❶ e英语教程3unit1标题 luv 2 txt 什么意思
这节课我们已经上完了,说的青年在打字短信交流会用上缩写、简写,就像我们原来用过的886(拜拜了),Luv 2 txt意思就是love to text(热爱发短信)
❷ e英语教程4弟一单元翻译
中文名称:最新英语国际音标教程
英文名称:THE ENGLISH PHONENTIC ALPHABET
资源类型:MP3
格式: 90MB RAR
地区:大陆
语言:英语
基本信息
·出版社:中国对外翻译出版公司
·页码:164 页码
·出版日:2006年
·ISBN:750011477X
·条码:9787500114772
·装帧:平装
·开本:32开
内容简介
让你踏出正确发音第一步,掌握纯正地道的英语,提高听力新境界,一切从英语国际音标开始。
本书的编写为英语语音(音标)、英语的节奏和英语的语调三个章节。第一章学习的重点是48个英语国际音标的发音方法,12个单元,共29课;第二章学习的重点是英语的节奏,共有7课;第三章学习的重点是英语的语调,共有7课。
第一章的主要内容是简单的语音讲解、音节体验、对话演练和脱口而出等栏目。第一课的编写都遵循渐进的教学原则。语音讲解通俗易懂,练习的编写由浅入深。“对话演练”及“脱口而出”贴近生活。本书所编选的语句自然、生动,避免语音操练的乏味枯燥,使每一节课的语音演练饶有趣味。
第二章的学习重点是英语的节奏,其中包括音节的划分、重音、连读、强读与弱读、停顿、意群与气群、节奏等等。
本教材配有英国语音专家纯正的高品质的录音供学习者学习和模仿。多听标准录音,对语流语调形成整体印象。在初学阶段,要坚持每天练习以因家口形和声音,这对过发音关和语感的形成至关重要。
随书附赠2盘磁带。
目录
总论
字母表的发音
发音器官
第一章 英语语音
第一部分 英语元音
第一单元 英语前元音
第一课 英语前元音(1)/i/ /I/
第二课 英语前元音(2)/e/ /ae/
第二单元 英语后元音
第三课 英语后元音(1)/a:/
第四课 英语后元音(2)/D/ /O:/
第五课 英语后元音(3)/u:/ /v/
第三单元 英语中元音
第六课 英语中元音(1)/A/
第七课 英语中元音(2)/э/ /e/
语音知识小站
英语单元音小结
第四单元 英语合口双元音
第八课 英语合口双元音(1) /eI/
语音知识小站
英语中的四大音乐
第九课 英语合口双元音(2)/eu/
语音知识小站
无音字母在非重读音节中的读音
第十课 英语合口双元音(3)/aI/
语音知识小站
元音的长度
第十一课 英语合口双元音(4)/au/
语音知识小站
不发音的元音字母与元音的省略
第十二课 英语合口双元音(5)/OI/
语音知识小站
英语双元音小结(合口双元音)
第五单元 英语集中双元音
第十三课 英语集中双元音(1)/Ie/
语音知识小站
元音字母组合的读音
第十四课 英语集中双元音(2)/ee/
语音知识小站
元音字母+辅音字母的组合读音
第十五课 英语集中双元音(3)/ue/
语音知识小站
英语双元音小结(集中双元音)
第二部分 英语辅音
……
第二章 英语的节奏
第三章 英语的语调
附录Ⅰ 英语国际音标与旧版英语国际音标的元音对照表
附录Ⅱ 通用英语与通用美语使用的国际音标的元音对照表
附录Ⅲ 绕口令
附录Ⅳ 谚语与箴言
附录Ⅴ 英语美文和名人演讲辞
迅雷和电驴下载: 最新英语国际音标教程[PDF][MP3].rar
❸ 大学体验英语听说教程3听力材料
大学英语听说教程III听力原文(Unit10)
2005-4-8
UNIT 10
Part B
Text 1
How to Get a Laugh
Gene Perret has been a joke writer for twenty years and has taken hundreds of flights. So he was only half listening when the air steward began going over the safety instructions. Suddenly Perret's ears stood up. 'There may be 50 ways to leave your lover,' the steward said, 'but there are only five ways to leave this airplane.' And then he added: 'Please return your seat to its upright and most uncomfortable position. Later you may lean back and break the knees of the passenger behind
you. '
Perret uses the air steward story to make a serious point: humor can catch someone's attention and get a message across. 'Some people can't tell a joke to save their lives,' says Perret, 'but everyone can learn to use humor effectively. The secret is developing your own style, learning a few tricks and taking the time to practice.'
