单词造句磨耳朵 首字母D day67(661-670)

听前提示 一、每期提供10个单词,每个单词都会有2-3个例句,方便理解记忆。 二、每个单词和句子都会重复5遍,其中第2遍为慢速,有助于识别。 三、本材料的整体难度较低,可以用来听力磨耳朵和单词查漏补缺。 Day 67 661. Diagram n.图表,图解;几何图形v.用图表示 Let me explain it with a diagram. 让我用一张图表来解释一下。 Would you like me draw you a diagram of the system? 你想让我给你画一张系统图吗? 662. Diamond n.钻石;菱形;(纸牌的)方块 He bought her a diamond ring. 他给她买了一枚钻石戒指。 663. Diary n.日记 Keeping a diary is a good habit. 记日记是个好习惯。 She has kept a diary for 3 years. 她写日记已有3年了。 It's fun to read my old diary. 读我的旧日记很有趣。 664. Dictionary n.字典,词典;双语词典 This dictionary has about 40,000 entries. 这本词典有大约40,000个条目。 I keep a dictionary beside me when I'm doing crosswords. 我在做填字游戏的时候会在身边放一本字典。 665. Die v.死亡;消失,灭亡 Are they going to die? 他们会死吗? He will certainly die if you don't call a doctor. 如果你不打电话给医生,他肯定会死的。 666. Die n.规定饮食;日常饮食v.节食adj.低脂的,低糖的 You need to vary the diet. 你需要改变饮食。 She went on an extreme diet. 她过着极端的饮食习惯。 You have to go on a strict diet to lose weight. 你必须严格饮食才能减肥。 667. Difference n.差异,不同之处;差额;分歧 I don't see any significant difference. 我看不出有什么显著的区别。 Do you think it'll make a difference? 你认为这会有所作为吗? Can you tell the difference between these two pictures? 你能分辨出这两张照片的区别吗? 668. Different adj.不同的;分别的;与众不同的 I tried many different methods. 我尝试了许多不同的方法。 My opinion is entirely different from yours. 我的看法与你的看法完全不同。 This factory produces over 20 different kinds of product. 这家工厂生产20多种不同种类的产品。 669. Differently adv.不同地 I now view life differently than l used to. 我现在对生活的看法与以前不同。 670. Difficult adj.困难的,费力的;不友好的,难对付的 It turned out to be awfully difficult. 事实证明这非常困难。 It was much more difficult than l initially thought. 这比我最初想象的要困难得多。 Initially I found it difficult to deal with my new environment. 起初我发现很难适应我的新环境。

