时间:2018-12-03 作者:英语课 分类:英国文化—oral english


英语课

 In the next few minutes we’re going to be talking about modern manners. It’s an argument that, on the face of it, has been going on between the generations, for hundreds of generations. Older people can often be heard saying the youth of today lack the basics in good behaviour and with newspapers and the media focusing on the anti-social activities of a minority of young people, it’s easy for them to be branded with a negative stereotype 1. So are British manners really getting worse? Our reporter Mark went to find out.


-----Well, I’ve come to a typical UK high street on a weekday to talk to the young mums and dads, business people, elderly people and students that are out doing their shopping. So we should get an interesting mix of views. Let’s go see what people think.
-Excuse me, sir, would you say that manners are getting better or worse in the UK?
"I actually think they’re getting worse. I think that the standards are declining 2 generally. ""I think they are getting worse but not terribly so.""Generally in buses and trains I think that people’s manners have improved in many ways.""There are cultural differences, so you might meet someone from a different culture and your set of manners will quite be different to theirs."-----Well, is it all a question of individual taste or is there some common ground? With me here is Simon Fanshawe, author of a book called ‘The Done Thing’, all about modern British manners.
-Simon, what are the basic dos and don’ts?
-I think one of the things that’s confusing for people is when they come here is there appear to be hundreds and hundreds of rules, hundreds of things you should and shouldn’t do. And the truth of it is that most of them are about class. And lots of them are trip-wires actually for people who don’t know them.
So what I tried to do in my book was take it back to some sort of first principle and say look – there are anthropological 3 reasons why we have certain kinds of manners. So I’ll give you a very good example, in Britain there are sort of two ways of holding a knife, very broadly. And broadly speaking the middle-classes hold it with the index finger on the top, gripped in the hand. And working-class people hold it like a pen. Entirely 4 a class distinction and people mercilessly exploit it if they want to. The truth of it is, the one way not to hold a knife at the table, is clasped 5 in your fist, raised as if to kill your guest. And what does that tell us about eating? Well, what it tells us about eating is two things: it's never confuse your guests with either the food or the enemy. Don’t eat them and don’t kill them!That’s about how you should hold your knife, because actually manners are really about the reduction of violence. There’s a lot in there about reducing violence. So that’s just an illustration of what one tries to do so actually when you look at real table manners they’re about people feeling comfortable with each other, sharing food around a table. Very important human thing.
-And are things actually getting worse?
-Very broadly speaking, we all rub along together pretty well, actually, we don’t do so badly. The trouble with bad manners is that when you experience it, it completely occupies your field of vision. So you feel completely knocked back and rather hurt by somebody.
-Should foreigners, say, comply 6 with British manners when in Britain or should they just be themselves?
-Well I think, one, they should be very gentle with us because we’re not terribly good at understanding that there are lots of different customs from round the world, so you know, be gentle. But I think the thing what I would say to anybody going to any other culture, any other country in the world: Number one – be curious, ask yourself. The other thing is don’t think there’s a right and a wrong way to do things in terms of little funny details. Always remember that fundamentals matter more than anything else. ‘Please’ and ‘Thank You’ is a gift and a grace in any language so treat people in the fundamental purpose of manners which is to make life easier. If I can give you a definition of manners, it is it the reduction of actual or potential violence between strangers. So always seek to defuse conflict, always seek to reach out and offer yourself to other people, always seek to open the door and let them through. Do those kind of things because actually you’ll find people love it and they’ll respond to you.
-Simon Fanshawe, it would be very bad manners of me not to say, ‘thank you’ for coming to talk to us.
-----Our reporter Mark, minding his p’s and q’s there. And that’s it for this time.
 

1 stereotype
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。
2 declining
adj.下降的,衰落的
  • The nub of the matter is that business is declining. 事情的实质是工商业在萎缩。
  • It is encouraging to read that illiteracy is declining. 从读报中了解文盲情况正在好转,这是令人鼓舞的。
3 anthropological
adj.人类学的
  • These facts of responsibility are an anthropological datums- varied and multiform. 这些道德事实是一种人类学资料——性质不同,形式各异。 来自哲学部分
  • It is the most difficult of all anthropological data on which to "draw" the old Negro. 在所有的人类学资料中,最困难的事莫过于“刻划”古代的黑人。 来自辞典例句
4 entirely
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地
  • The fire was entirely caused by their neglect of duty. 那场火灾完全是由于他们失职而引起的。
  • His life was entirely given up to the educational work. 他的一生统统献给了教育工作。
5 clasped
抱紧( clasp的过去式和过去分词 ); 紧紧拥抱; 握紧; 攥紧
  • He leaned forward, his hands clasped tightly together. 他俯身向前,双手十字交错地紧握着。
  • The child clasped the doll tightly. 小孩紧抱着洋娃娃。
6 comply
v.遵照,照做,应允,顺从,服从
  • She was told to pay the fine,but refused to comply.她被通知交纳罚款,但她拒不服从。
  • Candidates must comply strictly with these instructions.候选人必须严格遵守这些指示。
学英语单词
abrasive hardness tester
accokeek
aconitum balfourii stapf.
airplane mother ship
astrogeodesy
atrial siphon
backward-wave oscillation
bactericidal finish
bendroflumethiazide
br?nsted-lowry acid
braked tie rod
bronze work
bucco-occlusal angle
cabalistic
caller's logic address space
caraco
cardiobiomar
cat-tail
cecropia moth
Chatom
chinese pharmacopoeia
colormen
conflagration fire
corduras
Davallia Mariesii
decoloration
dog-collar worker
drygoods
dwey
e - book reader
Egretta
elastic potential energy
erysiphe polygoni dc.
for serious
forward command
french oceanias
Fujithion
gender-equity
Ilha, Pta.da
indigosol printing blue
internal vocal sac
intersender conflict
intracerebroventricularly
ischio-pubic fenestrae
joining with swelled tenon
Kidner
lagrangian integral scale
liangs
lokken
makiwara
medium moor peat
memory package interface
metal sulphide concentrates
microcosmopolitan
mobile navigation
Mobius strip
morant hutch
natural uranium fuel(led) reactor
neurotic anxiety
new-line character
non-technical approach to a technical problem
northpark
Nuannuan District
obstreperously
over-counter
paleosoil
partially inverted file system
Pentacin
Peterzell
plastic bearing
platyphylla
poopahs
pot-shop
prestressed stand
Protomonadida
reducer angle
Robert E Lee's Birthday
rr. viscerales (aort? thoracalis)
sebesite
sedimentary dike
sewadars
smoothing plane
soxhlet extraction
spontaneous abortion
standards and effectiveness unit
sted
streetling
strongylium longissimum
tactical questioning
take your mind off something
threating language
to ... sorrow
Trafonomby
tycoonocrat
uncaped
underdoping
urocanic acid
virtual storage
werturn
xylol bromide
Zionistan