【英文短篇小说】YOU'RE UGLY, TOO
时间:2019-01-23 作者:英语课 分类:英文短篇小说
英语课
You had to get out of them occasionally, those Illinois towns with the funny names: Paris, Oblong, Normal. Once, when the Dow Jones dipped two hundred points, a local paper boasted the banner headline
"NORMAL MAN MARRIES OBLONG WOMAN." They knew what was important. They did! But you had to get out once in a while, even if it was just across the border to Terre Haute for a movie.
Outside of Paris, in the middle of a large field, was a scatter 1 of brick buildings, a small liberal-arts college by the improbable name of Hilldale-Versailles. Zoe Hendricks had been teaching American history there for three years. She taught "The Revolution and Beyond" to freshmen 2 and sophomores 3, and every third semester she had the senior seminar for majors, and although her student evaluations 4 had been slipping in the last year and a half — Professor Hendricks is often late for class and usually arrives with a cup of hot chocolate, which she offers the class sips 5 of— generally the department of nine men was pleased to have her. They felt she added some needed feminine touch to the corridors — that faint trace of Obsession 6 and sweat, the light, fast clicking of heels. Plus they had had a sex-discrimination suit, and the dean had said, well, it was time.
The situation was not easy for her, they knew. Once, at the start of last semester, she had skipped into her lecture hall singing "Getting to Know You" — all of it. At the request of the dean, the chairman had called her into his office, but did not ask her for an explanation, not really. He asked her how she was and then smiled in an avuncular 7 way. She said, "Fine," and he studied the way she said it, her front teeth catching 8 on the inside of her lower Up. She was almost pretty, but her face showed the strain and ambition of always having been close but not quite. There was too much effort with the eyeliner, and her earrings 9, worn, no doubt, for the drama her features lacked, were a little frightening, jutting 10 out the sides of her head like antennae 11.
"I'm going out of my mind," said Zoe to her younger sister, Evan, in Manhattan. Professor Hendricks seems to know the entire soundtrack to "The King and I." Is this history? Zoe phoned her every Tuesday.
"You always say that," said Evan, "but then you go on your trips and vacations and then you settle back into things and then you're quiet for a while and then you say you're fine, you're busy, and then after a while you say you're going crazy again, and you start all over." Evan was a part-time food designer for photo shoots. She cooked vegetables in green dye. She propped 12 up beef stew 13 with a bed of marbles and shopped for new kinds of silicone sprays and plastic ice cubes. She thought her life was O.K. She was living with her boyfriend of many years, who was independently wealthy and had an amusing little job in book publishing. They were five years out of college, and they lived in a luxury midtown high rise with a balcony and access to a pool. "It's not the same as having your own pool," Evan was always sighing, as if to let Zoe know that, as with Zoe, there were still things she, Evan, had to do without.
"Illinois. It makes me sarcastic 14 to be here," said Zoe on the phone.
She used to insist it was irony 15, something gently layered and sophisticated, something alien to the Midwest, but her students kept calling it sarcasm 16, something they felt qualified 17 to recognize, and now she had to agree. It wasn't irony. "What is your perfume?" a student once asked her. "Room freshener," she said. She smiled, but he looked at her, unnerved.
Her students were by and large good midwesterners, spacey with estrogen from large quantities of meat and eggs. They shared their parents' suburban 18 values; their parents had given them things, things, things. They were complacent 19. They had been purchased. They were armed with a healthy vagueness about anything historical or geo-graphic. They seemed actually to know very little about anything, but they were good-natured about it. "All those states in the East are so tiny and jagged and bunched up," complained one of her undergraduates the week she was lecturing on "The Turning Point of Independence: The Battle at Saratoga." "Professor Hendricks, you're from Delaware originally, right?" the student asked her.
"Maryland," corrected Zoe.
"Aw," he said, waving his hand dismissively. "New England."
Her articles — chapters toward a book called Hearing the One About: Uses of Humor in the American Presidency 20 — were generally well received, though they came slowly for her. She liked her pieces to have something from every time of day in them — she didn't trust things written in the morning only — so she reread and rewrote painstakingly 21.
No part of a day — its moods, its light — was allowed to dominate. She hung on to a piece for a year sometimes, revising at all hours, until the entirety of a day had registered there.
The job she'd had before the one at Hilldale-Versailles had been at a small college in New Geneva, Minnesota, Land of the Dying Shopping Mall. Everyone was so blond there that brunettes were often presumed to be from foreign countries. Just because Professor Hendricks is from Spain doesn't give her the right to be so negative about our country There was a general emphasis on cheerfulness. In New Geneva you weren't supposed to be critical or complain. You weren't supposed to notice that the town had overextended and that its shopping malls were raggedy and going under. You were never to say you weren't "fine, thank you — and yourself?" You were supposed to be Heidi. You were supposed to lug 22 goat milk up the hills and not think twice. Heidi did not complain.
Heidi did not do things like stand in front of the new IBM photocopier 23 saying, "If this fucking Xerox 24 machine breaks on me one more time, I'm going to slit 25 my wrists."
But now in her second job, in her fourth year of teaching in the Midwest, Zoe was discovering something she never suspected she had: a crusty edge, brittle 26 and pointed 27. Once she had pampered 28 her students, singing them songs, letting them call her at home even, and ask personal questions, but now she was losing sympathy. They were beginning to seem different. They were beginning to seem demanding and spoiled.
"You act," said one of her senior-seminar students at a scheduled conference, "like your opinion is worth more than everyone else's in the class."
Zoe's eyes widened. "I am the teacher," she said. "I do get paid to act like that." She narrowed her gaze at the student, who was wearing a big leather bow in her hair like a cowgirl in a TV ranch 29 show. "I mean, otherwise everybody in the class would have little offices and office hours." Sometimes Professor Hendricks will take up the class's time just talking about movies she's seen. She stared at the student some more, then added, "I bet you'd like that."
"Maybe I sound whiny 30 to you," said the girl, "but I simply want my history major to mean something."
"Well, there's your problem," said Zoe, and, with a smile, she showed the student to the door. "I like your bow," she said.
Zoe lived for the mail, for the postman — that handsome blue jay — and when she got a real letter with a real full-price stamp from someplace else, she took it to bed with her and read it over and over. She also watched television until all hours and had her set in the bedroom — a bad sign. Professor Hendricks has said critical things about Fawn 32 Hall, the Catholic religion, and the whole state of Illinois. It is unbelievable. At Christmastime she gave twenty-dollar tips to the mailman and to Jerry, the only cabbie in town, whom she had gotten to know from all her rides to and from the Terre Haute airport, and who, since he realized such rides were an extravagance, often gave her cut rates.
"I'm flying in to visit you this weekend," announced Zoe.
"I was hoping you would," said Evan. "Charlie and I are having a party for Halloween. It'll be fun."
"I have a costume already. It's a bonehead. It's this thing that looks like a giant bone going through your head."
"Great," said Evan.
"It is, it's great."
"All I have is my moon mask from last year and the year before. I'll probably end up getting married in it."
"Are you and Charlie getting married?" Zoe felt slightly alarmed.
"Hmmmmmmnnno, not immediately."
"Don't get married."
"Why?"
