unit 7课文翻译

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(完整版)Unit7TheMonster课文翻译综合教程四

(完整版)Unit7TheMonster课文翻译综合教程四

Unit 7The MonsterDeems Taylor1He was an undersized little man, with a head too big for his body ― a sickly little man. His nerves were bad. He had skin trouble. It was agony for him to wear anything next to his skin coarser than silk. And he had delusions of grandeur.2He was a monster of conceit. Never for one minute did he look at the world or at people, except in relation to himself. He believed himself to be one of the greatest dramatists in the world, one of the greatest thinkers, and one of the greatest composers. To hear him talk, he was Shakespeare, and Beethoven, and Plato, rolled into one. He was one of the most exhausting conversationalists that ever lived.Sometimes he was brilliant; sometimes he was maddeningly tiresome. But whether he was being brilliant or dull, he had one sole topic of conversation: himself. What he thought and what he did.3He had a mania for being in the right. The slightest hint of disagreement, from anyone, on the most trivial point, was enough to set him off on a harangue that might last for hours, in which he proved himself right in so many ways, and with such exhausting volubility, that in the end his hearer, stunned and deafened, would agree with him, for the sake of peace.4It never occurred to him that he and his doing were not of the most intense and fascinating interest to anyone with whom he came in contact. He had theories about almost any subject under the sun, including vegetarianism, the drama, politics, and music; and in support of these theories he wrote pamphlets, letters, books ...thousands upon thousands of words, hundreds and hundreds of pages. He not only wrote these things, and published them ― usually at somebody else’s expense ― but he would sit and read them aloud, for hours, to his friends, and his family.5He had the emotional stability of a six-year-old child. When he felt out of sorts, he would rave and stamp, or sink into suicidal gloom and talk darkly of going to the East to end his days as a Buddhist monk. Ten minutes later, when something pleased him he would rush out of doors and run around the garden, or jump up and down off the sofa, or stand on his head. He could be grief-stricken over the death ofa pet dog, and could be callous and heartless to a degree that would have made aRoman emperor shudder.6He was almost innocent of any sense of responsibility. He was convinced thatthe world owed him a living. In support of this belief, he borrowed money from everybody who was good for a loan ― men, women, friends, or strange rs. He wrote begging letters by the score, sometimes groveling without shame, at others loftily offering his intended benefactor the privilege of contributing to his support, and being mortally offended if the recipient declined the honor.7What money he could lay his hand on he spent like an Indian rajah. No one will ever know ― certainly he never knows ― how much money he owed. We do know that his greatest benefactor gave him $6,000 to pay the most pressing of his debts in one city, and a year later had to give him $16,000 to enable him to live in another city without being thrown into jail for debt.8He was equally unscrupulous in other ways. An endless procession of women marched through his life. His first wife spent twenty years enduring and forgiving his infidelities. His second wife had been the wife of his most devoted friend and admirer, from whom he stole her. And even while he was trying to persuade her to leave her first husband he was writing to a friend to inquire whether he could suggest some wealthy woman ― any wealthy woman ― whom he could marry for her money.9He had a genius for making enemies. He would insult a man who disagreed with him about the weather. He would pull endless wires in order to meet some man who admired his work and was able and anxious to be of use to him ― and would proceed to make a mortal enemy of him with some idiotic and wholly uncalled-for exhibition of arrogance and bad manners. A character in one of his operas was a caricature of one of the most powerful music critics of his day. Not content with burlesquing him, he invited the critic to his house and read him the libretto aloud in front of his friends.10The name of this monster was Richard Wagner. Everything I have said about him you can find on record ― in newspapers, in police reports, in the testimony of people who knew him, in his own letters, between the lines of his autobiography.And the curious thing about this record is that it doesn’t matter in the least.11Because this undersized, sickly, disagreeable, fascinating little man was right all the time, the joke was on us. He was one of the world’s greatest dramatists; he was a great thinker; he was one of the most stupendous musical geniuses that, up to now, the world has ever seen. The world did owe him a living. What if he did talk about himself all the time? If he talked about himself for twenty-four hours every day for the span of his life he would not have uttered half the number of words that othermen have spoken and written about him since his death.12When you consider what he wrote ― thirteen operas and music dramas, eleven of them still holding the stage, eight of them unquestionably worth ranking among the world’s great musico-dramatic masterpieces ― when you listen to what he wrote, the debts and heartaches that people had to endure from him don’t seem much of a price.13What if he was faithless to his friends and to his wives? He had one mistress to whom he was faithful to the day of his death: Music. Not for a single moment did he ever compromise with what he believed, with what he dreamed. There is not a line of his music that could have been conceived by a little mind. Even when he is dull, or downright bad, he is dull in the grand manner. Listening to his music, one does not forgive him for what he may or may not have been. It is not a matter of forgiveness. It is a matter of being dumb with wonder that his poor brain and body didn’t burst under the torment of the demon of creative energy that lived inside him, struggling, clawing, scratching to be released; tearing, shrieking at him to write the music that was in him. The miracle is that what he did in the little space of seventy years could have been done at all, even by a great genius. Is it any wonder he had no time to be a man?畸人迪姆斯·泰勒1 他是个大头小身体、病怏怏的矬子;成日神经兮兮,皮肤也有毛病。

