UNIT 8听力原文
新视野大学英语视听说第4册听力原文及答案Unit8
Uint8II. Basic Listening Practice1.ScriptM:Scentists claim the world population has 99.5% of the same DNA. W: But this doesn’t tell us there is no such thing as race.Q: What is true of the DNA of difference races?2.ScriptW: With the advent of the genetic map we know where everything is, but do we know where to go with it?M: Your map seems to differ largely from my geographical map!Q: What does the man imply?3.ScriptM: As you know, it has taken millions of years of evolution and natural selection to get us where we are today.W: Yes, but now that we have genetic engineering, we seem to have decided that we want to be God.Q: What does the woman imply?4.ScriptM: I think the research into cloning will lead us into dangers, filling us with false hopes of perfection.W: It’s too late to turn back the clock. We’ll just have to depend on common sense to solve uncommon problems.Q: What does the woman mean?5.ScriptW: In America, many prisoners are having their cases reviewed, and some have even been freed through DNA testing.M: Except for the ones whose death sentence has already been carried out.Q: What can we learn about DNA testing from the dialog?Keys: 1.B 2.C 3.D 4.A 5.CIII. Listening InTask 1: Stem Cell ResearchScriptGregory: The Republican party in America is opposing stem cell research.I find ithard to believe that in this day and age, someone would do that. Lillian: Stem cell research sounds pretty impressi ve, I’ll admit. But just what is it?Gregory: Well, a stem cell is a special type of cell. It is a general cell that, when itdevides, can become any specific type of cell.Lillian: You mean, a stem cell can become a heart cell? Or a brain or a kidney cell?Gregory: That’s about it. Stem cells are a part of the body’smaintenance and repairsystem. When they divide, they can become any cell type. Lillian: I guess there would be some tremendous medical advantages in that sort ofresearch.Gregory: You’ve said a mouthful. Recently, scientists were able to help a man wholost a jawbone for cancer. They recreated bone material for hisjaw from stem cells. What it means is that since the new bone wascreated out of the person’s own cells, there was no problemwith rejection because the DNA was the same.Lillian: I bet the person was delighted. Why would anyone oppose that sort of research? It would seem to have endless potential tobenefit the human race.Gregory: I agree, but there are people who think we should not interfere with nature and manipulate “what is natural”.Lillian: It’s easier to hold such a narrow view if you’re not in a position to need the benefits of the research. If you’re missing a jawbonebecause of cancer, you probably support the research.1.What is the passage mainly about?2.Who is against stem cell research?3.What is special about a stem cell?4.When can a stem cell become another cell type?5.According to the passage, why do some people oppose stem cellresearch?Keys: 1.B 2.A 3.A 4.A 5.DTask 2: The Improvement of RiceScriptScientists now know a lot more about a grain that people have eaten for ten thousand years. (S1) Research teams around the world have completed a map of the (S2) genes of rices. The findings appeared last week in the (S3) journal Nature.The aim is to speed up the improvement of rice. The scientists (S4) warn that the kinds of rice plants used now have reached the limit of their (S5) productivity. Yet world rice production must (S6) grow by an estimated 30 percent in the next twenty to meet demand. By 2025, as many as 4.6 billion people will depend on rice for (S7) survival. There is a lot of pressure on breeders to improve the crop, and the rice genome is a valuable tool to do that. (S8) Plant breeders have already used preliminary information from the rice genome to create experimental strains of rice that better resist cold and pests.The researchers also say rice is an excellent choice for genetic mapping and engineering. Rice genes have only about 390 million chemical bases.That maight sound like a lot. But other major food grains have thousands of millions. (S9) The new map could better explain more than just rice. Rice shares a common ancestor with other cereal crops. Because rice is the first cereal crop to be fully analyzed, researchers expect that sufficient knowledge of its genetic information will reveal the heredity of more complex grains, including corn, wheat and barley.(S10) While significant progress has been made in the analysis of the rice genome, the mapping of human genes is also making headway. When scientists can identify and manipulate genes that cause certain diseases, mankind will cure them easily. The human genetic map may help us control a person’s height, weight, appearance and even length of life.Task3: The First Cloned CatScriptIn the age-old battle of cats and dogs, score one for the cats. Researchers at Texas A&M University recently announced that they have successfully cloned a cat name Rainbow—the first pet ever cloned—after several years of unsuccessful efforts to clone a dog name Missy.The ork, financed by a company hoping to provide pet-cloning services to wealthy owners, adds cats to a growing list of successfully cloned animals that includes pigs, sheep, cattle and mice.The success demonstrates cloning is a technology that could betransferred to other animal families as well. The accomplishment may provide new tools for studying diseases such as cats’ AIDS, a valuable research model for AIDS in humans.Research into animal cloning remains an important scientific alternative until the issue of human cloning is settled. And that seems unlikly in the immediate future, for it involves religious and moral principles. There are, for example, groups that insist no one should be allowed to take on the role of God the Creator.To create cloned cat embryos for the experiment, researchers transferred DNA from adult cat cells into egg cells stripped of their own genetic information. Out of 82 attempts with cloned embryos, one attempt resulted in a failed pregnancy, and another yielded a kitten named CC, delivered from a surrogate mother on December 22. The kitten’s name refers to “Carbon Copy” and “Copycat”, the name of the cloning project.Cloning attempts with dogs have proven unsuccessful in part because dogs’reproductive cycles are more complicated.The technique may also work with endangered cats such as the African wildcat, fishing cat and blackfooted cat.Ironically, the increased knowledge of cat reproduction may best be suited for developing cat contraceptives to control the U.S. cat population.1.Which of the following would be the best title for the passage?1.What did researchers at Texas A&M University recently announce?2.Which animals are NOT mentioned in the passage as having beencloned?3.According to the passage, why is human cloning unlikely to happen inthe near future?4.What does the passage say about the pregnancy and birth in catcloning?Keys: 1.A 2.B 3.C 4.B 5.CIV. Speaking OutMODEL 1 Why are people protesting againstgenetically modified foods?Susan:With so many people suffering from malnutrition around the world,why are people protesting against genetically modified foods?Chris: Some people are protesting about genetically modified foods, but even more people are protesting the fact that processed foods containing these ingredients aren’t labeled.Susan: But why should they be labeled?Chris: Not everyone is sure that genetically modified foods are safe. They want to be certain that biotech foods have the sme composition as organic foods.Susan: But there are more urgent problems in this world. Many people are dying of starvation.Chris: But those who aren’t starving may want genetically modified foods to be labeled so they know what foods they should andd shouldn’t eat.Susan: Y ou know, I heard of a genetically modified fish that grew to be ten times its normal size.Chris: That sure sounds abnormal.Susan: Yeah, it does sound a bit strange , but that fish could feed ten times as many people.Chris: You’re right; genetically modified food might help solve world hunger. But I think we have a right to know what we are eating.MODEL2 Do you think the cloning of humansshould be forbidden by law?ScriptSusan: After the cloning of Dolly the sheep, I think human cloning is next.John: Whoa. I have some reservations about it. There are stll many scientific problemsto solve before human cloning starts.Susan: There’s an easier way. The Clonaid Company says they’vecloned humans.John: Oh, my God! These guys claim aliens from another planet taught them humancloning.Susan: A woman gave them half a million dollars to clone her dead daughter.John: Clearly that woman doesn’t know much about cloning. How risky it is!Susan: I know it’s inefficient. It took 276 tries to produce Dolly. But why is it risky?John: Cloned animals grow abnormally large and age unnaturally fast. Susan: In other words, that woman may not be happy with her cloned daughter.John: Then there are the emotions. No one knows if cloning damages the mind.Susan: Do you think the cloning of humans should be forbidden by law? John: To my mind, the cloning of human organs shouldn’t be prohabited. It may helpsolve medical problems.Susan: I see your point: cloning should be regulated if it’s to benefit humanity.MODEL3 Is it interfering with nature?ScriptNora: Some religious groups are opposed to genetic research. They believe it’s interfering with nature.John: I know. But nature can be pretty hard-nosed too, so we often need to interfere with her—we build dams to control flooding.Nora: There’re many diseases that are a part of nature, and they cause people a great deal of misery: cancer and diabetes, for example. John: A better understanding of the genetic code that controls our body would be a great help in curing many diseases.Nora: The project to map the human genetic code…what’s that called? John: The genome project. As you say, it has tremendous promise to make our lives better—just in the ability to identify and correct genetically-caused diseases like Alzheimer’s.Nora: Some diseases like cancer are also believed to have a genetic switch.John: That’s right, and once researchers identify the switch, perhaps they can turn o ff cancer or Alzheimer’s.Nora: People are also concerned that science will enable us to determine such qualities as intelligence and height.John: You know it’s going to happen—it’s just a matter of when. Nora: Imagine if everyone was a combination of Yao Ming and AlbertEinstein.John: But what if they get it wrong, and you wind up with Yao Ming’s knowledge of nuclear physics and Albert Einstein’s height? Nora: All those religious groups would say that it served you right.Now Your TurnTask 1SAMPLE DIALOGJane: Some countries are suffering from crop failure and famine, but why do they refuse genetically modified crops and foods?Bob: And many Europeans insist that processed foods containing GM ingredients belabeled.Jane: Why should they be labeled?Bob: Not everyone is sure that genetically modified foods are safe. They want to certain that biotech foods have the same composition as traditional foods.Jane: But there are more urgent problems in this world. Many people are dying of famine.Bob: But th ose who aren’t hungry may want all genetically modified products to be labeled so they know exactly what they’re eating. Jane: You know, I’ve heard of a GM fish that was ten times larger than anormal fish.Bob: That really sounds abnormal.Jane: Some famine-stricken people are afraid GM crops will overpower and eliminate their native crops.Bob: Sounds alarming.Jane: Yeah, but GM foods can feed many people.Bob: You’re right; they could solve the problem of starvation in the world. But I think we have a right to know what we are eating. GM food should be labeled.V. Let’s TalkScriptCorrespondent: In the U.S. what percentage of people support biotech crops? And do those who support biotech crops also eatbiotech foods? What percentage of food on the markethas genetically modified ingredients?Professor: U.S. consumers have been exposed to a very effective anti-biotechnology propaganda campaign for the last fewyears, but according to polls, over 70% supportbiotechnology. For example, in a recent referendum inOregon, voters rejected a proposal to require speciallabels on all products containing biotech ingredients byan overwhelming 73% to 27%. That’s probably becauseconsumers know that we have an effective administrativesystem. Many may also know that 70-80% of theprocessed food products on supermarket shelves containone or more ingredients from biotech crops. AllAmericans eat biotech foods unless they deliberately seekout products that are labeled otherwise. Evidencesuggests that this is less than 5% of consumers. Correspondent: Chinese scientists have used biotechnology to create a new type of tomato, which contains the vaccine againsthepatitis B. What’s your take on this?Professor: It’s a great example of how this technology can be use d to save lives, ease pain and suffering and improve thehuman condition. How can anyone be opposed to that?My only hope is that the clinical trials of this new tomatogo well, and that it is quickly delivered to health-careproviders who will use it to vaccinate people againsthepatitis. By the way, please note that I do think that suchnew pharmaceutical foods need to be handled asmedicines by professionals and not as conventional foods.You will never see these tomatoes in the supermarket. In asense, the tomato plant is just being used to manufacturea vaccine in a very safe and economical manner.VI. Further Listening and SpeakingTask1: Confident enough to control your fate? ScriptSome people are born with the belief that they are masters of their own lives. Others feel they are at the mercy of fate. New research shows that part of those feelings are in the genes.Psychologists have long known that people confident in their ability to control their fates are more likely to adjust well to growing old than those who feel they drift on the currents of fate.Two researchers who questioned hundreds of Swedish twins report that such confidence, or lack of it, is partly genetic and partly drawn from experience.They also found that the belief in blind luck—a conviction that chance plays a big role in life—is something learned in life and has nothing to do with heredity.The research was conducted by Nancy Pedersen, a professor of psychology at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. The results were recently published in the United States in the Journal ofGerontology.People who are confident of their ability to control their lives have an “internal locus of control”, and have a better chance of being well adjusted in their old age, said Pedersen. An “external locus of control”,believing that outside fo rces determine the course of life, has been linked to depression in latter years, she said.“We are trying to understand what makes people different. What makes some people age slowly and others have a more difficult time?” she said.The study showed that while people have an inborn tendency toward independence and self-confidence, about 70 percent of this personality trait is affected by a person’s environment and lifetime experiences. Pedersen’s studies, with various collaborators, investigate the aging process by comparing sets of twins, most of whom were separated at an early age.The subjects were drawn from a list first compiled about 30 years ago, registering all twins born in Sweden since 1886. The complete list, which was extended in 1971, has 95,000 sets of twins.1.Which of the following is concerned with blind luck?2.Which of the following is related to an external locus of control?3.According to the passage, what is true of one’s inborn tendencytowards self-confidence?4.What subjects were mostly us ed in Pedersen’s studies?5.What is the main idea of the passage?Keys: 1.A 2.B 3.C 4.C 5.DTask 2: Is it moral to clone humans?ScriptLaura: Did you hear about that peculiar cult that claimed to have created the world’s first human clone?Ian: Yeah, I did! They also said that it was aliens that created life on earth over 25,000 years ago. What are they on?Laura: I know! It was so obviously just part of an elaborate hoax to bring publicity to their crazy movement. But I don’t think the truth can be far off. Scientists have been working on it for years.Ian: Sure, but most scientists are working on cloning human cells or body parts that can be used to repair or replace damaged organs.Not complete human beings! That’s just science fiction! Laura: Well, the science may seem to be very advanced, but the idea is not a new one. In A Journey to the West, Sun Wu-kung, the Monkey King, can clone himself from the hairs on his head. He just plucks a few hairs, chews them a bit, and when he spits them out, they change into replicas of him!Ian: Really? Now that would be cool! You could send your clone toschool while you went to the cinema, and then it could do your homework! Wow! Now that I think of it, it would be kind of fun to have a clone!Laura: You woul d say that! Don’t you think it’s slightly immoral? I mean, it’s just like having a slave. Doesn’t the clone deserve a life of his own?Ian: Sure, but human beings must learn to strike a balance between the welfare of a patient and of a clone.Keys: 1.T 2.T 3.F 4.F 5.TTask3: A Drunkard’s ArgumentScriptHere’s drunkard’s argument in favor of heavy drinking.We would learn more about human bihavior if we paid closer attention to the laws at work in the animal kingdom.“Only the fittest survive” is a law that is apparent everywhere in the natural world. Human beings could certainly benefit from a close study of how this law operates among, for example, the wild buffalo.A herd of buffalo moves only as fast as the slowest buffalo. When the herd is hunted, it is the slowest and weakest animals at the back that are killed first. This is natural selection, and it is good for the herd. The general speed and health of the group keeps improving with regularkilling of the weaker memebers.The same process of survival of the fittest is to be observed by looking closely at the human brain, which can operate only as fast as the slowest brain cells. Excessive consumption of alcohol, as we all know, kills brain cells. Just like the less vigorous buffalo at the back of the herd, the weakest and slowest brain cells are destroyed first.In this way the principles of natural selection become evident. Regular consumption of large amounts of beer eliminates the weaker brain cells, making the brain a faster and more efficient machine. It is therefore not suprising that one also feels smarter after drinking several glasses of beer.News ReportBioinformaticsScriptIt’s a complex name for a complex subject. Bioinformatics is the key to figuring out the wealth of information in the human genome project. Researchers have nearly mapped out all of the 30,000 genes that make up human DNA, but making sense of useful data is not easy.The company Double Twist is a pioneer in the business of bioinformatics.[SOUND BITE]Double Twist works mainly with information that is also available to the public,sifting through data to find what may help link a biological problem like cancer, to its possible cure.[SOUND BITE]The company then sells software and data to pharmaceutical companies, biotech companies, and academic institutions, which use them in their work. This provides a solution to help people better understand data from the human genome project.[SOUND BITE]Bioinformatics speeds up drug development and provides more accurate research.[SOUND BITE]Human Genome Sciences takes the process one step further. It uses bioinformatics to develop drugs using its own genomic information.[SOUND BITE]Right now, Human Genome Sciences has four new drugs being tested that are the results of genomic research. Bioinformatics systems developed within the company played an important role in discovering these drugs.[SOUND BITE]Bioinformatics can also bring much quicker returns for investors.[SOUND BITE]-------------精选文档-----------------Even though its role is crucial, bioinformatics if only a small part of the overall$305 billion biotech sector, accounting for only about $2.23 billion.But some investors believe that bioinformatics has great potential.[SOUND BITE]So unless drug companies start developing their own bioinformatics systems or partner with companies that can provide them, they may get left behind in the race to discover new drugs.可编辑。
新编大学英语(浙大 第三版 4)视听说教程 unit8听力原文及答案
