新编英语教程6_答案_修订版_教师用书_李观仪
枣窝窝练习册:We may regard “if only” as indicating the past and “next time” the future, we all know the most important time is “now”, as past things could not be changed and future is bad on “now”.
I. 1. The old man was an eminent psychiatrist and the author was a client of his. (famous and respected within a particular profession)
2. Refer to para. 1. To him, the ssion was just like “a flash of insight that leaves him a changed person—not only changed, but changed for the better.”
3. The three speakers on the tape were all unhappy, and the two words they all ud frequently in what they said were “if only.” What the old man wanted to point out to the author was that to keep saying “if only” would not change anything; on the contrary, it only kept the person facing the wring way—backward instead of forward. Thus it did more harm than good to the person who kept saying them. (See para. 15)
4. Shift the focus; substitute “next time” for “if only”
5. They point to entirely different mental directions; one is backward and negative, and the other forward and positive.东坡画扇
6. It is instructive and inspirational.
II. 1. The most inspiring and gratifying fact of life is the unexpected spark of enlightenment that makes you different and a better person than before.
鳗鱼热量
《青玉案元夕》2. At last he walked over from the other side of the street, wrapped in his old-fashioned overcoat, his bald head covered by a shapeless felt hat. He looked like a dwarfish old man full of energy rather than a well-known psychiatrist.
3. The next speaker on the tape was a woman who had remained single becau she thought she was obliged to take care of her mother who was a widow. She still remembered and told others mirably about all the chances of marriage she had misd.
4. Eventually, if you form a habit of sayi ng “if only”, the phra can really turn to an obstruction, providing you with an excu for giving up trying anything at all.
5. …you are always thinking of the past, regretting and lamenting. You did not look forward to what you can do in the future at all.
6. The Old Man said to me trickily, using the phra “if only” on purpo, “If only we?d got here ten conds earlier, we?d have caught the cab.” I laughed and understood what he meant. So I followed his advice and said, “Next time I?ll run faster”.
III. 1. The whole plan fell through for want of fund.
2. Newton is acknowledged as one of the world?s most eminent scientists.
3. He calculates the cost of production with invariable accuracy.
4. The spokesman of the corporation was berated for his irresponsible words.
5. The young clerk from the commercial bank
LANGUAGE WORK
I. 1. C 2. C 3. D 4. B 5. C 6. A 7. D 8. A 9. D 10. B 11. A 12. B 13. C 14. D
15. A 16. B 17. B 18. A 19. A 20. D
III. 1. predominantly, prevailing 2. preferential 3. tremulous 4. inadvisable, shrinkage 5. nsitive, terrorism/terror
6. magnifying
懒尿虾7. unapproachable, fictitious
8. unbecoming/becoming
9. unaccountable 10. disorientation 11. persuasion, entreaties 12. irremediable
IV. 1. blame 2. reproached 3. blamed/reproached 4. reproached
5. rebuke/reprimand
6. reprimanded
7. rebuke/scold/reprimand
8. reprimanded
9. reprimanded 10. scolded 11. reproach 12. scolded
V. 1. on 2. In 3. over 4. in 5. from 6. beneath 7. with 8. in 9. of 10. Since 11. to 12. in 13. with 14. with 15. between 16. with 17. to 18. In 19. on 20. In 21. to 22. on 23. in 24. like
VI. 1. ash 2. outbreaks 3. interval 4. eruption 5. volcanologist 6. which 7. lava 8. cone 9. flood 10. under 11. crater 12. began 13. cauliflower 14. like 15. and求比值
Unit Two
TEXT I
THE FINE ART OF PUTTING THINGS OFF
未修订前的练习答案:
I. Paraphra the parts underlined in the following:
“Never put off till tomorrow,” 1exhorted Lord Chesterfield in 1749, “what you can do today.”? That the elegant earl never 2got around to marrying his so n?s mother and had a bad habit of keeping 3worthies like Dr. Johnson cooling their heels for hours in an anteroom 4attests to the fact that even the most well-intentioned men have been postponers ever. Quintus Fabius Maximus, one of the great Roman generals, was 5dubbed “Cunctator” (Delayer) for putting off battle 6until the last possible vinum break. Mos 7pleaded a speech defect to rationalize his reluctance to deliver Jehovah?s edict to Pharaoh. Hamlet, of cour, raid procrastination to an art form.
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