"Just not yet. You're too young."
"You're only saying that because you're five years older than I am and you're not married."
"I'm not married? Oh, my God," said Zoe, "I forgot to get married."
Zoe had been out with three men since she'd come to Hilldale-Versailles. One of them was a man in the municipal bureaucracy who had fixed 33 a parking ticket she'd brought in to protest and then asked her out for coffee. At first, she thought he was amazing — at last, someone who did not want Heidi! But soon she came to realize that all men, deep down, wanted Heidi. Heidi with cleavage. Heidi with outfits 34. The parking-ticket bureaucrat 35 soon became tired and intermittent 36. One cool fall day, in his snazzy, impractical 37 convertible 38, when she asked him what was wrong he said, "You would not be ill served by new clothes, you know."
She wore a lot of gray-green corduroy. She had been under the impression that it brought out her eyes, those shy stars. She flicked 39 an ant from her sleeve.
"Did you have to brush that off in the car?" he said, driving. He glanced down at his own pectorals, giving first the left, then the right, a quick survey. He was wearing a tight shirt.
"Excuse me?"
He slowed down at an amber 40 light and frowned. "Couldn't you have picked it up and thrown it outside?"
"The ant? It might have bitten me. I mean, what difference does it make?"
"It might have bitten you! Ha! How ridiculous! Now it's going to lay eggs in my car!"
The second guy was sweeter, lunkier, though not insensitive to certain paintings and songs, but too often, too, things he'd do or say would startle her. Once, in a restaurant, he stole the garnishes 41 off her dinner plate and waited for her to notice. When she didn't, he finally thrust his fist across the table and said, "Look," and when he opened it, there was her parsley sprig and her orange slice crumpled 42 to a wad. Another time, he described to her his recent trip to the Louvre. "And there I was in front of Delacroix's The Barque of Dante, and everyone else had wandered off, so I had my own private audience with it, all those agonized 43 shades splayed in every direction, and there's this motion in that painting that starts at the bottom, swirling 44 and building up into the red fabric 45 of Dante's hood 46, swirling out into the distance, where you see these orange flames — " He was breathless in the telling. She found this touching 47, and smiled in encouragement. "A painting like that," he said, shaking his head. "It just makes you shit."
"I have to ask you something," said Evan. "I know every woman complains about not meeting men, but really, on my shoots I meet a lot of men. And they're not all gay, either." She paused. "Not anymore."
"What are you asking?"
The third guy was a political-science professor named Murray Peterson, who liked to go out on double dates with colleagues whose wives he was attracted to. Usually, the wives would consent to flirt 48 with him.
Under the table sometimes there was footsie, and once there was even kneesie. Zoe and the husband would be left to their food, staring into their water glasses, chewing like goats. "Oh, Murray," said one wife, who had never finished her master's in physical therapy and wore great clothes. "You know, I know everything about you: your birthday, your license-plate number. I have everything memorized. But then that's the kind of mind I have. Once, at a dinner party, I amazed the host by getting up and saying goodbye to every single person there, first and last names."
"I knew a dog who could do that," said Zoe with her mouth full.
Murray and the wife looked at her with vexed 49 and rebuking 50 expressions, but the husband seemed suddenly twinkling and amused. Zoe swallowed. "It was a talking Lab, and after about ten minutes of listening to the dinner conversation this dog knew everyone's name. You could say, 'Take this knife to Murray Peterson,' and it would."
"Really," said the wife, frowning, and Murray Peterson never called again.
"Are you seeing anyone?" said Evan. "I'm asking for a particular reason. I'm not just being like Mom."
"I'm seeing my house. I'm tending to it when it wets, when it cries, when it throws up." Zoe had bought a mint-green ranch house near campus, though now she was thinking that maybe she shouldn't have. It was hard to live in a house. She kept wandering in and out of the rooms, wondering where she had put things. She went downstairs into the basement for no reason at all except that it amused her to own a basement. It also amused her to own a tree.
Her parents, in Maryland, had been very pleased that one of their children had at last been able to afford real estate, and when she closed on the house they sent her flowers with a congratulations card. Her mother had even UPS'd a box of old decorating magazines saved over the years — photographs of beautiful rooms her mother used to moon over, since there never had been any money to redecorate. It was like getting her mother's pornography, that box, inheriting her drooled-upon fantasies, the endless wish and tease that had been her life. But to her mother it was a rite 51 of passage that pleased her. "Maybe you will get some ideas from these," she had written. And when Zoe looked at the photographs, at the bold and beautiful living rooms, she was filled with longing 52. Ideas and ideas of longing.
Right now Zoe's house was rather empty. The previous owner had wallpapered around the furniture, leaving strange gaps and silhouettes 53 on the walls, and Zoe hadn't done much about that yet. She had bought furniture, then taken it back, furnishing and unfurnishing, preparing and shedding, like a womb. She had bought several plain pine chests to use as love seats or boot boxes, but they came to look to her more and more like children's coffins 54, so she returned them. And she had recently bought an Oriental rug for the living room, with Chinese symbols on it she didn't understand. The salesgirl had kept saying she was sure they meant "Peace" and "Eternal Life," but when Zoe got the rug home she worried. What if they didn't mean "Peace" and "Eternal Life"? What if they meant, say, "Bruce Springsteen"? And the more she thought about it, the more she became convinced she had a rug that said "Bruce Springsteen," and so she returned that, too.
She had also bought a little baroque mirror for the front entryway, which, she had been told by Murray Peterson, would keep away evil spirits. The mirror, however, tended to frighten her, startling her with an image of a woman she never recognized. Sometimes she looked puffier and plainer than she remembered. Sometimes shifty and dark.
Most times she just looked vague. "You look like someone I know,"
she had been told twice in the last year by strangers in restaurants in Terre Haute. In fact, sometimes she seemed not to have a look of her own, or any look whatsoever 55, and it began to amuse her that her students and colleagues were able to recognize her at all. How did they know? When she walked into a room, how did she look so that they knew it was she? Like this? Did she look like this? And so she returned the mirror.
"The reason I'm asking is that I know a man I think you should meet," said Evan. "He's fun. He's straight. He's single. That's all I'm going to say."
"I think I'm too old for fun," said Zoe. She had a dark bristly hair in her chin, and she could feel it now with her finger. Perhaps when you had been without the opposite sex for too long, you began to resemble them. In an act of desperate invention, you began to grow your own. "I just want to come, wear my bonehead, visit with Charlie's tropical fish, ask you about your food shoots."
She thought about all the papers on "Our Constitution: How It Affects Us" she was going to have to correct. She thought about how she was going in for ultrasound tests on Friday, because, according to her doctor and her doctor's assistant, she had a large, mysterious growth in her abdomen 56. Gallbladder, they kept saying. Or ovaries or colon 57.
"You guys practice medicine?" asked Zoe, aloud, after they had left the room. Once, as a girl, she brought her dog to a vet 58, who had told her, "Well, either your dog has worms or cancer or else it was hit by a car."
She was looking forward to New York.
"Well, whatever. We'll just play it cool. I can't wait to see you, hon.
Don't forget your bonehead," said Evan.
"A bonehead you don't forget," said Zoe.
"I suppose," said Evan.