Part 1Listening 1Ex1: 1) rocks 2) Yes 3) stones 4) not 5)sand 6) No 7) waterEx2:1) time management business students 2) wide-mouthed produce at a time 3) dumped work themselves down 4) grabbed filled to the top illustration5)eager beaver how full your schedule is fit some more things 6) get them in at all Script:One day an expert on the subject of time management was speaking to a group of business students and, to stress a point, used an illustration I'm sure those students will never forget. After I share it with you, you'll never forget it either.As this man stood in front of the group of high-powered overachievers, he said, "Ok, time for a quiz." He pulled out a large, wide-mouthed jar and set it on a table in front of him. Then he produced about a dozen fist-sized rocks and carefully placed them, one at a time, into the jar.When the jar was filled to the top and no more rocks would fit inside, he asked, "Is this jar full?"Everyone in the class said, "Yes."Then he said, "Really?" He reached under the table and pulled out a bag of little stones. Then he dumped some of them in and shook the jar causing the little stones to work themselves down into the spaces between the big rocks.Then he smiled and asked the group once more, "Is the jar full?" By this time the class was onto him. "Probably not," one of them answered. "Good!" he replied. And he reached under the table and brought out a bag of sand. He started dumping the sand in and it went into all the spaces left between the rocks and the little stones. Once more he asked the question, "Is this jar full?""No!" the class shouted. Once again he said, "Good!" Then he grabbed a bottle of water and began to pour it in until the jar was filled to the top. Then he looked up at the class and asked, "What is the point of this illustration?"One eager beaver raised his hand and said, "The point is, no matter how full your schedule is, if you try really hard, you can always fit some more things into it!""No," the speaker replied, "that's not the point. The truth this illustration teaches us is: If you don't put the big rocks in first, you'll never get them in at all."Listening 2Ex1: B C A B D C B B A DEx2: F T F F TScripts:Throughout the day, energy rises and falls. At its peak, you're likely to perform 30 to 40 percent faster and more accurately, than at its lowest, says Lynne Lamberg. So by synchronizing your schedule with your natural energy supply ,it will help you use it more efficiently.She also says, alertness is highest and concentration the most between 9a.m. and early afternoon—the best time to crunch numbers or write a report. You should dive into the hardest tasks first, and your extend high-energy mornings with a late lunch. Many people are still going strong until 1 or 2 p.m., so why break the momentum?During mid-afternoon, you might attend to some routine tasks, such as paying bills or sorting through a pile of junk mail. Work that involves physical activity, such as running down the hall tophotocopy a memo, or talking to other people (that includes phone calls)—will keep your energy level from dropping way down.When full alertness returns—around 4 p.m.—you might do a few small projects that give you a feeling of satisfaction and accomplishment. Send off an important letter. Or plan and prioritize for the next day.The dark side of your cycle is equally important: For daylong energy we need a good night's sleep. On average, Americans get about seven-and-one-half hours, although some need more and others get by on less. We 're getting enough sleep if we wake up without the help of an alarm clock and don't feel the urge to nap during the day.Listening 3Ex1: 1) London 2) What a wonderful Life 3) Globe 4) changes developmentsnatural resources cities nuclear warEx2: T F T T FScript:(Do you feel depressed when you read newspapers? Does the news always seem bad? To many people it does, but not to Alexander Dubois, a French scientist living in London. Unlike many scientists, he believes that the world will be a better place in the future. His book, What a Wonderful Life, will be on sale, and Globe sent Reporter Catherine Brown to talk to him. Here is part of their conversation.)Catherine Brown: What changes will we see in the next few years?Alexander Dubois: Today, work is the most important part of many people's lives.In the future, machines will do much of our work. This meansthat we'll have more time to think about how to live happily.Catherine Brown: What developments will there be in medical science?Alexander Dubois: The day will come when we will eliminate killer diseases suchas diphtheria and typhoid. Also, there will be fewer babiesborn with birth defects because doctors will be able to operateon children before they are born.Catherine Brown: And what about natural resources? Will there be an adequatesupply of coal, oil and gas?Alexander Dubois: Of course! Research shows that there are sufficient resourcesfor the next 20,000 years within one kilometer of the earth'ssurface.Catherine Brown: Will cities continue to grow and become more and moreovercrowded?Alexander Dubois: No, they won't. People will return to smaller communitieswhere they can really know their neighbors and participate incommunity life.Catherine Brown: Aren't you worried about the possibility of nuclear war?Alexander Dubois: Yes, I am. I expect there will be a nuclear war in the future,but it won't end our world. Life will continue.Statements:1. Alexander Dubois holds an optimistic point of view for the world's future.2. Alexander Dubois believes that, people's jobs will play the most important part in their lives.3. Alexander Dubois thinks that,6 some defects in babies will be treated before birth.4. Alexander Dubois predicts that someday some people will move from big cities to smallercommunities.5. Alexander Dubois believes that a nuclear war can be the end of the world.Listening 4Ex1: e c b f a dEx2:1)biased 2) unaware 3) success 4) fun 5)control 6) environment7) flexibility 8)optimal 9)wings 10)exploreScripts:Professor Zimbardo: Time perspectives are easy to identify when people are making decisions. For some people, it’s only about what is in the immediate situation, what other people are doing, and what they are feeling. And those people, when they make their decision in that form, we’re going to call “present-oriented”, because their focus is what is now.Student A: Then maybe , I’m not ”present-oriented”. It seems what I care most is always what will be in the future.Professor Zimbardo: Yes. You might be among those ”future-oriented”. There focus is always about anticipated consequences. OK, anybody here who is neither “present-oriented”nor “future-oriented”?Student B: Myself. I think neither of your description about this two time perspectives fits me well.Professor Zimbardo: Then you mast belong to the third type. We call them “pat-oriented”because they focus on what was. For them, both the present and the future are irrelevant. Thire decisions are based on past memories.Student B: That’s true, but sometimes, I just fell my time perspectives are a mixture. Professor Zimbardo: That’s very likely the case. There are actually six time perspectives: past-positive or past-negative; present-hedonistic or present-fatalist: future-oriented or transcendental future, as a matter of fact, these six time perspectives might coexist in a person. But they are biased in different situations. Either of them may rise to be the dominating one that influences us to make decisions. But we’re totally unaware.Student A: But do those perspectives show bias in their influence on human life, for example, positive or negative?Professor Zimbardo: In a sense, that’s right. Any time perspective in excess has more negatives than positives, you know what those future-oriented people sacrifice for success. They sacrifice family time . they sacrifice friend time. They sacrifice fun time. And they sacrifice sleep. So it affects their health. And they live for work, achievement and control.Student B: Yes. That’s ture. We just never realized that before. But professor, do you think time perspective is something inherent or something we learn?Professor Zimbardo: People’s time perspectives result from the social environment and their life experiences, and they can be learned and be changed . That’s the last point I want to make today.one needs to develop the mental flexibility to shift time perspectives fluidly, depending on the demands of the situation; that’s what you’re got to learn to do. The optimal temporal mix is What you get from the past-positive gives you roots. What you get from the future is wings to soar to new destinations, new challenges. What you get from the present hedonism is energy, the energy to explore yourself, places, people, sensuality.Further ListeningListening 1Ex1: F F F F T T F TEx2: 1)friend 2) end 3) weeks 4)know 5)terrible 6)rang 7)younger 8)tired 9)game 10)make 11)show 12)thinking 13)distance 14)corner 15)telegram 16)deserveScripts:Around the Cornerby Henson TowneAround the corner I have a friend,In this great city that has no end.Yet the days go by and weeks rush on,And before I know it, a year is gone.And I never see my old friend's face,For life is a swift and terrible race,He knows I like him just as well,As in the days when I rang his bell,And he rang mine.But we were younger then,And now we are busy, tired men.Tired of playing a foolish game,Tired of trying to make a name."Tomorrow," I say, "I will call on JimJust to show that I'm thinking of him."But tomorrow comes and tomorrow goes,And distance between us grows and grows.Around the corner! — yet miles away."Here's a telegram sir—Jim died today."And that's what we get and deserve in the end.Around the corner , a vanished friend.Listening 2Ex1: 1)clocks 2) promptness efficiency 3) impatient 4) household appliances save time 5)control miss avoidEx2: F T F F FScript:Almost every American wears a watch, and in nearly every room in an American home,there's a clock. "Be on time." "Don't waste time." "Time is money." "Time waits for no one." All of these familiar sayings reflect the American obsession with promptness and efficiency. Students and employees displease their teachers and bosses when they arrive late. This desire to get the most out of every minute often affects behavior, making Americans impatient when they have to wait. The pressure to make every moment count sometimes makes it difficult for Americans to relax and do nothing.The desire to save time and handle work efficiently also leads Americans to buy many kinds of machines. These range from household appliances to equipment for the office such as calculators, photocopy machines and computers. One popular machine is the videocassette recorder, which gives Americans a new kind of control over time. Fans of professional football don't have to miss the Sunday afternoon game on TV because of a birthday party. They simply videotape it and watch the game in the evening. What's more, they can actual save time by fast-forwarding through all the sales ads and commercials shown during te game. So a 3.5-hour game, seen later on, might only last 1.5 hours.Listening 3Ex1: A B A B DEx2: 1)pessimistic 2)doubled 3)coal 4)chickens 5) artificial 6)well-designed7)fresher 8)leading 9)unnecessaryScript:What will life be like 100 years from now? Some experts are optimistic; others, far more pessimistic. They think that by then the population will have doubled. We will have run out of essential materials, like oil and coal. We may even have run out of water to drink. They believe that we will be living like chickens- living in little boxes, and eating artificial food.But those who are more optimistic say that life in the future will be much better than it is today. We may be living in well-designed , systematic communities. We may be getting more sunlight, breathing fresher air, living in a better environment and leading far more pleasant lives than we are today.Life will certainly have become far more mechanized by the year 2100. It may even have become too mechanized. Mechanization has already caused quite a few problems and will cause still mo re. For example, many jobs will have been “automated”. People will no longer be able to learn only one job in their lifetime. Many of the jobs that young people are doing today will have become unnecessary by the time they are 40.Questions:1. What can definitely be said of life in the next century?2. What does "many jobs will be 'automated'" mean according to the passage?3. What will the influence of automation be upon people in terms of employment?4. Is there any possibility hat some jobs will disappear in decades from now? Why or why not?5. What would the future job market look like?Listening 4Ex1: F T T F FEx2: 1) Because they could have a large house and yard there2) The cities have grown larger3) During the last 10 or 15 years of the 20th century4) Because they want to change them into apartment buildings5) It saves people time for traveling back and forthScript:Starting in the early 1900s, many Americans living and working in large cities moved to the suburbs. They wanted to live where they could have a large house and yard, instead of a small apartment with no yard. The problem that this has brought is that as the cities have grown larger, people must travel a long way to their place of work. Often the trip takes as much as two hours each way. Thus they have very little time to enjoy their houses and yards.Therefore, during the last decades of the 20th century, some people became interested in moving back to the business areas of the cities. Many old buildings with businesses or factories on the first few floors have upper floors that are empty- Other old buildings are completely empty. Architects have been buying these buildings and changing them into attractive apartment buildings. Most have large comfortable rooms with big windows, which let in a lot of light. The apartments in these buildings are quickly bought by people who want to move back downtown. As one new apartment owner said, "I don't have a yard anymore, but I also don't have to sit in my car for over three hours a day. And there are nearby parks that I can visit now that I have more time."。
剑桥国际少儿英语kb1unit8听力原文
Unit 8 My clothes1. Listen and point.Mr Star: Come on children. Time for school.Stella: Ok, Dad.Simon: Stella, where are my grey trousers?Stella: They are under your toy box.Simon: Now, where are my socks?Stella: Your blue socks? They are in your shoes.Simon: And where are my shoes?Stella: Under the chair, Simon. Come on!Simon: Ok. Is that my green T-shirt next to the computer?Stella: Yes, it is. And your jacket’s next to the door. Simon:2. Listen, point and repeat.T-shirt, skirt, socks, shoes, jacket, trousers3. Say the chant.I’ve got blue trousers and a green T-shirt.I’ve got a brown jacket and a purple skirt.I’ve got red shoes and long pink socks.They’re on the floor, next to my box.4. Listen and say the number.My favorite clothes are my grey skirt and my purple jacket. My favorite shoes are white.I’ve got an orange T-shirt. It’s my favorite.I’ve got short grey trousers.They are my favorite. My favorite shoes are red.My favorite trousers are brown. My favorite socks are pink.My favorite T-shirt is big and yellow. My favorite skirt is blue.I’ve got brown shoes.They are my favorite. My favorite shoes are black. They are beautiful. My favorite jacket is green. My favorite socks are white.5. Listen and point.Stella: Mum, have you got my red trousers? Where are they?Mum: I don’t know.Stella: Has Simon got my red trousers?Mum: Ask Simon, not me.Suzy: No, Stella. Simon hasn’t got your red trousers.Simon: Mum, has Stella got my blue T-shirt?Mum: I don’t know. Ask Stella, not me.Suzy: No, Simon. Stella hasn’t got your blue T-shirt.Stella:No,Ihaven’t got your blue T-shirt. Have you got my red trousers? Simon: No, I haven’t. And who’s got my favorite white shoes? Stella and Simon: Where’s Suzy?Mrs Star: Look at Suzy. She’s got your red trousers, Stella. She has got your blue T-shirt, Simon.Simon: And she’s got mu favorite white shoes. Not my shoes!6. Listen , point and repeat.He has got a blue T-shirt. She has got red trousers. He has got white sh oes.7. Sing the song.He has got a blue jacket in his hands, a blue jacket.He has got a blue jacket in his hands, a blue jacket in his hands.He has got a purple ball in his hands, a purple ball.He has got a purple ball in his hands, a purple ball in his hands.She has got a yellow sock in her hands, a yellow sock.She has got a yellow sock in her hands, a yellow sock in her hands. She has got a pink pencil in her hands, a pink pencil.She has got a pink pencil in her hands, a pink pencil in her hands. 8. Say it with Monty.Monty: Daisy dog.Monty, boy and girl: Daisy dog.Monty: A dirty dog, a doll and a door.Monty, boy and girl: A dirty dog, a doll and a door.10. Listen to the story.Simon: Here, Stella. Cath. Toys in the toy box. Come alive. Walk an d talk.On the count of five. One, two, three, four, five.Marie: Look at Stella’s clothes.She has got a yellow T-shirt. She has got a blue skirt. She has got pink s ocks and she has got brown shoes.Maskman: But she hasn’t got a jacket. Look at these. Simon’s got a red jacket. He has got green trousers and he has got black shoes. Marie: Well, Maskman. Stella has got trousers too. Has Simon got a skir t?Maskman: Huh! No, he hasn’t.Trevor: Ooohh! Hee, hee.Monty: Suzy has got a skirt, and she has got a beautiful orange T-shirt with a mouse on it.Trevor: Ha, ha, ha!。
【中学教材全解】配套14-15学年八年级英语(上)(冀教版)Unit 8 听力原文(文档版)
UNIT 8Lesson 43②Listen to the dialogue and fill in the blanks.Mike: Hi Helen! Are you there?Helen: Yes, Mike. What’s up?Mike: Could you help me with my project this week?Helen: Sure. Tell me more about it.Mike: We are supposed to write about Dr. Hawking. I know he is a famous scientist. But what should I write about him? I’m not sure.Helen: He wrote some interesting books. Maybe you can talk about one of his books.Mike: That’s a great idea. Thank you for your help.Helen: It’s my pleasure.Lesson 44①Listen to the passage and tick the correct answers.I have three good friends in my class—Tom, Natalie and Hong Lei. Tom comes from the U.S. He is here with his parents. His father works at a school. He teaches English. Tom wants to be a teacher like his father. His mother is a doctor at No. 1 Hospital. Natalie is from Russia. Her father works at a police station. Her mother works at a shop. As a shop assistant, she is always kind to her customers. Natalie wants to be a doctor when she grows up. Hong Lei is from China. Her parents both work in a bank. She enjoys exercising and wants to be a basketball player.Lesson 45②Listen to some pieces of advice and number them in the correct order.1. List your dreams and make a plan.2. Think about your interests and find a new hobby.3. Join a club and make more friends.4. Look in the mirror and smile at yourself every day.5. The important thing is to learn from your mistakes.Lesson 46②Listen to the passage and tick the correct answers.Hello everyone. I’m Li Yun. I grew up in the countryside, and when I was young, I liked to play in the hills near my home. The trees were full of birds, and I liked to sing along with the birds. Maybe this is how I became a good singer. I would like to go to a famous music college someday. My ambition is to become a famous singer.Lesson 47①Listen to the dialogues and tick the correct answers.1. M: I feel nervous when I give reports in front of the class.W: Don’t worry. You should be confident in yourself.2. M: Come here, Cathy. I’d like to talk to you.W: What’s up, Mr. Wang?M: Look at your homework. There are lots of mistakes.3. M: What did the teacher say about your homework, Cindy?W: The teacher asked me to improve my spelling.4. M: Hi Cathy. How time flies! The term will soon be over.W: You are right. There is only one week before the end of the term.Lesson 48②Lucy, Nick and Bob are talking about themselves. Listen to the passages and match the people with the statements.Passage 1: I don’t have much confidence in myself. Sometimes, I feel shy speaking in front of the class. But I enjoy playing with my friends. I like exercising. My favourite sport is football. Can you guess who I am? I’m Nick.Passage 2: I come from Africa. I am very active at my school, so I make a lot of friends. We study together every day. After class, we often play football or basketball. We help each other in our studies. My name is Bob.Passage 3: I like listening to music and dancing. I listen to music when I’m tired. It helps me calm down and feel good. My parents always say that I will be an artist when I grow up. That’s me—Lucy!Unit ReviewⅠ. Listen to the following sentences and underline the stressed words.1. My parents want me to study medicine.2. I saw my teacher smiling and my friends waving at me.3. I taught myself by listening to the radio and watching TV programs.4. Krista noticed Peter looking sad.5. Your voice sounds beautiful.。
人教版英语七年级下册Unit 8听力原文及翻译
Unit 8 Is there a post office near here? Section A, 1bConversation 1A: Is there a restaurant on Bridge Street?请问大桥街有餐厅吗?B: Yes, there is.是的,有。
Conversation 2A: Is there a post office near here?请问这附近有邮局吗?B: Um, yes, there is. There’s one on Long Street.有,在长街有一个。
Conversation 3A: Is there a hospital on Center Street?请问中心街有医院吗?B: No, there isn’t.没有。
