|
|
Óû§Ãû£ºyuyang9999 ±ÊÃû£ºyuyang9999 µØÇø£º ÐÐÒµ£ºÆäËû |
| ÈÕ | Ò» | ¶þ | Èý | ËÄ | Îå | Áù |
»¶Ó·ÃÎÊyuyang9999µÄ²©¿Í
ËÄÁù¼¶ÔĶÁ¼¼Çɼ¯ºÏ£¨Ò»£©
¡¡£¨×÷ÕßÖö¥£©
ËÄÁù¼¶ÔĶÁ¼¼Çɼ¯ºÏ£¨Ò»£©
Ëļ¶ÔĶÁÎÄÕÂÖÐÐÄ˼Ïë£Ä¿µÄÐÍ
We find that bright children are rarely held back by mixed -ability¡¡teaching. On the contrary, both their knowledge and experience are enriched. We feel that there are many disadvantages in¡¡streaming(°Ñ...°´ÄÜÁ¦·Ö°à) pupils. It does not take into account¡¡the fact that children develop at different rates. It can have a bad effect on both the bright and the not-so-bright child. After all, it can¡¡quite discouraging to be at the bottom of the top grade!
¡¡¡¡
¡¡¡¡Besides, it is rather unreal to grade people just according to¡¡heir intellectual ability. This is only one aspect of their total personality. We are concerned to develop the abilities of all our pupils to the full , not just their academic ability. We also value personal qualities and social skills, and we find that mixed-ability teaching con-tributes to all these aspects of learning.
¡¡¡¡
¡¡¡¡In our classrooms, we work in various ways. The pupils often¡¡work in groups: this gives them the opportunity to learn to cooper-ate, to share, and to develop leadership skills. They also learn how to cope with personal problems as well as learning how to think, to¡¡make decisions, to analyze and evaluate, and to communicate effectively. The pupils learn from each other as well as from the teacher.¡¡Sometimes the pupils work in pairs`, sometimes they work on individual tasks and assignments, and they can do this at their own speed. They also have some formal class teaching when this is appropriate. We encourage our pupils to use the library, and we teach¡¡them the skills they need in order to do this efficiently. An advanced pupil can do advanced work: it does not matter what age the child¡¡is. We expect our pupils to do their best, not their least, and we¡¡give them every encouragement to attain this goal.
¡¡¡¡
¡¡¡¡The author's purpose in writing this passage is to________.
¡¡¡¡A) argue for teaching bright and not-so-bright pupils in the¡¡same class
¡¡¡¡B) recommend pair work and group work for classroom activities
¡¡¡¡C) offer advice on the proper use of the library
¡¡¡¡D) emphasize the importance of appropriate formal classroom
¡¡¡¡
¡¡¡¡±¾ÌâÒªÇóѧÉúÊ×ÏÈÁ˽âÕâÆªÎÄÕµÄÖ÷Ìâ¡£ÎÄÕÂÖÐÌÖÂÛÁËÁ½ÖÖÉϿεķ½Ê½£ºstream1ng pupi1s¼´°ÑѧÉú°´ÄÜÁ¦·Ö°à½øÐнÌѧºÍmixed-ability teaching¼´°Ñ³Ì¶È²»ÆëµÄѧÉú»ì°àÉϿΡ£²¢ÁоÙÁËǰÕߵı׶˺ͺóÕßµÄÓŵ㡣Òò´ËA£©ÊǴ𰸡£¶øÑ¡Ïî³ö£¬B)£¬D£©ÖÐÌáµ½µÄ¼¸ÖÖ×ö·¨¾ùΪmixed-abi1ity teachingµÄ¾ßÌå×ö·¨£¬¶¼²»ÄÜ¿´×÷ÊÇ×÷ÕßдÕâÆªÎÄÕµÄÄ¿µÄ,µÀÕýÈÏΪÕâÒ»·½ÃæÊǹؼüËùÔÚ¡£ÕâÒ»ÌâÒªÇóÔĶÁʱ²»µ«Òª¿´¶®¸ö±ðµÄ¾ä×Ó£¬¶øÇÒÒªÄܹ»¸ù¾Ý×÷Õß˼·µÄÕ¹¿ª£¬°ÑÎÕ×÷ÕßÔÚÕûƪÎÄÕÂÖÐÔÞ³Éʲô·´¶Ôʲô£¬Òò´Ë£¬±ØÐë¿´¶®È«ÆªÎÄÕµÄÒâ˼£¬µÀÕýÀÏʦÈÏΪÕâÖÖ·½·¨ÊǺÜÖØÒªµÄ¡£
CET4&6ÔĶÁÀí½â¿¼ÊÔ´ðÌâ˼·
¸ù¾Ý¡¶´óѧ¼ÔÓï½Ìѧ´ó¸Ù¡·µÄ¹æ¶¨£¬CET4&6ÖеÄÔĶÁÀí½â²¿·ÖÖ÷Òª²âÊÔËĸö·½Ã棬¾Å¸ö²ã´Î£¬¾ßÌå±íÏÖΪ6ÖÖÌâÐÍ¡£¢ÙÖ÷Ö¼Ìâ(°üÀ¨´óÒâ)£»¢Úϸ½ÚÌâ(°üÀ¨ÊÂʵ)£»¢Û´ÊÒåÌâ(°üÀ¨´Ê»ãºÍ¶ÌÓï)£»¢ÜÂß¼Ìâ(°üÀ¨¾ä»ò¾äȺ)£»¢ÝÍÆÀíÌâ(°üÀ¨ÒýÉê)£»¢Þ¹ÛµãÌâ(°üÀ¨Ì¬¶È)¡£
¤K¤K1. ÓйØÖ÷Ö¼ÌâµÄ½âÌâ˼·
¤K¤KÖ÷Ö¼ÌâµÄÄ¿µÄÊǼì²é¶Ô¶ÌÎÄÕûÌåÀí½â¸ÅÀ¨µÄÄÜÁ¦¡£ÉϺ£µÀÕýÈÏΪһ°ãÎÄÕ£¬ÓÈÆäÊÇ˵Ã÷ÎĺÍÒéÂÛÎÄ£¬ÍùÍùÓÐÖ÷Ìâ¾ä±íÃ÷ÖÐÐÄ˼Ï룬¶ÎÖÐÓжÎÖ¼¾äÕ¹¿ª¶ÎÂäÖÐÐÄ¡£Ö÷Ìâ¾äͨ³£ÔÚ¶ÌÎĵĿªÊ¼»ò½á⣬ÉÙÊý³öÏÖÔÚÎÄÖУ¬Á˽âÕâÒ»µã£¬´ðÖ÷Ö¼ÌâÍùÍù»áÓÈжø½â¡£ÓеÄÎÄÕ£¬¼ÇÊöij¸öÈËÎï»òʼþ£¬ÍùÍùûÓÐÖ÷Ìâ¾ä£¬Òª¿¿×ÛºÏÎÄÕ£¬·ÖÎöÍÆÀí²ÅÄܵóöÎÄÕÂÖ÷Ö¼£¬¸üҪϸÐÄÔĶÁ¡£¸ù¾ÝÉϺ£µÀÕýѧУ½Ìѧ¾Ñé¿ÉÖª¿¼ÉúʧÎóµÄÖØÒªÔÒòÖ®Ò»ÊǰÑÌ«Áýͳ»òÌ«¾ßÌ塢δÄÜÇ¡µ±·´Ó³ÎÄÕÂÕûÌå˼ÏëµÄÑ¡Ïî¿´×÷ÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£»¹ÓÐÒ»µãÓбØÒªÃ÷È·£¬ÀúÀ´ÊÔ¾íÖеÄÔĶÁÀí½â¶ÌÎľùÎÞ±êÌ⣬¿¼Éú±ØÐëͨ¹ý×Ô¼ºÔĶÁÀí½â£¬Á˽âÎÄÕµÄÖ÷Ö¼´óÒ⣬¶øÖ÷Ö¼´óÒâµÄÁ˽⣬ÒâÒåÔ¶Ô¶³¬Ô½´ðÖ÷Ö¼Ì⣬ÒòΪ´ðÆäËûÌâÍùÍùÒ²»áÉæ¼°Ö÷Ö¼¡£´ÓÕâ¸öÒâÒåÉϽ²£¬²»¹Ü±¾ÆªÊÇ·ñÓÐÖ÷Ö¼Ì⣬ÿƪ¶¼Ó¦Á˽âÖ÷Ö¼£¬Ñø³ÉÕâÒ»Á¼ºÃϰ
¹ßÊ®·ÖÓÐÒæ¡£
¤K¤KÖ÷Ö¼(°üÀ¨¶ÎÖ¼)Ìâ³£¼ûµÄÌáÎÊÐÎʽÓУº
¤K¤KWhat is the main idea of the passage?
¤K¤KWhat is the main subject of this passage?
¤K¤KWhat is the main topic of this passage?
¤K¤KThe central point of the selection is that___________
¤K¤KThe selection is concerned primarily with_______
¤K¤KThe author is mainly concerned with _________
¤K¤KWhat does the passage mainly discuss?
¤K¤KWhich of the following best states the main idea of the passage?
¤K¤KThe passage is mainly about_________
¤K¤KWhich illustrates the main idea of the selection?
¤K¤KWhich of the following sentences best describes the writer's main
¤K¤Kpoint in paragraph one?
¤K¤KWhich sentence best expresses the central point of the selection?
¤K¤KThe statement that best relates the main idea of this passage is
ÓÐʱ»¹ÁÉúÈ·¶¨ÏàÓ¦µÄÎÄÕ±êÌâÀ´²âÊÔÆä¶ÔÈ«ÎÄÖÐÐÄ˼ÏëÁìÎò¡£³£ÓÃÌâÓУº
¤K¤KWhat would be an appropriate title for this passage?
¤K¤KWhich of the following would be the most appropriate title for the ¤K¤Kpassage?
¤K¤KThe best title for this passage would be/might be/is
¤K¤KWhat might be the best title of this passage?
¤K¤KThe most suitable title of the passage is
¤K¤KWhich is the best suggested title?
¤K¤KThe title that best expresses the ideas of this passage is
¤K¤KThe title below that best expresses the ideas of this passage is
¤K¤K_______.
¤K¤KÓÐʱ»¹ÁÉúÈ·¶¨ÎÄÕµĻùµ÷»ò×÷ÕßµÄд×÷Ä¿µÄ£¬ÒÔ´ËÀ´²âÊÔÆä¶ÔÈ«ÎÄÒâ˼µÄÀí½â¡£³£ÓõÄÌáÎÊ·½Ê½ÓУº
¤K¤KThe tone of this essay is________________
¤K¤KThe author's attitude toward, is best described as one
¤K¤K of_____________
¤K¤KWhat is the author's main purpose in this passage?
¤K¤KWhat might be the purpose of the author to write this passage?
¤K¤KThe author's main purpose of the passage is to____________
¤K¤KWhat is the primary purpose of the passage?