研究生英语课文翻译Unit 7

研究生英语课文翻译Unit 7

The Healing power of BeliefFor the past two years,I have been studying cancer survivors at UGLA,trying to find out why it is that some people respond much better to their treatment than do others.At first I though that some patients did well because their illnesses were not as severe as the illnesses of others.On closer scrutiny,however,I discovered that severity of the illness was only one of a number of factors that accounted for the difference between those who get well and those who don’t .The patients i am talking about here received upon diagnosis whatever therapy medication,radiation,surgery-their individual cases demanded.Yet the response to such treatments was hardly uniform.Some patients fared much better in their therapies than others.在过去的两年里,我一直在UGLA研究癌症幸存者,试图发现为什么对有些人治疗产生的效果会比其他人好。

以开始我认为一些人治疗效果好是因为他们的疾病没有别人眼中。

人教版八年级下册英语unit7课文翻译

人教版八年级下册英语unit7课文翻译

人教版八年级下册英语unit7课文翻译英语是国际经济、技术、信息等交流中应用最广泛的语言,也是我国八年级基础教育中最主要的外语课程。

店铺为大家整理了人教版八年级下册英语unit7的课文翻译,欢迎大家阅读!人教版八年级下册英语unit7课文翻译(一)P50,2d导游:请随便问我关于今天长城之旅的任何问题。

游客:长城有多长?导游:哦,最常见的问题!如果我们只谈论明长城的话,大约长8850千米。

这使它成为世界上最长的城墙。

游客2:喔,真是令人惊叹!古代的皇帝们为什么修建长城呢?导游:主要的原因是为了保护中国。

正如你们所看到的,它很高很宽。

据我所知,没有人造物体和这一样大。

游客3:八达岭是明长城的一部分吗?导游:是的,它是最著名的一部分。

3a阅读文章,将每个段落和段落大意搭配起来。

第一段登山者的精神第二段登山者的成就第三段事实和危险珠穆朗玛峰---世界上最危险的山峰?世界上最危险的运动之一是登山运动,并且最受欢迎的登山地点之一是喜马拉雅山脉。

喜马拉雅山脉横亘中国西南地区。

在所有的山峰中,珠穆朗玛峰最高、最著名。

它高8844.43米,所以攀登很危险。

乌云盖顶,并且雪会下得很大。

更大的困难包括冰冻气候条件和强烈的暴风雪。

当你接近山顶的时候,呼吸也很困难。

丹增•诺尔盖和埃德蒙•希拉里于1953年5月29日成为第一批登顶的人。

第一支中国登山队于1960年登顶。

来自日本的田部井淳子于1975 年成为第一位成功登顶的女性。

为什么这么多登山者要冒生命危险呢?主要原因之一是人们想在困难面前挑战自己。

这些登山者的精神向我们展示了在尽力实现梦想的路上要永不言弃。

它也展示了有时人类可以比自然力量更加强大。

人教版八年级下册英语unit7课文翻译(二)P52语法聚焦世界上最高的山是什么? 珠穆朗玛峰。

珠穆朗玛峰有多高? 它高8844.43米。

它比其他任何一座山都高。

世界上最深的咸水湖是哪个? 里海是所有咸水湖中最深的。

你知道中国是世界上最古老的国家之一吗?是的,我知道。

Unit7Culture新编大学英语第二版第二册课文翻译

Unit7Culture新编大学英语第二版第二册课文翻译

Unit7Culture新编⼤学英语第⼆版第⼆册课⽂翻译Unit 7 CultureBridging Cultural Gaps Gracefully[1] Why is it that when you study a foreign language, you never learn the little phrases that let you slip into a culture without all your foreignness exposed? Every Chinese-language textbook starts out with the standard phrase for greeting people; but as an American, I constantly found myself tongue-tied when it came to seeing guests off at the door. An abrupt goodbye would not do, yet that was all I had ever learned from these books. So I would smile and nod, bowing like a Japanese and trying to find words that would smooth over the visitors' leaving and make them feel they would be welcome to come again. In my fluster, I often hid behind my Chinese husband's graciousness.[2] Then finally, listening to others, I began to pick up the phrases that eased relations and sent people off with a feeling of mission not only accomplished but surpassed.[3] Partings for the Chinese involve a certain amount of ritual and a great deal of one-upmanship. Although I'm not expected to observe or even know all the rules, as a foreigner, I've had to learn the expressions of politeness and protest that accompany a leave-taking.[4] The Chinese feel they must see a guest off to the farthest feasible point—down a flight of stairs to the street below or perhaps all the way to the nearest bus stop. I've sometimes waited half an hour or more for my husband to return from seeinga guest off, since he's gone to the bus stop and waited for the next bus to arrive.[5] For a less import ant or perhaps a younger guest, he may simply say, “I won't see you off, all right?” And of course the guest assures him that he would never think of putting him to the trouble of seeing him off. “Don't see me off! Don't see meoff!”[6] That's all very well, but when I'm the guest being seen off, my protests are always useless, and my hostess or host, or both, insists on seeing me down the stairs and well on my way, with our going through the “Don't bother to see me off” ritual at every landing. If I try to go fast to discourage them from following, they are simply put to the discomfort of having to flee after me. Better to accept the inevitable.[7] Besides, that's going against Chinese custom, because haste is to be avoided. What do you say when you part from someone? “Go slowly.” Not farewell or Godspeed, but “Go slowly.” To the Chinese it means “Take care” or “Watch your step”or some other such caution, but translated literally it means “Go slow.”[8] That same “slow” is used in another polite express ion used by the host at the end of a particularly large and delicious meal to assure his guests what a poor and inadequatehost he has been.[9] American and Chinese cultures are at polar opposites. An American hostess, complimented for her cooking skills, is likely to say, “Oh, I'm so glad that you liked it. I cooked it especially for you.” Not so a Chinese host or hostess (often the husband does the fancy cooking), who will instead apologize for giving you “nothing” even slightly edible and for not showing you enough honor by providing proper dishes.[10] The same rules hold true with regard to children. American parents speak proudly of their children's accomplishments, telling how Johnny made the school team or Jane made the honor roll. Not so Chinese parents, whose children, even if at the top of their class in school, are always so “naughty”, never studying, never listening to their elders, and so forth.[11] The Chinese take pride in “modesty”; the Americans in “straightforwardness”. That modesty has left many a Chinese hungry at an American table, for Chinese politeness calls for three refusals before one accepts an offer, and the American hosts takea “no” to mean “no”, whether it's the first, second, or third time.[12] Recently, a member of a delegation sent to China by a large American corporation complained to me about how the Chinese had asked them three times if they would be willing to modify some proposal, and each time the Americans had said “no” clearly and definitely. My friend was angry because the Chinese had not taken their word the first time. I recognized the problem immediately and wondered why the Americans had not studied up on cultural differences before coming to China. It would have saved them a lot of confusion and frustration in their negotiations.[13] Once you've learned the signals and how to respond, life becomes much easier. When guests come, I know I should immediately ask if they'd like a cup of tea. They will respond, “Please don't bother,” which is my signal to fetch tea.从容得体德跨越⽂化沟壑1 在外语学习中,学会⼀些简单的词组就能让你不知不觉地进⼊另⼀种⽂化,⽽丝毫不暴露你作为⼀个外国⼈的⾝份,但你为什么总是学不会呢?每本汉语课本都,⼀律从问候语开始的。

