时间:2019-03-16 作者:英语课 分类:王迈迈大学英语四级预测与详解


英语课

   [00:04.29]Section A


  [00:05.92]11. W: You still have to wait an hour, so relax.
  [00:09.99]M: Relax? How can I when I'm so anxious about the interview.
  [00:14.07]Q: What does the man mean?
  [00:31.70]12. W: I thought Amy majored in mathematics in college,
  [00:35.57]but now she has just found a job as an engineer in a building company.
  [00:40.05]M: That's true, after studying mathematics for three years,
  [00:43.57]she changed her major.
  [00:45.56]Q: What's true of Amy?
  [01:03.32]13. W: Why don't you try to leave your office at 6:15
  [01:07.06]and I'll try to pick you up at 6:30.
  [01:09.89]M: That may be a little late if we want to be sure of getting good seats.
  [01:14.36]I think I'd rather leave here at 6:00.
  [01:17.46]Q: When will the man probably meet the woman?
  [01:35.98]14. W:I can't stand this class. It's so boring.
  [01:40.89]M: Well, you might as well as get used to it.
  [01:43.19]It's required, and you have to take it in order to graduate.
  [01:46.77]Q: How does the woman feel about the class?
  [02:05.33]15. M: Well, I'd better go , Sue 1.
  [02:08.44]Look after yourself while I'm away. Goodbye, darling.
  [02:11.68]W: You'll write everything, won't you?
  [02:14.52]Q: What's the probable 2 relationship between them?
  [02:33.20]16. W: I know the coat is a bit too large,
  [02:36.72]but it was such a good buy.
  [02:38.56]I'm going to keep it.
  [02:39.82]M: Well, that doesn't make any sense to me.
  [02:43.17]Q: Why did the woman want to keep the coat?
  [03:01.77]17. M: Our teacher can speak English like an American,
  [03:05.39]even though his native language is Spanish.
  [03:08.95]W: Yes, and he speaks French and German, too.
  [03:11.85]Q: What's the teacher's native language?
  [03:30.79]18. M: How's Mary feeling today?
  [03:33.91]W: She's still running a temperature.
  [03:36.12]Q: What does the woman say about Mary?
  [03:55.95]Now you'll hear two long conversations.
  [03:59.44]Conversation One
  [04:01.75]M: Mum! 
  [04:02.75]W: Yeah, Micky.
  [04:04.25]M: Can I have a really good snack? 
  [04:06.68]W: Uh, I don't know. I think it's  …  uh  …
  [04:09.45]what time's it? I think it's going on dinner.
  [04:12.58]M: Uh, it's three thirty.
  [04:15.43]W: Three thirty. Uh …  We'd better wait.
  [04:18.40]M: Why, Mum?
  [04:19.88]W: Well, what kind of snack do you want? 
  [04:21.80]M: Candy?
  [04:22.45]W: No, candy is out. Oh, how about some broccoli 3? Uh, carrots?
  [04:28.66]Well, what else can you suggest?
  [04:31.32]M: Candy.
  [04:32.43]W: Candy. No, I don't think …
  [04:34.80]I think you'd better wait.
  [04:37.25]M: A Sandwich? A spinach 4 sandwich?
  [04:39.79]W: Sandwich? Spinach sandwich! When did you start liking 5 spinach?
  [04:44.57]M: Uh, today.
  [04:45.96]W: Well, what about a small sandwich? 
  [04:48.17]M: Okay.
  [04:48.98]W: Okay, I'll  in a minute.
  [04:51.01]Play with your toys while you're waiting for it.
  [04:53.80]Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
  [04:59.62]19. Why doesn't the mother give her son something to eat?
  [05:19.45]20. What snack does the boy want at the beginning of the conversation?
  [05:39.19]21. What snack does the boy want to eat at last?
  [05:58.83]22. What does the mother ask the boy to do while she is preparing the snack?
  [06:19.77]Conversation Two
  [06:22.01]M: Uh, where am I?
  [06:24.33]W: Excuse me. Do you need any help? 
  [06:26.72]M: Nah, I … I'm just looking … well …
  [06:30.26]Uh, well, actually … yeah. Um …
  [06:33.61]I want to go to the science museum,
  [06:36.19]but I've been lost for the past few hours,
  [06:38.94]and I can't  use ticket machines.