¤K¤K½â¾öÕâÀàÌâÐ͵ÄÒªµã¾ÍÊÇץסÖÐÐÄ˼Ïë,µÀÕýÀÏʦÈÏΪÕâÖÖ·½·¨ÊǺÜÖØÒªµÄ£¬´ó¼ÒÖªµÀ£¬Ò»Æª¶ÌÎĵÄÖÐÐÄ˼ÏëÊÇ×÷ÕßÌá³öµÄ×îÖØÒªÐÅÏ¢£¬ËüÊǹᴩÎÄÕµÄ˼Ïë¡£Òò´Ë£¬Òª°ÑÎÕÎÄÕµÄÖÐÐÄ£¬Ê×ÏȱØÐëץסÿһ¶ÎÂäµÄÖÐÐÄ£¬È»ºó¾Í¿ÉÒÔ¹éÄɳöÎÄÕµÄÖÐÐÄ˼Ïë¡£
¤K¤KÔڻشðÖ÷Ö¼ÌâÐÍʱ£¬×¥×¡ÎÄÕµĸ÷¶ÎÂäµÄÒªµã¶Ô´ðÌâÊǷdz£ÖØÒªµÄ¡£¶ø¸÷¸ö¶ÎÂäµÄÒªµãÒ»°ãÊÇÓÉÖ÷Ìâ¾äÌåÏֵġ£Ö÷Ìâ¾äÒ»°ã·ÖΪÒÔÏÂËÄÖÖÇé¿ö£¬Î»ÓÚ¶ÎÊ×µÄÖ÷Ìâ¾ä£¬Î»ÓÚ¶ÎÄ©µÄÖ÷Ìâ¾ä£¬Î»ÓÚ¶ÎÖеÄÖ÷Ìâ¾ä¡¢Ç°ºóºôÓ¦µÄÖ÷Ìâ¾äÒÔ¼°ÎÞÃ÷È·Ö÷Ìâ¾ä¡£
¤K¤K¡ôλÓÚ¶ÎÊ×µÄÖ÷Ìâ¾ä
¤K¤KÒ»°ã¶øÑÔ£¬ÒÔÑÝÒï·¨(deduction)²ûÊö¹ÛµãµÄÎÄÕ£¬Ö÷Ìâ³£³£ÔÚÎÄÕµĿªÍ·£¬¼´Ïȵã³öÖ÷Ì⣬Ȼºó£¬Î§ÈÆÕâÒ»Ö÷Ìâ×÷¾ßÌåµÄ³ÂÊö¡£Ëü³£¸ø¶ÁÕßÒÔÇåÐÂÃ÷Á˵ĸоõ£¬Ê¹ÈËÂíÉϾͿÉÃ÷°×ÎÄÕÂËù½²µÄÊÇʲô£¬¼´ÎÄÕµÄÖ÷Ö¼¡£
¤K¤K¡ôλÓÚ¾äÄ©µÄÖ÷Ìâ¾ä
¤K¤KÒÔ¹éÄÉ·¨£¨induction£©Ä£Ê½Ð´×÷µÄÎÄÕ£¬Ö÷Ìâ¾ä³£³£³öÏÖÔÚ¶ÎÂä»òÎÄÕµĽá⣬ÒÔÇ¿µ÷¸ù¾Ý²ûÊö¾äÌṩµÄ¾ßÌåÊÂʵµÃ³öµÄ½áÂÛ¡£
¤K¤K¡ôλÓÚ¶ÎÖеÄÖ÷Ìâ¾ä
¤K¤K³öÏÖÓÚ¶ÎÖеÄÖ÷Ìâ¾äÓÐÁ½ÖÖÇé¿ö£¬»òÏÈÌá³öÎÊÌ⣬Ȼºó¸øÓè»Ø´ð£¨Ö÷Ìâ¾ä£©£¬ÔÙ¸øÓè½âÊÍ»òÏÈÌá³öÎÊÌ⣬Ȼºóµã³öÖ÷Ìâ˼Ï루Ö÷Ìâ¾ä£©£¬×îºó¸øÓè½âÊÍ¡£
¤K¤K¡ôǰºóºôÓ¦µÄÖ÷Ìâ¾ä
¤K¤KÓÐЩ¶ÌÎÄÓÐǰºóÁ½¸öÖ÷Ìâ¾ä£¬ÕâÁ½¸öÖ÷Ìâ¾äÐð˵µÄÊÇͬһ¸öÄÚÈÝ£¬µ«Óôʲ»¾¡Ïàͬ£¬ÕâÑù²»µ«Ç¿µ÷ÁËÖ÷Ìâ˼Ï룬¶øÇÒ¸üÏÔµÃÁé»î¶à±ä¡£ÕâÁ½¸ö¾ä×Ó²¢ÇÒ¼òµ¥µØÖظ´£¬ºóÒ»¸öÖ÷Ìâ¾ä»òÕß¶Ô¸ÃÖ÷Ìâ×÷×îºóµÄÆÀÊö£¬»ò°ÑÖ÷ÒªÒªµã×öÒ»¸ÅÀ¨£¬»òʹ֮ÒýÉêÁô¸ø¶ÁÕßȥ˼¿¼¡£
¤K¤K¡ôÎÞÃ÷È·Ö÷Ìâ¾ä
¤K¤Kһƪ¶ÌÎÄͨ³£°üÀ¨Á½²¿·Ö£º¢Ù±íÃ÷ÖÐÐÄ˼ÏëµÄÖ÷Ìâ¾ä£»¢ÚÓëÖÐÐÄ˼ÏëÓйػòΪÆäÌṩÂ۾ݵÄÒ»¸ö»ò¶à¸öÖ§³ÖÐÔ¾ä×Ó¡£Òò´Ë£¬ÉϺ£µÀÕýÈÏΪÄÜÇ¡ÈçÆä·ÖµØÓÐÕë¶ÔÐÔ¡¢¸ÅÀ¨ÐÔÈ«Ãæ·´Ó³±¾Æª¶ÌÎĵÄÄÚÈݵľä×Ó£¬¶¼¿É±»ÈÏΪÊÇÖ÷Ìâ¾ä¡£×îÁîÈ˼¬ÊֵĿÖÅÂÒªÊýËùÑ¡µÄ¶ÌÎijöÏÖÎÞÖ÷Ìâ¾äµÄÇé¿ö¡£Èç¹ûûÓÐÖ÷Ìâ¾ä£¬¿¼Éú¿ÉÒÔ²ÉÓÃÌá¸ÙêüÁì·¨£¬Í¨¹ý·ÖÎöϸ½Ú°ÑÎÄÕµÄÒªµã¹éÄɳöÀ´¡£¾ßÌå¿É²Î¿¼ÈçÏ·½·¨Ñ°ÕÒÎÄÕµÄÖ÷Ҫ˼Ï룺
¤K¤K1) ÅжϳöÎÄÕµÄÖ÷Ì⾿¾¹ÊÇÖ¸Ò»¸öÈË¡¢Ò»¸öµØ·½»¹ÊÇÒ»¼þÊÂÇ飬Èçijһ¸ÅÄî¡¢ÉèÏëµÈ£»Ò²¿ÉÄÜÊÇijһÊÂÇéµÄ¹ý³Ì¡¢·½·¨¡£×ÜÖ®£¬ÈË¡¢Îï¡¢µØµã¡¢Ë¼Ïë»ò¹ý³Ì¶¼¿ÉÒÔ³ÉΪÖ÷Ìâ¾äµÄÖ÷Óï¡£
¤K¤K2) ÅжϳöÓë¸ÃÖ÷ÓïÓйصÄ×îÖ÷ÒªµÄ¶«Î÷¡¢¸ÃÖ÷ÓïËù×öµÄÊÂÇ飬»òÕßÍâ½ç¶ÔÓÚ¸ÃÖ÷ÓïËù×öµÄÊÂÇé¶ø³ÉΪ¸ÃÖ÷ÌâµÄ¶¯´Ê¡£ 2. ÓйØÏ¸½ÚÌâµÄ½âÌâ˼·
¤K¤KÖ÷Ö¼ÌâÐÍ(»ñÈ¡Ö÷Ö¼ºÍ´óÒâ)Ö÷ÒªÓÃÓÚ²âÊÔ¶ÁÕß¶ÔÕûƪ¶ÌÎĵĸÅÒªÀí½âµÄÄÜÁ¦£¬°üÀ¨È«ÎĵÄÖÐÐÄ˼Ï룬×÷ÕßµÄд×÷Ä¿µÄºÍÒâͼµÈ¡£ËüÊÇÌá¸ßÔĶÁЧÂʵÄÒ»¸öÖØÒª¼¼ÇÉ£¬µ«²»ÊÇΨһµÄ¼¼ÇÉ¡£Ö÷Ìâ˼ÏëÖ»ÊÇÎÄÕµĿò¼Ü£¬×÷ÕßÔÚ¹¹Ë¼¹ý³ÌÖУ¬»¹±ØÐë¶ÔÒª±í´ïµÄ¹Ûµã»òÐÅÏ¢½øÐоßÌåµÄ³ÂÊö£¬¶ÁÕßÓ¦ÄÜÈ·ÇÐ×¢Òâ»ò¼Çס×÷ÕßÔÚ³ÂÊöÖÐ̸µ½µÄÊǺÎÈË¡¢ºÎ´¦¡¢ºÎÊ¡¢ºÎʱºÍºÎ¹Ê£¬ÕâÊÇÊ®·ÖÖØÒªµÄ¡£Òò´Ë£¬¶ÁÕß±ØÐëÃÜÇÐÖØÊÓÈËÃû¡¢ÈÕÆÚ¡¢ÊÂʵ¡¢Êý¾ÝºÍµØµãµÈ¡£¶ÔÓÚÕâÀàϸ½ÚÐÔµÄÎÊÌ⣬¶àÊýÎÄÕ¶¼±È½ÏÃ÷ÏÔµØÌṩÁËÊÂʵ(facts)ºÍϸ
½Ú(details)£¬Æä´ð°¸±Ø¶¨ÔÚÎÄÕÂÂÛÊö·¶Î§Ö®ÄÚ¡£¶ÁÕßÓ¦¸ÃÕÒ³öÎÄÕÂÖÐΪËù×÷µÄÑ¡ÔñÌṩÒÀ¾ÝµÄµ¥´ÊºÍ¾ä×Ó£¬¶ø²»ÄÜÍÑÀëÔÎÄÈ¥»ñÈ¡ÐÅÏ¢£¬Ò²²»ÄִܲٵØ×÷³öûÓÐÔÎĸù¾ÝµÄ¼ÙÉè¡£
¶þ¡¢ÌâÐ͵ÄÖ÷Òª½á¹¹ÐÎʽ¼°½âÌâ¼¼ÇÉ
¤K¤Kϸ½ÚÌâÐεÄÈýÖÖÖ÷ÒªÐÎʽ£ºÎʾäʽ¡¢²»ÍêÕûµÄ³ÂÊö¾äʽºÍÅųýʽ¡£
1. Îʾäʽ
A) ½á¹¹ÐÎʽ
¤K¤KÊÇÒÔÌáÎʵÄÐÎʽÌá³öÎÊÌ⣬ÓÃÓÚ²âÊÔ¶ÁÕßÀí½âÔĶÁ²ÄÁÏÖоßÌåÄÚÈݵÄÄÜÁ¦¡£ËùÓеÄÌâÄ¿³£ÒÔ"WHICH£¬WHERE£¬WHAT£¬WHEN£¬WHY"µÈWh-Questions¼°"HOW"Òýµ¼µÄÎÊÌâ×÷Ϊ¿ªÊ¼µÄÎʾ䣬ÎÊÌâÖ÷񻃾¼°Ê±¼ä¡¢ÈËÎï¡¢µØµã¡¢ÔÒò¡¢¶¨Òå¡¢Êý×ֵȡ£Æä·¢ÎÊÐÎʽÖ÷ÒªÓÐÒÔϼ¸ÖÖ£º
1£© What does (did) somebody (something) do?
2£© What do people like to do for... ?
3£© What effect did something have on... ?
4£© What is (was) the purpose of... ?
5£© Why is (was) it necessary for somebody (not) to do something?
6£© According to the passage, why is (was) in darter of(verb+ ing)?
7£© Why is (was) somebody becoming (adj. )?
8£© Where should somebody do something?
9£© Where is (was)... located?
10£© How many (days, months, years, hours, minutes, etc. ) does¤K¤K¤K
¤K¤K (did)somebody do something?
11£© How did something happen?
12£© When was something done?
13£© When did it happen?
14£© Which of the following people should (not) do it?
15£© Which of the following did someboby have to deal with (face...)?
