大学英语考试精读:第五册(UNIT8)

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新视野大学英语读写教程第五册 课后答案 unit 8

新视野大学英语读写教程第五册 课后答案 unit 8

新视野大学英语读写教程第五册课后答案 unit 8unit 8Comprehension of the Text1. No, the author believes that it is unnecessary.2. Because they thought the reward to the boy was not enough to match his good deed.3. In his opinion, they are more confused about values than the boy.4. Greed.5. They treated it with scorn and cynicism.6. No.7. The obscene message is that children can get material incentives if tbey do what have beentold. For example, children are offered either some money or a party or a $10 a week if theylearn mathematics, read a certain number of books or do not stay away from school.8. It refers to material rewards or incentives, such as money or ice cream.9. That there are some simple pleasures that don't require a purchase.10. Parents should set good examples to their children.Vocabulary1. cynical2. plight3. ascribe4. refreshments5. compulsory6. commended7. reeled8. suffice9. absurd 10. aggravated 11. obscene 12. eclipsedExercises on CD and web course only: 13. outraged 14. elicit 15. incentive1D1. In retrospect2. a token of3. converted to4. looked up to5. are on the brink of(making)6. be subject to7. run out of control 8. reeled.., in9. a parade of 10. ascribed.., to11. In light of 12. belonged toExercises on CD and web course only: 13. doled out 14. paid dividends 15. cling to CollocationBI. phone 2. green 3. business 4. identity5. credit6. Valentine7. tarot8. ChristmasExercises on CD and web course only: 9. birthday 10. greetingTranslation1. Children were asked to complete many compulsory pieces of work each week.2. I commended the girl on the excellent job she had done. I later wrote to commend her to heremployer.3. Everyone with a mortgage realized the government's economic strategy was not working.4. Absurd though it may seem, it is quite likely that Mr. Smith and his companions genuinelybelieve all this.5. He aggravated his condition by leaving hospital too soon.6. By patient questioning we managed to elicit enough information from the witness.7. During your flight you can relax with a drink from the duty-free bar, and a meal or lightrefreshments will be served according to the time of day.8. I was in a dreadful plight -- I had lost my money and missed the last bus home.9. One of the witnesses was bribed to give false evidence.10. Despite repeated assurance(s) he failed to repay the money he had borrowed.-- lChanges in the American family structure are evidenced by increased rates of separation anddivorce. In certain areas of the country these trends have resulted in a growing number of singleparentfamilies and remarried parents. This does not indicate, however, that the institution of marriage is crumbling. It is estimated that four ont of five divorced couples eventually remarryother people. These shifts in family relationships may be interpreted as a breakdown or as anadaptation of the American family to changing roles, attitudes, and values. The changes,according to the more traditional viewpoint, represent a breakdown in the family structure, adisintegration of values, and a decline of morality.1.这些教师为丢失现金者显而易见的吝啬而感到愤慨,于是他们就主动为那男孩募捐·日2.很明显,诚实与善良这些品德已经变成了商品,像其他任何东西一样,也会受到通货膨胀的影响。

大学英语精读第5册第8单元

大学英语精读第5册第8单元

Unit8Ⅲ. Vocabulary Activities1.1. guilty of2. flames3. equality4. reminds of5. was stripped of6. justice7. destiny8. poverty9. despair 10. discrimination 11. architect 12. pledges13. degenerated 14. horror 15. threshold 16. crippled2.1. fallen heir to2. obligation3. legitimate4. fatigue5. fatal6. thirst7. transforms8. bankrupt9. In a sense10. defaulted on 11. speeding up 12. sacred 13. tied up with 14. horror 15. underestimate 16. cool off3.1. The man confessed he had been guilty of theft.2. David felt despair as he read the exam questions.3. We are on the threshold of a new era in genetic engineering.4. He was stripped of his knighthood after he was found guilty.5. A taste of power left him with a thirst for more power.6. A series of strikes have crippled some of the basic industries of thatcountry.4.1. The increasing prosperity of the country was in a large measure attributableto the governm ent’s pursuit of a policy of economic reform.2. The black leader took it as his sacred obligation to fight hard all his life toachieve racial equality.3. The year 1976 saw the deaths of Premier Zhou En-lai, Marshal Zhu De andChairman Mao Ze-dong, the three leading ar chitects of the People’s Republic.4. On more than one occasion I reminded the principal of his promise to standup for the legitimate interests of retired teachers.5. The theme of the story is that a person’s destiny is closely tied up wit h thatof the whole nation.6. The large fortune the young man fell heir to enabled him to live out hisdreams.5.1. stood up for2. stand up3. stand up for4. stood for5. stand by6. stand up to7. stood out8. stand for9. sit in 10. sat on 11. sit down 12. will sit for/sat for13. sit up for 14. sitting in 15. sits upⅣ. Cloze1. from2. free3. colonial4. nonviolent5. unjust6. live7. to8. could9. of 10. segregation 11. conditions 12. already 13. came 14. returning 15. when 16. on17. not 18. spread 19. attend 20. decided21. lasted 22. effective 23. laws 24. victory 25. comeⅤ. Error Correction1. solve-solve it2. done-made3. Yet-For4. difficult-easy5. historical6. and-but7. appear-disappear8. dissatisfied-satisfied9. true-truth 10. was-wereReading ActivityExercise A1. a2. c3. d4. d5. d6. b7. c8. dExerciseB1. e2. a3. h4. l5. f6. d7. b 8. i 9. k 10. g 11. c 12.j1. accommodations2. illiterate3. bans4. submissive5. participate6. specify7. status8. Tension9. persists 10. accumulate 11. kidnapped 12. eliminated。

大学英语精读第五册

大学英语精读第五册

大学英语精读第五册 Unit 2Translation Chinese to English1.我认为向他求助是不现实的。

事实上,他自己也需要帮助。

I don’t think it is realistic to turn to him for help.As a matter of fact, he himself is in need of help.2.越来越多的人正在意识到与空气污染作斗争的迫切需要。

More and more people are being awakened to the urgent need of combating air pollution.3.有明显的迹象表明一些古老的传统和价值观念采不再被年轻人珍视。

There are visible signs that some of the time-honored old traditions and values are no longer cherished by the young people.4.我们许多人觉得宇宙无限这一概念难以理解。

Many of us find the notion of a boundless universe hard to grasp.5. 因为法律和规章中有许多漏洞(loophole),一小撮投机倒把者一夜之间暴富就没有什么奇怪了。

There being so many loopholes in the laws and regulations, it is little wonder that a handful of speculators got rich overnight.6. 旅游事业的空前兴旺使这个从前只住有三百人的边境小镇突然繁荣起来。

An unprecedented boom in tourism brought sudden prosperity to the small border town, which was formerly inhabited by only three hundred people.7.根据这一信息,该国已经具有制造核武器的能力。