Unit-7-When-Lightning-Struck-课文翻译-综合教程一

Unit-7-When-Lightning-Struck-课文翻译-综合教程一

Unit 7 When Lightning StruckI was in the tiny bathroom in the back of the plane when I felt the slamming jolt, and then the horrible swerve that threw me against the door. Oh, Lord, I thought, this is it! Somehow I managed to unbolt the door and scramble out. The flight attendants, already strapped in, waved wildly for me to sit down. As I lunged toward my seat, passengers looked up at me with the stricken expressions of creatures who know they are about to die."I think we got hit by lightning," the girl in the seat next to mine said. She was from a small town in east Texas, and this was only her second time on an airplane. She had won a trip to England by competing in a high school geography bee and was supposed to make a connecting flight when we landed in Newark.In the next seat, at the window, sat a young businessman who had been confidently working. Now he looked worried. And that really worries me—when confident-looking businessmen look worried. The laptop was put away. "Something's not right," he said.The pilot's voice came over the speaker. I heard vaguely through my fear, "Engine number two ... emergency landing ... New Orleans." When he was done, the voice of a flight attendant came on, reminding us of the emergency procedures she had reviewed before takeoff. Of course I never paid attention to this drill, always figuring that if we ever got to the point where we needed to use life jackets, I would have already died of terror.Now we began a roller-coaster ride through the thunderclouds. I was ready to faint, but when I saw the face of the girl next to me, I pulled myself together, I reached for her hand and reassured her that we were going to make it, "What a story you're going to tell when you get home!" I said. "After this, London's going to seem like small potatoes."I wondered where I was getting my strength. Then I saw that my other hand was tightly held by a ringed hand. Someone was comforting me—a glamorous young woman across the aisle, the female equivalent of the confident businessman. She must have seen how scared I was and reached over."I tell you," she confided, "the problems I brought up on this plane with me sure don't seem real big right now." I loved her Southern drawl, her indiscriminate use of perfume, and her soulful squeezes. I was sure that even if I survived the plane crash, I'd have a couple of broken fingers from all the TLC. "Are you okay?" she kept asking me.Among the many feelings going through my head during those excruciating 20 minutes was pride—pride in how well everybody on board was behaving. No one panicked. No one screamed. As we jolted and screeched our way downward, I could hear small pockets of soothing conversation everywhere.I thought of something I had heard a friend say about the wonderful gift his dying father had given the family: he had died peacefully, as if not to alarm any of them about an experience they would all have to go through someday.And then—yes!—we landed safely. Outside on the ground, attendants and officials were waiting to transfer us to alternative flights. But we passengers clung together. We chatted aboutthe lives we now felt blessed to be living, as difficult or rocky as they might be. The young businessman lamented that he had not a chance to buy his two little girls a present. An older woman offered him her box of expensive Lindt chocolates, still untouched, tied with a lovely bow. "I shouldn't be eating them anyhow," she said. My glamorous aisle mate took out her cell phone and passed it around to anyone who wanted to make a call to hear the reassuring voice of a loved one.There was someone I wanted to call. Back in Vermont, my husband, Bill, was anticipating my arrival late that night. He had been complaining that he wasn't getting to see very much of me because of my book tour. I had planned to surprise him by getting in a few hours early. Now I just wanted him to know I was okay and on my way.When my name was finally called to board my new flight, I felt almost tearful to be parting from the people whose lives had so intensely, if briefly, touched mine.Even now, back on terra firma, walking down a Vermont road, I sometimes hear an airplane and look up at that small, glinting piece of metal. I remember the passengers on that fateful, lucky flight and wish I could thank them for the many acts of kindness I witnessed and received. I am indebted to my fellow passengers and wish I could pay them back.But then, remembering my aisle mate's hand clutching mine while I clutched the hand of the high school student, I feel struck by lightning all over again: the point is not to pay back kindness but to pass it on.闪电来袭当我感到猛烈摇晃时我正在飞机尾部的小卫生间。