B) ½âÌâ¼¼ÇÉ
ÔÚ½âÕâÀàÌâʱ£¬¿É²ÉÓÃ"¶ÔºÅÈë×ù"µÄ°ì·¨£¬¼´´ø×ÅÎÊÌâÕÒ¾ä×Ó£¬½¨Òé²ÉÈ¡Èçϲ½Ö裺
¢ÙÏÈ¿´ÎÄÕºóÃæµÄÎÊÌâ(Õâ³£³£±»ÈÏΪÊǷdz£ÓÐЧµÄ·½·¨)£¬×¢Òâ¼ÇÒ乨¼üµÄ´ÊÓÈçÈËÎʱ¼ä¡¢Ê¼þµÈ£¬È·¶¨Ã¿ÌâÄ¿µÄ·¢ÎÊÖÐÐÄ£¬Ò²¾ÍÊÇ˵£¬Ä³¸öÎÊÌâÊÇÕë¶ÔʲôÌáÎʵġ£ÕâÑùÎÒÃǾͿÉÒÔ´ø×ÅÎÊÌâÈ¥ÔĶÁÎÄÕ£¬×öµ½ÓеķÅʸ¡£
¢Ú°Ñÿ¸öÎÊÌâµÄ·¢ÎÊÖÐÐÄ·´À¡µ½ÔÎÄÖÐÈ¥¡£µ±¶Áµ½Óйؽâ´ð·¢ÎÊÖÐÐĵÄÐÅϢʱ£¬¿ÉÔÚÓйØÐÅÏ¢ÏÂÃæ»Ò»Ö±ÏßÒÔʾͻ³ö¡£Èç¹ûÎÊÌâµÄ˳ÐòûÓа´Ë³Ðò¸ø³ö£¬¿ÉÒÔÔÚÔÎÄÐÅϢϻÏßµÄͬʱ£¬°ÑÎÊÌâµÄÌâºÅÒ²±ê³öÀ´£¬±ãÓÚ×îºó¼ì²é£¬²¢½ÚԼʱ¼ä¡£
¢ÛÔÚÔÎÄÖÐÕÒ³ö¶Ô·¢ÎÊÖÐÐĵĽâ´ðÐÅÏ¢ºó£¬¿É°ÑÔÎÄÐÅÏ¢·Åµ½ÎÊÌâÖÐÈ¥£¬Óëÿһ¸öÑ¡ÔñÏîÄ¿½øÐжÔÕÕ£¬ÓëÔÎÄÐÅÏ¢Ïà·ûµÄÄÇÏ¼´ÊÇÕýÈ·µÄ´ð°¸¡£
3. ²»ÍêÕûµÄ³ÂÊö¾äʽ
A.½á¹¹ÐÎʽ
ÓÐЩÌâÄ¿³öÏֵIJ¢²»ÊÇÎʾ䣬¶øÊÇÒ»¸ö²»ÍêÕûµÄ³ÂÊö¾ä£¬ÒªÇó¶ÁÕßÑ¡³öµÄ´ð°¸ÓëÌâ¸É¹¹³ÉµÄ¾ä×ÓÔÚÒâÒåÉÏÓÐÔÎÄÄÚÈÝÏà·û¡£Ìâ¸ÉΪ²»ÍêÕûµÄ³ÂÊö¾ä²¿·Ö£¬¶øÑ¡ÔñÏîĿΪÍêÐβ¿·Ö¡£Ñ¡ÔñµÄÏîÄ¿Ö÷񻃾¼°ÈËÎʱ¼ä¡¢µØµã¡¢ÊÂÎï¡¢Êý×Ö¡¢Ä¿µÄ¡¢ÔÒòµÈ£¬µÀÕýÀÏʦ·¢ÏÖÕâÖÖÌâÐ͵ij£¼ûÐÎʽÓÐÒÔϼ¸ÖÖ£º
1£© somebody has (had) been known to do something only when he(she) is (was)something is (was) made out of __
2£© According to the passage, Somebody does (did) something (in order) to
3£© Something can (could) best be named (classified, called... ) as
4£© The value of something amounts to __
5£© A certain kind of person is someone who __
6£© People are looking for better ways to
7£© From their experience, they concluded that
8£© When doing something, it is important to
9£© Apparently he (she) felt (thought) that
10£© When "it" happened, he was doing
11£© The time for him to do it is __
12£© The reason why he did it was
13£© According to the author, "it" was caused by_
14£© He does (did) something in __
B£®½âÌâ¼¼ÇÉ
ÕâÀàÌâµÄ´ð°¸ÓëÔÎÄÔÚ×ÖÃæÉϵIJîÒìºÜ´ó£¬ÓÐʱ»¹ÒªÕÒ³öÓëǰ¾äµÄÄÚÈÝÔÚÂß¼ÉϵÄÁªÏµ¡£Òò´Ë´ð´ËÀàϸ½ÚÌâʱ׼ȷÀí½âÊǹؼü£¬Ò»¶¨ÒªÀä¾²£¬×Ðϸ·ÖÎö¡£ 3£®Åųýʽ
A.½á¹¹ÐÎʽ
Ç°ÃæÁ½ÖÖÐÎʽ£¬¶¼ÊÇÒÀ¾Ý¶ÌÎÄËùÌṩµÄÊÂʵϸ½Ú£¬ÒªÇó¶ÁÕßÍêÈ«Àí½âÈ«ÎÄ£¬¿ÉÒÔÖ±½ÓÔÚÎÄÕÂÖÐÕÒµ½´ð°¸¡£»¹ÓÐÒ»ÖÖÎÊÌâµÄÐÎʽ£¬¾ÍÊÇÒªÇóÎÒÃÇÅųýÎÄÕÂÖеÄ˵Ã÷ÐÅÏ¢£¬ÕÒ³öÔÎÄδÐð¼°µÄÄÚÈÝ£¬¼ä½ÓµØÕÒ³öÎÊÌâ´ð°¸¡£µÀÕýÀÏʦ·¢ÏÖÕâÀàÌâÐÍÖ÷ÒªÓÐÒÔϼ¸ÖÖÐÎʽ£º
1£© In the passage, the author refers to something or somebody as all of the following except __
2) Which of the following are NOT mentioned in the passage?
3) According to the passage which of the following is NOT true?
4) Which of the following is NOT stated in
5) Which of the following is NOT listed as
6) Which of the following is NOT necessary for __
7) From the report you can NOT get the information of __
8) Which of the following is NOT included in the display?
9) Which of the following could NOT be a consumer as described in the passage?
10) The author does NOT tell us __
B½âÌâ¼¼ÇÉ
×öÕâÀàÌâʱ£¬Ê×ÏÈÒª×ÐϸÔĶÁÌâºóµÄÑ¡ÔñÏîÄ¿£¬ÀμǸ÷¸öÏîÄ¿Ëù²ûÊöµÄ²»Í¬ÄÚÈÝ¡£È»ºóÐíµÀÕýÀÏʦǿÁÒ½¨Òé´ø×ÅÕâЩ²»Í¬µÄÄÚÈÝÈ¥ÔĶÁÔÎÄ¡£·²ÊÇÔÎÄÖеÄÐÅÏ¢ÓÐÑ¡ÔñÏîÄ¿ÄÚÈÝÏàͬµÄ£¬ÎÒÃÇ¿ÉÒÔÔÚÕâЩÐÅϢϻÏߣ¬ÒÔ×÷ΪÅųýµÄÄÚÈÝ¡£Èç¹û»ù±¾Ñ¡ÔñÏîÄ¿µÄÄÚÈÝÔÚÔÎÄÕÒ²»µ½ÏàÓ¦µÄÐÅÏ¢£¬ÄÇô¸ÃÑ¡ÔñÏîÄ¿¼´Îª¸ÃÌâµÄ´ð°¸¡£ÕâÀàÌâÓëǰÁ½ÖÖÌâÐͲ»Í¬£¬ºóÕߣ¬´ð°¸Ó¦°üÀ¨ÔÚÔÎĵÄÄÚÈÝÖУ¬¼´ÓëËùÊöÊÂʵ¾ßÓÐÖ±½Ó»ò¼ä½ÓµÄÁªÏµ£¬¶øÇ°ÕߵĴð°¸ÊDZ»ÅųýÔÚÔÎÄÄÚÈÝÖ®ÍâµÄ£¬Òò´ËÔÚ´ðÌâʱҪ½«ÓëÔÎÄÓйصÄÈý¸öÑ¡ÔñÏîÅųý£¬Ê£ÏµÄÒ»¸ö²ÅÊǴ𰸡£
3. ´ÊÒåÌâµÄ½âÌâ˼·
ÔĶÁʱÀûÓø÷ÖÖÒÑÖªÐÅÏ¢ÍÆ²âÅжÏijЩ³¬¸Ù´Ê»ã»ò¶ÌÓïµÄ´ÊÒåÊǶÁÕß±ØÐëÕÆÎÕµÄÒ»ÏîÔĶÁ¼¼ÇÉ£¬Í¬Ê±Ò²ÊÇÔĶÁÀí½â²âÊԵĻù±¾½â¾ö·½·¨Ö®Ò»¡£²Â´ÊÄÜÁ¦Ö÷Ҫȡ¾öÓÚ¶ÁÕßÒÑ¾ÕÆÎյĴʻãÁ¿£¬ÊìϤӢÓïÓïÑԽṹµÄ³Ì¶È£¬¸÷ÖÖ³£Ê¶Óë¾Ñ飬ÒÔ¼°Âß¼ÍÆÀíµÄÄÜÁ¦µÈµÈ¡£¼´Ê¹¿¼ÉúÕÆÎÕÁËеġ¶´óѧӢÓï½Ìѧ´ó¸Ù¡·´Ê±íÖй涨µÄ6500´Ê£¬ÔÚÔĶÁ¹ý³ÌÖУ¬¿¼ÉúÍùÍùÒ²»áÅöµ½Éú´Ê¡¢ÄÑ´Ê¡£Õâ²»½öºÜ´ó³Ì¶ÈÉÏÓ°ÏìÁËËûÃǵÄÔĶÁËÙ¶È£¬¶øÇÒÒ²»á·Á°ËûÃǶÔÎÄÕµÄÕýÈ·Àí½â¡£µ«ÊÇ£¬ÎÒÃÇ¿ÉÒÔͨ¹ýÉÏÏÂÎĵÄÖÖÖÖÌáʾÀ´×¼È·µØ²Â³öһЩÉú´ÊµÄÒâ˼¡£ÕâÊÇÔĶÁÀí½âÖÐ×îÖØÒªµÄ¼¼ÄÜÖ®Ò»£¬¿¼ÉúÓ¦ÈÏÕæÕÆÎÕ¡£ÏÂÃæ´Ó°Ë¸ö·½ÃæÀ´·Ö±ð²ûÊö¡£
Ò»¡¢¸ù¾Ý¶¨Òå²Â²â´ÊÒå
ÎÒÃÇÔÚÔĶÁÎÄÕÂʱ£¬²»ÄÜÒòΪÉú´ÊµÄ´æÔÚ¶øÈ´²½£¬Ïà·´Ëæ×ŶÔÈ«ÎĵÄÀí½â£¬»áÖð½¥Ã÷°×ij¸öÉú´ÊµÄ´ÊÒå¡£ÓÐЩÎÄÕ³£³£²Éȡֱ½Ó¶¨ÒåµÄ·½·¨£¬À´½âÊÍ˵Ã÷Éú´ÊµÄ´ÊÒå¡£¶þ¡¢¸ù¾Ý½âÊͲ²â´ÊÒå
½âÊÍÓ붨ÒåÓÐʱºÜÏàËÆ£¬µ«ÊÇËü²»È綨ÒåÄÇÑùÏ꾡¡¢ÑÏÃÜ£¬¾¡¹ÜÈç´Ë£¬ËüΪÎÒÃÇÌṩµÄÐÅÏ¢ÒÑ×ã¹»²Â²â´ÊÒåʹÓÃÁË¡£
Èý¡¢¸ù¾Ý¸´Êö²Â²â´ÊÒå