13分钟
4k+
10个月前

考级英语听力材料(专四)2 短文

00:00 2005年英语专业四级 短文1 01:27 2005年英语专业四级 短文2 02:58 2005年英语专业四级 短文3 2005年英语专业四级 短文1 Attention all passengers, platform change, this is a platform change. 各位乘客注意,火车停靠站台改变,火车停靠站台改变。 The train, now standing at platform 9, is the 10:48 train, calling at all stations to Nanjing. 现在停在九号站台的这列火车,是10:48分出发的火车,它会在通往南京的所有站做停留。 Please note, the train on platform 9 is not the 10:52 train to Jinan. 请注意,停在九号站台的火车并不是10:52分开往济南的火车。 It's the 10:48 train calling at all stations to Nanjing. 这是10:48分出发,在通往南京所有站做停留的火车。 The 10:52 to Jinan will now leave from platform 7. 10:52开往济南的火车即将从七站台出发。 Train announcement. 列车到发通告。 The 11:20 train to Zhengzhou from platform 8 will be subject to a 15-minute delay. 11:20从八号站台开往郑州的列车晚点15分钟。 I repeat, there will be a 15- minute delay for the Zhengzhou train on platform 8 .It will now leave at 11:35, not 11:20. 再次重复,八号站台开往郑州的列车晚点15分钟。11:35列车开动,不是11:20。 The 11:28 train to Hangzhou has been cancelled. 11:28开往杭州的火车已经取消。 We apologize to customers, but due to a signal problem, the 11:28 train to Hangzhou from platform 15 has been cancelled. 我们向您道歉,由于信号问题,11:28从十五号站台开往杭州的列车已经取消。 The 11:32 train to Tianjin is now standing at platform 13. 11:32开往天津的火车现在停靠在十三号站台。 Please note, there will be no restaurant car on this train. I repeat, there will be no restaurant car on the 11:32 to Tianjin now standing at platform 13. 请注意,这列火车上没有餐车。再次重复,现在停靠在13号站台,11:32开往天津的火车上没有餐车。 2005年英语专业四级 短文2 The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum was opened in Geneva in 1988国际红十字会和红新月博物馆于1988年在日内瓦开幕。 It tells the story of men and women who, in the course of the major events of the last 150 years, have given assistance to victims of war and natural disasters. 它讲述了在过去150年的重大事件中,为战争和自然灾害受害者提供援助的男男女女的故事。 The organization was established in 1863 and was based on an idea by a Swiss businessman called Henri Durant. 该组织成立于1863年,由瑞士商人亨利·杜南创建。 He had witnessed the heavy casualties at the battle of Sulferino in Italy 4 years earlier, in which 40,000 people were killed, wounded or missing. 四年前,他看到了意大利索尔费里诺战役的惨重伤亡,那场战役造成4万人死亡、受伤或失踪。 He had seen the lack of medical services and the great suffering of many of the wounded who simply died from lack of care. 他看到了医疗服务的缺乏以及因为缺乏医疗而死亡的大量伤员的巨大痛苦。 The International Red Cross or Red Crescent exists to help the victims of conflicts and disasters regardless of their nationalities. 国际红十字会或红新月博物馆的存在是为了帮助冲突和灾难的受害者,不论他们的国籍是什么。 The symbol of the organization was originally just the red cross. 该组织的象征最初只是红十字会。 It has no religious significance. 没有宗教意义。 The founders of the movement adopted it as a tribute to Switzerland. 该组织的创始人将它作为对瑞士的致敬。 However,during the Russo-Turkish War, the Turks felt that the cross could be seen as offensive to Muslim soldiers. 然而,在俄土战争期间,土耳其人认为十字架是对穆斯林士兵的冒犯。 And a second symbol, the red crescent, was adopted for use by national organizations in the Islamic world. Both are now official symbols. 第二个标志红新月,为伊斯兰世界的国家组织所采用。现在两者都是官方标志。 2005年英语专业四级 短文3 At major college or high school sports events, cheerleaders, both male and female,jump and dance in front of the crowd, and shout the name of their team, running around and yelling "Go, team, Go" 在主要的大学或高中体育赛事中,啦啦队队长,无论男女,都要在人群前蹦蹦跳跳,喊出自己球队的名字,到处跑,喊着“加油,球队,加油”。 The first cheerleader ever was a man. 第一个啦啦队队长是一个男人。 In 1898, John Campbell jumped in front of the crowd at the University of Minnesota and shouted for his team. 1898年,约翰·坎贝尔在明尼苏达大学的人群前跳下,为他的球队呐喊。 He shouted "Hoorah, Minnesota". This was the first organized shout, oryell. 他喊道“万岁,明尼苏达大学”。这是第一次有组织的喊叫或呐喊。 For the next 32 years cheerleaders were men only. 在接下来的32年里,啦啦队员只有男性。 Cheerleading is not just about cheering. They practice special shouts, dances, and athletic shows. 啦啦队不仅仅是为了欢呼。他们练习特殊的喊叫声、舞蹈和体育表演。 The men throw the women high in the air and catch them. 男人把女人抛向空中,然后抓住她们。 The team members climb on each other's shoulders to make a human pyramid. 队员们爬上彼此的肩膀,形成一个金字塔。 They yell and dance, too. It is like human fireworks. 他们喊啊,叫啊,舞啊,那激情如烟花般四射。 Of course, they may often suffer serious knee and wrist injuries, and bloody noses. 当然,他们可能经常遭受严重的膝盖和手腕受伤,流鼻血。 Cheerleaders have their own contests every year at local, state and national levels. 拉拉队长每年在地方、州和国家都有自己的比赛。 And the crowd shouts for them. 群众为他们呼喊。 It is not fair to think cheerleading is just being cheerful and lively and having aloud voice. 把啦啦队看作娱乐,维持现场气氛活跃,保持声音响亮的手段是不公平的。 Cheerleading is a sport in itself. 啦啦队本身就是一项运动。

