张汉熙高级英语(第三版)II 12 The 4Laws of Ecology

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张汉熙《高级英语(2)》(第3版)学习指南(Four Laws of Ecology (Part I

张汉熙《高级英语(2)》(第3版)学习指南(Four Laws of Ecology (Part I

Lesson 12 Four Laws of Ecology (Part II)一、词汇短语1. pervasive [] adj. existing everywhere到处存在的,到处弥漫着的:The fact that so many people have posted comments on this topicshows how pervasive and complicated it is.事实上这么多人公开谈论这个话题,就已经表明这是多么普遍多么复杂的事情。

2. detrimental [] adj. causing harm or damage有害的,不利的:The policy will be detrimental to the peace process.这项政策不利于和平进程。

3. analogy []n. something that seems similar between twosituations, processes, etc.类似处,相似处4. finite [] adj. having an end or a limit 有限的,有限度的:Humanknowledge is finite, ie there are things we do not know. 人类的认识是有限的。

5. improbable [] adj. not likely to happen or to be true 不大可能发生的,未必确切的:As improbable as this sounds, it really works.听起来有点不可思议,但这是真的。

6. self-evident [] adj. clearly true and needing no moreproof不证自明的,显而易见的:It seems to me self-evident that policesearches of newspaper offices burden the freedom of the press.警察对报社的搜查给新闻自由造成压力,这在我看来是不言而喻的。

《高级英语2(第3版)(附光盘)》(张汉熙)

《高级英语2(第3版)(附光盘)》(张汉熙)

内容简介《高级英语2(第3版)》是我国改革开放后最早出版的大学高年级英语教材,一直深受广大师生的喜爱,至今仍被广泛使用,对我国的英语教学产生了深刻影响。

该套教材曾先后于l988年和l996年分别获得国家教委(现教育部)和北京市社科优秀成果奖,并被评为“60年60本最具影响力英语教育出版物”。

为了继承和发扬原书的优秀品质,进一步提高教科书的质量,我们在征集了广大师生的意见和建议后,现对《高级英语》(修订本)进行再次修订。

修订后的版本称为《高级英语》(第三版)。

第三版修订的重点为:在保持《高级英语》(修订本)的基础上适当增加新的课文,用更具时代感的新课文替换原教材的部分课文,并对第一、二册的课文内容作适当调整;在学生用书中加强了关于作品、作者及作品背景的介绍;加强对文章主题、整体结构以及写作风格的分析,调整了练习项目并作了适当修改等。

编辑推荐媒体评论目录Lesson 1Pub Talk and the King's EnglishLesson 2Marrakech George OrweliLesson 3Inaugural Address (January 20, 1961 )Lesson 4Love Is a Fallacy Max ShulmatLesson 5The Sad Young MenLesson 6Loving and Hating New York Thomas GriffithLesson 7The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas (Excerpts)Lesson 8The Future of the EnglishLesson 9The Loons Margaret LaurenceLesson 10The Discovery of What It Means to Be an AmericanLesson 11Four Laws of Ecology (Part I)Barry CommonerLesson 12Four Laws of Ecology (Part II)Barry CommonerLesson 13The Mansion: A Subprime Parable (Excerpts)Lesson 14Faustian Economics Wendell BerryLesson 15 Disappearing Through the Skylight作者简介张汉熙(1921—1999):北京外国语大学教授。

完整word版,高级英语2第三版_张汉熙_课文翻译

完整word版,高级英语2第三版_张汉熙_课文翻译

Unit 1 Pub Talk and the King’s English人类的一切活动中,只有闲谈最宜于增进友谊,而且是人类特有的一种活动。

动物之间的信息交流,不论其方式何等复杂,也是称不上交谈的。

闲谈的引人人胜之处就在于它没有一个事先定好的话题。

它时而迂回流淌,时而奔腾起伏,时而火花四射,时而热情洋溢,话题最终会扯到什么地方去谁也拿不准。

要是有人觉得“有些话要说”,那定会大煞风景,使闲聊无趣。

闲聊不是为了进行争论。

闲聊中常常会有争论,不过其目的并不是为了说服对方。

闲聊之中是不存在什么输赢胜负的。

事实上,真正善于闲聊的人往往是随时准备让步的。

也许他们偶然间会觉得该把自己最得意的奇闻轶事选出一件插进来讲一讲,但一转眼大家已谈到别处去了,插话的机会随之而失,他们也就听之任之。

或许是由于我从小混迹于英国小酒馆的缘故吧,我觉得酒瞎里的闲聊别有韵味。

酒馆里的朋友对别人的生活毫无了解,他们只是临时凑到一起来的,彼此并无深交。

他们之中也许有人面临婚因破裂,或恋爱失败,或碰到别的什么不顺心的事儿,但别人根本不管这些。

他们就像大仲马笔下的三个火枪手一样,虽然日夕相处,却从不过问彼此的私事,也不去揣摸别人内心的秘密。

有一天晚上的情形正是这样。

人们正漫无边际地东扯西拉,从最普通的凡人俗事谈到有关木星的科学趣闻。

谈了半天也没有一个中心话题,事实上也不需要有一个中心话题。

可突然间大伙儿的话题都集中到了一处,中心话题奇迹般地出现了。

我记不起她那句话是在什么情况下说出来的——她显然不是预先想好把那句话带到酒馆里来说的,那也不是什么非说不可的要紧话——我只知道她那句话是随着大伙儿的话题十分自然地脱口而出的。

“几天前,我听到一个人说‘标准英语’这个词语是带贬义的批评用语,指的是人们应该尽量避免使用的英语。

”此语一出,谈话立即热烈起来。

有人赞成,也有人怒斥,还有人则不以为然。

最后,当然少不了要像处理所有这种场合下的意见分歧一样,由大家说定次日一早去查证一下。

高级英语第三版第二册第十一课FourLawsofEcologyPartI.ppt

高级英语第三版第二册第十一课FourLawsofEcologyPartI.ppt

The Poverty of Power, a bestseller
• Commoner addressed the "Three E's" that were plaguing the United States in the 1970s:
• First there was the threat to environmental survival; • then there was the apparent shortage of energy; • and now there is the unexpected decline of the economy.
• He criticized Ronald Reagan and George Bush for regulating pollution and not presenting it.
Barry Commoner
(1917 – 2012)
Commoner’s Books
• In the 1950s, Commoner began ng of nuclear weapons, thereby bringing himself into public prominence. In the 1960s, he became involved in other environmental issues; these included pollution and energy sources.
• Commoner also has strong views on social causes of the present environmental situation. He argues, for example, that eliminating Third World debt payments would lesson the economic gap between developed and less developed countries and end the desperation that usually results in overpopulation. This debt forgiveness could also compensate for previous decades of damage inflicted on such countries. Commoner also calls for redistribution of the world's wealth.

高级英语2Four Laws of Ecology第1段

高级英语2Four Laws of Ecology第1段

Lesson 12 Four Laws of Ecology
Teaching contents
Discourse vocabulary The
Structure Analysis
analysis of paragraph 1 The analysis of sentences conclusion
这是一个很极端的看法,然而我认为,如果 从一个适当的特定的前后关系的角度去理解, 它是具有很多优势的。

conclusion
1 Contradiction :nature knows best and human beings know better than nature. (sentence1) 1 features : One of the most pervasive features of modern technology (sentence 2) Connotation: any major man-made change in a nature system is likely to be detrimental to that system (sentence3) Conclusion: The third law of ecology is a rather extreme claim but has a good deal of merit in a properly defined context (sentence4)
坦白地说,生态学的第三个法则认为,任何 在自然系统中主要是因人为而引起的变化, 对那个系统都有可能是有害的。

Sentence 4

This is a rather extreme claim ; nevertheless I believe it has a good deal of merit if understand in a properly defined context.