¸´ÊöÒ²ÊÇÒ»ÖÖ½âÊÍ·½Ê½£¬¼´»»Óò»Í¬µÄ´ÊÓïÖØÐ±í´ïͬһÄÚÈÝ¡£¸´Êö²¿·Ö¿ÉÒÔÊǵ¥´Ê¡¢¶ÌÓҲ¿ÉÒÔÊÇ´Ó¾ä»òÕß¾ä×Ó¡£
ËÄ¡¢¸ù¾Ý¾ÙÀý²Â²â´ÊÒå
ÔÚÔĶÁ¹ý³ÌÖУ¬¶ÌÎÄÖг£³£³öÏÖ"for example£¬such as£¬as£®£®£®as£®£®£®"µÈÕâ
Ò»ÀàµÄ´ÊÓËü¶ÔÎÒÃÇÈÏʶÉú´Ê°ïÖúºÜ´ó¡£Ëüͨ¹ýÇ¡µ±µÄ¾ÙÀýÄܸüÇå³þ¡¢¸üÉú¶¯µØ±í´ï´ÊÒå¡£ Îå¡¢¸ù¾Ý¶Ô±È¹ØÏµ²Â²â´ÊÒå
ÕâÀàÌâÐ͵ÄÉÏÏÂÎÄÌáʾ²»ÊÇ×÷Õß¶ÔÉú´Ê¡¢ÄѵãËù×÷µÄ½âÊͺÍ˵Ã÷£¬¶øÊÇÐèÒª¶ÁÕßÔËÓÃÓïÑÔ֪ʶºÍ·ÖÎöÄÜÁ¦È¥Ï¸ÐÄËÑѰºÍÁì»áµÄÏà¹ØÐÅÏ¢Ö®¼ä´æÔÚµÄÖÖÖÖÂß¼¹ØÏµ¡£¸ù¾ÝÕâÖÖÂß¼¹ØÏµËùÌṩµÄ˼·ºÍ·¶Î§£¬À´·ÖÎöÅжÏÓйØÉú´ÊµÄ´ÊÒå»òÏà½üÒâÒ壬´Ó¶ø´ïµ½Àí½âÈ«ÎÄ˼ÏëÄÚÈݵÄÄ¿µÄ¡£×ªÕÛ´Ê"but"Èò½ºÍÌõ¼þ×´Óï(´Ó¾ä)ÒÔ¼°"unlike"£¬"in spite of"£¬"despite"£¬"however"µÈһЩ½é´ÊºÍ¸±´Ê¶¼¿ÉÒÔ°ïÖú¹¹³ÉÒâÒåÉϵĶԱȹØÏµ¡£
Áù¡¢¸ù¾Ý±È½ÏÁªÏµ²Â²â´Ê»ã
ͬ¶Ô±È¹ØÏµÏà·´£¬±È½Ï¹ØÏµ±íʾÒâÒåÉϵÄÏàËÆ¹ØÏµ£¬³£³£Ê¹ÓÃlike, as, just as, alsoµÈ´ÊÓïÀ´±íʾ¡£
Æß¡¢¸ù¾ÝÒò¹û¹ØÏµ²Â²â´ÊÒå
Ò»¶¨µÄÔÒòµ¼ÖÂÒ»¶¨½á¹û£¬Ö»ÒªÈ·ÈÏÁËÕâÒ»Âß¼¹ØÏµ£¬ÎÞÂÛÉú´Ê³öÏÖÔÚÔÒò·½Ã棬»¹ÊdzöÏÖÔÚ½á¹û·½Ã棬¶¼¿ÉÒÔ¸ù¾ÝÕâÖÖÒò¹û¹ØÏµÀ´ÍƲâÆä´ÊÒå¡£
°Ë¡¢¸ù¾Ý¹¹´Ê·¨Ê¶±ðÉú´Ê
ÕÆÎÕÓ¢Óïµ¥´ÊµÄ¹¹´Ê·¨£¬ÄܰïÖú¶ÁÕßÈÏʶÉú´Ê£¬²¢µ¥Ò»·´Èý£¬³É±¶µØÀ©´ó´Ê»ãÁ¿¡£Ó¢Îĵ¥´ÊÓÉÁ½²¿·Ö¹¹³É£º´Ê¸ÉºÍ´Ê׺¡£´Ê׺ÓÖ¿É·ÖΪǰ׺ºÍºó׺¡£ÓÐЩ´Ê¸É±¾Éí¿É×÷Ϊ¶ÀÁ¢µÄ´ÊʹÓ㬶ø²»ÉÙµ¥´ÊÔòÓɴʸɸ½¼Ó´Ê׺¹¹³É¡£ÓÉÓڴʸÉÓë´Ê׺¶¼Êǰüº¬Ò»¶¨ÓïÒåµÄµ¥´Ê³É·Ö£¬²»Í¬´Ê¸ÉÓë´Ê׺×éºÏ¾Í»á¹¹³ÉеĴÊÒå¡£ÀýÈ磺
¤K¤K1£®´Ê¸É£ºpatient (ÃûÈË£¬²¡ÈË)
¤K¤K¼Óǰ׺£ºimpatient(ÐÎÈÝ´Ê£¬²»ÄÍÐĵÄ)
¤K¤KÔÙ¼Óºó׺£ºimpatiently(¸±´Ê£¬²»ÄÍÐĵØ)
¤K¤K2£®´Ê¸É£ºstate(¶¯´Ê£¬³ÂÊö£¬ÉùÃ÷)
¤K¤K¼Óǰ׺£ºrestate(¶¯´Ê£¬ÖØÉê)
¤K¤KÔÙ¼Óºó׺£ºrestatement(Ãû´Ê£¬ÖØÐ³ÂÊö)¡£
¤K¤K´ÓÒÔÉÏÀý×Ó¿ÉÒÔ¿´³ö£¬Ç°×ººÍºó׺¸Ä±äÁËÔÀ´µÄ´ÊÒå»ò´ÊÐÔ¡£ËùÒÔÕÆÎÕÁ˹¹´Ê·¨ÄܰïÖú¿¼ÉúÈÏʶÉú´Ê£¬²¢À©´ó´Ê»ãÁ¿¡£
¤K¤K
4. ÓйØÂß¼ÌâµÄ½âÌâ˼·
¤K¤K¼ÈÀí½â¸ö±ð¾ä×ÓµÄÒâÒ壬ҲÀí½âÉÏÏÂÎÄÖ®¼äµÄÂß¼¹ØÏµÊÇCEr4&6¶ÔÔĶÁÀí½â²¿·ÖËùÒªÇó¿¼Éú±ØÐëÕÆÎÕµÄÒ»ÖÖÔĶÁ¼¼ÄÜÖ®Ò»¡£ÊìÁ·ÕÆÎպôËÏîÔĶÁ¼¼ÄÜ£¬ÓÐÖúÓÚÌá¸ßÔĶÁËٶȺÍÀí½âÄÜÁ¦£¬´Ó¶øÔÚ¿¼ÊÔÖлñµÃ¸ß·Ö¡£´ËÏîÔĶÁ¼¼ÄÜÊÇ¿¼ÉúÓïÆªÀí½âÄÜÁ¦µÄÖØÒª±íÏÖ£¬¼´¿¼Éú×ÛºÏÔËÓÃÓï¸Ð¡¢Óï·¨¡¢´Ê»ã¡¢Âß¼µÈ·½ÃæµÄ֪ʶ½øÐзÖÎöºÍÅжϵÄÄÜÁ¦¡£ÐèҪעÒâµÄÊÇ£¬ÔÚÔĶÁÎÄÕÂʱ£¬Ö»Àí½â¸ö±ð¾ä×ÓµÄÒâ˼ÊDz»¹»µÄ£¬»¹ÐèÒª°ÑÉÏÏÂÊ·µÄÒâ˼ÁªÏµÆðÀ´£¬Åª¶®Ç°ºó¾äÖ®¼äµÄÂß¼¹ØÏµ¡£Í¬Ê±Ò²Òª×¢Òâ¾ä×Ó¼ä»ò¶ÎÂä¼äµÄÉÏϹý¶É£¬»òºôÓ¦µÄ³Ð½Ó´ÊÓïµÄ×÷Ó㬰üÀ¨Á¬½Ó´Ê¡¢Ä³Ð©¸±´Ê¼°½é´Ê¶ÌÓïµÈµÈ¡£ÕâЩ³Ð½Ó´ÊÓïÍùÍù±»ÓÃÀ´±íʾÖ÷Ìâ˼ÏëÓ븨ÖúÂÛµãÖ®¼ä¡¢¸¨ÖúÂ۵㱾ÉíÖ®¼äµÄÁªÏµ¡£ÎÒÃǿɰÑËüÃÇ¿´×÷ָʾÆ÷(ÐźŴÊ)£¬¶ÔÎÒÃǵÄ˼άÆð×Åָʾ·½ÏòµÄ×÷Ó᣾ÍÏñÔÚÒ»Ìõ³¤³¤µÄÏß·ÖУ¬ËæÊ±ÌáÐѶÁÕߺδ¦ÕÕÖ±×ߣ¬ºÎ´¦¸Ã¹ÕÍä¡£½èÖúËüÃǵÄÌáʾ£¬²Å¿ÉÒÔ׼ȷµØ·ÖÎö¾ä×ӽṹºÍ¶ÎÂä½á¹¹£¬·ÖÇå²ã´Î£¬È·¶¨ÎÄÕµÄÖ÷Ìâ˼ÏëºÍϸ½ÚµÈµÈ¡£ÀýÈ磬µ±ÎÒÃǶÁµ½"thus"£¬¾Í»áÆÚ´ýÒ»¸ö½á¹û³öÏÖ£»¶øµ±ÎÒÃǶÁµ½"however"£¬¾Í»áÖªµÀËæÖ®¶ø³öÏֵıض¨ÊÇÒ»ÖÖתÕÛ£»¿´µ½"in addition"»òÕß"furthermore"£¬¾ÍÖªµÀÎÄÕ½«Ìṩ½øÒ»²½ÐÅÏ¢¡£
´óѧӢÓïËÄ¡¢Áù¼¶ÔĶÁ˼·
1. Ìâ²Ä·Ö²¼
CET4£¦6ÀúÄêÔĶÁÎÄÕÂÖ÷񻃾¼°ÒÔÏÂÈý´óÀࣺ
¤K¤K(1)ÈËÎĹÜÀí£ºÉæ¼°µ½ÕþÖΡ¢¾¼Ã¡¢·¨ÂÉ¡¢ÀúÊ·¡¢µØÀí¡¢ÎÄ»¯¡¢Ï°Ëס¢½ÌÓý¡¢ÓéÀÖ¡¢ÈËÎïµÈ¡£
¤K¤K(2)¿ÆÑ§¼¼Êõ£º°üÀ¨¿ÆÆÕ֪ʶ£¬Èç·¨ÂÉ¡¢µØÖÊ¡¢ÒÅ´«¡¢ÌìÎÄ¡¢ÓïÑÔ¡¢¶¯Ö²Îï¡¢µç×Ó¼¼Êõ¡¢¿Õ¼ä¼¼ÊõµÈ¡£
¤K¤K(3)ÉúÎïҽѧ£ºº¸ÇÉúÎï·¢Õ¹¼°Ò½Ñ§³£Ê¶µÈ¡£
´ËÍâÉç»áÎÊÌ⣬Èç¼ÒÍ¥¡¢»éÒö¡¢Â×Àí¡¢·¸×ï¡¢ÇàÉÙÄê¡¢¸¾Å®¡¢ÖÖ×å¡¢½»Í¨¡¢×¡·¿¡¢»·¾³¡¢ÄÜÔ´µÈÒàÊôѧÊõÓ¢ÓïµÄ±íÏÖ·¶Î§¡£Õâ¾ÍÒªÇó¿¼Éúƽʱ¶àÉæÁÔÕâ·½ÃæµÄÌâ²ÄÎÄÕ£¬·á¸»×Ô¼ºµÄ֪ʶ½á¹¹£¬ÕâÑù¾ÍÄÜʹÐí¶àÔĶÁÀí½âÎÊÌâÓÈжø½â¡£
2. ÔĶÁÀí½âÊÔÌâµÄÓïÑÔÌØµã
¤K¤KÓÉÓÚCET4£¦6 (ÈçÒªÇóÔĶÁÀí½â²ÄÁ϶¼ÊÇ˵Ã÷ÎÄ¡¢ÒéÂÛÎÄÌå²Ã£®¶øÇÒ¶ÔÓïÑÔ²»×÷Èκεĵ÷Õû£¬Òò¶ø¾ö¶¨ÁËÆä¾ä×ӵį½¾ù³¤¶ÈºÍ¸´Ôӳ̶ȸßÓÚÆäËüÒ»°ãÓïÑÔÌâ²Ä£¬¶øÇÒËùÑ¡ÎÄÕ¼¸ºõ²»¿¼ÂÇÄÚÈݵÄȤζÐÔºÍÓïÑԵĽ¥½øÐÔ£¬Òò¶ø¼«´óµØÖÆÔ¼ÁËÔĶÁÀí½âµÄËٶȺÍ׼ȷÐÔ¡£ÉϺ£µÀÕýÈÏΪÕâ¾ÍÒªÇó¿¼Éú¼Ó´óÔĶÁÁ¿£¬ÔÚÔĶÁÖлýÀ۴ʻ㣬ͬʱעÒâ¶ÔһЩ³¤¾ä¡¢¸´Ôӵľä×Ó½øÐзÖÎö£¬Èçµ¹×°¾ä¡¢·Ö¸ô¾ä¡¢Ê¡ÂÔ¾ä¡¢Ë«ÖØ·ñ¶¨¾ä£¬·ÖÎöÆä½á¹¹ÌصãºÍ¹æÂÉ£¬ÕâÑù£¬Ó¦ÊÔʱ²ÅÄÜ´ÓÈÝÓ¦¶Ô¡£
3. ÔĶÁÀí½âÊÔÌâµÄ¼¼ÄÜÒªÇó
¤K¤K¸ù¾Ý1999Äê×îÐÂÐÞ¶©µÄ¡¶´óѧӢÓï½Ìѧ´ó¸Ù¡·µÄ¹æ¶¨£¬CET4£¦6ÖеÄÔĶÁÀí½â²¿·ÖÖ÷Òª²âÊÔÏÂÊöÄÜÁ¦£º
¤K¤K1£®ÕÆÎÕËù¶Á²ÄÁϵÄÖ÷Ö¼ºÍ´óÒ⣻
¤K¤K2£®Á˽â˵Ã÷Ö÷Ö¼ºÍ´óÒâµÄÊÂʵºÍϸ½Ú£»
¤K¤K3£®¼ÈÀí½â×ÖÃæÒâ˼£¬Ò²Äܸù¾ÝËù¶Á²ÄÁϽøÐÐÒ»¶¨µÄÅжϺÍÍÆÂÛ£»
¤K¤K4£®¼´Àí½â¸ö±ð¾ä×ÓµÄÒâÒ壬ҲÀí½âÉÏÏÂÎĵÄÂß¼¹ØÏµ£¬Àí½âÎÄÕµÄÉî²ãº¬Òå¡£
4. ÔĶÁÀí½âÊÔÌâÕýÈ·Ñ¡ÏîµÄ¹æÂÉ