4分钟
3k+
10个月前

英文名著分集阅读 罗伯特·史蒂文森《金银岛》 part10

Treasure Island by Robert Stevenson 原文 Chapter 10: The End The pirates thought about the treasure and they were happy. They ate their breakfast quickly and we all started to walk along the beach. 'We must go this way, and look for a tall tree,'said Silver. There were a lot of tall trees on the island and the pirates ran to look at all of them. Then one of the pirates said, 'Here!' Near a tree was a dead man. 'He was a sailor,' said one of the pirates. 'Look at his jacket! But what's he doing here? When did he die?' 'Flint killed him years ago,' said Silver. 'He's showing us the way to the treasure. Follow his arm.Come on! This way.' The pirates followed quietly. They were afraid. We climbed a hill, then we sat down. Suddenly we heard singing. 'It's Flint!' said one man, his face very white. 'No,' said Silver.'Not Flint. Flint's dead. Remember the treasure, my boys, and don't be afraid!' But all the pirates had white faces. Silver listened carefully to the singing. 'That's not Flint!' he said. 'It's ... it's Ben Gunn! We're not afraid of Ben Gunn!' The singing stopped and we moved on. After twenty minutes,we saw a very big tree on top of a hill. The pirates started to run. But they did not find any treasure. Under the tree they found an old box. There was nothing init. Flint's treasure was not there. For a long time, the six pirates sat and said nothing. Then Silver turned to me. 'Be very careful,Jim,' he said quietly. 'These men are dangerous.' He gave me a gun. The pirates looked at us and we looked back at them. Suddenly, from the trees, guns started to shoot. Two of the pirates dropped to the ground and the other three ran away. The doctor and Ben Gunn ran out of the trees and started to run after the pirates. 'They can't getaway,' said Silver. 'And you, Ben Gunn, what are you doing here?' 'Ben found the treasure a long time ago,' said the doctor. 'He moved it to his home on the island. So I gave the pirates Flint's map and we left the house and went to stay with Ben.' We took one of the pirate's boats, and broke the other. 'The pirates haven't got a boat now,' said the doctor. 'They can't follow us.' Then we went round the island to find the Hispaniola. At last, we found our ship and met Mr. Trelawney and Captain Smollett. 'What are you doing here, John Silver?' asked the captain. 'I'm here to help you,' said Silver. 'Ah,' said the captain. I had a good dinner that night with all my friends. We were all happy. Silver ate and drank and smiled and laughed too. The next morning, we started to carry the treasure to the ship. We did not see the three pirates on the island. Three days later, we finished our work. We heard the pirates singing loudly, but we did not see them. We left some boxes of food for the pirates, and started across the sea to the nearest town. We were happy when we arrived there. And there Silver left us. We were in the town and he got away. He took some of the treasure with him, too. And so, after some weeks at sea, we arrived home with our treasure. I never wanted to go back to that island again.

5分钟
3k+
10个月前

Level 4 听力纯享合订集 85篇

付费

这是分段音频的合订纯享版本,欢迎愿意支持本专辑的朋友进行购买。不想购买的朋友,听“level 4”分段音频和专题听单都是一样的。感谢大家! 购买了本单集的朋友,可以到公众号“高效英语磨耳朵”私信我获取和音频配套的文稿及翻译。 Level 4 听力纯享合订集 85篇 00:00:00 Day 1. Come to the fair 00:04:10 Day 2. Hiroshima 00:07:37 Day 3. Niagara Falls 00:10:56 Day 4. Cowboys 00:14:34 Day 5. George W Bush Junior 00:18:16 Day 6. Handel's "Messiah" 00:21:52 Day 7. Ireland 00:25:12 Day 8. Louisa May Alcott 00:29:04 Day 9. Niagara-On-The-Lake 00:32:47 Day 10. Newspaper 00:36:44 Day 11. Paul Kane, Frontier Artist 00:41:21 Day 12. Plains Indians 00:44:39 Day 13. Pocahontas and John Smith 00:48:13 Day 14. Remember The Alamo! 00:52:10 Day 15. Gribbio 00:55:02 Day 16. Summertime 00:58:11 Day 17. Telephone Systems 01:00:58 Day 18. Texas 01:04:16 Day 19. The Ford Pinto Case 01:07:40 Day 20. The Golden Man El Dorado 01:12:04 Day 21. The Grand Canyon 01:15:26 Day 22. The Niagara Park's Commission 01:18:53 Day 23. The Welland Canal 01:22:21 Day 24. Wal-Mart Stores 01:25:32 Day 25. Yellowstone National Park 01:29:20 Day 26. Student Newspapers 01:32:26 Day 27. Canadian Colleges and Universities 01:35:54 Day 28. Coffee and Donuts 01:39:04 Day 29. David Livingstone Medical Missionary 01:44:01 Day 30. Favorite Cookies 01:47:09 Day 31. Florence Nightingale 01:51:28 Day 32. Harriet Tubman 01:55:20 Day 33. Hernias Repaired Here 01:58:35 Day 34. Julie Andrews 02:01:40 Day 35. Potato Chips and Corn Chips 02:05:33 Day 36. The Stratford Festival 02:09:02 Day 37. The Two Cultures 02:12:15 Day 38. The War That Both Sides Won 02:16:08 Day 39. North American Death and Burial 02:20:28 Day 40. Anastasia and the Russian Revolution 02:24:32 Day 41. Australian Origins 02:28:30 Day 42. Casa Loma 02:32:12 Day 43. Charlie Brown 02:35:48 Day 44. Conquering Lake Ontario 02:39:14 Day 45. Currier and Ives 02:42:40 Day 46. Death Valley – California 02:45:09 Day 47. Dr. Norman Bethune 02:48:56 Day 48. Ebenezer Scrooge 02:53:26 Day 49. Etiquette 02:56:34 Day 50. Gambling 02:59:37 Day 51. Gilbert and Sullivan 03:03:11 Day 52. Hawaii 03:06:30 Day 53. Henry Ford 03:10:02 Day 54. It Could Be a Whole Lot Better 03:13:52 Day 55. John Chapman -American Pioneer 03:18:08 Day 56. Las Vegas, Nevada 03:21:20 Day 57. Laura Secord 03:25:53 Day 58. Little House on the Prairie 03:31:12 Day 59. Mutiny!! 03:35:12 Day 60. North America's Rain forest 03:38:40 Day 61. Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia 03:42:25 Day 62. Prince Edward Island 03:46:47 Day 63. Public Transit 03:51:12 Day 64. Red-haired Ann 03:55:13 Day 65. Romance Novels 03:58:08 Day 66. Shopping at The Mall 04:00:28 Day 67. Stephen Foster American Songwriter 04:04:23 Day 68. Sunday Morning at Church 04:07:29 Day 69. Thanksgiving Day 04:11:11 Day 70. The Calgary Stampede 04:14:27 Day 71. The Expulsion of the Acadians 04:18:11 Day 72. The Florida Everglades 04:21:25 Day 73. The Great Walls of China 04:24:21 Day 74. The Internet 04:27:33 Day 75. The Planetarium 04:30:03 Day 76. Alexander Graham Bell 04:33:20 Day 77. The Story of Anne Frank 04:37:12 Day 78. Charlotte Church 04:41:20 Day 79. Christmas Holidays 04:45:27 Day 80. Garage Sales and YardSales 04:48:53 Day 81. Helen Keller 04:53:08 Day 82. Trial By Jury 04:57:18 Day 83.A Favorite Place 05:01:13 Day 84. Business Ethics 05:04:58 Day 85. Colonial Williamsburg