(完整word版)大学英语精读第5册答案1-8单元

(完整word版)大学英语精读第5册答案1-8单元

Unit1Study&PracticeⅡ. Paragraph Analysis1. a2. c3. b4. c 5 .b 6 .cⅢ.Vocabulary Activities1.1) given 2) at a glance 3)fluency 4)Given 5) hopefully 6) define7)looked(him)up 8) no good 9)context 10)guidance11) immediate 12) disgust 13) come across 14)recognition15)scope2.1) washed his hands of 2) given 3) was confronted with 4) countering5) were reduced to eating 6) at a glance 7) took refuge in8) less practicable 9) countered 10) dedication 11) in disgust12) relied on 13) shorts-cuts to3,1) Without suitable entertainment, these young people often get bored and take refuge in drinking and taking drugs.2) The school washed its hands of the students’ behavior during the spring recess.3) His cruel remarks reduced the innocent girl to tears.4) Many difficult words are out of the scope of this learner’s dictionary.5) The thief admitted his guilt as soon as he was confronted with the evidence.6) The incident should be viewed in the wider context of the political turmoil of that time.4.1) has come down 2) came to 3) comes out 4)come up to5) come in 6) came across 7) has come about 8) come off9) come to 10) give up 11) was given back 12) give away13) gave out 14)give in 15) gives off/outⅣ.Cloze1. express2. both3. intended4. still5. where6. personal7. of 8.them 9. make 10. before 11. still 12. before13. fluent 14. while 15. enough 16. on 17. in 18. In19. find 20. who 21. carefully 22. to 23. possible 24. make25. depend 26. than 27. made 28. use 29. phrases 30. above31. on 32. demonstrate 33. out 34. writingⅤ. Passage Translation(省略)Reading ActivityExercise A1.d2.d3.b4.c5.c6.c7.d8.c9.dExercise B1. d2. h3. g4. c5. f6. a7. j8. I9. b 10. e1. flexible2. haphazard3. established4. land5. mediocrity6. identical7. assurance8. device9. a host of 10. quadrupledUnit 2Study &PracticeII. Comprehension Questions5. b6. c7. c 10. aParagraph Analysis: The Outline(Paras. 3-6)III. We are losing this fifth freedom through three misunderstandings.(Para. 4) A. The first misunderstanding is that of the meaning of democracy.1.We think that democracy in education means gearing all courses to the middle level.2.We reject special programs and schools for superior students as undemocratic.(Para. 5) B. The second misunderstanding is that of the meaning of happiness.1.This misunderstanding results from our stress on comfort rather than on accomplishment.2.The stress on material well-being has been reflected in the schools by too little discipline and too easysubjects.(Para. 6) C. The third misunderstanding is that of ultimate values.1.These values have been denied in recent teacher education.2.The inevitable result in mass selfishness is already evident.(Paras. 7-9)IV. To assure our children the freedom to develop, we must challenge their abilities.(Para.7) A. we can give them a demanding curriculum.1.Michelangelo did not learn to paint by doodling.2.Mozart did not become a pianist by watching television.3.They, like Eve Curie and Helen Keller, were challenged by disciplined training.(Para. 8) B. We can give them the right to failure.1.We must not give high school diplomas without regard to merit.2.We must be realistic about failure to meet standards and must teach our children realism.(Para. 9) C. We can give them the best values we know.1.We can show them what history has taught us to be true.2.These truths may inspire us to make a ringing message that could mean true freedom for them.V ocabulary Activities1.1-5 notion, inhabited; denial; independent; realistic; passed for6-10 consequent; a handful of; as opposed to; urged, influential; eternal11-16 descendants; cherish; related; denial, was opposed to; haunted; discerned2.1-14 combat; capabilities; eternal; opposed to; outstanding; stake…on; no wonder; In the light of; discern; paralyzed; crying for; were not awakened to; consequent; sensitive to3.1. No wonder that the children are excited, this is the first time they’ve been abroad.2. Now that she’s got a part-time job, she is financially independent of her family.3. As a charity, we provide food and shelter for people in need, regardless of the reasons for their need.4. The depression that started in mid-1929 was a catastrophe of unprecedented dimensions for the United States.5. Even to this day, the memory of hunger in his childhood still haunts him.6. Robert overcame his shyness which had formerly paralyzed him in Mary’s presence.4. Translation1.I don’t think it is realistic to turn to him for help.2.More and more people are being awakened to the urgent need of combating air pollution.3.There are visible signs that some of the age-old traditions and values are no longer cherished by the young people.4.Many of us find the notion of a boundless universe hard to grasp.5.There being so many loopholes in the laws and regulations, it is no wonder that a handful of speculators got rich overnight.6.An unprecedented boom in tourism brought sudden prosperity to the small border town, which was formerly inhabited by only300 people.7.In the light of the information, that country already has the capabilities to make nuclear weapons.8. Regardless of repeated warnings from his friends, he staked all his money on high-risk ventures.5. Phrasal Verbs1.Early rising makes for good health.2.I don’t know. I couldn’t make out the expression on his face.3.I’m sorry I can’t quite make out what you mean.4.No, she made the whole thing up.5.Well, I have to make up the hour we lost in Chicago.6.I learned from his wife that he had passed away before my letter reached him.7.I think it can pass for silk.8.It says the storm will pass off before dark.9.Well, I passed it on to the manager.10.Perhaps we can pass on to the next one.11.I think he will pass it over for this once.Cloze1.other2. magazines3. consider4. times5. answered6. ways7. questions 8. offer 9. differ 10. for 11. themselves 12. to13. open 14. making 15. so 16. single 17. with 18. Others 19. young20. private 21. than 22. curriculum 23. kinds 24. Should 25. amount26. or 27. charge 28. whatReading activity B1.go against the grain2.bent on3.elite4.preoccupied with5.echo6.set in my ways7.on his mind8.get through9.were lingering10.wary ofPrecis writingMore than three centuries ago a few pioneers came to America in search of the freedoms we still cherish: freedom from want andfour, that we are in danger of losing--- the freedom to be one’s best.This freedom is in danger because of three misunderstandings. The first is about the meaning of democracy. The second is about what makes for happiness. The third is about the importance of values. As a result, all our standards have deteriorated alarmingly.To preserve the fifth freedom, we must give our children the most challenging curriculum possible, the right to fail, and the best values that history has taught us.Unit 3Study & PracticeⅡ.Comprehension Questions3. c 6. b 9. d 11. bⅢ. Outlining Activity1. The most important psychological discovery of this century is the discovery of the “self-image”.A.Self-image is our opinion of ourselves.B.All of us have it and we do not question its validity, but proceed to act upon it just as if it were true.2.This self-image becomes a golden key to living a better life because of two important discoveries.3.The first important discovery is that all our actions, feelings, behavior and abilities are always consistent with thisself-images.A.People tend to act like the sort of person they think themselves to be.B.Self-image is a base upon which their entire personality and behavior are built.C.They are unaware of the true causes of their troubles.4.The second important discovery is that one’s self-image can be changed at any time in his life.A.Up to now our efforts at change have been directed to the circumference of the self instead of the center.B.