时间:2019-01-10 作者:英语课 分类:创新英语教程第二册


英语课
[00:06.58]While you read
[00:13.24]FOUR EXPERIENCES
[00:17.21]QUENTIN
[00:19.67]Back in 1989,I went on holiday to London to visit somefriends.
[00:26.12]The second day I was there,the Notting Hill Carnival 1 was on.
[00:32.39]So I went to see what it was all about.It was amazing!
[00:38.84]It's like a huge street party right in the middle of London.
[00:44.62]It's basically a celebration of Afro-Caribbean culture,
[00:50.86]but all kinds of thousands of people there.
[00:55.72]There are literally 2 hundreds of thusands of people there.
[01:01.07]Anyway,everyone dresses up in outrageous 3 costumees and dances and has a great time.
[01:08.94]I met some really nice people that day and it really helped broaden 4 my mind.
[01:16.30]I've been back every other year since then.and always look forward to it.
[01:22.96]BARNAbY
[01:26.83]I've been going to the Glastonbury festival in the west of England for years.
[01:33.78]It used to be really great.but it's become a bit commercial now.
[01:40.34]It's got too big.Ten years ago.
[01:45.48]it was much smaller and it was easier to make friends
[01:50.84]and everyone was there for the music.
[01:54.81]Nowadays,everything is much more expensive
[02:00.06]and it's become a place people go in order to drink and take drugs,
[02:06.12]It's got more aggressive too.Things get stolen from your tent.
[02:12.78]There are more fights and there are so many people
[02:18.24]that you can't even see the bands.
[02:22.71]The stages seem to be miles away!I only go out of habit now.I suppose.
[02:30.26]RicARdO
[02:34.12]Fallas is a big annual festival they hold in my home town,Valencia.
[02:41.49]It's held every spring and it commemorates 5 the patron 6 saint 7 of the city.
[02:47.94]Lots of people spend the whole year preparing for it.
[02:53.30]Each area raises money to build their own fallas
[02:58.26]-huge papier-mache models-and they all spend ages making them look great.
[03:05.34]We make funny models of famous politicians,
[03:10.20]footballers,local celebrities,that kind of thing.
[03:14.95]The festival runs all through the beginning of March and it's pretty carzy-lots of drinking,
[03:22.61]hundreds of people all throwing fireworks at each other,
[03:27.65]street performers and so on.Anyway,on March 19th,
[03:33.71]there's a huge fireworks display and then everyone burns all their models!
[03:40.37]It's mad,but really good fun.
[03:45.04]YASUKO
[03:49.49]Hounen Matsuri is a fairly strange festival.
[03:55.23]I don't really know much about it.It still happens every year.
[04:01.89]in March,but it's mainly for older people.
[04:06.75]Most young people just find it a bit embarrassing,I think,
[04:12.81]I suppose it's a celebration of spring
[04:17.57]and the end of winter and that kind of thing.
[04:22.14]People get really drunk on rice wine
[04:27.18]and parade this big wooden thing through the streets.
[04:32.04]Don't ask me why!Then they take it to the temple and pray and that's it,really.
[04:39.69]It's odd,though,because it's really popular with tourists.
[04:45.54]I guess it attracts the kind of person
[04:50.01]who likes to think they're seeing the real Japan.
[04:54.45]whatever that means.
[04:57.93]3  Radio interview
[05:08.87]You are now going to listen to a radio programme.
[05:13.73]One of the speakers is Gareth Davies himself.
[05:18.69]The other is a Professor of Modern Languages.
[05:23.66]And now we turn on the story of Gareth Davies.which has caused so much discussion recently.
[05:32.51]As you probably know.Mr Davies lost his job.
[05:38.26]despite being an award-winning teacher of English.
[05:43.01]because he failed an exam in Welsh.
[05:47.48]He lost a court case recently,where he had argued he shouldn't be forced to have a qualification which wasn't relevant to his job.
[05:56.73]To discuss this and other issues about language
[06:01.87]we have Gareth himself and Christine Edwards,
[06:07.05]Professor of Modern Languages at the University of Eastminster.
[06:12.92]First of all,Gareth,I think quite a few people would say,you live in Wales.
[06:20.47]you should speak the local language which is Welsh.
[06:26.04]Well,I'm not actually sure you can say that Welsh is the local language.