¤K¤KCET4£¦6ÒªÇóÔÚÔĶÁÀí½âÊÔÌâµÄËĸöÑ¡ÏîÖÐÈ·¶¨ÕýÈ·´ð°¸²¢²»ÊÇÒ»¼þÈÝÒ×µÄÊ£¬Õâ²»½öÓÉÓÚËüÊÇ»ìÔÚÆäËûÈý¸ö¸ÉÈÅÏîÖУ¬¶øÇÒ»¹ÔÚÓÚÕýÈ·Ñ¡Ïî±¾ÉíÐÎʽµÄ¶àÑùÐÔ£¬»»¾ä»°Ëµ£¬ÕýÈ·µÄ´ð°¸ÏîÍùÍùÒÔÓëÎÄÕÂÏà¹ØµÄÄÚÈݲ»Í¬µÄ´Ê¡¢²»Í¬µÄ½á¹¹¡¢²»Í¬µÄÓïÒå¹ØÏµ±íÏÖ³öÀ´µÄ¡£¾¡¹ÜÓïÒåÒ»Ö£¬µ«±íÏÖÐÎʽȴǧ²îÍò±ð£¬ÓÐʱÉõÖÁ±íÃæÎÄ×Ö±íÊöÔ½ÏàËÆ£¬Ô½²»¿ÉÄÜÊǴ𰸡£Òò´Ë£¬ÈçÄÜÁ˽âºÍÕÆÎÕÕýÈ·Ñ¡ÏîµÄÌØµã£¬ÒÔ¼°ËüÓëÎÄÕÂÏà¹Ø¾äµÄÓïÒå¹ØÏµ£¬¶ÔÓÚ¿¼Éú¼È¿ìÓÖ×¼µØÕÒµ½ÕýÈ·´ð°¸´óÓаïÖú¡£¸ù¾ÝÕýÈ·´ð°¸µÄÐÔÖʺÍÌØµã£¬µÀÕýÀÏʦÈÏΪ¿É°ÑÕýÈ·Ñ¡Ïî·Ö³ÉÁ½´óÀࣺ
¤K¤K(Ò»)Ö±½ÓÐÔ´ð°¸
¤K¤K´ËÀà´ð°¸¿ÉÒÔÔÚÎÄÕÂÖÐÖ±½ÓÕÒµ½Ïà¹ØµÄÖ¤¾Ý£¬Æä±íÏÖÐÎʽÓÐÏÂÁм¸ÖÖ£º
1) ´ð°¸ÏîʹÓÃÔÎĵÄÓïÑÔ£¬¼´ÔÚÎÄ×Ö±íÊöÉÏ»ù±¾ºÍÔÎÄÏà¹Ø¾äÒ»Ö¡£
2) ´ð°¸ÏîʹÓÃÔÎĵÄͬÒå´ÊÓ¼´ºÍÔÎÄÏà¹Ø¾äµÄ¾ä×ӽṹһÖ£¬µ«»»ÁËÒâ˼ÏàͬµÄ¤K¤K¼¸¸ö´Ê¡£
3) ´ð°¸ÏîʹÓÃÔÎĵÄͬÒå½á¹¹£¬¼´»»Óò»Í¬µÄÓï·¨±íÏÖÐÎʽ£¬µ«ÓïÒåÒ»Ñù¡£
4) ´ð°¸ÏîʹÓÃÔÎĵķ´Òå´ÊÓ¼´°Ñ¶ÔÁ¢µÄ·´Òå´Ê´îÅäÔÚÁ½¸ö²»Í¬µÄ¾ä×ÓÀͨ¹ý²»¤K¤KͬµÄ½á¹¹£¬¿ÉÒÔ±í´ïÏàͬµÄÒâ˼¡£
5) ´ð°¸ÏîʹÓÃÔÎĵķ´Òå½á¹¹£¬Ò༴ÓÃÓëÔÎÄÏà·´µÄ½á¹¹(»ò·ñ¶¨£¬»ò¿Ï¶¨)£¬µ«ÓïÒå¤K¤KÒ»Ñù¡£
6) ´ð°¸ÏîʹÓÃÔÎĵÄÉÏÏÂÒå½á¹¹¡£ÉÏÏÂÒå¹ØÏµ¾ÍÊǶ¯ÎïºÍè¡¢¹·¡¢ÀÏ»¢¡¢ÎÚ¡¢³æµÄ¹Ø¤K¤Kϵ£¬»ò¿ÆÑ§ÓëÉúÎҽѧ¡¢µç×Ó¡¢¼ÆËã»ú¡¢º½ÌìµÄ¹ØÏµ¡£
7) ÔÚÒ»¶¨µÄÉÏÏÂÎÄÖУ¬Ã¨¾ÍÊǶ¯Î¶¯Îï¿ÉÒÔÖ¸´ú衣ҽѧ¾ÍÊÇ¿ÆÑ§£¬¿ÆÑ§¿ÉÒÔÖ¸´ú¤K¤Kҽѧ¡£
8) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÔÎÄÉú´ÊµÄ½âÊÍ£¬ËüÓÐÁ½ÖÖÐÎʽ£ºAËĸöÑ¡ÏîÖÐÁÐÁËËĸöµ¥´Ê»ò´Ê×飬Æä¤K¤KÖÐÒ»¸ö¾ÍÊÇÎÊÌâËùÎʵÄÔÎÄÖÐÒ»¸öÉú´ÊµÄͬÒå´Ê»òͬÒå´Ê×飻BËĸöÑ¡ÏîÁÐÁËËĸö¤K¤K¾ä×Ó£¬ÆäÖÐÒ»¸öÊǶÔÔÎÄÖÐÒ»¸ö´øÓÐÒ»¸ö¹Ø¼üÐÔÉú´ÊµÄ¾ä×ӵĽâÊÍ£¬Èç¶ÔÕâÒ»Éú´Ê¤K¤K²»Àí½â£¬¾ÍÎÞ·¨ÖªµÀÕâ¸ö¾ä×ÓµÄÒâ˼¡£
9) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÔÎÄÄѾäµÄ½âÊÍ¡£ÎÄÕÂÖиö±ð¾ä×ӱȽÏÄÑ£¬ÓеÄÊDZ¾Éí¾ä×ӽṹ±È½Ï¸´¤K¤KÔÓ£¬¾ä×Ӻܳ¤£»Óеıí´ï±È½Ï³éÏó£¬Óеĺ¬ÓÐÉú´Ê£¬Õâ¶¼Ó°ÏìÀí½â£¬Òò´ËÎÊÌâÍùÍù¤K¤K¾ÍÕë¶ÔÕâЩ¾ä×ÓÎÊ£¬¶ø´ð°¸ÊǶÔËüÃǵÄdz½üµÄ¾ßÌåµÄ½âÊÍ¡£
10) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÔÎıÈÓ÷»òÑèÓïµÄ½âÊÍ¡£ÔÎÄÓÐЩ¾ä×ÓÓÃÁ˸÷ÖÖ±ÈÓ÷ʽ¡¢ÑèÓÕâ¶Ôȱ¤K¤K·¦Ò»¶¨±³¾°ÖªÊ¶µÄ¿¼Éú£¬¹¹³ÉÁËÀí½âÉϵÄÀ§ÄÑ£¬ÎÊÌâÕë¶ÔÕâЩ±ÈÓ÷»òÑèÓ´ð°¸Ïî¤K¤K¾ÍÊǶÔËüÃǵĽâÊÍ¡£
11) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÔÎÄÒýÓïµÄ½âÊÍ¡£
12) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÔÎľä×ӵĸ´ÔÓ»¯µÄ½âÊÍ¡£Ò༴ÓÐʱÔÎľä×Ó²¢²»ÄÑ£¬¶ø´ð°¸ÏîµÄ¾ä×Ó¤K¤K½á¹¹ºÍÉú´Êʹ¿¼ÉúÀí½â·¢ÉúÀ§ÄÑ£¬ÄÑÒÔ°ÑËüºÍÔÎľä×Ó¶ÔÉϺš£
13) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÔÎÄÊý¾ÝµÄ¼Ó¼õ»»Ëã¡£
(¶þ)¼ä½ÓÐÔ´ð°¸
¤K¤K¼ä½ÓÐÔ´ð°¸ÊÇÖ¸ÕâÖִ𰸲»ÄÜÔÚÎÄÕÂÖеÄijһ¸ö¾ä×ÓÖÐÖ±½ÓÕÒµ½Ïà¹ØµÄÖ¤¾Ý¡£ËüÐèҪͨ¹ý¹éÄÉÍÆÀíµÈ²ÅÄܵõ½£¬Ëü±íÏÖΪÏÂÁм¸ÖÖ£º
¤K¤K1) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÔÎÄÀýÖ¤µÄ¹éÄÉ¡£
¤K¤K2) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÔÎÄÊÂʵµÄ¹éÄÉ¡£
¤K¤K3) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÔÎÄÐðÊöµÄ¹éÄÉ¡£
¤K¤K4) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶԶÎÂä´óÒâµÄ¹éÄÉ¡£
¤K¤K5) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÈ«ÎÄÖÐÐÄ˼ÏëµÄ¹éÄÉ¡£
¤K¤K6) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÎÄÕÂÖеĹ۵ãµÄÑÝÒï¡£
¤K¤K7) ´ð°¸ÏîÊǶÔÒ»¶ÎÎÄ×ÖµÄÍÆÀí¡£
5. ÔĶÁÀí½âÊÔÌâ¸ÉÈÅÏîµÄÌØµã
¤K¤K¸ÉÈÅÏîµÄÄ¿µÄ¾ÍÊÇÈÅÂÒÄãµÄ˼ά£¬Ê¹Äã²»ÄÜÇáÒ×»ò½öƾºúÂҲ²â¾ÍÄÜÕÒµ½´ð°¸¡£¸ÉÈÅÏî²»½öÓïÑÔ¸´ÔÓ£¬¶øÇÒÆÛÆÐÔÇ¿£¬Á½¸öÓïÑÔˮƽÏàͬ£¬¶ÔÎÄÕÂÀí½â²î²»¶àµÄ¿¼Éú»áÒòΪ¶Ô¸ÉÈÅÏîµÄ±æ±ðÄÜÁ¦²»Í¬£¬¶ø´ðÌâÕýÈ·Âʲ»Ò»Ñù£¬Òò¶øÎªÁËÌá¸ß±æ±ð´íÎó»ò¸ÉÈÅÐÅÏ¢µÄÄÜÁ¦£¬ÓбØÒª·ÖÎö¸ÉÈÅÏîµÄÖÖÖֱ仯¼°ÆäÐÔÖÊ,µÀÕýÈÏΪÕâÒ»·½ÃæÊǹؼüËùÔÚ¡£
¤K¤K(Ò»)ÒÔ¼ÙÂÒÕæ£¬Ò༴ÎÄÕÂÖиù±¾Ã»ÓдËÒâ˼£¬Ó²ÊDZàÔìÒ»¸öÐÅÏ¢£¬×é³ÉÒ»¸öÑ¡ÏÒÔ¼ÙÂÒÕæ£¬ÒÔÃÔ»óºÍ¸ÉÈÅ¿¼Éú£¬Ëü¾ßÓÐÁ½ÖÖ±íÏÖÐÎʽ£º
¤K¤K1) ÆÛÆÐÔµÄÐÅÏ¢ÊÇÀûÓÃÎÄÕÂÖгöÏÖµÄһЩ´Ê¡£
¤K¤K2) ÆÛÆÐÔµÄÐÅÏ¢ÊÇÀûÓûù±¾³£Ê¶ºÍÒ»°ãµÄ¿´·¨¡£
¤K¤K(¶þ)͵Áº»»Öù£¬Ò༴ÓÃÔÎĵĽṹºÍ´ó²¿·ÖµÄ´Ê»ã£¬Ö»ÊÇÔÚ²»ÆðÑ۵ĵط½»»Á˼¸¸ö´Ê£¬Ôì³ÉÒâ˼µÄ±ä»¯¡£
¤K¤K(Èý)ÕŹÚÀî´÷£¬Ò༴½«ÎÄÕÂ×÷ÕߵĹ۵ãÓëÎÄÕÂÖÐËûÈ˵Ĺ۵ã»ìÏýÆðÀ´¡£
¤K¤K(ËÄ)ÒÔÆ«¸ÅÈ«£¬Ò༴Ôڲ²âÎÄÕ»ò¶ÎÂä´óÒâ¡¢±êÌâÒÔ¼°ÊÍÒåÌâÖУ¬¸ÉÈÅÏî×ÜÊÇÒÔÆ«¸ÅÈ«£¬¾ßÌå±íÏÖΪ£º
¤K¤K1) °ÑÎÄÕÂÖеĴÎÒª¹Ûµã¡¢Ï¸½Ú»ì½øÌåÏÖÎÄÕÂÖ÷Òª¹Ûµã¡¢ÖÐÐÄ˼ÏëµÄÑ¡Ïî¡£
¤K¤K2) °Ñ³¬¹ýÎÄÕÂÌÖÂ۵Ķ«Î÷Òà×÷Ϊ¹éÄÉ»ò½áÂÛ»ì½øÑ¡ÏËùÒÔÌáÐÑ¿¼Éú£¬ÔÚ×ö¹éÄÉÐÔ¡¢¸ÅÀ¨ÐÔÌâĿʱ£¬Òª×¢ÒâÑ¡ÏîµÄ¹éÄɷִ磬²»Òª±»¹éÄɲ»¹»»ò¹éÄɹýÍ·µÄÑ¡ÏîËùÃÔ»ó¡£
´óѧÁù¼¶¿¼ÊÔÔĶÁ¹Ø¼ü
µÚÒ»×飺
1. Plainly enough, anyone must realize it who reflects upon the manner in which they reach public office.
2. "Your abilities count", explained psychologist Michael F. Scheler of
"but the belief that you can succeed affects whether or not you will."