“Positive thinking” about a particular thing will not help as long as we hold a negative self-image.5.Prescott Lecky is often mentioned because he was a pioneer in self-image psychology.A.He was a school teacher and made experiment on thousands of students to help themChange their self-images.B.He believed that if a student could change his self-image, his learning ability would change too.C.The real trouble with those students was an inadequate or negative self-image.IV. Vocabulary Activities1.1) accordingly 2) credits 3) ideal 4) honorable 5) conceive of6) defect 7) conception 8) premise 9) objective 10) lies in11) have borne out 12) induce 13) vicious 14) venture15) as the case may be2.1) ideal 2) objective 3) negative about 4) honorable 5) external6) as the case may be 7) premise 8) prevailed upon 9) defects10) accordingly 11) is not consistent/inconsistent with12) a miraculous 13) conceive of 14) verified 15)induce 16)vicious3.1) This medicine is for external use ,not to be taken orally.2) It never occurred to him that people could deliberately do harm to others purely out of malice.3) An atmosphere of warm friendship prevailed at the reception.4) Many women can identify with the movie’s heroine, who struggles to gain respect and fulfill her ambitions.5) He claimed credit for the success of this project even though he had contributed very little.6) Women are often the first to victim to rising unemployment at a time of recession.7) What he does is not consistent with what he says.8) I will start working or pursue graduate studies, as the case may be.1) set up 2) set side 3) set back 4) set out 5) set about 6) set off7) was going on 8) went on 9) go by 10) has gone without11) go after 12) went through with 13)go over 14) go into15) went off 16) are going in forV. Cloze.1) as 2) in 3) confirm 4) stupid 5) way 6) rather 7) that8) out 9) longer 10) how 11) from 12) sales 13) to14) continued 15) more 16) still 17) not 18) self-image19) certain 20) from 21) from 22) comePassage translationIf you started on some venture and failed, do not despair/ lose heart. There is a world of difference between “I have failed three times” and “I am a failure.” So long as you do not hold a negative concept of self or identify with failures but try to learn from them, you stand a good chance to succeed in the future. Did it ever occur to you that those who fail repeatedly are often victims of a poor self-image? Often their failures are due to internal causes rather than external causes. Numerous cases have borne it out that if they can be induced to change their viewpoint and construct a positive self-image, miraculous changes may take place in their performance. Success can come anytime---at thirty, forty or even after a lifetime of apparent failure. Early triumphs may be sweet, but success in later life often tastes even better.Reading ActivityExercises BII.1.transition2.unique3.spontaneous4.status quo5.appropriate6.potentials7.facilitate8.enhance9.rigid10.break away from11.equivalents12.orthodoxWriting practiceSome young people seem to have pessimistic outlook on life. They tend to believe they will never amount to much because they are not talented in anything whatsoever. Yet I think they are far from justified in feeling that way.These young men and women may have met with failures at one time or another, consequently they generalize about their abilities and aptitudes and conclude that they won’t be able to get very far in life. It needs to be pointed out here, however, that generalization is often dangerous. Just because one fails in one area doesn’t mean he will be unsuccessful in another. As a matter of fact, there are other options for his life if the path he chooses leads to failure.Furthermore, success belongs to the persevering, as the saying goes. Instead of asking themselves how much genius they have displayed, young people should ask themselves how hard they have worked. So long as they persist in their efforts, they are bound to get somewhere. As is known to all, the early life of many a great man was a mess. Thomas Edison’s teacher tried to get him out of the class because he was “addled”. Charles Darwin’s father once shouted: “You care for nothing but shooting dogs and rat-catching, and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family!” But later they responded to the challenge of their lives by great perseverance and success finally came their way.Obviously no young person need be pessimistic about his future. He has one special advantage over the greatest man alive--- time! Seize the hour! Seize the minute! It’s never too late for success.Unit 4Study & PracticeIII. Vocabulary Activities1.1) ahead of the pack 2) priorities 3) permissive 4) be tailored to5)assumption 6) eligible 7) stopped by 8) correlation 9) in between10) prestigious 11) enrich 12) Excessive 13) the norm 14) rot15) epidemic 16) presume/presumed 17) exceptional 18) took charge of2.1) looked upon as 2) sprouted up 3) more likely than not 4) presumed5) eligible 6) correlation 7) take the initiative to 8) competence9) tremendous 10) staying ahead of the pack 11) exceptional12) self-esteem 13) carve out 14) involved in3.1) Harvard, Yale, and Stanford are all exceptional in academic excellence.2) Statistics show that violent crime has been an epidemic in all big U.S. citied.3) Don’t you think high school students are being pushed too hard for good grades.4) Rational persons are most unlikely to go to extremes, for they tend to stick to the middle ground they’ve occupied.5) For a team, the most important thing is to have close teamwork ; the rest will take care of itself6) We should be as concerned with the development of variety as with the improvement on quality.4. Translation1. Far from being permissive, many parents are putting tremendous pressure on their children to be exceptional in everything.2. Owing to her academic excellence, this Changsha girl has been accepted by several prestigious American universities, includingHarvard, Yale and MIT.3. Many parents start their children in piano or violin lessons at ever-earlier ages in hopes that they will become exceptional pianistsor violinists.4. In modern society, clothing styles change yearly. Some are in this year but will be out the next.5. More likely than not, what this ‘new’ parenting idea brings about will be ‘super problems’ rather than ‘super kids’.6. Young people should be given the opportunity to take the initiative, to take responsibility for their mistakes and credit for theirachievements.7. In my view, he is so weak-willed that he could hardly give up smoking. To my surprise, he has easily cured himself of this badhabit.8. Demands on students have to be tailored to their interests and abilities.5.1-8 looking forward…to; looked on; look up to/look on; Look out; look up; look into; looked upon as; look down on9-16 look back; Looking through; looked over; looking back on; took off; take to; took on; taken on17-24 took…for; takes after/took after; took down; taken in; took over; taken up; take in; take upIV. Cloze1-12 just; around; directions; why; major; in; with; language; pairs; makes; to; groups13-25 low-status; hold; skill; purpose; in; out; case; men; where; which; by; from; costV. Error Correction1. tried-managed2. (in)the(mid-1970s)3. handwriting-handwritten4. eighth-eight5. for-/6.illterate-literate7.to-for8. parenting-parental 9. between-of 10. for-toExercise A1.N2. N3. Y4. NG5. in the college dining hall/went through all sorts of interviews6. A full-time job supervising student labor in the dining hall7. settle for a job as a bookstore clerk8. mild irony9. a classicist working in the capacity as a bookstore clerk10. it’s about time college graduates from the class of ’86 started their lucky or unlucky life journey! Or: it’s about time for college graduates from the class of 1986 to start their lucky or unlucky life journey!Exercise B1-10 thrive on; minimal; persisted in; ultimate; aptitude; plight; enthusiastic; otherwise; is/was supervising; inquiries;11-20 entails; simultaneous; desperate for; be taken into account; pursue; prospective; at the mercy of; recession; contagious; unconcernedWriting PracticeThese days, after-school classes for children are very popular in china. The classes cover a dizzying array of subjects and skills such as music, dancing, painting, calligraphy, computer, oratory, essay writing, mathematics, and foreign languages---just to name a few.Do children really gain extra benefit from these extra classes? The answer depends very much on whether the children themselves wish to attend them. If the children uncover some intrinsic happiness because of the lessons, then by nurturing and developing their talents, they do learn something. If, however, they are just being compelled by their parents to attend, then very likely everyone ends up disappointed with the final result. All will have been for no gain or pleasure, and ultimately just a waste of time. So while piano lessons may well be a blessing for one child, they may just likely end up a curse for another.Besides the issue of motivation, parents must also be careful not to over-schedule their child. Some parents try to fill up every minute of their child’s life with so-called ‘meaningful’ activities. Weekends get crammed with a variety of supplementary classes, and the child I rushed from one classroom to another. As a result, he or she is under tremendous pressure, and may even lack adequate sleep, all of which may lead to serious mental and physical problems.So, after-school classes have a positive effect only when the child truly wishes to take them and also has enough time and energy to truly commit to them.Unit 5Study&PracticeⅠ. Comprehension Questions3.c4.d5.b 7.d 8.d 11.bⅡ. Outlining Activity3. The Church banned Copernicus’ book, burned Bruno at the stake and imprisoned Galileo for popularizing Copernicus’ and his own scientific ideas.4. Every age has one or more groups of intellectual rebels who are persecuted, condemned or suppressed; but to a later age, they seem harmless and often essential to the improvement of human conditions.5. Most people have believed that the enormous success of science is due to the use of a scientific method by scientists and Galileo is known as the “Father of the Scientific Method”.6. Rather than the scientific method, the scientific attitude is the key to the success of science.7. Scientists must accept facts whether they like them or not and they must be good at changing their minds because the purpose of science is not to defend their beliefs but to improve them.8. Honesty is the most valuable quality of scientists because it is not only essential to the progress of science but also a matter of self-interest to the scientists themselves.