大学英语听说第五册答案(上海外语教育出版社版)
综合英语教程第五册-课后答案-课件Unit-04-Force-of-Nature演示课件.ppt
minded, a legend. I was just a girl with little direction, more
drawn to words and made-up stories than to formulas and lab
experiments.
综合教程5(第2版)电子教案
精心整理
综合教程5(第2版)电子教案
精心整理
Text Introduction | Culture Notes | Author | Structure
Using original research (diaries, letters, and family interviews) to peel away the layers of myth and reveal the woman behind the icon, the acclaimed author and historian Barbara Goldsmith offers a dazzling portrait of Curie, her amazing discoveries, and the price she paid for fame.
全新版大学英语听说教程5的1-7单元答案
UNIT 1Strangers1. The stranger looked at me skeptically for a few minutes and then drove away from the parking lot without a word.2. Though she's studied in a foreign language university for several years, she is a stranger French.3. The little boy felt strange amid so many foreign children.4. It seems odd that John could afford a new BMW,for he was laid off from his job a year ago.5. She was very curious about the way he counted the votesafter the election for school president.6. My curiosity as well as anger rose as I watched him flip through the letterson my desk in his nosy way.7. It is quite indifferent to me whether you agree or disagree with the argumentthat men are born evil.8. It's queer indeed that a stranger offered me a cup of teawhen I was thirsty on the train during the journey.9. The new regulations imposed by the police are very unusual and it will take time to get used to them.10. That newspaper is notorious for giving biased accounts.11. The old lady always slept under the bed with her clothes on,and this eccentric habit of hers actually saved her lifewhen an earthquake struck abruptly one night.12. Too many people, especially young people,like to use screen names to chat online.13. Though you can not tell how old your pal(伙伴) in an Internet room is,more often than not you can tell whether the chatter is a male or a female.14. Talkative persons are dangerous, for they have no secrets about themselves and keep no secrets of others.15. I like easy-going people and feel relaxed when talking to them. The monitor, for example, acts and thinks in one and the same way.16. Speech is silver, but silence is gold.17. Facial expressions are very important. We sometimes can tell from the way a stranger talks whether he or she is trustworthy or not.18. Instant Messaging(即时信息), or "IM," is a new phenomenon that has rapidly grown in popularity around the world in just a few years. Some experts now believe that IM may be one of the most popular computer applications ever.19. IRC, or Internet Relay Chatting, has become very popularity on the World Wide Web, for it enables people from different part of the world to talk to each other via the Internet.20. MSN is a collection of Internet sites and services provided by Microsoft.Microsoft used the MSN brand nameto promote numerous popular Web-based services in the late 1990s,most notably Hotmail and Messenger,before reorganizing many of them in 2005 under another brand name, Windows Live.Some of the MSN services affected by the rebranding included MSN Hotmail,which became Windows Live Hotmail;MSN Messenger, which became Windows Live Messenger;MSN Search, which became Live Search, now known as Bing.QQ is a popular instant messaging system that is commonly used in China and the Asia-Pacific. It enables real-time communication between PCs, mobile phones and pagers. Perhaps it is one of the best ways to develop contact in China.21. Tencent QQ, generally referred to as QQ,is the most popular free instant messaging computer program in mainland China.It enables real-time communication between PCs, mobile phones and pagers.The number of simultaneous online QQ users exceeded 100 million on March 5, 2010.It is reported that the number of registered QQ users in China has exceeded 7 million. On February 18th, 2003 alone, the number of QQ users online was 295063.22.Skype is a popular chatting program on the Internet.The Skype communications system is notable for its broad range of features,including free voice and video conferencing,its ability to use peer to peer technology(点对点网络技术) to overcome common firewall(防火墙)and network address translation problems.Mobile QQ is a service that seamlessly allows the customer’s PC-based instant messaging service to become integrated with his or her mobile phone, allowing the customer to stay in touch with PC-or mobile-based contacts from just about anywhere.UNIT 2UFOs1. UFO stands for Unidentified Flying Object. Some people also call UFOs flying saucers,because their shapes look like saucers.2. In its broader sense, the UFO includes any object or light, reportedly sighted in the sky, that cannot be immediately explained by the observer.3. I remember as a child, I would save every penny my mother gave me to buy the latest UFO magazines from the grocery store.4. We cannot deny the existence of the UFO phenomenon simply because we have not seen it or cannot explain it.5. Science has its limitations and many mysteries throughout the world have remained unsolved.6. Sightings of unusual aerial phenomena date back to ancient times.7. The early cave paintings and ancient scriptures(经文) seem to indicate that we may have had visitors from other worlds or planets in the past.8. In fact, ancient scriptures from many different cultures would give us the impression that we've had visitors from outer space.9. How do you explain ancient tales of chariots(战车) from the sky? And what are the flying ships appearing in science fiction novels before the first plane was ever thought about?10. Even the Bible has been suggested as possible evidence of alien contact,for its numerous accounts of objects in the sky, and other strange events.11. What secrets lie with ancient Egypt, Stonehenge(Salisbury),or possibly even Atlantis ?Have there indeed been more advanced civilizations of man that have somehow been lost?12. Some UFO enthusiasts even claim to have been abducted and taken aboard UFOs.But so far, no one has produced scientifically acceptable proof of these claims.13. Some people believe that UFOs are extraterrestrial spacecraft,even though no scientifically valid evidence supports that belief.14. Scientists speculate that intelligent life may well exist elsewhere in the universe.15. In addition to many reports and sightings of UFOs,observers have provided photographs or even videos.16. UFOs became widely discussed only after the first widely publicized US sighting in 1947.Many thousands of such observations have since been reported worldwide. 17. From 1947 to 1969 the US Air Force investigated UFOs as a possible threat to national security.18. The UK Ministry of Defence recorded 634 UFO sightings in 2009,the second highest annual total after 1978, when there were 750,according to UFO expert Dr David Clarke.The UK Ministry of Defence recorded 634 UFO sightings in 2009,the second highest annual total after 1978, when there were 750,according to UFO expert Dr David Clarke.A total of 12618 reports were received ,of which 701 or 5.6 percent were listef as unexplained.19.UFOs have been subject to investigations over the yearsthat vary widely in scope and scientific ernments or independent academics in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom,Japan, France, Belgium, Sweden, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Spain, and the Soviet Unionare known to have investigated UFO reports at various times.UFOs have been subject to investigations over the yearsthat vary widely in scope and scientific ernments or independent academics in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom,Japan, France, Belgium, Sweden, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Spain, and the Soviet Unionare known to have investigated UFO reports at various times.Since 1959 no agence of the us government has had any active program of ufo investigation.20. In 1997 the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) admitted that the US military had deceived the American publicin an effort to hide information about high-altitude spy planes.21. At least 90 percent of UFO sightings can be identified as conventional objects, although time-consuming investigations are often necessary for such identification. 22. The objects most often mistaken for UFOs are bright planets and stars, aircraft, birds, balloons, kites, aerial flares, peculiar clouds, meteors, and satellites.UNIT 3Part A1. We are living in an era of globalization.Overseas study has become popular in many countries.We are living in an era of globalization.2. Each year, over one million students worldwidechoose to study outside their own countries.3. More than 195,000 students from 188 countriesand regions came to study at more than 500 Chinese universities, colleges and research institutes in 2008.This compares with 141,000 students from 179 countries and regions in 2005.4. Meanwhile, the number of American students studying abroadhas more than doubled in the last decade.5. Recent reports by Britain and the US indicatethat China ranks first in the number of studentswho have gained doctorate degrees in the two countries.6. According to a government report,overseas students from China are largely self-funded.7. The number of high school and even primary school students going abroad has been increasing recently.8. Rapid domestic economic growth makes it more affordablefor Chinese students to study abroad.9. The process of application has become easiersince many intermediate agencies were founded to help students.10. In the age of a global economy,your experience abroad distinguishes you from others and becomes an excellent résumé builder.11. The first group of foreign students came from East Europe in 1950. Since then over 60,000 students from 160 countrieshave come to China for further studies.The first group of foreign students came from East Europe in 1950. 12. China is politically stable and economically optimistic,which is the main reason why so many foreign students are attracted.13. People living together in a society share a common culture.For example, almost all people living in the US use the English language, dress in similar styles, eat many of the same foods,and celebrate many of the same holidays.14. Exchange can provide many benefits for all societies.Different societies can exchange ideas,people, manufactured goods, and natural resources.15. International education improves the relations among peoples of different culturesand encourages cross-cultural communication.16. Culture shock is the anxiety and feelings of surprise, disorientation, uncertainty, confusion, etc.felt when people have to operate within a different and unknown culture such as one may encounter in a foreign country.17. Culture shock grows out of the difficulties in assimilating the new culture,causing difficulty in knowing what is appropriate and what is not. This is often combined with a dislike for,or even disgust (moral or aesthetic) with certain aspects of the new ordifferent culture.18. Culture shock is something that many international students experiencein the course of adjusting to a new culture.19. Many things may bring about culture shock —different foods and waysof eating,different learning and teaching methods,the peculiar attitudes of people in a certain place, etc.20. According to the Chinese Ministry of Education,Chinese students are currently studying in more than 100 countries. The top five destinations are the US, Japan, the UK, Canada and Australia. Non-English-speaking countries like Italy,Germany and France are also becoming popular destinations.21. Across the country, a total of 98,510 Chinese graduate and undergraduate studentswere enrolled at US institutions in the 2008-2009 academic year, meaning that roughly 15 percent of international students were from China. These numbers also signify a staggering 60 percent increasefrom the previous academic year in the number of Chinese students studying abroad in the US.22. Official statistics show that from 1978 to the end of 2005, Chinese students studying abroad are over 930,000 and 230,000 of them are employed in China upon return,an evidence that the policy of encouraging studentsand scholars to study abroad is very successful.23. There is a whole emerging middle class of Chinese,well over 300 million, many of them with one-child familieswho are interested in sending their son or daughterabroad for higher educational experience.24. International students and their families contributemore than $15 billion annually to the US economy,according to a separate survey by NAFSA(美国国际教育工作者协会).UNIT 4Laughter: the Best Medicine1. Humour is the tendency of particular cognitive(认知的) experiences to provoke laughter and provide amusement.2. People of all ages and cultures respond to humour. The majority of people are able to experience humour, i.e., to be amused, to laugh or smile at something funny, and thus they are considered to have a sense of humour.3. Though there are many ways to laugh, from giggles to guffaws(大笑) andfrom chuckles to cackles(咯咯的笑), it turns out that we humans laugh at the strangest things.4. Laughter is rightly called the best medicine as it relieves not only the one who laughs, but all those around him too.5. A healthy sense of humour helps you to laugh at the worst situations and above all at yourself, a very positive sign of a happy life.6. The world is certainly not worth crying over and little jokes show us the funny side of the gravest things.7. A sense of humour makes you more acceptable in society. It makes you welcome everywhere, especially at parties, picnics and social gatherings.8. If you can use humour to bridge the gap between people from different backgrounds, you can learn how to use diversity to enhance business objectives.9. Laugh and make others laugh and get rid of nervousness and depression.A man who always sees the funny side of a situation can never be a pessimist10. If you can learn to relax with a sense of humour you can keep away boredom and fatigue job pressures and domestic worries.11. It is proved that laughter enhances the level of hormones which stimulate the heart and act as natural pain-killers.12. As a Chinese saying goes, "A smile can make you ten years younger." Doctors say laughter removes stress, burns calories and improves one's digestion.13. Laughing at yourself is of immense benefit for your puffed-up pride. If you learn to laugh at yourself it will ease all your tensions and worries.14. Laughter has been known to have cured serious illnesses and helped people get over bad phases in their lives.15. Science has proven that when we're happy, the body recovers more quickly from the biological arousal of upsetting emotions.16. Adults laugh approximately 15 times per day, while children laugh about 400 times a day! When we grow up, somehow we lose a few hundred laughs a day.17. People believe that if they try to be funny and no one laughs, something terrible and embarrassing will happen.18. The problem is that I tell a joke to co-workers and no one laughs. Now every time I see a straight face I have a panic attack.19. We now know that there are two types of stress: good stress and bad stress. Laughter is a form of good stress, or stress in reverse.20. Research on stress has shown that bad stress suppresses your immune system while good stress, or laughter, improves the immune system.21. Being unhappy or very sad can seriously damage your health. So don't worry, be happy and laugh!22. As the highest emotion, laughter is magical. It is an inner human tool that can be used to respond to any situation with power and grace. Cultivate a habit of smiling at the neutral, the tragic, and the horrible. Find laughter in tears. This cultivates not only physical and psychological health, but also a happier and friendlier personality.Unit 5Neighbours1. Good fences make good neighbours. This proverb means that good neighbours respect one another’s property. As long as neighbours mindtheir own business, they will get along fine. Good farmers, for example, maintain their fences in order to keep their livestock from wandering onto neighbouring farms.2. Jack and I have been roommates and friends for four years. We have been through many experiences together, learning and playing together, and there seems to be no border between us.3. Difficult neighbours refer to those who are not easy to get along with, to deal with or to put up with, when a dispute arises.4. The Bible says: “Love thy neighbour.” But in real life situations, loving one’s neighbour as oneself can be very difficult.5. We build fences to keep our dog in our own yard and not in our neighbour’s. Folks well off enough to have a swimming pool build a fence around it to keep outsiders out — and safe.6. But we build too many fences and walls — walls in our personal lives,walls in our churches, walls in our community and nation. So we have walls of hostility, anger, judgment, indifference, and isolation.7. A warm and cordial relationship between neighbours can greatly increase the chances of a peaceful resolution. A warm and cordial relationship between neighbours can greatly increase the chances of a peaceful resolution.8. Some people say that good fences make bad neighbours and others say good lawyers make bad neighbours.9. There might be a time when you share a room with another person. Keep in mind that unfamiliar situations and stress will cause a person to act differently.10. It is true that we all need to be good roommates. Students and residents need to respect each other, in and out of the university.11. Being a good neighbour means working together to win together. Helping your fellow neighbour without expecting something in return is being a good neighbour.12. A 60-year-old woman was arrested last week and charged with attempted murder, for she poisoned a dog of her next-door neighbour.13. A man lived in a house that was separated from a next-door neighbour by a hedge. He allowed the hedge to grow to a towering height, blockingout all the sun in the neighbour’s yard. The neighbour tried to communicateabout the problem, but was met with a wall of silence and quickly closed doors.14. My father is being sued by his neighbour for building up a 6-foot-tall wood fence between his neighbour’s property and his own. There was anexisting 4-foot-tall wood fence, but my father decided to tear that down and put up a new one. The result is: good fences make bad neighbours.15. My housemates and I were fined $70 last month because there was trash in front of our house. The worst part about it is that it wasn’t our trash.16. My next-door neighbour is not only mean but noisy; she often plays her stereos loud enough to wake up the whole community.17. A man known as the “most annoying neighbour” went before a jury for the first time last Tuesday on charges of littering in his home’s yard.Neighbours have complained about the piles of junk and rats in his yard for more than 10 years.18. When some neighbours complained about the loud noise that my classmates made on weekends, the university quickly adopted a new noise policy that restricted some traditional events held on weekends. 