Section A, 2bConversation 1A: Excuse me. Is there a police station near here?打扰一下,请问这附近有警察局吗?B: Yes. It’s between the restaurant and the hospital.有,在餐厅和医院之间。
Conversation 2A: Where’s the park?公园在哪儿?B: The park? Oh, it’s across from the bank.公园吗?在银行对面。
Conversation 3A: Excuse me. Is there a hospital near here?打扰一下,请问这附近有医院吗?B: Yes, it’s on Bridge Street.有,在大桥街。
Conversation 4A: Where’s the pay phone?公用电话在哪儿?B: It’s next to the post office.在邮局旁边。
Conversation 5A: Excuse me. Are there any restaurants near here?打扰一下,请问这附近有餐厅吗?B: Yes, there’s one in front of the post office.有,邮局前面有一家。
2023年英语专八听力原文及答案
The popularity of EnglishGoo.morning.everyone.Today'.lectur.i.abou.th.popularit.o.English.rges.numbe.o.nat ng municatio.be?nguage.ar.differen.fro.e nguag..Q1).in.English.the.Englis.i.th.lingu.franca.nguage.Som.re?searche.suggeste.tha.. nguage.An.anywa.betwee.2 nguag..Q...An.o.cours..i.w.includ.peopl.wh.ar.learnin.Englis.a..fore nguag.al.ove.th.world.tha.numbe.ma.increas.dramatically.The.w.ma.as..question.ho.di.Englis. ge.there.Tha.i.ho.di.Englis.gai.th.presen.statu.o.popularity?Ther.ar.i.fac..numbe.o.interlockin.reason.fo.th.popularit.o.Englis.a..lingu.franca.Man.o.th.reason.ar ngu age.Let'.g.throug.th.reason.on.b.one.First.it'nd e.o.th.Massachusett.coas.i.162.afte.thei.journe.fro.England.the.brough.wit.the.no.jus..se.o.religiou. ter.th.Amer nguag.o.Englis.remaine.an.stil.does.I.wa.th.sam.i.Austra mande.Philipp.plante.th.Britis.fla.i.Sydne.curv.o.th.26t.o.Januar.178..i.wa.no.jus..b nguage.I.othe.part.o.th.forme.Britis.Empire.Englis.ra pidl.becam..unifyin.o.dominatin.mean.o.control.Fo.example.i.becam..lingu.franc.i.Indi.wher..varie .o.an.on.o.the.a..whol.countr.syste.problemati..Q4).S.th.impositio nguag.o..ministratio.help.maintai.th.colonizers.contro.an.power.Thu.Englis.trav e.a nguag.i.countrie.a.fa.apar.a.Jamaic.an.Pakistan..Ugand.an.Ne.Zealand.Tha.i.th.firs.factor.merc.through?ou.th.world.Th.spr merc.ha.take.Englis.alon.wit.i..Q...Thi.i.th.2023.centur.phenomeno.o.globali zation.Therefore.on.o.th.firs.sight.man.traveler.se.whe.arrivin.i.countrie.a.divers.a.Brazil.Chin.fo.e xample.it'.th.yellow.twi.ar.sig.o..Macdonald'.fas.foo.restauran.o.som.othe.famou.brand'.outlets.An. munity. .o.Englis.i.th.boo.i.internationa.trave..Q6).An.yo.wil.fin.tha.mu c.trave.an.touris.i.carrie.o.aroun.th.worl.i.English.O.cours.thi.i.no.alway.th.case.A.th.multi-linguali s.o.man.touris.worker.i.differen.countrie.demonstrate.Bu..visi.t.mos.airport.o.th.glob.wil.sho.sign. nguag.o.tha.countr.bu.als.i.English.Jus.a.man.airlin.announcement.ar.broadcas.i.Engli nguag.o.air municatio..Q.).rmatio.exchang.aroun.th.world.A.w.al.know..grea.dea.o.ac ademi.discours.aroun.th.worl.take.plac.i.English.I.i.ofte..lingu.franc.o.conferences.fo.example.An. man.journa.article.i.field.a.divers.a.astronomy.tria.psycholog.an.zoolog.hav.Englis.a..kin.o.defaul.l anguag..Q8).nguag.i.po pula.culture.Po.musi.i.Englis.ca.b.hear.o.man.radio..Q9).Thu.man.peopl.wh.ar.no.Englis.speaker.ca.sin.word.fro.thei.favorit.Englis.mediu.songs.An.man.pe A.Now.t.su.up.i.today'.lecture.w.hav.reviewe.som.o.th.reason.o.factor.tha.li.be?.o.En nguage.Befor.w.finish..woul.lik.t.leav..fe.question.fo.yo.t.thin.about.I.th.statu. nguag.assure.i.th.future.Wil.i.spli.int.varietie.tha.becom.les.mutuall.intelli nguag.i.futur..Q.).Thes.question.ar.no.eas.t.answer..know.bu.the.ar.definitel.wort.ponderin.ove.afte.th.lecture.OK.let'.brin.u.t.th.en.o.today'.lecture.Than.yo.fo.you.attention.SECTION B CONVERSATIONW Hello! Freddy.NI.Hello.Marry.Ho.nic.t.se.yo.again.Ho.i.everythin.going?.. Fine.Bus.thes.days?..Yeah.Wit.lot.o.thing.t.do.Woul.yo.lik.t.joi.m.fo..drink?W: Ok! Thanks!M: Any news recently?ernmen.i.plannin.t.buil.a.air?por.here.Yo.kne.that? M Afraid not.M.rea.objectio.t.thi.ide.o..ne.airpor.is...i.tha.th.whol.thin.i.s.wasteful..mean.w.kno.w.ar.currentl.i..f ue.crisis.W.kno.tha.we'ernmen.seem.quit.de ..hec.o..lo.o.oil..mea.i.take..to.o.oil..to.o.p et?ro.befor.on.o.thi.bi.jet.eve.take.of.(Q1).M: Hmmm.n.an.s.on..can'.see..can'.se.th.rati ona.behin.reall.wantin.an...a.airpor.a.all.M.Well.surel.yo.mus.admi.th.existin.airpor.nearb.ar.becomin.swarmed..mean.wh.shoul.people... 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( Q2)M.But.th.airpor.infrastructur.relie.o.housin.an.othe.facilitie.fo.th.grea.numbe.o.peopl.wh.woul.b.e mploye.i.th.airport.th.pilo.even.th.stewardnesses.The.hav.t.liv.somewher.nea.th.airport.right?W.Yeah.bu.it's.it'.jus.s.damagin.t.th.whol.area..think.airports.fro.m.poin.o.view.th.whol.concep.i.outdate.really.Wit.moder.technology.we'r.goin.t.mak..lo.o.trave.unnecessary.reall. (Q4).Fo.example.i.won'.b.necessar.fo.businessma.t.fl.ou.t..foreig.countr.t.tal.t.somebody.The.ca.jus.lif.u. telephon.i.th.office.pres.th.but?to.an.se.th.perso.the.wan.t.d.busines.with.Yo.see.busines.deal.ca.b. mad.with?ou.havin.t.trave.bac.an.forth.right?M.Yes.you'r.right.But.fo..lo.o.people.'persona.contac.i.important.An.thi.mean.travel.an.mean.quic.travel.ai.'trave.an.w.jus.nee..ne.airpor.(Q5).SECTION C NEWS BROADCASTNews Item 1 (for question 6)ernmen.o.Monday.I.Sunday'.Election..th.Ne.Moderate.Part.defeate.th.Socia.Democrats.Th.Socia.Democrati.Part.ha.controlle.Swede.fo.al.bu.nin. year.sinc.193..buildin.u.th.country'.generou.welfar.state.Bu.th.Ne.Moderate.want.t.chang.it..Q..Sweden'.welfar.syste.i.fame.aroun.th.world.bu.th.syste.enco panie.whic.make.i.difficul.t.emplo.ne.people.News Item 2 (for questions 7 and 8)Much of the world was watching on television when the command of the Apollo-11 mission Neal Armstron.too.th.firs.step.o.th.moo.i.Jul.1969.Th.picture.o.tha.histori.footste.an.?nding.wer.recorde.o.magneti.tap.a.thre.NAS.gr oun.trackin.station.aroun.th.world.Th.tape.wer.the.shippe.t..NAS.operatio.centr.nea.Washington—t.196..th.spac.agenc.bega.transferrin.the.an.ten.o.thousand.o.ta ernmen.archive.warehouse.NAS.say.i.aske.fo.the.bac.i.th. 1970s.bu.no.doe.no.kno.wher.the.are.".probabl.a.overl.sensitiv.t.th.wor.`lost...di.no.fee.the.ar.lost..s ai.Richar.Nafzger..Goddar.Spac.Fligh.Centr.enginee.wh.wa.i.charg.o.televisio.processin.fro.al.o.N ASA'.groun.receivin.sites.Th.Spac.Agenc.ha.authorize.hi.t.se.a?sid.hi.othe.dutie.fo.th.foreseeabl.f utur.an.devot.hi.tim.t.th.hun.fo.th.tapes.Nafzge.says.the.ar.store.somewhere..Q.)News Item 3 (for questions 9 and 10)lio.peopl.wh.liv.i.th.Unit.Stat.don'.spea.o.understan.Englis.ver.wel.an.tha.ca.b.deadly ngu municatin.wit.health-car.provider.wit.seriou.consequences..Q.. Docto.Flore.record.on.inciden.i.whic.English-speakin.doctor.`though..Spanish-speakin.ma.wa.suff erin.fro..dru.over-doze."H.wa.i.th.hospita.basicall.fo.tw.day.bein.worke.u.fo.dru.abus...Flore.says.. The.finall.di..hea.C.sca.an.realize.h.ha.ha..majo.blee.int.hi.brain.H.ende.u.bein.paralyze.an.h.go..7. millio.dollar.settlemen.awar.fro.th.hospital..Docto.Flore...professo.a.th.Medica.Colleg.o.Wisconsin .say.tha.despit.example.lik.that.th.majorit.o.U.health-car.facilitie.stil.d.no.hav.traine.interpreter.o.si ght.bu.h.acknowledge.tha.increasin.number.o.healt.car.worker.ar.bilingua.an.tha.mor.clinic.an.hosp ital.d.mak.sur.thei.staf.an.patient.understan.eac.other..Q10)参考答案SECTION A MINI-LECTURE(1)native languages (2).350 (3).Historical (4).India (5).commerce (6).Boom (7).sea travel communication (8).conferences (9).many radios (10).splitSECTION B&C1.C2.A3.D4.B5.D6.B7.C8.A9.D 10.D。
英语听力教程第三版unit8thesoundofmusic听力原文
Unit 8 The Sound of MusicPart I Getting readyA quiz game show is a type of radio or television programming genre in which contestants, television personalities or celebrities, sometimes as part of a team, play a game which involves answering questions or solving puzzles usually for money and/or prizes.A The following words will appear in this unit. Listen carefully and study the definitions.1. panel:a group of specialists who give their advice or opinion about something2. contender:a person who takes part in a competition or tries to win something3. nomination:the act of suggesting or choosing somebody asa candidate in an election, or for a job or an award4. cinematography:the art or process of making films5. score:the music written for a film/movie or play6. audition:take part in a practical test for performing applicants7. choreography:the arranging or inventing of dances, especially ballet8. pantomime:traditional Christmas musical show for children9. scherzo:a short, lively piece of music, that is often part of a longer piece10. lyrics:the words of a songListen to the following radio quiz game. Who are those people on the panel Supply the missing information.Now listen again. Put a mark beside each question. Put a tick if it is true. If it is false, put a cross. Finally write down who that person is.Audioscript::A - Announcer M - MaxineQ - Quizmaster L - LauraT-Tim D-David Radio Bristol. Ladies and gentlemen, it's time for "Alive or Dead" our exciting quiz game about famous people alive or dead. Before I tell you the rules, let's meet our panel for tonight. From right to left we have that famous sportsman and racing driver, Tim Brown. T:. Evening everyone. Next to Tim, is that lovely star of the American cinema, who is now here in Bristol at the Opera House, Maxine Morgan. Hi there! Next we have novelist, David Walker. Good evening. And last but not least, composer and singer, Laura Dennison. Hello. So let's get with the game. I have the name of a famous person -- alive or dead -- in this envelope. The panel will try to guess who it is. But they can only ask questions which have a "yes" or "no" answer. Are we ready Well, yes. Are you alive No, I'm not. Now Maxine, let's have your question. You're not alive. So you are a famous person who is dead. Oh, I know. Are you a person in a book -- a fictional character -- somebody who isn't real No, I'm not fictional. David, can we have your question So you're a real, dead person That's right, I am. Good, now we want to know where you come from. Are you British No, I'm not British. Are you from Europe No, I'm not. T: Are you Australian No, Tim, I'm not. I'm not Australian. Oh, then I know, you're American. You're a real American person, butyou're dead. Now let me think. Ah, yes, are you a writer of any sort No, I'm not. Are you anything to do with peace, you know someone like Martin Luther King A good guess, Laura, but I'm nothing to do with peace. Well, that's a difficult one, really. I think the answer is half "Yes" and half "No". No, I'll say "No". T: Mm, funny, half "Yes", half "No", but finally "No". Well, well, are you famous as an entertainer of any sort, you know a film star, or pop singer, or an actor, you know what I mean Ask one question at a time, Tim, please. The answer to your question is "No". I've got it, I've got the answer.I know, I'm right. Careful now, Maxine. Say the wrong answer and I win the game. Are you sure you know who I am Yes, you're dead, you're famous, you're American, you are sort of famous for peace work. You're not an entertainer -- you're not an American film star. I don't think you were famous as a soldier.I think you were a politician, I think you died in think you were married to a very beautiful woman ... I think you are very close, Maxine. I think you are almost there. I think you once went to Berlin. I think you are President John Kennedy, President of the United States of America. And congratulations to you and the panel, Maxine. Yes, you are right, the name of the famous person in my envelope isPresident Kennedy, born in 1917 and died in 1963, on November 22nd to be exact. Now for my next famous person ...Part II Slumdog Millionaire Slumdog Millionaire is a 2000 British drama film. Set and filmed in India, the film tells the story of Jamal Malik, a young man from the Juhu slums of Mumbai who appears on the Indian version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire and exceeds people's expectations, thereby arousing the suspicions of cheating. It was widely acclaimed, being praised for its plot, soundtrack and directing. It was nominated for 10 Academy Awards in 2009, winning eight, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay.A Listen to the first news report broadcasted when Slumdog Millionaire won 10 Academy Award nominations. Note down the key words in the notes column. Then complete the storyline of the movie.Audioscript:One of the strongest contenders for the Best Picture Oscar this year is Slumdog Millionaire.Set in Mumbai, India, it is a story about destiny. Jamal Malik, a young man from the slums, becomes a contestant on the Indian reality show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Based on its American equivalent, the Indian show offers 20 million rupees ($400 000) to the winner.Few expected this independent production directed by filmmaker Danny Boyle to make it to the Oscars. But Slumdog is no longer an underdog. It has won viewers' hearts and gained critical acclaim. With ten Academy Award nominations, it is a serious Oscar contender. (Movie) Host: Jamal Malik, you 're absolutely right!Jamal Malik is not knowledgeable. He just happens to know the answers to the specific questions he's been asked. Each question is somehow related to an event that has defined his life.With their mother dead, Jamal and his brother Salim begin to steal, trade and sleep wherever they can to survive.But the defining moment in Jamal's life is when an orphan girl named Latika tags along with them.Latika is taken by gangsters and Jamal will not rest until he sees her again.Years later, as a young adult, he finds her at a gangster's house. She is locked up, and her only pastime is the Indian TV show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Jamal gets on the show so she can watch him. (Movie) Two of the musketeers are called Athos and Porthos. What was the name of the third musketeer Danny: I'd like to phone a friend. Host: Here we go. Latika: Hello.Latika answers the phone. When they were kids, she was the third musketeer. Jamal and Salim were Athos and Porthos. Director Danny Boyle's love story is influenced by Bollywood where everything is extreme.Like most Indian films, Slumdog Millionaire offers upall-consuming passion, tear-jerking drama and a happy ending. The film's dynamic music and vivid colors enhance the emotions. Its fairytale quality does not undermine Danny Boyle's gritty look at today's India, a country of extremes itself. (Movie) Danny: Latika.Slumdog Millionaire's exuberance is contagious. We leave the theater love-struck, exhilarated.And, as in Jamal's case, we can't help but root for the Oscar nominee regardless of the odds.Now listen to the second news report broadcasted on the day when Slumdog Millionaire finally earned 8 Oscars. After listening, match the awards with the corresponding names. Audioscript:Slumdog Millionaire was expected to win big. And, it did, earning Oscars for its cinematography, film editing, sound mixing, and bringing two of the golden statuettes to composer A. R. Rahman for his score and an original song.Steven Spielberg announced the top award of the evening. "And, the Oscar goes to Slumdog Millionaire, Christian Colson, producer."The man behind the movie, Danny Boyle, was named best director.Slumdog Millionaire was a collaboration between the British filmmaker, an Indian cast and crew and a Hollywood distributor. Backstage, Boyle said joint efforts like this will become more common."You know, there's all sorts of people gonna work there. These things are gonna come together. The world's shrinking a bit in a ... in a wonderful way and it will benefit from it because, in ... in culture, fusion is a wonderful thing."The film is set in the slums of Mumbai and features two professional actors with a cast of unknown youngsters from the Mumbai slums. Young cast members came to Hollywood for the Oscars.The story revolves around a teenager who hopes to win riches on a quiz show. Writer Simon Beaufoy, who won an Oscar for his adapted screenplay, says the story is appropriate in a recession."A film comes out that is ostensibly about being a millionaire, and actually what it's about is, it's a film that says there are more important things than money. There's love and faithand your family, and that struck a chord with people, I think, right now."Part III Karen Kain -- a Canadian ballerina The beautiful prima ballerina of the National Ballet of Canada, Karen Kain, was for five years the partner of Rudolph Nureyev and has danced most of the major classical ballet roles all over the world, since her debut in the demanding role of Odile/Odette in Swan Lake at the age of nineteen. She was born in Hamilton, Ontario, not far from Toronto, the home of the National Ballet of Canada. She and her husband now live in Cabbagetown, one of the oldest districts in central Toronto. In this section, you are going to hear an interview during which Karen Kain, a Canadian ballerina, talks about her work and how she first became interested in the ballet. While listening for the first time, add more key words in the left column. After the second listening, answer the questions. Now try this: listen to a more authentic version of the interview and then do the multiple choice.Audioscript:Well, I actually saw Celia Franka dance, and now she founded the National Ballet of Canada. And she was dancingin my hometown -- Giselle, and I was taken for my birthday, and I saw her dance, (I) fell in love with it, and I started taking ballet lessons, and then at one point ... I think it was around ten ... my teacher said that I should audition for the National Ballet School, which is a full-time academic and ballet training facility here in Toronto. It's one of (I)think it's the only one in North America. I mean, it's the same set-up as the Paris Opera, the Bolshoi, the Leningrad ... you know, that they have the school affiliated with the Company. And you take all your academic training as well as your dance training. So she told me that I should audition for that, and I did. And when I was eleven years old I went to the ballet school for seven years till I was eighteen, graduated from high school and I joined the National Ballet. Now you were married fairly recently, weren't you It'll be three years next month, yes. Is touring and so forth hard on married life I believe your husband's an actor, isn't he Yes, he is. So you're probably both away quite a lot. We've been very fortunate. We've managed to stay together most of the time. The longest we were separated was when I was on tour with the National Ballet in Europe last spring, and I was gone for six weeks, and he was making a television series and hewas in Australia for six weeks. So we have been separated a few times, but most of the time we manage to be together. We've just been very fortunate. Throughout the year ... how much time do you have off away from the dance Very little. I'm trying to make sure that I get one week in June this year, because I have not had more than two days free since a year ago January. So I've been working very very hard, and I feel that I really need one week free, you know. Tom Boyd: How long can a ballerina go on before she should start thinking of retiring I hope that I have another ten years at the most to dance. Tom Boyd: What would you do after that Would you leave the ballet completely or go into teaching, or choreography I don't think choreography, I don't think I have any talent in ... you know ... I have no desire, no talent. I like to teach, I like to coach young dancers. I don't think I would leave the ballet world entirely, but I may try something else. You never know. I'm interested in other things and I have done some sorts of musical comedy work, and I've enjoyed it very much -- just to expand myself a little and to look around. And this Christmas again I'll be playing Cinderella in an English pantomime -- which is great fun for me. I really have fun and it's not serious dancing, you know, and I get to speakand act and everything. So I don't know. I would also like to have a family, so I have lots of things that I may do.Part IV More about the topic:Beethoven VBeethoven was a German composer and pianist. A crucial figure in the transition between the Classical and Romantic eras in Western art music, he remains one of the most famous and influential of all composers. His best known compositions include 9 symphnies, 5 concertos for piano, 32 piano sonatas, and 16 string quartets. The Symphony No. 5 in C minor was written in 1804 - 1808. It is one of the most frequently played symphonies.Listen to the recording. Learn to appreciate Beethoven's Fifth Symphony with the speakers. While listening, complete the following outline.Audioscript:"" The most famous four-note sequence in music, instantly recognizable to us today as Beethoven's Fifth and full of associations. Fate knocking at the door. "V" for victory. But how must it have sounded to that original audience Beethovenpresented it as pure music. No clue to its significance or meaning. Well, Beethoven, as a personality, was so tricky and so uncouth in so many ways, and had such a difficult, troubled childhood, that the adult that gave us some of these pieces was a man so often at odds