高级英语2张汉熙第3版学习指南及答案

高级英语2张汉熙第3版学习指南及答案

高级英语2张汉熙第3版学习指南及答案|才聪学习网[电子书]张汉熙《高级英语(2)》(第3版)学习指南【词汇短语+课文精解+全文翻译+练习答案】文章来源:才聪学习网/高级英语内容简介《高级英语(2)(第3版)学习指南》按照原教材的课次进行编写,每单元涉及词汇短语、课文精解、文体修辞、全文翻译以及练习答案等内容,旨在帮助学生更好、更高效地学习和掌握教材中的重点及难点知识,具有很强的针对性和实用性。

在编写过程中,该书力求突出重点,答疑难点,语言言简意赅,讲解深入浅出,希望它能得到广大英语专业学生和英语自学者的喜爱和认可。

试读(部分内容)Lesson 1 Pub Talk and the King’s English一、词汇短语1.intricate [5intrikit] adj. complex; solvable or comprehensible only wit h painstaking effort错综复杂的;难懂的,难以解决的:an intricate desig n难懂的设计2.indulge [in5dQldV] vt. to yield to the desires and whims of, especial ly to an excessive degree沉迷,放纵,纵情享受:indulge oneself in ea ting and drinking纵情于吃喝。

与其构成的短语有:indulge in沉溺于;饱享3.meander [mi5AndE] vi. to move aimlessly and idly without fixed dir ection漫游,闲逛:We usually meander down to the pub after the di nner.晚饭之后,我们常常漫步去酒吧。

4.conversationalist [7kCnvE5seiFEnElist] n. one given to or skilled at co nversation健谈者:He is even-tempered, easy-going and an excellent conversationalist.他是处事不惊的,待人随和,同时也是个非常健谈的人。