3. In 1600 the earth was not the center of the universe because the majority then supposed it was; nor, because she
had more readers, was Ella Wheeler Wilcox a better poet than Father Hopkins.
µÚ¶þ×飺
1. The war unquestionably wrecked the cream of the Iraqi Army.
2. Workers have been priced out of the restaurants.
µÚÈý×飺
1. He seldom ignores that many potential votes, and it did not escape the notice of congressmen that these Negro
organizations, some of which had almost as much trouble getting out a crowd as the Washington Senators
several years ago, were now capable of organizing the largest demonstrating throng ever gathered at one spot in
the
2. That sex ratio will be favored which maximizes the number of descendants an individual will have and hence
the number of gene copies transmitted.
µÚËÄ×飺
1. It follows from the foregoing discussion that this issue is to be settled by weighing the pros and cons and not by
any arbitrary decision. Therefore, we may conclude that the above argument is a viable one, inasmuch as it
rests upon a fundamental principle of science and logic, namely, that of cause and effect.
2. The acumen embodied in the foregoing argument is truly remarkable.
3. In my opinion the evidence adduced in support of the argument does not hold water.
ËÄ¡¢Áù¼¶ÔĶÁÄѾä·ÖÎö
1. In 1975 psychologist Robert Ader ¡conditioned mice to avoid saccharin by ¡with a drug that while suppressing their immune systems caused stomach upsets.
·ÖÎö£ºby¶ÌÓïÓÐÁ½¸ö¶¯Ãû´Ê¶ÌÓfeeding them the sweetenerºÍinjecting them with a drug, ¶øa drugµÄ¶¨Óï´Ó¾äÖÐÓÖ°üº¬ÁË"Á¬´Êwhile+ÏÖÔÚ·Ö´Ê"½á¹¹¡£1£©´ÓÓïÒå·½Ãæ¿´£¬conditionedÒâΪ"ʹ¡ÐγÉÌõ¼þ·´Éä"£¬conditioned mice to avoid saccharinÒâΪ"ʹÀÏÊó¶ÔÅųâÌǾ«ÐγÉÌõ¼þ·´Éä"£»2£©the sweetener Ö¸saccharin.
ÒëÎÄ£º1975Ä꣬ÂÞÇÐË¹ÌØ´óѧҽѧԺµÄÐÄÀíѧ¼ÒRobert AderÔÚʹÀÏÊó¶ÔÅųâÌǾ«ÐγÉÌõ¼þ·´ÉäµÄÊÔÑéÖУ¬Î¹Ê³ÀÏÊóÁ¸¾«µÄͬʱ¸øËüÃÇ×¢ÉäÁËÒ»ÖÖÒ©¼Á£¬ÕâÖÖÒ©ÔÚÆÆ»µÀÏÊóÃâÒßϵͳµÄͬʱ»¹»áÒýÆð¸¹Í´¡£
2. Where is industry's and our recognition that protecting mankind's great treasure is the single most important responsibility?
·ÖÎö£ºÖ÷´Ó¸´ºÏ¾ä£¬that¡responsibilityÊÇrecognitionµÄͬλÓï´Ó¾ä£¬´Ó¾äµÄÖ÷ÓïÊǶ¯Ãû´Ê¶Ì´Êprotecting mankind's great treasure. 1£©industry ´Ë´¦Ö¸"¹«Ë¾£¬ÆóÒµ"¡£ÈçǰÎÄÖеÄindustrial denialÖ¸"À´×ÔÆóÒµ»ò¹«Ë¾µÄ¾Ü¾ø¡£2£©the single most important ÒâΪ"Ωһ×îÖØÒªµÄ"£¬singleÔڴ˱íʾǿµ÷¡£
ÒëÎÄ£ºÆóÒµºÍÎÒÃǸöÈËʲôʱºò²ÅÄÜÒâʶµ½±£»¤ÈËÀàµÄ×ÊÔ´±¦²ØÊÇ×î×îÖØÒªµÄÔðÈÎÄØ£¿
3. If ever there will be time for environmental health professionals to come to the frontlines and provide leadership to solve environmental problems, that time is now.
·ÖÎö£º×¢Òâ±¾¾äµÄ±í´ï¼°everµÄÇ¿µ÷ÒâÒå¡£If ever there will be time for ¡, that time is now. ÕâÒ»¾äÐÍÊǸöºÜÓÐÓõľäÐÍ£¬±í´ïʱÄܾ³£ÓõÃÉÏ¡£È磺
If ever there will be time for you to revenge yourself, that time is now.
Èç¹ûÄãÒª¸´³ð£¬ÏÖÔÚÕýµ±Æäʱ¡£
ÒëÎÄ£ºÈç¹û˵ÓÐÐèÒª»·±£×¨ÒµÈËԱվͬÀ´µ£¸ºÆðÁìµ¼ÔðÈεÄ×î¼Ñʱ»úµÄ»°£¬ÏÖÔÚ¿ÉνÊÇÕýµ±Æäʱ¡£
4. The Times newspaper agrees, complaining that quality has suffered as student numbers soared, with close tutorial supervision giving way to "mass production methods more typical of European universities."
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾äÖÐνÓﶯ´ÊagreesµÄÄÚÈÝÊÇǰ¾äÖжÔÀ©´óÕÐÉúµÄ»³ÒÉ̬¶È£¬ÏÖÔڷִʶÌÓïcomplaining that ¡ ˵Ã÷ÔÒò£¬½é´Ê¶ÌÓïwill¡±íʾ½á¹û£¬ËµÃ÷ÏÖÔڷִʶÌÓï¡£
ÒëÎÄ£º¡¶Ì©ÎîÊ¿±¨¡·¶Ô´ËÓÐͬ¸Ð£¬Ëü±§Ô¹Ëµ£¬ÓÉÓÚѧÉúÈËÊý¼¤Ôö£¬½ÌѧÖÊÁ¿ÊÜÓ°Ï죬ÒòΪ¸ö±ðÖ¸µ¼²»µÃ²»ÈÃλÓÚ"Å·ÖÞ´ó½¹úÕâ¼Ò¸ßУÀï¹ßÓеĴó¹æÄ£Éú²ú·½Ê½¡£"
5. Those current changes are logged into a computer that sorts out odors based on their electrical signatures.
·ÖÎö£ºÓ¦×¢Ò⣬based on their electrical signatures²»Ó¦¿´×÷¹ýÈ¥·Ö´Ê¶ÌÓï×÷odorsµÄ¶¨Ó¶øÓ¦¿´×÷ÐÎÈݴʶÌÓï×÷×´Óï˵Ã÷sorts out. 1)current changes, ´ÓÉÏÏÂÎÄ¿´Ö¸"µçÁ÷µÄ±ä»¯"¡££²£©log×÷Ãû´ÊÒâΪ"º½º££¨»ò·ÉÐУ©ÈÕÖ¾"£¬×÷¶¯´ÊΪ"°Ñ¡¼ÇÈ뺽º££¨·ÉÐУ©ÈÕÖ¾"´Ë´¦ÒýÉêΪ"¼Ç¼"¡£
6. If food already contains natural carcinogens, it does not make sense to add dozens of new man-made ones.
·ÖÎö£º¾äÖÐitÊÇÐÎʽÖ÷Ó²»¶¨Ê½¶ÌÓïto add dozens of new manmade onesÊÇÕæÊµÖ÷Óï¡£1£©if ´Ë´¦µÈÓÚeven if£¬±íʾÈò½¶ø·ÇÌõ¼þ¡£2£©make senseÒâΪ"½²µÃͨ£¬ÓÐÒâÒå"¡£´Ë´¦¿ÉÀí½âΪ"ÓеÀÀí"¡£
ÒëÎÄ£º¾¡¹ÜʳƷÖÐÒѾº¬ÓÐÁËÌìÈ»µÄÖ°©ÎïÖÊ£¬µ«ÊÇ£¬ÔÙÈËΪµØÔö¼ÓһЩÓж¾ÎïÖÊÒ²ÊǺܲ»Ó¦¸ÃµÄ¡£
7. By studying mineral grains found in materials ranging from rocks to clay articles, previous researchers have already been able to identify reversals dating back ¡, including ¡.
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾ä½Ï³¤£¬Ó¦×¢Ò⼸¸öÏÖÔڷִʶÌÓïµÄ×÷Óá£Ranging from¡ÐÞÊÎmaterials, ¶ødating back¡ºÍincluding¡ÐÞÊÎreversals.1)mineral grains: ¿óÎï¿ÅÁ£2£©clay articles: ÌÕÆ÷£¬articles´Ë´¦Ö¸"Îï¼þ"3£©´ËÍ⣬ӦעÒâreversalsºÍswitchÊÇͬÒåÌæ»»£¬¶¼Ö¸"polarity reversal".
ÒëÎÄ£ºÍ¨¹ýÑо¿ÑÒʯ£¬ÌÕÆ÷µÈһϵÁвÄÁÏÖк¬ÓеĿóÎï¿ÅÁ££¬ÏÈǰµÄÑо¿ÈËÔ±ÒÑÄܹ»È·ÈÏÔçÔÚ1.7ÒÚÄê·¢ÉúµÄ´Å³¡Á½¼«×ª»¯ÏÖÏó£¬ÒÔ¼°·¢ÉúÔÚ73ÍòÄêÒÔǰµÄ×îÐÂÒ»´ÎÁ½¼«×ª»¯ÏÖÏó¡£
8. Several theories link polarity flips to external disasters such as meteor impacts.
·ÖÎö£º1£©link sth. to sth. else ÒâΪ£º"½«Ä³ÎïÓëÁíÒ»ÎïÁªÏµÆðÀ´"£¬´Ë´¦¿ÉÀí½âΪ"½«¡¹éÒòÓÚ¡"2£©flips´Ë´¦ÊÇpolarity reversalsµÄͬÒå˵·¨¡£3£©impact: ÎïÀíѧÉÏÖ¸"ײ»÷£¬³å»÷£¬Åöײ"£¬´Ë´¦²»Ó¦Àí½âΪ"Ó°Ïì"
9. They could not learn: they could not benefit from experience because this emotionless world would lack rewards and punishments.
±¾±£´æÉæ¼°ÁËÈÏ֪ѧ·½ÃæµÄÖØÒªÔÀí£¬¼´£ºÈËÃÇÄܹ»Ñ§Ï°µÄÔÒòÊÇ£ºÈ˵ľÀúÄܹ»´øÀ´½±Àø»ò³Í·£¡£»»ÑÔÖ®£¬Èç¹ûÈ˵ÄijһÐÐΪµÃµ½µÄÊǹÄÀø£¬ËûÖØ¸´ÕâÖÖÐÐΪ£»Èç¹ûËûµÄijһÐÐΪ´ø¸øËûµÄÊdzͷ££¬Ëû»á±ÜÃâÕâÖÖÐÐΪ¡£ÎªÁË»ñµÃ¹ÄÀø£¬±ÜÃâ³Í·££¬ÈË»áŬÁ¦È¥×öËûÈËÈϿɵÄÊÂÇ飬´Ó¶ø²»¶Ï½ø²½¡£
10. Out of our emotional experiences¡comes a social feeling of agreement that¡, and we apply these categories to every aspect of our social life---from¡to¡will accept.
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾äÓÉandÁ¬½ÓÁ½¸ö²¢Áз־䣬µÚÒ»¸ö·Ö¾äΪ±£³Ö¾ä×ÓÆ½ºâ¶ø²ÉÓÃÁ˵¹×°ÓïÐò£¬½«½é´Ê¶ÌÓïÖÃÓÚ¾äÊ×£¬Ö÷ÓïÖÃÓÚ¾äβ£»µÚ¶þ¸ö·Ö¾äÖÐÆÆÕۺźóµÄfrom¡to½á¹¹±È½Ï´ó£¬ÓÃÓÚ˵Ã÷¶¯´ÊapplyµÄ·¶Î§¡£´ËÍ⣬µÚÒ»·Ö¾äÖеÄthat´Ó¾äÊÇagreementµÄͬλÓï´Ó¾ä¡£
11. The current crisis, it contends, does not derive from a legitimate desire to put learning to productive ends.
·ÖÎö£º1£©´ÓÉÏÏÂÎÄ¿´£¬the current crisisÏÔȻָǰ¾äÄÚÈÝ£¬¼´¡has increasingly catered to narrow-minded careerism while failing to cultivate a global vision among their students.2£©´ËÍ⣬contend´Ë´¦ÒâΪ"¼á³ÖÈÏΪ£¬¼á¾öÖ÷ÕÅ"3£©derive from:"ÆðÔ´£¬ÓÉÀ´£¬À´Ô´ÓÚ¡"£¬±íʾÒò¹û¹ØÏµ4£©legitimate:±¾ÒåÖ¸"ºÏ·¨µÄ"£¬´Ë´¦¿ÉÀí½âΪ"ºÏÀíµÄ£¬ÕýÈ·µÄ"¡£
ÒëÎÄ£º±¨¸æ¼á³ÖÈÏΪ£¬µ±Ç°¸ßÐ£ÃæÁÙµÄΣ»ú²»ÊÇÓɽ«ÖªÊ¶ÔËÓÃÓÚÉú²úÕâÒ»Ö¸µ¼Ë¼Ïëµ¼Öµģ¬Õâһ˼ÏëÊÇÍêÈ«ÕýÈ·µÄ¡£ 12. Yet for all the talk of a forthcoming technological utopia little attention has been given to the implications of these developments for the poor.
