时间:2019-01-10 作者:英语课 分类:高中英语人教版必修


英语课

[00:08.80]The united kingdom

[00:11.08]Reading

[00:10.08]Puzzles in geography

[00:13.21]There is no need to debate any more

[00:16.97]about why different words are used to describe the four countries:

[00:21.23]England, wales, Scotland 1 and northern Ireland.

[00:24.99]You can easily clarify 2 and problems if you study british history.

[00:29.96]First there was England.

[00:32.59]Wales was linked to England in the 13th century ad .

[00:37.14]now when people refer to England you find wales included as well.

[00:42.89]Great Britain was the name given when England and wales were joined to Scotland .

[00:49.34]it happened in 1603

[00:52.39]when king james of Scotland became king of England and wales as well.

[00:57.75]To their surprise,

[01:00.39]the three countries found themselves united peacefully instead of by war.

[01:06.21]However,

[01:07.36]just as they were going to get Ireland connected to form the united kingdom.

[01:12.01]The southern part of that country broke away

[01:14.94]to form its own government.

[01:16.69]So only northern Ireland joined with England,

[01:21.13]wales and Scotland

[01:22.64]to become the united kingdom and this was shown to the world in a new flag called the union jack 3.

[01:30.01]Although the four countries do work together in some areas(for example,

[01:35.57]in international relations) they are still very different.

[01:39.55]For example, northern Ireland,

[01:42.50]England and Scotland

[01:44.33]have developed different educational and legal systems

[01:48.06]as well as different football teams for competitions like the world cup!

[01:53.34]England is the largest of the four countries

[01:57.39]and for convenience

[01:59.35]it is divided roughly 4 into three zones.

[02:02.19]The zone nearest france is called the south of England,

[02:06.35]the middle zone is called the midlands,

[02:08.80]and the one nearest to Scotland is known as the north.

[02:13.30]You find most of the population settled in the south,

[02:17.32]but most of the large industrial cities in the midlands and north of England.

[02:22.49]Although many of the cities are not as large as those in china,

[02:27.53]they have famous football teams and some even have two.

[02:31.79]However, these industrial cities built in the 19th century

[02:37.15]do not have the historical attractions of other places.

[02:41.17]For those you have to go to older but smaller towns first built by the romans.

[02:48.01]There you will find out more about british history and culture.

[02:53.16]The greatest historical treasure of all is London with its museums,

[02:58.83]art collections, theatres, parks and buildings.

[03:03.08]It has the oldest port built by the romans in the lst century ad,

[03:08.94]the oldest building begun by the anglo-saxons

[03:13.01]in the 1060s

[03:14.76]and the oldest castle constructed by later Norman rulers in 1066.

[03:20.93]but London has been in fluenced only by some invaders 5 of England.

[03:25.94]The first invaders,the Romans ,

[03:29.60]left their towns and roads. The second,

[03:33.57]the anglo-saxons, left their language and their the fourth,

[03:45.32]the Normans, left castles and words for food.

[03:49.87]if you look around the British countryside,

[03:53.34]you will find evidence of all these invaders.

[03:59.30]if you are going to make your trip to the united kingdom worthwhile!

[04:03.74]Using language

[04:10.87]Sightseeing in London

[04:14.79]Worried about the time available,

[04:18.55]zhang pingyu had made a list of the sites

[04:21.61]she wanted to see in London.

[04:23.25]Her first delight was going to the tower.

[04:26.91]It was built long ago by the Norman invaders of ad 1066.

[04:33.16]fancy! This solid, stone, square tower had remained standing 6 for one thousand years.

[04:41.70]Although the buildings had expanded around it,

[04:44.86]it remained part of a royal palace and prison combined.

[04:48.91]To her great surprise,

[04:51.86]zhang pingyu found the queen's jewels guarded by special royal soldiers who,

[04:57.71]on special occasions 7,

[04:59.62]still wore the four-hundred -year-old uniform of the time of queen Elizabeth i


[05:06.54]There followed st pau1's cathedral

[05:09.10]built after the terrible fire of London in 1666.

[05:13.51]it looked splendid when first built!

[05:16.47]Westminster abbey, too, was very interesting.

[05:20.12]It contained statues in memory of dead poets and writers,

[05:24.56]such as Shakespeare.

[05:26.31]Then just as she came out of the abbey,

[05:29.34]pingyu heard the famous sound of the clock, big ben,

[05:33.16]ringing out the hour.

[05:34.99]She finished the day by looking at the outside of Buckingham palace,

[05:39.82]the queen's house in London. Oh ,she had so much to tell her friends!

[05:45.25]The second day the girl visited Greenwich

[05:49.01]and saw its old ships and famous clock that sets the world time.

[05:53.06]What interested her most was the longitude 8 line.

[05:57.11]It is an imaginary 9 line dividing the eastern and western halves of the world

[06:01.48]of the world and is very useful for navigation 10.

[06:05.24]It passes through Greenwich,

[06:08.01]so pingyu had a photo taken so pingyu had a photo taken standing on either side of the line.