The ultrasound Zoe was keeping a secret, even from Evan. "I feel like I'm dying," Zoe had hinted just once on the phone.
"You're not dying," said Evan, "you're just annoyed."
"Ultrasound," Zoe now said jokingly to the technician who put the cold jelly on her bare stomach. "Does that sound like a really great stereo system or what?"
She had not had anyone make this much fuss over her bare stomach since her boyfriend in graduate school, who had hovered 59 over her whenever she felt ill, waved his arms, pressed his hands upon her navel, and drawled evangelically, "Heal! Heal for thy Baby Jesus' sake!" Zoe would laugh and they would make love, both secretly hoping she would get pregnant. Later they would worry together, and he would sink a cheek to her belly 60 and ask whether she was late, was she late, was she sure, she might be late, and when after two years she had not gotten pregnant they took to quarreling and drifted apart.
"O.K.," said the technician absently.
The monitor was in place, and Zoe's insides came on the screen in all their gray and ribbony hollowness. They were marbled in the finest gradations of black and white, like stone in an old church or a picture of the moon. "Do you suppose," she babbled 61 at the technician, "that the rise in infertility 62 among so many couples in this country is due to completely different species trying to reproduce?" The technician moved the scanner around and took more pictures. On one view in particular, on Zoe's right side, the technician became suddenly alert, the machine he was operating clicking away.
Zoe stared at the screen. "That must be the growth you found there," suggested Zoe.
"I can't tell you anything," said the technician rigidly 63. "Your doctor will get the radiologist's report this afternoon and will phone you then."
"I'll be out of town," said Zoe.
"I'm sorry," said the technician.
Driving home, Zoe looked in the rearview mirror and decided 64 she looked — well, how would one describe it? A little wan 31. She thought of the joke about the guy who visits his doctor and the doctor says, "Well, I'm sorry to say, you've got six weeks to live."
"I want a second opinion," says the guy. You act like your opinion is worth more than everyone else's in the class.
"You want a second opinion? O.K.," says the doctor. "You're ugly, too." She liked that joke. She thought it was terribly, terribly funny.
She took a cab to the airport. Jerry the cabbie was happy to see her.
"Have fun in New York," he said, getting her bag out of the trunk. He liked her, or at least he always acted as if he did. She called him Jare.
"Thanks, Jare."
"You know, I'll tell you a secret: I've never been to New York. I'll tell you two secrets: I've never been on a plane." And he waved at her sadly as she pushed her way in through the terminal door. "Or an escalator!" he shouted.
The trick to flying safely, Zoe always said, was to never buy a discount ticket and to tell yourself you had nothing to live for anyway, so that when the plane crashed it was no big deal. Then, when it didn't crash, when you succeeded in keeping it aloft with your own worthlessness, all you had to do was stagger off, locate your luggage, and, by the time a cab arrived, come up with a persuasive 65 reason to go on living.
"You're here!" shrieked 66 Evan over the doorbell, before she even opened the door. Then she opened it wide. Zoe set her bags on the hall floor and hugged Evan hard. When she was little, Evan had always been affectionate and devoted 67. Zoe had always taken care of her — advising, reassuring 68— until recently, when it seemed Evan had started advising and reassuring her. It startled Zoe. She suspected it had something to do with her being alone. It made people uncomfortable.
"How are you?"
"I threw up on the plane. Besides that, I'm O.K."
"Can I get you something? Here, let me take your suitcase. Sick on the plane. Eeeyew."
"It was into one of those sickness bags," said Zoe, just in case Evan thought she'd lost it in the aisle 69. "I was very quiet."
The apartment was spacious 70 and bright, with a view all the way downtown along the East Side. There was a balcony, and sliding glass doors. "I keep forgetting how nice this apartment is. Twenty-first floor, doorman . . ." Zoe could work her whole life and never have an apartment like this. So could Evan. It was Charlie's apartment. He and Evan lived in it like two kids in a dorm, beer cans and clothes strewn around.
Evan put Zoe's bag away from the mess, over by the fish tanks. "I'm so glad you're here," she said. "Now what can I get you?"
Evan made them lunch — soup from a can and saltines.
"I don't know about Charlie," she said after they had finished. "I feel like we've gone all sexless and middle-aged 71 already."
"Hmmm," said Zoe. She leaned back into Evan's sofa and stared out the window at the dark tops of the buildings. It seemed a little unnatural 72 to live up in the sky like this, like birds that out of some wrong-headed derring-do had nested too high. She nodded toward the lighted fish tanks and giggled 73. "I feel like a bird," she said, "with my own personal supply of fish."
Evan sighed. "He comes home and just sacks out on the sofa, watching fuzzy football. He's wearing the psychic 74 cold cream and curlers, if you know what I mean."
Zoe sat up, readjusted the sofa cushions. "What's fuzzy football?"
"We haven't gotten cable yet. Everything comes in fuzzy. Charlie just watches it that way."
"Hmm, yeah, that's a little depressing," Zoe said. She looked at her hands. "Especially the part about not having cable."
"This is how he gets into bed at night." Evan stood up to demonstrate. "He whips all his clothes off, and when he gets to his underwear he lets it drop to one ankle. Then he kicks up his leg and flips 75 the underwear in the air and catches it. I, of course, watch from the bed.
There's nothing else. There's just that."
"NORMAL MAN MARRIES OBLONG WOMAN." They knew what was important. They did! But you had to get out once in a while, even if it was just across the border to Terre Haute for a movie.
Outside of Paris, in the middle of a large field, was a scatter 1 of brick buildings, a small liberal-arts college by the improbable name of Hilldale-Versailles. Zoe Hendricks had been teaching American history there for three years. She taught "The Revolution and Beyond" to freshmen 2 and sophomores 3, and every third semester she had the senior seminar for majors, and although her student evaluations 4 had been slipping in the last year and a half — Professor Hendricks is often late for class and usually arrives with a cup of hot chocolate, which she offers the class sips 5 of— generally the department of nine men was pleased to have her. They felt she added some needed feminine touch to the corridors — that faint trace of Obsession 6 and sweat, the light, fast clicking of heels. Plus they had had a sex-discrimination suit, and the dean had said, well, it was time.
The situation was not easy for her, they knew. Once, at the start of last semester, she had skipped into her lecture hall singing "Getting to Know You" — all of it. At the request of the dean, the chairman had called her into his office, but did not ask her for an explanation, not really. He asked her how she was and then smiled in an avuncular 7 way. She said, "Fine," and he studied the way she said it, her front teeth catching 8 on the inside of her lower Up. She was almost pretty, but her face showed the strain and ambition of always having been close but not quite. There was too much effort with the eyeliner, and her earrings 9, worn, no doubt, for the drama her features lacked, were a little frightening, jutting 10 out the sides of her head like antennae 11.
"I'm going out of my mind," said Zoe to her younger sister, Evan, in Manhattan. Professor Hendricks seems to know the entire soundtrack to "The King and I." Is this history? Zoe phoned her every Tuesday.