·ÖÎö£º"for all+¾ä´Ê¶ÌÓï"½á¹¹±íʾ"¾¡¹Ü"¡£
ÒëÎÄ£ºÈ»¶ø£¬¾¡¹ÜÈËÃÇÕýÔÚ´óÌ¸ÌØÌ¸¼´½«µ½À´µÄÁîÈËÉñÍùµÄ¿Æ¼¼Íõ¹ú£¬È´ºÜÉÙÓÐÈËÒâʶµ½ÕâЩ¼¼Êõ·¢Õ¹¶Ô·¢Õ¹Öйú¼ÒÒâζ×Åʲô¡£
13. The electronic economy made possible by information technology allows the haves to increase their control on global market, ---with destructive impact on the have ---nots.
·ÖÎö£º¹ýÈ¥·Ö´Ê¶ÌÓïmake possible by information technologyÐÞÊÎÖ÷ÓïThe electronic economy. With ½é´Ê¶ÌÓï˵Ã÷Õû¸ö¾ä×Ó£¬±íʾ½á¹û¡£
14. Home schoolers habor few kind words for public schools, charging shortcomings that range from lack of religious perspective in the curriculum to a herd-like approach to teaching children.
·ÖÎö£ºÏÖÔڷִʶÌÓïcharging¡to teaching children×÷°éËæÇé¿ö×´Óthat range from¡to teaching children ÊÇÐÞÊÎshortcomings µÄ¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä¡£Charging shortcomings ÊÇcharge sb. sth. ½á¹¹µÄ±äÌ壬ÒâΪ"°Ñ¡¹é¾ÌÓÚ¡"¡£1£©home schoolers ÔÚ±¾ÎÄÖÐÖ¸advocates of home-schooling, "¼ÒÍ¥½ÌÓý³«µ¼Õß"¡£2£©herd-like approach to teaching children: ·ÅÄÁʽµÄ½ÌÓý¶ùͯµÄ·½·¨¡£ApproachÒâΪ"·½·¨£¬·½Ê½"¡£
15. Finally, advertisers try to begin commercials with sounds that are highly different from those of programming within which the commercial is buries.
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾äÊÇÒ»¸öÖ÷´Ó¸´ºÏ¾ä£¬¶¨Óï´Ó¾äthat are highly different from¡the commercial is buriedÖУ¬ÓÖº¬ÓÐÒ»¸ö¶¨Óï´Ó¾äwithin which the commercial is buried£¬ºóÕßÐÞÊÎprogramming. bury±¾ÎÄΪ"ÂñÔᣬÑÚ¸Ç"£¬ÕâÀïÖ¸ÔÚÕý³£½ÚÄ¿Öв岥¹ã¸æ¡£
16. The act, designed to protect species' living areas, and policies that preserve land and forests compete with economic interests.
·ÖÎö£ºÓ¦×¢Òâ±¾¾äµÄÖ÷ÓïÊÇThe act¡and policies, ¹ýÈ¥·Ö´Ê¶ÌÓïdesigned to protect species' living areasÐÞÊÎThe act£¬¶¨Óï´Ó¾äthat preserve land and forestsÐÞÊÎpolicies.1)compete with: Óë¡¶Ô¿¹£¬¾ºÕù¡£2£©economic interests: ¾¼ÃÀûÒæ¡£´Ë´¦interests²»Ó¦Àí½âΪ"ÐËȤ"¡£
ÒëÎÄ£ºÕâÒ»Ö¼ÔÚ±£»¤¶¯ÎïÉú»î³¡ËùµÄ·¨°¸ÒÔ¼°Ò»Ð©±£»¤ÍÁµØ¼°ÉÁÖµÄÕþ²ßÈ´Óë¾¼ÃÀûÒæÏàµÖ´¥¡£ 17. Un-American, you say, unfair and extremely unbelievable>
ÕâÊÇÒ»¸öÊ¡ÂԾ䣬¿É×÷Èçϲ¹³ä£º
You say that is un-American, unfair and extremely unbelieveable? ThatÖ¸µÚ¶þ¶ÎµÄÄÚÈÝ£¬¼´the conclusionºÍÉç»áѧ¼ÒµÄÊý¾Ý±íÃ÷µÄÇé¿ö¡£
18. Once again, the scientists have caught us mouthing pieties while acting just the contrary.
·ÖÎö£ºËäÈ»¾ä×ӽ϶̣¬µ«Ó¦Ê¶±ð³ömouthing¡the contrary×÷±öÓï²¹×ãÓï¡£±¾¾äµÄÄѵãÔÚÓÚÀí½âmouthing pieties while acting just the contraryµÄÒþº¬Ö®Òå¡£Æä×ÖÃæÒâ˼ÊÇ"×ìÉÏ˵ò¯³Ï£¬×öµÄÈ´Ïà·´"£¬Òþº¬Ö®ÒåÊÇ"ÐĿڲ»Ò»£¬ÑÔÐв»Ò»"¡£
19. Not content with its doubtful claim to produce cheap food for our own population, the factory farming industry also argues that "hungry nations are benefiting from advances made by the poultry industry."
·ÖÎö£ºÐÎÈݴʶÌÓïNot content with¡our own population, ˵Ã÷the factory farming industry£¬ÆäÖеIJ»¶¨Ê½¶ÌÓïto produce food¡²¹³ä˵Ã÷claim.1)be content with ÒâΪ"Âú×ãÓÚ¡"È磺Not content with having overthrown the government, the military dictator imprisoned all his opponents. ÄǸö¾üʶÀ²ÃÕß²»Âú×ãÓÚÍÆ·Õþ¸®£¬»¹°ÑËùÓеķ´¶ÔÕßÇô½ûÆðÀ´¡£2£©factory farming industryÖ¸¹¤Òµ»¯¼ÒÇÝÑøÖ³Òµ¡£3£©argueÕâÀïµÄÒâ˼ÊÇ"Óñç½âÖ¤Ã÷£¬ÂÛÖ¤"¡£
20. then came the weakening of the U.S. dollar against major currencies.
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾äÊÇÒ»¸öµ¹×°¾ä£¬Ö÷ÓïÊÇthe weakening of ¡against major currencies. 1)weakeningÕâÀïÖ¸ÃÀÔªµÄ"Æ£Èí"£¬¼´"Íâ»ã½»Ò×ÖбȼÛϵø"2£©major currencies: ÊÀ½çÆäËûÖ÷Òª»õ±Ò
ÒëÎÄ£ºÆä´Î£¬ÃÀÔª¶ÔÊÀ½çÆäËûÖ÷Òª»õ±ÒµÄ±È¼Ûϵø¡£
21. Bottom retail prices---anywhere from 30% to 70% lower than those in Europe and Asia---have attracted some 47 million visitors, who are expected to leave behind $79 billion in 1994.
·ÖÎö£º1£©ÆÆÕÛºÅÖ®¼äµÄÄÚÈÝÖ¼ÔÚ˵Ã÷bottom retail prices. 2)whoÒýµ¼µÄ¶¨Óï´Ó¾äΪ·ÇÏÞ¶¨ÐÔ¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä£¬·Òëʱ£¬¿É¿¼Âǽ«ÆäÒë³Éµ¥¶ÀµÄ¾ä×Ó¡£Bottom retail prices: ×îµÍµÄÁãÊÛ¼Û¸ñ¡£×¢Òâbottom×÷ÐÎÈÝ´Ê£¬±íʾ"×îµÍµÄ"¡£È磺bottom salary ×îµÍ¹¤×Ê£»bottom priceµ×¼Û¡£
ÒëÎÄ£º±ÈÅ·ÖÞºÍÑÇÖÞµÍ30%~70%µÄÁãÊÛ¼Û¸ñÎüÒýÁËÔ¼ËÄǧÆß°ÙÍòµÄÓοÍÓÚ1994ÄêÓ¿ÈëÃÀ¹ú£¬¶øÕâЩÓοÍΪÃÀ¹úÁôÏÂÁË79ÒÚÃÀÔªµÄÊÕÈë¡£
22. It is said that ¡because Senator Hart discovered that the boxes¡consumed by¡were becoming¡, with a decline of net weight¡, without any reduction in price.
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾ä½Ï³¤£¬Ê×ÏÈÓ¦°ÑÎÕÆäÖ÷¾ä¾äÐÍ£ºIt is said that¡. ´ËÍâҪעÒâ×÷ÎªÕæÊµÖ÷ÓïµÄthat´Ó¾äÖк¬ÓÐbecauseÒýµ¼µÄÔÒò×´Óï´Ó¾ä£¬ÆäÖÐÓÖº¬ÓÐthatÒýµ¼µÄ±öÓï´Ó¾ä¡£×îºó£¬Ó¦×¢Òâ¹ýÈ¥·Ö´Ê¶ÌÓïconsumed by±í±»¶¯£¬ÐÞÊÎthe boxes, ÒÔ¼°withºÍwithout¶ÌÓïͬʱ˵Ã÷±öÓï´Ó¾äµÄνÓﶯ´Êwere becoming.
ÒëÎÄ£º²ÎÒéÔ±¹þÌØÒ»¼ÒÔÚ¹ºÂòºÏ×°ÂóƬʱ·¢ÏÖ£¬°ü×°ºÐ±ä¸ßÁË£¬±äÕÁË£¬Ê³Æ·µÄ·ÖÁ¿Ò²¼õÉÙÁË£¬È»¶ø¼Û¸ñÈ´·ÖÎÄδ½µ¾Ý˵£¬ÓÉ´ËÔÚ¹«ÖÚºÍÒé»áÖÐÒý·¢ÁËÒ»³¡¹ØÓÚÆÛÆÐÔÉÌÆ·°ü×°µÄÐùÈ»´ó²¨¡£ 23. The producers¡argue strongly against changing sizes of packages to contain even weights and volumes, but no one¡improving a product's market position.
·ÖÎö£º×¢Òâ¾äÖеÄthe huge costsÓÐÁ½¸öÐÞÊγɷ֣º·Ö´Ê¶ÌÓïincurred by¡ºÍ¶¨Óï´Ó¾äthat are used for¡¡£»»ÑÔÖ®£¬¶¨Óï´Ó¾äthat are used for¡²»ÊÇÐÞÊÎnet weightsµÄ¡£1£©argue against: oppose, "·´¶Ô"¡£2£©evenÒâΪ"ÏàµÈµÄ£¬Í¬ÑùµÄ"£¬even weights and volumes¼´"Óë´ÓǰÏàµÈµÄÖØÁ¿ºÍÌå»ý"¡£3£©tradeÔÚÕâÀïÊÇ"ÐÐÒµ"µÄÒâ˼£¬ÓëindustryͬÒå¡£×¢Ò⣺×÷"ÐÐÒµ"½²µÄtradeÊÇ¿ÉÊýÃû´Ê£¬×÷"óÒ×"½²µÄtradeÊDz»¿ÉÊýÃû´Ê¡£
24. If the bottom half can't effectively staff¡ the management and professional jobs that go with these processes will disappear.