最新新目标英语七年级上册UNIT7课文翻译

最新新目标英语七年级上册UNIT7课文翻译

Unit7
Section A 2e
需要帮助吗?
是的,好。

我需要一件上学穿的毛衣。

好的。

你想要什么颜色? 蓝色。

这件怎么样? 它看起来很好。

多少钱? 9美元。

我要买它。

那些黄色的袜子多少钱?
两美元一双,三美元两双。

好极了。

我买两双。

给你。

谢谢。

不用谢。

Grammar Focus
帽子多少钱?它是5美元。

这件T恤衫多少钱?它是7美元。

那件棕色的毛衣多少钱?它是8美元。

这些袜子多少钱?它们是2美元。

那些黑色的裤子多少钱?它们是9美元。

Section B 2b
酷先生服装店
我们在大甩卖,快来买衣服吧。

我们卖的所有服装价格都很优惠。

你喜欢毛衣吗?
我们有绿色的毛衣仅售15美元。

黄色的毛衣仅售12美元。

你需要裤子吗?
对于男孩,我们有黑色的裤子仅售22美元。

短裤仅售16美元。

对于女孩,我们有紫色的裙子仅售20美元。

我们的夹克衫多少钱?仅售30美元。

我们有黑色的鞋子仅售28美元。

袜子仅售2美元三双。

现在就来酷先生服装店吧。

Unit-7-College-Life新编大学英语第二版第四册课文翻译

Unit-7-College-Life新编大学英语第二版第四册课文翻译

Unit 7 College LifeThe Commencement Speech You'll Never HearWe the faculty take no pride in our educational achievement with you. We have prepared you for a world that does not exist, indeed, that cannot exist. You have spent four years supposing that failure leaves no record. You have learned at Brown that when your work goes poorly, the painless solution is to drop out. But starting now, in the world to which you go, failure marks you. Confronting difficulty by quitting leaves you changed. Outside Brown, quitters are no heroes.With us you could argue about why your errors were not errors, why mediocre work really was excellent, why you could take pride in routine and slipshod presentation. Most of you, after all, can look back on honor grades for most of what you have done. So, here grades can have meant little in distinguishing the excellent from the ordinary. But tomorrow, in the world to which you go, you had better not defend errors but learn from them. You will be ill-advised to demand praise for what does not deserve it, and abuse those who do not give it.For years we created an altogether forgiving world, in which whatever slight effort you gave was all that was demanded. When you did not keep appointments, we made new ones. When your work came in beyond the deadline, we pretended not to care.Worse still, when you were boring, we acted as if you were saying something important. When you were garrulous and talked to hear yourselves talk, we listened as if it mattered. When you tossed on our desks writing upon which you had not labored, we read it and even responded, as though you earned a response. When you were dull, we pretended you were smart. When you were predictable, unimaginative and routine, we listened as if to new and wonderful things. When you demanded free lunch, we served it. And all this why?Despite your fantasies, it was not even that we wanted to be liked by you. It was that we did not want to be bothered, and the easy way out was pretense: smiles and easy Bs.It is conventional to quote in addresses such as these. Let me quote someone you've never heard of: Professor Carter A. Daniel, Rutgers University:"College has spoiled you by reading papers that don't deserve to be read, listening to comments that don't deserve a hearing, paying attention even to the lazy, ill-informed and rude. We had to do it, for the sake of education. But nobody will ever do it again. College has deprived you of adequate preparation for the last 50 years. It has failed youby being easy, free, forgiving, attentive, comfortable, interesting, unchallenging fun. Good luck tomorrow.That is why, on this commencement day, we have nothing in which to take much pride.Oh, yes, there is one more thing. Try not to act toward your co-workers and bosses as you have acted toward us. I mean, when they give you what you want but have not earned, don't abuse them, insult them, act out with them your parlous relationships with your parents. This too we have tolerated. It was, as I said, not to be liked. Few professors actually care whether or not they are liked by peer-paralyzed adolescents, fools so shallow as to imagine professors care not about education but about popularity. It was, again, to be rid of you. So go, unlearn the lies we taught you. To life!你将永远不会听到的毕业演讲1 我们这些教师对于在你们身上取得的教育成就一点都不感到自豪。

三上英语译林教版unit7

三上英语译林教版unit7

以下是三上英语译林教版Unit7的课文及译文,供您参考:Unit7 Would you like a pie?Story timeThe children are having a picnic in the park. 孩子们正在公园里野餐。

Look at the ants. They are carrying food. 看那些蚂蚁。

它们正在搬运食物。

Would you like a sandwich, Mike? 迈克,你想要三明治吗?No, thank you. I’m full. 不,谢谢。

我已经饱了。

Here’s a pie for you. 这是给你的馅饼。

Thank you. I like pie. 谢谢。

我喜欢馅饼。

Look at the bird. It’s flying high in the sky. 看那只鸟。

它正在高空中飞翔。

Would you like a swing, Alice? 爱丽丝,你想要秋千吗?Yes, please. 是的,请给我。

Here’s a balloon for you. 这是给你的气球。

Thank you. I like balloons. 谢谢。

我喜欢气球。

Let’s fly the balloon. 我们来放飞气球吧。

Careful, Alice. Don’t let the balloon go too high. 小心,爱丽丝。

别让气球飞太高了。

Oh no! The balloon is going up, up and away! 哦,不!气球正在往上升,升上去了!。

译林版小学五年级英语上册第7单元Unit7 At weekends课文翻译

译林版小学五年级英语上册第7单元Unit7 At weekends课文翻译

译林版小学五年级英语上册第7单元Unit7 At weekends课文翻译Story time故事时间翻译Mike: What do you do at weekends, Su Hai?迈克:在周末你做什么,苏海?Su Hai: I usually visit my grandparents. Su Yang and I like playing with their cat Kitty very much. We often have dinner with our grandparents at weekends.苏海:我通常去看望我的祖父母。