with the world around him. Born in poverty in the German town of Bonn, he was bullied as a child by his alcoholic father and in his 20s realized he was going deaf, surely the crudest of tragedies for a musician. But Beethoven was a man with a will of iron, and, in the Fifth, he harnesses the power of the orchestra to an insistent propulsive rhythm, forcing the symphony to articulate the profoundest personal drama. Host: The story of a soul struggling against implacable fate and emerging incandescently victorious. One of the great contrasts available to a composer are the contrasts of darkness and lightness. And in his Fifth Symphony, builds up from hesitant darkness into the radiant blaze of optimism, confidence, whatever. Now he does this through the simplest of means. At the end of the third movement, which is the rather shadowy, dark scherzo, his plan is to burst us into the light without stopping. Now he does this by making the orchestra play as quietly as it can, all the strings just plucking very, veryquietly. Then comes the heartbeat of the drum, very, very quiet and distant and the strings just moving up and down, uncertain about which way they're going to go. And then suddenly, very quickly, the whole orchestra comes in, and, without stopping, we burst into the final movement. This is in the major key. Lights full on, after lights hardly on at all. The symphony is a masterpiece of storytelling without words. When the French Revolution erupted, Beethoven was a teenager, struggling to support his family after the death of their mother, and the concept of individual liberty became a lifelong issue. And we, the listeners, are compelled to share his battle against fate. Although Beethoven wanted to write something that was comprehensible at first hearing, he wasn't writing simply to give pleasure. He wanted it to be a potentially life-changing experience, music that would resonate in the mind long after the last note had sounded.Part V Do you know ...What is a musical According to one definition, it is a stage, television or film production utilizing popular-style songs and dialogue to either tell a story and/or showcase the talents of varied performers. Musicals are not just written-- they are collaborative creations that are put together piece by piece. Then what is the Broadway musical When was it bornA Spot dictation. Listen to a passage about the birth of the Broadway musical. Fill in the blanks with the words you hear. Audioscript:Most scholars believe that The Black Crook in 1866 marked the beginning of the musical comedy, integrating music, dance and comedy, with an emphasis on beautiful women and spectacular scenery. But it was during World War One and after, that the musical developed as a uniquely American idiom.Song-and-dance man George M. Cohan exploited Americans' sense of patriotism, moving away from European influences. In the 1920s. songwriters who include Jerome Kern, George and Ira Gershwin, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, brought the musical to maturity with their meticulous crafting of music and lyrics to create the American popular song.The modern musical was born in 1943 with Rodgers and Hammerstein's Oklahoma, which revolutionized the way dance, music and dialogue were used to develop the plot andcharacters. Other songwriters of the 1940s, 50s and 60s capitalized on that winning formula to write so many hit musicals, that that era is now referred to as "Broadway's Golden Age." Since then, American musicals have been translated and produced on stages all over the world. The music has become a mainstay among vocalists and jazz musicians, making clear the expression that the music of Broadway is truly "America's classic music."Foreigners call Americans Yankees. Southerners say that Yankees are Northerners. Northerners say that Yankees are from the New England states. People in New England say it is the Vermonters who are Yankees. Vermonters reply that a Yankee is just someone who eats pie for breakfast. It seems that the origin of this term defies detection.B1 Listen to the passage. Focus on what the word "Yankee" refers to at different times. Supply the missing information. B2 Now listen to the passage again. Complete the summary. Our question this week asks about the song Yankee Doodle. To explain, we must go back more than 200 years. The American colonies had not yet won independence from England. The British used the word "Yankee" to describe colonists in thenortheast part of America. That area was known as New England. After the War for Independence, the British used the word to mean all Americans. And during both World Wars American soldiers were known as Yankees or just Yanks.That was the song Yankee Doodle. History experts do not know exactly when it was written. Some research shows the date may have been during the 1750s. Many stories say a British army doctor wrote the song when England was fighting the French and the Indians in North America. There is little confirmation of these stories. We do know, however, that Yankee Doodle was sung by the British to make the colonial people of North America look foolish. And we know the song became popular among the colonists themselves. Many knew at least some of the words.The British continued to use the song to make Yankees look foolish until the early days of the War for Independence in the 1770s. Stories say, British soldiers marching out of the city of Boston stepped in time to the music of Yankee Doodle. Those same soldiers were defeated by colonial troops at the town of Concord singing the same song. Since then, Yankee Doodle has been a song that represents the United States.Part VII Watch and enjoyMagic is a performing art that entertains audiences by staging tricks or creating illusions of seemingly impossible or supernatural feats using natural means. These feats are called magic tricks, effects, or illusions. A professional who performs such illusions is called a magician or an illusionist. Watch the video clip from the movie Illusionist. After watching, answer the following questions. Videoscript:Announcer:Life and death, space and time, fate and chance.These are the forces of the universe. Tonight, ladies and gentleman, I present to you a man who has unlocked these mysteries. From the furthest corners of the world where the dark arts still hold sway, he returns to us todemonstrate how nature's laws may be bent. I give you ...Eisenheim.Eisenheim:Might I borrow a handkerchief from someone You, Madam. Thank you. Ah, be patient. Now, if you please, I would like to continue with an examination of time. From the moment we enter this life we are in the flow of it.We measure it and we mark it but we cannot defy it. We cannot even speed it up or slow it down. Or can we Have we not each experienced a sensation that a beautiful moment seemed to pass too quickly And wished that we could make it linger Or felt time slow on a dull day and wished that we could speed things up a bit I assure you, they're quite real. Audience: Is it realEisenheim: And you, Madam, where is your handkerchief Audience: Bravo! Very good.。
人教版)九年级英语(上)UNIT8教材听力原文及汉语翻译
UNIT 8Section A 1b Listen and match each person with a thing and a reason.Girl 1:Whose volleyball is this?Boy: It must be Carla’s. She loves volleyball.Girl 1: Ho w about this toy truck?Girl 2: H mm.…that toy truck must belong to Jane’s little brother. He was the only little kid at thepicnic. And the magazine must belong toDeng Wen. He loves rabbits.Boy: Oh, look, someone left a book.Girt 2: That book must be Mary’s.J.K. Rowling is her favorite writer.Girl 1: OK…and how about this CD?Girl 2: Hmm…The CD must belong toGrace. She alw ays listens to pop music.2a Bob and Anna found a schoolbag at the park. Listen and wr ite down the things in the schoolbag.Bob: Hey, look! Whose schoolbag do you think this is?Anna: I don’t know. Look, here’s a school T-shirt.Bob: Well then, the person must go to our school.Oh! Here is a hair band, so the person can’tbe a boy.Anna: It could be Mei’s hair band. She has long hair.Bob: Or the hair band might belong to Linda. She was at the picnic, wasn’t she?Anna: Yes, she was. But then the schoolba g could belong to Rita. She’s always forgettingthings.Bob: Oh, look! Tennis balls.Anna: Then it must be Linda’s schoolbag. She has long hair and she’s on the tennis team.Bob: You’re right!2b Listen again.Fill in the blanks.Bob: Hey, look! Whose schoolbag do you think this is? 听录音,将每个人与物品及其理由相匹配。
人教版英语九年级全一册Unit 8听力原文及翻译
Unit 8 It must belong to Carla.Section A, 1bGirl 1:Whose volleyball is this?这是谁的排球?Boy:It must be Carla’s. She loves volleyball.肯定是卡拉的,她喜欢排球。
Girl 1:How about this toy truck?这个玩具车呢?Girl 2:Hmm …that toy truck must belong to Jane’s little brother. He was the only little kid at the picnic. And the magazine must belong to Deng Wen. He loves rabbits.嗯,那个玩具车肯定是简的弟弟的。
他是这次野营唯一的小孩儿。
而这本杂志肯定是邓文的,他喜欢兔子。
Boy:Oh, look, someone left a book.哦,看,有人落了一本书。
Girl 2:That book must be Mary’s. J.K. Rowling is her favorite writer.那书肯定是玛丽的。
J.K.罗琳是她最喜欢的作家。
Girl 1:OK … and how about this CD?好的,那这张CD呢?Girl 2:Hmm … The CD must belong to Grace. She always listens to pop music.嗯,CD肯定是格蕾丝的。
她总是听流行音乐。
Section A, 2a, 2bBob:Hey, look! Whose schoolbag do you think this is?你看,你觉得这是谁的书包?Anna:I don’t know. Look, here’s a school T-shirt.我不知道。
看,这儿有件学校T恤。
新视野大学英语视听说教程3(第三版)UnittextUint8听力原文和答案
Unit 8 test Next Direc ons: Click on the speaker to the le to start playing the audio recordings for Parts I, II and III. They will be played con nuously. Once the recording starts playing, please do NOT click on either the speaker icon or the 'Unit Quiz' link in the menu bar above. Otherwise, you may lose the chance of hearing the complete recording. Part I Direc ons: Listen to the short dialogs, and then choose the correct answers to the ques ons. You will hear the recording recording twice. twice. twice. A er A er A er the the first first playing, playing, playing, there there there will will be me me for for for you you you to to to choose choose choose the the correct answers. Use the second playing to check your answers. 1. (Listen to the audio recording for the ques on.) A. It is important to offer an online friend a drink. B. It is deligh ul to get a drink from an online friend. C. Ensure that nobody puts anything harmful into your drink. D. Be sure to shake the drink before you take it. 2. (Listen to the audio recording for the ques on.) A. She will run as fast as she can. B. She will defend herself. C. She will be scared to death. D. She will buy a can of hairspray. 3. (Listen to the audio recording for the ques on.) A. Her bicycle. B. Her sunglasses. C. Her cell phone. D. Her wallet. 4. (Listen to the audio recording for the ques on.) A. Mom and son. B. Teacher and student. C. Colleagues. D. Strangers. 5. (Listen to the audio recording for the ques on.) A. His father. B. His sister. C. His teacher. D. The woman speaker. Part II Direc ons: Listen to the passage three mes. When the passage is read for the first me, listen for the general idea. When the passage is read the second me, fill in the blanks numbered from S1 to S7 with the exact words you hear. For blanks numbered from S8 to S10, write down either the exact words you hear or the main points in your own words. When the passage is read the third me, check your answers. How can a teen be convinced to stop smoking —or persuaded never to take up the (1) at all? Those Those ques ons ques ons ques ons became became became even even even more more more (2) (2) (2) last last last week week week when when when the the the Center Center Center for for for Disease Disease Disease Control Control Control and and Preven on reported that tobacco use (3) teenagers increased by nearly one-third in the last (4). In 1994, 27.5% of teens used cigare es, smokeless tobacco or cigars. In 2004, 36.4% (5). Teens Teens have have have their their their own own (6), their own pressures. pressures. What What works works for for for (7) (7) smokers smokers may may may not not work work for for adolescents. To survey the teens, the ques ons must be carefully phrased because "(8)", says April Roeseler, a health health educator educator educator and and and chief chief chief of of of local local local programs programs programs for for for the the the Tobacco Tobacco Tobacco Control Control Control Sec on Sec on Sec on of of of the the the California California Department Department of of of Health Health Health Services, Services, Services, which which which runs runs runs the the the California California California Smokers' Smokers' Smokers' Helpline. Helpline. Helpline. With With With teenagers, teenagers, counselors aim to be more conversa onal. (9). In the next few weeks, the counselor sets up addi onal telephone appointments, with up to a total of eight sessions. (10), says Lester Brown, assistant professor of family and preventa ve medicine at the UC San Diego School of Medicine and the principal inves gator for the project. Researchers want to see whether the teens who quit remain non-smokers. "Things are looking promising," he says, but he could offer no success-rate figures. Part III Direc ons: Direc ons: Listen Listen Listen to to to the the the following following following recording, recording, recording, and and and then then then choose choose choose the the the correct correct correct answers answers answers to to to the the ques ons. You will hear the recording twice. A er the first playing, there will be me for you to choose the correct answers. Use the second playing to check your answers. 1. Which of the following would be the best tle for the passage? A. World day against child labor. B. The worst forms of child labor. C. The reasons for child labor. D. The solu ons to child labor. 2. About how many children are doing dangerous jobs? A. About 120 million. B. Over 180 million. C. About 250 million. D. Nearly 750 million. 3. Which of the following is NOT men oned among the worst forms of child labor? A. Illegal sex trade. B. Illegal drug trade. C. Robbery. D. Wars. 4. Where are the most children forced to work? A. In Asia and La n America. B. In Asia and Africa. C. In Africa and La n America. D. In Asia, Africa and La n America. 5. What should be governments' first step to reduce and end child labor? A. To find out the worst forms of child labor. B. To iden fy the worst areas of child labor in the world. C. To punish governments that do not fight against child labor. D. To carry out special programs with me limits. Part IV Direc ons: Choose the best answer to each of the following statements. 1. Believe me, I'll never again be a slave ____ smoking. A. at B. in C. to D. with 2. It's the local youth throwing firecrackers. Don't go out. They're likely to throw one _____ you if you bother them. A. to B. at C. for D. through 3. The beggars really _________. I can't help but feel sorry for them. They look so miserable. A. get to me B. get in me C. make to me D. make in me 4. Someone must have made a copy of your credit card. You'll have to cancel it at once and get a new one. Hopefully, the bank will ______ the damage. A. include B. embrace C. cover D. pay with 5. My accountant is preparing my income tax ______, and I need to go over some of the receipts with her. A. turn B. return C. pay D. report 6. The government just squanders our ___________ tax money on some unnecessary projects. A. hard-earned B. hardly-earned C. hard-earning D. hardly-earning 7. 7. Start-up Start-up Start-up companies, companies, companies, par cularly par cularly par cularly those those those _______ _______ _______ new new new technology, technology, technology, some mes some mes some mes produce produce produce huge huge returns to their creators and investors. A. associa ng with B. associated with C. associates with D. associate with 8. You can't understand gambling as an addic on unless you've been _______. A. a racted B. a ached C. hooked D. booked 9. _____ every student the school had in the ESL and Limited English Proficiency Program, they would receive $400. A. To B. In C. At D. For 10. You don't have money you need to buy the equipment to be compe ve. You have just _____ enough funds to cover your day-to-day opera onal expenses. A. merely B. surely C. barely D. rarely 。
新编大学英语视听说教程unit8听力原文及答案
Part 1Listening 1Ex1: 1) rocks 2) Yes 3) stones 4) not 5)sand 6) No 7) waterEx2: 1) time management business students 2) wide-mouthed produce at a time 3) dumped work themselves down 4) grabbed filled to the top illustration 5)eager beaver how full your schedule is fit some more things 6) get them in at allScript:One day an expert on the subject of time management was speaking to a group of business students and, to stress a point, used an illustration I'm sure those students will never forget. After I share it with you, you'll never forget it either.As this man stood in front of the group of high-powered overachievers, he said, "Ok, time for a quiz." He pulled out a large, wide-mouthed jar and set it on a table in front of him. Then he produced about a dozen fist-sized rocks and carefully placed them, one at a time, into the jar.When the jar was filled to the top and no more rocks would fit inside, he asked, "Is this jar full"Everyone in the class said, "Yes."Then he said, "Really" He reached under the table and pulled out a bag of little stones. Then he dumped some of them in and shook the jar causing the little stones to work themselves down into the spaces between the big he smiled and asked the group once more, "Is the jar full" By this time the class was onto him. "Probably not," one of them answered. "Good!" he replied. And he reached under the table and brought out a bag of sand. He started dumping the sand in and it went into all the spaces left between the rocks and the little stones. Once more he asked the question, "Is this jar full""No!" the class shouted. Once again he said, "Good!" Then he grabbed a bottle of water and began to pour it in until the jar was filled to the top. Then he looked up at the class and asked, "What is the point of this illustration"One eager beaver raised his hand and said, "The point is, no matter how full your schedule is, if you try really hard, you can always fit some more things into it!""No," the speaker replied, "that's not the point. The truth this illustration teaches us is: If you don't put the big rocks in first, you'll never get them in at all."Listening 2Ex1: B C A B D C B B A DEx2: F T F F TScripts:Throughout the day, energy rises and falls. At its peak, you're likely to perform 30 to 40 percent faster and more accurately, than at its lowest, says Lynne Lamberg. So by synchronizing your schedule with your natural energy supply ,it will help you use it more efficiently.She also says, alertness is highest and concentration the most between 9a.m. and early afternoon—the best time to crunch numbers or write a report. You should dive into the hardest tasks first, and your extend high-energy mornings with a late lunch. Many people are still going strong until 1 or 2 ., so why break the momentum During mid-afternoon, you might attend to some routine tasks, such as paying bills or sorting through a pile of junk mail. Work that involves physical activity, such as running down the hall to photocopy a memo, or talking to other people (that includes phone calls)—will keep your energy level from dropping way down.When full alertness returns—around 4 .