308分钟
2k+
10个月前

单词造句磨耳朵 首字母D day66(651-660)

听前提示 一、每期提供10个单词,每个单词都会有2-3个例句,方便理解记忆。 二、每个单词和句子都会重复5遍,其中第2遍为慢速,有助于识别。 三、本材料的整体难度较低,可以用来听力磨耳朵和单词查漏补缺。 Day 66 651. Destruction n.破坏,摧毁 The destruction of the ozone layer affects the environment. 臭氧层的破坏会影响环境。 We are trying to save the building from destruction. 我们正在努力拯救这座建筑物免遭破坏。 652. Detail n.细节;详情v.详细说明,详述 I'm not concerned with the details. 我不关心细节。 I'll explain it in detail next week. 下周我会详细解释的。 We need to clarify a few details. 我们需要澄清一些细节。 653. Determination n.决心,坚定;决定,裁定 The key to success is determination. 成功的关键是决心。 Failure will never overtake me if my determination to succeed is strong enough. 如果我的成功决心足够强烈,失败将永远不会超越我 A dream doesn't become reality through magic. It take sweat, determination and hard work. 梦想不会通过魔法变成现实。这需要汗水、决心和辛勤工作。 654. Determine v.决定,控制;查明;下定决心 We're still trying to determine what happened. 我们还在努力确定发生了什么。 The doctors couldn't determine the cause of death. 医生无法确定死因。 655. Determined adj.下定决心的,坚定的v.决定;确定 I am determined to give up smoking. 我决心戒烟。 The path to success is to take massive, determined action. 成功之路是采取大规模、坚定的行动。 The government is determined to tackle inflation. 政府决心解决通货膨胀问题。 656. Develop v.成长,发育,发展;开发;出现 We need to develop a new kind of energy. 我们需要开发一种新的能源。 He is planning to develop his business. 他正计划发展自己的业务。 657. Development n.成长;发展;开发,研制 He contributed to the development to the city. 他为这座城市的发展做出了贡献。 Use your free time for self-development. 利用你的空闲时间进行自我发展。 658. Device n.装置,设备;手段,方法 Computer is an electronic device. 计算机是一种电子设备。 This is a very sophisticated device. 这是一款非常复杂的设备。 The device will be in production by the end of the year. 该设备将于今年年底投入生产。 659. Devote v.献身,致力;用于 I want to devote more time to my family. 我想花更多的时间陪伴我的家人。 660. Devoted adj.挚爱的;热衷的v.献身,致力 She's devoted to her family. 她很爱她的家庭。 He is a devoted husband. 他是一位虔诚的丈夫。 He devoted his whole life to science. 他毕生致力于科学。