The first step Perret recommends is to build up a “ collection”. Note down 25 jokes or stories that you find funny. Then work out whether you are better with stories or one-liners. Don't try to be what you're not. 'Matching people with the wrong material is like teaching a pig to sing,' Perret says. “It not only wastes your time, it annoys the pig.”
Look out for humor on a regular basis, not just before you intend to use it. Joke books are OK, but Perret suggests looking for material from your own experience. He tells a story about helping his little daughter prepare to perform a poem at her school. When he offered to write one for her, she said, “No, Dad, this is in front of the whole school. I'd rather it was good.” Nothing makes people feel more comfortable than self-critical humor.
Material should also fit the audience. 'The more humor fits a particular situation, the funnier it is,' Perret says. But Perret advises people to forget the idea that a speech should open and close with a joke. When a closing joke falls flat, it is almost impossible to recover.
Text 2
You're Under Arrest!
Fritz Kreisler, a world-famous Austrian-born American violinist, was once in Hamburg, Germany, waiting for a boat to take him to London, where he was to give a concert the following evening. With an hour until sailing time, he decided to stop and browse for a few minutes in a music shop he had noticed earlier in the day while roaming the streets of the city. In his comfortable old clothes for travel, he would have been difficult to recognize, except for the violin he carried under his arm.
When he entered the music shop the owner asked to see his violin. He examined it closely, and then disappeared. A few minutes later, he returned, accompanied by two policemen.
"You're under arrest," one of the policemen told Kreisler.
"Under arrest? What for?"
"You have Fritz Kreisler's violin."
"Of course I do. I am Fritz Kreisler."
"You Fritz Kreisler in those shabby clothes?" jeered the policeman. "You phony! You're no more Fritz Kreisler than I am. You're nothing but a crook who has stolen Kreisler's violin. Come with us to the station." He began to tug at the violinist's arm.
Kreisler's boat would sail within the hour, and there was no time to dawdle. The violinist hadto think fast.
Looking around he saw a record player in the shop. "Do you have any of Kreisler recordings?" he asked the proprietor.
Luckily, one was handy."The Old Refrain", and the man put the recording on the machine.
When the recording ended, Kreisler picked up his violin and played the same number. "Now are you satisfied?" he asked.
The red-faced proprietor and the two policemen began to apologize as Kreisler rushed from the shop and headed for his ship.
Part C
A Hectic Monday Morning
It was a hectic Monday morning. Everyone at our 1)employment agency was busy working on the 2) job-matching program. Suddenly the computers in our office 3) broke down. And we couldn't run the program which we knew was 4)essential /to the counselors and their clients; As the 'down' time went from minutes to half an hour and to an hour, we were all 5) frustrated.
'Look,' shouted a colleague of mine, pointing at the screens. 6) There on the terminal screens appeared a single sentence typed in by an annoyed counselor. It read: 'May the fleas of a thousand camels spread all over your circuit box!' 7) Before the laughter in the office could die down, the computers blinked and went back into action.
We were all amazed. 8) It seemed that the power of the Middle East extended far beyond the oil fields.
Part D
The Blonde and the Lawyer
A blonde and a lawyer were seated next to each other on a flight from Los Angeles to New York. The lawyer asked her if she would like to play a fun game with him.
The blonde, tired, just wanted to take a nap. She politely declined and rolled over to the window to catch a few winks. The lawyer persisted and explained that the game was easy and a lot of fun. He explained, "I'11 ask you a question, and if you don't know the answer, you pay me $5, and vice versa." Again, she declined and tried to get some sleep. The lawyer, now anxious and nervous, said, "OK, if you don't know the answer you pay me $5, and if I don't know the answer, I'll pay you $500."