"You always say that," said Evan, "but then you go on your trips and vacations and then you settle back into things and then you're quiet for a while and then you say you're fine, you're busy, and then after a while you say you're going crazy again, and you start all over." Evan was a part-time food designer for photo shoots. She cooked vegetables in green dye. She propped 12 up beef stew 13 with a bed of marbles and shopped for new kinds of silicone sprays and plastic ice cubes. She thought her life was O.K. She was living with her boyfriend of many years, who was independently wealthy and had an amusing little job in book publishing. They were five years out of college, and they lived in a luxury midtown high rise with a balcony and access to a pool. "It's not the same as having your own pool," Evan was always sighing, as if to let Zoe know that, as with Zoe, there were still things she, Evan, had to do without.
"Illinois. It makes me sarcastic 14 to be here," said Zoe on the phone.
She used to insist it was irony 15, something gently layered and sophisticated, something alien to the Midwest, but her students kept calling it sarcasm 16, something they felt qualified 17 to recognize, and now she had to agree. It wasn't irony. "What is your perfume?" a student once asked her. "Room freshener," she said. She smiled, but he looked at her, unnerved.
Her students were by and large good midwesterners, spacey with estrogen from large quantities of meat and eggs. They shared their parents' suburban 18 values; their parents had given them things, things, things. They were complacent 19. They had been purchased. They were armed with a healthy vagueness about anything historical or geo-graphic. They seemed actually to know very little about anything, but they were good-natured about it. "All those states in the East are so tiny and jagged and bunched up," complained one of her undergraduates the week she was lecturing on "The Turning Point of Independence: The Battle at Saratoga." "Professor Hendricks, you're from Delaware originally, right?" the student asked her.
"Maryland," corrected Zoe.
"Aw," he said, waving his hand dismissively. "New England."
Her articles — chapters toward a book called Hearing the One About: Uses of Humor in the American Presidency 20 — were generally well received, though they came slowly for her. She liked her pieces to have something from every time of day in them — she didn't trust things written in the morning only — so she reread and rewrote painstakingly 21.
No part of a day — its moods, its light — was allowed to dominate. She hung on to a piece for a year sometimes, revising at all hours, until the entirety of a day had registered there.
The job she'd had before the one at Hilldale-Versailles had been at a small college in New Geneva, Minnesota, Land of the Dying Shopping Mall. Everyone was so blond there that brunettes were often presumed to be from foreign countries. Just because Professor Hendricks is from Spain doesn't give her the right to be so negative about our country There was a general emphasis on cheerfulness. In New Geneva you weren't supposed to be critical or complain. You weren't supposed to notice that the town had overextended and that its shopping malls were raggedy and going under. You were never to say you weren't "fine, thank you — and yourself?" You were supposed to be Heidi. You were supposed to lug 22 goat milk up the hills and not think twice. Heidi did not complain.
Heidi did not do things like stand in front of the new IBM photocopier 23 saying, "If this fucking Xerox 24 machine breaks on me one more time, I'm going to slit 25 my wrists."
But now in her second job, in her fourth year of teaching in the Midwest, Zoe was discovering something she never suspected she had: a crusty edge, brittle 26 and pointed 27. Once she had pampered 28 her students, singing them songs, letting them call her at home even, and ask personal questions, but now she was losing sympathy. They were beginning to seem different. They were beginning to seem demanding and spoiled.
"You act," said one of her senior-seminar students at a scheduled conference, "like your opinion is worth more than everyone else's in the class."
Zoe's eyes widened. "I am the teacher," she said. "I do get paid to act like that." She narrowed her gaze at the student, who was wearing a big leather bow in her hair like a cowgirl in a TV ranch 29 show. "I mean, otherwise everybody in the class would have little offices and office hours." Sometimes Professor Hendricks will take up the class's time just talking about movies she's seen. She stared at the student some more, then added, "I bet you'd like that."
"Maybe I sound whiny 30 to you," said the girl, "but I simply want my history major to mean something."
"Well, there's your problem," said Zoe, and, with a smile, she showed the student to the door. "I like your bow," she said.
Zoe lived for the mail, for the postman — that handsome blue jay — and when she got a real letter with a real full-price stamp from someplace else, she took it to bed with her and read it over and over. She also watched television until all hours and had her set in the bedroom — a bad sign. Professor Hendricks has said critical things about Fawn 32 Hall, the Catholic religion, and the whole state of Illinois. It is unbelievable. At Christmastime she gave twenty-dollar tips to the mailman and to Jerry, the only cabbie in town, whom she had gotten to know from all her rides to and from the Terre Haute airport, and who, since he realized such rides were an extravagance, often gave her cut rates.
"I'm flying in to visit you this weekend," announced Zoe.
"I was hoping you would," said Evan. "Charlie and I are having a party for Halloween. It'll be fun."
"I have a costume already. It's a bonehead. It's this thing that looks like a giant bone going through your head."
"Great," said Evan.
"It is, it's great."
"All I have is my moon mask from last year and the year before. I'll probably end up getting married in it."
"Are you and Charlie getting married?" Zoe felt slightly alarmed.
"Hmmmmmmnnno, not immediately."
"Don't get married."
"Why?"
"Just not yet. You're too young."
"You're only saying that because you're five years older than I am and you're not married."
"I'm not married? Oh, my God," said Zoe, "I forgot to get married."
Zoe had been out with three men since she'd come to Hilldale-Versailles. One of them was a man in the municipal bureaucracy who had fixed 33 a parking ticket she'd brought in to protest and then asked her out for coffee. At first, she thought he was amazing — at last, someone who did not want Heidi! But soon she came to realize that all men, deep down, wanted Heidi. Heidi with cleavage. Heidi with outfits 34. The parking-ticket bureaucrat 35 soon became tired and intermittent 36. One cool fall day, in his snazzy, impractical 37 convertible 38, when she asked him what was wrong he said, "You would not be ill served by new clothes, you know."
She wore a lot of gray-green corduroy. She had been under the impression that it brought out her eyes, those shy stars. She flicked 39 an ant from her sleeve.
"Did you have to brush that off in the car?" he said, driving. He glanced down at his own pectorals, giving first the left, then the right, a quick survey. He was wearing a tight shirt.
"Excuse me?"
He slowed down at an amber 40 light and frowned. "Couldn't you have picked it up and thrown it outside?"
"The ant? It might have bitten me. I mean, what difference does it make?"
"It might have bitten you! Ha! How ridiculous! Now it's going to lay eggs in my car!"
The second guy was sweeter, lunkier, though not insensitive to certain paintings and songs, but too often, too, things he'd do or say would startle her. Once, in a restaurant, he stole the garnishes 41 off her dinner plate and waited for her to notice. When she didn't, he finally thrust his fist across the table and said, "Look," and when he opened it, there was her parsley sprig and her orange slice crumpled 42 to a wad. Another time, he described to her his recent trip to the Louvre. "And there I was in front of Delacroix's The Barque of Dante, and everyone else had wandered off, so I had my own private audience with it, all those agonized 43 shades splayed in every direction, and there's this motion in that painting that starts at the bottom, swirling 44 and building up into the red fabric 45 of Dante's hood 46, swirling out into the distance, where you see these orange flames — " He was breathless in the telling. She found this touching 47, and smiled in encouragement. "A painting like that," he said, shaking his head. "It just makes you shit."
