances as the relatively fuzzy type, glare, the need to scrollrepeatedly, the screen’s relatively fixed position and so forth.4. What are the essential problems in using computers in polices departments?First, the police found they spent so much time dealing with the computer interface that they fell short in listening and talking to victims, an essential activity both for offering comfort and for picking up subtle clues to what exactly had happened. Second, the goal of prompt reporting was compromised by the fact that police kept revising their reports after filing them.5. What are the reasons for people’s chimera of going paperless according to the author? Firstly, people who can profit from the idea keep selling it to us. Secondly, all technologies come down to our trying to get what we want, what we desire. And much of what we desire comes down to taking control of ourlives, doing what we please without being overwhelmed by what we don’t please.6.Why cannot computers replace paper in an office?First, paper has some hidden advantages over computers especially in the following three aspects—reading, writing and personal satisfaction in delivery. Furthermore, computers can’t replace paper completely in some activities such as air-traffic control and writing up police reports.U7 Competition is destructive1. Why is competition destructive according to the author? (para. 3)According to the author, competition is destructive because it undermines self-esteem, poison s relationships and holds us back from doing our best.2. What are the purposes of the games devised or collected by Orlick and others? (para.6)The idea of the games devised or collected by Orlick and others is for each person on the field to make a specified contribution to the goal, or for all the players to reach a certain score, or f or everyone to work with their partners against a time limit.3. What is the difference between teamwork and team competition? (para. 8)The difference between teamwork and team competition is that in teamwork everyone on the f ield is working together for a common goal, while in team competition a given player works with and is encouraged to feel warmly toward only half of those present.4. Why do most kinds of fun require competition? (para. 10, 11, 12)First of all, people don't know any other way or people have never tasted the alternative. Secondly, we overlook the psychological costs of competition: it causes self-doubt and feeling s of self-worth become dependent on external sources of evaluation.5. Who is to blame for competition?It is the structure of the game itself thatis to blame rather than the individuals, since it sets competition at the very beginning.U10 Why we strive for status1. What is the writer's attitude in the sentence "The drive for dominance skews our perception, colors our friendships, shapes our moods and affects our health"? (para. 2) The author takes a negative attitude. Usually, the verbs color, shape and affect are neutral in indicating meanings, but in this context they express negative meanings.2. How do you understand the sentence "If the tendency showed up only in certain societies, it would be easier to dismiss as something we learn"? (para. 4)If the relentless one-upmanship were only limited within very few sample groups, it would be easily neglected because we could only regard that as an exception.3. In which way do zoologists support the anthropological point on the biologically endowed one-upmanship?Anthropologists point out that the same pattern can be seen everywhere while the zoologists show a wide variety of animals inferior and superior which illustrate the same pattern too. 4. What are the differences between men being powerful and powerless?Men who achieve high status enjoy more sex with more partners wheresas men who are just u nemployed may lose their marriages as well as self-esteem.5. In which ways are modern men the same as, and also different from Genghis Khan? Modern men are the same as Genghis Khan in that they all strive for high status, but different in that modern men tend to rule by consent and try to avoid fighting.6. Do males always have to fight for power? Why or why not?Not necessarily, for the most durable leaders are the ones who govern by consent and try to av oid fighting.U13 Giving credit where debt is due1. How many credit cards does the average American have?4.2. What is a "sub-prime" borrower?People who have a bad credit history.3. What were the spending habits of people in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuri es?People regarded debt in a very negative way. They always tried to pay off their debts in a tim ely manner.4. How has credit card spending changed in the United States since the 1960s?In the 1960s most borrowers paid off their credit card balances monthly. Since then, many peo ple have amassed credit card debt.1.Only twenty-seven new members had been ____________ since the Leeds Congress, and the total membership still stood at less than one hundred. (B) B. enrolled2.You could go for advertising ____________, the catchy floor displays or the flashy packagi ng. (C) C. hype3.The desk was ____________ with files, but the chair behind it was vacant. (A) A. cluttered4.