张汉熙高级英语第三版paraphrase-2

张汉熙高级英语第三版paraphrase-2

张汉熙高级英语第三版中的Paraphrase高级英语第二册Lesson 1 Pub Talk and the King’s English1. And it is an activity only of humans.And conversation is an activity which is found only among human beings.Conversation is not for persuading others to accept our ideas or points of views. In a conversation we should not try to establish the force of an idea or argument.3. In fact, the best conversationalists are those who are prepared to lose.In fact, people who really enjoy and are good at conversation will not argue to win or force others to accept his ideas.4. Bar friends are not deeply involved in each other’s lives.People who meet each other for a drink in the bar of a pub are not close/ intimate friends for they ar e not deeply absorbed in each other’s private lives.5. ...it could still go ignorantly on.The conversation could go on without anybody knowing who was right or wrong.6. There are cattle in the fields ,but we sit down to beef (boeuf ).These animals are called cattle when they are alive and feeding in the fields; but when we sit down at the table to eat, we call their meet beef.7. The new ruling class had built a cultural barrier against him by building their French against his own language.The new ruling class by using French instead of English made it hard for the English to accept or absorb the culture of the rulers.The English received proper recognition and was used by the King once more.9. The phrase has always been used a little pejoratively and even facetiously by the lower classes.The phrase, the King’s English, has always been used disrespectfully and jokingly by the lower classes. (The working people very often make fun of the proper and formal language of the educated people.)10. The rebellion against a cultural dominance is still there.There still exists in the working people, as in the early Saxon peasants, a spirit of opposition to the cultural authority of the ruling class.11. There is always a great danger, as Carlyle put it, that “ words will harden into things for us.”There is always a great danger that we might forget that words are only symbols and take them for things they are supposed to represent.Lesson 2 Marrakech1. The burying-ground is merely a huge waste of hummocky earth, like a derelict building-lot.The burying-ground is nothing more than a huge piece of wasteland full of mounds of earth looking like a deserted and abandoned piece of land on which a building was going to be put up.2. All colonial empires are in reality founded upon this fact.All the imperialists build up their empires by treating the people in the colonies like animals (by not treating the people in the colonies as human beings).3. They rise out of the earth, they sweat and starve for a few years, and then they sink back into the nameless mounds of the graveyard…They are born. Then for a few years they work, toil and starve. Finally they died and are buried in graves without a name, and nobody notices that they are dead.4. A carpenter sits cross-legged at a prehistoric lathe, turning chair-legs at lightning speed.Sitting with his legs crossed and using a very old-fashioned lathe, a carpenter quickly gives a5. Instantly, from the dark holes all round, there was a frenzied rush of Jews…Immediately from their dark hole-like cells everywhere, a great number of Jews rushed out wildly excited, all loudly demanding a cigarette.6. …every one of them looks on a cigarette as a more or less impossible luxury.Every one of these poor Jews looks on the cigarette as a piece of luxury which they could not possibly afford.7. Still, a white skin is always fairly conspicuous.However, a white-skinned European is always quite noticeable./ However, people always notice anyone with a white skin.8. In a tropical landscape one's eye takes in everything except the human beings.If you take a look at the natural scenery in a tropical region, you see everything but the human beings.9. No one would think of running cheap trips to the Distressed Areas.No one would think of organizing cheap trips for the tourists to visit the poor slum areas.10. …for nine-tenths of the people the reality of life is an endless, backbreaking struggle to wring a little food out of an eroded soil.Life is very hard for ninety percent of the people. They can produce a little food on the poor soil With hard backbreaking toil.11. She accepted her status as an old woman, that is to say as a beast of burden.She took it for granted that as an old woman she was the lowest in the community, that she was only fit for doing heavy work like an animal.12. People with brown skins are next door to invisible.People with brown skins are almost invisible.13. Their splendid bodies were hidden in reach-me-down khaki uniforms…The Senegales soldiers were wearing second-hand ready-made khaki uniforms which hid their beautiful, well—built bodies.14. How long before they turn their guns in the other direction?How much longer before they turn their guns around and attack the colonialist rulers?15. Every white man there had this thought stowed somewhere or other in his mind.Every white man there had this thought hidden somewhere in his mind.Lesson 3 Inaugural Address (January 20, 1961)1. And yet the same revolutionary belief for which our forebears fought is still at issue around the globe....Our ancestors fought a revolutionary war to maintain that all men were created equal and God had given them certain unalienable rights which no state or ruler could take away from them. But today this issue has not yet been settled in many countries around the world .2. This much we pledge--- and more.We promise to do this and we promise to do more.3. United, there is little we cannot do in a host of cooperative ventures.United and working together we can accomplish a lot of things in a large number of joint bold undertakings.4. ...our last best hope in an age where the instruments of war have far outpaced the instruments of peace...The United Nations is our last and best hope of survival in an age where the tools to wage war have far surpassed and exceeded the tools to keep peace.5. ...to enlarge the area in which its writ may run.We pledge to help the United Nations enlarge the area in which its authority and mandate would continue to be in effect or in force.6. ....before the dark powers of destruction unleashed by science engulf all humanity in planned or accidental self-destruction.Before the terrible forces of destruction, which atomic bombs can now release, wipe out mankind, which may be planned or brought about by an accident.7. ....yet both racing to alter that uncertain balance of terror that stays the band of mankind’s final war.Yet both groups of nations are trying to change as quickly as possible this uncertain balance of terrible military power that restrains each group from launching mankind’s final war.8. So let us begin anew, remembering on both sides that civility is not a sign of weakness...Let us start once again. We must bear in mind that being polite does not mean one is weak.9. Let both sides seek to invoke the wonders of science instead of its terrors.Let both sides try to use science to produce good and beneficial things for man instead of employing it to bring frightful destruction.10. ....each generation of Americans has been summoned to give testimony to its national loyalty.Americans of every generation have been called upon to prove their loyalty to their country (by fighting and dying for their country’s cause).11. With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love...We still lead the country we love , knowing our sure reward will be a good conscience, and history will finally judge whether we have done our task well or not.Lesson 4 Love Is a Fallacy1. A nice enough young fellow, you understand, but nothing upstairs.He is a nice enough young fellow, you know, but he is empty-headed.2. Fads, I submit, are the very negation of reason.3. I should have known they’d come back when the Charleston cam e back.I should have known that raccoon coats would come back to fashion when the Charleston dance, which was popular in the 1920s, came back.4. “All the Big Men on Campus are wearing them. Where’ve you been?”All the important and fashionable men on campus are wearing them. How come you don’t know?5. My brain, that precision instrument, slipped into high gear.My brain, which is precision instrument, began to work at high speed.6. With one omission, Polly fitted these specifications perfectly.Except for one thing (intelligence) Polly had all the other requirements.7. She was not yet of pin-up proportions, but I felt sure that time would supply the lack.She was not as beautiful as those girls in posters but I felt sure she would become beautiful enough after some time.8. In fact, she veered in the opposite direction.In fact, she went in the opposite direction, that is, she was not intelligent but rather stupid.9. “In other words, if you were out of the picture, the field would be o pen. Is that right?”If you were no longer involved with her (if you stopped dating her), others would be free to compete to get her as a girlfriend.10. Back and forth his head swiveled, desire waxing, resolution waning.His head turned back and forth (looking at the coat and then looking away from the coat). Every time he looked his desire for the coat grew stronger and his resolution not to abandon/ give away Polly became weaker.To teach her to think appeared to be a rather big task.12. Admittedly it was not a prospect fraught with hope, but I decided to give it one more try.One must admit the outcome does not look very hopeful, but I decided to try one more time.13. There is a limit to what flesh and blood can bear.There is a limit to what any human being can bear.14. I was not Pygmalion; I was Frankenstein, and my monster had me by the throat.I planned to be Pygmalion, to fashion an ideal wife for myself, but I turned out to be Frankenstein because Polly (the result/ product of my hard work) ultimately rejected me and ruined my plan.15. Frantically I fought back the tide of panic surging through me.Desperately I tried to stop the feeling of panic that was overwhelming me.Lesson 5 The Sad Young Men1. The slighted mention of the decade brings nostalgic recollections to the middle-aged...At the very mention of this post-war period ,middle-aged people begin to think about it longingly and young people become curious and start asking all kinds of questions..2. The rejection of Victorian gentility was, in any case, inevitable .In any case, an American could not avoid casting aside middle-class respectability and affected refinement.3. The war acted merely as a catalytic agent in this breakdown of the Victorian social structure...The war only helped to speed up the breakdown of the Victorian social structure.4. ...it was tempted, in America at least, to escape its responsibilities and retreat behind an air of naughty alcoholic sophistication...In America the young people did not seriously take up the responsibilities of changing the traditional customs of society; instead they lived unconventional lives and, by drinking and behaving indecently in many ways, they broke the moral code of the community.5. Prohibition afforded the young the additional opportunity of making their pleasures illicit...The young people found greater pleasure in their drinking because Prohibition, by making drinking unlawful added a sense of adventure.6. ...our young men began to enlist under foreign flags.As a result, the young men began to join the armies of foreign countries to fight in the war.7. ...they “wanted to get into the fun before the whole thing turned belly up.”The young people wanted to take part in the glorious adventure before the war ended.8. ...they had outgrown towns and families...These young people could no longer adapt themselves to lives in their hometowns or their families.9. ...the returning veteran also had to face the sodden, Napoleonic cynicism of Versailles, the hypocritical do-goodism of Prohibition...The returning veteran also had to face the stupid cynicism of the victorious allies in Versailles who acted as cynically as Napoleon did. They had to face Prohibition which the lawmakers hypocritically assumed would be good for the people.10. Something in the tension-ridden youth of America had to “give”...