Ⅲ. Vocabulary Activities1.1) distinguish between 2) opposition 3) to the contrary 4) procedures5) in principle 6)proportional 7) rebels 8) strive for13) speculation 14) banned 15) outweigh 16) formulated, represented17) ingredients 18) circulated 19) retain 20) pointed out21) condemned2. 1) took his word for it 2) formulated 3) adequate 4) met with5) representing 6)strive 7) immense 8) infinite 9) adopt10) persecuted 11) circulates 12) retaining 13) are subjected to14) its outcome 15) modified 16) condemned 17) suppressing18) largely 19) ingredient 20)criteria3. 1) You’ll buy nothing but trouble if you buy that house, take my word for it.2) Dr. Li has always been credited with being able to understand and sympathize with his patients.3) If I don’t hear anything to the contrary, I’ll come and meet you on July 8th.4) It’s very important to follow the safety procedures laid down in the service manual.5) The new Medicare program puts a high premium on prevention and primary care.6) Children’s comics were banned back then at home because my parents thought they weren’t a good influence.7) It’s essential that children be taught to distinguish right from wrong.8) The number of representatives each state is entitled to is proportional to the size of its population.9) A novelist cannot be a great one unless he has a well-developed insight into human nature.10) More and more people have come to realize that cancer of the lung has more to do with smoking than with anything else.11) Late frosts account for the poor fruit-crop of this year.12) What’s the matter with you today! Everything I say you contradict.Ⅳ. Cloze1.questions2. solving3. out4. between5. establishing6. these7. with8. science9. do 10. in 11. so 12. universe13. highest 14. dislikes 15. did 16. unpleasant 17. believe18. hear 19. flying 20. breathe 21. age 22. terms23. reverse 24. serve 25. those 26. themselves 27. toV. Passage TranslationScientists are a small group of people who strive to gain insights into nature and seek order in seeming disorderliness. They are credited with a special ability to think and analyze, and with infinite patience in making observations and collecting data. But ability and patience do not account for all scientific discoveries, which often have much to do with creative imagination. Indeed, a leap of imagination is often the first step towards discovery. In addition, scientists are also noted for their honesty. They put a high premium on honesty, largely because it is essential to their profession. Every theory they put forward is subjected to further testing. Every mistake or lie is bound to be found out. Therefore, if any evidence is found contradicting their ideas, scientists do not suppress the evidence, but modify or even abandon their ideas. In this way, they have accumulated immense knowledge, which helps us understand better ourselves and the world around us.Reading ActivityExercise A1. c2. c3. a4. d5. d6. Behavioral: b, c, e, g, h, i Medical: a, d, fExerciseB1. c2. e3. a4. f5. g6. b7. d8. j9. h 10. i1. serves you right2. precede3. data4. evaluate5. backs/backed up6. dramatically7. radical8. undergraduates9. plainly 10. deliveredUnit 6Text Analysis1.Title: Love StoryAuthor: Erich Segal2.Principal characters:3.PLOT:A.Exposition of Conflict1)Oliver’s father, Oliver Barrett III, sent the invitation.2)Oliver wants to ignore it.3)Jenny is ready to accept it, thinking that it’s about time for the father and son to reconcile.B.Rising Action:1)The old man is already sixty. There is no telling if he will still be living when Oliver is finally ready to be reconciledwith him.Mr. Barrett has sent the invitation. It indicates the father is reaching out to the son. They themselves will have a sonsomeday.Maybe the son will resent his father.2)Oliver is busy preparing for the exams.Jenny fails to make him change his mind.3)Jenny gives Mr. Barrett a phone call, but she does not decline the invitation immediately. She still hopes that Oliverwill change his mind at the last minute.4)He feels annoyed. He resents being involved in the matter.5)Jenny begs Oliver to say hello to his own father, because she cannot bear hurting anyone.6)No, he is not moved at all. He says he will never talk to his father.D.ResolutionJenny is gone.E.Further Rising Action1)Yes, he feels deeply regretful for what he has done.Evidence shown in the text:---“I must never be forgiven for what I have done.”---“Jesus Christ! What the hell had happened to me?”---“The pain of not knowing what to do was exceeded only by that of knowing what I had done.”F.Second Climax:Having searched everywhere without success, Oliver is about to give up hope of finding Jenny when he catches sight of her sitting on the top of the steps.G.ResolutionNo, Jenny is not at all angry with Oliver. When Oliver apologizes she cuts him off, saying “Love means not ever having to say you’re sorry.”4.THEME C5.STYLE 1) A 2) DIII. Vocabulary Activities1.1-8 virtual; reconciliation; deliberately; precedent; essence; rational; get to the point; go out of my mind9-16 immersed in; cut…off; scared to death; lost his nerve; Supreme; apology; invasion; muttering2.1-7 awaiting; lost my nerve; immersed in; alleged; deliberately; involving her in; in celebration of8-14 ironic; get to the point; yelled; is in need of; rational; fierce; squeeze3.1) Because of the bank’s refusal to give him another loan, Morris had to abandon the project.2) Although both of them were ready for reconciliation, neither was prepared to make the first move.3) The old lady nearly died of fright when a gunman suddenly appeared in front of her.4) Bob seems to have an instinct for knowing which products will sell.5) The organizers of the appeal are reaching out to the public in order to get their help.4.1) -7) cut off; cut back/cut down; cut in/ cut across; cut down; cuts in; cut…off8)-14) cut off; hangs back; hang up; hanging about; hang together; hang on; hang on toCloze1-10 other; with; increased; for; last/past; who; adult/grown-up; summed; in; who;11-20 better; teach; without; as; view; generation; granted; only; decision; importantPassage TranslationOne day, we received an invitation to my father’s birthday party. Jenny thought my father was reaching out to me for reconciliation and we should accept the invitation. I was in the midst of abstracting an important precedent and in the virtual shadow of exams, so I just told her in the simplest possible terms that there would never be reconciliation. My refusal obviously made Jenny very upset, but being a rational woman she didn’t quarrel with me. She just tried hard to persuade me. But this only filled me with fury, thinking that Jenny was just upsetting me deliberately. I must have tone out of my mind for I did something for which I would never forgive myself--- I yelled at Jenny and hurled the phone at her. But the instant I did it I regretted. And when I turned to look at her, she was already gone.I went out and searched everywhere but Jenny was nowhere to be found. I was scared to death, not knowing what to do next. Just as I was about to give up, I caught sight of her sitting in front of our house. I went up to her and said, “Jenny, I’m sorry…” but she cut off my apology and said, “Love means not ever having to say you’re sorry.”Reading ActivityExercise B1.fragrance2.knocked off3.cozy4.gasped5.discharged6.furnished7.smashed8.for dear life9.clinging10.tipped11.shove12.scrubbedUnit 7Study & PracticeⅡ. Comprehension Questions1. d2. b3. c4. d5. b6. c7. d8. d9. d 10. bⅢ.Vocabulary Activities1.1. dense2. accompanied3. theses4. disorderly5. evoked6. voluntary7. intellect8. in sequence9. deterioration10. distinguished himself 11. deviated from 12.lit up13. over the hill 14. talking shop 15. put…back together16. uncertain2.1. was confined to2. distinguished himself3. irresistible4. accompany5. accurately6. (a year) to the day7. reigned over8. Overwhelmed 9.boundary10.deviatedfrom11.outstanding//distinguished。