19. There are good neighbours and bad neighbours, both students and non-students, that live around the campus. I am not trying to say that our neighbours are bad or mean, just that the university should not always take their side.20. Every year in the US, the Good Neighbour Awards are given to about 2,000 winners who have made extraordinary commitments to improving the quality of life in their communities.21. We hope to show the world the neighbour’s virtues and to inspire peoplearound the country to contribute to their communities.22. Indonesia and Australia are neighbours, whether we like it or not. Between neighbours, there are always ups and downs. Sometimes we have very good and excellent relations and at other times we may have some problems— this is just normal between neighbours.Unit6Find keepers1.“Finders keepers, losers weepers” means a person who finds somethingcan keep it,and the loser has no right to it.Today this proverb is of dubious ethical merit.2. “Finders keepers, losers weepers” is believed to be an old Scottishproverband while it may be common in some places,it is not law.It is folk wisdom.3. According to a legal casebook,the principle that the finder of an object has the propriety right against the true owner goes back to an English case in 1722.4. In most instances,the principle of “Finders keepers”translates into victory for thefinder,simply because no one else can demonstrate true ownership to the satisfaction of a court.5. In a hospital in Taiwan,Mr. Wang, a devout Buddhist, found a wallet on top of a payphone.He promptly took it to the reception desk.When asked why he did that, he simply said:“It is my duty and belief that made me do it.”6. Robert, aged 44, from Glasgow, had no thought of hanging on to the wallet he found,despite living on income support.He said: “I am a miner’s son and was a Sunday school teacher.Honesty is second nature to me.”7. A wallet was spotted by a boy out shopping with his mother and sister in Thailand.The mother quickly stuffed the wallet into her trousers,grabbed both children and hurried to catch a bus.8. Shannon Hill was a student in North Carolina,doing three jobs to pay for her tuition, food and rent.When she found a wallet, her first thought was, I could really use this money.But then she saw a picture of a baby in the wallet and changed her mind. Someone else needed it more, she thought.9. Andrew, 26, a TV production student in Glasgow,had just £10 to buy food for the week.Yet when he found a watch in a supermarket, he went to hand it in.He explained: “It might have sentimental value.I lost my watch and never got it back.”10. Mary, a little girl in a pink floral dress,found a wallet on a bench in a Seattle amusement park.She ran to her father, who immediately handed it back to her.“You must take this to someone who can help find the owner,” he said.“You must take this to someone who can help find the owner,” he said.The nine-year-old took her dad’s hand and they went off to find the parkoffice.11. In some countries,if you pick up a wallet containing a handsome amount of money that does not belong to you,and you keep it, you won’t really be prosecuted.But your action is considered by many as a theft.12. A lawyer explains that a person is guilty of theftif he dishonestly takes property belonging to anotherwith the intention of permanently depriving the other of it.13. People argue that if you believe that keeping the money you find is acceptableand other people would do the same, then you are not dishonest.14. A lost and found (American English),or lost property (British English) office,is one in a large public buildingor area where visitors can go to retrieve lost articlesthat may have been found by other visitors.15. Frequently found at museums, amusement parks and schools,a lost and found office will typically be a clearly-marked boxor room in a location near the main entrance.16. Some lost and found offices will try to contact the owners of any lost itemsif there are any personal identifiers available.Practically all will either sell,give or throw away items after a certain period has passed to clear their storage.17. Lost and found offices at large organizations can handle a large and varied collection of articles.Transport for London’s lost property offices (which handle items lost on the city’s tube,buses and taxis) handles over 130,000 items a year,including 24,000 bags and 10,000 mobile phones.18. In China, the law clearly stipulatesthat lost property should be returned to its rightful owner.Those who find a misplaced article should inform the owner or the person who lost it,or hand it in to relevant authorities, within 20 days of the property being found.19. Those who offer a reward for returned property should pay up as agreed. Lost property reverts to the State if nobody claims it.But some people say it goes against the traditional Chinese virtue of“returning to the owner what one has picked up (拾金不昧).”20. Some Chinese finders feel it is their right to keep property of little value.For more valuable property they thinkthey have the right to claim a certain amount as a handling fee,and would expect to receive a reward.21. A young security guard from the countryside, who earned only 300 yuana month,found a wallet containing 80,000 yuan in cash and other valuables whilst on duty,and took the trouble to return the wallet to its owner.The young man refused to accept the 5,000-yuan reward offered by the owner.22. The website is a research tool which allows you to find people,things or information through a system of classifieds.Because of its easy and ambitious principle, allows you to find anyone or anything, anywhere.UNIT 7The Skeptical Mind1. Having a skeptical mind means keeping an open mind and basing your beliefs far as possible, on the total available evidence.2. You believe that everything is “explainable” in principle, and the only difference between a miracle and a natural phenomenon is that you are not able yet to explain the former in natural terms.3. Skepticism is essentially a way of evaluating other people’s beliefs and forming your own.4. Skeptics believe that in matter of the intellect, we ought to follow our reason so far as it is possible.Skepticism does not necessarily preclude belief in God or an afterlife. It may be true that most skeptics are atheists and doubt the possibility of an afterlife.5. It is a mistake to think that we ought to either believe in God or not believe in God because of the psychological benefits of doing so.缺少6789. Being a skeptic means being a mature adult who take responsibility for his or her own life and who makes his or her own judgement.10. Sometime people’s opinion are influenced by the media and by what is said over and over again.There are few filter that separate reliable information from false and misleading data.11. The Internet is quickly growing into the largest and most complex web of information our world has ever known.12. We are presented with piles upon piles of ideas, claims and unusual phenomenawithout a tool kit to help us sort out the good from the bad.13. Skepticism is a primary tool of science, but unbridled disbelief is a threat to the development of science.14. However, it must be admitted that our actual knowledge of natural laws is imperfect and limited, so that the belief in the existence of basic all-embracing laws in Nature also rests on a sort of faith.15. Apollo was the name given to any of a series of manned U.S. spacecraft designed to explore the Moon and surrounding space.16. On July 16,1969, the crew of Apollo 11-Neil Armstrong, Mike Collins, and Buzz Aldrin-headed off to attempt the first lunar landing.17. In April 1970 Apollo 13 almost ended tragically when an oxygen tank inside the service module exploded.18. On 19th December 1972 the return of the astronauts aboard Apollo 17 after the 6th successful Moon landing marked the end of the Apollo era.19. Over the past thirty years, many people have been persuaded that the Apollo missions never actually took place and therefore represent the largest hoax in history.20. It would be quite easy for me to state that the people who believe that the Apollo Moon landings were faked are wrong or just mad.21. My present interest in Apollo is historical I love the details of how and why the Apollo spacecraft worked as well as the details of the lunar exploration.22. I watch astronauts carrying out experiments, picking up Moon rocks, taking pictures and so forth, especially during the last few flights to the Moon.23. But it wasn’t until later that I really understood how and why they would pick a particular rock to sample or crater to visit.。
大学英语听力第五册答案
大学英语听力第五册(focus listening)答案Lesson1Part AI. 1d 2b 3a 4b 5cII. (1) psychological (2) cultural (3) lin guistic(4) They speak very quickly (5) They speak with different accents (6) They use different styles of speech. (7) Attend Engl ish classes(8) Use a language lab as much as possible(9) Listen to programs in English on the radio and TV(10) Take every opportunity to meet and speak with native English-speaking peop le.Part BTo go I know Goodbye Farewell right therePart C1 a2 d3 c4 b5 bLesson 2Part AI.1 c 2 b 3 a 4 c 5 c II.1 F 2 F 3 F 4 F 5 TPart C1 d2 b3 c4 b5 dLesson 3Part AI. 1 c 2 b 3 c 4 c 5 dII. 1. Friday/ 2. Can't make the meeting on Tuesday afternoon3. Friday/4. Grandmother died. Got to go to the funeral5. Strike /6. Cancel the last order7. London/ 8. Phone her as soon as Dawson's back9. Supply / 10. Will explain laterPart C1 d2 b3 b4 a5 cLesson 4Part AI. 1 c 2 a 3 d 4 b 5 cII. 1 good things / who do hard physical work.2 co-workers / too heavy / when there was nothing to do3 pride and satisfaction / praise from co-workers pay a job was being done4 his time had been well spentPart C1 d2 d3 b4 c5 aLesson 5Part AI.2 If you can't get to sleep at night, what do you do3 What do you do before you go to bed4 When you dream, what do you dream about5 How much time do you spend making your bed every day6 Have you had any people complaining about your sleeping habits II.1 c 2 a 3 b 4 c 5 dPart C1 d2 c3 a4 b5 cLesson 6Part AI. 1 d 2 a 3 d 4 d 5 cII.<1>1899 <2> a reporter on Kansas City Star<3>serving as an ambulance driver for the Red Cross<4>he got to know many of the American writers and artists in Paris<5> 1925 <6>A Farewell to Arms<7>The 1930s <8>The Old Man and the Sea<9>The Nobel prize for Literature<10>He committed suicidePart C1 c2 d3 b4 d5 bLesson 7Part AI. 1 c 2 d 3 c 4 b 5 dII.1. A college student2.A man who looked like a city businessman3.Did some shopping there4.In a traffic j5.am 3:306.An evening paper, a coffee and a packet of chocolate biscuits.7.Did a crossword puzzle8.Sat opposite her9.The man open her packet of biscuits and begin to eat them10.Her own packet of biscuits under the newspaper.Part B(1) taste color smell run full of lifearound an island(2) large small high fall in the nightin the day(3)all my lettersPart C1 d2 b3 b4 b5 cMID-TERM TESTPart A1 b2 b3 c4 a5 c6 d7 a8 c9 c 10 bPart B11 b 12 c 13d 14 c 15 d 16 b 17 d 18 b 19 a 20 cPart C(22) health (23) heat (24) excitement (25) cooler(26) opposite (27) emotional(28) The phrase 'green with envy' often refers to a person who is angry because he does not have more money than someone else has.(29) People describe a day in which everything does wrong as 'a black day'(30) But black is not necessarily always used in bad sense. For example, a busi ness ' in the black' is one with profitsPart D31 c 32 d 33 c 34 d 35 c 36 b 37 b 38 a 39 c 40 bLesson 8PartAI. 1 c 2 b 3 a 4 b 5 dII. 1 1)What made you give up everything to come here2)How do you earn a living3)There must be some things you miss, surely2 1)What led you to leave your job and make this trip2)What did you do for money3)How did people react to you4)Did you ever feel like giving up, turning round and coming home5)You've had such an exciting time that you'll find it difficult to settle down, won't youPart C1 d2 b3 b4 c5 bLesson 9Part AI.1 b 2 b 3 a 4 c 5 cII. (1) Paul could reach all the switches.(2) TO give warning if a fire is on.(3) TO prevent burglary.(4) Paul will be able to reach everything in the kitchen.(5) Paul will have a large room on the ground floor.Part C1 b2 a3 c4 b5 cLesson 10Part AI.1 c 2 b 3 a 4 b 5 dII. (1) 1891 (2) principle(3) Whitcomb Judson(4) a new model of fastener (5) manufacture(6) clumsy (7) burst open(8) a really practical slidefastener (9) 1913(10) the presentday zipperPart C1 a2 b3 c4 d5 dLesson 11Part AI.1 c 2 b 3 b 4 d 5 aII.(1) probably Italian (2) probably lived in Pisa, Italy(3) almost certainly a craftsman working in glass(4) most likely around 1286(5) nearly 700 years after he made the inventionPartC1 c2 b3 c4 a5 bLesson 12Part AI.1 d 2 d 3 b 4 d 5 cII.(1) escape from persecution(2) seek a better life for themselves and their children(3) seek adventure and wealth(4) 17th and 18th centuries(5) Ireland and Germany(6) eastern and southern Europe(7) Close-knit communities(8) mutual-aid societies(9) adjust new and strange conditions become Americans(10) learn more about the old waysPartBPeach soak green alive sunPart C1 c2 c3 b4 d5 bLesson 13Part AI.1 d 2 d 3 c 4 a 5 bII.1 adaptable many different places different food different problems of survi val2 modify his environment build houses light fires wear clothesPart C1 a2 c3 a4 b5 aLesson 14Part AI.1 d 2 a 3 d 4 b 5 a II.1 T 2 F 3 T 4 F 5 F 6 T 7 F 8 T 9 T10 FPart C1d 2 c 3 d 4 b 5 aLesson 15Part AI.1 a 2 b 3 b 4 b 5 dII. 1 a gateway committee a sister-city committee aa business committee a trade committee2 had no relationship with the U.S.Ahas a very different form of government from hersindustrialize and to open its door to friends and people3 Pollution transportationPart C1 c2 a3 c4 c5 bFINAL TEST1 b2 d3 a4 c5 d6 c7 d8 b9 c 10 c11 d 12 b 13 d 14 d 15 c 16 d 17 c 18 a 19 a 20 d21 b 22 b 23 d 24 c 25 b26 sensed 27 unsteadily 28 fastened 29 thrown30 whisper 31 fainted 32 hesitation33 The plane was now dangerously close to the ground, but to everyone's relief, it soon began to climb.34 Following instructions, the man guided the plane towards the airfield.35 It shook violently as it touched the ground and then moved rapidly across the field, but after a long run it stopped safely.36 c 37 d 38 d 39 b 40 c 41 b 42 a43 d 44 b 45 c 46 a 47 b 48 c 49 b 50 b。
全新版大学英语听说教程答案1-4册(含TEST部分)
全新版大学英语听说教程答案第一册Key to Listening CourseBookBook-I(《大学英语》全新版)Unit 1Part ACommunicative Function1.How are you?/ I'd like you to meet my classmate.2.I'm.../ May I introduce...to you?/ Pleased to meet you.e and meet my family./ ...this is Tom./ It's good to know you./ ...this is my sister.Part BTextExercise 1: 1. B 2. DExercise 2:1.Yang Weiping:China/ Chemistry/ Likes listening to English programs on radio and TV;enjoys English pop songs/ Started learning English several years ago/ F avorite activity: listening; Difficulty: speaking2.Virginia:Singapore/ Library science/ To get a good job, one has be to fluent in English./ Started learning English in high school./ Favorite activity: readi ng; Difficulty: writingPart CExercise:How to Improve Listening ComprehensionAmong the four skills of listening , speaking, reading and writing, I find listening most difficult, because I worry about the words I don't know. Now I am trying to focus on the general idea,not worrying about he new words. This makes me feel good, because I know I have understood something. Then, I listen againcarefully and if I have any problems I play the difficult part again. In this way I come to understand better both the main ideaand the details of the listening text.Part D(Refer to TextBook)Unit 2Part ACommunicative Function1.closing2.opening3.closing4.opening5.opening6.openingListening Strategy1. a2. b3. b4. a5. b6. a7. b8. a9. b 10. bPart BTextExercise 1:1. 1) b 2) c 3) a2. dExercise 2:1. a. age b. money c. people's appearance2. a. ...say that again? I did not catch it./ b. ...speak more slowly, please?3. a....I really need to be going./ ...nice talking to you.Part C•I hear this idea: 1/2•I don't hear this idea but I can infer it: 4/5/6•I don't hear this idea and I can't infer it: 3Part D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 3Part ACommunicative FunctionMaggie likes swimming but she does not care for skiing. She loves flying o n planes and traveling by train but she hates getting on buses because they ar e too crowded and dirty. she is not interested in playing the piano and she pr efers reading to playing computer games. She loves going to Chinese restaurant s and her favorite food is spicy Sichuan bean curd. After work she is keen on listening to music. She prefers light music to rock, because light music makes feel relaxed. She enjoys watching TV in the evening. She thinks a lot of ne ws programs but sitcoms are the last kind of thing for her to watch.Listening Strategy1. /br/2. /pr/3. /kl/4. /tr/5. /sp/6. /pr/7. /pl/8. /str/9. /gr/ 10. /gl/Part BTextExercise 1: 1.c 2.dExercise 2:1.Private2.Halls of Residence3.Self-catering (rent per week)4.37.86 (single)5.52.78 (double)Part CExercise:1. A busy life2.Between 6 and 15 hours3.They must remain current in their fields.4.They will revise and update them.Part D(Refer to TextBook )Unit 4Part ACommunicative Function1.Yeah/ By the way/ Who?/ Don't you think so?/ Yes./ Quite well.2.Like what?/ Yeah/ Hmmm, let me think./ Well./ Come to think of it. Listening Strategy1. 923812.26083.15404.755.1566.9007.842008.17359.9:4010.5:45Part BTextExercise 1: 1. c 2.a 3. dExercise 2:1.At Carol's house on Saturday2.He's uncertain whether he can have a good time at the party or not.3.He is not good at small talk.4.one should talk about something other people are interested in.5.by getting them to talk about themselves.Part CExercise: 1. F 2.T 3. F 4.T 5.FPart D(Refer to TextBook )Unit 5Part ACommunicative Function1.Call Back David Johnson this afternoon2.Call Bill Green at 415-289-1074 this evening. It's important.3.Meet Judy outside the Art Museum at ten tomorrow morning.4.Don't forget to go to Tom's party this evening.Listening Strategy1.6247-22552.5404-99823.612-930-9608Part BTextExercise 1: 1. b 2. aExercise 2:Telephone Message:For: Mr. Johnson of ABC ImportsCaller: Richard Alexander from Star ElectronicsMobile Phone Number: 909-555-2308Office number: 714-555-2000Message: Call Richard Alexander at office number before 6pm.Part CExercise:1.Brian Tong2.Good luck Companyputer sales representative4. a degree in Computer science5. a computer programmer in a trading company for thee years.6.38839673Part D(Refer to TextBook)Unit 6Part ACommunicative Function1.He wants to know where he can buy a painting2.He found out how much the dress cost as well as where hi could buyit.3.She suggests that them man buy a tie for his cousin.Listening Strategy1.20.502.50.953.175.404.50.805.594Part BTextExercise 1:1.In a department store2.there are four people speaking in the conversation. they are the receptionist, the salesperson, Ann and Mark3.to buy a dress for AnnExercise 2: 1. a 2. d 3. b 4. d 5. cPart CExercise:1....some defective goods2....was absent/...had mistaken his shop for a second had goods store./ ...was careless3....the mistake/...exchange the ladies' purchases/...half the price.Part D(Refer to TextBook)Unit 7Part ACommunicative Function1.O,2.O3.F4.F5.O6.F7.O8.O9.F 10.O 11.O 12.FListening Strategy(omitted)Part BTextExercise 1: 1.a 2.dExercise 2:Steve Wellsa university juniorB averagea lifeguard for two summersin an apartmenthard working and reliableseldom absent from work and always on timepay the rent of the apartmenta clerk in the mailroom2 to 6 am Monday through FridayminimumPart CExercise:mentioned: 1,3not mentioned but can be inferred: 2,5not mentioned and can't be inferred: 4,6Part D(Refer to TextBook)Unit 8Part ACommunicative Function1.because he dialed the wrong number2.because she was late for work. she overslept.3.because he did not notify her earlier about quitting.4.because he could not hire the woman.Listening Strategy(omitted)Part BTextExercise 1: 1.c 2.b 3.cExercise 2:1.he was clumsy and spoiled everything he did.2.in a warehouse.3.he unpacked the goods newly arrived from the factory and put them inassigned places.4.Fred broke a large base.5.