15分钟
6k+
10个月前

考级英语听力材料(专四)1 对话

00:00 2005年英语专业四级 对话1 01:37 2005年英语专业四级 对话2 03:12 2005年英语专业四级 对话2 2005年英语专业四级 对话1 Good morning, sit down please Mr. Johnson. 早上好,请坐,约翰逊先生。 Thank you, ma'am. 谢谢你,女士。 I have read your letter here. You seem to have done very well at school. Can you tell me something about your school work? 我在这里读过你的信。你似乎在学校表现得很好。你能跟我讲讲你学校的工作吗? As you can see, my strongest subjects were art subjects. My best subject was history and my second best was geography. However, my favorite subject was math and the results I got in the math paper were quite reasonable. 正如你所看到的,我最擅长的科目是艺术。我最好的科目是历史,其次是地理。然而,我最喜欢的科目是数学,我的数学论文相当不错。 That's true. Now can you tell me why you think these subjects will help you in this job? 这是真的。现在你能告诉我为什么你认为这些科目会对你的工作有帮助呢? Well,ma'am, I understand that you manufacture computers, prepare software and advise clients on how to use them. Is that right? 嗯,女士,我知道你们生产电脑,准备软件,并向客户建议如何使用。是这样吗? That's right. 是的。 And I've been told that working with computers needs the logical mind rather than great skills in mathematics. That's especially true, I believe, when it comes to writing programs. So I think my results show that I have some ability in logic and in mathematics as well. 有人说,与计算机打交道需要的是逻辑思维,而不是高超的数学技能。我相信,当涉及到编写程序时,这一点尤其正确。所以我认为我的科目成绩表明我在逻辑和数学方面也有一些能力。 So you would like to write material for computers, would you? 所以你想为电脑编写程序,是吗? Yes,ma'am, that's what interests me most about computers: writing programs. But I think the computer industry itself is still expanding enormously. I am sure that career prospects in the industry will be very good no matter what sort of job I went into. 是的,女士,这就是我对计算机最感兴趣的地方:编写程序。但是我认为计算机产业本身仍在极大的扩张。我相信,无论我从事什么样的工作,这个行业的职业前景都会很好。 I see. Well, thank you. I've enjoyed our talk, we'll be writing to you. 我明白了。好,谢谢你。我很喜欢我们的谈话,我们会写信给你。 Thank you ma'am. Good morning. 谢谢你女士。早上好。 2005年英语专业四级 对话2 Excuse me, could I ask you some questions? 打扰一下,我能问你几个问题吗? Of course. 当然。 I work for an advertising agency and I'm doing some research. It's for a new magazine, for people like you. 我在一家广告公司工作,正在做一些研究。是为一本新杂志,正是为了像你一样的人。 People like me? What do you mean? 像我一样的人?是指什么意思? People between 25 and 35 years old. 25到35岁的人。 OK. 这样啊。 Right.Um, what do you do at the weekend? 是的。嗯,你周末都做什么呢? Well,on Fridays my wife always goes to her exercises class, then she visits friends.嗯,星期五我妻子总是去健身班,然后再去拜访朋友。 Don't you go out? 你不出去吗? Not on Fridays. I never go out on Fridays. I stay at home and watch television. 不是在星期五。我从来不在星期五出去。我呆在家里看电视。 And on Saturdays? 星期六呢? On Saturdays my wife and I always go sailing together. 星期六我和妻子总是一起去航海。 Really? 真的吗? Mmm,We love it. We never miss it. And then in the evening we go out. 嗯,我们喜欢航海。我们从来没有错过。晚上我们出去。 Whereto? 去哪里呢? Different places. We sometimes go and see friends, we sometimes go to the cinema or a restaurant, but we always go out on Saturday evenings. 不同的地方。我们有时去看朋友,有时去电影院或餐馆,但我们总是在星期六晚上出去。 I see. And now, Sunday? What happens on Sundays? 我知道了。那么现在,星期日呢?星期日会发生什么事情吗? Nothing special. We often go for a walk and I always cook a big Sunday lunch. 没什么特别的。我们经常出去散步,我总是在星期天做一顿丰盛的午餐。 Oh, how often do you do the cooking? 哦,你多久做一次饭? Um, twice a week, three times a week. 嗯,一周两次或者三次。 Thank you very much. All I need now are your personal details, your name, job,and soon. What's your surname? 非常感谢。我现在需要你的个人资料,名字、工作等等。你的姓是什么? Robinson. 罗宾逊。 2005年英语专业四级 对话3 Parcel Express, good morning. How can I help you? 包裹快递,早上好。我能帮你什么忙吗? Good morning. I'm thinking of sending a parcel to New York next week. Can you tell me what the procedure is, please? 早上好。我打算下星期寄一个包裹到纽约。你能告诉我手续吗? Certainly.When you ring us, we need the following information: the invoice address,that's probably your address, isn't it? And then, the pickup address if that's different. And a contact phone number. 当然可以。环时,我们需要以下信息:收票人的地址,这可能是你的地址,不是吗?如果跟你的地址不同,还需要提货地址,还有一个联系电话。 Just a moment, I'm taking notes. Phone number, right. 请等一下,我在做笔记。电话号码,好的。 Then we need the full name, address and phone number of the person you're sending the parcel to. 然后我们需要收件人的全名、地址和电话号码。 Ok,anything else? 好的,还有别的吗? Yes,the weight and dimensions of the parcel. That's height, width and length. And the value of the goods and a full description. 是的,包裹的重量和尺寸。还有高度、宽度和长度。以及商品的价值和详细的描述。 Value,description. 价值,描述。 Yes, but don't seal the parcel. You need to leave it open so that the driver can check the contents when he collects it. After the recent bombing, the airlines said that we'd have to check. 是的,但是不要封包裹。你需要把它打开,以便司机取件时检查包裹。最近的轰炸之后,航空公司说我们必须检查所有包裹。他们告诉我们必须这么做。 Fine,now last question. How long will the parcel take to get to New York? 好的,现在最后一个问题。这个包裹到纽约要多长时间? One to two working days. There are daily flights at midday. And if we collect the parcel from you at 10:15, then your parcel catches that flight and it'll arrive within 24 hours. 一到两个工作日。中午有每日航班。如果我们10点15分收到你的包裹,你的包裹可以赶上那趟航班,24小时内就会到达。 Right,thank you very much. You've been very helpful. 好的,非常感谢。你真是帮了大忙。 Not at all. Good-bye. 不客气。拜拜。 Good-bye. 拜拜。