"I have to ask you something," said Evan. "I know every woman complains about not meeting men, but really, on my shoots I meet a lot of men. And they're not all gay, either." She paused. "Not anymore."
"What are you asking?"
The third guy was a political-science professor named Murray Peterson, who liked to go out on double dates with colleagues whose wives he was attracted to. Usually, the wives would consent to flirt 48 with him.
Under the table sometimes there was footsie, and once there was even kneesie. Zoe and the husband would be left to their food, staring into their water glasses, chewing like goats. "Oh, Murray," said one wife, who had never finished her master's in physical therapy and wore great clothes. "You know, I know everything about you: your birthday, your license-plate number. I have everything memorized. But then that's the kind of mind I have. Once, at a dinner party, I amazed the host by getting up and saying goodbye to every single person there, first and last names."
"I knew a dog who could do that," said Zoe with her mouth full.
Murray and the wife looked at her with vexed 49 and rebuking 50 expressions, but the husband seemed suddenly twinkling and amused. Zoe swallowed. "It was a talking Lab, and after about ten minutes of listening to the dinner conversation this dog knew everyone's name. You could say, 'Take this knife to Murray Peterson,' and it would."
"Really," said the wife, frowning, and Murray Peterson never called again.
"Are you seeing anyone?" said Evan. "I'm asking for a particular reason. I'm not just being like Mom."
"I'm seeing my house. I'm tending to it when it wets, when it cries, when it throws up." Zoe had bought a mint-green ranch house near campus, though now she was thinking that maybe she shouldn't have. It was hard to live in a house. She kept wandering in and out of the rooms, wondering where she had put things. She went downstairs into the basement for no reason at all except that it amused her to own a basement. It also amused her to own a tree.
Her parents, in Maryland, had been very pleased that one of their children had at last been able to afford real estate, and when she closed on the house they sent her flowers with a congratulations card. Her mother had even UPS'd a box of old decorating magazines saved over the years — photographs of beautiful rooms her mother used to moon over, since there never had been any money to redecorate. It was like getting her mother's pornography, that box, inheriting her drooled-upon fantasies, the endless wish and tease that had been her life. But to her mother it was a rite 51 of passage that pleased her. "Maybe you will get some ideas from these," she had written. And when Zoe looked at the photographs, at the bold and beautiful living rooms, she was filled with longing 52. Ideas and ideas of longing.
Right now Zoe's house was rather empty. The previous owner had wallpapered around the furniture, leaving strange gaps and silhouettes 53 on the walls, and Zoe hadn't done much about that yet. She had bought furniture, then taken it back, furnishing and unfurnishing, preparing and shedding, like a womb. She had bought several plain pine chests to use as love seats or boot boxes, but they came to look to her more and more like children's coffins 54, so she returned them. And she had recently bought an Oriental rug for the living room, with Chinese symbols on it she didn't understand. The salesgirl had kept saying she was sure they meant "Peace" and "Eternal Life," but when Zoe got the rug home she worried. What if they didn't mean "Peace" and "Eternal Life"? What if they meant, say, "Bruce Springsteen"? And the more she thought about it, the more she became convinced she had a rug that said "Bruce Springsteen," and so she returned that, too.
She had also bought a little baroque mirror for the front entryway, which, she had been told by Murray Peterson, would keep away evil spirits. The mirror, however, tended to frighten her, startling her with an image of a woman she never recognized. Sometimes she looked puffier and plainer than she remembered. Sometimes shifty and dark.
Most times she just looked vague. "You look like someone I know,"
she had been told twice in the last year by strangers in restaurants in Terre Haute. In fact, sometimes she seemed not to have a look of her own, or any look whatsoever 55, and it began to amuse her that her students and colleagues were able to recognize her at all. How did they know? When she walked into a room, how did she look so that they knew it was she? Like this? Did she look like this? And so she returned the mirror.
"The reason I'm asking is that I know a man I think you should meet," said Evan. "He's fun. He's straight. He's single. That's all I'm going to say."
"I think I'm too old for fun," said Zoe. She had a dark bristly hair in her chin, and she could feel it now with her finger. Perhaps when you had been without the opposite sex for too long, you began to resemble them. In an act of desperate invention, you began to grow your own. "I just want to come, wear my bonehead, visit with Charlie's tropical fish, ask you about your food shoots."
She thought about all the papers on "Our Constitution: How It Affects Us" she was going to have to correct. She thought about how she was going in for ultrasound tests on Friday, because, according to her doctor and her doctor's assistant, she had a large, mysterious growth in her abdomen 56. Gallbladder, they kept saying. Or ovaries or colon 57.
"You guys practice medicine?" asked Zoe, aloud, after they had left the room. Once, as a girl, she brought her dog to a vet 58, who had told her, "Well, either your dog has worms or cancer or else it was hit by a car."
She was looking forward to New York.
"Well, whatever. We'll just play it cool. I can't wait to see you, hon.
Don't forget your bonehead," said Evan.
"A bonehead you don't forget," said Zoe.
"I suppose," said Evan.
The ultrasound Zoe was keeping a secret, even from Evan. "I feel like I'm dying," Zoe had hinted just once on the phone.
"You're not dying," said Evan, "you're just annoyed."
"Ultrasound," Zoe now said jokingly to the technician who put the cold jelly on her bare stomach. "Does that sound like a really great stereo system or what?"
She had not had anyone make this much fuss over her bare stomach since her boyfriend in graduate school, who had hovered 59 over her whenever she felt ill, waved his arms, pressed his hands upon her navel, and drawled evangelically, "Heal! Heal for thy Baby Jesus' sake!" Zoe would laugh and they would make love, both secretly hoping she would get pregnant. Later they would worry together, and he would sink a cheek to her belly 60 and ask whether she was late, was she late, was she sure, she might be late, and when after two years she had not gotten pregnant they took to quarreling and drifted apart.
"O.K.," said the technician absently.
The monitor was in place, and Zoe's insides came on the screen in all their gray and ribbony hollowness. They were marbled in the finest gradations of black and white, like stone in an old church or a picture of the moon. "Do you suppose," she babbled 61 at the technician, "that the rise in infertility 62 among so many couples in this country is due to completely different species trying to reproduce?" The technician moved the scanner around and took more pictures. On one view in particular, on Zoe's right side, the technician became suddenly alert, the machine he was operating clicking away.
Zoe stared at the screen. "That must be the growth you found there," suggested Zoe.
"I can't tell you anything," said the technician rigidly 63. "Your doctor will get the radiologist's report this afternoon and will phone you then."
"I'll be out of town," said Zoe.
"I'm sorry," said the technician.
Driving home, Zoe looked in the rearview mirror and decided 64 she looked — well, how would one describe it? A little wan 31. She thought of the joke about the guy who visits his doctor and the doctor says, "Well, I'm sorry to say, you've got six weeks to live."
"I want a second opinion," says the guy. You act like your opinion is worth more than everyone else's in the class.
"You want a second opinion? O.K.," says the doctor. "You're ugly, too." She liked that joke. She thought it was terribly, terribly funny.
She took a cab to the airport. Jerry the cabbie was happy to see her.
"Have fun in New York," he said, getting her bag out of the trunk. He liked her, or at least he always acted as if he did. She called him Jare.