This caught the blonde's attention and as she figured there would be no end to this torment unless she played, she agreed to the game.
The lawyer asked the first question. "What's the distance from the earth to the moon?" Without saying a word, the blonde reached into her purse, pulled out a $5 bill and handed it to the lawyer.
"OK," said the lawyer, "your turn." She asked the lawyer, "What goes up a hill with three legs and comes down with four legs?"
The lawyer, puzzled, took out his laptop computer and searched all his references, no answer. He searched the Internet and the Library of Congress, still no answer. Frustrated, he sent e-mails to all his friends and co-workers, to no avail. After an hour, he woke up the blonde, and handed her $500. "Thank you," the blonde said and turned back to get some more sleep.
The lawyer, who was a bit angry, woke her up again and asked, "Well, what's the answer?"
Without a word, the blonde reached into her purse, handed the lawyer $5, and went back to sleep,
❹ E英语教程第三单元
1 B. following
2 A. flying
3 B. rising
4 A. playing
5 B. carrying
6 C. being discussed
❺ 求作业答案 英语听力教程第三版 1 (高等教育出版社;主编张民伦)
A. Keys:
1: instrumental 2: examinations 3: integrative 4: immigration 5: marry 6: confident
7: a good ear 8: revision 9: monitor 10: organization 11: teacher 12: classroom 13: 24 hours 14: responsibility B. Keys:
1: eternal 2: solution 3: out-of-classroom 4: in-classroom 5: responsibility 6: failed 7: blame 8: blame
Part III Foreign accents A. Keys:
1: judge 2: accents 3: snobbish 4: posh 5: foreign 6: talk 7: expect 8: BBC
B. Keys: 1: strong 2: struggle 3: broken 4: sort 5: tell
Part IV More about the topic: How to Enlarge your Vocabulary?
Keys: (the red numbers after the statements mean that you should tick Women 1, 2 or 3 in the form)
1. learn new words by reading, e.g. newspapers, magazines: 1、3 2. learn new words from TV, films, etc.: 2 3. look up new words in a dictionary: 1、2
4. ask a native speaker of English what a new word means: 2 5. keep vocabulary cards or a vocabulary notebook: 2、3
6. try to use new words in conversations or when writing letters: 2 7. guess the meaning of new words: 3 8. group words related to one topic: 3
9. figure out the words from the pronunciation: 2 10. do crossword puzzles: 1
Part V Do you know…?
B. Keys: 1: lift, weekend 2: announcer or newsreader, smoking, training 3: building 4: parking
第八单元
Part I Getting ready A.
B. Keys:
1 : √ 2 : 0 3 : 0 4 : √ 5 : 0
Part II Home schooling A. Keys:
1: About 300000 2: In reading and math 3: interests, questions 4: outsider, mixing with, well qualified, narrow views 5: time, desire B. Keys:
1: snowfall, climate, Alaska, tourism
2: spring, stars, telescope, satellites, space
3: dinner, atlas, influence, greenhouse, deserts, ice caps
Part III UK or US ecation? A. Keys:
1: everything 2: fair idea, want to do 3: competent, narrow, one thing 4: beginning, lose years B. Keys:
1: depth, general, wide 2: 90% 3: pure, technical, scientific, academic, practical use 4: flexible, switch 5: far more, prepared, new skills
Part IV More about the topic: Co-ecational or Segregated Schools Keys:
1: to equip 2: require 3: shock 4: apart 5: true 6: get to know 7: live together 8: compare 9: male 10: female 11: healthy attitude 12: mysterious creatures 13: romantic heroes 14: physical 15: emotional
Part V Do you know…? Keys:
1 : similar, Britain 2 : 1732, life stories 3 : 1751, Frenchmen 4 : 1768, Scotland 5 : 72000, 7000 6 : 8000, 1000 7 : 70 to 125
第九单元
Part I Getting ready A.