—you might do a few small projects that give you a feeling of satisfaction and accomplishment. Send off an important letter. Or plan and prioritize for the next day.The dark side of your cycle is equally important: For daylong energy we need a good night's sleep. On average, Americans get about seven-and-one-half hours, although some need more and others get by on less. We 're getting enough sleep if we wake up without the help of an alarm clock and don't feel the urge to nap during the day.Listening 3Ex1: 1) London 2) What a wonderful Life 3) Globe 4) changes developments natural resources cities nuclear warEx2: T F T T FScript:(Do you feel depressed when you read newspapers Does the news always seem bad To many people it does, but not to Alexander Dubois, a French scientist living in London. Unlike many scientists, he believes that the world will be a better place in the future. His book, What a Wonderful Life, will be on sale, and Globe sent Reporter Catherine Brown to talk to him. Here is part of their conversation.) Catherine Brown: What changes will we see in the next few yearsAlexander Dubois:Today, work is the most important part of manypeople's lives. In the future, machines will do muchof our work. This means that we'll have more time tothink about how to live happily.Catherine Brown: What developments will there be in medical scienceAlexander Dubois:The day will come when we will eliminate killerdiseases such as diphtheria and typhoid. Also, therewill be fewer babies born with birth defects becausedoctors will be able to operate on children beforethey are born.Catherine Brown:And what about natural resources Will there be anadequate supply of coal, oil and gasAlexander Dubois:Of course! Research shows that there are sufficientresources for the next 20,000 years within onekilometer of the earth's surface.Catherine Brown:Will cities continue to grow and become more and moreovercrowdedAlexander Dubois:No, they won't. People will return to smallercommunities where they can really know theirneighbors and participate in community life.Catherine Brown: Aren't you worried about the possibility of nuclearwarAlexander Dubois: Yes, I am. I expect there will be a nuclear war in thefuture, but it won't end our world. Life willcontinue.Statements:1. Alexander Dubois holds an optimistic point of view for the world's future.2. Alexander Dubois believes that, people's jobs will play the most important partin their lives.3. Alexander Dubois thinks that,6 some defects in babies will be treated beforebirth.4. Alexander Dubois predicts that someday some people will move from big cities tosmaller communities.5. Alexander Dubois believes that a nuclear war can be the end of the world.Listening 4Ex1: e c b f a dEx2: 1)biased 2) unaware 3) success 4) fun 5)control 6) environment 7) flexibility 8)optimal 9)wings 10)exploreScripts:Professor Zimbardo: Time perspectives are easy to identify when people are making decisions. For some people, it’s only about what is in the immediate situation, what other people are doing, and what they are feeling. And those people, when they make their decision in that form, we’re going to call “present-oriented”, because their focus is what is now.Student A: Then maybe , I’m not ”present-oriented”. It seems what I care most is always what will be in the future.Professor Zimbardo: Yes. You might be among those ”future-oriented”. There focus is always about anticipated consequences. OK, anybody here who is neither “present-oriented” nor “future-oriented”Student B: Myself. I think neither of your description about this two time perspectives fits me well.Professor Zimbardo: Then you mast belong to the third type. We call them “pat-oriented”because they focus on what was. For them, both the present and the future are irrelevant. Thire decisions are based on past memories.Student B: That’s true, but sometimes, I just fell my time perspectives are a mixture.Professor Zimbardo: That’s very likely the case. There are actually six time perspectives: past-positive or past-negative; present-hedonistic or present-fatalist: future-oriented or transcendental future, as a matter of fact, these six time perspectives might coexist in a person. But they are biased in different situations. Either of them may rise to be the dominating one that influences us to make decisions. But we’re totally unaware.Student A: But do those perspectives show bias in their influence on human life,for example, positive or negativeProfessor Zimbardo: In a sense, that’s right. Any time perspective in excess has more negatives than positives, you know what those future-oriented people sacrificefor success. They sacrifice family time . they sacrifice friend time. They sacrifice fun time. And they sacrifice sleep. So it affects their health. And they live for work, achievement and control.Student B: Yes. That’s ture. We just never realized that before. But professor,do you think time perspective is something inherent or something we learnProfessor Zimbardo: People’s time perspectives result from the social environment and their life experiences, and they can be learned and be changed . That’s the last point I want to make today. one needs to develop the mental flexibility to shift time perspectives fluidly, depending on the demands of the situation; that’s what you’re got to learn to do. The optimal temporal mix is What you get from the past-positive gives you roots. What you get from the future is wings to soar to new destinations, new challenges. What you get from the present hedonism is energy, the energy to explore yourself, places, people, sensuality.Further ListeningListening 1Ex1: F F F F T T F TEx2: 1)friend 2) end 3) weeks 4)know 5)terrible 6)rang 7)younger 8)tired 9)game 10)make 11)show 12)thinking 13)distance 14)corner 15)telegram16)deserveScripts:Around the Cornerby Henson TowneAround the corner I have a friend,In this great city that has no end.Yet the days go by and weeks rush on,And before I know it, a year is gone.And I never see my old friend's face,For life is a swift and terrible race,He knows I like him just as well,As in the days when I rang his bell,And he rang mine.But we were younger then,And now we are busy, tired men.Tired of playing a foolish game,Tired of trying to make a name."Tomorrow," I say, "I will call on JimJust to show that I'm thinking of him."But tomorrow comes and tomorrow goes,And distance between us grows and grows.Around the corner! — yet miles away."Here's a telegram sir—Jim died today."And that's what we get and deserve in the end.Around the corner , a vanished friend.Listening 2Ex1: 1)clocks 2) promptness efficiency 3) impatient 4) household appliances save time 5)control miss avoidEx2: F T F F FScript:Almost every American wears a watch, and in nearly every room in an American home, there's a clock. "Be on time." "Don't waste time." "Time is money." "Time waitsfor no one." All of these familiar sayings reflect the American obsession with promptness and efficiency. Students and employees displease their teachers and bosses when they arrive late. This desire to get the most out of every minute often affects behavior, making Americans impatient when they have to wait. The pressureto make every moment count sometimes makes it difficult for Americans to relax anddo nothing.The desire to save time and handle work efficiently also leads Americans to buy many kinds of machines. These range from household appliances to equipment for the office such as calculators, photocopy machines and computers. One popular machineis the videocassette recorder, which gives Americans a new kind of control over time. Fans of professional football don't have to miss the Sunday afternoon game on TV because of a birthday party. They simply videotape it and watch the game in the evening. What's more, they can actual save time by fast-forwarding through all the sales ads and commercials shown during te game. So a game, seen later on, might only last hours.Listening 3Ex1: A B A B DEx2: 1)pessimistic 2)doubled 3)coal 4)chickens 5) artificial6)well-designed7)fresher 8)leading 9)unnecessaryScript:What will life be like 100 years from now Some experts are optimistic; others,far more pessimistic. They think that by then the population will have doubled. Wewill have run out of essential materials, like oil and coal. We may even have run out of water to drink. They believe that we will be living like chickens- living in little boxes, and eating artificial food.But those who are more optimistic say that life in the future will be much better than it is today. We may be living in well-designed , systematic communities. We may be getting more sunlight, breathing fresher air, living in a better environment and leading far more pleasant lives than we are today.Life will certainly have become far more mechanized by the year 2100. It may even have become too mechanized. Mechanization has already caused quite a few problems and will cause still more. For example, many jobs will have been “automated”. People will no longer be able to learn only one job in their lifetime. Many of the jobs that young people are doing today will have become unnecessary by the time they are 40.Questions:1. What can definitely be said of life in the next century2. What does "many jobs will be 'automated'" mean according to the passage3. What will the influence of automation be upon people in terms of employment4. Is there any possibility hat some jobs will disappear in decades from now Why or why not5. What would the future job market look likeListening 4Ex1: F T T F FEx2: 1) Because they could have a large house and yard there2) The cities have grown larger3) During the last 10 or 15 years of the 20th century4) Because they want to change them into apartment buildings5) It saves people time for traveling back and forthScript:Starting in the early 1900s, many Americans living and working in large cities moved to the suburbs. They wanted to live where they could have a large house and yard, instead of a small apartment with no yard. The problem that this has brought is that as the cities have grown larger, people must travel a long way to their place of work. Often the trip takes as much as two hours each way. Thus they have very little time to enjoy their houses and yards.Therefore, during the last decades of the 20th century, some people became interested in moving back to the business areas of the cities. Many old buildings with businesses or factories on the first few floors have upper floors that are empty- Other old buildings are completely empty. Architects have been buying these buildings and changing them into attractive apartment buildings. Most have large comfortable rooms with big windows, which let in a lot of light. The apartments in these buildings are quickly bought by people who want to move back downtown. As one new apartment owner said, "I don't have a yard anymore, but I also don't have to sit in my car for over three hours a day. And there are nearby parks that I can visitnow that I have more time."。
人教版英语八年级上册Unit 8听力原文及翻译
Unit 8 How do you make a banana milk shake?Section A, 1bBoy 1:I’m hungry! Let’s make a banana milk shake.我饿了!我们一起做个香蕉奶昔吧。
Boy 2:How do you make a banana milk shake?怎么做香蕉奶昔?Boy 1:Well, first peel three bananas.首先剥好三根香蕉。
Boy 2:Three bananas?三根香蕉?Boy 1:Yes. Then cut up the bananas.是的,然后把香蕉切碎。
Boy 2:OK, I’m finished.好的,我弄好了。
Boy 1:Now put the bananas and ice-cream in the blender. Then pour the milk into the blender.现在把香蕉和冰激凌放入果汁机中,然后再将牛奶倒进去。
Boy 2:Is this enough milk?这些牛奶够吗?Boy 1:I guess so. Next, turn on the blender. Finally, pour the milk shake into a glass and drink it.我想可以。
接下来开启果汁机,最后把奶昔倒在杯子中就可以喝了。
Section A, 2a, 2bGirl 1:Let’s make fruit salad.我们来做水果沙拉吧。
Girl 2:OK. Do you have bananas?好的,你有香蕉吗?Girl 1:Yes, I do. How many bananas do we need?有,需要几根香蕉?Girl 2:We need three bananas.需要三根。
Girl 1:That sounds about right. What else?那应该够了,别的呢?Girl 2:Watermelon.西瓜。
英语听力教程(第2册)Unit8听力原文
Unit 8 听力原文Part ICAn easy way to remember how much we need to exercise for fitness is to keep in mind the letters F, I and T:Frequency --- 3 to 5 days a weekIntensity—till your heart rate reaches your target speedTime -15 to 60 minutes each timeThen you may ask how to work out your target heart speed range. Let's do it together.The upper limit of your target heart speed range is 190 minus your age.The lower limit is 160 minus your age.For someone who is 20 years old, for example, his target heart speed range would be between 140 beats per minute (160-20) and 170 beats per minute (19~20).Once you've got your target speed range, you may start checking whether your exercise gives you the fitness effect.First, warm up with five minutes for stretch exercises. Then start your energetic exercise (e.g. jogging). About 10 minutes after starting energetic exercise, stop and check your pulse rate (whichis the same as your heart rate). Finally, count your pulse beats forl5 seconds and multiply by four.Remember to take your pulse rate as soon as you stop. If you wait even 30 seconds, the rate will have begun to slow and will not be accurate.You are getting the fitness effect if your pulse rate is in your target heart speed range.Part II The digestive system and diarrheaAEvery now and again, a stressful situation may arise the course of our school, home or community life. Often, the situation involves disagreements between people.Sometimes, the situation involves work difficulties—not knowing how to solve a problem or having to make a difficult decision. At other times, it involves money—not having enough to spend or disagreement over what to spend on.That is why relationship problems, work-related problems and money problems are three well-known situations that cause stress. So knowing how to handle people, learning how to solve problems or make decisions, and living within our income all help to control stress.Here are four ways to help you control stress from situations.Clue #1: Be kind, loving and polite to your parents, grandparents, brothers and sisters. Make time to talk, play and relax together.Clue #2: Treat others the way you would like them to treat you. Smile, chat, laugh and do things together. Learn to cooperate, share and make sacrifices for others.Clue #3: Do not keep your worries to yourself. Talk them over with someone you respect. Two heads are better than one.Clue #4: Think of the good and bad points of each choice. Be guided by facts and not your feelings. Choose together with the people who will be affected by the results. In this way, they will see how the choice is made and be more willing to bear with the bad points.CThere are many explanations of why people catch colds. Some say colds are caused by the environment. Others say colds can result from smoking too much, lack of exercise, not enoughrest, poor diet, or working too hard. But new studies suggest that people who feel extreme tension for a long period of time also may be at a higher risk of developing a cold. The researchers notethat stress is not the cause of all colds. But studies show that people who suffer from the stress caused by serious personal problems are more likely to get sick than those who do not.Researchers have spent years trying to find out why some people have colds more often than others. An earlier study directed in 1991 showed that emotional stress can lead to colds. In current studies, researchers at the University of Pittsburgh studied almost 300 people, ages 18 to 55. They were given physical, social and mental and emotional examinations. Then live cold viruses were placed in their noses. During the next five days, they were examined to find out who became infected by the virus and then developed signs of a Cold. Such signs include coughing, sneezing and a blocked nose. Stress lowers resistance, but just how it does is unknown. So in this study, the researchers look for the kinds of stress involved and how they might have affected resistance to colds. The study found that severe stress lasting a month or more increased the risk of a cold. Two causes of stress—losing a job or having difficulties with family members or friends—increase the risk the most.Part III “So you wanna keep fit, huh?”Exercise keeps you fit and healthy. Exercises should be done three to five times a week. Exercise for at least 15 to 30 minutes each time. However, a good exercise plan should include warming-up exercises before and cool-down exercises after vigorous activity. Both of them should last five to ten minutes. These exercises, such as head tilt, arm circles, side bend and toe touch, stretch your muscles and make them move more easily. They prepare you for vigorous activity and help your body slowly return to its normal breathing and heart rate after vigorous activity. Andhere comes Crystal Collins.Hi there! I'm Crystal Collins, and I'm very happy to share some time with you. So, you wanna keep fit, huh? Well, you sure came to the right place! Together we can keep fit and healthy, and be more successful. It's easy. Everybody can do it, you hear?Just remember the five golden rules:Number one. Always wear loose and comfortable clothes when you're exercising. You needto feel comfortable and relaxed.Number two. You should always do some simple warming-up exercises first. To get your body ready for the real thing.Number three. Never try to do too much exercise too soon. Take it nice and easy now, you hear? There's no rush about this.Number four. Don't forget to relax completely for about five minutes when you've finishedyour-workout. You need to rest a little bit after you've been exercising.And here is golden rule number five. Stop immediately if you feel any pain in your chest, throat, neck or head.Part ⅣMore about the topic: Subhealthstressed out:very tense and anxious because of difficulties in their lives. (INFORMAL) 紧张的,有压力的borderline: the point at which one quality, situation, emotion etc ends and another begins.i.e. She slipped over the borderline into sleep.exposure: when someone is in a situation where they are not protected from something dangerous or unpleasant.exposure toi.e. Prolonged exposure to the sun can cause skin cancer.fatigue: a feeling of extreme physical or mental tiredness. 疲倦,疲乏,疲劳endocrinopathy: [end?ukrai'n?p?θi] n. [医]内分泌病] n. 神经衰弱症neurasthenia: [nju?r?s'θi:ni?climacteric: [klai'm?kt?rik] 更年期insomnia: Someone who suffers from insomnia finds it difficult to sleep.agitation: If someone is in a state of agitation, they are very worried or upset, and show this intheir behavior, movements, or voice.不安,焦虑cardiovascular: [kɑ:di?u'v?skjul?] adj. 心脏血管的palpitations: /p?lp?'te???nz/ n [plural] if you have palpitations, your heart beats quickly in an irregular way急速不规则的跳动;心悸]名词‘医’心律不整; 心脏跳动不规则arrhythmia: [?'riθmi?aquatic: living or growing in water, e.g. an aquatic planttrace element: a chemical element such as iron or zinc that occurs in very small amounts in living things and is necessary for normal growth and development. ‘生物’(动植物所不可欠缺的) 微量元素indispensable: essential; too important to be without: Cars have become an indispensable part of our lives.digestive tract: 消化道Feeling stressed out lately? Has the doctor said he cannot find anything wrong with you? Perhaps he sent you to a hospital, but all the fancy equipment there show that there is nothing wrong. Then consider this, you might be in a state of subhealth. Subhealth, also called the thirdstate or gray state, is defined as a borderline state between health and disease. According to an investigation by the National Health Organization, over 45 percent of subhealthy people are middle aged or elderly. The percentage is even higher among people who work in management positions as well as students around exam-time, due to their heightened exposure to stress. Subhealth comes under several clinical names, including fatigue syndrome, endocrinopathy, neurasthenia, and climacteric syndrome. Symptoms include a lack of energy, depression, slow reactions, insomnia, agitation, and poor memory. Other symptoms include shortness of breath, sweating and aching in the waist and legs. In addition, cardiovascular diseases such as palpitations and arrhythmia may appear. The key to preventing and recovering from subhealth, according to some medical experts is to form good living habits, alternate work with rest, exercise regularly,and take part in open air activities. As for meals, people are advised to eat less salt and sugar. They should also eat more fresh vegetables, fruits, fish and aquatic products because they are rich in nutritional elements--vitamins and trace elements--that are indispensable to the body. Nutrition experts point out that it is not good to eat too much at one meal because it may cause unhealthy changes in the digestive tract. They also say that a balanced diet is very helpful in avoiding subhealth.Part V Memory test: How to Keep Your Liver HealthyThe liver does so much for your body that without it, you wouldn’t last longer than 24 hours. Its functions are so vital that if it falls into poor health, the rest of your body falls into poor health.In this video, we’re going to discuss in greater detail how to keep your liver healthy because a happier liver means a happier you. If you like to drink, be sure to do so in moderation. Drink aslittle as possible although one glass of red wine a day is acceptable and can even help your body. However, avoid hard liquors such as scotch, whiskey and vodka, which actually cause the most damage to your liver. Eat liver-healthy foods. Now we will be going to much more detail on healthy liver foods, liver diets and even liver cleanses in later videos, but it’s important that you eat foods rich in antioxidants such as kale, spinach, blueberries, broccoli, cauliflower and cabbage. These foods will help your liver detoxify damaging chemicals that are currently in your body. Drink lots of water. Water is a great natural detoxifier. Water will flush toxins from your body, and give your liver a much needed break. This next suggestion can be tough for many, but by cutting down caffeine-rich stimulants, such as coffee, soda and tea, will also reduce the amount of work your liver has to put into removing toxins in your body as well. Exercise regularly, even if it’s lightly. Getting out and exercise regularly increases liver activity by causing you to sweat and get your liver to push toxins out as you do. It’s like a jumpstart for your liver. Exercise does much more for you and your body beyond a healthy liver and is always a good idea if you want to stay healthy.。
Unit8听力原文及译文