"Thanks, Jare."
"You know, I'll tell you a secret: I've never been to New York. I'll tell you two secrets: I've never been on a plane." And he waved at her sadly as she pushed her way in through the terminal door. "Or an escalator!" he shouted.
The trick to flying safely, Zoe always said, was to never buy a discount ticket and to tell yourself you had nothing to live for anyway, so that when the plane crashed it was no big deal. Then, when it didn't crash, when you succeeded in keeping it aloft with your own worthlessness, all you had to do was stagger off, locate your luggage, and, by the time a cab arrived, come up with a persuasive 65 reason to go on living.
"You're here!" shrieked 66 Evan over the doorbell, before she even opened the door. Then she opened it wide. Zoe set her bags on the hall floor and hugged Evan hard. When she was little, Evan had always been affectionate and devoted 67. Zoe had always taken care of her — advising, reassuring 68— until recently, when it seemed Evan had started advising and reassuring her. It startled Zoe. She suspected it had something to do with her being alone. It made people uncomfortable.
"How are you?"
"I threw up on the plane. Besides that, I'm O.K."
"Can I get you something? Here, let me take your suitcase. Sick on the plane. Eeeyew."
"It was into one of those sickness bags," said Zoe, just in case Evan thought she'd lost it in the aisle 69. "I was very quiet."
The apartment was spacious 70 and bright, with a view all the way downtown along the East Side. There was a balcony, and sliding glass doors. "I keep forgetting how nice this apartment is. Twenty-first floor, doorman . . ." Zoe could work her whole life and never have an apartment like this. So could Evan. It was Charlie's apartment. He and Evan lived in it like two kids in a dorm, beer cans and clothes strewn around.
Evan put Zoe's bag away from the mess, over by the fish tanks. "I'm so glad you're here," she said. "Now what can I get you?"
Evan made them lunch — soup from a can and saltines.
"I don't know about Charlie," she said after they had finished. "I feel like we've gone all sexless and middle-aged 71 already."
"Hmmm," said Zoe. She leaned back into Evan's sofa and stared out the window at the dark tops of the buildings. It seemed a little unnatural 72 to live up in the sky like this, like birds that out of some wrong-headed derring-do had nested too high. She nodded toward the lighted fish tanks and giggled 73. "I feel like a bird," she said, "with my own personal supply of fish."
Evan sighed. "He comes home and just sacks out on the sofa, watching fuzzy football. He's wearing the psychic 74 cold cream and curlers, if you know what I mean."
Zoe sat up, readjusted the sofa cushions. "What's fuzzy football?"
"We haven't gotten cable yet. Everything comes in fuzzy. Charlie just watches it that way."
"Hmm, yeah, that's a little depressing," Zoe said. She looked at her hands. "Especially the part about not having cable."
"This is how he gets into bed at night." Evan stood up to demonstrate. "He whips all his clothes off, and when he gets to his underwear he lets it drop to one ankle. Then he kicks up his leg and flips 75 the underwear in the air and catches it. I, of course, watch from the bed.
There's nothing else. There's just that."
vt.撒,驱散,散开;散布/播;vi.分散,消散
- You pile everything up and scatter things around.你把东西乱堆乱放。
- Small villages scatter at the foot of the mountain.村庄零零落落地散布在山脚下。
n.(中学或大学的)一年级学生( freshman的名词复数 )
- We are freshmen and they are sophomores. 我们是一年级学生,他们是二年级学生。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- University freshmen get lots of razzing, but they like the initiation. 大一新生受各种嘲弄,但是他们对这种入门经验甘之如饴。 来自辞典例句
n.(中等、专科学校或大学的)二年级学生( sophomore的名词复数 )
- We are freshmen and they are sophomores. 我们是一年级学生,他们是二年级学生。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- Over half the students in the course are sophomores. 听这门课的一大半是二年级学生。 来自辞典例句
估价( evaluation的名词复数 ); 赋值; 估计价值; [医学]诊断
- In fact, our moral evaluations are merely expressions of our desires. 事实上,我们的道德评价只是我们欲望的表达形式。 来自哲学部分
- Properly speaking, however, these evaluations and insights are not within the concept of official notice. 但准确地讲,这些评估和深远见识并未包括在官方通知概念里。
n.小口喝,一小口的量( sip的名词复数 )v.小口喝,呷,抿( sip的第三人称单数 )
- You must administer them slowly, allowing the child to swallow between sips. 你应慢慢给药,使小儿在吸吮之间有充分的时间吞咽。 来自辞典例句
- Emission standards applicable to preexisting stationary sources appear in state implementation plans (SIPs). 在《州实施计划》中出现了固定污染的排放标准。 来自英汉非文学 - 环境法 - 环境法
n.困扰,无法摆脱的思想(或情感)
- I was suffering from obsession that my career would be ended.那时的我陷入了我的事业有可能就此终止的困扰当中。
- She would try to forget her obsession with Christopher.她会努力忘记对克里斯托弗的迷恋。
adj.叔伯般的,慈祥的
- He began to talk in his most gentle and avuncular manner.他开始讲话了,态度极其和蔼而慈祥。
- He was now playing the role of disinterested host and avuncular mentor.他现在正扮演着慷慨的主人和伯父似的指导人的角色。
adj.易传染的,有魅力的,迷人的,接住
- There are those who think eczema is catching.有人就是认为湿疹会传染。
- Enthusiasm is very catching.热情非常富有感染力。
n.耳环( earring的名词复数 );耳坠子
- a pair of earrings 一对耳环
- These earrings snap on with special fastener. 这付耳环是用特制的按扣扣上去的。 来自《简明英汉词典》
v.(使)突出( jut的现在分词 );伸出;(从…)突出;高出
- The climbers rested on a sheltered ledge jutting out from the cliff. 登山者在悬崖的岩棚上休息。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- The soldier saw a gun jutting out of some bushes. 那士兵看见丛林中有一枝枪伸出来。 来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
n.天线;触角
- Sometimes a creature uses a pair of antennae to swim.有时某些动物使用其一对触须来游泳。
- Cuba's government said that Cubans found watching American television on clandestine antennae would face three years in jail.古巴政府说那些用秘密天线收看美国电视的古巴人将面临三年监禁。
支撑,支持,维持( prop的过去式和过去分词 )
- He sat propped up in the bed by pillows. 他靠着枕头坐在床上。
- This fence should be propped up. 这栅栏该用东西支一支。
n.炖汤,焖,烦恼;v.炖汤,焖,忧虑
- The stew must be boiled up before serving.炖肉必须煮熟才能上桌。
- There's no need to get in a stew.没有必要烦恼。
adj.讥讽的,讽刺的,嘲弄的
- I squashed him with a sarcastic remark.我说了一句讽刺的话把他给镇住了。
- She poked fun at people's shortcomings with sarcastic remarks.她冷嘲热讽地拿别人的缺点开玩笑。
n.反语,冷嘲;具有讽刺意味的事,嘲弄
- She said to him with slight irony.她略带嘲讽地对他说。
- In her voice we could sense a certain tinge of irony.从她的声音里我们可以感到某种讥讽的意味。
n.讥讽,讽刺,嘲弄,反话 (adj.sarcastic)
- His sarcasm hurt her feelings.他的讽刺伤害了她的感情。
- She was given to using bitter sarcasm.她惯于用尖酸刻薄语言挖苦人。
adj.合格的,有资格的,胜任的,有限制的
- He is qualified as a complete man of letters.他有资格当真正的文学家。
- We must note that we still lack qualified specialists.我们必须看到我们还缺乏有资质的专家。
adj.城郊的,在郊区的
- Suburban shopping centers were springing up all over America. 效区的商业中心在美国如雨后春笋般地兴起。
- There's a lot of good things about suburban living.郊区生活是有许多优点。
adj.自满的;自鸣得意的
- We must not become complacent the moment we have some success.我们决不能一见成绩就自满起来。
- She was complacent about her achievements.她对自己的成绩沾沾自喜。
n.总统(校长,总经理)的职位(任期)
- Roosevelt was elected four times to the presidency of the United States.罗斯福连续当选四届美国总统。
- Two candidates are emerging as contestants for the presidency.两位候选人最终成为总统职位竞争者。
n.柄,突出部,螺帽;(英)耳朵;(俚)笨蛋;vt.拖,拉,用力拖动
- Nobody wants to lug around huge suitcases full of clothes.谁都不想拖着个装满衣服的大箱子到处走。
- Do I have to lug those suitcases all the way to the station?难道非要我把那些手提箱一直拉到车站去吗?