  [06:41.43]W: Ah, well, just press this button.
  [06:44.06]And from here, it's a dollar fifty.
  [06:47.38]M: Okay.
  [06:48.49]W: Then, get on the train at  number 4.
  [06:51.44]M: Alright. Oh, and how often do the trains come around this time of day?
  [06:56.36]W: Usually, they come about every six minutes.
  [06:59.33]M: Okay. And where do I get off the train? 
  [07:02.63]W: Get off at State Street Station, three stops from here.
  [07:07.32]M: Okay. I got it. Thanks for your help.
  [07:09.76]W: No problem. Good luck.
  [07:12.20]Questions 23 to 25 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
  [07:17.85]23. Where does the man want to go?
  [07:36.00]24. How often do the trains come?
  [07:54.57]25. Where should the man get off the train?
  [08:14.23]Section B
  [08:16.16]Passage One
  [08:17.88]It was not until one hundred and fifty years ago
  [08:20.80]hat scientists learned 6 about the existence of dinosaurs 8.
  [08:24.93]Thanks to an English doctor and his wife,
  [08:27.34]the door was opened to this zoological study.
  [08:30.80]Reasoning that these animals' tremendous 9 size
  [08:34.23]must have made them terrible creatures,
  [08:36.84]scientists combined two Greek words,
  [08:40.30]deimos, meaning terrible, and saros, meaning lizards 10,
  [08:44.06]to form the word dinosaur 7.
  [08:46.24]After many years of study,
  [08:47.50]they determined 11 that these beasts roamed 12 the earth for millions of years,
  [08:51.71]and ceased 13 to exist some sixty million years ago.
  [08:55.50]Unbelievable as it may seem,
  [08:57.63]not all dinosaurs were carnivorous, that is, meat eating.
  [09:00.73]Many were herbivorous, or vegetarians 14.
  [09:03.52]By reassembling the bones found at digging sites,
  [09:07.41]scientists have been able to reconstruct the skeletons 15
  [09:10.70]and learn great deal about the dinosaur's living conditions.
  [09:14.64]They have learned that dinosaurs inhabited 16 not only the land,
  [09:18.26]but also the water and sky.
  [09:21.44]Questions 26 to 29 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  [09:27.92]26. By what name did scientists call these creatures?
  [09:47.82]27. When do scientists believe that the last of the dinosaurs disappeared?
  [10:08.48]28. How have scientists been able to learn of the living conditions of these animals?
  [10:29.54]29. Which of the following is not true of these animals?
  [10:49.96]Passage Two
  [10:51.67]Robert Edwards became blind in an car accident nine years ago.
  [10:56.58]He was also partially 17 deaf because of old age.
  [11:01.13]Last week, he was taking a walk near his home
  [11:04.28]when a thunderstorm approached.
  [11:06.81]He hid under a tree and was struck by lightning.
  [11:10.34]He was knocked to the ground and woke up some twenty minutes later,
  [11:14.31]lying face down in bed.
  [11:16.84]A short time later, he awoke;
  [11:18.99]his legs were unfeeling and he was trembling,
  [11:22.52]but, when he opened his eyes,
  [11:24.28]he could see the clock across the room fading in and out in front of him.
  [11:29.62]When his wife entered,
  [11:30.89]he saw her for the first time in nine years.
  [11:34.61]Doctors confirm the flash of lightning,
  [11:37.32]but they are unable to explain the occurrence 18.
  [11:40.72]The only possible explanation offered by one doctor was that,
  [11:44.67]since Edwards lost his sight as a result of injury in a terrible accident,
  [11:50.41]perhaps the only way it could be restored 19 was by another injury.
  [11:55.85]Questions 30 to 32 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  [12:01.56]30. What was the first thing that he saw after being struck by lightning?
  [12:21.84]31. Which of the statements is not true?
  [12:40.60]32. What was the reason given by one doctor that Edwards could see again?
  [13:01.92]Passage Three
  [13:03.83]In America, where labor 20 costs are so high,
  [13:07.48]"do it yourself" is a way of life.
  [13:09.81]Many people repair their own cars,
  [13:12.07]build their own garages,
  [13:13.43]and even rebuild their own houses.
  [13:15.66]Soon many of them will also be writing their own books.