现代大学英语第五册精读paraphrase

现代大学英语第五册精读paraphrase

Unit 61. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.The fact that we do not have evidence showing that there is life beyond Earth does not mean that we can come to the conclusion that there is actually no life beyond Earth.2. Examining them for the atmosphere signatures of a living world.…Examining these planets to see if the surrounding atmosphere can be identified as fitting for life.3. The optimists figure it’s only a matter of time before we tune in the right channel.Those who are optimistic think that as time goes on, they will someday get the signal sent out by an alien civilization.4. That’s what we need to begin the long process of putting human existence……Originally, we regard our world as the only one in the universe which is inhabited by intelligent humans, but we need to change our view and regard this world as one of many in the universe.5. T rue believers and skeptics rarely go over to the other side.Neither those who genuinely believe that space aliens are lurking in our midst nor those who firmly reject such an idea are likely to change their views and join the other side.6. The alien is a Hollywood stock character but not a Hollywood creation.The alien is a character used too much in Hollywood films so it has become hackneyed but the idea of extraterrestrial life was not first brought up by Hollywood.7. The absence of detectable life on Mars put exobiology into a two-decade funk.… The fact that no life had been detected on Mars was a terrible blow to exobiology which did not recover from the blow in the following 20 years.8. Everyone realized the historical glory of being right about these purposed……Everyone knew that if what appeared to be microfossils were confirmed to be such, then the discovery would be of historic significance, but if they proved to be something else, the adverse effect that followed would be equally dramatic.9. If you rewound the tape of terrestrial evolution and played it again……… if evolution on Earth were to take place a second time, a human being who is genetically similar to us would be the result of such evolution.10. So before we worry about our dealings with the Galactic Empire, we have some……Since there is so much work we need to do here in this world (since there are so many issues we need to address in this world), let us first concentrate on doing some solid research (on addressing these issues )and drop discussion about drafting messages to another civilization out there.Unit 51. Fads, I submit, are the very negation of reason.I believe following passing crazes shows a complete lack of sound judgment.2. One afternoon I found Petey lying on his bed with an expression of such distress…One afternoon, when I went back to my dorm, Petey was lying on his bed. He wore such a depressed look that I came to the conclusion at once that he was suffering from appendicitis.3. My brain, that precision instrument, slipped into high gear.My brain, which is as precise as a chemist’s scales, began to work at high speed.4. She was, to be sure, a girl who excited the emotions, but I was not……She was beautiful and attractive enough to arouse the desires and passions of men, but I would not let feelings or emotions get the upper hand of reason or good sense.5. She was not yet of pin-up proportions, but I felt sure that time would supply the lack.She was not yet fully developed like pin up girls but I felt sure that, given time, she would fill up and become jut as glamorous.6. In fact, she veered in the opposite direction.In fact, she went in the opposite direction. This is a sarcastic way of saying that she was rather stupid.7. If you were out of the picture, the field would be open.If you are no longer involved with her (if you stop dating her) other would be free to compete for her friendship.8. Back and forth his head swiveled, desire waxing, resolution waning.His head turned back and forth (looking at the coat then looking away from the coat). Every time he looked, his desire for the coat grew stronger and his resolution not to give away Polly became weaker.9. This loomed as a project of no small dimensions, and at first I was tempted…To teach her to think appeared to be a very big task, and at first I even thought of giving her back to Petey.10. There is a limit to what flesh and blood can bear.There is a limit to what any human being can bear.Unit41. Pianos and models, Paris, Vienna……are not needed by a writer.If you want to be musician or a painter, you must own a piano or hire models, and you have to visit or even live in cultural centers like Paris, V ienna and Berlin. And also you have to be taught by masters and mistresses. However, if you want to be a writer, you don't need all this. 2. She would have plucked the heart out of my writing.Those conventional attitudes would have taken away the most important part of my writing, the essence of my writing3. Thus, whenever I felt the shadow of her……the inkpot and flung it at her.Thus, whenever I felt the influence of the V ictorian attitudes on my writing, I fought back with all my power4. For though men sensibly allow themselves……condemn such freedom in women.It was a sensible thing for men to give themselves great freedom to talk about the body and their passions, but if women want to have the same freedom, men condemn such freedom in women. And I don't believe that they realize how severely they condemn such freedom in women, nor do I believe that they can control their extremely severe condemnation of such freedom in women5. Indeed it will be a long time still, I think……a rock to be dashed against.It will take a long time for women to rid themselves of false values and attitudes and toovercome the obstacle to telling the truth about their body passions6. Even when the path is nominally open—when there is nothing to prevent a woman…Even when the path is open to women in name only, when outwardly there is nothing to prevent a woman from being a doctor, a lawyer, a civil servant, inwardly there are still false ideas and obstacles impeding a woman's progress.7. Y ou have won rooms of your own in the house hitherto exclusively owned by men.Y ou have gained a position or certain freedom in a society which has been up to now dominated by menUnit31. Y et globalization……is a reality, not a choice.Y et globalization is not something that you can accept or reject, it is already a matter of life which you will encounter and have to respond to every day.2. Popular factions sprout to exploit nationalist anxieties.Political groups with broad support have come into being to take advantage of existing worries and uneasiness among the people about foreign" cultural assault"3. Where xenophobia and economic ambition have often struggled for the upper hand.In China, the two trends of closed-door and open-door policies have long been struggling for dominance4. Those people out there