B. Keys:
1: F 2: T 3: F 4: F C. Keys:
1: comedy 2: women 3: scenery 4: One 5: American 6: patriotism 7: European 8: 1920s 9: maturity 10: popular 11: 1943 12: plot 13: hit 14: golden age 15: all over the world 16: mainstay 17: music of Broadway 18: classic
Part II Times Square A. Keys:
1: Because it is the name for the area around where Broadway crosses Forty-Second Street in Manhattan
2: In 1904, it got its name in an area which was then called Long Acre Square.
3: New York Times newspaper, New Year celebrations, Entertainment, Its huge colorful signs B. Keys:
1: seedy, drug dealers, pornography or cheap knock-off,
2: be widened, declined, upscale, Times Square clothing and accessories
Part III What is a pub? A. (Outline) Keys:
1: sign 2: name 3: sale of alcoholic drinks 4: 10:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. 5: 6 p.m. - 11 p.m. 6: Sundays 7: 7 p.m. - 10:30 p.m. 8: accommodation B. Keys:
1: That is because they seldom find the word "pub" in the name of a pub. Very often many pubs have names linked to royalty, sports, popular heroes or great occasions.
2: The first thing to look for is a large sign either hanging over the street or placed on a pole outside the building.
3: "Saloon Bar" is more comfortably furnished.
4: That means the pub doesn't buy its drinks from one particular brewery only. It isn't tied to a brewery. C. Keys:
1: coaches welcomed by appointment 2: bar food - lunchtimes only
3: pub accommodation 4: facilities for the disabled 5: a pub of historic interest
Part IV More about the topic: The Song Yankee Doodle A. Keys:
1: Colonists in the northeast part of America 2: All Americans 3: American soldiers B. Keys:
1: little 2: British 3: British 4: foolish 5: colonists 6: words 7: 1770s 8: soldiers 9: music 10: defeated 11: same 12: represents
Part V Do you know…? A. Keys:
1:It's Christmas Eve supper.
2:There are 12 traditional dishes on the table.
3:They just break wafers with each other, wishing each other good luck.
4:The children go to the other room, where the big Christmas tree stands. Under the tree there are some Christmas presents.
5:They go to church at midnight. B. Keys: 1:c 2:a 3:b 4:b 5:c 第十单元
Part I Getting ready A.
B. Keys:
1: July 20. 1969 2: U.S. 3: descended 4: the first person 5: step 6: leap
7: two-and-a-half hour 8: flag 9: a phone called 10: feat 11: heavens 12. world 13: moment 14: people 15: pride 16: astronauts 17: mole 18. legacy
19: demonstration 20: chained 21: further 22: unlimited Part II Standing on the moon A. Keys:
1: the fifth person 2: nine hours and twenty-three minutes 3: gather and photograph 4:peacefull, insignificant B. Keys:
1: F 2: F 3: F 4: T
Part III Grand projects of the age A. Keys: 4, 2, 5, 3, 1, 6 B. Keys:
1: 1931, 102-floor high, 42 years, its limestone majesty 2: 2009, $24 billion, electrity
3: $330 billion, (still counting), 4300 miles, (still counting), automobile society, jobs, trade 4: 1994, 24 miles, England, the Continent 5: 1914, $380 million, 7800 miles
Part IV More about the topic: World Wars (I& II) Missing…
Part V Do you know…?
Keys: 1: T 2: F 3: F 4: F 5: T 6: F 第十一单元
Part I Getting ready A.
B. Keys:
1: Tuesday, March 1st 2: Arts 3: Sciences 4: instry 5: technicians 6: 30 7: recognize 8: create 9: vote 10: 70 11: Album 12: gold
13: players 14: short 15: nominated 16: six 17: Pop Male 18: country singer 19: The Hard Way
Part II Karen Kain—a Canadian ballerina A. Keys:
1: In her hometown.
2: When she was eleven years old. 3: She also got academic training. 4: When she was eighteen years old. 5: He is an actor. 6: For six weeks.
7: For another ten years at the most.
8: She will be playing Cinderella in an English pantomime. B. Keys:
1: c 2: d 3: d 4: a 5: d 6: c
Part III “The Scream” A. Keys:
1: powerful 2: black 3: white 4: bridge 5: screaming 6: at the end 7: loneliness 8: sadnness 9: hide B. Keys:
1: For painting the bridge or the street