  [13:19.15]In Hollywood there is a company that publishes children's book
  [13:22.95]with the help of computers.
  [13:24.86]Although other book companies also publish that way,
  [13:28.09]this company is not like the others.
  [13:30.03]It allows the reader to become the leading character in the stories
  [13:34.17]with the help of computers.
  [13:36.25]Here is how they do it.
  [13:38.09]Let us suppose the child is named Henry.
  [13:41.20]He lives in New York, and has a god named Jody.
  [13:44.62]The computer uses this information to make up a story with pictures.
  [13:48.86]The story is then printed up.
  [13:50.69]A child who receives such a book might say,
  [13:53.96]"This book is about me." So the company calls itself
  [13:57.40]the "Me Books Publishing Company".
  [13:59.91]Children like the Me Books because they like to see
  [14:03.46]in print their own names an the names of their friends and their pets.
  [14:07.73]But more important, in this way,
  [14:09.54]readers are much more interested in reading the stories.
  [14:13.25]Me Books are helping 21 a child to learn how to read.
  [14:16.97]Questions 33 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  [14:23.52]33. Why do Americans do most things themselves?
  [14:42.69]34. What distinguishes 22 this company from the others?
  [15:01.57]35. What are the "Me Books"?
  [15:13.53]Section C
  [15:15.17]Many people who are rich are also well known.
  [15:19.28]Ted Sweenay was an exception 23 to this rule.
  [15:23.12]His family moved to San Francisco from Los Angeles
  [15:26.77]when he was one month old.
  [15:29.26]That's where he grew up.
  [15:31.04]At the age of seventeen,
  [15:32.60]he was hit by a train.
  [15:34.77]Although he was not seriously hurt,
  [15:36.96]the railroad 24 paid him $ 25,000.
  [15:41.18]Instead of going to college,
  [15:42.76]he bought a small store.
  [15:44.73]Six months later,
  [15:45.86]the government bought his land to build a new highway.
  [15:49.34]He sold it for $95,000.
  [15:52.91]With this money he moved to Detroit.
  [15:55.71]He started a small company that made parts for the car manufacturers 25.
  [16:01.20]It was very successful and by the time he was 23 he was a millionaire.
  [16:07.78]When he was 24 he got married.
  [16:10.38]He and his wife had three daughters in the next five years.
  [16:15.08]By the time he was 30 he had over ten million dollars.
  [16:19.51]Then tragedy struck,
  [16:21.60]he was involved in a traffic accident.
  [16:24.54]He did not die but his wife and daughters did.
  [16:28.14]Six months later he sold everything he owned
  [16:31.32]and put his money in stocks 26.
  [16:33.77]Ted then moved to New York.
  [16:36.46]He lived for the next forty years in a one room apartment.
  [16:40.80]He spent most of his days wandering through the city
  [16:44.56]looking in garbage cans for food.
  [16:46.81]He never cooked.
  [16:48.16]He rarely talked to anyone except himself.
  [16:51.80]Most people were afraid of him.
  [16:54.35]His clothes were always old and dirty!
  [16:58.40]Shortly before he died,
  [16:59.81]he moves back to Los Angeles.
  [17:02.34]After spending two weeks there he was put in jail 27
  [17:05.84]because he had no money and no job.
  [17:08.71]City workers tried to help him.
  [17:11.11]They offered him work but he would not work.
  [17:13.97]Towards the end he would not talk to anyone at all.
  [17:18.22]When he died he was a lonely man.
  [17:21.20]But someone remembered his name.
  [17:24.13]They knew he had lived in Detroit and had been successful.
  [17:29.00]It was learned that he had put his stocks in a box at a Detroit bank.
  [17:34.95]After they were sold and all the taxes paid,
  [17:38.49]there was still over a hundred million dollars left.
  [17:45.90]Many people who are rich are also well known.
  [17:49.41]Ted Sweenay was an exception to this rule.
  [17:54.13]His family moved to San Francisco from Los Angeles
  [17:57.64]when he was one month old.
  [18:01.33]That's where he grew up.
  [18:03.27]At the age of seventeen,
  [18:04.75]he was hit by a train.
  [18:07.64]Although he was not seriously hurt,
  [18:11.15]the railroad paid him $ 25,000.