(Under all this force and pressure) something in the youth of America, who were already very tense, had to break down.11. ...it was only natural that hopeful young writers , their minds and pens inflamed against war, Babbittry, and “Puritanical” gentility, should flock to the traditional artistic center...It was only natural that hopeful young writers ,whose minds and writings were full of violent anger against war, Babbittry, and “Puritanical” gentility, should come in large numbers to live in Greenwich Village, the traditional artistic center.12. Each town had its “fast” set which prided itself on itself on its unconventionality...Each town was proud that it had a group of wild, reckless people, who lived unconventional lives.Lesson 6 Loving and Hating New York1. Nowadays New York is out of phase with American taste...Nowadays New Yorkers can’t understand nor follow the taste of the American people and is often in disagreement with American politics.2. New York even prides itself on being a holdout from prevailing American trends...New York now boasts that it is a city that resists the prevailing trends ( fashion, styles) of America and that it is a place where people can escape from uniformity and commonness.3. ...sitcoms cloned and canned in Hollywood, and the Johnny Carson show live, preempt the airways from California...Situation comedies made in Hollywood and the live talk show by Johnny Carson are on all channels, filling the airwaves.4. ... it is making something of a comeback as a tourist attraction...New York is regaining somewhat its status as a city that attracts tourists .5. To win in New York is to be uneasy...A person who wins in New York is constantly disturbed by fear and anxiety (because he is afraid of losing what he was won in the fierce competition).6. Nature’s pleasures are much qualified in New York.Being a large and crowed city with many tall buildings, etc., the chance to enjoy the pleasures of nature is very limited in New York.7. ...the city’s bright glow arrogantly obscures the heavens.At night the city of New York is aglow with lights and seems haughtily to dim the light of the stars.8. But the purity of a bohemian dedication can be exaggerated.But a pure and wholehearted devotion to a Bohemian life style can be exaggerated.9. In both these roles it ratifies more than it creates.In both these roles of banking and communications headquarters, New York starts or originates very few things but gives its stamp of approval to many things created by people in other parts of the country.10. The television generation grew up in the insistent presence of hype...The television generation was constantly and strongly affected by extravagant promotional advertising.11. ...those who are writing ambitious novels sustain themselves on the magazines.Authors writing long serious novels earn their living in the meantime by also writing articles for popular magazines.12. Broadway, which seemed to be succumbing to the tawdriness of its environment, is astir again.Broadway, which seemed unable to resist the cheap, gaudy shows put on in the surrounding areas, is once again busy and active.13. The defeated are not hidden away somewhere else on the wrong side of town.Those who failed in the struggle of life, the down-and-outs, are not hidden away in slums or ghettoes where other people cannot see them.14. The place constantly exasperates, at times exhilarates.New York constantly irritates and annoys very much but sometimes/ at times it also invigorates and stimulates.Lesson 7 The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas1. With a clamor of bells that set the swallows soaring, the Festival of Summer came to the city Omelas.beginning of the Festival of Summer in Omelas.2. ...their high calls rising like the swallows’ crossing flights over the music and singing.The shouting of the children could be heard clearly above the music and singing like the calls of the swallows flying by overhead.3. . ..exercised their restive horses before the race.The riders were putting the horses through some exercises because the horses were eager to start and stubbornly resisting the control of the riders.4. Given a description such as this one tends to make certain assumptions.After reading the above description the reader is likely to assume certain things.5. This is the treason of artist: a refusal to admit the banality of evil and the terrible boredom of pain.An artist betrays his trust when he does not admit that evil is nothing fresh nor novel and pain is very dull and uninteresting.6. They were nature, intelligent, passionate adults whose lives were not wretched.They were fully developed and intelligent grown-up people full of intense feelings and they were not miserable people.7. Perhaps it would be best if you imagined it as your own fancy bids, assuming it will rise to the occasion.Perhaps it would be best if the reader pictures Omelas to himself as his imagination tells him, assuming his imagination will be equal to the task.8. …the faint insistent sweetness of drooz may perfume the way of the city…The faint but compelling sweet scent of the drug drooz may fill the streets of the city.9. Perhaps it was born defective, or perhaps it has become imbecile through fear, malnutrition, and neglect.Perhaps the child was mentally retarded because it was born so or perhaps it has become very foolish and stupid because of fear, poor nourishment and neglect.10. Its habits are too uncouth for it to respond to humane treatment.The habits of the child are so crude and uncultured that it will show no sign of improvement even if it is treated kindly and tenderly.11. Their tears at the bitter injustice dry when they begin to perceive the terrible justice of reality, and to accept it.They shed tears when they see how terribly unjust they have been to the child, but these tears dry up when they realize how just and fair though terrible reality is though it is terrible, and they accept it.12. It is the existence of the child, and their knowledge of its existence, that makes possible the nobility of their architecture, the poignancy of their music, the profundity of their science.The existence of the child and their knowledge of its existence is the reason that makes their buildings grand and impressive, their music moving and their science intellectually deep.Lesson 8 The Future of the English1. ...below the noisy arguments, the abuse and the quarrels, there is a reservoir of instinctive fellow-feeling...The English people may hotly argue and abuse and quarrel with each other, but there still exists a lot of natural sympathetic feelings for each other.2. ...at heart they would like to take a whip to the whole idle troublesome mob of them.What the wealthy employers would really like to do is to whip all the workers, whom they regard as lazy and troublesome people.3. ...there are not many of these men, either on the board or the shop floor...There are not many snarling shop stewards in the work-shop, nor are there many cruel wealthy employers on the board of managers ( or governing board of a factory ).4. It demands bigness, and they are suspicious of bigness.The contemporary world demands that everything should be done on a big scale and the English do not like or trust bigness.5. Against this, at least superficially, Englishness seems a poor shadowy show...At least on the surface, when Englishness is put against the power and success of Admass, Englishness seems to put up a rather poor weak performance.6. ...while Englishness is not hostile to change, it is deeply suspicious of change for change’s sake...Englishness is not against change, but it believes that changing just for changing and for no other useful purpose to be very wrong and harmful.7. To put cars and motorways before houses seems to Englishness a communal imbecility.To regard cars and motorways as more important than houses seems to Englishness a public stupidity.8. I must add that while Englishness can still fight on, Admass could be winning.I must further say that while Englishness can go on fighting, there is a great possibility of Admass winning.9. It must have some moral capital to draw upon, and soon it may be asking for an overdraft.Englishness draws its strength from a reservoir of strong moral and ethical principles, and soon it may be asking for strength which this reservoir of principles cannot provide.10. They probably believe, as I do, that the Admass”Good Life” is a fraud on all coun ts.These people probably believe, as I do, that the “Good Life” promised by Admass is false and dishonest in all respects.11. ...he will not even find much satisfaction in this scrounging messy existence, which does nothing for a man’s self-respect.He will not even find much satisfaction in his untidy and disordered life where he manages to live as a parasite by sponging on people. This kind of life does not help a person to build up any self-respect.12. To them the House of Commons is a remote squabbling-shop.These people consider the House of Commons as a place rather far away (from them) where some people are always quarreling and arguing over some small matters.13. ...heavy hands can fall on the shoulders that have been shrugging away politics.If a dictator comes to powder, these people then will soon learn in the worst way that they were very wrong to ignore politics for they can now suddenly and for no reason be arrested and thrown into prison.Lesson 9 The Loons1. ...with a face that seemed totally unfamiliar with laughter...with a face that was dead serious, never laughed2. Sometimes old Jules, or his son Lazarus, would get mixed up in a Saturday-night brawl...Sometimes old Jules, or his son Lazarus, would get involved in a rough, noisy quarrel or fight on a Saturday night after much drinking of liquor.3. ...her attendance had always been sporadic and her interest in schoolwork negligible.She often missed her classes and had little interest in schoolwork.4. ...she existed for me only as a vaguely embarrassing presence...I only knew her as a person who would make other people feel ill at ease.5. She dwelt and moved somewhere within my scope of vision...She lived and moved somewhere within my range of sight. But I paid little attention to her: she was almost invisible for me. (Recall Orwell’s “Marakech” in which dark-skinned people become invisible.)6. If it came to a choice between Grandmother Macleod and Piquette, Piquette would win hands down, nits or not.If my mother had to make a choice between Grandmother Macleod and Piquette, she would certainly choose the latter without hesitation, no matter whether the latter had nits or not.7. My acquaintance with Indians was not extensive.I didn’t know many Indians.8. ...she remained both a reproach and a mystery to me.I blamed myself (for my inability to make Piquette’s response warmer) and at the sametime found her mysterious.9. Her defiant face, momentarily, because unguarded and unmasked, and in her eyes there was a terrifying hope.Normally, she was a defensive and sensitive as if her face was guarded and marked. But in a brief moment when she was saying this, there was an expression of defiance on her face, which was her true emotion. In her eyes there was a kind of hope which was so intense that it stuck people as terrifying.10. ...she looked a mess, to tell you the truth, a real slattern, dressed any old how...She looked very messy, dirty and untidy, dressed in a very careless way.11. She was up in court a couple of times--drunk and disorderly, of course.She was taken to court several times, because she was drunk and disorderly as onecould expect.12. The one store had become several dozen, and the settlement had all the attributes of a flourishing resort--hotels, a dance-hall, cafes with neon signs, the penetrating odours of potato chips and hot dogs.There had been only one store before, but now there were several dozen stores. The settlement had all the features of a flourishing resort such as hotels, a dance-hall, cafes lighted by neon signs, the strong smells of potato chips and hot dogs.13. Perhaps they had been unable to find such a place, and had simply died out, having ceased to care any longer whether they lived or not.Perhaps they had failed to find a suitable habitat where they could belong and hadsimply died out, having stopped caring any longer whether they lived or not.Lesson10 The Discovery of What It Means to Be an American1. It is a complex fate to be an American…The fate of an American is complicated and hard to understand.2. ..they were no more at home in Europe than I was.They were uneasy and uncomfortable in Europe as I was.3. ...we were both searching for our separate identities.American writers, black and white, were all trying to find their own special individualities.4. I do not think that could have made this reconciliation here.I don't think I could have accepted in America my black status without feeling ashamed.5. ...it is easier to cut across social and occupational lines there than it is here.It is easier in Europe for people of different social groups and occupations to intermingle and have social contact than in America.6. A man can be as proud of being a good waiter as of being a good actor, and in neither case feel threatened.In Europe a good waiter and a good actor are equally proud of their social status and functions in society. They are not jealous of each other and do not live in fear of losing their status.7. I was born in New York, but have lived only in pockets of it.I was born in New York but have lived only in some small areas of the city.8. This reassessment, which can be very painful, is also very valuable.This process of reconsidering many things that one had taken for granted in the past can be very painful (because you have to admit that some ideas you held were wrong), but is also very valuable and important.9. On this acceptance, literally, the life of a writer depends.The life of a writer really depends on his accepting the fact that no matter where he goes or what he does he will always carry the marks of his origins.10. American writers do not have a fixed society to describe.American writers live in a mobile society where nothing is fixed, so they do not have a fixed society to describe.11. Every society is governed by hidden laws, by unspoken but profound assumptions on the part of the people.Every society is influenced and directed by unwritten laws, and by many things deeply felt and taken for granted by the people, though not openly spoken about.Lesson 11 Four Laws of Ecology ( Part 1 )1. All this, many times multiplied and organized species by species in intricate, precise relationships, make up the vast network of life on the earth.The above is just a single example about the connections of deer to other forms of life. In reality this is added many times and organized species by species in precise relationships with many details. And this makes up the large and extensive network of life on the earth.2. It is the science of planetary housekeeping.Ecology is the science about how the affairs of our house, the planet, are managed.3. Our ability to picture the behavior of such systems has been helped considerably by the development, even more recent than ecology, of the science of cybernetics.The development of the science of cybernetics has greatly helped our ability to scribe the behavior of ecosystems. The science of cybernetics is even younger than the science of ecology.4. In quite a similar way, stabilizing cybernetic relations are built into an ecological cycle.Similar to the ship system, cybernetics systems with stabilizing effects are an integral part of an ecological cycle.5. The most famous examples of such ecological oscillations are the periodic fluctuations of the size of fur-bearing animal populations.The best-known examples that can clearly illustrate such ecological oscillations are the changes of the size of fur-bearing animal populations that take place periodically.6. These oscillations are built into the operation of the simple cycle, in which the lynx population is positively related to the number of rabbits and the rabbits population is negatively related to the number of lynx.More rabbits provide more food for lynx and thus the rising population of rabbits increases the。