n.复印机
- You've left your master in the photocopier.你把原件留在影印机里了。
- If the photocopier stops working,just give it a clout.如果那部影印机停止运转的话就敲它一下。
n./v.施乐复印机,静电复印
- Xerox and Lucent are two more high-tech companies run by women.施乐和朗讯是另外两家由女性经营的大科技公司。
- You cannot take it home,but you can xerox it.你不能把它带回家,但可以复印。
n.狭长的切口;裂缝;vt.切开,撕裂
- The coat has been slit in two places.这件外衣有两处裂开了。
- He began to slit open each envelope.他开始裁开每个信封。
adj.易碎的;脆弱的;冷淡的;(声音)尖利的
- The pond was covered in a brittle layer of ice.池塘覆盖了一层易碎的冰。
- She gave a brittle laugh.她冷淡地笑了笑。
adj.尖的,直截了当的
- He gave me a very sharp pointed pencil.他给我一支削得非常尖的铅笔。
- She wished to show Mrs.John Dashwood by this pointed invitation to her brother.她想通过对达茨伍德夫人提出直截了当的邀请向她的哥哥表示出来。
adj.饮食过量的,饮食奢侈的v.纵容,宠,娇养( pamper的过去式和过去分词 )
- The lazy scum deserve worse. What if they ain't fed up and pampered? 他们吃不饱,他们的要求满足不了,这又有什么关系? 来自飘(部分)
- She petted and pampered him and would let no one discipline him but she, herself. 她爱他,娇养他,而且除了她自己以外,她不允许任何人管教他。 来自辞典例句
n.大牧场,大农场
- He went to work on a ranch.他去一个大农场干活。
- The ranch is in the middle of a large plateau.该牧场位于一个辽阔高原的中部。
adj. 好发牢骚的, 嘀咕不停的, 烦躁的
- People get rude and whiny when they are exhausted. 人们在精疲力竭的时候会变得粗野,爱发牢骚。
- People get rude and whiny and exacting when they are exhausted. 人在筋疲力尽的时候会变得粗暴、爱发牢骚而苛求。
(wide area network)广域网
- The shared connection can be an Ethernet,wireless LAN,or wireless WAN connection.提供共享的网络连接可以是以太网、无线局域网或无线广域网。
n.未满周岁的小鹿;v.巴结,奉承
- A fawn behind the tree looked at us curiously.树后面一只小鹿好奇地看着我们。
- He said you fawn on the manager in order to get a promotion.他说你为了获得提拔,拍经理的马屁。
adj.固定的,不变的,准备好的;(计算机)固定的
- Have you two fixed on a date for the wedding yet?你们俩选定婚期了吗?
- Once the aim is fixed,we should not change it arbitrarily.目标一旦确定,我们就不应该随意改变。
n.全套装备( outfit的名词复数 );一套服装;集体;组织v.装备,配置设备,供给服装( outfit的第三人称单数 )
- He jobbed out the contract to a number of small outfits. 他把承包工程分包给许多小单位。 来自辞典例句
- Some cyclists carry repair outfits because they may have a puncture. 有些骑自行车的人带修理工具,因为他们车胎可能小孔。 来自辞典例句
n. 官僚作风的人,官僚,官僚政治论者
- He was just another faceless bureaucrat.他只不过是一个典型呆板的官员。
- The economy is still controlled by bureaucrats.经济依然被官僚们所掌控。
adj.间歇的,断断续续的
- Did you hear the intermittent sound outside?你听见外面时断时续的声音了吗?
- In the daytime intermittent rains freshened all the earth.白天里,时断时续地下着雨,使整个大地都生气勃勃了。
adj.不现实的,不实用的,不切实际的
- He was hopelessly impractical when it came to planning new projects.一到规划新项目,他就完全没有了实际操作的能力。
- An entirely rigid system is impractical.一套完全死板的体制是不实际的。
adj.可改变的,可交换,同意义的;n.有活动摺篷的汽车
- The convertible sofa means that the apartment can sleep four.有了这张折叠沙发,公寓里可以睡下4个人。
- That new white convertible is totally awesome.那辆新的白色折篷汽车简直棒极了。
(尤指用手指或手快速地)轻击( flick的过去式和过去分词 ); (用…)轻挥; (快速地)按开关; 向…笑了一下(或瞥了一眼等)
- She flicked the dust off her collar. 她轻轻弹掉了衣领上的灰尘。
- I idly picked up a magazine and flicked through it. 我漫不经心地拿起一本杂志翻看着。
n.琥珀;琥珀色;adj.琥珀制的
- Would you like an amber necklace for your birthday?你过生日想要一条琥珀项链吗?