[06:12.63]The last day she visited Karl Marx's Statue in highgate cemetery 11.

[06:18.06]It seemed strange that the man who had developed communism

[06:22.43]should have lived and died in London.

[06:24.38]Not only that,

[06:26.24]but he had worked in the famous reading room of the library of the british museum.

[06:31.10]Sadly the library had moved from its original place

[06:35.46]into another building and the old reading room was gone.

[06:39.22]But she was thrilled by so many wonderful treasures

[06:43.06]from different cultures displayed in the museum.

[06:46.22]When she saw many visitors enjoying looking at the beautiful old Chinese pots

[06:52.15]and other objects on show, she felt very proud of her country.

[06:56.80]The next day pingyu was leaving London for Windsor castle.

[07:02.37]"perhaps I will see the queen?" she wondered as she fell asleep



n.苏格兰
  • He has been hiking round Scotland for a month.他围着苏格兰徒步旅行了一个月。
  • Scotland is to the north of England.苏格兰在英格兰之北。
v.澄清,阐明,使变得清晰;净化
  • I am happy to clarify any points that are still unclear.我愿意说明任何仍然不清楚的地方。
  • Can you clarify this long sentence?你能把这个长句子解释清楚吗?
n.插座,千斤顶,男人;v.抬起,提醒,扛举;n.(Jake)杰克
  • I am looking for the headphone jack.我正在找寻头戴式耳机插孔。
  • He lifted the car with a jack to change the flat tyre.他用千斤顶把车顶起来换下瘪轮胎。
adv.概略地,粗糙地,粗鲁地
  • If you treat your coat so roughly,it will be worn out soon.你如果这么糟蹋你的外套,它很快就不能穿了。
  • The island is roughly circular in shape.这个岛屿大致是圆形的。
入侵者,侵略者,侵入物( invader的名词复数 )
  • They prepared to repel the invaders. 他们准备赶走侵略军。
  • The family has traced its ancestry to the Norman invaders. 这个家族将自己的世系追溯到诺曼征服者。
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的
  • After the earthquake only a few houses were left standing.地震过后只有几幢房屋还立着。
  • They're standing out against any change in the law.他们坚决反对对法律做任何修改。
n.机会( occasion的名词复数 );时刻;原因;需要
  • The prosecution stated that intercourse had occurred on several occasions. 控诉方称发生过数次性交。
  • He has been late on numerous occasions. 他已经迟到过无数次了。
n.经线,经度
  • The city is at longitude 21°east.这个城市位于东经21度。
  • He noted the latitude and longitude,then made a mark on the admiralty chart.他记下纬度和经度,然后在航海图上做了个标记。
adj.想象中的,假想的,虚构的,幻想的;虚数的
  • All the characters in this book are imaginary.此书中的所有人物都是虚构的。
  • The boy's fears were only imaginary.这小孩的恐惧只是一种想象。
n.航行;航海;航空
  • The compass is an instrument of navigation.罗盘是导航仪器。
  • Navigation is difficult on this river because of hidden rocks.由于多暗礁,在这条河上航行很困难。
n.坟墓,墓地,坟场
  • He was buried in the cemetery.他被葬在公墓。
  • His remains were interred in the cemetery.他的遗体葬在墓地。
学英语单词
11-oxy-steroid
aeroflot
Akashic Records
aleukemia hemorrhagica
anti-depression
anti-drip
apicoalveolar
barbula arcuata
Boulby
breuel
brier-wood
bring something to the touch
claim letter
clonalities
cock of the wood
congenial
cornua superius
customs authority
cyclic shear
cylinder bolck
deceivableness
deck plan
dietary defect
Dionda
document entry subsystem
drive sampling
elena
face painter
fielder
flag-feather
floppy base
flow field visualization test
gassest
gender reassignment
gonnies
halftone picture
hedger
high limit of tolerance
Illinois Waterway
integrated optics (io) strip guide
interactive software
JAL
k-r
kanji utility
Laurel Grove
laying battery
loss of import duty risk
low-affinity
lubricating oil system
lubrication gap
Lucea
make on stranger of
metaclassifier
meteorologic instrument
microwave zone position indicator
monopolar cautery
multivalent repression
Nihongo
nuclear resonance thermometer
number seventeen
nutrient cycling
nutting truck
observation range
open-coils
order cost
out-of-balance force
overuniform
Peranakan
perxenic
picture output signal
piston flow
pooin'
post mortem time
Praesepe
pulsator jig
punkas
radicalno
recreative
Red Army man
reeling drum
reference orbit
repeated puncture
Sedlec Prčice
seguramente
semibilinear functional
shorter
single plunger plastic injection moulding machine
skales
speak the worst something
stuporous depression
symbology
tacca integrifolia ker-gawl
the product of
tricholimnas sylvestris
tuning fork wristwatch
two doors down
universal control automation
universologists
unsubstantiated hypothesis
visceromegaly
wait_flags
zero phase sequence-relay