高级英语第三版2,张汉熙主编,Paraphrase

高级英语第三版2,张汉熙主编,Paraphrase

Unit 2 Marrakech1. The burying-ground is merely a huge waste of hummocky earth, like a derelict building-lot.The burying-ground is just a huge piece of wasteland full of mounds of earth looking like a deserted and abandoned construction site.2. All colonial empires are in reality founded upon that fact. All the imperialists build up their empires by treating the people in the colonies like animals.3. They rise out of the earth, they sweat and starve for a few years, and then they sink back into the nameless mounds of the graveyard.They are born. Then for a few years they work, toil and starve. Finally they die and are buried in graves without a name, and nobody notices that they are dead.4. A carpenter sits cross-legged at a prehistoric lathe, turning chair-legs at lightning speed.Sitting with his legs crossed and using a very old-fashioned lathe, a carpenter quickly gives a round shape to the chair-legshe is making.5. Instantly, from the dark holes all round, there was a frenzied rush of Jews.Immediately from their dark hole-like cells everywhere a great number of Jews rushed out wildly excited.6. …every one of them looks on a cigarette as a more or less impossible luxury.Every one of these poor Jews looked on the cigarette as a piece of luxury which they could not possibly afford.7. Still, a white skin is always fairly conspicuous.However, a white -skinned European is always quite noticeable.8. In a tropical landscape one’s eye takes in everything except the human beings.If you take a look at the natural scenery in a tropical region, you see everything but the human beings.9. No one would think of running cheap trips to the Distressed Areas.No one would think of organizing cheap trips for the tourists to visit the poor slum areas. 10. …for nine-tenths of the people the reality of life is an endless, back-breaking struggle to wring a little food out of an eroded soil.Life is very hard for ninety percent of the people. With hard backbreaking toil they can produce a little food on the poor soil.11.She accepted her status as an old woman, that is to sayas a beast of burden.She took it for granted that as an old woman she was the lowest in the community, that she was only fit for doing heavy work like an animal.12. People with brown skins are next door to invisible. People with brown skins are almost invisible.13.Their splendid bodies were hidden in reach-me-down khaki uniforms…The Senegalese soldiers were wearing ready-made khaki uniforms which hid their beautiful well-built bodies.14. How long before they turn their guns in the other direction?How much longer before they turn their guns around and attack the colonialist rulers? 15.Every white man there had this thought stowed somewhere or other in his mind.Every white man, had this thought hidden somewhere or other in his mindUnit31.And yet the same revolutionary belief for which our forebears fought is still at issue around the globe...Our ancestors fought a revolutionary war to maintain that all men were created equal and God had given them certainunalienable rights which no state or ruler could take away from them. But today this issue has not yet been decided in many countries around the world.2. This much we pledge—and more.2.This much we promise to do and we promise to do more.3. 3. United, there is little we cannot do in a host of cooperative ventures.United and working together we can accomplish a lot of things in a great number of joint undertakings.4. …our last best hope in an age where the instruments of war have far outpaced the instruments of peace…The UN is our last and best hope of survival in an age where the instruments of war have far surpassed the instruments of peace.5. …to enlarge the area in which its writ may run.We pledge to help the United Nations enlarge the area in which its authority and mandate would continue to be in effect or in force.6. …before the dark powers of destruction unleashed by science engulf all humanity in planned or accidental self-destruction.Before the terrible forces of destruction, which atomic bombscan now release, wipe out mankind, which may be planned or brought about by an accident.7. …yet both racing to alter that uncertain balance of terror that stays the hand of mankind’s final war.Yet both groups of nations are trying to change as quickly as possible this uncertain balance of terrible military power which restrains each group from launching mankind's final war.8. So let us begin anew, remembering on both sides that civility is not a sign of weakness,… So let us start once again and let us remember that being polite is not a sign of weakness.9.Let both sides seek to invoke the wonders of science instead of its terrors.Let both sides try to call forth the wonderful things that science can do for mankind instead of the frightful things it can do.10. …each generation of Americans has been summoned to give testimony to its national loyalty. Americans of every generation have been called upon to prove their loyalty to their country .11. With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the landwe love,…Let history finally judge whether we have done our task welt or not, but our sure reward will be a good con-science for we will have worked sincerely and to the best of our ability. Let us lead the country we love , knowing our sure reward will be a good conscience and history will finally judge whether we have done our task well or not.Unit51.The slightest mention of the decade brings nostalgic recollections to the middle aged.At the very mention of this post-war period, middle-aged people begin to think about it longingly.2.The rejection of Victorian gentility was, in any case, inevitable.In any case, an American could not avoid casting aside its middle-class respectability and affected refinement.3. The war acted merely as a catalytic agent in this breakdown of the Victorian social structure,…The war only helped to speed up the breakdown of the Victorian social structure.4…it was tempted, in America at least, to escape its responsibilities and retreat behind an air of naughty alcoholicsophistication…In America at least, the young people were strongly inclined to shirk their responsibilities. They pretended to be worldly-wise, drinking and behaving naughtily.5.Prohibition afforded the young the additional opportunity of making their pleasures illicit,…The young people found greater pleasure in their drinking because Prohibition, by making drinking unlawful added a sense of adventure.6…our young men began to enlist under foreign flags.Our young men joined the armies of foreign countries to fight in the war.7…they “wanted to get into the fun before the whole thing turned belly up”.The young people wanted to take part in the glorious ad-venture before the whole war ended. 8….they had outgrown towns and families…These young people could no longer adapt themselves to lives in their home towns or their families.9…the returning veteran also had to face…the hypocritical do-goodism of Prohibition,…The returning veteran also had to face Prohibition which thelawmakers hypocritically assumed would do good to the people.10. Something in the tension-ridden youth of America had to “give”…Something in the youth of America, who were already very tense, had to break down.11…it was only natural that hopeful young writers, their minds and pens inflamed against war, Babbittry, and “Puritanical” gentility, should flock to the traditional artistic center…It was only natural that hopeful young writers whose minds and writings were filled with violent anger against war, Babbitry, and "Puritanical" gentility, should come in great numbers to live in Greenwich Village, the traditional artistic centre.12. Each town had its ”fast” set which prided itself on its unconventionality,…Each town was proud that it had a group of wild, reckless people, who lived unconventional lives.Unit81. ....below the noisy arguments , the abuse and the quarrels , there is a reservoir of instinctive fellow-feeling...The English people may hotly argue and abuse and quarrel witheach other , but there still exists a lot of natural sympathetic feelings for each other in their hearts.2. ....at heart they would like to take a whip to the whole idle troublesome mob of them.What the wealthy employers would really like to do is to whip all the workers whom they regard as lazy and troublesome.3....there are not many of these men , either on the board or the shop floor...There are not many snarling shop stewards in the workshop,nor are there many cruel wealthy employers on the board of directors.4. It demands bigness ,and they are suspicious of bigness. The contemporary world demands that everything should be done on a big scale and the English do not trust bigness.5. Against this , at least superficially ,Englishness seemsa poor shadowy show...At least on the surface ,when Englishness is put against the power and success of Admass , Englishness seems to put up a rather poor performance.6. ...while Englishness is not hostile to change,it is deeply suspicious of change for change‟s sake...Englishness is not against change, but it believes thatchanging just for change‟s sake and not other useful purposes is very wrong and harmful. 7. To put cars and motorways before houses seems to Englishness a communal imbecility.To regard cars and motorways as more important than houses seems to Englishness a public stupidity.8.I must add that while Englishness can still fight on ,Admass could be winning.I must further say that while Englishness can go on fighting, there is a great possibility for Admass to win.9. It must have some moral capital to draw upon,and soon it may be asking for an overdraft.Englishness draws its strength from a reservoir of strong moral and ethical principles ,and soon it may be asking for strength which this reservoir of principles cannot provide.10.They probably believe ,as I do , that the Admass”Good Life”is a fraud on all counts.There people probably believe ,as I do,that the “Good Life”promised by Admass is false and dishonest in all respects.11....he will not even find much satisfaction in this scrounging messy existence, which does nothing for a man‟s self-respect.He will not even find much satisfaction in this untidy anddisordered life where he manages to live as a parasite by sponging on people. This kind of life does not help a person to build up any self-respect.12.To them the House of Commons is a remote squabbling-shop. These people consider the House of Commons as a place rather far away from them where some people are always quarreling and arguing over some small matters.13...heavy hands can fall on the shoulders that have been shrugging away politics.They were very wrong to ignore politics for they can now suddenly and for no reason be arrested and thrown into prison. Unit101.the fate of an American is complicated and hard to understand.2. They were as uneasy and uncomfortable in Europe as I was.3. American writers, black and white, were both trying to find their own special individualities.4.I don't think I could have accepted in America my black status without feeling ashamed.5. It is easier in Europe for people of different social groups and occupations to intermingle and have social contact than in America.6. In Europe a good waiter and a good actor are equally proud of their social status and functions in society. They are not jealous of each other and do not live in fear of losing their status.7.I was born in New York but have lived only in some small areas of the city8.This process of reconsidering many things that one had taken for granted in the past can be very painful (because you have to admit that some ideas you held were wrong), but is also very valuable and important.9. The life of a writer really depends on accepting the fact that no matter where he goes or what he does he will always carry the marks of his origins.10. American writers live in a mobile society where nothing is fixed so they do not have a fixed society to describe.11. Every society is influenced and directed by unwritten laws, and by many things deeply felt and taken for granted by the people, though not openly spoken about.Unit71.With a clamor of bells that set the swallows soaring, the Festival of Summer came to the city Omelas.The loud ringing of the bells, which sent the frightenedswallows flying high, marked the beginning of the Festival of Summer in Omelas. 2. ..Their high calls rising like the swallows’ crossing flights over the music and singsing.The shouting of the children could be heard clearly above the music and singing like the calls of the swallows flying by overhead. 3. ..Exercised their restive horses before the race.The riders were putting the horses through some exercises because the horses were eager to start and stubbornly resisting the control of the riders.4.Given a description such as this one tends to make certain assumptions.After reading the above description the reader is likely to assume certain things.5. This is the treason of artist: a refusal to admit the banality of evil and the terrible boredom of pain.An artist betrays his trust when he does not admit that evil is nothing fresh nor novel and pain is very dull and uninteresting.6. They were nature, intelligent, passionate adults whose lives were not wretched.They were fully developed and intelligent grown-up people fullof intense feelings and they were not miserable people.7. Perhaps it would be best if you imagined it as your own fancy bids, assuming it will rise to the occasion.Perhaps it would be best if the reader pictures Omelas to himself as his imagination tells him, assuming his imagination will be equal to the task.8. The faint insistent sweetness of drooz may perfume the way of the city.The faint but compelling sweet scent of the drug drooz may fill the streets of the city.9.Perhaps it was born defective, or perhaps it has become imbecile through fear, malnutrition and neglect.Perhaps the child was mentally retarded because it was born so or perhaps it has become very foolish and stupid because of fear, poor nourishment and neglect.10. Its habits are too uncouth for it to respond to humane treatment. The habits of the child are so crude and uncultured that it will show no sign of improvement even if it is treated kindly and tenderly.11. Their tears at the bitter injustice dry when they begin to perceive the terrible justice of reality, and to accept it. They shed tears when they see how terribly unjust they havebeen to the child, but these tears dry up when they realize how just and fair though terrible reality was.12.the existence of the child and their knowledge of its existence is the reason that their buildings are grand and impressive,their music is moving,and their science has great intellectual depth.。

高级英语第三版第二册张汉熙1-6,8课课后答案

高级英语第三版第二册张汉熙1-6,8课课后答案

Lesson One1.And it is an activity only of humans.And conversation is an activity found only among human beings.2.Conversation is not for making a point.Conversation is not for persuading others to accept our ideas or points of views.3.In fact, the best conversationalists are those who are prepared to lose.In fact , people who are good at conversation will not argue to win or force others to accept his ideas.4.Bar friends are not deeply involved in each other’s lives.People who meet each other for a drink in the bar of a pub are not close friends for they are not deeply absorbed in each other’s private lives.5.....it could still go ignorantly on ...The conversation could go on without anybody knowing who was right or wrong.6.There are cattle in the fields ,but we sit down to beef.These animals are called cattle when they are alive and feed in the fields , but when we sit down at the table to eat, we call their meet beef.7.The new ruling class had built a cultural barrier against him by building their French against his ownlanguage.The new ruling class by using French instead of English made it hard for the English to accept or absorb the culture of the rulers.8.English had come royally into its own.English received proper recognition and was used by the King once more.9.The phrase has always been used a little pejoratively and even facetiously by the lower classes.The phrase , the King’s English ,has always been used disrespectfully and jokingly by the lower classes.(The working people often mock the proper and formal language of the educated people.)10.The rebellion against a cultural dominance is still there.As the early Saxon peasants , the working people still have a spirit of opposition to the cultural authority of the ruling class.11.There is always a great danger that “ words will harden into things for us. “There is always a great danger , as Carlyle put it , that we might forget that words are only symbols and take them for things they are supposed to represent.a.However intricate the ways in which animals communicate with each other, they do not indulge in anythingthat deserves the name of conversation.不管动物之间的交流方式多么复杂,它们不能参与到称得上是交谈的任何活动中。