4分钟
4k+
10个月前

英文名著分集阅读 罗伯特·史蒂文森《金银岛》 part9

Treasure Island by Robert Stevenson 原文 Chapter 9: Silver Helped Jim It was now evening. 'I must go back to the house now,' I thought. 'They're going to be angry with me, but I've got the ship.' So I left the ship and went happily back through the trees. I saw the house, and a big fire next to it. I moved on quietly through the trees and went into the house. It was dark and very quiet. 'Everyone is sleeping,'I thought. Then somebody spoke. 'Who's there?' he said. It was Long John Silver. Somebody brought alight. There were six pirates in the room. The other pirates were all dead. 'So here's Jim,' said Long John Silver. 'Here to visit us. That's very nice ...' I said nothing. 'So now you want to be a pirate, Jim,' Silver said. 'The captain and the doctor are angry with you,I know.' 'What's happening?' I asked. 'Well, Jim,' said Silver. 'The ship's far away. Your friends left the house yesterday, and we're here now. And you, Jim, are you going to stay with us?' 'Let's kill him,' said one of the other pirates. 'No,' said Silver.'I'm the captain. And I like this boy.' The other men were angry with Silver. They went away to talk about it together. 'I want to help you,Jim,' said Silver quietly tome. 'But you must help me, too.' At last, the other pirates came back. They gave Silver some paper. It was black. 'You aren't our captain now, John Silver,' one of the pirates said. 'We don't want you. And we don't want that boy.' 'Well,' said Silver. 'I have something you want. Look! And he showed them Mr.Trelawney's treasure map.' 'The doctor gave me this!' he said. The pirates were very excited and they all looked at the map. 'Good old Silver!' they said. 'Good old Captain Silver!' The next morning the doctor came to the house. 'Good morning, doctor,' said Long John. 'Look who's here!' 'Jim!' said the doctor. 'I want to talk to you. But first I must look at these men.' 'Now I want to talk to Jim, 'said the doctor after a few minutes. 'No, you can't,'said one pirate. But Silver said, 'Yes,he can. You can speak to the boy, doctor.' The doctor turned tome. 'Why are you with the pirates, Jim?' he asked sadly. 'It was a mistake,' I said. 'They caught me here last night. But doctor, I've got the ship. It's in the North Inlet.' 'The ship! 'said the doctor. 'Good boy!' he said. Then he turned to Silver. 'Silver! Look after this boy. Perhaps I can help you later. Goodbye, Jim.' And the doctor left us. 'And now, Jim,' said Silver, 'we're going to look for the treasure.'

4分钟
4k+
10个月前

单词造句磨耳朵 首字母D day65(641-650)

听前提示 一、每期提供10个单词,每个单词都会有2-3个例句,方便理解记忆。 二、每个单词和句子都会重复5遍,其中第2遍为慢速,有助于识别。 三、本材料的整体难度较低,可以用来听力磨耳朵和单词查漏补缺。 Day 65 641. Desert n.沙漠,荒漠;荒凉的地方v.背弃,放弃 The Sahara is a vast desert. 撒哈拉沙漠是一片广阔的沙漠。 Crossing that desert is dangerous. 穿越那片沙漠很危险。 They lost their way in the desert and died of thirst. 他们在沙漠中迷路了,死于口渴。 642. Deserted adj.空旷的;被抛弃的;废弃的 v.离弃 The school is quite deserted. 学校已经空无一人了。 I like walking alone on the deserted beach. 我喜欢独自在荒凉的海滩上散步。 643. Deserve v.值得,应受 I think I deserve a raise. 我想我应该加薪。 You deserve a higher salary. 你应该得到更高的薪水。 We want to help you because you deserve it. 我们想帮你,因为你值得。 644. Design n.设计,布局;设计艺术v.设计,制图 She is studying interior design. 她正在学习室内设计。 I'm at college, studying graphic design. 我在上大学,学习平面设计。 645. Desire n.愿望,欲望,渴望v.渴望,想望 I have no desire to stay here. 我不想待在这里。 My desire is to help you with this problem. 我的愿望是帮助你解决这个问题。 646. Desk n.书桌,办公桌,写字台 We need to dust the desk. 我们需要把桌子除尘。 She found her purse under the desk. 她在桌子底下找到了自己的钱包。 This desk is designed for children. 这张桌子是为儿童设计的。 647. Desperate adj.拼命的;极需要的,渴望的;绝望的,无望的 She's in desperate need of money. 她迫切需要钱。 I know the situation is desperate. 我知道情况非常严峻。 We're desperate to find a solution. 我们迫切希望找到解决方案。 648. Desperately adv.绝望地,拼命地,不顾一切地;非常 He tried desperately to get her attention. 他拼命试图引起她的注意。 We desperately need more money to help fund our project. 我们迫切需要更多的资金来资助我们的项目。 649. Despite prep.尽管,即使;不由自主地,忍不住地 I like him despite all his faults. 尽管他有种种缺点,但我还是喜欢他。 He refused to quit despite many obstacles. 尽管遇到了许多障碍,他还是拒绝辞职。 650 Destroy v.破坏,毁灭;杀死,彻底打败,击溃 We intend to destroy it. 我们打算摧毁它。 Do not let the behavior of others destroy your inner peace. 不要让别人的行为破坏你内心的平静。