杨栗和我非常喜欢和他们的猫凯蒂一起玩。

周末我们经常和爷爷奶奶一起吃饭。

Mike: My grandparents live in the UK. I usually chat with them on the Internet at weekends.迈克:我的祖父母住在英国。

我通常在周末和他们在网上聊天。

Su Hai: What does Helen do at weekends?苏海:在周末海伦做什么?Mike: She always has dancing lessons. She sometimes goes to the cinema with her friends.迈克:她总是上舞蹈课。

她有时和朋友去看电影。

Su Hai: What about you, Mike?苏海:你呢,迈克?Mike: I usually play football with Liu Tao at weekends.I sometimes go to the park with my family. We usually fly a kite and have a picnic there.迈克:我通常在周末和刘涛一起踢足球。

我有时和家人去公园。

我们通常在那里放风筝和野餐。

Unit 7 Will people have robots课文翻译

Unit 7 Will people have robots课文翻译

Section A, 2d尼克:你在读什么书,吉尔?吉尔:一本关于未来的书。

尼克:听起来好酷。

那么未来会是什么样子呢?吉尔:嗯,城市将更加拥挤,污染将更加严重。

树木将会更少,环境将极其危险。

尼克:听起来真糟糕!那我们得搬到其他行星上去吗?吉尔:或许吧。

但是我想住在地球上。

尼克:我也是。

那么我们能做些什么呢?吉尔:我们可以节约用水,还可以种更多的树。

每一个人都应当尽一份力来拯救地球。

Section B,2b你认为你将会拥有自己的机器人吗?在观看关于未来的电影时,我们有时会看见机器人。

通常它们像人类的佣人。

它们帮忙做家务,或者在肮脏或危险的地方干活。

现在已经有机器人在工厂里干活了。

有些机器人能帮我们制造汽车,并且它们反复地干着简单的工作。

将来做这样的工作的人会更少,因为它们很枯燥,但是机器人永远不会感到厌烦。

科学家们正在努力使得机器人看上去像人,并且与我们做同样的事情。

在日本,有些机器人会走路、跳舞。

这种机器人观看起来很有趣。

但是,一些科学家认为,尽管我们能够让机器人像人一样活动,却很难让它们真的像人类那样思考。

例如,科学家詹姆斯·怀特认为,机器人永远不可能(像人一样)醒来后知道自己在哪里。

但是,很多科学家们不同意怀特先生的观点。

他们认为在25到50年之后,机器人甚至能够像人类那样说话。

一些科学家相信,未来会有更多的机器人。

然而,他们认为这可能需要数百年的时间。

这些新型机器人将会有很多不同的形状,有的会看起来像真人,其他的可能看起来像动物。

比如,在印度,科学家们已经制造出像蛇一样的机器人。

如果建筑物倒塌了,并且还有人在里面,这些蛇形机器人能够帮助搜寻埋在建筑物下面的人。

这在20年前还是不可能的事,不过在100年以前,电脑、火箭看上去似乎也是不可能的。

我们永远不知道未来会发生什么事!。

九年级英语unit7课文 翻译

九年级英语unit7课文 翻译

九年级,英语,unit7,课文,翻译,九年级,英语,unit7,九年级英语unit7翻译Unit7 Teenagers should be allowed to choose their own clothes.Section A 2d桑迪:要去看毕加索的著名绘画作品,我真的很激动。

吴兰:我也是。

我很高兴史密斯先生为今年的校外旅行选择了美术博物馆。

桑迪:我要带上我的新照相机,照好多好多照片!吴兰:哦,不行。

史密斯先生说我们不可以照相。

博物馆不允许。

桑迪:太糟糕了!你说,如果我们不用闪光灯,会不会允许(我们)照相啊?吴兰:嗯…..我觉得我们只是想保护那些绘画作品。

如果不用闪光灯的话,那也许可以。

Section A 3a妈妈最了解我当我是个小宝宝整夜哭闹的时候,妈妈依偎在我身旁,唱歌送我入梦乡。

在我累了饿了的时候,妈妈给我食物,那温暖的臂膀就是我的床。

当我奔跑在田野上,她确保我的安全,让我远离安全,让我远离危险,在我摔倒受伤的时候她给我拥抱,扶我站好。

七岁的我剧烈咳嗦,她说我不适合吃冰激凌,我却大声反驳:你必须同意,我就要定了!九岁时我看恐怖电影,她说:这种电影会将噩梦给你带来,我却愤怒地咆哮:我就该看这样的电影,别拿我当小孩!青少年的我开始和朋友外出闲逛了,她叮咛道:十点以前一定要回来!我又顶嘴:我都17岁了,不需要你告诉我该不该!现在我长大了,回想当初的是时光,吃了冰激凌让我咳嗦不止,看了恐怖片让我噩梦连连,上学迟到只因为10点还在外游荡。

我真的后悔呀!后悔不该顶嘴,后悔没有听从妈妈的忠告;妈妈最了解(孩子),她只是想怎样对我最好!Section B 2b能允许我自己做决定吗?很多青少年都有自己的业余爱好。