张汉熙《高级英语(2)》(第3版)学习指南(Four Laws of Ecology (Part I

张汉熙《高级英语(2)》(第3版)学习指南(Four Laws of Ecology (Part I

Lesson 11 Four Laws of Ecology (Part I)一、词汇短语1. property [] n. a quality or power that a substance, plant, etc. has特性,性质,属性:A radio signal has both electrical and magnetic properties.无线电信号既具有电的特性也具有磁的特性。

2. environmental niche [] n. 生态位:While the environmental niche haddeclined, but the change was relatively flat from 2004.环境生态位呈下降趋势,但自2004年以来变化比较平缓。

3. immediate [] adj. next to, or very near to, a particular place(地方)邻近的,紧邻的:Only a handful had returned to work in theimmediate vicinity.只有少数几个人回到附近地区工作。

4. bewildering [] adj. confusing, especially because there aretoo many choices or things happening at the same time令人困惑的,使人糊涂的:Even more bewildering—God was not only silent, he alsocommemorated his silence for posterity.更令人困惑的是上帝不仅沉默,他还将自己的沉默成为子孙后裔的纪念。

5. intricate [] adj. containing many small parts or details that allwork or fit together 错综复杂的:One is that languages all share somedeep and intricate universals.其一是,所有语言都共享一些深层且复杂的共性。

Lesson 12 Four Laws of Ecology paragraph 2

Lesson 12    Four Laws of Ecology paragraph 2
eless, this result is extremely unlikely to happen. At issue: in question; in dispute 在争论中 Try out: to test or use experimentally 试验,
测验

Compatible: able to exist or perform in harmonious or agreeable combination with another or others 兼容的,可以并存的


In effect: in essence 事实上
There was an enormous variety of possible arrangements of component parts of a watch. Over the years, watchmakers have tried them out, have disgarded those that are inconsistent and harmful and retained the better ones ;the real situation is that the present watch mechanism is the result of a very restrictedly selected arrangement of a particular and excellent organization of the watch works.


“There is …… improve it.” Paraphrase: there is a limited possibility that the watch needed adjustment and that the random thrust of the pencil happened to make the precise change which was needed to make it better. 有可能这只手表本来就没有校正,而铅笔 的随意插入碰巧使它得到了所需的能提高 它性能的精准校正。

高级英语2第三版 张汉熙 课后答案

高级英语2第三版 张汉熙 课后答案

高级英语2第三版张汉熙课后答案Q ALESSON 1 PUB TALK AND KING’S ENGLISHQ B:1.2.3.Conversation is not for persuading others to accept our idea or point of view(4. In fact a person who really enjoys and is skilled at conversation will not argue to win or force others to accept his point of view(5.6.7. The conversation could go on without anybody knowing who wasright or wrong(III:1.No one knows how the conversation will go as it moves aimlessly and desultorily or as it becomes spirited and exciting.2.It is not a matter of interest if they are cross or in a bad temper.3.Bar friends, although they met each other frequently, did notdelve into each other's lives or the recesses of their thoughts and feelings.4.Suddenly a miraculous change in the conversation took place.5.The conversation suddenly became spirited and exciting.6.We ought to think as the Saxon peasants did at that time.7.The Elizabethan writers spread the English language far and wide.8.I have always had an eager interest in dictionaries.9.Otherwise one will tie up the conversation and will not let it go on freely.10.We would never have talked about Australia, or the languagebarrier in the time of the Norman Conquest.IV A:1. on the rocks: metaphor,comparing a marriage to a ship wrecked on the rocks2( get out of bed on the wrong side:be in a bad temper for the day (The meaning is perhaps derived from the expression “You got out of bed thewrong way”( It was an ancient superstition that it was unlucky to set the left foot on the ground first on getting out of bed() 3(on wings:metaphor,comparing conversation to a bird flying and soaring( It means the conversation soon became spirited and exciting(4( turn up one’s nose at:scorn;show scorn for5( into the shoes: metaphor(or more appropriately an idiomatic expression), think as if one were wearing the shoes of the Saxon peasant,i( e( as if one were a Saxon peasant6 .come into one’s own: receive what properly belongs to one,especiallyacclaim or recognition657(sit up at:(colloquial)become suddenly alert and take notice ofIV B:1(ignorant指缺乏知识,可以是就整体而言(如 an ignorant man),也可以是就某一具体方面或问题而言(如 ignorant of the reason of their quarrel对他们争吵的起因毫无所知);illiterate意为缺乏文化修养,尤指读写能力的缺乏; uneducated指没有受到正规的、系统的学校教育;unlearned意为学问不富(未必无知),既可指一无所长,又可指某一方面所知有限,如unlearned in science,意为对科学懂得有限,但对其他学科,如文学、哲学等,倒可能是很精通的。

高级英语2第三版张汉熙unit4逻辑谬误定义

高级英语2第三版张汉熙unit4逻辑谬误定义

高级英语2第三版张汉熙unit4逻辑谬误定义
摘要:
1.逻辑谬误的定义
2.逻辑谬误的分类
3.逻辑谬误在日常生活中的表现
4.如何避免逻辑谬误
5.逻辑谬误对思考和沟通的影响
正文:
逻辑谬误是指在推理过程中,由于逻辑关系不正确、概念混淆等原因导致的错误。

这种错误可能导致观点站不住脚,甚至误导他人。

逻辑谬误的种类繁多,包括以偏概全、非黑即白、诉诸情感等。

逻辑谬误在日常生活中的表现形式多种多样。

例如,有些人会在讨论问题时,故意使用一些模糊的概念,使对方陷入混乱。

还有些人可能因为自己的立场而曲解事实,用错误的前提推出错误的结论。

这些做法都是逻辑谬误的体现。

为了避免逻辑谬误,我们需要具备一定的逻辑思维能力,学会分辨正确的逻辑关系。

在表达观点时,要确保自己的论据充分、论证严密。

在听取他人意见时,要保持开放的心态,尽量理解对方的观点,避免过早下结论。

逻辑谬误对思考和沟通的影响不容忽视。

逻辑谬误可能导致误解加深,使问题变得复杂。

在某些情况下,逻辑谬误甚至可能导致恶劣的后果,如误导决策、引发冲突等。

因此,我们要时刻保持警惕,避免陷入逻辑谬误的陷阱。

总之,逻辑谬误是一种常见的思维错误,我们需要加强逻辑训练,提高自己的思维品质。

Four-Laws-of-Ecology中英对照

Four-Laws-of-Ecology中英对照

Four Laws of Ecology1 In broad outline,there are environmental cycles which govern the behavior of the three great global systems:the air,the water,and the soil.Within each of them live many thousands of different species of living things.Each species is suited to its particular environmental niche,and each,through its life processes,affects the physical and chemical properties of its immediate environment.1概括来讲,地球的三大系统—空气、水和土壤的行为由环境循环所决定。

每个系统中都生活着成千上万个不同物种的生物,每个物种都有与之相适宜的独特的环境生位,并且每一物种,在其整个生命历程中,都影响着它的周边环境的物理和化学特性。

2 Each living species is also linked to many others.These links are bewildering in their variety and marvelous in their intricate detail.An animal,such as a deer,may depend on plants for food;the plants depend on the action of soil bacteria for their nutrients;the bacteria in turn live on the organic wastes dropped by the animal on the soil.At the same time.the deer is food for the mountain lion. Insects may live on the juices of plants or gather pollen from their flowers.Other insects suck blood from animals.Bacteria may live on the internal tissues of animals and plants.Fungi degrade the bodies of dead plants and animals.All this,many times multiplied and organized species by species in intricate,precise relationships,makes up the vast network of life on the earth.2每个生物物种也与许多其他的物种相联系。