$3506.to deduct part of Fred's weekly wages until the base was paid for.7.as it would take a long time to deduct $350 from his wages, he couldkeep the job while he was paying for the vase.Part CExercise: 1.d 2.c 3.d 4.b 5.bPart D(Refer to TextBook )Unit 9Part ACommunicative Function1.Mrs. FaberOct. 20thThree nightsone double room130 dollars including breakfast2.Mr.Green8:00 tomorrow morningPudong AirportRoom 804, Park HotelListening Strategy1.March 122.May 23.25 days4.June 9Part BTextExercise 1: 1.d 2.b,d,e,f,gExercise 2: 1.c 2.d 3.b 4.bPart CExercise:1.they will have two leisurely weks on the beach2.expensive/ a train or a bus3.share the expenses/ cost too much4.have enough time/ the new semester5.good food/ casual clothes/ their homePart D(Refer to TextBook)Unit 10Part ACommunicative Function1.•big/exciting/crowded•expensive•lovely/historic2.1) very pretty2) lovely views3) /4) fascinating5) large shopping malls6) stores not too expensiveListening Strategy(ommitted)Part BTextExercise 1: 1.a,f 2.d,gExercise 2:Located in:Catcotin Mountain in Maryland because it is cool and safe. Composed of: an office for the president and living areas for his family and guests as well as a swimming pool and areas to play golf and other sports. Set up by President Roosevelt in 1942Present name given by: President Eisenhower for his grandson in 1953Used as :official presidential holiday resort since 1945Used by: several presidents for important meetings and talks during World Wa r Two and in 1959, 1978, and in July2000.Part CExercise: 1.T 2.F 3.F 4.T 5.FPart D(Refer to TextBook )Unit 11Part ACommunicative FunctionB: Why don't you buy him a dog?Dogs are so friendly.B: How about a rabbit?B: Have you thought about bu7ying him a bird?B: Then you can buy him some tropical fish. They are pretty.B: The market. Shall we go right now?Listening Strategy1.once a week2.twice a week3.once a month4.every other day5.four nights a week6.neverPart BTextExercise 1: 1.b 2.cExercise 2: 1.F 2.F 3.F 4.T 5.F 6.TPart CExercise: 1.a 2.b 3.d 4.c 5.dPart D(Refer to TextBook )Unit 12Part ACommunicative Function: 1.c 2.dListening Strategy1....there are more and more ways...2....interested in...3.An average day...costs a dog owner...4....but only for a few weeks at a time5.Small talk is easy, isn't it?6....fill in a form...7.When I put my card in, the machine ate it.Part BTextExercise 1: 1.b 2.c 3.dExercise 2:1. A customer's credit card got stuck in a ATM machine.2....a wrong code numger three times3.go to the counter/ fill in a form with his account number and the date/Purpose: to get the customer a new card4.in about a weekPart CExercise: 1.F 2.F 3.T 4.T 5.FPart D(Refer to TextBook)Unit 13Part ACommunicative Function1.he went for a visit to his hometown2.he went for an autumn walk in the hills3.he went on a river trip4.she did nothing but lie in bed5.she came down with the fluListening Strategy(ommitted)Part BTextExercise 1: 1.c 2.dExercise 2:1.Hid belief that one day he would become a movie star2.parking cars for one of Hollywood's big restaurants3.No, his pay was only basic. but he got generous tips form guests driving into the restaurant.rry parked the car of a famous film director and was able to introduce himself to the man.5.He was amused by Larry's usual way of recommending himself.Part CExercise: 1.b 2.a 3.c 4.d 5.bPart D(Refer to TextBook)Unit 14Part ACommunicative Functioncolor: orangecomposition: woolusage: to keep warmthe present: a woolen scarfListening Strategy(ommitted)Part BTextExercise 1: 1.a 2.dExercise 2:1....form pictures in your own mind2....stay in the room where the radio set is3....do something else, like driving in the car, jogging, or even just walking around.4....half an hour or hourly intervals. ...variety of topics.5....the radio station they are listening to...opinions.Part CExercise: 1.F 2.T 3.F 4.T 5.F 6.TPart D(Refer to TextBook )Unit 15Part ACommunicative FunctionAGREE: 1,2,5,8DISAGREE: 3,4,6,7Listening Strategy: 1.b 2.a 3.b 4.a 5.a 6.b Part BTextExercise 1: 1.b 2.d 3.dExercise 2:1.Roommate2.female roommate3.fifth avenue4.three blocks5.rent6.September 17.555067928. 59.9 p.m.10.for sale11.sofa12.easy chair13.excellent condition14.$35015.offer16.555-679217.518.9 p.m.Part CExercise: 1.F 2.T 3.F 4.T 5.FPart D(Refer to TextBook)Unit 16Part ACommunicative Functionsimilarities: ...family reunion differences:...New Year's Eve's dinnerTV's Spring Festival Special...firecrackers...Christmas trees...presents under the treeListening Strategy:Yes: 2, 3, 5, 7No: 1, 4, 6, 8Part BTextExercise 1: 1.c,g 2.aExercise 2: 1.d 2.a 3.bPart CExercise:mentioned: 5not mentioned but can be inferred: 2not mentioned and can't be inferred: 1.3.4.6 Part D(Refer to TextBook)全新版大学英语听说教程答案第二册Key to Listening CourseBookBook-II(《大学英语》全新版)Unit 1Part A1. 108:962. 110:1113. 135:1304. 69:75Part BTextExercise 1: 1. D 2. BExercise 2:1. Peter likes cycling and swimming. Laura likes these two sports too. Besides, she plays tennis regularly.2. Because she wants to enjoy good health; she wants to stay in shape and look good. Part CExercise: 1. B 2.DPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 2Part A1.a. Fine and pleasantb. 18'C (64'F)c. Cloudy with outbreaks of heavy showers2. a. It started around 8 pm and lasted for about three minutes.b. It caused four deaths and serious damage including a power failure.Part BTextExercise 1: 1. B 2. A 3.AExercise 2:1. They went to the department picnic but their fun was spoiled by the hot weather.2. Because he thinks it will only be short shower that cools things off a little.Part CExercise: 1. F 2.F 3.F 4.T 5.FPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 3Part A1. Yes2.No3.Yes4.No5.Yes6.No7.No8.NoPart BTextExercise 1:1. ...for a while2. ...plans for this Saturday3. ...dinner...weekend4. ...Italian...too much food5. ...Chinese...JapaneseExercise 2:1. It uses natural flavors, not much oil or cream or heavy sauces.2. They will have dinner on Saturday either at a Chinese or a Japanese restaurant. Part CExercise: 1. B 2.C 3.DPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 4Part A1. C2. DPart BTextExercise 1: 1. d 2.d 3. c 4. dExercise 2:1. He has suffered from insomnia for several months and lately has had a lot of indigestion.2. She gave the patient some medicine for insomnia and indigestion. she advised the patient to have a proper diet and begin a regular exercise program.Part CExercise: 1. T 2.T 3. F 4.T 5.FPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 5Part A1. However2. Because3.Firstly,then,finally4.In shortPart BTextExercise 1: tick: 2,4,5,10,12,13,16,17Exercise 2: 1. b 2.d 3. c 4.aPart CExercise:1. working-class2. Canada3. 134. song5. Dream6. fond7. own home8. great success9. Canadian10. gold 11. France 12. English language 13. award14. opening ceremonies 15. Titanic 16. Heart 7. LovePart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 6Part AQ1: They are probably business partners.Q2: One is showing the other the building where her company has offices.Q3: Accounting Office: 2nd floorPersonnel Department: 8th floorManager's Office: 9th floorSales Office: 1st floorPart BTextExercise 1:1. They are discussing which candidate is more suitable for a vacant position in the company.2. Leader of a small group.3. being dynamic4. because he is always a follower5. because he has no experience in leadership.Exercise 2:1. John: Loyal; with the company for 20 years/ No experience in being a leader/ Peter/ Joan and Clive2. Rita: Has personnel management skill/ lacks experienc/ Joan/ Peter and Clive3. Susan: Experiences, solid and reliable/ a bit too cautious, not dynamic enough/ Peter and Clive; Joan (agrees with reservation)/ Joan (at first)Part CExercise: 1.c 2.c 3.a 4.d 5.cPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 7Part AA man is at a store. He wants to buy a medium-sized T-shirt with a slogan on the front. He is helped by a shop assistant in getting what he wants.Part BTextExercise 1: 1.b; 2.c; 3.dExercise 2:1. interesting/handsome/successful/sporty, fashionable/fun2. the high status group/taste and style/image3. brightens/good/face another day/energy4. great/terrible/average buyers5. high fashion or not/image and realityPart CExercise: 1.T 2.F 3.T 4.F 5.FPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 8Part AHeart/14/weight changes/3130/adults/heart disease/sure/high-fat foods/developing heart disease/lose/stomachPart BTextExercise 1: 1.b; 2.d; 3.d ; 4.b; 5.c; 6.dExercise 2: (ommited)Part CExercise: 1.c 2.b 3.d 4.dPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 9Part A1. He was walking his dog, Jack.2. The dog can not digest paper.3. He was happy because he got his money back and the money could be used again after being cleaned.Part BTextExercise 1: 1.d; 2.c; 3.c ; 4.d; 5.aExercise 2:1. about 63 years ago2. about three years old3. in 19704. 92 years oldPart CExercise: 1-4-2-5-6-3Part D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 10Part A11) earthquake2) 3 days ago3) Turkey4) 100005) 3400021) explosion2) early this morning4) 385) 11Part BTextExercise 1:1. 3 months ago2. in the middle of a jungle in Burma3. a terrible storm4. all aboard the plane except the narrator5. 1 (narrator)Exercise 2:1. It rolled and shook in the wind.2. No. It arrived nine days later because it was raining heavily and the helicopters couldn't fly in the heavy rain. To make the matter worse, the plane crashed in a swamp in the middle of a jungle.3. Yes. She was in terrible pain and couldn't move.4. By drinking dirty flood water.Part CExercise: 1.b 2.a 3.a 4.d 5.cPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 11Part A1. Neutral2. Positive3. Positive, respectfulPart BTextExercise 1: 1.a 2.b 3.d 4.c 5.aExercise 2:1) stockbroker2) retailing3) March 6, 19264) New York5) music school6) economics7) Commerce8) Master's degree9) PhD10) Industrial11) economic consulting12) Federal GovernmentExercise: 1.F 2.T 3.F 4.F 5.F 6.TPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 12Part A 1. B 2. B 3. APart BTextExercise 1: 1.a 2.d 3.b 4.b 5.dExercise 2: (ommited)Part CExercise:1. microwave oven2. New York, July 12, 18543. replace the heavy old machine4. films for the camera5. you push the button, we do the rest6. clinics/ museums/ performing7. 1932/77/remembered/the good of mankindPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 13Part A 1. f 2. e 3. dPart BTextExercise 1: 1.a 2.c 3.d 4.a 5.bExercise 2: (ommited)Part CExercise:1. operation, Jewish2. Jew3. Palestinian/ Sunday4. father/ Radio/ noble act/ donor's5. deep inside people are exactly the same/ conflicts/ unnecessary Part D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 14Part A 1. c 2. b 3. aPart BTextExercise 1: 1.T 2.F 3.T 4.F 5.FExercise 2:1. a wonderful world2. loss/ change/ balance3. direct benefits/ plants/ air/ breathe4. economic/ health/ raw material / things / medicine5. unless/ later/ valuable/ threatPart CExercise: 1.c 2.a 3.c..4.a 5.bPart D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 15Part A 1. c 2. d 3. bPart BTextExercise 1: 1.c 2.a 3.dExercise 2: 1.F 2.T 3.F 4.T 5.F 6.TPart CExercise:1. It is Western Europe's most important waterway.2. It was seriously polluted. Fish disappeared and it was dangerous to swim in.3. A fire broke out at chemical plant in Basel, France, which caused tons of pesticides to leak into the Rhine.4. The countries along the Rhine realized that they should clean it up and keep it clean.5. Every six minutes, twenty-four hours a day.6. France, Germany, Switzerland and Holland.Part D (Refer to TextBook)Unit 16Part A1. computer labs for the school/ poor rural2. cooperating/ India/ software professionals3. attackPart BTextExercise 1: 1.b 2.a 3.b 4.b 5.bExercise 2:1. 65%2. 30%3. 33%4. 47%Part CExercise: 1.F 2.T 3.F 4.TPart D (Refer to TextBook)Test 1Part A1. d2. b3. b4. a5. b6. d7. c8. aPart B1. exaggeration2. controlled3. extent4. remote control5. manufactured6. automation7. scheduling 8. computerized 9. confirmed10. calculations 11. storing much more information12. would take years of work by mathematiciansPart CPassage IMr. Johnson: better climate; less pollutionMrs. Johnson: a more modern house; a bigger gardenDavid: a better place for surfingCarol and Betty: live in a new house; learn to play the pianoPassage II1. a2. d3. bTest 2Part A1. What is the main idea of the passage? A. The Life of Mozart.2. What does the speaker think of dictation? C. He thinks it is a comprehensive skill training exercise.Part B1. 5 billion2. sensible3. 30%4. cleaning the filters5. 256. 10%7. leaks are fixed immediately 8. 5009. 3 10. 5% to the amount of energy consumedPart CPassage I1. take of her three dogs2. agreed3. really mad4. did not like dogs5. did not like him either6. they would take care of the dogs until Mrs. Young got back in two weeksPassage IIFunctions of computer:1. Internet2. word processing3. designing and store4. play gamesDisadvantages of spending too much time on the computer:1. eyesight2. backaches3. their social skills4. socially awkwardConclusion…they are not without disadvantagesPassage III1. F2. T3. T4. F5. F全新版大学英语听说教程答案第三册Key to Listening CourseBookBook-III(《大学英语》全新版)Unit 1Part BText 1Exercise 1: 1. c 2. a 3.bExercise 2:1.She suggested that her husband spend more time with his mother. Shesaid to her husband, "Life is too short, but you need to spend time with the people you love. You probably won't believe me, but I know youlove her and I think that if the two of you spend more time together ,it will make us closer."2.1) ...she was waiting by the door with her coat on and she had her hair curled. 2) She had told her lady friends ab out this.Text 2Exercise 1: 1. c 2. d 3. dExercise 2: 1. F 2. T 3. F 4. T 5. FPart C1. b2. c3. b4. d5. dUnit 2Part BText 1Exercise 1: 1. b 2. a 3. d 4. cExercise 2:1984 / son / medical school / tuition / afford it / realize / newspaper ads / ex tra business / advertisement / succeeded / agent / changed / phone call / put a side / doing / immediately / familiar / father-in-law's / visited / his father-in-la w alive / coincidence.Text 2Exercise 1: 1. T 2. F 3. F 4. F 5. FExercise 2:1.He was intrigued.2. A bank statement.3.his father-in-law had put an amount of money in the bank for his grandchildren's education.4. A little over $15,000.5.He could use the money to cover the tuition of his first year at a medical college.6.He is a doctor in Illinois.Part C1. F2. T3. F4. F5. T6. T7. F8. TUnit 3Part BText 1Exercise 1: 1. b 2. c 3.aExercise 2:1.Because she wanted to understand each other's expectations so that potential problems could be avoided and they could live happily together.2.Cleaning up. Everything must be cleaned up and put away before goingto bed.3.Sleeping. Time for bed: 11pm; time to get up: 6:30am except on weekends.Text 2Exercise 1: 1. F 2.F 3.T 4.TExercise 2:1.One rule says that if they get lost for more than five minutes when they are driving, they must stop and ask for directions.2.Once Tom and Linda got lost when they were driving to a friend's wedding.3.Linda wanted to stop at a gas station to ask the way, but Tom thoughthe could figure it out.4.As a result, they were late for the wedding because they went in the wrong direction for forty miles.Part C1....not so special/not extremes2. a. ...get angry quickly b. ...change themselves...Unit 4Part BText 1Exercise 1: 1. d 2. c 3.aExercise 2:Sam has been a police officer for 30 years. He has done everything from p atrol to undercover work. He has also done detective work and now he is sup ervising investigations.Sam thinks being a police officer is a very stressful job, but it depends on t he assignment one has. In his opinion the biggest pert of the stress is the fear of the unknown and patrol is the most stressful assignment.Text 2Exercise 1: 1. T 2. F 3. T 4. F 5. TExercise 2:1.... One is an exercise program, another is a psychological program withcounseling for officers. And there are several discussion groups as wellfor officers to sit down and talk about their stress with other officers.2.2)...He tries to get some sort of exercise every day. 3)...his personal relationships, especially his relationships with his wife.Part C1. d2. d3. d4. b5. cUnit 5Part BText 1Exercise 1: 1. D 2. DExercise 2: 1. F 2.T 3.F 4.T 5.T 6.F 7.T 8.F 9.F 10.TText 2Exercise 1:1.R eaching E verybody by E xposing L ies2.They launched an advertising campaign to call on youth to fight againsttobacco companies by starting the "Not fro Sale" commercial on televi sion and radio.3.They intend to spread the message that teenagers no longer want to betargeted by tobacco companies in their advertisements.Exercise 2: 1. c 2.a 3.c 4.c 5.bPart CSkatescooter•Mostly made in Switzerland•In 1999•Not until it was popular in Japan•For sport; for transportation from home to the underground or from a b us stop to the office• a variety of people, from students to business executives•Can be folded up without difficulty and is easy to carry aboutUnit 6Part BText 1Exercise 1: 1. D 2. CExercise 2:Leaves are Nature's food factories. Plants take water from the ground through their roots and carbon dioxide from the air. Then leaves turn water and carbo n dioxide into sugar in the presence of sunlight and chlorophyll. This process i s called photosynthesis. Leaves are mostly green because chlorophyll is green. As a matter of fact, there are, in leaves, small amounts of yellow and orange all along, but they are covered up by the green chlorophyll in summer. They s how up in fall as chlorophyll disappears from the leaves, due to the decline of photosynthesis. The bright reds and purples we see in leaves of trees like maples are made mostly in fall. The brown color of trees like oaks is made from wastes left in the leaves.Text 2Exercise 1: 1. C 2. BExercise 2:1.They are leaf pigments, length of night, and weather.2.It is the steadily increasing length of night.3.They change their colors at the same time no matter whether they areon a high mountain or in warm lowlands because the timing of color c hange seems to be genetically inherited.4.It is because their needle-like or scale-like foliage is covered with a heavy wax coating and the liquid inside their cells contains cold-resistant el ements.5.In the Arctic because the winter there is too cold.Part CExercise: 1. T 2.F 3.T 4.T 5.F 6.F 7.T 8.TUnit 7Part BText 1Exercise 1: 1. B 2. CExercise 2: 1. F 2. T 3. F 4. F 5. T 6. T 7. FText 2Exercise 1: 1. D 2. BExercise 2:1.Because she was afraid Krimali might not be able to catch her.2.Because she thought the bed sheets could somehow protect the baby from being hurt if she failed to catch her.3.Because they were afraid of the swaying ceiling.4.to make it easier and safer for people to get down.5.About two dozen were saved.Part CExercise: 1. A 2.B 3.B 4.B 5.AUnit 8Part BText 1Exercise 1: 1. B 2. A 3. DExercise 2: 1. T 2. F 3. T 4. F 5. FText 2Exercise 1: 1. D 2. DExercise 2:。
全新版大学英语听说5听力材料unit12
[03:28.34]1. What is the Massachusetts Institute of Technology famous for?