Unit 8 Is there a post office near here?Section A1b the places you hear in 1a. A: Is there a restaurant on Bridge Street? B: Yes, there is. Conversation 2A: Is there a post office near here?B: Um, yes, there i s. There’s one on Long Street. Conversation 3A: Is there a hospital on Center Street? B: No, there isn ’t.2b Listen and fill in the blanks with the words in the box. Conversation 1A: Excuse me. Is there a police station near here? B: Yes. It’s between t he restaurant and the hospital. Conversation 2 A: Where’s the park?B: The park? Oh, it’s across from the bank. Conversation 3A: Excuse me. Is there a hospital near here? B: Yes, it’s on Bridge Street . Conversation 4A: Where’s the pay phone? B: It’s next to the post office. Conversation 5A: Excuse me. Are there any restaurants near here? B: Yes, there’s one in front of the post office. Conversation 6 A: Where’s the hotel?B: The hotel? It’s behind the police station.Section B1b Listen and write the correct place for each letter in the picture.A: Excuse me. Is there a hotel around here? B: Yes, there is. Just go along Bridge Street and turn left when you see the library. Go along Long Street and听录音,圈出1a 中你听到的地点。
英语听力教程第三版unit8thesoundofmusic听力原文
Unit 8 The Sound of MusicPart I Getting readyA quiz game show is a type of radio or television programming genre in which contestants, television personalities orcelebrities, sometimes as part of a team, play a game which involves answering questions or solving puzzles usually formoney and/or prizes.A The following words will appear in this unit. Listencarefully and study the definitions.1.panel :a group of specialists who give their advice oropinion about something2. contender :a person who takes part in a competition or tries to win something3.nomination :the act of suggesting or choosing somebody as a candidate in an election, or for a job or an award4.cinematography :the art or process of making films5. score :the music written for a film/movie or play6.audition :take part in a practical test for performingapplicants7.choreography :the arranging or inventing of dances, especially ballet8. pantomime:traditional Christmas musical show for children9. scherzo :a short, lively piece of music, that is often part of a longer piece10. lyrics:the words of a songListen to the following radio quiz game. Whoare those people on the panel Supply the missing information.Nowlisten again. if it is true. If who that person is.Put a mark beside each question. Put a tickit is false, put a cross. Finally write downAudioscript::A - Announcer M - Maxine Q - Quizmaster L - LauraT-Tim D-David Radio dies and gentlemen, it's time for"Alive or Dead" our exciting quiz gameabout famous people alive or dead. Before I tell you the rules, let's meet ourpanel for tonight. From right to left we have that famoussportsman and racing driver,Tim Brown. T:. Evening everyone. Next to Tim, is that lovely star of the American cinema, whois now here in Bristol at the Opera House, Maxine Morgan. Hithere! Next we have novelist,David Walker. Good evening.And last but not least,composer and singer,Laura Dennison. Hello. So let's get with the game. I have the name of a famous person --alive or dead -- in this envelope. The panel will try toguess who it is. But they can only ask questions which havea "yes" or "no" answer. Are we ready Well, yes. Are you alive No, I'm not. NowMaxine, let's have your question. You're not alive. So you are a famous person who is dead. Oh, I know.Are you a person in a book -- a fictional character -- somebody who isn't real No, I'm not fictional.David, can we have your question So you're a real, dead person That's right, I am.Good, now we want to know where you comefrom. Are you British No, I'm not British. Are you from Europe No, I'm not. T: Areyou Australian No, Tim, I'm not. I'm not Australian. Oh, then I know, you're American. You're a real American person, butyou're dead. Now let me think. Ah, yes, are you a writer ofany sort No, I'm not. Are you anything to do with peace, youknow someone like Martin Luther King A good guess,Laura,but I'm nothing to do with peace. Well, that's a difficult one,really. I think the answer is half "Yes" and half "No". No,I'll say "No".T: Mm,funny,half"Yes",half "No",but finally "No".Well,well, are you famous as an entertainer of any sort, you know a film star, or pop singer, or an actor, you knowwhat I meanAsk one question at a time,Tim, please.The answer to your question is "No". I've got it, I've got the answer.I know, I'm right. Careful now, Maxine. Say the wrong answerand I win the game. Are you sure you know who I am Yes, you're dead, you're famous, you're American, you are sort of famousfor peace work. You're not an entertainer -- you're not anAmerican film star.I don't think you were famous as a soldier.I think you were a politician,I think you died in think you were married to a very beautiful woman ... I think you arevery close,Maxine. I think you are almost there.I think you once went to Berlin. I think you are President John Kennedy, President of the United States of America. Andcongratulations to you and the panel, Maxine. Yes, you areright, the name of the famous person in my envelope isPresident Kennedy, born in 1917 and died in 1963, on November 22nd to be exact. Now for my next famous person ...Part II Slumdog MillionaireSlumdog Millionaire is a 2000 British drama film. Set andfilmed in India, the film tells the story of Jamal Malik, ayoung man from the Juhu slums of Mumbai who appears on the Indian version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire and exceedspeople's expectations, thereby arousing the suspicions ofcheating. It was widely acclaimed, being praised for its plot, soundtrack and directing. It was nominated for 10 AcademyAwards in 2009, winning eight, including Best Picture, BestDirector, and Best Adapted Screenplay.A Listen to the first news report broadcasted when Slumdog Millionaire won 10 Academy Award nominations. Note down thekey words in the notes column. Then complete the storyline of the movie.Audioscript:One of the strongest contenders for the Best Picture Oscarthis year is Slumdog Millionaire.Set in Mumbai, India,it is a story about destiny.Jamal Malik, a young man from the slums,becomes a contestant on the Indian reality show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Based on itsAmerican equivalent,the Indian show offers 20 million rupees ($400 000) to the winner.Few expected this independent production directed byfilmmaker Danny Boyle to make it to the Oscars. But Slumdogis no longer an underdog. It has won viewers' hearts and gained critical acclaim. With ten Academy Award nominations, it isa serious Oscar contender. (Movie) Host: Jamal Malik, you 're absolutely right!Jamal Malik is not knowledgeable. He just happens to know the answers to the specific questions he's been asked. Eachquestion is somehow related to an event that has defined hislife.With their mother dead, Jamal and his brother Salim begin tosteal, trade and sleep wherever they can to survive.But the defining momentin Jamal's life is when an orphan girl named Latika tags along with them.Latika is taken by gangsters and Jamal will not restuntil he sees her again.Years later, as a young adult, he finds her at a gangster'shouse. She is locked up, and her only pastime is the IndianTV show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire Jamal gets on the showso she can watch him. (Movie) Two of the musketeers are called Athos and Porthos. What was the name of the third musketeer Danny: I'd like to phone a friend. Host: Here we go. Latika: Hello.Latika answers the phone. When they were kids, she was thethird musketeer. Jamal and Salim were Athos and Porthos.Director Danny Boyle's love story is influenced by Bollywood where everything is extreme.Like most Indian films, Slumdog Millionaire offers up all-consuming passion, tear-jerking drama and a happy ending. The film's dynamic music and vivid colors enhance the emotions. Its fairytale quality does not undermine Danny Boyle's grittylook at today's India, a country of extremes itself. (Movie)Danny: Latika.Slumdog Millionaire 's exuberance is contagious. Weleave the theater love-struck, exhilarated.And, as in Jamal's case, we can't help but root for the Oscar nominee regardless of the odds.Now listen to the second news report broadcasted on the daywhen Slumdog Millionaire finally earned 8 Oscars. After listening, match the awards with the corresponding names. Audioscript:Slumdog Millionaire was expected to win big. And, it did,earning Oscars for its cinematography, film editing, soundmixing, and bringing two of the golden statuettes to composer A. R. Rahman for his score and an original song.Steven Spielberg announced the top award of the evening."And, the Oscar goes to SlumdogMillionaire , Christian Colson, producer."The man behind the movie, Danny Boyle, was named best director.Slumdog Millionaire was a collaboration between the British filmmaker, an Indian cast and crew and a Hollywood distributor. Backstage, Boyle said joint efforts like this will becomemore common."You know, there's all sorts of people gonna work there.These things are gonna come together. The world's shrinking a bitin a ... in a wonderful way and it will benefit from it because, in ... in culture, fusion is a wonderful thing."The film is set in the slums of Mumbai and features twoprofessional actors with a cast of unknown youngsters fromthe Mumbai slums. Young cast members came to Hollywood forthe Oscars.The story revolves around a teenager who hopes to win richeson a quiz show. Writer Simon Beaufoy, who won an Oscar forhis adapted screenplay, says the story is appropriate in a recession."A film comes out that is ostensibly about being a millionaire, and actually what it's about is, it's a film that says thereare more important things than money. There's love and faithand your family, and that struck a chord with people, I think, right now."Part III Karen Kain -- a Canadian ballerinaThe beautiful prima ballerina of the National Ballet of Canada, Karen Kain,was for five years the partner of Rudolph Nureyev and has danced most of the major classical ballet roles allover the world, since her debut in the demanding role ofOdile/Odette in Swan Lake at the age of nineteen. She was bornin Hamilton, Ontario, not far from Toronto, the home of theNational Ballet of Canada. She and her husband now live in Cabbagetown, one of the oldest districts in central Toronto. In this section, you are going to hear an interview duringwhich Karen Kain, a Canadian ballerina, talks about her work and how she first became interested in the ballet. Whilelistening for the first time, add more key words in the leftcolumn. After the second listening, answer the questions.Now try this: listen to a more authentic version of theinterview and then do the multiple choice.Audioscript: Well, I actually she founded the National Ballet saw Celia Franka dance, and now of Canada. And she was dancingin my hometown -- Giselle, and I was taken for my birthday,and I saw her dance, (I) fell in love with it, and I startedtaking ballet lessons, and then at one point ... I think itwas around ten ...my teacher said that I should audition for the National Ballet School, which is a full-time academic and ballet training facility here in Toronto. It's one of (I)think it's the only one in North America. I mean, it's thesame set-up as the Paris Opera, the Bolshoi, the Leningrad ... you know, that they have the school affiliated with theCompany. And you take all your academic training as wellas your dance training. So she told me that I should auditionfor that, and I did. And when I was eleven years old I went tothe ballet school for seven years till I was eighteen,graduated from high school and I joined the National Ballet.Now you were married fairly recently, weren't you It'll bethree years next month, yes. Is touring and so forth hard onmarried life I believe your husband's an actor, isn't he Yes, he is. So you're probably both away quite a lot. We've beenvery fortunate. We've managed to stay together most of thetime. The longest we were separated was when I was on tourwith the National Ballet in Europe last spring, and I was gone for six weeks, and he was making a television series and hewas in Australia for six weeks. So we have been separated afew times,but most of the time we manageto be together.We've just been very fortunate. Throughout the year ... how muchtime do you have off away from the dance Very little. I'mtrying to make sure that I get one week in June this year,because I have not had more than two days free since a yearago January. So I've been working very very hard, and I feelthat I really need one week free,you know. TomBoyd: Howlong can a ballerina go on before she should start thinking ofretiring I hope that I have another ten years at the most todance. TomBoyd: What would you do after that Would you leave the ballet completely or go into teaching, or choreographyI don't think choreography, I don't think I have any talentin ... you know ... I have no desire, no talent. I like toteach, I like to coach young dancers. I don't think I wouldleave the ballet world entirely,but I may try something else. You never know. I'm interested in other things and I have done some sorts of musical comedy work, and I've enjoyed it verymuch -- just to expand myself a little and to look around.And this Christmas again I'll be playing Cinderella in anEnglish pantomime -- which is great fun for me. I really have fun and it's not serious dancing,you know, and I get to speakand act and everything. So I don't know. I would also liketo have a family, so I have lots of things that I may do.Part IV More about the topic:Beethoven VBeethoven was a Germancomposer and pianist. A crucial figure in the transition between the Classical and Romantic eras in Western art music, he remains one of the most famous and influential of all composers. His best known compositionsinclude9 symphnies, 5 concertos for piano,32 piano sonatas, and 16 string quartets. The Symphony No. 5 in C minor waswritten in 1804 - 1808. It is one of the most frequently played symphonies.Listen to the recording. Learn to appreciate Beethoven'sFifth Symphony with the speakers. While listening,complete the following outline.Audioscript:"" The most famous four-note sequence in music, instantly recognizable to us today as Beethoven's Fifth and full of associations. Fate knocking at the door. "V" for victory. But how must it have sounded to that original audience Beethovenpresented it as pure music. No clue to its significance ormeaning. Well, Beethoven, as a personality,was so tricky and so uncouth in so many ways, and had such a difficult,troubled childhood, that the adult that gave us some of these pieceswas a man so often at odds with the world around him. Bornin poverty in the German town of Bonn, he was bullied as achild by his alcoholic father and in his 20s realized he wasgoing deaf, surely the crudest of tragedies for a musician.But Beethoven was a man with a will of iron, and, in the Fifth, he harnesses the power of the orchestra to an insistent propulsive rhythm, forcing the symphony to articulate the profoundest personal drama. Host: The story of a soul struggling against implacable fate and emerging incandescently victorious. One of the great contrasts available to a composer are the contrasts of darkness and lightness. And in his Fifth Symphony, builds up from hesitant darkness into the radiant blaze of optimism, confidence, whatever. Now he does this through the simplest of means. Atthe end of the third movement, which is the rather shadowy,dark scherzo, his plan is to burst us into the light withoutstopping. Now he does this by making the orchestra play asquietly as it can, all the strings just plucking very, veryquietly. Then comes the heartbeat of the drum, very, very quietand distant and the strings just moving up and down, uncertainabout which way they're going to go. And then suddenly, very quickly, the whole orchestra comes in, and, without stopping,we burst into the final movement. This is in the major key.Lights full on, after lights hardly on at all. The symphony is a masterpiece of storytelling without words. When the French Revolution erupted, Beethoven was a teenager, struggling tosupport his family after the deathof their mother, and the concept of individual liberty became a lifelong issue. And we, the listeners, are compelled toshare his battle against fate. Although Beethoven wanted towrite something that was comprehensible at first hearing,he wasn't writing simply to give pleasure. He wanted it to be apotentially life-changing experience, music that wouldresonate in the mind long after the last note had sounded.Part V Do you know ...What is a musical According to one definition,it is a stage, television or film production utilizing popular-style songs and dialogue to either tell a story and/or showcase thetalents of varied performers. Musicals are not just written-- they are collaborative creations that are put togetherpiece by piece. Then what is the Broadway musical Whenwas it bornA Spot dictation. Listen to a passage about the birth of theBroadway musical. Fill in the blanks with the words you hear. Audioscript:Most scholars believe that The Black Crook in 1866 marked the beginning of the musical comedy, integrating music, dance and comedy, with an emphasis on beautiful women and spectacular scenery. But it was during World War One and after, that themusical developed as a uniquely American idiom.Song-and-dance manGeorge M. Cohan exploited Americans' sense of patriotism, moving away from European influences. In the1920s. songwriters who include Jerome Kern, George and Ira Gershwin, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, broughtthe musical to maturity with their meticulous crafting ofmusic and lyrics to create the American popular song.The modern musical was born in 1943 with Rodgers and Hammerstein's Oklahoma, which revolutionized the way dance, music and dialogue were used to develop the plot andcharacters. Other songwriters of the 1940s, 50s and 60s capitalized on that winning formula to write so many hitmusicals, that that era is now referred to as "Broadway'sGolden Age." Since then, American musicals have beentranslated and produced on stages all over the world. Themusic has becomea mainstay amongvocalists and jazz musicians, making clear the expression that the music of Broadway is truly "America's classic music."Foreigners call Americans Yankees. Southerners say thatYankees are Northerners. Northerners say that Yankees arefrom the New England states. People in New England say it isthe Vermonters who are Yankees. Vermonters reply that a Yankee is just someone who eats pie for breakfast. It seems that the origin of this term defies detection.B1 Listen to the passage. Focus on what the word "Yankee"refers to at different times. Supply the missing information.B2 Now listen to the passage again. Complete the summary.Our question this week asks about the song Yankee Doodle. To explain, we must go back more than 200 years. The American colonies had not yet won independence from England. The British used the word "Yankee" to describe colonists in thenortheast part of America. That area was known as NewEngland. After the War for Independence, the British used the word tomean all Americans. And during both World WarsAmerican soldiers were known as Yankees or just Yanks.That was the song Yankee Doodle. History experts do not know exactly when it was written. Someresearch shows the date may have been during the 1750s. Many stories say a British armydoctor wrote the song when England was fighting the Frenchand the Indians in North America. There is little confirmationof these stories. Wedo know, however, that Yankee Doodle was sung by the British to make the colonial people of NorthAmerica look foolish. And we know the song became popularamong the colonists themselves. Many knew at least some ofthe words.The British continued to use the song to make Yankees lookfoolish until the early days of the War for Independence inthe 1770s. Stories say, British soldiers marching out of the city of Boston stepped in time to the music of Yankee Doodle. Those same soldiers were defeated by colonial troops at thetown of Concord singing the same song. Since then,Yankee Doodle has been a song that represents the United States.Part VII Watch and enjoyMagic is a performing art that e ntertains audiences by staging tricks or creating illusions of seemingly impossible orsupernatural feats using natural means. These feats arecalled magic tricks, effects, or illusions. A professionalwho performs such illusions is called a magician or anillusionist.Watch the video clip from the movie Illusionist.After watching, answer the following questions.Videoscript:Announcer:Life and death, space and time, fate and chance. These are the forces of the universe. Tonight, ladies and gentleman, I present to you a man who has unlocked these mysteries. From the furthest corners of the world wherethe dark arts still hold sway, he returns to us todemonstrate how nature's laws may be bent. I give you ...Eisenheim.Eisenheim :Might I borrow a handkerchief from someone You, Madam. Thank you. Ah, be patient. Now, if you please, Iwould like to continue with an examination of time. From themoment we enter this life we are in the flow of it.We measure it and we mark it but we cannot defy it. Wecannot even speed it up or slow it down. Or can we Havewe not each experienced a sensation that a beautifulmomentseemedto pass too quickly And wished that we couldmake it linger Or felt time slow on a dull day and wished that we could speed things up a bit I assure you, they'requite real. Audience: Is it realEisenheim : And you, Madam, where is yourhandkerchief Audience: Bravo! Very good.。