should continue to live in a museum while we will have showers that work.The Chinese people should continue to live a backward life while we live comfortably with all modern conveniences5. W esternization…is a phenomenon shot with inconsistence and populated by bedfellows. Westernization is a concept full of self-contradiction and held by people of very different backgrounds or views6. Y ou don’t have to be cool to do it; you just have to have the eye.In trying to find out what will be the future trend, you don't need to be fashionable yourself, all you need is awareness, that is to say, you need to be on the alert, to be observant7. He…was up in the cybersphere far above the level of time zones.He was moving around, playing a game through the Internet, with people living in different time zones, thus their activity on the computer broke down time zone limit.8. In the first two weeks of business the Gucci Store took in a surprising $100,000.The Gucci store didn't expect the first two weeks of its opening in shanghai business could be so good9. Early on I realized that I was going to need some type of compass to guide me through…From the very beginning I know I need some theory as guideline to help me in my study of global culture as globalization, to guide me through such a great variety of cultural phenomena 10. The penitence may have been Jewish, but the aspiration was universal.The way of showing repentance might be peculiar to the Jews, but the strong desire of gaining forgiveness from God is common, shared by allUnit21. I pictured this prodigy part of me as……each one on for size.I visualized what I would look like as different types of prodigy, trying to find out which onewould suit me best2. I had new thoughts, willful thoughts……filled with lots of won’ts.Some new thoughts occurred to me, thoughts that I intended deliberately to be a defiant girl, and I would say lots of "I won't ~~"to my mom.3. The girl had the sauciness of a Shirley T emple.The girl was Shirley Temple like, slightly rude but in an amusing way.4. It felt like worms and toads and slimy things……awful side of me had surfaced, at last.As I blurted these words out, I felt that something nasty had got out of my chest, and so I felt disgusted. But at the same time, I felt good and relieved, because those nasty thoughts had been suppressed in my heart for a long time and now they had got out at last5. And I could sense her anger rising to its breaking point. I wanted to see it spill out.I could feel that her anger had reached the point where she was at the very verge of losing herself-control, I wanted to see what my mother would do when she lost complete control of herself.6. The lid to the piano was closed, shutting out the dust, my misery, and her dreams.When the lid to the piano was closed, it shut out the dust and also put an end to my misery and her dreams.Unit11.The job of arousing manhood within a people……is not easy.It is no easy job to educate a people who have been over centuries that they were inferior and of no importance to see that they are humans, the same as any other people.2.Psychological freedom……against long night of physical slavery.If you break the mental shackles imposed on you by white supremacists, if you really respect yourself, thinking that you are a Man, equal to anyone else, you will be able to take part in the struggle against racial discrimination.3. The Negro will only be free when he……assertive manhood his own emancipationproclamation.The liberation of mind can only be achieved by the Negro themselves, only when a Negro is fully convinced that he/she is a man/woman and is not inferior to anyone else, can he/she throw off manacles of self-abnegation and become free.4. Power at its best is love……correcting everything that stands against love.Power in its best form of function is the carrying out of the demands of justice with love and justice its best form of function is the overcoming of everything standing in the way of love with power.5. At that time economic status was considered ……ability and talents.At that time, the way to evaluate how capable and resourceful a person was to see how wealthy he was.6. The absence of worldly goods indicated……and moral fiber.A person was poor because he was lazy and not hardworking and lacked a sense of right andwrong.7. It is not the work of slaves……or by animal necessity.This kind of work cannot be done by slaves who work because the work has to be done, because they are forced to work by salve-drivers or they need to work in order to be fed and clothed.8. When the unjust measurement of human……is eliminated.When the unfair practice of judging human value by the amount of money a person has is done away with.9. He who hates does not know God……the meaning of ultimate reality.Those who harbor hate in their hearts cannot grasp the teaching of God, only those who have love can enjoy the ultimate happiness in Heaven.10. Let us be dissatisfied until America……an anemia of deeds.Let us be dissatisfied until American no longer only takes about racial equality but is unwilling to take action to end such evil practice as racial discrimination.。

英语精读第五册答案汇总

英语精读第五册答案汇总

第五册第一单元选词填空B5U1P71) The bank has discovered that on any _____ day, transactions in cash seldom exceed one million. given 该银行发现每天现金交易都很少超过一百万元。

2) One could tell _____ that she was not the kind of person who would give up easily. at a glance 人们一眼就能看出她不是那种会轻言放弃的人。

3) Applicants for this position need _____ in at least one foreign language. fluency 这个职位需要至少一门外语流利的求职者。

4) _____ patience, the artificial breeding of this species can be achieved. Given 只要有耐心,这个物种的人工繁育是可以实现的。

5)So far we have had perfect weather. The yield of the crop, _____, will hit a new record this year. hopefully 目前为止天气很好,今年庄稼产量很有希望创历史新高。

6) An employment contract should _____ the rights and duties of both the employee and the employer in no uncertain terms. define 劳动合同应该用明确的条款界定雇佣方和受雇方的权利和义务。

7) “How did you get the information about this author?”“I _____ him _____in Who’s Who.”looked…up 你是怎么得到这个自己的信息的?我在《名人录》中查到的。

新编英语教程第五册Unit 8(有备注)

新编英语教程第五册Unit 8(有备注)

Much
of human existence consists of efforts [aimed at (making sure that <things don‟t go wrong, fall apart, break down, or stop running until a decent interval has elapsed after their manufacture.>)]
What
role does Murphy‟s law play in this article?
Main The
idea
author raises the topic of shoddy goods problem by referring to Murphy‟s law and the inference from it, thus leading to the argument of whether technology or human input plays a decisive role in quality control.
savant:
a person having great knowledge of some subject 专家,学者,博学之士
corollary:
an idea, an argument, or a fact that naturally follows something else 必然的结果, 自然的结果
The
original Murphy„s law reads: If there are two or more ways to do something, and one of those ways can result in a catastrophe (大灾难), then someone will do it.