[03:38.45]2. Why is MIT difficult to get into?
[03:45.76]3. How many Chinese students are currently studying in MIT?
[00:46.76]MIT has more than 900 professors and nearly 10,000 students.
[00:53.40]It is organized into schools of study.
[00:56.60]One is the School of Architecture and Planning.
[00:34.53]That is the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, known as MIT.
[00:41.57]It is in the northeast, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, near Boston.
[01:52.04]China sends the largest number of foreign students to MIT.
[01:56.56]335 Chinese students are studying there.
[02:00.49]More than 180 students are from India,
[07:57.16]Heroes live forever, yeah, heroes live forever
大学英语听力5原文
大学英语5听力上海外语教育出版社Lesson 1Part AProblems facing foreign studentsToday I'd like to talk about some of the problems that students face when they follow a course of study through the medium of English--if English is not their mother tongue.The problems can be divided into three broad categories: psychological, cultural and linguistic. The first two categories mainly affect those who come to study in Britain from Asia and Africa. I’ll come to comment only briefly on these two categories and then spend most of the time looking at linguistic difficulties which apply to everyone. Some of the common psychological problems really involve fear of unknown: for example, whether one's academic studies will be too difficult. Looking at the cultural problems, we can see that some of them are very practical nature, for example, arranging satisfactory accommodation. Others are less easy to define.The largest category seems to be linguistic. Let’s look at this in some details. Most students, in their own countries, will have little opportunity to practice using English. Where foreign learners first have the opportunity to speak to an English-speaking person then may have a shock “they often have great difficulty in understanding! I'll just mention three of the possible reasons for this.First, it seems to students that English people speak very quickly. Second, they speak with a variety of accents. Third, different styles of speech are used. For all of these reasons students will have difficulty, mainly because they lack everyday practice in listening to English people speaking English.What can a student do then to overcome these difficulties? Obviously, attend English class and, if a language laboratory is available, use it as much as possible. He should also listen to programs in English on the radio and TV. Perhaps most important of all, he should take every opportunity to meet and speak with native English-speaking people.In addition, the student probably has difficulty in speaking English fluently. The advice here will seem difficult to follow but it's necessary. Firstly, he must simplify what he wants to say so that he can express himself reasonably clearly. Secondly, he must try to think in English, not translate from his mother tongue. This will begin to take place only when his use of English becomes automatic. Using a language laboratory and listening to English as mush as possible will help.I: question:1. What does the lecture mainly discuss? [d]2. What kind of students is the speaker referring to? [b]3. Why do students have difficulties in understanding English speech?[a]4. How, according to the speaker, can foreign students learn to speak English fluently?[b]5. Which of the following statements can be infers from the passage? [c]Part CAt the age of 64 and having only a 1937 diploma from an apprentice training school, I decided to enroll in an new weekend college program at Findley College in Ohio-now the University of Findley. The result is I was granted dual B.A.diploma in 1985 at the age of 69.My degrees are in business administration and information systems analysis, which means computers.My 'excuse' for going to college at that age was to find what I did right in business for 33 years. The second reason was to prove to myself that I was an 'A' student-which I accomplished by making the dean's list the second semester.Because the dean of the college knew that I expected to be treated like any other student. We both laughed about the professor who rushed into the dean's office and explained, 'I have a trustee of the college in my class! what do I do?' when the dean told me about it, my response was, 'I hope you told him to fail me if I didn't do the work.' the dean replied, ‘that is exactly what I told him.'the dean's list : 学院院长公布的优秀学生名单trustee:董事Question: 1. when did the speaker receive his diplomas? [A]2. The speaker received two B.A.degrees after a five-year study at a college. What subjects are these degrees in? [d]3. What was one of the reasons why the speaker went to college? [c]4. Why did the professor feel so nervous when he found the speaker sitting in his class as one of his students? [b]5. What is the main lesson to be drawn from the passage? [b]Lesson2PART AAmerican Marriage CustomsPeople in the U.S., when they attain legal age and meet certain medical requirements, are free to choose their own mates. Once a couple has decided to get married, the man customarily gives the girl a diamond ring. The use of ring comes from the ancient custom of using a ring to settle an important agreement. When the wedding day is decided upon, the girl sends out wedding announcements or friends and relatives. The then sends wedding gifts to the girl’s home.On the wedding day it is supposed to be bad luck for the bride and groom to see each other before the wedding. Another ole custom that people believe will bring good luck to the marriage is for the bride to wear’ something old, something new, something borrowed, and something blue’.Before the wedding day the groom always chooses a ‘best man’, a good friend to help him and stand beside him during the wedding ceremony. The custom of having a ’best man’ is thought to have come from ancent times when a strong friend helped the groom escape from the bride’s father.When a couple marries, the groom gives his bride a wedding ring. Many marriages are double ring ceremonies ---that is, the bride and the groom exchange rings. The wedding ring is customarily a simple plain gold band. The roundness of the ring symbolizes eternity and announces that the couple is united for life. The wedding ring is worn on the third finger of the left hand. People believe that a vein from the third finger runs directly to the heart.Near the end of the recepition, which is offered by the br ide’s the parents, the bride throws her bouquet flowers to the unwed bridemaids. The luckily girl who catches it is supposed to be the next in the group to the married. As the bride and the groom leave for their honeymoon, the guests all throw confetti on them. This is a symbol of joy and happiness.I答案1-5c b a c c II 答案“FFFFTPART CIn many homes, divorce is caused by the ‘battle between the sexes’. To understand the problem, one must remember the modern American woman is freed. During childhood and adolescence, the American girl is given freedom and education which is equal to a boy’s. After completing school, she is able to get a job and support herself. She doesn’t have to marry for financial security. She considers herself an independent, self-sufficient person. She wants a husband whom she can respect, but she doesn’t want to be dominated by him. She wants a democratic household in which she has a voice in making decisions. When a husband and wife are able to share decision making, their marriage is probably closer, stronger, and more satisfying. Otherwise, the couple is likely to wind up in the divorce court.When a couple gets divorced, the court usually requires the man to pay his former wife a monthly sum of money. If the couple has children, they usually remain with the mother, and the father is expected to pay for their support.Although divorced is quite common in the United States, 80 percent of those who get divorced remarry. The remarriages allow thousands of people, especially children, to enjoy family life again, but at the same time many troubles have arisen. A well-known American joke tells of a wife calling to her second husband, ‘Quick, John! Come here and help me! Your children and my children are beating up our children!’答案:1-5dbcbdLesson 3PART A Telephone message for Mr. Dawson9:00Amanda Mr. Dawson's office.Jenny oh, it's Jenny. Can you give Mr. Dawson a message? I won't be in till Friday. I've got the flu. I saw the doctor this morning.Amanda OK, jenny. I'll pass the massage on. I hope you'll feel better soon,9:40Amanda Mr. Dawson's office. Can I help you?Mr. Watkins May I speak to Mr. Dawson’s, please?Amanda I'm afraid he's away in business. He’ll be back tomorrow. Can I take a message?Mr. Watkins Please. It’s Tom Datkins here. Look. I can't make the meeting on Tuesday afternoon. Something important's come up. I’ll ring Peter on Wednesday.11:30Amanda hello, godfrey. What can I do for you?Godfrey Mr. Dawson isn't here, is he?Amanda No, not till tomorrow.Godfrey Ah ... it's just that I want Friday off. You see. My grandmother died yesterday. I’ll have to go to the funeral.Amanda Oh, I am sorry. How old was she?Godfrey 92.12:15Amanda Mr. Dawson's office.Salesman can you put me to through to Mr. Dawson?Amanda I'm afraid he isn't here today. Would you like to leave a message?Salesman Oh, right, Wadley’s garage here. It’s about his new car. It isn't ready yet. There’s a strike at he factory today.2:10Amanda Good afternoon. Mr. Dawson's office.Miss Dobson Good afternoon. This is Juliet Dobson from western Video Systems. Mr. Dawson's at the trade fair in Lyon, isn't he?Amanda yes. That’s right. He should be here tomorrow.Miss Dobson well, cam you give him this message first thing in the morning? I'm afraid we must cancel our last order. The customers have changed their minds again!3:20Amanda Good afternoon. Mr. Dawson's office.Mr. Gonzalez hello, this is Miguel Gonzalez speaking. Is Peter there?Amanda No, I’m afraid he's away on business today. Can I pass on a message .Senor Gonzalez?Mr. Gonzalez yes, I may be in London from 21st to 25th. I want to see Peter then, if possible. it's about the agency in Mexico.4:35Amanda Mr. Dawson's office.Mrs. Ellis My name's Samantha Ellis. Can you get Mr. Dawson to phone me as soon as he gets back from Lyon? It really is very urgent.4:55Amanda Mr. Dawson's office.Mr. Berry Ah, Miss Hayward. This is Charles Berry.Amanda Oh, good afternoon, sir.Mr. Berry I've got an important message for Mr. Dawson. Give it to him the minute he comes in. just say, 'Don't supply Mason and Company until further notice'. I'll explain later.(It’s Tuesday morning. Peter Dawson has returned to the office after his business trip to Lyon.)Peter Good morning, Amanda. Could you come in for a minute, please?Amanda Good morning, Mr. Dawson. Did you have a good trip?Peter Yes, thank you. Were there any messages for me yesterday?Amanda yes, quite a few. Shall i just run through them?Peter please.Amanda Jenny phoned. She said she would be in till Friday.Peter Oh, why's that?Amanda she said she had the flu. She’d seen the doctor.Peter Right, go on.Amanda Then Mr. Watkins called, he said he couldn't make the meeting this afternoon but would ring you on Wednesday.Peter OK.Amanda Godfrey came in looking for you. he said he wanted Friday off.Peter Did him?Amanda yes, he told me his grandmother had died and he'd have to go to the funeral.Peter Oh, dear. I'd better see him later.Amanda And Wadley's Garage called. They said you new car wasn't ready.Peter Oh,no... Why on earth not?Amanda they said there was a strike at the factory yesterday.Peter Again!Amanda After lunch Miss Dobson phoned. She said that Western Video Systems had to cancel their last order because their customers had changed their minds.Peter Pity!Amanda Mr. Gonzalez called from Mexico to say he might be in London from 21st to 25th. He said he wanted to see you then.Peter Oh, good. I hope he can make it.Amanda then a lady phoned, Samantha, Ellis. She asked you to phone her as soon as possible. She said it was urgent.Peter Ah, Samantha. I wonder what she wants.Amanda Oh and just before five. Mr. Berry phoned. He told us not to supply Mason&Co.until further notice. He said it was important and that he would explain later.Peter Anything else?Amanda No, that's it. Coffee?Peter Please, that would be nice.答案1-5 c b c c dPART CThe United States is a telephone land. Almost everyone uses the telephone to make or break social engagements, to say their 'thank yours, to do their shopping and ordering (even from food and drug stores), and to obtain all kinds of information. Telephones are save you feet and endless amounts of time----not to mention multiple bus or subway fares!Different countries put their telephones in different places. in the U.S they are so widespread that you will find them in buses and air terminals, railroad stations, stores, hotels, the lobbies of many office buildings, restaurants and in small booths along streets and highways.It is simple and quick to have a private phone installed. you just call the telephone company and they will come to install it on a special dayby appointment, when it is convenient for you. You fill out a form and pay a deposit of some 40 dollarsfor the phone and, if you are formally employed, you may even be freed from this fee.答案:1-5 d b b a cLESSON4PART A Dr Coleman's Sabbatical LeaveIn the United States a university professor is granted a few months of freedom from his duties approximately every seventh year for travel or advanced study. This period of freedom from teaching is called a 'sabbatical leave'.Few sabbatical leaves are interesting enough to be described in national newspapers and magazines. Recently, however, there was an exception. The public learned how Dr JohnR.Coleman, president of Haverford College. Had spent his sabbatical leave.At the age of 51 Dr Coleman was determined to escape from university life for a few months and to get a variety of experiences in the world of work. He especially wanted to learn about people. People who do hard physical labor were particularly interesting to him.Telling no one of his plans. Dr Coleman started his sabbatical leave on a farm in Canada, hundreds of miles from his college. Getting up at 4:30 each morning, working thirteen hours a day in fields and barns, he prepared himself physically for his next job, digging ditches, in Atlanta, Georgia, after that, the college president washed dishes in a Boston restaurant, during the last ten days of his leave, and he worked as a garbage collector.This unusual sabbatical leave was conducted in great secrecy. Coleman telephoned his family once a week, ‘just to let some know where I was and that I was healthy.' none of his students or co-workers at Haverford College knew what their president was doing. On each job he avoided letting people know who he was. 'When people would ask me about myself, I’d try to turn the conversation back to them,' he explained. 'Some co-workers might have thought I was a little different, a little quiet maybe, but I doubt anyone knew I was a college president.'There was only one employer who sensed something unusual. 'at a restaurant in Boston, I had been on the job exactly one hour-- I was washing dishes--when the boss came over and said, ‘I’m afraid you won't do.' and handed me two dollars. Immediately I asked him why, but he just said,' it's mot your work. Sorry.'That was the first time in more than thirty years as a job holder that Coleman had heard such words. It helped him understand how a man of his age might feel when he suddenly realized he had lost his job.After two months of working with his hands, Coleman returned from his unusual sabbatical leave, convinced that the experience had been worthwhile. He had some good things to say about people who do hard physical work. ‘a lot of my co-workers would complain when the was too heavy,' he said, 'but they'd complain a lot more when there was nothing to do.'He found that pride and satisfaction came chiefly in the form of praise from co-workers. Even though pay was important, what brought the greatest satisfaction was knowing that someone hadnoticed how a job was being done.At the end of the sabbatical leave Dr Coleman felt that his time had been well spent. He now believes that every young person should be required to spend at least half a year in the world of work before starting university studies.1.what do professors usually do during their sabbatical leave?[c]2.which of the following jobs hadn't Dr Coleman taken during his sabbatical leave?[a]3.how did he feel when the restaurant owner gave him two dollars?[d]4.which of the following is not true about Dr Coleman?[b]5.what can you infer from the passage?[c]PART CI arrived in the United States on February 6, 1991, but I remember my first day here very clearly. My friend Tom was waiting for me when my plane landed at Kennedy Airport at twoo'clock in the afternoon. It was freezing that day but I was too excited to mind. From the airport. Tom drove me to the hotel. On the way, I saw the skyline of Manttan for the first time and I stared in astonishment at the famous skyscrapers and their man made beauty. Tom helped me unpack at the hotel and then left me because he had to go back to work. He promised to return the next day.Shortly after Tom left. I went to a restaurant near the hotel to get something to eat. Because I couldn't speak a word of English. I couldn't tell the waiter what I wanted. I was very upset and started to make some gestures. But the waiter failed to understand me. I was really at a loss what to do. Finally, I ordered the same thing the man at the next table was eating. After dinner, I started to walk along Broadway until I came to Times Square with its movie theaters. Neon lights and huge crowds of people. I didn't feel tired so I continued to walk around the city. I wanted to see everything on my first day. i knew it was impossible. But I wanted to try.When I returned to the hotel. I was exhausted, but I couldn't sleep because I kept hearing the noise and police sirens during the night, I lay awake and thought about New York. It was really a very big and fascinating city with so many tall buildings and big cars, and full of noise and busy people. I also decided right then that I would learn to speak English.1.when did the speaker arrive in New York?[d]2.what impressed the speaker most on her way to the hotel?[d]3.what did the speaker do immediately after her friend left?[b]4.what do we know about the speaker?[c]5.what can we infer from the passage?[a]Lesson 5PART A Sleeping HabitsWoman good morning, sir.Man Er, good morning.Woman I wonder if you'd like to answer a few questions.Man well er...Woman we're doing a market survey.Man that depends, what sorts of questions are they, eh?Woman well, it's questions about your sleeping habits.Man sleeping habits?Woman Mm.Man well, i suppose that's all right. Yes, well, what do you want to know?Woman right, um, what would you do if you heard a strange noise in the middle of the night?Man I’d wonder what it was, er, I suppose, and then I’d um, see if it happened again.Woman Mm.Man I would lie awake a little while. Waiting to see if it happened again, and if it did ----I suppose I’d get up...Woman Mm.Man and go and see what it was.Woman very courageous. um, if you, if you can't get to sleep at night, er, what do you, what do you do? Have you a special method?Man well, I generally go to sleep straight away. I don't have any trouble getting to sleep.Woman Mm.Man well. If I do have... occasionally, happens about once every six months, I suppose, that I can't go to sleep and then I, er, I lie awake and I, um, think about things.Woman Mm, Mm. think about things. And, er, what about before going to bed? What do you do before you go to bed?Man well. I, it all depends, er. If I've been out I, I, don't do anything. I just come home and go straight to bed. i clean my teeth, ha , ha.Woman Mm, good, good.Man that's one thing i do before i go to bed. Um, well, i occasionally read a bit but if i read i go, i tend to go straight to sleep. i , i, can usually read about a page and then i go to straight off.Woman Mm, yes, me too. yeah, and, um, when you dream, what do you dream about?Man Aah! Now that's a very interesting question.Woman Mm.Man yes, I have been dreaming a great deal recently as it happens.Woman Have you?Man Mm.Woman Have you?Man Um, I’ve had dream every single...all, all the way through my holidays. I’ve just come back from my holiday and I've been dreaming every single night. Quite worrying dreams, very worrying dreams. For example, I had a dream about parrots the other night.Woman parrots?Man yes, green parrots. i mean, they shouldn't have been there because we weren't in any tropical country or anything.Woman er, no. no.Man it was a flock of parrots.Woman A flock?Man a flock. A whole flock of parrots.Woman that's funny.Man and there I was climbing up this stream bed...Woman Yes, Um.Man with these parrots flying around. Ha, most extraordinary.Woman Really. Yes, would you describe that as a nightmare?Man well, it’s rather worrying, don't you think?Woman very--well, um, another question, sir, how much time do you spend making you bed every day?Man I don't spend any time at all. I just get out and then I get back in, in the evening.Woman I see. So no time at all. And, um yes, the last question, um, have you had any people complaining about your sleeping habits?Man complaining?Woman yes, that's to say...Man what would they complain of?Woman do you, perhaps you snore at night?Man no, I don't snore.Woman perhaps you talk in your sleep.Man no, I, I tend to take up rather a lot of room, though.Woman yes, I can see that.Man yes, yes, I do tend to use up more than my fair share of the bed, yes.Woman but you...Man roll around a bit.Woman but you've had no complaints?Man well, i occasionally get complaints but i don't take much notice of them, what can you do?Woman yes. Quite so. Well um, thank you very much indeed, sir, you've been very cooperative and helpful.Man yes, well. Thank you. Yes, it was quite interesting speaking to you actually. Ha, ha.Woman good-bye.Man bye, bye.