高级英语第三版2,张汉熙主编,Paraphrase.doc

高级英语第三版2,张汉熙主编,Paraphrase.doc

高级英语第三版2,张汉熙主编,Paraphrase.docUnit 2 Marrakech1. The burying-ground is merely a huge waste of hummockyearth, like a derelict building-lot.The burying-ground is just a huge piece of wasteland full of mounds of earth looking like a deserted and abandoned construction site.2. All colonial empires are in reality founded upon that fact. All the imperialists build up their empires by treating the people in the colonies like animals.3. They rise out of the earth, they sweat and starve for a few years, and then they sink back into the nameless mounds of the graveyard.They are born. Then for a few years they work, toil and starve. Finally they die and are buried in graves without a name, and nobody notices that they are dead.4.A carpenter sits cross-legged at a prehistoric lathe,turning chair-legs at lightning speed.Sitting with his legs crossed and using a very old-fashioned lathe, a carpenter quickly gives a round shape to the chair-legs he is making.5.Instantly, from the dark holes all round, there wasa frenzied rush of Jews.Immediately from their dark hole-like cells everywhere agreat number of Jews rushed out wildly excited.6.every one of them looks on a cigarette as a more or less impossible luxury.Every one of these poor Jews looked on the cigarette as a piece of luxury which they could not possibly afford.7. Still, a white skin is always fairly conspicuous.However, a white -skinned European is always quite noticeable.8. In a tropical landscape one’s eye takes in everything except the human beings.If you take a look at the natural scenery in a tropical region, you see everything but the human beings.9. No one would think of running cheap trips to the Distressed Areas.No one would think of organizing cheap trips for the tourists to visit the poor slum areas. 10.for nine-tenths of the people the reality of life is an endless, back-breaking struggle to wring a little food out of an eroded soil.Life is very hard for ninety percent of the people. With hard backbreaking toil they can produce a little food on the poor soil11She accepted her status as an old woman, that is to sayas a beast of burden.She took it for granted that as an old woman she was thelowest in the community, that she was only fit for doing heavy work like an animal12. People with brown skins are next door to invisible.People with brown skins are almost invisible13Their splendid bodies were hidden in reach-me-down khaki uniformsThe Senegalese soldiers were wearing ready-made khaki uniforms which hid their beautiful well-built bodies14. How long before they turn their guns in the other direction?How muchlonger before they turn their guns around andattack the colonialist rulers? 15Every white man there had this thought stowed somewhere or other in his mind.in Every white man, had this thought hidden somewhere or otherhis mindUnit31. And yet the samerevolutionary belief for which our forebears fought is still at issue around the globe...Our ancestors fought a revolutionary war to maintain that all men were created equal and God had given them certainunalienable rights which no state or ruler could take away from them. But today this issue has not yet been decided in many countries around the world.2. This much we pledge—and more.2. This much we promise to do and we promise to do more.3. 3. United, there is little we cannot do in a host of cooperative ventures.United and working together we can accomplish a lot of things in a great number of joint undertakings.4.our last best hope in an age where the instruments ofwar have far outpaced the instruments of peaceThe UN is our last and best hope of survival in an agewhere the instruments of war have far surpassed the instruments of peace.5.to enlarge the area in which its writ may run.We pledge to help the United Nations enlarge the area in whichits authority and mandate would continue to be in effect or in force.6. before science engulf thealldark powers ofhumanity indestructionplanned orunleashed byaccidentalself-destruction.Before the terrible forces of destruction, which atomic bombs can now release, wipe out mankind, which may be planned orbrought about by an accident.7.yet both racing to alter that uncertain balance of terror that stays the hand of mankind’s final war.Yet both groups of nations are trying to change as quickly as possible this uncertain balance of terrible military power which restrains each group from launching mankind's final war.8.So let us begin anew, remembering on both sides that civility is not a sign of weakness,So let us start once again and let us remember that being polite is not a sign of weakness.9. Let both sides seek to invoke the wonders of science insteadof its terrors.Let both sides try to call forth the wonderful things thatscience can do for mankind instead of the frightful thingsit can do.10.each generation of Americans has been summoned to give testimony to its national loyalty.Americans of every generation have been called upon to prove their loyalty totheircountry .11.With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love,Let history finally judge whether we have done our task welt or not, but our sure reward will be a good con-science for we will have worked sincerely and to the best of our ability.Let us lead the country we love , knowing our sure reward willbe a good conscience and history will finally judge whether we have done our task well or not.Unit51.The slightest mention of the decade brings nostalgic recollections to the middle aged.At the very mention of this post-war period, middle-aged people begin to think about it longingly.2.The rejection of Victorian gentility was, in any case, inevitable.In any case, an American could not avoid casting aside itsmiddle-class respectability and affected refinement.3. The war acted merely as a catalytic agent in this breakdown of the Victorian social structure,The war only helped to speed up the breakdown of the Victorian social structure.4 it was responsibilities tempted,inandretreatAmericabehindat least, an air ofto escape its naughty alcoholicsophisticationIn America at least, the young people were strongly inclined to shirk their responsibilities.They pretended to be worldly-wise, drinking and behaving naughtily.5.Prohibition afforded the young the additional opportunity of making their pleasures illicit,The young people found greater pleasure in their drinking because Prohibition,by making drinking unlawful added a sense of adventure.6our young men began to enlist under foreign flags.Our young men joined the armies of foreign countries to fight in the war.7 they“wanted to get into the fun before the whole thingturned belly up”.The young people wanted to take part in the glorious ad-venture before the whole war ended. 8 .they had outgrown towns and familiesThese young people could no longer adapt themselves to livesin their home towns or their families.9 the returning veteran also had to face the hypocriticaldo-goodism of Prohibition,The returning veteran also had to face Prohibition which the lawmakers hypocritically assumed would do good to the people.10. Something in the tension-ridden youth of America had to “give ”very tense, Something in the youth of America, who werealreadyhad to break down.11 it was only natural that hopeful young writers, their mindsand pens inflamed against war, Babbittry, and “ Puritanical ” gentility, should flock to the traditionalartistic centerIt was only natural that hopeful young writers whose mindsand writings were filled with violent anger against war, Babbitry, and "Puritanical" gentility, should come in great numbers to live in Greenwich Village, the traditional artistic centre.12. Each town had its ”fast ”set which prided itself on its unconventionality,Each town was proud that it had a group of wild, recklesspeople, who lived unconventional lives.Unit81. ....below the noisy arguments , the abuse and the quarrels , there is a reservoir of instinctive fellow-feeling...The English people may hotly argue and abuse and quarrel witheach other , but there still exists a lot of natural sympathetic feelingsfor each other in their hearts.2. ....at heart they would like to take a whip to the wholeidle troublesome mob of them.What the wealthy employers would really like to do is to whip all the workers whom they regard as lazy and troublesome.3. ...there are not many of these men , either on the board orthe shop floor...There are not many snarling shop stewards in theworkshop,nor are there many cruel wealthy employers on the board of directors.4. It demands bigness ,and they are suspicious of bigness.The contemporary world demandsthat everything should be done on a big scale and the English do not trust bigness.5.Against this , at least superficially ,Englishnessseems a poor shadowy show...At least on the surface ,when Englishness is put against the power and success of Admass , Englishness seems to put upa rather poor performance.6. ...while Englishness is not hostile to change,it is deeply suspicious of change for change? s sake...Englishness is not against change, but it believes thatchanging just for change? s sake and not other useful purposes is very wrong and harmful. 7.T o put cars and motorways before houses seems to Englishness a communal imbecility.To regard cars and motorways as more important than housesseems to Englishness a public stupidity.8. I must add that while Englishness can still fight on ,Admass could be winning.I must further say that while Englishness can go on fighting,there is a great possibility for Admass to win.9.It must have some moral capital to draw upon,and soonit may be asking for an overdraft.Englishness draws its strength from a reservoir of strongmoral and ethical principles ,and soon it may be asking for strength which this reservoir of principles cannot provide.10. They probably believe ,as I do , that theAdmass”GoodLife ”is a fraud on all counts.There people probably beli eve ,as I do,that the “Good Life ”promised by Admass is false and dishonest in all respects.11....he will not even find much satisfaction in this scrounging messy existence, which does nothing for a man? s self-respect.He will not even find much satisfaction in this untidy anddisordered life where he manages to live as a parasite by sponging on people. This kind of life does not help a person to build up any self-respect.12.To them the House of Commonsis a remote squabbling-shop. These people consider the House of Commonsas a place rather far away from them where some people are always quarreling and arguing over some small matters.13...heavy hands can fall on the shoulders that have beenshrugging away politics.They were very wrong to ignore politics for they can now suddenly and for no reason be arrested and thrown into prison. Unit101.the fate of an American is complicated and hard to understand.2.They were as uneasy and uncomfortable in Europe as I was.3. American writers, black and white, were both trying to find their own special individualities.4.I don't think I could have accepted in America my black status without feeling ashamed.5. It is easier in Europe for people of different social groups and occupations to intermingle and have social contact than in America.6.In Europe a good waiter and a good actor are equally proudof their social status and functions in society. They are notjealous of each other and do not live in fear of losing their status.7. I was born in NewYork but have lived only in some small areas of the city8. This process of reconsidering many things that one had taken for granted in the past can be very painful (because you haveto admit that some ideas you held were wrong), but is also very valuable and important.9. The life of a writer really depends on accepting the factthat no matter where he goes or what he does he will always carry the marks of his origins.10.American writers live in a mobile society where nothingis fixed so they do not have a fixed society to describe.11.Every society is influenced and directed by unwritten laws, and by many things deeply felt and taken for granted by the people, though not openly spoken about.Unit71.With a clamor of bells that set the swallows soaring, theFestival of Summer came to the city Omelas.The loud ringing of the bells,which sent the frightenedswallows flying high, marked the beginning of the Festival of Summer in Omelas. 2. ..Their high calls rising like the swallows ’ crossing flights over the music and singsing.The shouting of the children could be heard clearly above the music and singing like the calls of the swallows flying by overhead. 3. ..Exercised their restive horses before therace.The riders were putting the horses through some exercises because the horses were eager to start and stubbornlyresisting the control of the riders.4.Given a description such as this one tends to make certain assumptions.After reading the above description the reader is likely toassume certain things.5.This is the treason of artist: a refusal to admit thebanality of evil and the terrible boredom of pain.An artist betrays his trust when he does not admit that evil is nothing fresh nor novel and pain is very dull and uninteresting.6.They were nature, intelligent, passionate adults whoselives were not wretched.They were fully developed and intelligent grown-up people fullof intense feelings and they were not miserable people.7.Perhaps it would be best if you imagined it as yourown fancy bids, assuming it will rise to the occasion.Perhaps it would be best if the reader pictures Omelas tohimself as his imagination tells him, assuming his imagination will be equal to the task.8. The faint insistent sweetness of drooz may perfume the way of the city.The faint but compelling sweet scent of the drug drooz may fillthe streets of the city.9.Perhaps it was born defective, or perhaps it hasbecome imbecile through fear, malnutrition and neglect.Perhaps the child was mentally retarded because it was born so or perhaps it has become very foolish and stupid because of fear, poor nourishment and neglect.10. Its habits are too uncouth for it to respond to humanetreatment.The habits of the child are so crude and uncultured that it will show no sign of improvement even if it is treated kindly and tenderly.11. Their tears at the bitter injustice dry when they beginto perceive the terrible justice of reality,and to accept it. They shed tears when they see how terribly unjust they have been to the child, but these tears dry up when they realize howjust and fair though terrible reality was.12.the existence of the child and their knowledge of itsexistence is the reason that their buildings are grand andimpressive,their music is moving,and their science has great intellectual depth.。