____________ is a meal typically eaten late in the morning as a combination of a late break fast and an early lunch. (B) B. Brunch5.The improvement of the highway will _________pressure on the trains to some extent. (B)B. relieve6.John's hands were ____________ as he put down his papers and started his speech at the fir st time. (A) A. quivering7.His mood was an explosive mixture of ____________ self-pity and forced gaiety, the latter predominating as he got drunk. (A) A. maudlin8.Because of the economic slowdown, the government changed its policy to ____________ re venue by limiting commerce. (C) C. diminish9.In women's magazines and educational material the apple ____________ good food and hea lth. (B) B. conjures10.It is the opinion of a(n) ____________ tourist that no price would be too great to pay, the n ovelist declared. (D) D. sentimental1.According to the opinion poll, the Socialists were predominant in the last parliament. (D)D. dominant2.He exerted himself, during his sojourn among this simple and well-disposed people, to inculcate, as far as he was able, the gentle and humanizing precepts of the Christian faith. (B)B. infuse3.A domestic unit consists of the members of a household who live together along with non-r elatives such as servants. (A) A. family4.It was clear that a man after seventeen years of wedlock did not leave his wife without certa in occurrences which must have led her to suspect that all was not well with their married life.(B) B. marriage5.Several common reasons that lead couples to decide to cohabit: wanting to test compatibilit y or establish financial security before marrying. (A) A. live together6.The studies show that most delinquent boys have a non-conventional orientated self-conce pt, while other boys who are not involved in the peer group, have a school orientated self-con cept. (C) C. offensive7.They are a fierce and intractable people, though capable of forming most devoted friendshi ps when their confidence has once been gained. (C) C. unmanageable8."Your religion," says he, "serves you only for an excuse for your faults, but is no incentive t o your virtue." (B) B. inducement9.The real estate investors have tempered to meet the investor's needs. (A) A. adjusted10.To penalize a yacht in proportion to the fineness of her performance is unfair to the craft a nd to her men. (D) D. punish1. Advocates of organic foods frequently proclaim that such products are safer and more nutritious than others. (A) A. announce2. If I may venture an opinion, I’d say the plan needs closer examination. (C) C. express3. These photographs capture the essence of working-class life at the turn of the century. (A)A. describe4. There was a preponderance of female teachers in the English department. (B)B. dominance5. Clarence had only a few fuzzy memories of his grandparents. (C) C. obscure6. What he has achieved is an extraordinary feat that would be impossible to duplicate. (B)B. equal7. He’s stopped taking drugs now, but he ma y revert to taking them again. (C) C. restore8. As often as not, people tend to scream under such circumstances. (D) D. quite often9. What is even more important is the fact that the astronauts’ photographs have uncovered many things not evident at close range. (D) D. revealed10. The disposition of the troops on the battlefield is of paramount importance. (A)A. arrangement1. In particular, the relationship is becoming increasingly bedeviled by the issue of anti-missile defence. (C) C. plagued2. The universe offers no such categories or simplifications; only flux and infinite variety. (B)B. change3. The news of the wedding was plastered all over the morning papers. (A) A. covered4. Perhaps you should tweak that line or paragraph that throws the structure off before sending in the report. (C) C. revise5. The daily news stories of the worsening economy unnerved the nation. (A)A. discouraged6. She allowed her steady gaze to flicker from the glass which she had been holding for hours.(C) C. shine unsteadily7. Self-awareness of roles and of the feelings evoked in interpersonal encounters is increasingly critical for the nimble entrepreneur. (B) B. agile8. I have always tried to live by my faith but it’s sometimes unexpectedly difficult to achieve.(C) C. act on9. What we’ve got here is a half-baked proposal that still needs a great deal of work. (D)D. unthoughtful10. For the next four years they defied convention by living as man and wife when they were not. (A) A. tradition1.She has been eliminated from the swimming race because she did not win any of the practi ce races. (C) C. got rid of2.One of the major flaws in the existing system is that the prosecutor has immunity from law suits claiming malicious prosecution. (B) B. spiteful3.They define a good patient as one who accepts their statements and their actions uncritically and unquestioningly. (A) A. characterize4.Roberts' poor physical condition combined with nagging injuries prevented him from playi ng more than 51 games in the past four seasons. (A) A. troubling5.Constant correction by a teacher is often counterproductive, as the student may become afr aid to speak at all. (C) C. unfavorable6.For centuries we women have gloated over the one negative aspect of aging more evident i n men than women: balding. (B) B. felt maliciously satisfied with7.In the conducive atmosphere around the fort, General Bradley immediately found out about the plot. (D) D. favorable8.It's a story of a harmful dynamic between white prejudice and black autonomy. (C)C. competing or conflicting system9.Gandhi rejects outright claims made concerning the superior or inferior status of religions.(B) B. direct10.My first boss was a really nasty person, who seemed to enjoy making life difficult for ever yone. (C) C. ugly1.To put a kid like Delia in eight-hour isolation for accepting a cigarette from a friend is bizarre and outrageous. (B) B. violent2.Depression remains one of the most prevalent health disorders in the US. (A) A. common3.The next version of the software will have the edge over its competitors. (C)C. advantage4.He's managed to create a niche for himself in local politics. (B) B. right position5.There is nothing in the intrinsic nature of the work that makes it more suitable for women.