答案:1-5 c a b c dPART CCats are creatures of habits. They like to fall to sleep about the same time everyday and for a certain length of time. They seem to have a national clock inside them that tells them when to sleep.Cats supplement their regular sleep with occasional cat naps. Some experts feel that humans could also benefit from this habit. Cat naps help to build up energy in the body. They are also a good way to overcome boredom. Since cats have moods similar to those of humans, some experts believe that people can improve their moods and attitudes by catnapping. People might become happier;A number of famous people have copied cats by taking cat naps during the day. The naps would usually last from 15 to 30 minutes. Winston Churchill took cat naps. So did President Harry Truman. John Kennedy and so on. There famous people were known for their energy. They were also able to work long hours. Often late into the night. And napping was their secret. Perhaps more people could learn from cats and take naps to feel better and live longer.答案1-5dcabcLesson 11Part AThe Invention of SpectaclesWho is the inventor of spectacles? It said the inventor probably lived in the town of Pisa, Italy,around 1286, and he was almost certainly a craftsman working in glass. But nobody know thismuch about the inventor because on a Wednesday morning in February 1306 when Friar Giordano gave a sermon at a church in Florence, he said, ‘It is not yet twenty years since there was found the art of making eye-glasses which make for good vision.’ He also said,‘I have seen the man whofirst invented and created it, and I have talked to him.’ We know Friar said this because admirers copied his sermons down as he gave them.The inventor of spectacles kept the method of making them to himself. But the idea soon got around. As early as 1300, craftsmen in Venice were only shaped for far-sighted people. The lenses for short-sighted people were not developed until the late 15th century.Spectacles allowed people to go on reading and studying long after bad eyesight would normally have forced them to give up. They were like a new pair of eyes. Everyone thought the inventor of such a valuable thing should be honored. But for centuries no one had any idea who the inventor really was. So all kinds of candidates were put forward: Dutch, English, German, and Italian. A fake memorial was erected last spectacles—but he never even existed!It is only recently that the researchers have dug back through the records, pushed away all the stories and legends, and they have found the man whose name they do not know and to whom Friar talked, probably lived in Pisa, nearly seven hundred years ago. One researcher wrote, ‘The world has found lenses on its nose without knowing whom to thank.’ Can you believe it?Direction 11. How did the world get to know about the inventor of spectacles?2. What did the speaker think of the invention of spectacles?3. For whom were the first spectacles designed?4. What event took place in a church in Florence last century?5. What can be concluded from the passage?c b bd aDirection 21) probably Italian2) probably lived in Pisa, Italy3) almost certainly a craftsman working in glass4) most likely around 12865) nearly 700 years after he made the inventionPART B1. What country has a good appetite? (Hungary)2. What country is popular on Thanksgiving Day? (Turkey)3. What star is not seen in the sky? (A film star)4. What part of a watch is always old? (The second hand)5. What kind of table has no legs? (A timetable)6. What is the worst weather for rats and mice? (When it rains cats and dogs)PART CA new kind of contact lenses has recently been invented in America. Disposable contacts, as they come to be called, have hit the market after extended-wear contact lenses. Disposable contacts can be worn without being removed, then thrown away and replaced by a fresh pair. Dr Jack Hartstein, eye specialist at the Washington University, says: ‘If disposable lenses are worn properly, they are safer and more convenient than extended-wear lenses.’ He also says: ‘Many eye specialists are increasingly reluctant to prescribe extended-wear lenses.’ To allow oxygen to reach the cornea, the transparent out coat of the eyeball, extended-wear lenses contain up to 70 percent water. But the water also absorbs bacteria, irritants and protein which can result in cloudy vision, infection and cornea ulcers.Disposable lenses cost about $365 for the first year and $280 there-after, but competition will drive the price down. Extended-wear lenses range from approximately $150 to more than $400, but need replacing once or twice a year. Dr Hartstein estimates that users of disposable lenses will save at least $100 a year on cleansing solutions. And there is no need for insurance to cover lost or damaged lenses.1. What has recently been invented in the U.S.?2. Why are many specialists increasingly reluctant to prescribe extended-wear lenses?3. How much can users of disposable contact lenses save compared with those of extended-wear contact lenses?4. What kinds of lenses does the speaker recommend in the passage?5. What can you infer from the passage?c b ca bLesson 12Part AA Nation of ImmigrantsThe United States has been called a ‘nation of immigrants’. Indeed, aside from the American Indians, all Americans are immigrants or the descendants of immigrants. All have come from other places within the last 400 years.Americans came from different parts of the earth and for different reasons. Some came to escape persecution, religious or political; others to find a better life for themselves and their children. Still others were looking for adventure or for wealth. As for the blacks, they were forcibly brought here as slaves.Immigrants usually came in ‘waves’. The early settles came mainly on the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, mostly from the British Isles. In the middle decades of the nineteen century a much larger wave of immigrants arrived, chiefly from Ireland and Germany. But the really huge wave reached the United States between 1880 and 1920. Over twenty-three million people came during that period, more than twice as many as had come in all the years before. Unlike their predecessors, who were mostly from northwestern Europe, the later arrivals were mainly from eastern and southern Europe and from various parts of Asia. This meant that they were quite different from the old-time Americans in language, appearance, customs, attitudes, and in other respects.All these immigrants as well as the later ones had to adjust to the unfamiliar conditions they found in the new place and all had to work very hard to survive. Consequently, newcomers tend to stay together, forming close-knit communicates and clinging to their old customs and language. They。
[整理]大学英语精读预备级答案(上海外语教育出版社第三版)
[整理]大学英语精读预备级答案(上海外语教育出版社第三版)上海外语教育出版社第三版大学英语精读预备级第一册1 第二册2 第三册3 第四册4 第五册5 第六册6大学英语课后练习题参考答案翻译词汇结构写作阅读听力朗读摘要完形填空Unit 1 How to be a Successful Language LearnerText A Learning to Think All Over Again1 substituted2 analogy3 represented4 associated5 challenge6 converted7 concept8 reduced9 image 10 bundles 11 choose 12 pointed 13 instead 14 various1 get away from2 put together3 getting into4 broken into5 a great deal6 Over and over again7 depend on1 took2 go3 take4 go5 go1 what caused the fire2 what site of shoe your father wears3 what looked like a ball4 what our family and friends do for us5 what she had bought for his birthday1.Translation翻译1.What the boy likes to do most is putting together building blocks.2.In terms of previous working experience, John is the best choice for this position.3.My physics teacher often uses analogy to explain some difficult concepts.4.With the help of his family and friends, Tom build up his publishing business bit by bit.5.Linda was not able to go to that famous college, but she planned to start all over again rather than give up the challenge.6.This company has a very good public image. People always associate its product with high quality and good service.Text B Learning Grammar by "Feel"1 recognized2 later on3 fall back on4 slightest5 alternative6 figure out7 conviced8 complicated9 struck terror into 10 oral 11 sound 12 Follow 13 doubts 14master1 然而,对于一个正在学习母语的三岁孩子来说,语法一点儿也不可怕,因为他能在不知不觉中掌握它。
全新版大学英语听说教程5(第二版)答案教学文案
崭新版大学英语听闻教程 5( 第二版) 答案崭新版大学英语听闻教程5(第二版 )参照答案Unit 1 StrangersPart BText 1dbcab(o:old man; m:mother)o m o m o m oText 2babacigarette smoke; middle; bar; drink; pound; change; drank in one go; hat; coat; hat; coat; rack; umbrellas; a tall thin man; in an opposite direction.Part CdadacUnit 2 UFOsPart BText 1FTFTTFskipped a beat; strange lights; the yards; were day; 50 feet;300-400 feet; aluminum; the top; bottom; glass-like material; white;glowed yellow.Text 2accbaa;sleeping; the aliens; the saucer; their will; from my family; family;hovering so close to; the strange light; crazy;drinking;Part CcdbaUnit 3 Overseas Studydacaaplane journey; supposed; residence hall; luggage; somehow; mumble;journalism; scholarship; strange; foreign; looking right; soccer; Scottishinfluences; locals; experience; lifetime; decision; semester.Part CcbdcaUnit 4 Laughter: the Best MedicinePart Bdbadimmune system; stress hormones; blood pressure; laughter began; comedy videos;30 percent; second attack; inner jogging; immune system; humour; comedies;collections of jokes; 20; 3; hard rowing; sitting down; equipment; skill; workout;regular fitness program; breath; smile; exhale; muscles; cells; memory.Part CcbadUnit 5 NeighborsPart BFFFTTFTblue-collar; employee; rotted; threw them back;common driveway open;military uniform; charged; answering complaints that the other’ s TV was too lo her car was blocking the driveway or her kids were unruly; insisted that they submittheir dispute to mediation.Part CcbcdUnit 6 Finders KeepersText 1TFFTTTFFTLatin America; unsuspecting people; 1,100 wallets; 44; varied widely; 80wallets; 65; honest; Australia; India; diverse cultures; things; faith;Text 28-year-old boy; theirs; resort; fashionable cab; daughter; looking on; palace; pulling up; Her son; woman; fruit stall; waver; Mexico; elderly people; cross; peeking; waiter; returned; Canada; out of work; cash; booth.dbaaPart CFFTFTUnit 7 The Skeptical MindPart Bbacdaincredible; swirled; an hour; interviews; faked; discrepancies; imagery; stars; lunar; bending; waving; giant leap for mankind; immortal.Part CcbbcUnit 8 Heroes in EducationPart Baadbcthe new principal; need repair; truancy; dropout rate; incentive programs;useful skills; 90 percent; $ 9 million; academic achievements; diploma;erupted in cheers;her beliefs about renovating the lives of students who have been worn down or broken;something in every young person that can be cultivated into greatness.Part CFTTFFFFTUnit 9 Role ModelsPart BFTTFTFFFcrime; boxing couch; stole his bike; remained; amateur boxing career; easy-to-get-along-with; handle; wonderful; smoke; drink; shy; girls; obsessed with boxing.Part CacacUnit 10 Plastic SurgeryPart BTFTTF FTTFTValentine ’ s Day; their bodies; anticipation of the big day; very romantic and- old fashioned; strict physical exercise plan at the gym; wedding ring; bandages still on her stomach; baffled wedding audience; bridal veil; room and broad costs; regrets; underwear; inspirationPart CcacdUnit 11 Speed DatingPart Badccdbreak the ice; motherly charm; executive; 23-year-old mother;usual circle;have a relationship; 30-year-old labourer; smallish chair; great concept;boring; booming; magic;successful that Ann is even thinking she might try this out in Singapore.Part CbadcdUnit 12 DivorcePart Bcacbdthe police; something must have happened; first couple of years; peddles and the four kids were the ball; custody of all of us; split children up; hurt him; big mouth; good to me; being slapped across the face.Part CbabdUnit 13 Man VS. MachinePart Bacdbcworld chess champion; computer chess program; making moves with subtlety; achieve consciousness; stronger; ordinary players; adapt; tactical error; one error; imagination; pieces; combinationsPart CbdccUnit 14 CloningPart Bcadbadistrict; career; decent; pregnant; sperm count; fertilize; distress; special; successful; consent; donation; quiet violated; hairs; impression; give birth.Part Ccbaa。
《全新版大学英语-听说教程第五册》听力原文 College English Listening and Speaking Course 5 - Unit 3
Re c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a oUnit Three The Skeptical MindPart A Pre-listening Task (I)Listen to the facts and opinions about The Skeptical Mind twice and fill in the blanks with the words you hear from the recording. Pay attention to the sentence structures that you might find useful in your discussions.Facts and OpinionsNotedPreclude n. 排除Atheist n.无神论者1. Having a skeptical mind means keeping an open mind and basing your beliefs, so far as possible, on the total available evidence.2. You believe that everything is “explainable” in principle, and the only difference between a miracle and a natural phenomenon is that you are not able yet to explain the former in natural terms.3. Skepticism is essentially(本质上) a way of evaluating other people’s beliefsand forming your own.4. Skeptics believe that in matter of the intellect(智力), we ought to follow ourreason so far as it is possible.5. Skepticism does not necessarily preclude belief in God or an afterlife. It maybe true that most skeptics are atheists and doubt the possibility of an afterlife.6. It is a mistake to think that we ought to either believe in God or not believe in God because of the psychological benefits of doing so.7. Being a skeptic means being a mature adult who take responsibility for hisor her own life and who makes his or her own judgments.8. Sometime people’s opinions are influenced by the media and by what is saidover and over again.9. Skepticism is a primary tool of science, but unbridled(不受控制的,放纵的) disbelief is a threat to the development of science.10. However , it must be admitted that our actual knowledge of natural laws isimperfect and limited, so that the belief in the existence of basic all-embracing(包括一切的;包罗万象) laws in Nature also rests(倚靠) on a sort of faith.11. Apollo was the name given to any of a series of manned U.S. spacecraftdesigned to explore the Moon and surrounding space.Re c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a o 12. On July l6, 1969, the crew of Apollo II-Neil Armstrong, Mike Collins, and Buzz Aldrin-headed off to attempt the first lunar landing.13. In April 1970 Apollo l3 almost ended tragically when an oxygen tank inside the service module exploded.14. On 19th December 1972 the return of the astronauts aboard Apollo l7 after the 6th successful Moon landing marked the end of the Apollo era.15. Over the past thirty years, many people have been persuaded that theApollo missions never actually took place and therefore represent the largest hoax in history.16. It would be quite easy for me to state that the people who believe that the Apollo Moon landings were faked are wrong or just mad.17. My present interest in Apollo is historical I love the details of how and why the Apollo spacecraft worked as well as the details of the lunar exploration.18. I watch astronauts carrying out experiments, picking up Moon rocks, taking pictures and so forth, especially during the last few flights to the Moon.19. But it wasn’t until later that I really understood how and why they wouldpick a particular rock to sample or crater(火山口) to visit.20. The Internet is quickly growing into the largest and most complex web ofinformation our world has ever known.21. There are few filters that separate reliable information from false and misleading data.22. We are presented with piles upon piles of ideas, claims and unusual phenomena without a tool kit to help us sort out the good from the bad.Part A Pre-listening Task (II)Pair/ Group Work - Additional question for discussion1. Do you think a skeptical attitude is important in scientific research? Why orwhy not?2. Are you a skeptical person? Give an example to show that you are or aren'ta skeptical person?3. Do you chat with strangers on a train when going home during the vacationin order to kill time? What kind of persons do you choose to talk to?4. What are the topics that you like to talk about with strangers on a train?Sample1. Do you think a skeptical attitude is important in scientific research? Why or why not?In my opinion, a skeptical attitude is not only important but also necessary in scientific research. Every discovery and every new theory must have a reason to exist and can be explained in a scientific way. For example, British scientist Isaac Newton had doubts about Kepler's discoveries about the universe, because Kepler's theory could not answer some basic questions, such as: "What keeps the planets in their elliptical(椭圆的) orbits?Re c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a o On our spinning (旋转) Earth what prevents objects from flying away when they are thrown in the air? What keeps you from being hurled off (用力投掷) the spinning Earth?”With these questions in mind, Newton stated out to find the truth and in the end he discovered the Law of Gravity. (万有引力定律)2. Are you a skeptical person? Give an example to show that you are or aren't a skeptical person?Yes, I am a skeptical person to some extent. Take global warming for example, scientists say the Earth is turning hotter and hotter. Then I would not just take what scientists said for granted and I would ask why. I would compare the weather data collected about l0 year ago with the data of today. I would try to find out the reasons that caused the increase of the earth average temperature during these years. If the high level of carbon (碳) dioxide (二氧化物) emitted (发出) by major industrial countries is the main cause, I would probably join or support the international efforts to curb(限制) the emission(排放) of it into the atmosphere(大气).3. How much do you know about the Moon, such as its orbit, diameter , temperature and surface?The Moon is a natural satellite of the Earth, visible by reflection of sunlight and having a slightly elliptical orbit, approximately 356,000 kilometers (221,600 miles) distant at perigee ((月球等轨道的)近地点) and 406,997 kilometers (252,950 miles) at apogee(距地心最远的一点). Its mean diameter(直径) is 3,475 kilometers (2,l60 miles), its mass approximately one eightieth that of the Earth, and its average period of revolution(革命;彻底改变;旋转;运行,公转) around the Earth 29 days l2 hours 44 minutes as calculated with respect to(相对于) the sun.Part BListening Task(A)Notesswirl v. 纷乱地流传hoax n.骗局conspiracy n. 阴谋X-Files (X-档案) (美国科幻电视剧名)Mitch Pileggi (人名)Bill Kaysing (人名)testimony n. 证据,证明,证言Nevada n. 内华达州studio n. 摄影棚blundering a. 笨拙的Re c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a o constellation n. 星座discrepancy n. 差异,不一致immortal a. 不朽的Reference1. Background InformationConspiracy theorists (阴谋论) like Bill Kaysing and Ralph Rene claim that the Apollo Moon landings were a hoax. On 15 February and 19 March 2001 the Fox TV network aired a program called "Conspiracy Theory: Did We Land on the Moon?", hosted by "X-Files" actor Mitch Pileggi, that rehearsed (排演) these claims. Guests on the show argued that NASA technology in the 1960s wasn't up to the task of a real Moon landing. Instead, anxious to win the Space Race any way it could, NASA acted out the Apollo program in movie studios. Thesuggestive (引起联想的) scenes in films like "Diamonds Are Forever" (1971) and "Capricorn (摩羯座) One" (1978) helped establish the Moon Hoax theme in American popular culture. The best rebuttal (反驳) to allegations(指控) of a "Moon Hoax," however, is common sense. Evidence that the Apollo program really happened is compelling(引人入胜的).2. That last bit was hard to swallow, …The last part of what she said was hard for me to believe, …3. the controversy (论战) that swirled (纷乱地流传) through the small townthe controversy that spread out like a swirl of wind through the small town4. the Fox Television networkalso Fox Broadcasting Company (FBC), an American television network with headquarters in Los Angeles. FBC distributes entertainment, sports, and talk programs and television movies to about 200 affiliated (隶属于) stations in the United States. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, FBC, also known simply as Fox, became the fourth major commercial television network in the United States.5. Conspiracy Theory…speculation concerning the existence of an agreement to perform together an illegal (不合法的) or unofficial actionDid We Land on the Moon?Last week my phone rang. It was my mother and she was very upset."Tony!" she exclaimed, "I just came from the coffee shop and there's a guy down there who says NASA never landed on the Moon. Everyone was talking about it ... I just didn't know what to say!"That last bit was hard to swallow, I thought. Mom's never at a loss for words.Re c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a o But even more incredible was the controversy that swirled through the small town and places like it across the country. After a long absence, the "Moon Hoax" was back.All the debates about the Moon landing began on Thursday, February 15, 2001 when the Fox Television network aired a program called "Conspiracy Theory: Did We Land on the Moon?" It was re-aired on March 19. The program was hosted by "X-Files" actor Mitch Pileggi. The program was an hour long, and featured interviews with a series of people who believe that NASA faked the Apollo Moon landings in the 1960s and 1970s. The biggest voice in this is Bill Kaysing, who claims to have all sorts of hoax evidence, including pictures taken by the astronauts, engineering details, discussions of physics and even some testimony by astronauts themselves. The program's conclusion was that the whole thing was faked in the Nevada desert. According to them, NASA technology in the 1960s did not have the technical capability of going to the Moon. Instead, anxious to win the Space Race any way it could, NASA acted out the Apollo program in movie studios. Neil Armstrong's historic first steps on another world, the Moon vehicle and the American flag -- it was all a fake! Fortunately the Soviets didn't think it was a hoax. Otherwise, they could have filmed their own fake Moon landings and really embarrassed the free world. According to the show, NASA was a blundering (笨拙的) movie producer thirty years ago. The hoax believers pointed out a lot of discrepancies (差异, 分歧) in Apollo imagery. For example, pictures of astronauts transmitted from the Moon don't include stars in the dark lunar sky -- an obvious production error! What happened? Did NASA film-makers forget to turn on the constellations?Here's another one. Pictures of Apollo astronauts erecting (直立的) a US flag on the Moon show the flag bending and waving. How can that be? After all, there's no breeze on the Moon ..."One small step for man, one giant leap(跳跃, 飞跃) for mankind." These immortal (不朽的) words were spoken when American astronaut Neil Armstrong first set foot on the Moon in 1969. Or did he?Questions I.:Listen to the story and choose the right answers to each questions you hear.1. Why was the speaker's mother at a loss for words at the beginning?A. Because she was too angry to speak out.B. Because she was so surprised at the news that she just couldn ’t think what to say.C. Because she was crying at the incredible news.D. Because she disbelieved the story and didn’t want to argue back.正确答案:B. Because she was so surprised at the news that she just couldn ’tRe c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a o think what to say.2. When did the Fox TV network air the program for the second time?A. About a month after it was aired for the first time.B. On February 15th , 2001C. About two weeks after it was aired for the first time.D. On March 21, 2001正确答案:A. About a month after it was aired for the first time.3. What was the theme of the program that the Fox TV network aired in 2001?A. The conspiracy of NASA in an attempt to overthrow the government.B. The conspiracy that NASA found out about the Moon landing program.C. People ’s disbelief in the Moon landing program of about 30 years ago.D. A plot to attack NASA ’s Moon landing program.正确答案:C. People ’s disbelief in the Moon landing program of about 30 years ago.4. Why did NASA fake the Moon landings in the 1960s and 1970s according to the passage?A. Because NASA failed in many of its attempts to land on the Moon.B. Because NASA was controlled by a group of conspirators then/C. Because the president ordered them to beat the soviet Union in space explorations.D. Because NASA was anxious to beat the Soviet Union in the space race. 正确答案:D. Because NASA was anxious to beat the Soviet Union in the space race.5. What was the speaker's attitude toward the hoax incident?A. The speaker did not believe in the Moon landing.B. The speaker was neutral (中立者) in his or her account.C. The speaker believed in the Moon landing.D. The speaker was against the Moon landing program from the very beginning.正确答案:A. The speaker did not believe in the Moon landing.Questions II:Listen to the passage again and complete the following statement with the word or phrases you have heard.1. But even more incredible was the controversy that swirled through thesmall town and places like it across the country.Re c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a o 2. The program was an hour long, and featured interviews with a series of people who believe that NASA faked the Apollo Moon landings in the 1960s and 1970s.3. The hoax believers pointed out a lot of discrepancies in Apollo imagery.4. For example, pictures of astronauts transmitted from the Moon don't include stars in the dark lunar sky.5. Pictures of Apollo astronauts erecting a US flag on the Moon show the flag bending and waving. How can that be? After all, there's no breeze on the Moon.6. "One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." These immortalwords were spoken when American astronaut Neil Armstrong first set foot on the Moon in 1969. Or did he?Speaking Task (I)You have just heart a passage about the Moon landing that happened during the time between 1969 and 1972. What is your opinion of the Apollo mission? Are you skeptical after listening to the text? Exchange views with your partner. You may to cover the following points in your discussion.1. When and how did the upsetting debate start?2. What was the theme of the program aired by the Fox Television?3. What were the two discrepancies in the pictures of the Apollo mission?4. What do you think of the arguments put forward by the hoax believers? Are you skeptical about NASA ’s Moon Landing? Give your reasons.The argument began on Thursday, February 15, 2001 when the Fox Television network aired a program called "Conspiracy Theory: Did We Land on the Moon?" It was replayed on March 19. The argument was put forward by some conspiracy theorists, including BiII Kaysing. Kaysing claimed on TV that NASA's Apollo Moon missions were a giant hoax. During the 1960s and 1970s, NASA was so anxious to win the space race with the Soviet Union that faked all the Apollo Moon missions and fabricated(虚构) the films and photos of the Moon landings in a film studio.The program also showed some discrepancies in the Moon landing photos. One of the discrepancies is that the photos don't include stars in the dark lunar sky. The other one is that the American flag erected by the US astronauts was fluttering and bending. How could the flag wave on the Moon since there is no breeze there?In my opinion, this TV program was like a nuclear bomb. The Fox Television network is one of the major news agencies in the US and most people tend to believe what it says. If it said that the whole Apollo Moon landing was a big hoax, then people would tend toRe c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a o believe it. This indicates that people are generally gullible(易受骗的) about what is said in the media. So l think the merit of this program is to make people think for themselves and help them reach their own conclusions based on the evidence.As for me, I don't think the Apollo Moon landing was a hoax. I have made this judgment on common sense and on the evidence that the astronauts brought back some Moon rocks. As the saying goes, seeing is believing. But in many cases, we can not see what is happening elsewhere in the world with our own eyes. Anyway, people should have the right to know the truth and should be skeptical about what is said in the media. Part C Additional ListeningHenry Beatle (人名)Your Money (广播节目名)tremendous a. 极大的,巨大的David Champion (人名)manufacturer n. 制造商US Carmakers Make Progress... I'm Henry Beatle with "Your Money".For decades many people have insisted that they wouldn't buy an American car or light truck simply because they believe European and Asian vehicles were better made. "Consumer Reports Annual Auto" issue says the US carmakers have been making tremendous progress over the past five years in improving the quality of their products and in reducing the number of things that will go wrong with them.David Champion is the director of auto-testing for the magazine. He says the American automakers now feel vehicles (that) are as reliable on average during the first year as those from European manufacturers. In fact, Champion says the Europeans have made smaller improvements and haven't kept up with the strides being made by carmakers in the US and Asia. A "Consumer Reports" survey finds American and European models now average 21 problems per hundred vehicles during the first year compared to 12 problems per hundred for Asian models.With CNN radio "Your Money". I'm Henry Beatle.Questions:Listen to the recording and choose the right answers to each question you hear.1. What's the main topic of this news report?A. How to buy a new car .Re c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a o B. Why won't people buy American cars?C. American automakers are making great progress.D. There are problems with vehicles made in America , Europe and Asia . 正确答案:C. American automakers are making great progress.2. In which area has progress been made by the US carmakers?A. Cheaper price .B . Greater re li abi li ty .C. Appearance.D. Less fue l consumption .正确答案:B . Greater re li abi li ty .3. Who is David Champion?A. A correspondent for a radio stat ion.B. Th e director of auto-testing for the ma gaz in e .C. Head of an auto ma gaz in e .D. Director of an American automaker .正确答案:B. Th e director of auto-testing for the ma gaz in e .4. Which of the following is NOT true according to the talk?A . US carmakers have been makin g tremendous progress over the past five years .B . For decades man y peop l e wou l dn't buy an American car s impl y because of their fa l se be li efs .C . Champion says the Europeans have mad e greater impro ve m ents in their auto indu stry .D. A "Consumer Reports" survey found that American and European mod e l s have mor e prob l e m s than Asian mod e l s .正确答案:C . Champion says the Europeans have mad e greater impro ve m ents in their auto indu stry .Part C Leisure TimeHumour - Accidental bondingA woman and a man get into a car accident. Both cars were totally demolished, but amazingly neither of them is hurt.After they crawl out of their wreckage, the woman says, " Wow, look at our cars – there ’s nothing left! Thank God we are all right. This must be a sign from Him that we should be friends and not try to pin the blame on each other ”R e c o r d e r C o l e W i n G a oThe man replied, “Oh yes, I agree with you completely."The woman points to a bottle on t he ground and says, “And here's another miracle. Somehow this bottle of Scotch(划开) from my back seat didn't break. Surely God wants us to drink this Scotch and celebrate our good fortune."Then she hands the bottle to the man. The man nods his head in agreement, opens it, and chugs about a third of the bottle to calm his nerves. He then hands it back to the woman. The woman takes the bottle, immediately puts the cap back on, and hands it back to the man.The man asks, "Aren't you having any?"The woman replies, "No. I think I'll just wait for the police …”Part C Movie TimeWatch an excerpt of a film and choose the right answer to each of the following questions.H. G. Wells (1866-1946): 英国著名科幻小说家,发表了的科幻作品包括. ”The Time Machine ” (1895), “The Invisible Man ”(1897), “The War of the Worlds ” (1898) , “The Shape of Things to Come ” (1933) 等。
全新版大学英语听说5听力材料unit4partb
[00:41.42]According to our research,
[00:43.44]laughter strengthens the immune system and lowers the levels of stress hormones?
[02:57.26]W: What about the situation in which you aren't in a mood to laugh?
[03:01.64]M: OK, remember, even when you fake a smile or laugh,
[03:05.66]you get the same physiological benefits as when it's the real thing,
[05:01.32]W: What else?
[05:02.75]M: Another year-long study of heart attack victims done
[05:06.50]at the Oakhurst Health Research Institute in California found
[02:01.12]and incorporated humor into their recovery regimen
[02:04.28]by watching comedies or reading collections of jokes.
[02:07.97]W: You said Norman learned this?
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.
大学英语听说__第五册__答案
Unit 1PartAExercise 11c 2b 3c 4c 5dExercise 21 Friday2 Can’t make the meeting on Tuesday afternoon3 Friday4 Grandmother died . Got to go to the funeral5 Strike6 Cancel the last order7 London8 Phone her as soon as Dawson’s back9 supply10 Will explain laterPart DImportant MessagesMessage 1Ask Mr Hudson to call Ms Alvarez’s secretary at the Columbia Towers HotelMessage 2Ask Mr Hudson to call All Canada Airlines at 604-511-0973Message 3Ask Mr Hudson to call Laura Smith back Wednesday nightPart ECan I Take a Message?1 Message:Call Peter befor 11 in the morning , He wants to talk about the weekend2 MessageTell Mr Barrett that Bob Hudson is back in his office3 MessageCan’t baby-sit on Friday night , but her friend Mary Ann who has lots of experience in baby-sitting can and her phone number is 892-2971Unit 2Part AExercise 21Good things / do hard physical work2co-workers / complain / heavy / when there was nothing to do3pride and satisfaction / praise from co-workers / pay / a job was being done4his time had been well spentPart EConversation 2Jane: ruslted across / foot / dark night //// a snake //// Screamed / work up everybodyTony: stuck / subway car / total darkness //// between two stations / dark and hot //// Got off the train / the next station / far from where he wanted to goUnit 3Part AExercise 21 18992 a reporter on Kansas City Star3 serving as an ambulance driver for the Red Cross4 he got to know many of the American writers and artists in Paris5 19256 A Farewell to Arms7 the 1930s8 The Old Man and the Sea9 the Nobel Prize for Literature10 he committed suicidePart DPassage 2 Pablo Picasso1 He was born in Spain , on 25 October , 18812 He was the only son in the family and was spoilt by his parents . He hated school but learned to draw before he could talk3 His father , who was an amateur artist4 For his “Cubist” pictures , which used only simple geometric shapes5 They were often made up of triangles and squares , which their features in the wrong place6 He died of heart attack during an attack of influenza in 1973Part EPassage 1 Walt Disney1 In Chicago in 19012 He was a cartoon artist and producer of animated films3 Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs , Pinocchio , etc4 Mickey Mouse ,Donald Duck ,and Pluto the dog5 Disneyland in California in 19556 Disney World in Florida , Tokyo Disney in Japan ,Euro Disney in France and Hong Kong Disneyland in China7 in 1966Passage 2 Jane Austen1 large2 17753 Not well off4 Single5 18016 very unhappy7 her father died8 her brother’s estate9 181110 Pride and Prejudice11 181312 181513 181814 satirize15 social inequalities16 kidneys17 1817Unit 4Part AExercise 12 If you can’t get to sleep at night , what do you do ?3 What do you do before you go to bed?4 When you dream , what do you dream about ?5 How much time do you spent making your bed every day ?6 Have you had any people complaining about your sleeping habits ?Part EPassage 1 What Your Dream Tell You1 emotional problems2 looking for success3 have some specific goal4 have low self-esteem5 typical dream of people who are under stress6 have a decision to make7 afraid of dying8 a clue to your personalityUnit 5Part AExercise 2(1)1 What made you give up everything to come here ?2 How do you earn a living ?3 There must be some things you miss ,surely ?(2)1 What led you to leave your job and make this trip ?2 What did you do for money ?3 How did people react to you ?4 Did you ever feel like giving up , turning round and coming home ?5 You’ve had such an exciting time that you’ll find it difficult to settle down , won’t you ?Part EHow to Relieve Stress ?1 A college student2 Hard to make friends at college3 Join the drama club4 A software engineer5 Working long hours6 Started taking ballroom dancing lessons7 An administrative assistant8 Very boring job9 Quit the job and started her own flower shop10 Driving to and from work during rush hour11 Started taking the trainUnit 6Part AExercise 21 Paul could reach all the switches2 To give warning if there is a fire3 To prevent burglary4 Paul will be able to reach everything in the kitchen5 Paul will have a large room on the ground floor where he can workPart DExercise I Believe In Do-It-Yourself1 an old house2 neighbor3 remodel the house4 mend the gate5 roof6 knock down7 right8 enlarge the garage9 fireplace10 redecorate the whole house11 builder12 believed in do-it-yourself13 mended a roof14 installed a fireplace15 handyman’s workbook16 what to do step by stepExercise1 passion2 dependent3 decorating4 installing5 enthusiasts6 advisory7 assemble8 Men are believed to be9 automatically assume that their husbands will somehow put things right10 It is a question of pride as much as anything elsePart EPassage 2 Designer’s Top Ten//home-improvement / transform a room1 create the entire mood / come to life2 a large piece of art / a small space3 reflection / personal style / interests4 do your homework / buy from reputable galleries5 the way you see each piece / an artistic process / a great deal of interest / reflections6 a great addition / unexpected / two artworks / different periods /a common element7 your collection effortlessly / ruining8 Choose frames carefully / set it off9 grouping many small artworks together10 the artists you are interested in / recent workUnit 7Part AExercise 21 Italian2 probably lived in Pisa , Italy3 almost certainly a craftsman working in glass4 most likely around 12865 nearly 700 years after he made the inventionPart DA Compound DictationExercise1 distances2 1800’s3 explore4 camera5 helicopter6 Nylon7 disease8 As time went by , new inventions continued to be made , but people now had a desire to explore again9 People began looking for ways to go into space10 New inventions will someday allow us to do things we have never yet dreamed ofPart EPassage 2 The Invention of Zipper1 18912 principle3 Whitcomb Judson4 a new model of fastener5 manufacture6 clumsy7 burst open8 a really practical slide-fastener9 191310 the present day zipperUnit 8Part AExercise 21 phone calls2 lives back East3 once a week4 one hour5 stays current6 letters7 went to China for two years8 good friends ever since9 e-mails10 in and out of touch11 twice a week12 two months13 Back in good touchPart DA Compound DictationExercise1 adolescent2 change3 need4 adults5 support6 critical7 Make new friends , but keep the old , one is silver and the other gold8 we usually try to “keep the old ”as well9 maintaining friendships over time and distance is not easy10 old friendships often suffer as a resultPart EWhat Is Friendship ?1 straightforward2 sunshine3 warmth and happiness4 comfort and support5 jokes6 help us out in times of difficulty7 in trouble8 the family9 choose10 such a wonderful thingUnit 9Part AExercise 21 The sea2 71% of the earth3 undiscovered4 dropping a weighted rope to the sea bottom5 measuring the time6 sound7 a ship8 flat area where living creatures , plants and minerals9 deep hollows shaped like bowls10 a mountain chain stretching 40,000 milesPart EA Compound DictationExercise1 endangered2 habitat3 ultimately4 disappears5 affected6 altered7 ensure8 the rapid extinction of so many creatures on our planets raises profound ethical and moral questions9 Do we want the future to be a place where pandas only exist in captivity in zoos ?10 what does that say about humankind’s future on earth ?Unit 10Part DA Compound DictationExercise1 blacked2 authority3 Pressimists4 varying5 prosperity6 disaster7 unemployment8 they wisely avoided using their guns against mobs which far outnumbered them and included armed men9 The blackout started at 9: 30 p.m , when lightning hit and knocked out vital cables10 They helped strangers , distributed candles and batteries , and tried to survive in a nightmareworld without traffic lights , elevators , water and electrical powerPart ESurviving a Plane Crash1 The dirty flood water2 Nine days after the plane crash3 She had a collapsed lung , a fractured jaw , Her left leg and all the toes in her left foot were brokenTest 1Part C1 sensed2 unsteadily3 fastened4 thrown5 whisper6 fainted7 hesitation8 The plane was now dangerously close to the ground , but to everyone’s relief , it soon began to climb9 Following instructions , the man guided the plane towards the airfield10 a crowd of people who had been watching anxiously rushed forward to congratulate the man ona perfect landingTest 2Part C1 necessarily2 solution3 abundance4 programmed5 Advisory6 refreshed7 older8 we are not physically designed to sleep for one long single blow9 Research has shown that in the Middle Ages , people’s sleep quite often occurred in 3 distinct parts:10 Your increased energy and alertness will make the rest of your day extra productive。
全新版大学英语听说5听力材料unit3
[07:24.69]and celebrate many of the same holidays.