张汉熙《高级英语(2)》(第3版重排版)学习指南【词汇短语+课文精解+全文翻译+练习答案】

张汉熙《高级英语(2)》(第3版重排版)学习指南【词汇短语+课文精解+全文翻译+练习答案】

张汉熙《高级英语(2)》(第3版重排版)学习指南【词汇短语+课文精解+全文翻译+练习答案】目录Lesson 1 Pub Talk and the King’s English 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 2 Marrakech 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 3 Inaugural Address (January 20, 1961) 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 4 Love Is a Fallacy 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 5 The Sad Young Men 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 6 Loving and Hating New York 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 7 The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas (Excerpts) 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 8 The Future of the English 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 9 The Loons 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 10 The Discovery of What It Means to Be an American 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 11 Four Laws of Ecology (Part I) 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 12 Four Laws of Ecology (Part Ⅱ) 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 13 The Mansion: A Subprime Parable (Excerpts) 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 14 Faustian Economics 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案Lesson 15 Disappearing Through the Skylight 一、词汇短语 二、课文精解 三、文体修辞 四、全文翻译 五、练习答案弘博学习网————各类考试资料全收录内容简介本书是《高级英语(2)》(第3版重排版)的学习辅导用书,按照原教材的课次进行编写,每单元涉及词汇短语、课文精解、单元语法、全文翻译以及练习答案等内容。

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Para.2 The analogy of watch
What does the term “R & D” mean? What role does it play in developing
the best watches? restricted selection Out of adjustment: out of order Translate: (para.2)
Para. 12 What’s the embarrassing fact about the final generalizations? Why are they widely held by many people without scientific analysis or
professional authorization? enmesh- trap, entangle, entrap Interplay- interact, intermesh Incisive-acute, penetrating, sharp, intelligent, bright
Para.7 further explanation by introducing enzyme capable of breaking down the substances the grave consequence of absence of degradative enzyme in a new maห้องสมุดไป่ตู้made organic substance Translate line 91-94 (para.7)
harmful. Translate: line 71-73
这个原因应归结于这样一个事实,即在生物体中实际发现的化学物质的
多样性,要比可能有的多样性受到更为广泛的限制。 Synthesize: 合成 Carbon chains of various lengths 含有偶数个碳链长度, 含有奇数个碳链长度 Found wanting: found failing, short of standards
system? x-irradiation: x- radiation, exposure to X-rays Mutation: a significant and basic alteration; change Frequency of mutation Albeit: even though, conceding the fact that
Para.9 How does the author begin this section? By explaining the origin of “free lunch” law.
Translate lines 113-115
根据我的经验,这一概念已被证明能十分清晰地解释环境问题。因此我借
Para.13 What’s the main idea of Para. 13? Why does the author say this literary heritage has not been enough to save
us from ecological disaster? condone- make allowance for 宽宥, forgive, overlook the assault on –the actions that cause damage to the environment avid- enthusiastic, zealous ardent, eager, greedy, insatiable, intense elucidate-explain in detail, annotate, clarify, demonstrate, expound, illustrate be taken unaware- be taken aback, be greatly surprised, be unprepared
生态学的第三条法则认为,人为引入的如果不是天然产生的,而是人工
制造的有机化合物,并且活跃在一种生命系统中,这一做法很可能是有 害的。
Para.6 What’s the logic relationship between para.6 and 5? Explaining why artificial introduction of an organic compound…is
Translation line-58-62 Para. 3 这样,现存的生物或者现有的自然生态系统的各种构成都经过了严格的筛
选,淘汰了不利的部分。从这个你上来说,其组成部分都是最佳的、优选 的,而任何新加入的成分可能都不如现有的组成成分。 Disadvantageous components Heavily screened
Para.4 What’s the topic sentence? How does the author develop it? What does the author mean when saying “In effect there are some 2 or 3
billion years of “R & D” behind every ling thing”? How has “R & D” carried on in nature? Produced- to try out the suitability of some random genetic change- if damaged- to kill it- accumulated the compatible– screened out A staggering number of : an overwhelming number of Staggering, unbelievable shocking, unsteady walking
Para.5 Topic sentence+ explanation (quoting a myth- correcting it with
the law) What does the third law suggest about the artificial introduction of an organic compound that does not occur in nature? 有机化合物 organic compounds Translate line 67-70
物质接触并影响大量我们观察不到的物质的时候,这般慎重当然是不可 能做到的 ,而这正是我们对待洗涤剂、杀虫剂、灭草剂的方式。
由此而经常产生的灾难性后果为“自然最了解情况”这一论断加强了说
服力.
The Fourth Law of Ecology: There Is No Such Thing as a Free Lunch
事实上,手表现有的装置体现的是对大量的有可能被选用的组件经过了
严格的挑选,才形成了现在的特有结构。
对手表进行任何随意的改变都可能导致很大程度上的系统紊乱和破坏,
因为所有这些改变都是在以往的手表制造经历中试验过后被摈弃了的东 西。 “手表工匠最懂手表” 可以说是手表业的行规。
Para.3 What’s the close, and very meaningful analogy in biological
坦率地说,生态的第三条法则认为自然体系中任何重大的人为变动都有
可能对系统造成伤害。
这是一个相当极端的观点,然而我相信,在适当的背景下,它还是有很
多可取之处的。
Para.2-3 What’s the main idea of the two paragraphs? What’s their common key word?
The story goes on in this vein. 按照这个脉络发展 In this vein: in this fashion
Para.10 What’s the topic sentence? The function and the contents of the 4th law of ecology. Para.11 A Transitive paragraph: A summary of the above and an introduction to a new idea generalization: law, principle 普遍法则 一套综合性普遍法则
每一个生物有机体产生一种有机物质的同时,在自然界某处一定存在一种
能够分解那种物质的酶,这是自然生态系统化学反应的一个突出事实。
事实上,除非为降解提供某种酶,从而使再循环得以实施,任何有机物都
无法合成。 that departs significantly from…大相径庭,大大偏离
Para.8 Conclusion The author ends the third law by giving advice: prudently and carefully
用了这一概念,它原本是用于经济学的。 illuminating: enlightening, lighting up, make clear, illustrating, revealing potentate: a powerful ruler on pain of death: under pain of death , a set phrase, anyone who’s against it should die 违者处死 tome: a great volume 巨著
treat all the man- made organic chemicals, regarding them as potentially detrimental. 在操作层面上 具有生物活性的 Disseminated [di’ se mi nei tid] distributed, spread 洗涤剂、杀虫剂、除草剂 Translate Para.8
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