但有时候,这些业余爱好会阻碍他们的学业,父母可能会担心他们在学校的学习成绩。

孩子们都希望尽可能多些机会实践自己爱好。

你同意吗?刘宇是来自山东省的一位15岁的男孩,他是一个赛跑运动明星。

他是学校校队的一名队员,希望长大以后能成为职业跑步运动员。

六上 Unit 7 课文翻译

六上 Unit 7 课文翻译

【闽教版】六年级(上册)英语:课文翻译Unit 7 ThanksgivingPart A1. Listen and follow.听录音并跟读。

What's the date today, Dad?爸爸,今天几号?It's November 17.今天是十一月十七号。

Thanksgiving is coming.感恩节要到了。

Can I invite my friends to dinner?我能邀请我的朋友们来吃饭吗?Sure.当然可以。

Please come to your Thanksgiving dinner.请来参加我们家的感恩节晚餐。

Thank you.谢谢你。

What is Thanksgiving?什么是感恩节?It's an American holiday.是美国人的一个节日。

When is it?那是什么时候?The last Thursday of November.十一月份的最后一个星期四。

How do you spend it?你们是怎么过节的?We have a big family dinner.我们会有一个大的家庭聚餐。

We also invite friends to join us.我们也会邀请朋友们一起参加。

That's interesting.那真有意思。

2. Ask and answer.问与答What’s the date today?今天几号?It’s March 12.3月12日。

It’s Tree Planting Day.今天是植树节。

What’s the date today?今天几号?It’s October 1.10月1日。

It’s National Day.今天是国庆节。

What’s the date today?今天几号?It’s September 10.9月10日。

It’s Teachers’ Day.今天是教师节。

译林版(三起)四年级英语下册课文翻译Unit 7 What’s the matter课文翻译

译林版(三起)四年级英语下册课文翻译Unit 7 What’s the matter课文翻译

译林版(三起)四年级英语下册课文翻译Unit 7 What’s the matter?第七单元怎么了?Pages 44-45 Story time❶Come and have a pie, Taotao.过来吃一个派吧,涛涛。

Thanks, Dad, but I'm not hungry. I'm thirsty.谢谢,爸爸,但是我不饿。

我渴了。

❷Can I have some water, Mum?我能喝一些水吗,妈妈?Here you are.给你。

Thank you, Mum.谢谢你,妈妈。

❸What's the matter, Taotao? Are you ill?怎么了,涛涛?你生病了吗?No, but I'm tired. I want to go to bed.没有,但是我很累。

我想睡觉。

❹Good night, dear.晚安,亲爱的。

Good night, Mum and Dad.晚安,妈妈爸爸。

单词happy 快乐的hungry 饥饿的ill 生病的sad 难过的thirsty 口渴的tired 疲倦的Page 47 Cartoon time❶What's the matter, Bobby?怎么了,博比?❷Are you ill?你生病了吗?No, I'm not.不,我没有。

Are you cold?你冷吗?No.不。

❸Hello, Mrs Mouse. This is Mrs Fox speaking.你好,老鼠夫人。

我是狐狸夫人。

❹Are you all right, Bobby?你还好吗,博比?I'm hungry, Mum.我饿了,妈妈。

❺Have a cake.吃一个蛋糕吧。

Thank you, Mum.谢谢你,妈妈。

❻Ha! Ha! He's happy now.哈!哈!他现在开心了。

Page 48 Sound timeoclose 关home 家no 不nose 鼻子open 打开Go home,Joe,回家去吧,乔,And show Rose your nose!给罗斯看看你的鼻子!Page 48 Rhyme timeAre you ill?你生病了吗?My baby Bill,我的宝贝比尔,Is sitting still.在坐着不动。

研究生英语综合教程UNIT7课文及翻译(含汉译英英译汉)

研究生英语综合教程UNIT7课文及翻译(含汉译英英译汉)

UNIT71. Several leading modern business leaders seem, surprisingly, to downplay the importance of strategy. You can make too much fuss about strategy, they imply--- you have a few clear options; just choose one and get on with it. is it really that simple?2. “Strategy is straightforward---just pick a general direction and implement like hell.”Jack Welch, for example---the chairman and CEO of the USA’s General Electric Company; the man who grow the company from a market capitalization of $27 billion to a $140 billion, making GE the largest and most valuable company in the world. he must know a thing or two about strategy. But here’s what he says: “In real life, strategy is actually very straightforward. You pick a general direction and you implement like hell.”Or Allan leighton, the man who was recruited by Archie Norman to help res cue the UK’s ailing Asda supermarket chain, and went on to build the company into one of Britain’s most successful retailers. “Strategy is important,” says Leighton, “but it is a compass, not a road map. It tells you in which direction you are heading, but the important bit is how you get there.”Or Louis Gerstner, the man who rescued IBM in the 1990’s when the struggling mainframe supplier was about to be driven into extinction by the new, smaller and more agile personal computer manufacturers. “It is extremely difficult to develop a unique strategy for a company; and if the strategy is truly different, it is probably highly risky. Execution really is the critical part of a successful strategy. Getting it done, getting it done right, getting it done better than the next person is far more important than dreaming up new visions of the future.”3. So strategy is simple. And having an ingenious new strategy is less important than carrying it out successfully. In fact it might be dangerous. It that right?Let’s look at one last quote from Mr. Welch. “When I became CEO in 1981, we launched a highly publicized initiative: be number one or number two in every market, and fix, sell or close to get there. This was not our strategy, although I’ve often heard it descri bed that way.It was a galvanising mantra to describe how we were going to do business going forward. Our strategy was much more directional. GE was going to move away from businesses that were being commoditized toward businesses that manufactured high-value technology products or sold services instead of things.”Grand strategy versus strategy4. I would argue that these CEO’s blue chip corporations are taking a slightly Olympian view of the concept of “strategy.” Let’s call what hey are talking about “grand strategy” a strategy, but in the overarching sense, like the American car industry saying that they are going to move out gas-guzzlers and into smaller, more fuel-efficient models. 1.一些领先的现代企业领导人似乎,奇怪的是,淡化战略的重要性。