- This is a piece of little amber stones.这是一块小小的琥珀化石。
n.(为色香味而添加的)装饰菜( garnish的名词复数 );装饰,装饰品v.给(上餐桌的食物)加装饰( garnish的第三人称单数 )
- Garnishes are terrific for making good drinks look even better. 装饰可以让好的饮品看上去更好,却不能让挽救不好的饮料。 来自互联网
- A slender skewer, usually ornamented at the top, used decoratively, especially in serving garnishes. 一种细长的叉状物,通常顶部有点缀,用作装饰,尤其在食品装饰中。 来自互联网
v.使(极度)痛苦,折磨( agonize的过去式和过去分词 );苦斗;苦苦思索;感到极度痛苦
- All the time they agonized and prayed. 他们一直在忍受痛苦并且祈祷。 来自《现代英汉综合大词典》
- She agonized herself with the thought of her loss. 她念念不忘自己的损失,深深陷入痛苦之中。 来自辞典例句
v.旋转,打旋( swirl的现在分词 )
- Snowflakes were swirling in the air. 天空飘洒着雪花。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
- She smiled, swirling the wine in her glass. 她微笑着,旋动着杯子里的葡萄酒。 来自辞典例句
n.织物,织品,布;构造,结构,组织
- The fabric will spot easily.这种织品很容易玷污。
- I don't like the pattern on the fabric.我不喜欢那块布料上的图案。
n.头巾,兜帽,覆盖;v.罩上,以头巾覆盖
- She is wearing a red cloak with a hood.她穿着一件红色带兜帽的披风。
- The car hood was dented in.汽车的发动机罩已凹了进去。
v.调情,挑逗,调戏;n.调情者,卖俏者
- He used to flirt with every girl he met.过去他总是看到一个姑娘便跟她调情。
- He watched the stranger flirt with his girlfriend and got fighting mad.看着那个陌生人和他女朋友调情,他都要抓狂了。
adj.争论不休的;(指问题等)棘手的;争论不休的问题;烦恼的v.使烦恼( vex的过去式和过去分词 );使苦恼;使生气;详细讨论
- The conference spent days discussing the vexed question of border controls. 会议花了几天的时间讨论边境关卡这个难题。
- He was vexed at his failure. 他因失败而懊恼。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
责难或指责( rebuke的现在分词 )
- Rebuking people who disagree with them. 指责和自己意见不同的人。
- We could hear the director rebuking Jim for being late from work again. 我们听得见主任在斥辞责吉姆上班又迟到了。
n.典礼,惯例,习俗
- This festival descends from a religious rite.这个节日起源于宗教仪式。
- Most traditional societies have transition rites at puberty.大多数传统社会都为青春期的孩子举行成人礼。
n.(for)渴望
- Hearing the tune again sent waves of longing through her.再次听到那首曲子使她胸中充满了渴望。
- His heart burned with longing for revenge.他心中燃烧着急欲复仇的怒火。
轮廓( silhouette的名词复数 ); (人的)体形; (事物的)形状; 剪影
- Now that darkness was falling, only their silhouettes were outlined against the faintly glimmering sky. 这时节两山只剩余一抹深黑,赖天空微明为画出一个轮廓。 来自汉英文学 - 散文英译
- They could see silhouettes. 他们能看得见影子的。
n.棺材( coffin的名词复数 );使某人早亡[死,完蛋,垮台等]之物
- The shop was close and hot, and the atmosphere seemed tainted with the smell of coffins. 店堂里相当闷热,空气仿佛被棺木的味儿污染了。 来自辞典例句
- Donate some coffins to the temple, equal to the number of deaths. 到寺庙里,捐赠棺材盒给这些死者吧。 来自电影对白
adv.(用于否定句中以加强语气)任何;pron.无论什么
- There's no reason whatsoever to turn down this suggestion.没有任何理由拒绝这个建议。
- All things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you,do ye even so to them.你想别人对你怎样,你就怎样对人。
n.腹,下腹(胸部到腿部的部分)
- How to know to there is ascarid inside abdomen?怎样知道肚子里面有蛔虫?
- He was anxious about an off-and-on pain the abdomen.他因时隐时现的腹痛而焦虑。
n.冒号,结肠,直肠
- Here,too,the colon must be followed by a dash.这里也是一样,应当在冒号后加破折号。
- The colon is the locus of a large concentration of bacteria.结肠是大浓度的细菌所在地。
n.兽医,退役军人;vt.检查
- I took my dog to the vet.我把狗带到兽医诊所看病。
- Someone should vet this report before it goes out.这篇报道发表之前应该有人对它进行详查。
鸟( hover的过去式和过去分词 ); 靠近(某事物); (人)徘徊; 犹豫
- A hawk hovered over the hill. 一只鹰在小山的上空翱翔。
- A hawk hovered in the blue sky. 一只老鹰在蓝色的天空中翱翔。
n.肚子,腹部;(像肚子一样)鼓起的部分,膛
- The boss has a large belly.老板大腹便便。
- His eyes are bigger than his belly.他眼馋肚饱。
v.喋喋不休( babble的过去式和过去分词 );作潺潺声(如流水);含糊不清地说话;泄漏秘密
- He babbled the secret out to his friends. 他失口把秘密泄漏给朋友了。 来自《简明英汉词典》
- She babbled a few words to him. 她对他说了几句不知所云的话。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.不肥沃,不毛;不育
- It is the Geneva, Switzerland-based Biotech Company's second recombinant infertility drug. 它是瑞士生物技术公司在日内瓦的公司生产的第二种重组治疗不孕症的药。 来自英汉非文学 - 生命科学 - 生物技术制药疫苗
- Endometritis is a cause of infertility. 子宫内膜炎是不育的原子。 来自辞典例句
adv.刻板地,僵化地
- Life today is rigidly compartmentalized into work and leisure. 当今的生活被严格划分为工作和休闲两部分。
- The curriculum is rigidly prescribed from an early age. 自儿童时起即已开始有严格的课程设置。
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的
- This gave them a decided advantage over their opponents.这使他们比对手具有明显的优势。
- There is a decided difference between British and Chinese way of greeting.英国人和中国人打招呼的方式有很明显的区别。
adj.有说服力的,能说得使人相信的
- His arguments in favour of a new school are very persuasive.他赞成办一座新学校的理由很有说服力。
- The evidence was not really persuasive enough.证据并不是太有说服力。
v.尖叫( shriek的过去式和过去分词 )
- She shrieked in fright. 她吓得尖叫起来。
- Li Mei-t'ing gave a shout, and Lu Tzu-hsiao shrieked, "Tell what? 李梅亭大声叫,陆子潇尖声叫:“告诉什么? 来自汉英文学 - 围城
adj.忠诚的,忠实的,热心的,献身于...的
- He devoted his life to the educational cause of the motherland.他为祖国的教育事业贡献了一生。
- We devoted a lengthy and full discussion to this topic.我们对这个题目进行了长时间的充分讨论。
a.使人消除恐惧和疑虑的,使人放心的
- He gave her a reassuring pat on the shoulder. 他轻拍了一下她的肩膀让她放心。
- With a reassuring pat on her arm, he left. 他鼓励地拍了拍她的手臂就离开了。
n.(教堂、教室、戏院等里的)过道,通道
- The aisle was crammed with people.过道上挤满了人。
- The girl ushered me along the aisle to my seat.引座小姐带领我沿着通道到我的座位上去。
adj.广阔的,宽敞的
- Our yard is spacious enough for a swimming pool.我们的院子很宽敞,足够建一座游泳池。
- The room is bright and spacious.这房间很豁亮。
adj.中年的
- I noticed two middle-aged passengers.我注意到两个中年乘客。
- The new skin balm was welcome by middle-aged women.这种新护肤香膏受到了中年妇女的欢迎。
adj.不自然的;反常的
- Did her behaviour seem unnatural in any way?她有任何反常表现吗?
- She has an unnatural smile on her face.她脸上挂着做作的微笑。
v.咯咯地笑( giggle的过去式和过去分词 )
- The girls giggled at the joke. 女孩子们让这笑话逗得咯咯笑。
- The children giggled hysterically. 孩子们歇斯底里地傻笑。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.对超自然力敏感的人;adj.有超自然力的
- Some people are said to have psychic powers.据说有些人有通灵的能力。
- She claims to be psychic and to be able to foretell the future.她自称有特异功能,能预知未来。