时间:2019-01-25 作者:英语课 分类:词汇大师(Wordmaster)


英语课

Broadcast on "Coast to Coast": January 9, 2003


AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on Wordmaster, we meet an English teacher who plays our program to his students, much to our delight.


RS: What's surprising is that Brian Backman teaches right here in America, and his students are mostly native-born English speakers. Brian teaches at Anacortes High School in Washington State, in the Pacific Northwest.


AA: His special interest is sentence structure. So we thought this would be a good chance to go over some of the basics.


RS: One kind of phrase that Brian Backman finds his students sometimes have trouble with is called a participial phrase.


BACKMAN: "A participial phrase is simply where you take a verb and you use it as an adjective to describe a noun in your sentence. And that causes some problems sometimes because students throw that into a sentence without understanding that it's got to modify something, like an adjective modifies a noun. Let's say you take a sentence like 'Reading a magazine, my dog ran up and began to lick my face.' That sentence makes it sound like the dog is reading the magazine, when what the writer intended to say is 'I was reading a magazine when the dog came up and licked my face.' So 'reading a magazine' is called a participial phrase -- it's a verb, an action, but it describes a person, in this case the person reading the magazine."


AA: So how would he recommend his students rewrite a sentence like that?


BACKMAN: "I would look at that sentence and I would probably say 'While I was reading a magazine, my dog ran up and began to lick my face.' You could also say 'Reading a magazine, I was licked in the face by my dog.' You get into a little bit of passive voice there, which isn't terrible, but you just don't want to overdue 1 too much of that."


RS: ... or start every sentence the typical way, with the subject. That, Brian Backman tells his students, can sound boring.


BACKMAN: "So by having some ways of starting a sentence -- for example, with a participle, it adds some action to the sentence and it also adds some variety. You could also put the participle after the verb. For example, 'Joe, laughing at a joke, almost choked on his pizza.' I could have started it with 'Laughing at a joke, Joe almost choked on his pizza.' And that's the kind of thing writers do, is they play around with their sentences and they understand where things go and where things are clear and where they're not clear, and it just gives you more variety. It also shows you the amazing thing about the English sentence is, there are so many different ways of saying the same thing."


RS: Yet, some ways that sound perfectly 2 fine in spoken English might seem too casual in writing. Brian Backman runs into this issue with his students.


BACKMAN: "You want them to be able to capture that power of spoken language, that freshness that we have, that colloquial 3 quality of the English language, but you also want them to write standard English. And it's oftentimes this struggle of getting them to understand when you write a sentence it has to be understood by somebody who can't ask you a question. So it has to be clear, the syntax has to be clear, read it aloud, make sure there's only one meaning based on what you wrote, and not some unintended meaning or some silly meaning like the dangling 4 modifier or dangling participle. But still you don't want it to sound like a computer wrote it, or a bureaucrat 5 wrote it. You want it to still be your sentence."


AA: "Now, for the 11 years that you've been teaching English, that's sort of tracked the time of the rise of electronic mail communication, e-mail, instant messaging, and this sort of language that we've seen spring up of kids writing back-and-forth in a very sort of abbreviated 6 shorthand. Are you seeing that creeping into their writing at all?"


BACKMAN: "I think probably because students write a lot of e-mail and things like that, and instant messaging, they tend to condense the language. Some English teachers see that as a bad thing, I see it as enlivening the language, really, because it's adding new words and a freshness to our language. Just like, you know, students have forever been using slang. Some of those slang terms and phrases we use today, without even realizing that at one time they were slang and they were seen as non-standard English, and I see it as something that's constantly enlivening our language. And that's the great thing about English is we don't have an academy like the French do."


AA: But he says it's a challenge to get students to know when it's OK to use slang and when it's not.


BACKMAN: "We talk about audience, think about who you're writing to, whether it's a speech or whether it's a piece of writing, an essay, think about who your audience is and make it appropriate. And that's just a lesson that I have to continue to reiterate 7 to students, that you just cannot talk the same way to everybody. And that's a problem, because in our culture we've become more comfortable with speaking to everybody the same."


RS: Brian Backman teaches at Anacortes High School, north of Seattle. He's written a book called "Building Sentence Skills: Tools for Writing the Amazing English Sentence," published just this week by Teacher Created Materials.


AA: Brian found our program on our Web site, and you can too. It's voanews.com/wordmaster. And our e-mail address is word@voanews.com. With Rosanne Skirble, I'm Avi Arditti.



adj.过期的,到期未付的;早该有的,迟到的
  • The plane is overdue and has been delayed by the bad weather.飞机晚点了,被坏天气耽搁了。
  • The landlady is angry because the rent is overdue.女房东生气了,因为房租过期未付。
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地
  • The witnesses were each perfectly certain of what they said.证人们个个对自己所说的话十分肯定。
  • Everything that we're doing is all perfectly above board.我们做的每件事情都是光明正大的。
adj.口语的,会话的
  • It's hard to understand the colloquial idioms of a foreign language.外语里的口头习语很难懂。
  • They have little acquaintance with colloquial English. 他们对英语会话几乎一窍不通。
悬吊着( dangle的现在分词 ); 摆动不定; 用某事物诱惑…; 吊胃口
  • The tooth hung dangling by the bedpost, now. 结果,那颗牙就晃来晃去吊在床柱上了。
  • The children sat on the high wall,their legs dangling. 孩子们坐在一堵高墙上,摇晃着他们的双腿。
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。
v.重申,反复地说
  • Let me reiterate that we have absolutely no plans to increase taxation.让我再一次重申我们绝对没有增税的计划。
  • I must reiterate that our position on this issue is very clear.我必须重申我们对这一项议题的立场很清楚。
学英语单词
acid-digestion sludge
affiliation
aircraft weight control
alarmest
angioneurotic gangrene
angle of obliguity
anisosphygmia
apigenidin chloride
auties
bedges
can fill box
catacrotic limb
CBAMA
cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide
Chaadayevo
child molester
chinging
choke bean
comminuent
contortions
crowings
demand notes
departure message
disk bursting test
divergence of wave
eastchester
electric caterpillar crane
Euratoms
ex-centric
excipulum porprius
expounds
facsimile (fax)
fibroma molluscum gravidarum
foraminiferans
gage glass bracket
gammerstang
Gondwana flora
grind away at one's studies
heartsinks
high duty malleable cast iron
Hydroxydaunomycin
hypervelocity free flow
inertia fuze
interruption control routine
intestinal sepsis
Ketter diode
kisses-of-life
l'ami
labber
larkings
lightheart
linear polymer
liquid pressure nitriding
loose hold of
misacts
moist subhumid climate
Montenero
morana
mottelson
musculi intercostales
non-combustion material
nucleus centralis pontis
Omemee
oral spine
parabolic stress-strain curve
Pasir, Pulau
permed
planning control and decision evaluation
playwhite
polar nets
Poopelloe L.
promise land
propagation of traveling waves
pyralin
random fixation(wright 1931)of gene
renal plexus
scheduled period
sherie
sixth-formers
solubilities product
specular reflection direction
sports-information
starlighted
stewards
Swertia patula
Taccaceae
tadago-pies
telepathed
thiamazole
tillets
traumatic disease
tropic cyclone
two-tailed exponential distribution
ultra-lean
un-fired combined cycle with heat recovery steam generator
updown flip-flop
ursa
vitriol plant
western wood pewees
whitefin dolphin
widows bewitched
Williment