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾ä½á¹¹²¢²»Ê®·Ö¸´ÔÓ£¬Ö»Ðè×¢ÒâÁ½¸öthatÒýµ¼µÄ¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä¼´²»ÄѰÑÎÕÈ«¾äµÄ½á¹¹¡£1£©staffµÄ±¾ÒåΪ"Ϊ¡Å䱸ÈËÔ±"£¬´Ë´¦ÒýÉêΪ"µ£¸ºÆðÔðÈΣ¬Íê³ÉÈÎÎñ"Ö®Òâ¡£È磺a finely-staffed school Ò»Ëùʦ×ÊÁ¦Á¿ÐÛºñµÄѧУ¡£2£©process±¾ÒåΪ"¹ý³Ì£¬¹¤Ðò"£¬´Ë´¦ÒâΪ"Éú²ú¹ý³Ì£¬Éú²úÁ÷³Ì"¡£
25. The biographer has to dance between two shaky positions with respect to the subject.
·ÖÎö£º1£©shakyÒâΪ"Ò¡Ò¡»Î»ÎµÄ£¬²»Îȵģ¬Î£ÏÕµÄ"¡£2£©with respect to ±íʾ"¹ØÓÚ£¬¾Í¡Ò³ÑÔ"¡£±¾¾ä´Ó½á¹¹¡¢ÉõÖÁÓôÊÀ´¿´£¬²¢²»Éî°ÂÄѶ®£¬¹Ø¼üÊÇÒª¶Á³öÆäÒþº¬Ö®Ò⡣ȫ¾äµÄ×ÖÃæÒâ˼ÊÇ£º´«¼Ç×÷¼Ò²»µÃ²»ÔÚÓë´«Ö÷Ëù´¦µÄÒ¡°Ú²»¶¨µÄλÖÃÖ®¼äÌøÀ´ÌøÈ¥¡£Òþº¬Ö®ÒåΪ£º´«¼Ç×÷¼Ò±ØÐëÓë´«Ö÷±£³ÖÊʵ±¾àÀ룬²¢ÒªÊ±³£µ÷ÕûÓë´«Ö÷¼äµÄ¾àÀë¡£
26. In book promotions, the "unauthorized" characterization usually suggests the prospect of juicy gossip that the subject had hoped to suppress.
·ÖÎö£º1£©promotions: ´Ë´¦ÒâΪ"Ðû´«£¬´ÙÏú"¡£In book promotions ÒâΪ"ÔÚΪÊé×÷Ðû´«Ê±"¡£2£©suggests´Ë´¦ÒâΪ"Òâζ×Å"¡£3£©prospect±¾ÒåΪ"ǰ¾°£¬Ç°Í¾"£¬´Ë´¦¿ÉÒýÉêΪ"¿ÉÄÜ£¨ÐÔ£©"¡£4£©juicy gossip: »æÉù»æÉ«¡¢ÌíÓͼӴ׵ÄÃØÎÅ¡£Juicy±¾ÒåΪ"¶àÖµÄ"£¬´Ë´¦ÒâΪ"ÓÐ×ÌζÓÐζµÄ£¬»æÉù»æÉ«µÄ"¡£GossipÖ¸"ÓйظöÈËÒþ˽µÄÏÐÑÔËéÓï¡£"
27. In Japan, however, where babies are carried on their mother's back, infants do not acquire as much attachment to eyes as they do in other cultures.
·ÖÎö£º1£©however±íʾµÄתÕÛÊDZ¾¾äÓëÉÏÎĵÄתÕÛ¡£2£©as much¡as½á¹¹±íʾ"Ïñ¡Ò»Ñù¶àµÄ"¡£AttachmentÔÚÕâÀïµÄÒâ˼ÊÇ"ÒÀÁµ£¬ÒÀÀµ"¡£
ÒëÎÄ£ºÈ»¶ø£¬ÔÚÈÕ±¾£¬ÓÉÓÚÓ¤¶ù´ÓС±³ÔÚĸÇ×±³ÉÏ£¬ËûÃǶÔÑÛ¾¦µÄÒÀÁµ¾Í²»ÈçÉú³¤ÔÚÆäËûÎÄ»¯»·¾³Öеĺ¢×ÓÄÇÑùÉî¡£
28. It is important that they be looking at ¡
×¢ÒâÐéÄâÓïÆøµÄÕâÖÖÓ÷¨¡£ÔÚit be+ÐÎÈÝ´Ê+that´Ó¾ä½á¹¹ÖУ¬µ±ÐÎÈÝ´ÊÊÇimportant, essential, desirable, necessary, natural imperative, advisable, fair, just, rightʱ£¬that´Ó¾äÖÐÓÃÐéÄâÓïÆø¡£È磺It is essential that he (should) be prepared for this.Ëû¶Ô´ËÓÐËù×¼±¸ÊǺÜÓбØÒªµÄ¡£
29. Just how critical this eye maneuvering is to the maintainance of conversational flow becomes evident when two speakers are wearing dark glasses: ¡
·ÖÎö£ºÕÒ¾ä×ÓÖ÷¸ÉʱӦעÒâÃû´Ê´Ó¾äÔÚ¾äÖÐ×÷Ö÷ÓÒò´ËÖ÷ÓïµÄνÓﶯ´ÊÊÇbecomes.
ÒëÎÄ£ºµ±Ì¸»°Ë«·½´÷×ÅÄ«¾µÊ±£¬Ë«·½µÄÄ¿µ±½Ó´¥ÔÚ±£³Ö½»Ì¸Ë³Àû½øÐз½ÃæµÄÖØÒªÐԾͲ»ÑÔ¶øÓ÷ÁË¡£
30. Unlike other lawbreakers, who¡computer criminals sometimes escape punishment, demanding not only that they not be charged but that¡
·ÖÎö£ºÏÖÔڷִʶÌÓïdemanding¡that¡×÷°éËæÇé¿ö×´Óï¡£´ËÍ⣬demandºóÃæµÄthatÒýµ¼µÄ±ö´Ó¾äÖÐÓÃÐéÄâÓïÆø£ºshould+¶¯´ÊÔÐΣ¬should¿ÉÊ¡ÂÔ¡£
ÒëÎÄ£ºÆäËûµÄÎ¥·¨Õß»òÕßÌÓÍö¹úÍ⣬»òÕß×Ôɱ£¬»òÕß½ø¼àÓü¡£¼ÆËã»ú·¸×ï·Ö×ÓÈ´²»Í¬£¬ËûÃÇ¿ÉÒÔÌӱܳͷ££¬²¢ÇÒҪЮ²»ÒªÖ¸¿ØËûÃÇ£¬Éõ¶Ô»¹ÒªÇóΪËûÃdzö¾ßÓÐÀûµÄÍÆ¼öÐÅ»òÕßΪËûÃÇÌṩÆäËûºÃ´¦¡£ËûÃǵÄÒªÇóÍùÍùÄܹ»µÃµ½Âú×ã¡£
31. The possibility of increases¡in addition to the cost of greater safety provisions could price nuclear power out of the market.
·ÖÎö£º1£©provisionsÕâÀïÒâΪ"´ëÊ©£¬·À±¸"¡£Greater safety provisionsÒâΪ"½øÒ»²½µÄ°²È«´ëÊ©¡£2£©price ÕâÀïÓÃ×÷¶¯´Ê£¬Òâ˼ÊÇ"ÓÉÓÚ̧¼Û¹ý¸ß¶ø¡"¡£È磺price one's goods out of the marketÂþÌìÒª¼ÛÒÔÖÂʧȥÊг¡
32. Having weighed up the arguments¡reasons for sources of energy other than nuclear power.
·ÖÎö£ºÏÖÔÚ·Ö´Êhaving weighed up¡±íʾʱ¼äÏȺó¡£Weigh up±¾ÒåΪ"³Æ"£¬´Ë´¦ÒýÉêΪ"¹ÀÁ¿£¬È¨ºâ"¡£ArgumentsÒâΪ"Â۾ݣ¬ÂÛµã"¡£
33. Clothes play a critical part in the conclusions we reach by providing clues to who¡
·ÖÎö£ºwe reachÊÇthe conclusionsµÄ¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä£»½é´Ê¶ÌÓïby providing clues to¡±íʾ·½Ê½£»Èý¸öwhoÒýµ¼µÄ´Ó¾ä×÷½é´ÊtoµÄ±öÓï¡£
ÒëÎÄ£ºÈËÃǵĴ©×ÅÄܹ»°µÊ¾ÈËÃÇÊÇʲôÑùµÄÈË£¬²»ÊÇʲôÑùµÄÈË£¬»ò¿ÉÄÜ»áÊÇʲôÑùµÄÈË£¬Òò´Ë£¬ÔÚÎÒÃÇÅжÏÒ»¸öÈËʱÆð׏ؼü×÷Óá£
34. Coleman concludes that¡so common these days that while doing your work well may win you pay increases, it won't secure you the big promotion.
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾äÊÇÒ»¸ö¶àÖØÖ÷´Ó¸´ºÏ¾ä£ºthatÒýµ¼µÄ±öÓï´Ó¾äÖк¬ÓÐso¡that½á¹¹£¬¸Ã½á¹¹ÖÐthatÒýµ¼µÄ½á¹û×´Óï´Ó¾ä²¿·ÖÓÖÓÉÒ»¸öwhileÒýµ¼µÄÈò½×´Óï´Ó¾ä¹¹³É¡£Secure sb. sth. ÒâΪ£º"ΪijÈËŪµ½Ä³Îï"¡£È磺secure him the job°ïËûµÃµ½ÄǷݹ¤×÷£»secure sb. a ticketÌæÄ³ÈËŪһÕÅÆ±¡£
35. Most women and blacks are so frightened that people will think¡ that they play down their visibility.
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾äµÄso¡that½á¹¹Öк¬ÓÐÒ»¸öthat people will think¡´Ó¾ä×÷frightenedµÄ±öÓï¡£1)play down: "½µµÍ£¬±áµÍ"¡£2£©visibility±¾ÒåΪ"¿É¼û¶È"£¬´Ë´¦¸ù¾ÝÉÏÏÂÎÄ¿ÉÀí½âΪ"Â¶Ãæ£¬ÏÔʾ"¡£
ÒëÎÄ£º´ó¶àÊýŮְԱºÍºÚÈËÖ°Ô±º¦ÅÂÈ˼Ò˵×Ô¼ºÊÇÒòΪÐÔ±ð»òÖÖ×å²ÅµÃµ½Ìá°ÎµÄ£¬Òò´Ë£¬ËûÃǾ¡Á¿²»È¥Å×Í·Â¶Ãæ¡£
36. The
·ÖÎö£º±¾¾äÖеÄÔÒò×´Óï´Ó¾ä½Ï³¤£¬Ó¦×¢Òâhesitate about doing sth.µÄ½á¹¹£¬ÆäÒâ˼ÊÇ"¶Ô×öijÊÂÓÌÔ¥²»¾ö"£¬Óëhesitate to do sth.¹¦ÄÜÏàͬ¡£1£©standÕâÀïÒâΪ"ÒÔµÃÆð£¬¾ÊܵÃס"¡£2£©vigorous±¾ÒåΪ"¾«Á¦³äÅæµÄ£¬Ç¿ÓÐÁ¦µÄ"£¬´Ë´¦¿ÉÀí½âΪ"ÑϸñµÄ"3£©bias: "Æ«¼û£¬³É¼û£¬ÇãÏòÐÔ"
ÒëÎÄ£ºÒò´Ë¡¶Å£½ò´Êµä¡·±È¡¶ÀÊÂü´Êµä¡·¸ü¾µÃÆð¶ÔÎÄ»¯Æ«¼ûµÄÑϸñÉóÊÓ£¬ÒòΪºóÕß×ÜÊÇÒÔ˵ӢÓï¹ú¼ÒµÄÊÓ½ÇÀ´ÆÀÅÐÆäËû¹ú¼ÒµÄÎÄ»¯ÏÖÏó¡£ 37. In reality, though, the BBC dictionary¡, as will the other two dictionaries.
·ÖÎö£ºasÔÚ´ËÓбȽϣ¬Òýµ¼Ò»¸ö±È½Ï´Ó¾ä¡£In realityÒâΪ"ÊÂʵÉÏ£¬Êµ¼ÊÉÏ"¡£
ÒëÎÄ£ºÊµ¼ÊÉÏ£¬BBC´Êµä½«ÓµÓбÈÁíÍâÁ½±¾´Êµä¸ü¹ãµÄ¶ÁÕßȺ¡£
- ×÷Õߣº yuyang9999 2005Äê09ÔÂ15ÈÕ, ÐÇÆÚËÄ 08:57¡¡ »Ø¸´£¨0£© |¡¡ ÒýÓã¨0£© ¼ÓÈ벩²É
ì¶ÜµÄÎÒ£¬ÓÐÈËÄܰïÖúÎÒô£¿³ö¹ú»¹ÊÇÔÚËýÉíÅÔ£¿
- ×÷Õߣº yuyang9999 2005Äê10ÔÂ22ÈÕ, ÐÇÆÚÁù 21:33¡¡ »Ø¸´£¨0£© |¡¡ ÒýÓã¨0£© ¼ÓÈ벩²É
Çﶬпî
- ×÷Õߣº yuyang9999 2005Äê09ÔÂ27ÈÕ, ÐÇÆÚ¶þ 21:57¡¡ »Ø¸´£¨0£© |¡¡ ÒýÓã¨0£© ¼ÓÈ벩²É
È˼ʹØÏµÄãÓÐ55ÕÐ
- ×÷Õߣº yuyang9999 2005Äê09ÔÂ16ÈÕ, ÐÇÆÚÎå 08:27¡¡ »Ø¸´£¨0£© |¡¡ ÒýÓã¨0£© ¼ÓÈ벩²É
ij´óѧÉúд¸øÅ®ÅóÓѵÄÐÅ