[07:33.44]14. Exchange can provide many benefits for all societies.
[06:15.51]12. China is politically stable and economically optimistic,
[06:21.72]which is the main reason why so many foreign students are attracted.
[05:36.47]11. The first group of foreign students came from East Europe in 1950.
[05:42.54]Since then over 60,000 students from 160 countries
[05:47.23]have come to China for further studies.
[03:35.80]According to a government report,
[03:37.58]overseas students from China are largely self-funded.
[03:47.57]7. The number of high school and even primary school students going abroad
[00:22.62]Pay attention to the sentence structures
全新版大学英语听说5听力材料unit11parta
[ti:Unit11 PartA]
[ar:上海外语教育出版社]
[by:上海外语教育出版社]
[00:00.00]Unit 11 Speed Dating
[00:03.74]Part A
[00:05.58]Pre-listening Task
[05:44.20]where they live or exchange phone numbers.
[05:53.57]The rule of the event dictates that you may not ask someone's age, income,
[05:58.31]where they live or exchange phone numbers.
[02:00.83]a significant proportion meet people through friends, family and hobbies,
[02:05.63]but that still leaves a lot prepared to use other methods to meet a partner.
[05:25.07]until the bell rings and then moves round on to the next.
[05:29.01]The duration of time is set by organizers.
[05:38.66]7. The rule of the event dictates that you may not ask someone's age, income,
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.
大学英语听说5-college-english-book-5部分原文
大学英语听说5-c o l l e g e-e n g l i s h-b o o k-5部分原文(总13页)--本页仅作为文档封面,使用时请直接删除即可----内页可以根据需求调整合适字体及大小--PART A Telephone message for Mr Drawson9:00Amanda Mr Dawson's office.Jenny oh,it's Jenny . can you give Mr Dawson a message I won't be in till Friday. I've got the flu. I saw the doctor this morning.Amanda OK, jenny. I'll pass the massage on. I hope you'll feel better soon,9:40Amanda Mr Dawson's office. can i help youMr Watkins may i speak to Mr Dawson's ,please?Amanda I'm afaid he's away in business. he'll be back tomorrow. can i take a message?Mr Watkins Please. it's Tom Datkins here. look. i can't make the meeting on Tuesday afternoon. something important's come up. i'll ring Peter on Wednessday.11:30Amanda hello, godfrey. what can i do for you?Godfrey Mr Dawson isn't here, is he?Amanda No, not till tomorrow.Godfrey Ah ... it's just that i want friday off. you see. my grandmother died yesterday. i'll have to go to the funeral.Amanda Oh, i am sorry. how old was she?Godfrey 92.12:15Amanda Mr Dawson's office.Salesman can you put me to through to Mr Dawson?Amanda I'm afraid he isn't here today. would you like to leave a message?Salesman Oh, right, wadley's garage here. it's about his new car. it isn't ready yet. there's a strike at he factory today.2:10Amanda Good afternoon. Mr Dawson's office.Miss Dobson Good afternoon. this is Juliet Dobson from western Video Syetems. Mr Dawson's at the trade fair in Lyon, isn't he?Amanda yes. that's right. he should be here tomorrow.Miss Dobson well, cam you give him this message first thing in the morning I'm afraid we must cancel our last order. the customers have changed their minds again!3:20Amanda Good afternoon. Mr Dawson's office.Mr Gonzalez hello, this is Miguel Gonzalez speaking. is Peter there?Amanda No,i'm afraid he's away on business today. can i pass on a message .Senor Gonzalez?Mr Gonzalez yes, i may be in London from 21st to 25st. i want to see Peter then, if possible. it's about the agency in Mexico.4:35Amanda Mr Dawson's office.Mrs Ellis My name's Samantha Ellis. can you get Mr Dawson to phone me as soon as he gets back from Lyon it really is very urgent.4:55Amanda Mr Dawson's office.Mr Berry Ah, Miss Hayward. this is Charles Berry.Amanda Oh, good afternoon, sir.Mr Berry I've got an important message for Mr Dawson. give it to him the minute he comes in. just say, 'Don't supply Mason and Company until further notice'. I'll explain later.(It's Tuesday Dawson has returned to the office after his business trip to Lyon.)Peter Good morning, Amanda. could you come in for a minute, please?Amanda Good morning , Mr Dawson. did you have a good trip?Peter Yes, thank you. were there any messages for me yesterday?Amanda yes, quite a few. shall i just run through them?Peter please.Amanda Jenny phoned. she said she would be in till Friday.Peter Oh, why's that?Amanda she said she had the flu. she'd seen the doctor.Peter Right, go on.Amanda Then Mr Watkins called, he said he couldn't make the meeting this afternoon but would ring you on Wednesday.Peter OK.Amanda Godfrey came in looking for you. he said he wanted Friday off.Peter Did he?Amanda yes, he told me his grandmother had died and he'd have to go to the funeral.Peter Oh, dear. I'd better see him later.Amanda And Wadley's Garage called. they said you new car wasn't ready.Peter Oh,no... why on earth not?Amanda they said there was a strike at the factory yesterday.Peter Again!Amanda After lunch Miss Dobson phoned. she said that Western Video Systems had to cancel their last order because their customers had changed their minds.Peter Pity!Amanda Mr Gonzalez called from Mexico to say he might be in London from 21st to 25th. he said he wanted to see you then.Peter Oh, good. I hope he can make it.Amanda then a lady phoned, Samantha,Ellis. she asked you to phone her as soon as possible. she said it was urgent.Peter Ah, Samantha. i wonder what she wants.Amanda Oh and just before five. Mr Berry phoned . he told us not to supply Mason& further notice. he said it was important and that he would explain later.Peter Anything else?Amanda No, that's it. Coffee?Peter Please,, that would be nice.答案 1-5 cbccdUnit 2Dr Coleman's Sabbatical LeaveIn the United States a university professor is granted a few months of freedom from his duties approximately every seventh year fortravel or advanced study. this period of freedom from teaching is called a'sabbatical leave'.Few sabbatical leaves are interesting enough to be described in national newspapers and magazines. recently, however, there was an exception. the public learned how Dr John , president of Haverford College. had spent his sabbatical leave.At the age of 51 Dr Coleman was determined to escape from universitylife for a few months and to get a variety of experiences in the world of especially wanted to learn about people. people who do hard physical labor were particularly interesting to him.Telling no one of his plans. Dr Coleman started his sabbatical leave on a farm in Canada, hundreds of miles from his college. Getting up at 4:30each morning, working thirteen hours a day in fields and barns, he prepared himself physically for his next job, digging ditches, in Atlanta, Georgia, after that, the college president washed dishes in a boston restaurant, during the last ten days of his leave, he worked as a garbage collector.This unusual sabbatical leave was conducted in great secrecy. Coleman telephoned his family once a week,'just to let some know where i was andthat i was healthy.' none of his students or co-workers at Haverford College knew what their president was doing. on each job he avoided letting people know who he was. 'when people would ask me about myself, i'd try to turn the conversation back to them,' he explained. 'some co-workers might have thought i was a little different, a little quiet maybe, but i doubt anyone knew i was a college president.'there was only one employer who sensed something unusual. 'at a restaurant in boston, i had been on the job exactly one hour-- i was washing dishes--when the boss came over and said,'I'm afraid you won't do.' and handed me two dollars. immediately i asked him why, but he just said,' it's not your work. sorry.'that was the frist time in more than thirty years as a job holder that Coleman had heard such words. it helped him understand how a man of his age might feel when he suddenly realizeed he had lost his job.after two months of working with his hands,Coleman returned from his unusual sabbatical leave, convinced that the experience had been worthwhile. he had some good things to say about people who do hard physical work.'a lot of my co-workers would complain when they was too heavy,' he said, 'but they'd complain a lot more when there was nothing to do.'he found that pride and satisfaction came chiefly in the form of praise from co-workers. even though pay was important, what brought the greatest satisfaction was known that someone had noticed how a job was being done.at the end of the sabbatical leave Dr Coleman felt that his time had been well spent. he now believes that every young person should be required to spend at least half a year in the world of work before starting university studies.Unit 3The life story of Ernest HemingwayDr Chu and His superconductorPablo picassoUnit 4a conversation sleeping habitsPART A Sleeping HabitsWoman good morning, sir.Man Er, good morning.Woman i wonder if you'd like to answer a few questions.Man well er...Woman we're doing a market survey.Man that depends, what sorts of questions are they, eh?Woman well, it's questions about your sleeping habits.Man sleeping habits?Woman Mm.Man well, i suppose that's all right. yes , well, what do you want to know?Woman right, Um, what would you do if you heard a strange noise in the middle of the night?Man i'd wonder what it was, er, i suppose, and then i'd um, see if it happened again.Woman Mm.Man i would lie awake a little while. waiting to see if it happened again, and if it did ----i suppose i'd get up...Woman Mm.Man and go and see what it was.Woman very , if you, if you can't get to sleep at night, er, what do you, what do you dohave you a special methodMan well, i generally go to sleep straight away. i don't have any trouble getting to sleep.Woman Mm.Man well. if i do have... occasionally, happens about once every six months, i suppose, that i can't go to sleep and then i, er, i lie awake and i, um, think about things.Woman Mm, Mm. think about things. and, er, what about before going to bed what do you do before you go to bedMan well. i , it all depends, er. if i 've been out i, i, don't do anything. i just come home and go straight to bed. i clean my teeth, ha , ha.Woman Mm, good, good.Man that's one thing i do before i go to bed. Um, well, i occasionally read a bit but if i read i go, i tend to go straight to sleep. i , i, can usually read about a page and then i go to straight off.Woman Mm, yes, me too. yeah, and, um, when you dream, what do you dream about?Man Aah! now that's a very interesting question.Woman Mm.Man yes, i have been dreaming a great deal recently as it happens.Woman have you?Man Mm.Woman have you?Man Um, i've had dream every single...all, all the way through my holidays. i've just come back from my holiday and i' ve been dreaming every single night. quite worrying dreams, very worrying dreams. for example, i had a dream about parrots the other night.Woman parrots?Man yes, green parrots. i mean, they shouldn't have been there because we weren't in any tropical country or anything.Woman er, no. no.Man it was a flock of parrots.Woman a flock?Man a flock. a whole flock of parrots.Woman that's funny.Man and there i was climbing up this stream bed...Woman yes, Um.Man with these parrots flying around. ha, most extraordinary.Woman really. yes, would you describe that as a nightmare?Man well, it's rathere worrying, don't you think?Woman very--well, um, another question, sir, how much time do you spend making you bed every day?Man i don't spend any time at all. i just get out and then i get back in, in the evening.Woman i see. so no time at all. and, Um yes, the lastquestion,Um ,have you had any people complaining about your sleeping habits?Man complaining?Woman yes, that's to say...Man what would they complain of?Woman do you, perhaps you snore at night?Man no, i don't snore.Woman perhaps you talk in your sleep.Man no , i , i tend to take up rather a lot of room, though.Woman yes, i can see that.Man yes, yes, i do tend to use up more than my fair share of the bed, yes.Woman but you...Man roll around a bit.Woman but you've had no complaints?Man well, i occasionally get complaints but i don't take much notice of them, what can you do?Woman yes. quite so. well um, thank you very much indeed, sir, you've been very cooperative and helpful.Man yes, well. thank you. yes, it was quite interesting speaking to you actually. ha, ha.Woman good-bye.Man bye, bye.答案:1-5 cabcdCats are creatures of habitsCats are creatures of habits. they like to fo to sleep about the same time everyday and for a certain length of time. they seem to have a nationalclock inside them that tells them when to sleep.cats supplement their regular sleep with occasional cat naps. some experts feel that humans could also benefit from this habit. cat naps help to build up energy in the body. they are also a good way to overcome boredom. since cats have moods similar to those of humans, some experts believe that people can improve their moods and attitudes by catnapping. people might become happier;a number of famous people have copied cats by taking cat naps during the day. the naps would usually last from 15 to 30 minutes. winston churchill tookcat naps. so did president harry truman. john kennedy and so on. there famous people were known for their energy. they were also able to work long hours. often late into the night. and napping was their secret. perhaps more people could learn from cats and take naps to feel better and live longer.答案1-5dcabcUnit 4The Invention of SpectaclesWho is the inventor of spectaclesIt said the inventor probably lived in the town of Pisa, Italy, around 1286, and he was almost certainly a craftsman working in glass. But nobody knowthis much about the inventor because on a Wednesday morning in February 1306 when Friar Giordano gave a sermon at a church in Florence, he said, ‘It is not yet twenty years since there was found the art of making eye-glasses which make for good vision.’ He also said, ‘I have seen the man who first invented and created it, and I have talked to him.’ We know Friar said this because admirers copied his sermons down as he gave them.The inventor of spectacles kept the method of making them to himself. Butthe idea soon got around. As early as 1300, craftsmen in Venice were only shaped for far-sighted people. The lenses for short-sighted people were not developed until the late 15th century.Spectacles allowed people to go on reading and studying long after bad eyesight would normally have forced them to give up. They were like a new pair of eyes. Everyone thought the inventor of such a valuable thing should be honored. But for centuries no one had any idea who the inventor really was. So all kinds of candidates were put forward: Dutch, English, German, Italian. A fake memorial was erected last spectacles—but he never even existed!It is only recently that the researchers have dug back through the records, pushed away all the stories and legends, and they have found the man whose name they do not know and to whom Friar talked, probably lived in Pisa, nearly seven hundred years ago. One researcher wrote, ‘The world has found lenses on its nose without knowing whom to thank.’ Can you believe it?A new kind of contact lenses has recently been invented in America. Disposable contacts, as they come to be called, have hit the market after extended-wear contact lenses. Disposable contacts can be worn without being removed, then thrown away and replaced by a fresh pair. Dr Jack Hartstein, eye specialist at the Washington University, says: ‘If disposable lenses are worn properly, they are safer and more convenient than extended-wear lens es.’ He also says: ‘Many eye specialists are increasingly reluctant to prescribe extended-wear lenses.’ To allow oxygen to reach the cornea, the transparent out coat of the eyeball, extended-wear lenses contain up to 70 percent water. But the water also absorbs bacteria, irritants and protein which can result in cloudy vision, infection and cornea ulcers.Disposable lenses cost about $365 for the first year and $280 there-after, but competition will drive the price down. Extended-wear lenses range from approximately $150 to more than $400, but need replacing once or twice a year. Dr Hartstein estimates that users of disposable lenses will save at least $100 a year on cleansing solutions. And there is no need for insurance to cover lost or damaged lenses.Unit 1Telephone message for Mr dawsonImportant messageAre you ringing about partyUnit 2Dr coleman’s sabbatical leaveA funny thing happened to meMy experience in a restaurantUnit 3The life story of Ernest Hemingway;Dr. chu and his superconductorPablo picassoUnit 4Sleeping habitsCats are creatures of habitIs the sleepwalker actually awake or asleep Unit 5A new way of lifeFarmers’ life in the usThe healthiest lifestyle in the worldUnit 6Do it yourselfA conversation I believe in do it yourselfA compound dictationUnit 7The invention of spectaclesA passage contact lensesUnit 8Long distance friendshipAn act of friendshipUnit 9Mysteries of the seaHow animals protect themselves The resources of the seaUnit 10Things we never saidYoung darwinSurviving a plane crash。
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.