最新新视野商务英语视听说(第二版)第8单元听力原文
Unit 8 Receiving Visitors2.Listening PracticeTask 2-1A receptionist in a small firm may have to use a computer, operate a switchboard, and perform other clerical duties, in addition to receiving visitors. In a large firm a receptionist can concentrate on welcoming and looking after visitors.A visitor to a large firm should make an appointment, because executives are often very busy and do not have much time for visitors. Executives and secretaries should notify the receptionist in advance about important appointments, and about the movements of executives, especially when they are out of the building on business. Executives often ask receptionists to make travel arrangements for them, such as booking hotel rooms and airline tickets.Task 2-2There is a certain procedure for receiving visitors. A receptionist should find out if the visitor has an appointment or not. If the visitor is an important client, the executive or his secretary will come down to the reception area to greet the visitor. Sometimes the receptionist or another secretary escorts, or accompanies, the visitor to the executive’s office. Using the visitor’s name when he arrives is a friendly gesture and gives the visitor a good impression of the firm. The receptionist announces the visitor’s name, title and position, and introduces the executive to him.When a visitor’s request for a meeting cannot be satisfied, the receptionist should apologise and make some suggestions for an alternative time. If a meeting is impossible, the receptionist should express regret and explain why, with tact, so that the visitor’s feelings are not hurt.A receptionist should keep a register which includes dates, times, names and the firm the visitor works for. A receptionist can then refer to this if there is a request for information.4. Video 1(R for receptionist; S for secretary; V for visitor)R: Good morning. May I help you?V: Yes, I’d like to see Mr. Hansen, the president.R: Do you have an appointment, sir?V: Yes. I have an appointment with him at 10:30.R: Can I have your name, please?V: Brawn Dantini from Wilson Electronics.R: Thank you, Mr. Dantini. Would you please take a seat? I’ll tell Mr. Hansen’s secretary that you’re here.V: Thanks.R: Mary, this is reception. Mr. Dantini is here for his appointment.S: I’m sorry, but Mr. Hansen is on a long-distance call. Would you ask Mr. Dantini to wait for a few minutes?R: All right. I’m sorry, Mr. Dantini, our president is occupied just now. Would you please wait for a few minutes?V: Yes, of course.R: Would you like something to drink? Do you prefer coffee or tea?V: Thank you. Coffee, please.R: Would you like sugar and cream with your coffee?R: Here you are, Mr. Dantini. And there are some magazines if you’d like to read them.V: Oh, good. Thank you very much.S: Mr. Hansen is available now. Please send Mr. Dantini up.R: OK. Mr. Dantini, our president is available now. I’ll take you to his office and bring you some more coffee.V: Thank you very much.5. Language Focus B2. Task 1(P for Paula; G for Mr. Green)P: Excuse me, sir, but are you Mr. Green from Sydney?G: Oh, yes. My name is Brain Green. I’m the Purchasing Manager of the Sydney Garment Ltd. Corporation. And you are …?P: My name is Paula.G: How do you do, Paula?P: How do you do? I work at the Guangzhou Textiles Company. I’m secretary to the General Manager, Mr. Liu. I’m here to meet you on his behalf.G: Thank you very much for coming to meet me.P: My pleasure. Fine weather, isn’t it?G: Yes, it’s lovely. Real November weather, sharp and bright.P: Now let’s go and collect your luggage first. And after that I’ll accompany you to the Garden Hotel.G: OK, I’m in your hands. Let’s go.6. Video 2(J for Ms. Jones; L for Lin Hua; W for Miss.Wang)L: Ms. Jones?J: Yes, I’m Miranda Jones from Flora Garment Trading.L: My name is Lin Hua. I’m the Sales Manager for Baiyun Sweaters. How do you do, Ms. Jones? J: How do you do? It’s very nice of you to come to meet me.L: You’re welcome. And may I introduce my secretary, Miss Wang?J: Sure. It’s a pleasure to meet you, Miss Wang.W: The pleasure is mine. The flowers are for you, Ms. Jones.J: Oh, thank you. They’re beautiful! You’re very kind.L: How was your flight, Ms. Jones?J: Very nice. The service on board was superb. And I managed a few hours’ sleep, so I feel fine now.L: I’m glad to hear that. Oh, let me help you with your luggage.J: Thank you.L: Is this your first visit to China?J: No. But it’s my first visit to Guangzhou. I hope it won’t be my last.L: I hope you will have a pleasant stay here.J: I’m sure I will.L: Our car is our in the parking lot. Shall we drive to your hotel now?W: This way, please. Here we are, Ms. Jones. This is the White Swan Hotel. We’ve reserved a room for you on the 6th floor with a balcony overlooking the park.J: Thank you very much. It’s very considerate of you.W: Well, that’s the least we could do.L: This is your room, Ms. Jones. Is it OK?J: Oh, yes it’s lovely, very cozy and well-decorated! It’s really very thoughtful of you to have arranged if for me.L: Not at all.W: You must be very tired after your long trip. Is there anything else we can do for you?J: No, thanks. Not at the moment.L: Then we’ll be leaving now so that you can settle in. After all, we’ll have enough time for business during the next 3days.J: Thank you.L: You’re welcome. We’ll contact you tomorrow morning.J: See you then.L,W: See you!。
施心远主编《听力教程》1 (第2版)Unit 8听力原文和答案
Unit 8Section OnePart 1 PhoneticsJill and Monica go to a travel agency.Jill: We’d like to make a booking (1) for a long weekend holida y, please.Clerk: Where (2) would you like to go, madam?Jill: Paris.Clerk: Where do you want to (3) stay in Paris?Monica: We’re not sure. Which hotel would you suggest?Clerk: The Residence Magenta is very good (4) and it’s quite cheap. I recommend you stay there.Monica: What (5) do you think, Jill?Jill: Ok. That’s what (6) we’ll do.Clerk: Would you complete this form, please?Jill: Is it (7) all right if we pay by cheque?Clerk: Of course, (8) that’s quite all right.Part 2 Listening and Note-TakingA. It’s got four wheels, and usually carries one person, but it ca n carry two. It top speed s around 6 kms an hour, and it weighs ab out 15 kilos. It costs £72.B. This vehicle costs about £5,000. It can go up to 160 kph, and can carry four people in comfor t. It weighs 695 kilos when it’s empty. There are four wheels.C. These two-wheeled vehicles are very popular with teenager s. They are fast, but much less safe than vehicle A or B. This mod el has a maximum speed of 224 KPH, and weighs 236 kilos. It can carry one or two people, and costs £1,700.D. This vehicle, which cots £65,000, is commonly used for public transport. It has two decks, or floors, and can carry 72 people when full. Its maximum speed is 11 0 kms an hour, but it doesn’t usually go faster than 80. It has six w heels, and weighs 9,000kilos.E. This vehicle was built by two countries working in collaborati on. It travels at 2, 160 kph- faster than sound-carrying a maximum of 100 people. When it is fully loaded with passengers and fuel, it weighs 175,000 kilograms. It has ten wheels. Each of these vehicl es cost hundreds of millions of pounds to produce- it is impossible to say exactly how much.F. “How may wheels”“Two”“What does it weigh?”“Thirteen and a half kilos.”“How much does it cost?”“£140”“How many people can it carry?”“Just one”“Top speed?”“It depends. For most people, perhaps about 25 kph.”Exercise BSection Two Listening ComprehensionPart 1 DialoguesDialogue 1Interviewer: So you’re over from the States?Woman: That’s right. We’ve been here about er, two and a half weeks and we’ve got another three days before we go back.Interviewer: Have you been to the theatre here??Woman: Oh, yes. Theatre, opera, concert, the lot. We’ve seen some magnificent things at the theatre, really excellent- the acting, the stage sets, the whole atmosphere, really, it was fantastic.Interviewer: Which do you think was your favorite play?Woman: It’s hard to say. Er, the Shakespeare play, that was br illiant, and then we saw a comedy last night, that was really funny, I loved that. I don’t know, it’s been a very entertaining two weeks, I think I’ve enjoyed most thing I’ve seen.Interviewer: and what’s next then?Woman: The bank! Tomorrow morning I’m going to cash som e more traveller’s cheques. You can spend quite a lot of money in London, you know. Never mind, it’s been worth it. The most excitin g two weeks I’ve had for a long time. And I think I’ll come back nex t year if I can. If I have enough money left that is!Ex. A. Listen to the interview and answer the questions.1. Where are they now?They are in London.2. Where is the woman from?She is from the United States.3. How long has she been here?She has been here for two and a half weeks.Exercise B: Listen again and decide whether the following statements are true or false.1. F. Plan to stay there for 3 weeks.(W: We’ve been here about two and a half weeks and we’ve got another three days before we go back.)2. F. She also has been to a concert.(W: Oh, yes. Theatre, opera, concerts, the lot.)3. F. She has traveller’s cheques.(W: Tomorrow morning I’m going to cash some more traveller’s cheques.)4. T (W: I’ll come ba ck next year if I can. If I have enough money left that is!)Dialogue 2 Are you Free for Lunch Today?Stuart: Woodside 8432Margaret: Hello again, Stuart. What can I do for you?Stuart: Are you free for lunch today?Margaret: Yes, I think so. What time?Stuart: One o'clock?Margaret: OK, where?Stuart: Lacy's, in Marston Street. Do you know where it is?Margaret: No.Stuart: Well, you take a 47 bus from the office, get off at Grange Square, cross the road, turn left, take the first on your right, and Lacy's is a few yards down the road on you left, opposite a church. You can't miss it.Margaret:But I won't be coming from the office. I've got a meeting at the town hall; I'll be coming straight from there.Stuart: OK. Then get a number 17, get off in front of the cathedral, walk through the park, then go along the canal to the right and over the first bridge, and you'll come out opposite Marston Street. Lacy's is down the other end on the right. You can't miss it.Margaret: No, I bet. Did you say one o'clock?Stuart: Yes. Is that OK?Margaret: No, on second thoughts, can we make it a bit earlier? Say a quarter to?Stuart: Quarter to one, OK.Margaret: All right. See you then. Macy's, in Caxton Street, right.Stuart: No!Ex. Listen to the dialogue and complete the passage.Stuart asked Margaret to have (1) lunch together. They will meet at Lucy’s, in (2) Marston Street at (3) a quarter to nine. Margaret can take a (4) 47 bus from the (5) office, gets off at (6) Grange Square, (7) cross the road, turns (8) left, takes the (9) first on her (10) right, and Lacy’s is a few yards down the road on the (11) left, opposite a (12) church. However, Margaret won’t be coming from the office.She’s got a meeting at the (13) town hall. She’ll be coming straight from there. Then she can get a number (14) 17, gets off in front of the (15) cathedral, walk through the (16) park, then go along the (17) canal to the (18) right and over the (19) first bridge, and she’ll come out (20) opposite Marston Street. Lacy’s is down at the (21) other end on the (22) right.Part 2 PassagesPassage 1 Sleep and Language learningIf you ask some people “how did you learn English so well?”, y ou may get a surprising answer: “In my sleep!” These are people w ho have taken part in one of the recent experiments to test learn-w hile-you-sleep methods, which are now being tried in several count ries, and with several subjects, of which English is only one.Specialists say that this sleep-study method speeds languag e learning tremendously. They say that the average person can lea rn two or three times as much during sleep as in the same period d uring the day- and this does not affect his rest in any way. A word of warning, however: sleep-teaching will only hammer into your he ad what you have studied while you are awake.In one experiment, ten lessons were broadcast over the radio at intervals of a fortnight. Each lesson lasted twelve hours- from 8 p.m. to 8 a.m. The first three hours of English grammar and vocab ulary were given with the students awake. At 11 p.m. a soothing lul laby was broadcast to send the student to sleep and for the next th ree hours the radio whispered the lesson again into his sleeping ea rs. At 2 a.m. a sharp noise was sent over the radio to wake the sle eping student up for a few minutes of revision. Then he was lulledback to rest again while the radio purred on. At 5 o’clock his sleep ended and he had to go through the lesson for three hours before his hard-earned breakfast.Exercise:1. A2. B3. D4. D5. C6. C7. A8. BPart3 NewsNews Item 1In many developing countries, weather reports remain trapped in the capital. National weather services have the information, but no way to get it to farmers and other people in rural communities.This is the job of an international project called RANET-Rural Communications using Radio and the Internet. RANET works with national weather services to improve their reach.The project develops networks of satellite receiver systems, community radio stations and other technologies. Communities often are provided with some equipment, but the systems are locally owned and supported. RANET is working to improve communications in countries with limited power supplies.Exercise A: Listen to the news item and complete the following summary.This news item is about getting weather reports to rural communities.Exercise B: Listen to the news item again and answer the following questions.1. What’s the situation of weather services in many developing countries?In many developing countries, national weather services have the information, but there is no way to get it to people in rural communities.2. What does RANET mean?RANET means Rural Communications using Radio and the Internet.3. What does RANET aim at?RANET aims at working with national weather services to improve their reach.4. Who owns and supports networks of satellite receiver systems?The local communities own and support the systems.5. Besides networks of satellite receiver systems, what else does the project help to develop?The project also helps to develop community radio stations and other technologies.News Item 2A government report says climate change is already affecting American agriculture.The news report is from the Climate Change Science Program, which brings together the research efforts of thirteen federal agencies.Much of the East and South now gets more rain than a century ago. But the report says there is some evidence of increaseddrought conditions in the West and Southwest. Western states have less snow and ice on the mountains and earlier melting in the spring.Grain and oilseed crops are likely to develop faster with increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. But higher temperatures will increase the risk of crop failures.Also, horticultural crops such as tomatoes, onions and fruit are more easily affected by climate change than grain and oilseed crops.The Department of Agriculture was the lead agency for the new report.Exercise A:This news item is about the effect of climate change on American agriculture.Exercise B: Listen to the news item again and answer the following questions.1. Where is the news report from?The new report is from the Climate Change Science Program.2. How many federal agencies conducted the research?Thirteen federal agencies conducted the research.3. Which is the lead agency for the report?The Department of Agriculture was the lead agency for the new report.4. On what condition are grain and oilseed crops likely to develop faster?Grain and oilseed crops are likely to develop faster if carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is increasing.5. What is more easily affected by climate change than grain and oilseed crops?Horticultural crops such as tomatoes, onions and fruit are more easily affected by climate change.C: Complete the following form.Parts of the United States Climate changeMuch of the East and SouthGets more rain than a century ago.The West and Southwest Have evidence of increased drought conditions. For example, there are less snow and ice on the mountains in western states and the snow melts earlier in the spring.News Item 3Science has made it possible to harvest energy from the wind, sun and water. All these renewable resources are used today to power an energy-hungry world. But imagine harvesting energy from crowds of people moving to and from work every day. That is one of the possibilities of piezoelectricity, the science of gaining power from motion.James Graham and Thaddeus Jusczyk are two graduate students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. They designed a way to capture the energy of people' footsteps.They created a design for a special floor covering that moves a little when people step on it. The movement would create an electrical current that could be captured to provide electrical power.Gathering power from the movements of large groups of people is called "crowed farming." And interest in crowd farming continues to grow.Exercise A:This news item is about gathering electrical power from the movements of people.Exercise B: Listen to the news item and give the definition of the following expressions.Piezoelectricity: the science of gaining power from motion Crowd farming: gathering power from the movements of large groups of peopleC: Complete the following passage.James Graham and Thaddeus Jusczyk are two graduate students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. They designed a way to capture the energy of people’s footsteps. They created a design for a special floor covering that moves a little when people step on it. The movement would create an electrical current that could be captured to provide electrical power.Section Three Oral WorkPart 1 Questions and AnswersRadio: Good afternoon. This is Radio Brighton. It’s two o’clock and time for “On the Town” and this is Judy Nash introducing the p rogram.Judy: Hello. I’m here on Palace Pire and it’s a beautiful holiday . The pier is crowed with visitors, Let’s talk to some of them. Where do you come from, sir?Ben: Montreal.Judy: All the way from Canada?Ben: That’s right.Judy: Are you enjoying yourself here in Brighton?Ben: Yes. It’s a lovely day and there’s lots to do.Judy: How much of Brighton have you seen?Ben: Not very much—we’ve only been here for an hour.Judy: Where are you going now?Ben: We’re going to Royal Pavilion.Judy: And after that?Ben: We haven’t decided yet.Judy: What about tonight?Ben: We’ll probably go to a restaurant and then catch the last t rain back to London.Judy: Well, thanks for talking to us, and have a good time.Exercise:1. Where is Judy?She is on Palace Pier.2. Whom is she talking to?She is talking to a visitor.3. Where does he come from?He comes from Montreal, Canada.4. Is he enjoying himself in Brighton?Yes. It’s a lovely day and there’s lots to do.5. How much of Brighton has he seen?He hasn’t seen much of Brighton.6. How long has he been there?He has been there for an hour.7. Where is he going now?He is going to the Royal Pavilion.8. Which train will he catch back to London? He will catch the last train back to London. Part 2 RetellingOne cold winter afternoon, a postman was slowly pushing his bicycle up the hill. He had only one letter to deliver: this was for an old lady who lived at the top of the hill. The old lady had lived alone ever since her daughter had moved to Australia many years before. She always invited the postman in for a cup of tea whenever he took her a letter and told him about her two grandchildren in Australia, whom she had never seen.Just as the postman went towards her gate, a small boy came running down the hill. Suddenly the boy slipped on the icy road and fell. The postman hurried across the road to help the boy. After a quick examination, he found that the boy hurt his leg badly. So the postman decided to send the boy to the hospital first. He carried the boy onto his bicycle and took