  [18:15.59]Instead of going to college,
  [18:16.87]he bought a small store.
  [18:18.93]Six months later,
  [18:20.06]the government bought his land to build a new highway.
  [18:24.48]He sold it for $95,000.
  [18:28.06]With this money he moved to Detroit.
  [18:30.82]He started a small company that made parts for the car manufacturers.
  [18:38.52]It was very successful and by the time he was 23 he was a millionaire.
  [18:45.97]When he was 24 he got married.
  [18:48.65]He and his wife had three daughters in the next five years.
  [18:53.40]By the time he was 30 he had over ten million dollars.
  [18:57.64]Then tragedy struck,
  [18:59.69]he was involved in a traffic accident.
  [19:03.02]He did not die but his wife and daughters did.
  [19:06.26]Six months later he sold everything he owned
  [19:09.49]and put his money in stocks.
  [20:01.94]Ted then moved to New York.
  [20:04.56]He lived for the next forty years in a one room apartment.
  [20:08.89]He spent most of his days wandering through the city
  [20:12.47]looking in garbage cans for food.
  [20:14.99]He never cooked.
  [20:16.27]He rarely talked to anyone except himself.
  [20:19.93]Most people were afraid of him.
  [21:12.63]His clothes were always old and dirty!
  [21:16.51]Shortly before he died,
  [21:17.94]he moves back to Los Angeles.
  [21:20.48]After spending two weeks there he was put in jail
  [21:23.75]because he had no money and no job.
  [21:26.83]City workers tried to help him.
  [21:29.17]They offered him work but he would not work.
  [21:32.08]Towards the end he would not talk to anyone at all.
  [21:36.33]When he died he was a lonely man.
  [21:39.27]But someone remembered his name.
  [21:42.22]They knew he had lived in Detroit and had been successful.
  [21:47.17]It was learned that he had put his stocks in a box at a Detroit bank.
  [21:53.06]After they were sold and all the taxes paid,
  [21:56.65]there was still over a hundred million dollars left.
  [22:51.00][22:51.32]Many people who are rich are also well known.
  [22:54.70][22:54.72]Ted Sweenay was an exception to this rule.
  [22:58.57][22:56.47]His family moved to San Francisco from Los Angeles
  [23:02.16]when he was one month old.
  [23:04.66]That's where he grew up.
  [23:06.43]At the age of seventeen,
  [23:08.04]he was hit by a train.
  [23:10.17]Although he was not seriously hurt,
  [23:12.42]the railroad paid him $ 25,000.
  [23:16.51]Instead of going to college,
  [23:18.16]he bought a small store.
  [23:20.20]Six months later,
  [23:21.30]the government bought his land to build a new highway.
  [23:24.73]He sold it for $95,000.
  [23:28.30]With this money he moved to Detroit.
  [23:31.08]He started a small company that made parts for the car manufacturers.
  [23:36.61]It was very successful and by the time he was 23 he was a millionaire.
  [23:43.25]When he was 24 he got married.
  [23:45.86]He and his wife had three daughters in the next five years.
  [23:50.58]By the time he was 30 he had over ten million dollars.
  [23:54.89]Then tragedy struck,
  [23:57.01]he was involved in a traffic accident.
  [24:00.31]He did not die but his wife and daughters did.
  [24:03.61]Six months later he sold everything he owned
  [24:06.69]and put his money in stocks.
  [24:09.15]Ted then moved to New York.
  [24:12.18]He lived for the next forty years in a one room apartment.
  [24:16.32]He spent most of his days wandering through the city
  [24:19.80]looking in garbage cans for food.
  [24:22.31]He never cooked.
  [24:23.90]He rarely talked to anyone except himself.
  [24:27.22]Most people were afraid of him.
  [24:29.73]His clothes were always old and dirty!
  [24:33.88]Shortly before he died,
  [24:35.44]he moves back to Los Angeles.
  [24:37.79]After spending two weeks there he was put in jail
  [24:41.29]because he had no money and no job.
  [24:44.16]City workers tried to help him.
  [24:46.51]They offered him work but he would not work.
  [24:49.48]Towards the end he would not talk to anyone at all.
  [24:53.64]When he died he was a lonely man.
  [24:56.58]But someone remembered his name.