全新版大学英语听说5听力材料unit2parta
全新版大学英语听说5听力材料unit2parta[al:全新版大学英语(第二版)听说教程5][ti:Unit2 PartA][ar:上海外语教育出版社][by:上海外语教育出版社][00:00.00]Unit 2 UFOs[00:04.58]Part A[00:06.43]Pre-listening Task[00:08.83]Facts and Opinions[00:11.13]Listen to the facts and opinions about UFOs twice [00:14.83]and fill in the blanks with what you hear from the recording.[00:19.80]Pay attention to the sentence structures as you might find them useful in your own discussion.[00:27.88]1. UFO stands for Unidentified Flying Object.[00:33.70]Some people also call UFOs flying saucers (碟子), [00:37.49]because their shapes look like saucers.[00:45.62]UFO stands for Unidentified Flying Object.[00:49.50]Some people also call UFOs flying saucers (碟子), [00:53.67]because their shapes look like saucers.[01:02.15]2. In its broader sense, the UFO includes any object or light,[01:08.97]reportedly sighted in the sky,[01:11.16]that cannot be immediately explained by the observer.[01:20.73]In its broader sense, the UFO includes any object or light,[01:25.83]reportedly sighted in the sky,[01:28.00]that cannot be immediately explained by theobserver.[01:37.34]3. I remember as a child,[01:40.50]I would save every penny my mother gave me[01:43.35]to buy the latest UFO magazines from the grocery store.[01:53.86]I remember as a child,[01:55.31]I would save every penny my mother gave me[01:58.31]to buy the latest UFO magazines from the grocery store.[02:08.40]4. We cannot deny the existence of the UFO phenomenon simply[02:14.44]because we have not seen it or cannot explain it.[02:23.34]We cannot deny the existence of the UFO phenomenon simply[02:27.83]because we have not seen it or cannot explain it.[02:36.45]5. Science has its limitations[02:39.48]and many mysteries throughout the world have remained unsolved.[02:49.99]Science has its limitations[02:51.94]and many mysteries throughout the world have remained unsolved.[03:01.70]6. Sightings of unusual aerial phenomena date back to ancient times.[03:13.98]Sightings of unusual aerial phenomena date back to ancient times.[03:24.81]7. The early cave paintings and ancient scriptures(经文) seem to indicate[03:30.74]that we may have had visitors from other worlds or planets in the past.[03:42.29]The early cave paintings and ancient scriptures(经文) seem to indicate[03:46.57]that we may have had visitors from other worlds or planets in the past.[03:58.03]8. In fact, ancient scriptures from many different cultures[04:03.11]would give us the impression that we've had visitors from outer space.[04:13.75]In fact, ancient scriptures from many different cultures[04:17.63]would give us the impression that we've had visitors from outer space.[04:27.92]9. How do you explain ancient tales of chariots(战车) from the sky?[04:33.82]And what are the flying ships appearing in science fiction novels[04:38.06]before the first plane was ever thought about?[04:47.38]How do you explain ancient tales of chariots(战车) from the sky?[04:51.76]And what are the flying ships appearing in science fiction novels[04:55.92]before the first plane was ever thought about?[05:05.35]10. Even the Bible has been suggested as possible evidence of alien contact,[05:12.17]for its numerous accounts of objects in the sky, and other strange events.[05:23.66]Even the Bible has been suggested as possible evidence of alien contact,[05:28.94]for its numerous accounts of objects in the sky, and other strange events.[05:40.14]11. What secrets lie with ancient Egypt, Stonehenge(英国Salisbury平原上的史前巨石柱),[05:46.41]or possibly even Atlantis(传说沉没于大西洋中的帝国)?[05:49.57]Have there indeed been more advanced civilizations of man that have somehow been lost?[06:01.49]What secrets lie with ancient Egypt, Stonehenge(英国Salisbury平原上的史前巨石柱),[06:05.42]or possibly even Atlantis(传说沉没于大西洋中的帝国)?[06:08.71]Have there indeed been more advanced civilizations of man that have somehow been lost?[06:20.81]12. Some UFO enthusiasts even claim to have been abducted(绑架) and taken aboard UFOs.[06:28.30]But so far, no one has produced scientifically acceptable proof of these claims.[06:41.21]Some UFO enthusiasts even claim to have been abducted(绑架) and taken aboard UFOs.[06:47.49]But so far, no one has produced scientifically acceptable proof of these claims.[06:59.99]13. Some people believe that UFOs are extraterrestrial(地球外的) spacecraft,[07:06.62]even though no scientifically valid evidence supports that belief.[07:17.14]Some people believe that UFOs are extraterrestrial(地球外的) spacecraft,[07:22.01]even though no scientifically valid evidence supports that belief.[07:32.17]14. Scientists speculate that intelligent life[07:36.01]may well exist elsewhere in the universe.[07:45.35]Scientists speculate that intelligent life[07:48.02]may well exist elsewhere in the universe.[07:57.31]15. In addition to many reports and sightings of UFOs,[08:03.63]observers have provided photographs or even videos.[08:13.79]In addition to many reports and sightings of UFOs, [08:18.17]observers have provided photographs or even videos.[08:28.41]16. UFOs became widely discussed only[08:32.79]after the first widely publicized US sighting in 1947.[08:38.25]Many thousands of such observations have since been reported worldwide.[08:49.53]UFOs became widely discussed only[08:52.21]after the first widely publicized US sighting in 1947.[08:57.53]Many thousands of such observations have since been reported worldwide.[09:09.31]17. From 1947 to 1969 the US Air Force investigated UFOs[09:19.28]as a possible threat to national security.[09:29.03]From 1947 to 1969 the US Air Force investigated UFOs[09:35.85]as a possible threat to national security.[09:44.92]18. The UK Ministry of Defence recorded 634 UFO sightings in 2009,[09:53.45]the second highest annual total after 1978, when there were 750,[09:59.95]according to UFO expert Dr David Clarke.[10:10.24]The UK Ministry of Defence recorded 634 UFO sightings in 2009,[10:17.29]the second highest annual total after 1978, when there were 750,[10:24.19]according to UFO expert Dr David Clarke.[10:33.85]19. UFOs have been subject to investigations over the years[10:39.72]that vary widely in scope and scientific rigor.[10:44.24]Governments or independent academics in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom,[10:51.37]Japan, France, Belgium, Sweden, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Spain, and the Soviet Union[11:02.87]are known to have investigated UFO reports at various times.[11:12.74]UFOs have been subject to investigations over the years[11:17.08]that vary widely in scope and scientific rigor.[11:21.64]Governments or independent academics in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom,[11:28.59]Japan, France, Belgium, Sweden, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Spain, and the Soviet Union[11:40.10]are known to have investigated UFO reports at various times.[11:50.26]20. In 1997 the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) admitted[11:57.93]that the US military had deceived the American public[12:01.68]in an effort to hide information about high-altitude spy planes.[12:13.24]In 1997 the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) admitted[12:19.51]that the US military had deceived the Americanpublic[12:23.33]in an effort to hide information about high-altitude spy planes.[12:34.39]21. At least 90 percent of UFO sightings can be identified as conventional objects,[12:42.65]although time-consuming investigations are often necessary for such identification.[12:55.24]At least 90 percent of UFO sightings can be identified as conventional objects,[13:01.56]although time-consuming investigations are often necessary for such identification.[13:13.96]22. The objects most often mistaken for UFOs are bright planets and stars,[13:21.09]aircraft, birds, balloons, kites, aerial flares, peculiar clouds, meteors, and satellites.[13:36.61]The objects most often mistaken for UFOs are bright planets and stars,[13:42.17]aircraft, birds, balloons, kites, aerial flares, peculiar clouds, meteors, and satellites.。
全新版大学英语听说5听力材料unit8parta
[06:52.67]But, best teaching emanates(产生) from concern and caring for your students.
[al:全新版大学英语(第二版)听说教程5]
[ti:Unit8 PartA]
[ar:上海外语教育出版社]
[by:上海外语教育出版社]
[00:00.00]Unit 8 Heroes in Education
[00:04.19]Part A
[00:05.34]Pre-listening Task
[02:54.83]or think about creating more creative lessons in the classroom.
[03:04.92]As a teacher, even out of the classroom,
[03:07.45]I would think about my students and ways to make them successful,
[06:36.99]Invariably, my students are my teachers.
[06:39.94]I have a desire to have them become the best they can be.
[06:45.36]I take my teaching seriously,
[05:30.59]what the student did wrong and what he or she could do now.
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Part AEx11.C2.B3.C4.C5.DEx21.Friday2.Can’t make the meeting aon Tuesday afternoon.3.Friday4.Grandmother died.Got to go to the funeral.5.Strike6.Cancel the last order.7.London8.Phone her as soon as Dawson’s back.9.supply10.Will explain later.Part D1.F2.T3.T4.T5.FPart EMessage1Call Peter before11in the morning.He wants to talk about the weekend.Message2Tell Mr.Barrett that Bob Hudson is back in his office.Message3Can’t baby-sit on Frinday night,but her friend Mary Ann who has lots of experience in baby-sitting can and her phone number is892-2971.1.C2.D3.C4.CUnit2Part AEx11.C2.A3.D5.CEx21.good things,do hard physical work2.co-workers,complain,heavy,when there was nothing to do3.pride and satisfaction,praise from co-workers,pay,a job was being done4.his time had been well spentPart DA story1.C2.B3.D4.B5.DA passage1.B2.C3.D4.CPart EConversation11.T2.T3.F4.F5.T6.F7.F8.F9.T10.FConversation2Jane:rustled across,foot,dark night;a snake;Screamed,woke up everydayTony:stuck,subway car,total darkness;between two stations,dark and hot;Got off the train,the next station,far from where he wanted to goUnit3Part AEx11.D2.A3.D4.D5.C1.18992.a reporter on Kansas City Star3.serving as an ambulance driver for the Red Cross4.he got to know many of the American writers and artists in Paris5.19256.A Farewell to Arms7.the1930s8.The Old Man and the Sea9.the Nobel Prize for Literature10.he committed suicidePart DPassage11.C2.D3.B4.D5.CPassage21.He was born in Spain,on25October,1881.2.He was the only son in the family and was spoiled by his parents.He hated school but learntto draw before he could talk.3.His father,who was an amateur artist.4.For his“Cubist”pictures,which used only simple geometric shapes.5.They were often made up of triangles and squares,with there features in the wrong place.6.He died of heart attack airing an attack of influenza in1973Part EPassage11.In Chicago in1901.2.He was a cartoon artist and producer of animated films.3.Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs;Pinocchio,etc.4.Mickey Mouse,Donald Duck,and Pluto the dog5.Disneyland in California in1955.6.Tokyo Disney in Japan,Euro Disney in France,and Hong Kong Disney in China.7.In1966.Passage2rge2.17753.Not well off.4.Single.5.18016.very unhappy7.her father died8.her brother’s estate9.181110.Pride and Prejudice11.181312.181513.181814.satirize15.social inequalities16.kidneys17.1817Unit4Part AEx11.What would you do if you heard a strange noise in the middle of the night?2.If you can’t get to sleep at night,what do you do?3.What do you do before you go to bed?4.When you dream,what do you dream about?5.How much time do you spend making your bed every day?6.Have you had any people complaining about your sleeping habits?Ex21.C2.A3.B4.C5.DPart DPassage11.D2.A3.B4.CPassage21.B2.D3.BPart EPassage11.emotional problems2.looking for success3.have some specific goal4.have low self-esteem5.typical dream of people who are under stress6.have a decision to make7.afraid of dying8.a clue to your personalityPassage21.A2.B3.D4.CUnit5Part AEx11.C2.B3.A4.B5.DEx21.1)What made you give up everything to come here?2)How do you earn a living?3)There must be some things you miss,surely?2.1)What led you to leave your job and make this trip?2)What did you do for money?3)How did people react to you?4)Did you ever feel like giving up,turning round and coming home?5)You’ve had such an exciting time that you’ll find it difficult to settle down,won’t you? Part DPassage11.D2.B3.B4.C5.BPASSAGE21.B2.D3.CPart EA Forum1.A college student2.Hard to make friends at college3.Join the drama club4.A software engineer5.Working long hours6.Started taking ballroom dancing lessons7.An administrative assistant8.Very boring job9.Quit the job and started her own flower shop10.Driving to and from work during rush hour11.Started taking the trainA Conversation1.C2.B3.DUnit6Part AEx11.B2.B3.A4.C5.CEx21.Paul could reach all the switches.2.To give warning if there is a fire.3.To prevent burglary4.Paul will be able to reach everything in the kitchen.5.Paul will have a large room on the ground floor where he can work. Part DA Conversation1.an old house2.neighbor3.remodel the house4.mend the gate5.roof6.knock down7.right8.enlarge the garage9.fireplace10.redecorate the whole house11.builder12.believed in do-it-yourself13.mended a roof14.installed a fireplace15.handyman’s workbook16.what to do step by stepA Compound Dictation1.passion2.dependent3.decorating4.installing5.enthusiasts6.advisory7.assemble8.Men are believed to be resourceful and can fix anything.9.automatically assume that their husbands will somehow put things right10.It is a question of pride as much as anything else.Part EPassage11.T2.F3.T4.F5.TPassage2home-improvement,transform a room1.create the entire mood,come to life2.a large piece of art,a small space3.reflection,personal,interests4.do your home work,buy from reputable galleries5.the way you see each piece,an artistic process,a great deal of interest,reflections6.a great addition,height,unexpected,two artworks,different periods,a common element7.your collection effortlessly,ruining8.Choose frames carefully.set it off9.grouping many small artworks together10.the artists you are interested in,recent workUnit7Part AEx11.C2.B3.B4.D5.AEx21.Italian2.probably lived in Pisa,Italy3.almost certainly a craftsman working in glass4.most likely around12865.nearly700years after he made the inventionPart DA Passage2.B3.C4.A5.BA Compound Dictation1.distances2.1800’s3.explore4.camera5.helicopter6.Nylon7.disease8.As time went by,new inventions continued to be made,but people now had a desire to explore again.9.People began looking for ways to go into space.10.New inventions will someday allow us to do things we have never yet dreamed of.Part EPassage11.A2.B3.C4.D5.DPassage21.18912.principle3.Whitcomb Judson4.a new model of fastener5.manufacture6.clumsy7.burst open8.a really practical slide-fastener9.191310.the present day zipperUnit8Part AEx11.C2.A3.D4.B5.A1.phone calls2.lives back East3.once a week4.one hour5.stays current6.letters7.went to China for two years8.good friends ever since9.e-mails10.in and out of touch11.twice a week12.two months13.Back in good touchPart DA Compound Dictation1.adolescent2.change3.need4.adults5.support6.critical7.Make new friends,but keep the old;one is silver and the other gold.8.we usually try to“keep the old”as well9.maintaining friendships over time and distance is not easy.10.old friendships often suffer as a resultA Passage1.A2.C3.A4.B5.APart EA Conversation1.straightforward2.sunshine3.warmth and happinessfort and support5.jokes6.help us out in times of difficulty7.in trouble8.the family9.choose10.such a wonderful thingA Passage1.D2.A3.B4.AUnit9Part AEx11.C2.D3.A4.B5.CEx21.The sea2.71%of the death3.undiscovered4.dropping a weighted rope to the sea bottom5.measuring the time6.sound7.a ship8.flat area where living creatures,plants and minerals9.deep hollows shaped like bowls10.a mountain chain stretching40,000milesPart DPassage11.B2.A3.D4.BPassage21.D2.C3.C4.BPart EA Passage1.D2.A3.D4.CA Compound Dictation1.endangered2.habitat3.ultimately4.disappears5.affected6.altered7.ensure8.the rapid extinction of so many creatures on our planet raises profound ethical and moral questions.9.Do we want the future to be a place where pandas only exist in captivity in zoos?10.what does that say about humankind’s future on earth?Unit10Part AEx11.A2.C3.B4.D5.BEx21.T2.F3.F4.F5.T6.F7.T8.T9.T10.F11.T12.T13.F14.F15.TPart DA Compound Dictation1.blacked2.authority3.Pessimists4.varying5.prosperity6.disaster7.unemployment8.they wisely avoided using their guns against mobs which far outnumbered them and included armed men9.The blackout started at9:30p.m.when lightning hit and knocked out vital cables.10.They helped strangers,distributed candles and batteries,and tried to survive in a nightmare world without traffic lights,elevators,water and electrical power.A Story1.D2.B3.B4.B5.CPart EStory11.C2.D3.BStory21.The dirty flood water.2.Nine days after the plane crash.3.She had a collapsed lung,a fractured jaw.Her left leg and all the toes in her left foot werebroken.Test1Part A1.B2.B3.C4.C5.B6.D7.B8.APart BConversation11.B2.C3.CConversation24.A5.C6.D7.CPart C1.sensed2.unsteadily3.fastened4.thrown5.whisper6.fainted7.hesitation8.The plane was now dangerously close to the ground,but to everyone’s relirf,it soon began toclimb.9.Following instructions,the man guided the plane towards the airfield.10.a crowd of people who had been watching anxiously rushed forward to congratulate the manon a perfect landingPart DPassage11.D2.D3.CPassage24.A5.C6.BPassage37.D8.B9.C10.BTest2Part A1.C2.A3.C4.D5.B6.D7.A8.CPart BConversation11.C2.B3.B4.DConversation25.B6.B7.DPart C1.necessarily2.solution3.abundance4.programmed5.Advisory6.refreshed7.older8.we are not physically designed to sleep for one long blow9.Research has shown that in the Middle Ages,people’s sleep quite often occurred in3distinctparts.10.Your increased energy and alertness will make the rest of your day extra productive.Part DPassage11.A2.D3.CPassage24.D5.C6.B7.BPassage38.C9.D10.B。