八下英语第七单元课文翻译

八下英语第七单元课文翻译

1a部分翻译Match the facts you know.把你知道的事实搭配起来。

Qomolangma珠穆朗玛峰about 9,600,000 square kilometers in size 面积大约960万平方千米The Sahara撒哈拉沙漠1,025 meters1025米深The Caspian Sea里海6,671 kilometers long6 671千米长The Nile尼罗河844. 43 meters high844.43米高21b部分翻译听录音,完成句子。

1. Qomolangma is _ than any othermountain in the worlcL. 珠穆朗玛峰比世界上其他任何一座山都高。

2. The Sahara is ____desert in the world.撒哈拉沙漠是世界上最大的爹漠。

3. The Caspian Sea is_____of all the salt lakes.在所有的咸水湖中里海是最深的。

4. The Nile is____river in the world.尼罗河是世界上最长的河流。

31c部分翻译Use the infonnation in lb to make conversations.用lb中的信息编对话。

A:What is the highest mountain in the world?世界上最高的山是什么?B:Qomolangma珠穆朗玛峰。

2a部分翻译Listen and number the facts[1-4] in the order you hear them. 听录音,然后把下面的事实按照你听到的顺序用[1~4]标出来。

……………………………………………………………最新资料推荐…………………………………………………____The Yangtze River is about____kilometers long and the Yellow River is____kilometerslong.长江大约300千米长,黄河王464千米长。

Unit7课文原文与翻译(素材)译林版九年级英语上册

Unit7课文原文与翻译(素材)译林版九年级英语上册

译林版八年级上册英语课文及翻译UNIT 7英中对照版UNIT 7Comic stripYou're very lucky, Hobo.霍波,你实在太幸运了。

Why?为什么这么说?Because I'm your friend. Do you know who I am? Tomorrow's TV superstar!因为你是我的朋友啊。

你知道我是谁吗?我是明日电视之星。

You? A TV superstar? In your dreams, Eddie.你?电视明星?艾迪,你在做梦吧。

Well, I'm so good that I should be in Hollywood instead.我实在太优秀了,我应该去好莱坞发展。

Welcome to the unitWho do you think would be suitable for entering the film industry?你觉得谁比较适合进入电影圈?I think Millie would be suitable.我觉得米莉比较适合。

Why do you think so?你为什么会这么觉得?Millie is such a good storyteller that she can write exciting scripts.米莉很会讲故事,她一定能写出有趣的剧本。

Yes, I think so too. What would you like to do in the film industry, Sandy?我也这么认为。

桑迪,如果你从事电影工作的话,你会选择做什么?Though I like acting, I'd rather be a director.虽然我喜欢表演,但是我还是喜欢做导演。

ReadingHollywood's all-time best --Audrey Hepburn好莱坞永恒的经典——奥黛丽·赫本Audrey Hepburn is one of Hollywood's all-time greatest actresses. When she died in 1993, the world felt very sad about the loss of a great beauty, a great actress and a great humanitarian.奥黛丽·赫本是好莱坞永远受欢迎的女演员之一。

Unit-7-The-Joy-of-Travel新编大学英语第二版第三册课文翻译

Unit-7-The-Joy-of-Travel新编大学英语第二版第三册课文翻译

Unit 7 The Joy of TravelTransformative TravelTwenty-five years ago I felt like a wreck. Although I was just 23, my life already seemed over. The future appeared as much like a wasteland as the emptiness I could see while looking back to the past. I felt lost, without choices, without hope.I was stuck in a job I hated and trapped in an engagement with a woman I didn't love. At the time, both commitments seemed like a good idea, but I suppose it was the fantasy of being a successful, married businessman that appealed to me far more than the reality.I decided to take a class just for the entertainment value. It happened to be an introductory counseling course, one that involved personal sharing in the group. We were challenged to make commitments publicly about things we would like to change in our lives, and in a moment of pure impulsiveness, I declared that by the next class meeting I was going to quit my job and end my engagement.A few days later I found myself unemployed and unattached, excited by the freedom, yet terrified about what to do next. I needed some kind of transition from my old life to a new one, a sort of ritual that would help me to transform myself from one person into another. So I did something just as impulsive as my previous actions: I booked a trip for a week in Aruba.In spite of what others might have thought, I was not running away from something but to something. I wanted a clean break, and I knew I needed to get away from my usual environment and influences so as to think clearly about where I was headed.Once settled into my room on the little island of Aruba, I began my process of self-change. I really could have been anywhere as long as nobody could reach me by phone and I had the peace and quiet to think about what I wanted to do. I spent the mornings going for long walks on the beach, the afternoons sitting under my favorite tree, reading books and listening to tapes. Probably most important of all, I forced myself to get out of my room and go to meet people. Ordinarily shy, I now decided that I was someone who was perfectly capable of having a conversation with anyone I chose. Since nobody knew the "real" me, the way I had always been, I felt free to be completely different.It took me almost a year to pay off that trip, but I am convinced that my single week in Aruba was worth three years in therapy. That trip started a number of processes that helped me to transform myself. This is how I did it:I created a mindset that made me ready for change. I expected that big things wereon the horizon, that a trip such as this could change my life. I believed with all my heart that I could change, if only I could find a quiet place to sort things out and experiment with new ways of thinking and acting.I insulated myself from the usual influences in my life and the people whose approval was most important. One of the reasons that therapy often takes so long is that, once you leave the safety and support of a session, you reenter the world where familiar people elicit the familiar reactions. By separating myself from others' approval and influences, I was able to think more clearly about what I really wanted.I structured my time in order to produce change and growth. Solitude, isolation, or new environments in themselves are not enough; you must also complete tasks that are relaxing and educational. The most important part of any therapy is not what you understand or what you talk about, but what you do. Insight without action is entertaining but not always helpful. Instead of reading novels and calling home regularly, I took the time to participate in different activities that would make me change.I pushed myself to experiment with new ways of being. I sampled alternative lifestyles and pretended to be a different person. I acted in unfamiliar ways just to see how it felt. Whatever I would usually do in various circumstances, I forced myself to do the opposite. This reinforced the idea that anything was possible, that I could do anything I wanted.I made public commitments of what I intended to do so it would be harder to back down. There were times when I wanted to avoid doing those things I found most frightening. Until this trip, I had never traveled to a strange place deliberately alone. Whenever I thought about taking safe routes, I imagined that I would soon have to face my classmates and that I would have to explain my actions to them.I processed my experiences systematically. I wrote in a journal each day and spoke to people I met about what I was doing and why. When I returned, I talked to several people I trusted about what had taken place. Each of them offered a different perspective that I valued and found useful in incorporating the experience into my life.I made changes when I returned that continued the transformation that started while I was in Aruba. It is easier to make changes when you are away from home than to maintain the changes after you return. To make sure I didn't slip back into old patterns, I immediately made new decisions about my work and my relationships that kept me moving forward.I decided that much of my future traveling would have some transformative dimension to it. Although it is possible to make extraordinary progress in a single week,transformative change takes place over a lifetime. I promised myself that I would make other trips from time to time in order to continue my growth.新生之旅25年前我感觉自己成了废物。