14分钟
7k+
10个月前

Level 5-Day 39.Salman Rushdie 'Life Under Threat' (2)

词汇提示 1.heretics 异端 2.savaged 激烈批评 3.mugged 公开打劫 4.tormentor 折磨者 5.scapegoat 替罪羊 6.marchers 抗议游行者 7.Enlightenment 启蒙教育 8.blasphemy 亵渎 原文 Salman Rushdie: 'Life Under Threat' (2) Out there where you are, in the rich and powerful and lucky west, has it really been so long since religions persecuted people, burning them as heretics,drowning them as witches, that you can't recognize religious persecution when you see it? The original metaphor has reasserted itself. I'm back in the balloon, asking for the right to live. What is my single life worth" Despair whispers in my ear: 'Not a lot.' But I refuse to give in to despair. I refuse to give in to despair because I've been shown love as well as hatred. I know that many people do care, and are appalled by the crazy, upside-down logic of the post-fatwa world, in which a single novelist can be accused of having savaged or 'mugged' a whole community, becoming its tormentor (instead of it starred and feathered victim) and the scapegoat for all its discontents. Many people do ask, for example: When a white pop-star-turned-Islamic-fanatic speaks approvingly about killing an Indian immigrant, how does the Indian immigrant end up being called the racist? Or,again: What minority is smaller and weaker than a minority of one? I refuse to give in to despair even though, for a thousand days and more, I've been put through a degree course in worthlessness, my own personal and specific worthlessness. My first teachers were the mobs marching down distant boulevards, baying for my blood, and finding, soon enough, their echoes on the English streets. I could not understand the force that makes parents hang murderous slogans around their children's necks. I have learned to understand it. It burns books and effigies and thinks itself holy. But at first, as I watched the marchers, I felt them trampling on my heart. Once again, however, I have been saved by instances of fair-mindedness, of goodness. Every time I learn that a reader somewhere has been touched by The Satanic Verses, moved and entertained and stimulated by it, it arouses deep feelings in me. And there are more and more such readers nowadays, my postbag tells me, readers(including Muslims) who are willing to give my burned, spurned child a fair hearing at long last. Sometimes I think that, one day, Muslims will be ashamed of what Muslims did in these times, will find the 'Rushdie affair' as improbable as the west now finds martyr-burning. One day they may agree that - as the European Enlightenment demonstrated- freedom of thought is precisely freedom from religious control, freedom from accusations of blasphemy. Maybe they'll agree, too, that the row over The Satanic Verses was at bottom an argument about who should have power over the grand narrative, the Story of Islam, and that power must belong equally to everyone. That even if my novel were incompetent, its attempt to retell the story would still be important. That if I've failed, others must succeed, because those who do not have power over the story that dominates their lives, power to retell it, rethink it, deconstruct it, joke about it, and change it as times change,truly are powerless, because they cannot think new thoughts. 翻译 萨尔曼·拉什迪:《生命受到威胁》(2) 在你们所处的地方,在富裕、强大、幸运的西方,宗教迫害人们真的已经很久了吗,把他们当作异教徒烧死,把他们当作女巫淹死,以至于当你看到宗教迫害时,你都认不出来了? 原来的比喻再次出现了。 我又回到了气球里,要求生存的权利。 我的单身生活值多少钱?”绝望在我耳边低语:“不值多少钱。” 但我拒绝向绝望屈服。 我拒绝向绝望屈服,因为我既被爱也被恨。 我知道,很多人确实关心这个问题,并对法特瓦后世界的疯狂、颠倒的逻辑感到震惊,在这个世界上,一个小说家就可能被指控蹂躏或“抢劫”了整个社会,成为它的折磨者(而不是被涂上焦油和羽毛的受害者),成为所有不满的替罪羊。 例如,很多人确实会问:当一个白人流行歌星出身的伊斯兰狂热分子赞许地说要杀死一名印度移民时,为什么印度移民最终会被称为种族主义者? 又或者:哪个少数群体比一个人的少数群体更小更弱? 我拒绝向绝望屈服,即使在过去的一千多天里,我已经完成了一个关于毫无价值的学位课程,我个人的和特定的毫无价值。 我的启蒙老师是那些在远处林荫大道上游行的暴徒,他们叫嚷着要我的血,很快,他们就在英国的街道上找到了回声。 我无法理解是什么力量让父母把杀人的标语挂在孩子的脖子上。 我已经学会了理解它。 它焚烧书籍和雕像,认为自己是神圣的。 但起初,当我看着游行队伍时,我感到他们在践踏我的心。 然而,我又一次被公正和善良的事例所拯救。 每当我得知某个地方的读者被《撒旦诗篇》所感动,被它所感动,被它所娱乐,被它所刺激,我的内心就会产生深深的感情。 现在有越来越多这样的读者,我的邮袋告诉我,读者(包括穆斯林)终于愿意给我那个被烧伤、被抛弃的孩子一个公平的机会。 有时我想,总有一天,穆斯林会为自己在这段时间里所做的事感到羞愧,会发现“拉什迪事件”就像西方现在认为焚烧烈士一样不可能。 有一天,他们可能会同意——正如欧洲启蒙运动所证明的那样——思想自由正是不受宗教控制的自由,不受亵渎指控的自由。 也许他们也会同意,关于《撒旦诗篇》的争论本质上是关于谁应该拥有对宏大叙事——伊斯兰故事——的权力的争论,这种权力必须平等地属于每个人。 即使我的小说不称职,它试图重述这个故事的努力仍然很重要。 如果我失败了,其他人一定会成功,因为那些没有能力掌控自己生活中的故事的人,没有能力复述、反思、解构、拿它开玩笑,也没有能力随着时代的变化而改变它的人,真的是无能为力的,因为他们无法想出新的想法。