[06:34.40]I'd say that the majority of people in Conway speak English as their first mother tongue.
[06:42.86]The second thing is.
[06:46.23]I am Welsh!OK.my parents moved to London,when I was four because of work,
[06:54.56]but I was born here and both my parents come from different parts of Wales.
[07:01.83]It's just that neither of them spoke 8 Welsh.
[07:06.89]If people want to speak it,fine,
[07:11.44]but it's no use to me in my normal life.apart from this stupid bit of paper.
[07:18.80]You can't make people learn languages.
[07:24.40]Isn't that a point.Christine?
[07:29.04]People simply express themselves in the way they want and that happens to be English.
[07:36.52]No.I'm sorry,but if you look at all the languages round the world.
[07:42.45]one is dying out every two weeks and that's because of English.
[07:48.32]I think people think they have to speak English
[07:53.36]or they will not be able to get a good job,or succeed in the world.
[07:59.03]Also,because America is so rich,people see lots of Hollywood movies,
[08:06.19]and listen to lots of American music,
[08:10.63]and so far younger people English becomes cool
[08:15.60]and they start to want to speak it.
[08:19.57]So then you get language like French being diluted 9 with English.
[08:25.73]No.when the language dies you also lose the culture and traditions of that country.
[08:32.50]Languages need to be protected,
[08:36.75]and that's all that's happened here in Garth's case.
[08:41.72]So what you're saying is that I'm actually somehow damaging Welsh culture
[08:50.36]by not learning the Welsh language!This is crazy.
[08:56.24]If kids want to be cool.what's wroing with that?
[09:01.60]What givess you the right to tell people how to live and how to speak?
[09:07.94]And anyway,
[09:11.00]the way you think doesn't change when you're speaking in another language.
[09:17.19]When I am speaking Welsh-badly,
[09:22.16]I admit-I still want to say the same kind of things I say in English.
[09:29.10]I'm still me.I'm not suddenly someone else.
[09:35.27]Disagreeing
[09:48.83]You can't get a good job if you don't speak English.
[09:53.27]Come on!That's bit of an exaggeration!No.it's not.
[09:58.83]All the best jobs these days ask you to be fluent in English.
[10:04.42]So what you're saying is could be a brilliant medical student,say,
[10:11.08]and I couldn't get a job as a doctor because I can't speak English.
[10:16.65]Yeah,more or less.
[10:19.99]Do you honestly believe that?Yeah,If you don't speak English,you're nothing.
[10:26.96]How can you say that?Because it's true.That's crazy.
[10:33.03]Listen we're obviously never going to agree,
[10:38.59]so let's just talk about something else.shall we?
[10:43.55]OK.but you do realise you're wrong!
[10:47.92]OK.whatever.I don't want to argue.Let's just agree to disagree.
[10:55.86]Stereotypes and reality
[11:07.12]1.He's typical Scot-really mean!
[11:13.36]Oh,come on!Every Scot I've ever met was really generous.
[11:19.31]2.He's typical ltalian-really loud!
[11:25.09]Oh,come on.I've got a really good friend who's from rome and he's quite quite.
[11:31.64]3.She's typical Japanese-really conservative 11.Oh,come on.
[11:40.19]That's such a stereotype 10!Lots of Japanese people are really out-going.
[11:46.64]4.She's typical small town girl-really conservative.Oh,come on!
[11:56.62]Just because you don't come from the city doesn't mean you can't be open-minded.
[12:02.86]5.She's typical Parisian-arrogant and snobbish 12!Oh,come on.
[12:10.72]I've got a friend from Paris and she's really nice.
[12:15.40]6.The Spanish are much more friendly than most people.
[12:22.35]Some of them,maybe,I've met some Spaniards who were really cold and distant.
[12:28.90]7.People from Osaka are usually really funny.Oh,come on!
[12:38.36]They can't all be funny!There must be some who are as dull as the rest of us!
[12:44.42]8.People from the north are much more open and honest than southerners.
[12:51.50]Oh,come on!Just because you're a southerner doesn't mean you have to be two-faced.