(C) C. essential6.She addressed her young guest with civilities suitable for a personage of advanced years and uncertain appetite. (D) D. politeness7.That cannot be promised here, though a holistic perspective is taken on literary stylistics in addressing science fiction. (C) C. overall8.Many observers suggest that this transfer has had mainly adverse effects on the populationconcerned. (D) D. unfavorable9.Instead, justice is a commodity designed by a hierarchy of judges still dedicated to the inter ests of Power. (B) B. devoted10.The university suspended the club for two years, during which it could not hold social or a thletic activities. (A) A. stopped1.The man amassed a great fortune during the war, but later lost all of it almost overnight.(A)A. collected2.Ten federal researchers were listed as contributors, but seven of them quickly disavowed an y connection with it. (D) D. denied3.Industrial labour was at last being regulated, water supplies purified, hospitals sanitised and prisons reformed. (D) D. controlled4.The investment remains beyond reach for many, but the choices today are much broader and more viable than 10 years ago. (D) D. feasible5.There is no resolution to this conflict and two sides seem to go to war. (B) B. disagreement6.The small island is now visited by millions of tourists for its natural endowments of white s andy beaches and clean water. (C) C. gifts7.Indeed, the logic of commercialism may lead the enterprise to pursue activities at odds with other government objectives. (B) B. run after8.First introduced in 1989, Adopt-a-Pet aims to highlight the plight of abandoned animals and encourage more responsible pet ownership.(B) B. deserted9.As the King got older, he became convinced that his family were scheming against him. (A)A. plotting10.The Chinese football team outscored its opponent by two balls. (A) A. overcame1.Clinton also asked Glickman to report back within 30 days with recommendations to help alleviate debt problems afflicting cattle producers. (A) A. ease2.There was plenty to do on your own doorstep-to look further was a cop-out. (B)B. avoiding responsibility3.Then, too, repeated visits to cultural monuments doubtless palled in time, natural curiosity withered by sheer surfeit. (C) C. over-doing4.For example, Wilson wanted new recipients to be eligible for aid or only one year, butDemocrats wanted two years. (B) B. qualified to be chosen5.It's up to him to show some grit in an uncertain world. (D) D. firm courage6.You can tell me if there's anything that's worrying you or getting you down. (C)C. making you depressed7.Farmers still have the problem of overcoming the stigma which all too often young people attach to working on the land. (A) A. deep feeling of losing face8.At decision-making time these consequences are simply left unmentioned, allowing organiz ational leaders to feign surprise when qualitative costs finally assert themselves. (A)A. give a false appearance of9.Anything less than this is a measure of the extent to which the research falls short of scienti fic standards. (B) B.is less than10.The second was that its atoms of uranium were transmuting themselves into atoms of a di fferent element whose atomic mass was lower. (D) D. changing themselves completely 1.For these the primary schools provided a gentle haven before they transferred to the local se condary modern school. (D) D. sanctuary2.It also makes specialty parts and accessories, which can be used to spruce up the performan ce and appearance of existing automobiles. (B) B. smarten up3.I knew that faking the tears would make her get a sense of gratification and end the punish ment, but I refused. (A) A. satisfaction4.The stigma may not result from associating her language with ignorance, but the unkindnes s is just as real. (C) C. disgrace5.Her eyebrow had received the blow from the torch and had begun to throb; she could feel a trickle of blood. (B) B. movement6.You should not tell your client to expect that they will automatically experience an aversion response to the imagery of drinking. (D) D. antipathy7.Some economists are now predicting the danger of runaway inflation and they see it as a fo rce that human can no longer control. (C) C. uncontrolled8.Anyone who studied at the college joined an elite band of well-connected lawyers, doctors a nd businessmen. (A) A. excellent9.Liz had a more robust notion of the self, and took another line on the individual's place in the structure. (D) D. potent10.His friendship with Fujimori gives him unusual access to a president with a tiny circle of a dvisers and a penchant for secrecy. (B) B. preference1.Firstly, we need to ease the problems of cash shortage and credit crunch to maintain a stable banking system. (B) B. deficiency2.Wholesale markets for agricultural products shall have transaction regulations. (C)C. dealing3.The board has decided to withhold part of their grant money from certain students. (B)B. reserve4.The remainder of their school time is devoted to music theory, instrumental lessons and pra ctice. (D) D. residue5.We will reimburse the expenses of the advertising for the representative. (A) A. recoup6.Any application for such extension of contract period shall be made six months before the expiration of the contract. (C) C. termination7.If you work in a company, you usually don't have to go to the tax bureau because your comp any will deduct it from your salary. (A) A. subtract8.What he said and did involved the bystanders in his dispute with the police. (D)D. disagreement9.You are advised to deposit your valuables in the hotel safe. (C) C. lodge10.She fumbled her purse which contained the address slip. (D) D. paper。