  [24:59.33]They knew he had lived in Detroit and had been successful.
  [25:04.48]It was learned that he had put his stocks in a box at a Detroit bank.
  [25:10.30]After they were sold and all the taxes paid,
  [25:13.94]there was still over a hundred million dollars left.

vt.控告,起诉;vi.请求,追求,起诉
  • If you don't pay me the money,I'll sue you.如果你不付给我钱,我就告你。
  • The war criminals sue for peace.战犯求和。
adj.可能的,有望发性或实现的
  • It is probable to finish the job before dark.天黑之前有可能完成这项工作。
  • It is hardly probable that he will succeed.他不会成功。
n.绿菜花,花椰菜
  • She grew all the broccoli plants from seed.这些花椰菜都是她用种子培育出来的。
  • They think broccoli is only green and cauliflower is only white.他们认为西兰花只有绿色的,而菜花都是白色的。
n.菠菜
  • Eating spinach is supposed to make you strong.据说吃菠菜能使人强壮。
  • You should eat such vegetables as carrot,celery and spinach.你应该吃胡萝卜、芹菜和菠菜这类的蔬菜。
n.爱好;嗜好;喜欢
  • The word palate also means taste or liking.Palate这个词也有“口味”或“嗜好”的意思。
  • I must admit I have no liking for exaggeration.我必须承认我不喜欢夸大其词。
adj.有学问的,博学的;learn的过去式和过去分词
  • He went into a rage when he learned about it.他听到这事后勃然大怒。
  • In this little village,he passed for a learned man.在这个小村子里,他被视为有学问的人。
n.恐龙
  • Are you trying to tell me that David was attacked by a dinosaur?你是想要告诉我大卫被一支恐龙所攻击?
  • He stared at the faithful miniature of the dinosaur.他凝视著精确的恐龙缩小模型。
n.恐龙( dinosaur的名词复数 );守旧落伍的人,过时落后的东西
  • The brontosaurus was one of the largest of all dinosaurs. 雷龙是所有恐龙中最大的一种。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • Dinosaurs have been extinct for millions of years. 恐龙绝种已有几百万年了。 来自《简明英汉词典》
adj.巨大的,极大的;很好的,非常好的
  • This book was the outcome of a tremendous amount of scientific work.这本书是大量科学研究工作的成果。
  • There is a tremendous difference between them.他们之间有着极大的差别。
n.蜥蜴( lizard的名词复数 )
  • Nothing lives in Pompeii except crickets and beetles and lizards. 在庞培城里除了蟋蟀、甲壳虫和蜥蜴外,没有别的生物。 来自辞典例句
  • Can lizards reproduce their tails? 蜥蜴的尾巴断了以后能再生吗? 来自辞典例句
adj.坚定的;有决心的
  • I have determined on going to Tibet after graduation.我已决定毕业后去西藏。
  • He determined to view the rooms behind the office.他决定查看一下办公室后面的房间。
随便走( roam的过去式和过去分词 ); 漫步; 眼睛或手 (缓慢地)扫遍; 摸遍
  • The lovers roamed around the fields in complete forgetfulness of time. 这对情侣漫步于田野,完全忘记了时间。
  • They roamed about in the park. 他们在公园里漫步。
n.吃素的人( vegetarian的名词复数 );素食者;素食主义者;食草动物
  • Vegetarians are no longer dismissed as cranks. 素食者不再被视为有怪癖的人。
  • Vegetarians believe that eating meat is bad karma. 素食者认为吃肉食是造恶业。
n.(建筑物等的)骨架( skeleton的名词复数 );骨骼;梗概;骨瘦如柴的人(或动物)
  • Only skeletons of buildings remained. 只剩下了建筑物的框架。 来自辞典例句
  • It looks like six skeletons in front of that stone door! 在这石头门前看上去就象有六副骨骼! 来自辞典例句
adv.部分地,从某些方面讲
  • The door was partially concealed by the drapes.门有一部分被门帘遮住了。
  • The police managed to restore calm and the curfew was partially lifted.警方设法恢复了平静,宵禁部分解除。
n.发生,出现,事件,发生的事件
  • Two things account for its occurrence.发生这件事的原因有两个。
  • For a military commander,winning or losing a battle is a common occurrence.胜败乃兵家常事。
v.归还( restore的过去式和过去分词 );交还;使恢复;修复
  • The stolen goods were all restored to their owners. 被偷窃的东西都归还给原主了。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • Mary was restored to health after a period of medical treatment. 经过一段时间治疗,玛丽康复了。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.劳动,努力,工作,劳工;分娩;vi.劳动,努力,苦干;vt.详细分析;麻烦