him to the hospital.Section Four Supplementary ExercisesPart 1 Listening ComprehensionPassage 1 RunningWhen I started running seven years ago, I could manage only about a quarter of mile before I had to stop. Breathless and aching,I walked the next quarter of a mile, then I jogged the next quarter ofa mile, alternating these two activities for a couple of miles. Within a few weeks I could jog half way round Hampstead Heath withoutstopping. Soon I started to run up the quarter-mile slope to the top of Parliament Hill, although I had to stop at the top to get my breath back. Eventually I found that I could even manage to get up the hill comfortably.I started to run because I felt desperately unfit. But the biggest pay-off for me was- and still is- the deep relaxation that I achieve by taking exercise. It tires me out but I find that it does calm me down.In those early days I saw few other runners. Now there are many more- and not just the macho* sports freaks*. Men and women of all ages have now taken up running. Some 25,000 runners aged 5 to 85 are attracted each year to the Sunday Times Fun Run in Hyde Park.In the last two years the London Marathon has become the biggest British sporting event — overtaking the boat race and the Derby* in the number of spectators it attracts. When I started to jog I never dreamt of running of a marathon, but in 1982 I realized that if I trained for it, it would be with in my reach, and after a slow,six-month build-up I managed the 26.2 miles in just four hours. A creditable performance for a first-timer and a far cry from those days when I had to stop for breath after a quarter of a mile.Ex. Listen and choose the best answer.1.C2. D3. B4. A5. A6.C7. C8.A9.APassage2 Cats in AmericaAn old expression says “Man’s best friend is his dog.” Today, h owever, it seems that cats have replaced dogs as the most popular pets in American homes. Americans have more than 62 million pe t dogs. But even more cats—more than 64 million—live in America n homes.These pet cats may have long hair or short hair. They are of d ifferent colors and sizes. Some are costly animals that take part in competitions. Many more are common American mixtures of sever al kinds of cats.Most house cats live a good life. They are not expected to w ork for their food. Instead, they rule their homes like furry kings and queens. They wait for their owners to serve them,Americans are increasingly serious about their cats. These con cerns have made the care of cats into big business.Each year, cat owners buy tons of food especially prepared for cats. They buy toys and other equipment. They buy jewelry and cl othes for themselves with images of cats on them. Some owners e ven bury their dead pets in special burial grounds.Animal experts offer several reasons why cats have become s o popular as house pets. They say cats need less care than dogs. And cats do not seem to suffer as much as dogs from being alone i f the owners are away.Still millions of other people do not like cats at all. They say do gs are better and more loving pets. They say cats do not have muc h feeling. They believe cats stay with people only to be fed.Cat owners defend their pets against such criticism. They say cats are just much more independent than dogs.A student of animal medicine explains the situation this way: D og follow you around. They want you to talk to them and play with t hem a lot of the time. Cats like more space and more privacy. This does not mean they do not love their owners.Cat owners often like to read about cats. Many books about ca ts are in American libraries and bookstores. Cats also appear as th e heroes of newspaper comics, television programs and movies. A mong the most famous is Garfield. He is an orange, striped tiger c at.Garfield eats too much. His owner, John, is always trying to get the cat to lose weight. However, Garfield usually eats what he wa nts. He often shows more intelligence than his owner.Listen to the passage and answer the following questions.1. More than sixty-four million cats live in American homes as pets.2. American homes keep costly cats in order to let them take part in competitions.3. They are not expected to work for their food and they wait for their owners to serve them.4. Americans are increasingly serious about their cats.5. Cat owners buy tons of food, toys and other equipment.6. They need less care and they do not seem to suffer a lot from being alone when the owner are away.7. Cats like more space and more privacy.8. Garfield is an orange, striped tiger cat. He often shows his intelligence and does many clever things.Part 2 Oral WorkWhen you take a walk in any of the cities in the West, you ofte n see a lot of people walking dogs. It is still true that a dog is the m ost useful and faithful animal in the world, but the reason why peop le keep a dog has changed. In the old days, people used to train d ogs to protect themselves against animal attacks. And later they came to realize that a dog was not only useful for protection but willin g to obey his master. But now people in the city need not protect th emselves against attacks of animals. Why do they keep dogs, then ? Some people keep dogs to protect themselves from robbery. But the most important reason is for companionship. For a child, a dog is his best friend when he has no friend to play with. For young co uples, a dog is their child when they have no children. For old coup les, a dog is also their child when their children have grown up.。
人教版英语八年级上册Unit 8听力原文及翻译(旧版)
Unit 8 How was your school trip?Section A, 1bKevin:Hi, Tina. How was your school trip?你好,蒂娜。
你这次学校郊游怎么样?Tina:It was fantastic, really fantastic.很好,太棒了。
Kevin:Did you go to the zoo?你去了动物园吗?Tina:No, I didn’t. I went to the aquarium. Look, here are my photos.没有,我去了水族馆。
看,这有照片。
Kevin:Were there any sharks?那有鲨鱼吗?Tina:No, there weren’t any sharks, but there were some really clever seals.没有鲨鱼,但是有一些非常聪明的海豹。
Kevin:Wow, that sounds wonderful! What else did you do?哇哦,听起来很棒!你还做什么了?Tina:Well, I hung out with my friends and I took lots of photos.我还和朋友一起去逛了逛,然后照了很多照片。
2a, 2bKevin:So, Tina, what else did you do?那蒂娜,你还做什么了?Tina:You won’t believe it, but I met Jake Dean!难以置信,我见到詹克·迪恩了。
Kevin:Jake Dean? The famous actor? You really met him?詹克·迪恩?著名的演员?你真见到他了?Tina:Yes! He was making a movie at the aquarium.是的!他在水族馆拍电影。
视听说 B1U8 听力原文
Unit 8 Arrivals and DeparturesInside ViewConversation 1Assistant Hi, how can I help you?Mark I’d like to book a flight and make a hotel reservation.Assistant Going to...?Mark To New York, please.Assistant Is that a one-way or a return?Mark A return, please. Out on the 17th of June and coming back on the 10th of September. Assistant OK, and I guess you want economy not club?Mark Yes, economy, please. Could I have an aisle seat, not a window seat?Assistant I’m afraid you’ll have to do that at the airport. What about accommodation?Mark Well, most of the time I’m working in upstate New York, but I need a cheap hotel in New York City and one in Boston for a few nights.Assistant How many nights will you be staying?Mark Three nights in Boston and two nights in New York. The 12th to the 15th of August in Boston, leaving on the 15th, so three nights in Boston. Then the 15th to the 17th in New York, leaving on the 17th. So two nights in New York.Assistant OK, I can check that out for you. Single or double room?Mark Single. With a shower, please.Assistant I can get you rooms in budget hotels and motels for around 75 dollars a night.Mark Does the price include breakfast?Assistant Let me see. Yes, I can do that for you.Mark What time is check-out?Assistant Usually midday... Do you have a student card? You’ll need it for the cheap flights and the accommodation. Oh, and any traveling within the US? We can get you seats on Greyhound buses, if you want.Mark Actually, that would be great. Can you get me a seat from New York to Boston, traveling on the 12th of August? And then one from New York to Chicago on the 17th? After Chicago I’m going to DC and then back to New York, but I’ll get those tickets when I’m in the States. Assistant No problem, just give me a few minutes ...Conversation 2Kate Have you made plans for the summer vacation yet?Mark Yes, I’m traveling around the States for three months.Janet Three months! Wow, you’re lucky! Whereabouts are you going?Mark Well, I’m flying to New York City, and then I’m working for eight weeks as a counselor ona summer camp in upstate New York. And then I’m traveling around for about four weeks,back in time for the start of term.Kate Where are you staying?Mark On the campsite in the mountains. It’s about an hour away from New York City by bus. Kate What are you going to do there?Mark I’ll be looking after teenagers, city kids mostly. We’re going swimming, rafting and canoeing, and maybe backpacking in the mountains.Janet That sounds amazing! And after that, what are your plans?Mark I’ll catch the Greyhound bus to Boston, and relax in a hotel for three days.Kate The museums in Boston are great! You absolutely must visit them.Mark OK, I’ll do that. Then I go back to New York for two days, to watch a baseball game.Kate The New York Yankees? That’s my team!Mark Then I’m flying to Chicago for six days, to stay with some friends.Kate And will you fly home from Chicago?Mark No, then I’ll go to DC for six days to do some sightseeing. And then I’ll be back a few days before the beginning of term.Janet It sounds like a dream vacation.Outside ViewSpeaker 1 Let’s take a trip to Australia.Speaker 2 That sounds like fun, but I won’t be able to come. I’m too busy. You can go if you promise to tell me all about it.Speaker 1 OK.Speaker 2 Oh, and get me some photos of kangaroos and koalas. I’d love to see them.Voice-over So here I am in Australia. How about a few facts to start with? Australia is the largest “island” in the world. There are over 27,000 kilometres of coastline. It’s the world’s smallest continent, but the sixth largest country. Its population is only 20 million, so there’s a lot of space. This is Perth on the west coast. It’s famous for its black swans. If you come here, you’ll definitely want to go sailing. This is Uluru, or Ayers Rock. This amazing rock formation is in the traditional lands of the original inhabitants of Australia -the Aborigines.Their rock paintings have been preserved here for centuries. If you want sun, sea and sand, Queensland is the place to be. This is where you can find the famous Great Barrier Reef. It’s the world’s largest natural feature and is 2,300 kilometres long. Sydney is Australia’s biggest city with over four million people -nearly a quarter of the entire population. The Opera House and Sydney Harbour Bridge are famous landmarks. If you like surfing, you’ll have to visit the world-famous Bondi Beach. The smallest state is the Australian Capital Territory around the city of Canberra, which is the capital of Australia. And finally, this is Melbourne -a lively city in the southeast. I did promise pictures of koalas and kangaroos. Are these OK?Listening inPassage 1Part 1Matt So how was your visit to the USA? How did you get on?Caroline Well, it was great. A bit difficult at the start, but it got better.Matt So what happened?Caroline Well, I started my trip in New York, but the trouble was I forgot to ring my friend Dave before I left London and ask him to meet me. Then, just as the plane was landing at New York airport, this French businessman sitting next to me called Serge, gave me a warning, “You shouldn’t arrive in New York alone.” This made me a bit worried, but I was going tocall Dave as soon as I arrived, so I hoped I’d be OK. But when we got off the plane, I was feeling a bit nervous. As soon as I walked out into the arrivals hall this crowd of people surrounded me. And when Serge disappeared, I did feel lonely and rather foolish.Matt I can see why.Caroline And when I saw a smiling group of new arrivals, you know, tourists from England, I wanted to join them. Just as I was starting to panic, someone tapped me on the shoulder. It was Serge. I was so relieved.Matt Thank heavens for strange men!Caroline Exactly! But when I called Dave from Serge’s office, he was out. It was late by now so I had to find a hotel. Serge told his driver to take me to a hotel in the Bronx. As soon as I got out of the car, two policemen in a police car stopped me and asked what I was doing in the district as it was dangerous at night. And at the reception desk, when I explained that I was on my own, they didn’t want to give me a room.Matt So what did you do?Caroline Well, I had to wait at reception until the school in Albany, where I was going to work, sent an email. When the hotel knew what I was doing in the States, I got a room.Part 2Caroline Well, in the end I got in touch with Dave and spent the next few nights with his family.But it was cold, and a freezing cold wind was blowing all the time.Matt But it all went better for you after that?Caroline Well, yes, until one morning I decided to go for a walk. I was really enjoying the fresh air, when I realized that I was lost. Then I found a street, which looked like the one the flat was on ... but then I found another one, and another one.Matt Oh no! You must have been very frightened!Caroline Well, I was. I couldn’t remember the address of the flat. It was freezing cold, minus 12 degrees. I was standing by the side of the road, praying that Dave would. send out a search party when suddenly a car stopped, and the driver said, “Taxi?” I was so relieved. Within a couple of minutes I was drinking tea with Dave and the driver back home. His name was Kevin and he was on his way to work. He wasn’t a taxi driver at all.Matt Was he a friend of Dave’s?Caroline No, just someone who was going to work when he saw someone looking lost, I think.They can be very friendly, the Americans.Part3Caroline I then took the train to Albany. No one was waiting for me at the station, although the school where I was working was going to send someone. I later learnt that the person didn’t recognize me because I was wearing a thick coat and a warm hat. So I took a taxi to the school, where I met one of the other teachers, Rebecca. She invited me to stay with her. She lived in a flat near the school, which she was sharing with three other people. I didn’t have much money, because I hadn’t been paid yet, and I wasn’t living on the school campus, so I tried to find some cheap food in the evenings. There was an old man selling hot dogs on a street corner. By the end of the first week, he greeted me and had a hot dog and coffee ready for me. Ah, it was an amazing experience.Passage 2There was this man, and he’s riding his bike along the road, heading towards the border between Mexico and the United States. So he comes up to the border, and this guard stops him. And he points to two sacks the man has on his shoulders.“What’s in the bags?” says the guard.“Sand,” says the man on the bike.So the guard says, “Sand? Get them off your shoulders. We’ll take a look.”So the man on the bike did as he was told, emptied the sacks, and poured the sand on the ground.“Sure enough, it’s nothing but sand,” says the guard, and the man on the bike loads the sand back into the sacks, puts them on his shoulders and goes across the border.Anyway, two weeks later, the man on the bike turns up at the border again, on his bike with two sacks on his shoulders.So the guard says, “What’s in the sacks?” The man takes them off his shoulders, pours the sand onto the ground, puts the sand back in the sacks, puts the sacks on his shoulders, gets back on his bike and goes across the border.This goes on every week for six months, man on the bike, guard at the border, sacks on the man’s shoulders, sand on the ground, sand back in the sacks, man across the border ... until one day the man on the bike with the sand bags doesn’t turn up.A few days later, the guard happens to meet the man on the bike downtown. “Say friend, you sure made us crazy,” says the guard. “We knew you were smuggling something across the border.I won’t say a word - but what is it you were smuggling?”The man on the bike says, “Bicycles!”Passage 3Speaker 1I don’t know if I’ve told you, but apparently this is a true story. There’s this small airline somewhere in New Zealand, I think, and it uses planes that carry about seven or eight passengers. So you sit just behind the pilot and get a really good view.Speaker 2 Yeah, I get the picture.Speaker 1 Anyway, the passengers are told to board the plane, and they climb in, you know, not much room. And they sit there waiting. A few minutes later the last passenger, a really cool-looking guy, turns up and takes his seat, and they all wait for the pilot to arrive and take off. And they wait. And they wait some more. And they’re still waiting, not long, you know, a few minutes, but just enough to make them wonder where the pilot is. Then the cool-looking guy at the back starts looking at his watch, and saying, “Well, where’s the pilot? We’re going to be late.” And they wait a bit longer, and the guy says, “I’ve got some people to meet, and I don’t want to miss my appointment.” And they wait some more, and the pilot still doesn’t turn up. So this guy says, “Right, I’m not going to wait any longer, if we don’t have a pilot, I’m going to take off and fly this plane myself.Speaker 2 What?Speaker 1 Exactly, and everyone is going ... duh? What’s happening? And this guy gets into the pilot seat, turns on the engine, starts heading for the runway ... and takes off.Speaker 2 I don’t believe it!Speaker 1 Yeah, well nor did the passengers. But the funny thing is ...Speaker 2 What?Speaker 1Apparently, the cool-looking guy really is the pilot. He plays the same trick on passengers fairly often because he gets bored with doing the same flight every day.。
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UNIT 8
When is your birthday? Section A
1a Listen and repeat. MONTHS,
January,
February,
March,
April,
May,
June,
July,
August, September,
October,
November,
December.
1b Listen and number the cnversations[1-3]. Conversation 1
When is your birthday, Linda? My birthady is on May 2nd. Conversation 2
When is your birthday,Mary? It’s on January 5th. Conversation 3
When is your birthday, Mike? My birthday is on June 3rd.
2a Listen and repeat.
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th
12th 13th 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th 20th 21st 22nd
23rd 24th 25th 26th 27th 28th 29th 30th 31st
2b Listen and circle the numbers you hear in 2a. Now, Alice, how old are you? I’m thirteen.
When is your birthday?
It’s on September 5th, Mr. Smith.
Oh, OK.
And how about Frank?
Frank isn’t here today, but his birthday is on July 4th.
Thank you , Alice.
And Eric?
My birthday is on January 17th. On January 17th.
OK.
And Jane, when is her birthday? Her birthday is on August 22nd. 2c Listen again. Match the names, months and dates. Now, Alice, how old are you?
I’m thirteen.
When is your birthday?
It’s on September 5th, Mr. Smith.
Oh, OK.
And how about Frank?
Frank isn’t here today, but his birthday is on July 4th.
Thank you , Alice.
And Eric?
My birthday is on January 17th. On January 17th.
OK.
And Jane, when is her birthday?
Her birthday is on August 22nd. 2e Role-play the conversation. Bill:Hi,Alan. Happy birthday. Alan:Thank you, Bill.
Bill:So, how old are you, Alan? Alan:I’m twelve.How old are you?
Bill:I’m thirteen.
Alan:When is your birthday? Bill:My birthday is in August. Alan:Well, do you want to come my birthday party?
Bill:Oh, yes. When is it? Alan:At three this afternoon.
Bill:OK, great. See you! Section B
1b Listen and circle the events you hear in 1a.
Hey,Sally.
Can I ask you some questions? Sure, John.
When is your birthday party? My birthday party is on October 5th.
OK, and when is the basketbal game?
They basketball game?
Oh, it’s on October 2nd.
Good.
And, umm, how about the school trip?
The school trip is on September 26th and 27th.
And when is the English test? Oh, that’s on Friday, September 29th.
OK. Thank you!
1c Listen again. Fill in John’s calendar.
Hey,Sally.
Can I ask you some questions? Sure, John.
When is your birthday party? My birthday party is on October 5th.
OK, and when is the basketbal game?
They basketball game?
Oh, it’s on October 2nd. Good.
And, umm, how about the school trip?
The school trip is on September 26th and 27th.
And when is the English test?
Oh, that’s on Friday, September 29th.
OK. Thank you!
2b Read the school notice and list the activities and the dates. Dear students,
We have some interesting and fun things for you this term. On September 21st,we have a school trip in the afternoon. October is a great month.
On the 12th and the 15th, we have two ball games, soccer and volleyball.
School Day is on October 22nd. Your parents can come to our school.
Next month, we have an art festival.It’s on November 3rd. We have an English party on November 30th.
And on December 3rd, we have a book sale in the school library.
This is a realy busy term! Have a good time!。