n.嘉年华会,狂欢,狂欢节,巡回表演
  • I got some good shots of the carnival.我有几个狂欢节的精彩镜头。
  • Our street puts on a carnival every year.我们街的居民每年举行一次嘉年华会。
adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实
  • He translated the passage literally.他逐字逐句地翻译这段文字。
  • Sometimes she would not sit down till she was literally faint.有时候,她不走到真正要昏厥了,决不肯坐下来。
adj.无理的,令人不能容忍的
  • Her outrageous behaviour at the party offended everyone.她在聚会上的无礼行为触怒了每一个人。
  • Charges for local telephone calls are particularly outrageous.本地电话资费贵得出奇。
v.放宽,变宽,扩大
  • We broaden in experiences by traveling.旅行增长我们的经验。
  • Let's broaden out the discussion to talk about education as a whole.我们来扩大一下讨论范围,全面谈谈教育问题。
n.纪念,庆祝( commemorate的名词复数 )v.纪念,庆祝( commemorate的第三人称单数 )
  • A tombstone is erected in memory of whoever it commemorates. 墓碑是为纪念它所纪念的人而建的。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • A tablet commemorates his patriotic activities. 碑文铭记他的爱国行动。 来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
n.资助人,赞助人,老主顾,顾客
  • The student wants to find a wealthy patron in America.那学生想在美国找一个富有的赞助人。
  • I hope that you will become our patron.我希望你将成为我们的靠山。
n.圣徒;基督教徒;vt.成为圣徒,把...视为圣徒
  • He was made a saint.他被封为圣人。
  • The saint had a lowly heart.圣人有谦诚之心。
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说
  • They sourced the spoke nuts from our company.他们的轮辐螺帽是从我们公司获得的。
  • The spokes of a wheel are the bars that connect the outer ring to the centre.辐条是轮子上连接外圈与中心的条棒。
无力的,冲淡的
  • The paint can be diluted with water to make a lighter shade. 这颜料可用水稀释以使色度淡一些。
  • This pesticide is diluted with water and applied directly to the fields. 这种杀虫剂用水稀释后直接施用在田里。
n.固定的形象,陈规,老套,旧框框
  • He's my stereotype of a schoolteacher.他是我心目中的典型教师。
  • There's always been a stereotype about successful businessmen.人们对于成功商人一直都有一种固定印象。
adj.保守的,守旧的;n.保守的人,保守派
  • He is a conservative member of the church.他是一个守旧教会教友。
  • The young man is very conservative.这个年轻人很守旧。
adj.势利的,谄上欺下的
  • She's much too snobbish to stay at that plain hotel.她很势利,不愿住在那个普通旅馆。
  • I'd expected her to be snobbish but she was warm and friendly.我原以为她会非常势利,但她却非常热情和友好。
学英语单词
a grant in aid
areic region
augmented chain complexes
azotogen
balanced mold
Bariri
barra de sao joao
beame
bisquine
blind drunk
bluethroats
Brandos
Bruxelles
cement admixture
chromoptometer
chronological book
deaerated feedwater
decade count
dentin exposure
dithiatopazine
Down link.
draw a long breath
drive sb into a corner
dry electrolytic capacitor
employmentally challenged
Entrance-hole
equal inclination interference
Erithacus
favisms
fermentation time
flood periphery
gamma ray laser
geisels
grievous bodily harm
hangs onto
honey-golds
hydroplastic corer
hypertensive cerebral symptom
ice-minus
Indigofera longipedunculata
Kaldbakur
key coding element location
Klyuchevskaya Volcano
Laotse
laterals
latrons
lipodystropy
managed object
morbus coxae senilis
multi-input comparator
noctiluca miliaris surir
non-industrial
nonfireproof
one-eyed
outseams
percent of harmonic distortion
pipe warm-up
poikilodermacongenital
polygonia c-album asakurai
pradco
prevesica
primordial delirium
publishing empires
put a bridle on one's passion
reaon
recalcifications
reciprocating pump
recomplementation
remaynand
reneger
return-to-zero recording
road stead
rotational substitution
Salamonie River
Salāmatābād
sarodist
scanline
scintillator conversion efficiency
selective construct
senhors
shrinking tolerance
shys
signal statement
sintering line
Siròr
slope distance
Sotério, R.
starting-frame delimiter
statement of manufacturing expense
straight back hand saw
synchronized clamping
system certification
thoriated emitter
to raise a point of order
tourmaline rock
trenching body
trimmed value
turreted steamer
urethroscopes
Vacaria
very -low frequency communication
weft fork limiting wire