  • We are never late in satisfying him for his labor.我们从不延误付给他劳动报酬。
  • He was completely spent after two weeks of hard labor.艰苦劳动两周后,他已经疲惫不堪了。
n.食物的一份&adj.帮助人的,辅助的
  • The poor children regularly pony up for a second helping of my hamburger. 那些可怜的孩子们总是要求我把我的汉堡包再给他们一份。
  • By doing this, they may at times be helping to restore competition. 这样一来, 他在某些时候,有助于竞争的加强。
辨别,区别( distinguish的第三人称单数 ); 使出众; (凭任何感觉器官)识别出; 看清
  • He has that je ne sais quoi that distinguishes a professional from an amateur. 他有那种难以言表的特质,体现出他是专业而非业余的。
  • It is in a storm that a capable skipper distinguishes himself. 暴风雨中才识好船长。
n.例外,除外
  • Everyone should keep discipline and you are no exception. 每个人都应该遵守纪律,你也毫无例外。
  • There's an exception to every rule. 每项规则均有例外。
n.铁路;vi.由铁路运输
  • The railroad connects two cities,namely,New York and Chicago.这条铁路连接两个城市,即纽约与芝加哥。
  • My brother is working on the railroad.我兄弟在铁路系统工作。
制造商,制造厂( manufacturer的名词复数 )
  • The manufacturers in some countries dumped their surplus commodities abroad. 一些国家的制造商向国外倾销过剩产品。
  • Colour TV has been more aggressively promoted as more manufacturers have joined the competition. 由于更多的厂商参与竞争,推销彩色电视机的宣传更为激烈了。
n.(树木等的)干( stock的名词复数 );公债;家系;家族
  • The manager wants to clear off the old stocks in the warehouse. 经理想把仓库里积压的存货处理掉。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • They want to unload the stocks on the market. 他们想把股票在市场上抛售掉。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.监狱,看守所;vt.监禁,拘留
  • The castle had been used as a jail.这城堡曾用作监狱。
  • If she carries on shoplifting,she'll end up in jail.她如果还在店铺里偷东西,最终会被抓进监狱的。
学英语单词
abeigh
absolute heating effect
accumulator address
acoustoelectric
aircraft wireless control
APPMPE
articular surface
arylhydroxylamine
Aso-wan
baby vamp
backward magnetic tape
beadnell b.
beta-gamma survey meter
bowel disease
calculating the charge
caveperson
cistron (benzer 1957)
clearcreekite
confidentiality key management services
contract high
corrugated hose
creamed chicken and ham soup
cunnilinctuss
decomposition curve
dedicated data
derrick head fitting
digital-camera
dimensional equation
disgorgements
ed-mund
edge of coverage
engineering control of air pollution
extractive netallurgy
fire sb up
fractured hydrocarbon reservoir
Gelidocalamus solidus
general interconnecting network
green-room
had no conception of
harmful impurity
hayel
hentoffs
Heraclitan
horizontaldischarge tube
hydrometer degree
hylobates concolor
idropise
indicated specific heat consumption
inverse circulation
junction pole transposition
Kisubi
krakoff
lay a hand on
least-integral-square error
leonensis
liner rerms
methoxygossypol
mini-stages
motive picture
normalized device coordinates
ONE OUT OF
osteochondrous
Osvaldo
oven-dry weight
perceptio
petiolary
petroleum deposit
pipelined system
position-transducer
posse
practicing license
protein paint
punchless
queynt
reflection interferometer
reflexogenic
run-time binding
Sauveterre-la-Lémance
Scotry
signal mechanic
silicon micromachining
st. pierre
stainable
Stavka
strong component
stufffed animal
T-beam
Taewang-ri
telisa
temlisartan
theobromine
toora
Topografov, Pik
trawling gear
triuncina brunnea
turn ... upside down
unturbaned
video-conference
wear-and-tear
web application manager
xantholith (staurolite)
year planner