大学英语精读5Unit 8课后翻译及单词相应句子

大学英语精读5Unit 8课后翻译及单词相应句子

Unit 81.He rarely spoke, but when he did, it was always with extraordinary precision and often withdevastating effect.他很少说话,可是一但开口,他的话往往极为精确,而且常常有压倒一切的威力。

2.At least my modem pieces shall be cheery/Like English bishops on the Quantum Theory至少我的大作将妙趣横生.犹如英国主教涉足量子理论3.Spender also does not seem to have remarked on Oppenheimer's eyes, which had a kind ofwary luminescence. Siamese cats make a similar impression.斯彭德也没有提到奥本海默的眼睛,那双眼睛里闪烁着一种提防的冷冷的光,这样的目光也可以在暹罗猫身上找到。

4.Oppenheimer had been "tried" for disloyalty to this country and that his clearance had beentaken away.奥本海默由于对国家忠诚问题被审查,最终他的参加秘密工作许可被吊销。

5.But, like Einstein, he had no school or following and had produced very few students.但是与爱因斯坦一样,他没有建立学派,没有追随者,也没有培养出几个学生。

6.he remarked that "the really good ideas in physics are had by only one person.他回答说:“物理学中真正有价值的主张只能为个人享有。

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洛基英语,中国在线英语教育领导品牌A victim of an incurable disease, Stephen Hawking is almost completely paralysed, confined to a wheelchair, and unable to speak. Yet, he has overcome every obstacle and achieved far more than most able-bodied people ever dream of accomplishing and become one of the greatest physicists of our time.Roaming the Cosmosby Le0on JaroffDarkness has fallen on Cambridge, England, and on a damp and chilly evening king's Parade is filled with students and faculty. Then, down the crowded thoroughfare comes the University of Cambridge's most distinctive vehicle, bearing its most distinguished citizen. In the motorized wheelchair, boyish face dimly illuminated by a glowing computer screen attached to the left armrest, is Stephen William Hawking, 46, one of the world's greatest theoretical physicists. As he skillfully maneuvers through the crowd, motorists slow down, some honking their horns in greeting. People wave and shout hello.A huge smile lights up Hawking's bespectacled face, but he cannot wave or shout back. Since his early 20s, he has suffered from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive deterioration of the central nervous system that usually causes death within three or four years. Hawking's illness has advanced more slowly, and now seems almost to have stabilized. Still, it has robbed him of virtually all movement. He has no control over most of his muscles, cannot dress or eat by himself and has lost his voice. Now he "speaks" only by using the slight voluntary movement left in his hands and fingers to operate his wheelchair's built-in computer and voice synthesizer.While ALS has made Hawking a virtual prisoner in his own body, it has left his courage and humor intact, his intellect free to roam. And roam it does, from the infinitesimal to the infinite, from the subatomic realm to the far reaches of the universe. In the course of these mental expeditions, Hawking has conceived startling new theories about black holes and the disorderly events that immediately followed the Big Bang from which the universe sprang. More recently, he has shaken both physicists and theologians by suggesting that the universe has no boundaries, was not created and will not be destroyed.Most of Stephen Hawking's innovative thinking occurs at Cambridge, where he is Lucasian professor of mathematics, a seat once occupied by Isaac Newton. There, in the Department of Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, he benevolently reigns over the relativity group, 15 overachieving graduate students from nine countries. On his office door is a small plaque irreverently reading QUIET, PLEASE. THE BOSS IS ASLEEP.Hardly. From midmorning until he departs for dinner around 7 p. m., Hawking follows a routine that would tax the most able-bodied, working in his book-lined office, amid photographs of his wife Jane and their three children. When he rolled into the department's common room one morning last month, his students were talkingshop around low tables. Maneuvering to one of the tables, Hawking clicked his control switch, evoking tiny beeps from his computer and selecting words from lists displayed on his screen. These words, assembled in sequence at the bottom of the screen, finally issued from the voice synthesizer: "Good morning. Can I have coffee?" Then, for the benefit of a visitor: "I am sorry about my American accent." (The synthesizer is produced by a California company.)When the conversation shifted to creativity and how mathematicians seem to reach a creative peak in their early 20s, Hawking's computer beeped. "I'm over the hill," he said, to a chorus of laughter.Hawking was born on Jan. 8, 1942-300 years to the day, he often notes, after the death of Galileo. As a small boy, he was slow to learn to read but liked to take things apart though he confesses that he was never very good at putting things back together. When he was twelve, he recalls humorously, "one of my friends bet another friend a bag of sweets that I would never come to anything. I don't know if this bet was ever settled and, if so, who won.Fascinated by physics, Stephen concentrated in the subject at Oxford's University College, but did not distinguish himself. He partied, took a great interest in rowing and studied only an hour or so a day. Moving on to Cambridge for graduate work in relativity, he found the going rough, party because of some puzzling physical problems; he stumbled frequently and seemed to be getting clumsy.Doctors soon gave him the bad news: he had ALS, it would only get worse, and there was no cure. Hawking was overwhelmed. Before long, he needed a cane to walk, was drinking heavily and ignoring his studies. "There didn't seem to be much point in completing my Ph. D.," he says.Then Hawking's luck turned. The progress of the disease slowed, and Einsteinian space-time suddenly seemed less formidable. But what really made the difference, he says, "was that I got engaged to Jane," who was studying modern languages at Cambridge. "This gave me something to liver for." As he explains, "if we were to get married, I had to get a job. And to get a job, I had to finish my Ph. D. I started, working hard for the first time in my life. To my surprise, I found I liked it."What particularly interested Stephen was singularities, strange beasts predicted by general relativity. Einstein's equations indicated that when a star several times larger than the sun exhausts its nuclear fuel and collapses, its matter crushes together at its center with such force that it forms a singularity, an infinitely dense point with no dimensions and irresistible gravity. A voluminous region surrounding the singularity becomes a "black hole," from which ——because of that immense gravity ——nothing, not even light, can escape.Scientists years ago found compelling evidence that black holes exist, but they were uncomfortable with singularities, because all scientific laws break down at these points. Most physicists believed that in the real universe the object at the heart of a black hole would be small (but not dimensionless)and extremely dense (but not infinitely so). Enter Hawking. While still a graduate student, he and Mathematician Roger Penrose developed new techniques proving mathematically that if general relativity is correct, singularities must exist. Hawking went on to demonstrate - againif general relativity is correct - that the entire universe must have sprung from a singularity. As he wrote in his 1966 Ph. D. thesis, "There is a singularity in our past."Stephen later discerned several new characteristics of black holes and demonstrated that the amazing forces of the Big Bang would have