3分钟
3k+
10个月前

英文名著分集阅读 罗伯特·史蒂文森《金银岛》 part8

Treasure Island by Robert Stevenson 原文 Chapter 8: Got The Ship The pirates had a big fire on the beach, and there was a small light on the Hispaniola. Very quietly, I put Ben Gunn's boat into the sea. The boat moved slowly and quietly across the water. Soon I was near the ship. Nobody saw me. 'I can cut the ship's rope with my knife,' I thought. 'And then the wind can push the ship away from the beach.' I listened. There were two men on the ship. The other pirates were all on the beach. The men on the ship were talking loudly and angrily. 'They're going to have a fight,' I thought. One of the men was Israel Hands. I waited, then I cut the rope. Slowly the ship turned round and began to move away from the beach. The two men on the ship started to fight. The pirates on the beach sat round their fire and sang. They did not see the ship moving away. I sat down in Ben Gunn's boat and fell asleep. In the morning, I sat up and looked around. The little boat was not far from the island and I saw that I was quite near the Hispaniola. I looked for Israel Hands and the other pirate, but I did not see them. I moved slowly nearer and nearer to the Hispaniola. Then I climbed on to the ship. The two pirates were there, on the ship. They did not move. One of them was dead. Israel Hand's leg was badly hurt, but he was not dead. I looked round the ship. All the cupboards were open, and everything was dirty. There were a lot of bottles on the floor. I found some drink and gave it to Hands. Then I took down the pirates' flag. 'The ship is ours, now,'I thought. Israel Hands spoke. 'You can't sail the ship, Jim Hawkins,' he said. 'Give me some food. I can help you.' 'I don't want to go back to the beach,' I said. 'Help me to sail it to the North Inlet.' 'Right,' he said. So we sailed to the north of the island. The ship moved quietly through the water; I was happy. The old pirate watched me carefully. Then he smiled.'Jim, go and get me ... er ... get me something to drink,' he said. 'I'm thirsty.' I did not like his smile. I went away, but I came back very quietly and watched him. He moved slowly and took a knife from behind some rope. Then he put the knife under his jacket and he went back to his old place. 'Ah,' I thought. 'He can move and he's got a knife. He wants to kill me. I must be careful.' I went back to him and gave him the bottle. We sailed on and came to the North Inlet. Hands told me what to do and I brought the ship near the beach. I watched the sails and the sea, but I did not watch Hands. Suddenly I turned and saw him behind me with his knife in his hand. I jumped away and took out my gun. I tried to shoot at Hands but nothing happened. The gun was wet with sea water. I moved away quickly, but Hands followed me. I climbed up among the sails and tried to shoot again. Hands looked up,then he threw his knife at me. It went into my arm. Then I shot him and he dropped into the sea. The pirate's knife was in my arm. I pulled it out and climbed down on to the ship.

4分钟
3k+
10个月前
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