新编英语教程第3册(李观仪主编)第四单元课后练习答案
- 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
- 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
- 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。
Answers to Exercises of Unit 4 (Workbook) Comprehensive exercises
Ⅰ. Spelling (P54)
1. lopsided
2. quirk
3. inaugurate
4. complexion
5. link
6. glare
7. shudder
8. blare
9. installation 10. passenger 11. champagne 12. geographic
Ⅱ. Dictation (P55)
Throughout the long period, the French showed noticeably more enthusiasm for a Channel tunnel than the British. This may seem curious, seeing that France already has many land frontiers, whereas for Britain a tunnel would be its first fixed link with the Continent, and thus more valuable. But the British were held back by their insularity, and especially by fears that an invader might be able to make use of the scheme. Happily, all that is past. Today Britain’s politicians and business circles hav e shown themselves as eager as the French.
Those who take a wider and longer-term view believe that these possible drawbacks for Britain will be far outweighed by the advantages. Passengers by express train will be able to do the journey at least an hour faster than by air, city centre to city centre, and without any tedious waits at airports. Also the fares will be cheaper. So the tunnel will probably stimulate a vast increase
in tourism and business travel between London and Paris.
Ⅲ. Listening Comprehension (P55)
True (T) or False (F)?
For false statements, write the facts.
1. The writer spent a year in Moldova to study the customs of daily life.
T
2. In Moldova, guests are expected to help with some domestic duties.
F
In Moldova, guests are not expected to help with any domestic duties.
3. In Moldova, buying groceries generally required long journeys to markets by cars.
F
In Moldova, buying groceries generally required long journeys to market by bus.
4. In England, guests may be invited to the kitchen to talk with the hostess. T
5. In England, refusing food can be regarded as a kind of impolite behavior. F
In England, hosts will not feel unhappy if their guests refuse food.
6. In England, the guest’s offer to help with the washing up may be accepted.
T
Script:(听力内容)
Different Forms of Hospitality
As a British woman social anthropologist, I once spent a year in Moldova, in Eastern Europe, studying everyday life in the country. I stayed with a Moldovan family, to see from the inside how people managed their lives.
I often found it surprisingly difficult to see life there through the eyes of
a Moldovan. This was because the people I met were extremely hospitable and I was treated as an honoured guest at all times. As my hosts, they wanted me to enjoy myself, and not to get involved in shopping, cooking, or other domestic chores. Most mornings I was encouraged to go out to explore the city, or carry out my research, and I returned later to find that my elderly landlady and her sister had travelled across the city on buses to the central market to bring back heavy loads of potatoes, a whole lamb, or other large quantities of produce.
I was often invited to people’s homes, and was always offered food on entering. Most of the adults I met enjoyed inviting friends, family, neighbours, colleagues and even strangers into their homes, where they treated them to food, drink, and a lively, hospitable atmosphere. Hosts hurried to serve guests as well and as quickly as possible. When a household was expecting guests,