created mini-black holes, each with a mass about that of a terrestrial mountain, but no larger than the subatomic proton. Then, applying the quantum theory (which accurately describes the random, uncertain subatomic world)instead of general relativity (which, it turns out, falters in that tiny realm), Hawking was startled to find that the mini-black holes must emit particles and radiation. Even more remarkable, the little holes would gradually evaporate and, 10 billion years or so after their creation, explode with the energy or millions of H-bombs.Hawking has visited the U. S. 30 times, made seven trips to Moscow, taken a round-the-word journey, and piloted his wheelchair on the Great Wall of China. On the road, the activities occasionally deviate somewhat from physics. One night Stephen accompanied a group to a Chicago discotheque, where he joined in the festivities by wheeling onto the dance floor and spinning his chair in circles.Recently, Hawking, who has no qualms about recanting his own work if he decides he was wrong, may have transcended his famous proof that singularities exist. With Physicist James Hartle. He has derived a quantum wave describing a self-contained universe that, like the earth's surface, has no edge or boundary. If that is the case, says Hawking, Einstein's general theory of relativity would have to be modified, and there would be no singularities. "The universe would not be created, not be destroyed; it would simply be," he concludes, adding challengingly, "What place, then, for a Creator?"NEW WORDSroamv. go from one place to another without a goal or purpose; wander 漫游cosmosn. the whole universe considered as an ordered system 宇宙cosmica.dampa. slightly wet; moistchillya. rather cold; unpleasantly coldchilln.facultyn. all the teachers of a school or collegethoroughfaren. a busy main road 通衢distinguisheda. showing remarkable qualities 杰出的boyisha. of or like a boydimlyad. faintly; unclearly 黯淡地glowvi. give off a steady light; shine 发光armrestn. a support for the arm, esp. one on the chair or couch 扶手motoristn. a person who drives or rides in an automobilephysicistn. a person who studies or works in physicshonkn. the sound made by a wild goose or an automobile horngreetingn. an act or expression of welcome or salutation 欢迎;致意bespectacleda. wearing glassesamyotrophic lateral sclerosis肌萎缩性脊髓侧索硬化deteriorationn. the act or process of deteriorating 恶化deterioratevi. become worserobvt. take from unlawfully, esp. by force 抢劫;使丧失voluntarya. controlled by the will; made, done, or a given of one's own free will 随意的;自愿的;志愿的built-ina. forming a part of sth. that cannot be separated from itsynthesizern. an electrical instrument that can produce many different sorts of sound 音响合成器voice synthesizer语音合成器synthesisn. the combining of separate things, ideas, etc., into a complete whole 合成humorn. the quality of being amusing or funny; the ability to see or express what is funny 幽默(感)intellectn. the ability to think, reason, and learn; intelligenceinfinitesimaln. a. 无穷小(的)subatomica. smaller than an atom 亚原子的expeditionn. a long trip for exploring or studying sth. 远征;探险;考察disorderlya. combining lacking organization or order; untidytheologiann. a person who has studied theology 神学家boundaryn. a dividing line between one place or thing and another; borderinnovativea. tending or liking to introduce new ideas or methods; different from, and esp. better than previous ones 创新的innovationn.benevolentlyad. in a kindly manner 仁慈地reignv. rule, esp. as a monarch 统治relativityn. 相对论overachievev. do or perform better than expectedgraduaten. one who has graduated, esp. from a college or university, holding a bachelor's degreegraduate student研究生plaquen. a flat decorative metal or stone plate, that is fixed to a wall, statue, etc. 饰板,匾irreverentlyad. in a disrespectful manner 不敬地midmorningn. the middle of the morningable-bodieda. strong and healthy; physically fitbook-lineda. lined with booksamidprep. in the middle of; amongcommon rooma room in a school or college for the use of teachers and / or students when they are not teaching or studying 公共休息室clickvt. strike or move with a sight short soundevokevt. produce; call up 产生;唤起beepn. a sharp, short soundchorusn. sth. said or shouted by many people togetherconfessv. say that sth. is true; say that one has committed a crime or done sth. wrong 承认;坦白fascinatevt. attract or interest very strongly 强烈地吸引;迷住partyvt. enjoy oneself, esp. at a party or partiesoverwhelmvt. overcome completely; overpower 征服,制服canen. a stick used to help in walking 手杖formidablea. difficult to defeat or deal with; frightening 难对付的;可怕的engageda. having agreed to get married 已订婚的singularityn. a hypothetical point in space at which an object becomes compressed to infinite density and infinitesimal volume 奇点beastn. any (four-footed)animal; a person or thing felt to be hateful or offensivenucleara. of a nucleus, esp. of an atom 核的,原子核的crushvt. squeeze together violently so as to breakvi. become crushedinfinitelyad. without limits of any kind; having no enddensea. packed closely together; thickdimensionn. the measurement of the length, width, or height of sth. 尺寸dimensionlessa.irresistiblea. that cannot be resisted; too great to be withstoodvoluminousa. very largecompellinga. strongly convincing or persuasivethesisn. a long piece of writing on a particular subject, based on original work and written for a higher degree 论文amazinga. causing great surprise or wonder, esp. because of quantity or qualityamazevt.mini-prefix. very small compared with others of its kindterrestriala. of the planet earthprotonn. a tiny particle of an atom that has a positive electric charge 质子quantumn. the basic unit of radiant energy; the smallest amount of energy capable of existing independently 量子accuratelyad. precisely; exactlyaccuratea.randoma. without plan, purpose, or pattern 任意的,随机的uncertaina. not certain; likely to changefaltervi. move or speak in an unsteady way; lose strength or effectiveness; failradiationn. the process of sending out rays of energy, such as heat or light; sth. that is radiated 辐射;放射物radiatev.evaporatev. change from a liquid into a vapor or gas 蒸发explodevi. burst with a loud noise; blow upH-bombn. a hydrogen bombpilotvt. act as a pilot; guide; lead 驾驶(飞行器等);指引;引导deviatevi. move away from a usual or accepted standard of behavior 偏离accompanyvt. go along withdiscothequen. (formal for disco)a club where people dance to recorded music 迪斯科舞厅festivityn. the act of rejoicing; merriment; gaiety 欢庆(活动)spinv. (cause to)turn quickly about an axisrecantvt. say publicly that one no longer holds (a former belief)self-containeda. complete in itself; independentcreatorn. a person who creates; (C)GodPHRASES & EXPRESSIONSlight upmake or become bright, cheerful, etc.rob oftake the property of, esp. using violence; prevent from enjoyingreign overrule as the king or queentalk shop(inf.)talk about things in one's work or tradein sequenceone following another; in successionover the hillpast one's prime, unable to function as one used toput togetherform by combining parts or members; assemblecome to anythingend in success / failuresomething / nothingdistinguish oneselfbehave or perform noticeably well(be)engaged tohaving agreed to marryto sb's surprisein a way that surprises sb.break downbecome unusable; falldeviate frommove away fromPROPER NAMESLeon Jaroff利昂.贾洛夫Cambridge剑桥(大学)King's Parade国王阅兵场Stephen William Hawking斯蒂芬.威廉.霍金Lucasian卢卡斯的Isaac Newton艾萨克.牛顿California加利福尼亚(州)Oxford牛津(大学)Jane简Roger Penrose罗杰.彭罗斯Moscow莫斯科Chicago芝加哥James Hartle詹姆斯.哈特尔“成千上万人疯狂下载。

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