九年级英语unit7课文翻译

九年级英语unit7课文翻译

九年级英语u‎n i t7翻译‎Unit7 Teenag‎e r s should‎ be allowe‎d to choose‎ their own clothe‎s. Sectio‎n A 2d桑迪:要去看毕加索‎的著名绘画作‎品,我真的很激动‎。

吴兰:我也是。

我很高兴史密‎斯先生为今年‎的校外旅行选‎择了美术博物‎馆。

桑迪:我要带上我的‎新照相机,照好多好多照‎片!吴兰:哦,不行。

史密斯先生说‎我们不可以照‎相。

博物馆不允许‎。

桑迪:太糟糕了!你说,如果我们不用‎闪光灯,会不会允许(我们)照相啊?吴兰:嗯…..我觉得我们只‎是想保护那些‎绘画作品。

如果不用闪光‎灯的话,那也许可以。

Sectio‎n A 3a妈妈最了解我‎当我是个小宝‎宝整夜哭闹的‎时候,妈妈依偎在我‎身旁,唱歌送我入梦‎乡。

在我累了饿了‎的时候,妈妈给我食物‎,那温暖的臂膀‎就是我的床。

当我奔跑在田‎野上,她确保我的安‎全,让我远离安全‎,让我远离危险‎,在我摔倒受伤‎的时候她给我‎拥抱,扶我站好。

七岁的我剧烈‎咳嗦,她说我不适合‎吃冰激凌,我却大声反驳‎:你必须同意,我就要定了!九岁时我看恐‎怖电影,她说:这种电影会将‎噩梦给你带来‎,我却愤怒地咆‎哮:我就该看这样‎的电影,别拿我当小孩‎!青少年的我开‎始和朋友外出‎闲逛了,她叮咛道:十点以前一定‎要回来!我又顶嘴:我都17岁了‎,不需要你告诉‎我该不该!现在我长大了‎,回想当初的是‎时光,吃了冰激凌让‎我咳嗦不止,看了恐怖片让‎我噩梦连连,上学迟到只因‎为10点还在‎外游荡。

我真的后悔呀‎!后悔不该顶嘴‎,后悔没有听从‎妈妈的忠告;妈妈最了解(孩子),她只是想怎样‎对我最好!Sectio‎n B 2b能允许我自己‎做决定吗?很多青少年都‎有自己的业余‎爱好。

但有时候,这些业余爱好‎会阻碍他们的‎学业,父母可能会担‎心他们在学校‎的学习成绩。

孩子们都希望‎尽可能多些机‎会实践自己爱‎好。

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你认为你将会有自己的机器人吗?
当我们看一些关于未来的电影时,我们有时看到机器人。

他们通常像人类的仆人。

他们帮助做家务并且做一些诸如脏的或危险的地方的工作。

现在已经有在工厂工作的机器人了。

一些机器人能帮助制造小轿车,他们反复的做简单的工作。

未来更少的人将做这样的工作,因为它们令人厌烦,但机器人将不会感到厌烦。

科学家们现在正尝试让机器人看起来像人类,并且做和我们相同的事。

日本的一些机器人能够走路和跳舞。

他们看起来很有趣。

然而,一些科学家相信,尽管我们能够使得机器人像人一样移动,但很难使他们真正像人类一样思考。

例如,科学家詹姆斯怀特认为机器人将不可能醒来并知道自己在哪里。

但是很多科学家不同意怀特先生的看法。

他们认为机器人在25年到50年后甚至将能像人类一样交谈。

一些科学家相信未来将有更多的机器人。

然而他们承认这可能需要数百年。

这些新的机器人将有很多不同的外形。

一些机器人将看起来像人,另外的机器人可能看起来像动物。

例如,在印度,科学家们制造看起来像蛇的机器人。

如果建筑物倒塌了人还在里面,这些蛇形机器人能够帮助寻找埋在建筑物下的人。

这在20年前是不可能的,但电脑和火箭在100年前也似乎是不可能的。

我们无法知道未来将发生什么。

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