英国人用英语怎么说Q A
德语学习软件
LESSON 1 PUB TALK AND KING’S ENGLISH
Q B:
1.
2.
3.Conversation is not for persuading others to accept our idea or point of view.
4. In fact a person who really enjoys and is skilled at conversation will not argue to win or force others to accept his point of view.
5.
show up6.
7. The conversation could go on without anybody knowing who was right or wrong.
III:recently是什么意思
1.No one knows how the conversation will go as it moves aimlessly and desultorily or as it becomes spirited and exciting.
2.It is not a matter of interest if they are cross or in a bad temper.
silly
3.Bar friends, although they met each other frequently, did not delve into each other's lives or the recess of their thoughts and feelings.
4.Suddenly a miraculous change in the conversation took place.
5.The conversation suddenly became spirited and exciting.
6.We ought to think as the Saxon peasants did at that time.
7.The Elizabethan writers spread the English language far and wide.
8.I have always had an eager interest in dictionaries.
9.Otherwi one will tie up the conversation and will not let it go on freely.
10.We would never have talked about Australia, or the language barrier in the time of the Norman Conquest.
IV A:
1. on the rocks: metaphor,comparing a marriage to a ship wrecked on the rocks
2. get out of bed on the wrong side:be in a bad temper for the day (The meaning is perhaps derived from the expression “You got out of bed the wrong way”. It was an ancient superstition that it was unlucky to t the left foot on the ground first on getting out of bed.)
3.on wings:metaphor,comparing conversation to a bird flying and soaring. It means the conversation soon became spirited and exciting.
4. turn up one’s no at:scorn;show scorn for
5. into the shoes: metaphor(or more appropriately an idiomatic expression), think as if one were wearing the shoes of the Saxon peasant,i. e. as if one were a Saxon peasant
6 .come into one’s own: receive what properly belongs to one,especially acclaim or recognition65
7.sit up at:(colloquial)become suddenly alert and take notice of
IV B:
1.ignorant指缺乏知识,可以是就整体而言(如 an ignorant man),也可以是就某一具体方面或问题而言(如 ignorant of the reason of their quarrel对他们争吵的起因毫无所知);illiterate意为缺乏文化修养,尤指读写能力的缺乏; uneducated指没有受到正规的、系统的学校教育;unlearned意为学问不富(未必无知),既可指一无所长,又可指某一方面所知有限,如unlearned in science,意为对科学懂得有限,但对其他学科,如文学、哲学等,倒可能是很精通的。
2.scoff指对某事疑惑不信或缺乏尊敬而用无礼、轻蔑的言词或加以嘲笑;sneer侧重于面部表情或语气中所含的轻蔑嘲笑之意:jeer侧重指用粗俗的、侮辱性的言词或粗鲁的嘲 笑来表示轻侮;gibe通常指不带恶意的取笑或作弄人的笑骂;flout主要指以不理不睬或视而不见的态度表示出的轻侮蔑视。
最后一天的英文IV C:
1.No one knows how the conversation will go as it moves aimlessly and desultorily or as it becomes spirited and exciting.
2. It is not a matter of interest if they are cross or in a bad temper.
启蒙老师英语
3. Bar friends, although they met each other frequently, did not delve into each other's lives or the recess of their thoughts and feelings. 肯定句变否定句
英语教育4. Suddenly a miraculous change in the conversation took place.
5. The conversation suddenly became spirited and exciting.
6.The Elizabethan writers spread the English language far and wide.
7. I have always had an eager interest in dictionaries.
8.
9.Otherwi one will tie up the conversation and will not let it go on freely.
10.We would never have talked about Australia, or the language barrier in the time of the Norman Conquest.
V A & V B:略
LESSON 2 MARRAKECH
Q B:
1.
2.
3.He manages to show that he is outraged at the spectacle of miry, first, through the appropriate u of words cond, through the clever choice of the scenes he describes; third, through the tone in which he describes the scenes and finally, by contrasting the indignation at the cruel handling of the donkey with the unconcern towards the fate of the human beings.
4.
5.
6.Yes, it is. In this essay Orwell denounces the evils of colonialism or imperialism by mercilessly exposing the poverty, miry and degradation of the native people in the colonies.
我爱英语 7.Orwell is good at the appropriate u of simple but forceful words and the clever choice of the scenes he describes. His lucid style and fine attention to significant descriptive details efficiently conveyed to the readers the central idea "all colonial empires are in reality founded upon this fact", the fact that the people are not considered or treated as human beings.
III:
1.The buring-ground is nothing more than a huge piece of wasteland full of mounds of earth looking like a derted and abandoned piece of land on which a building was going to be put up.
2. All the imperialists build up their empires by treating the people in the colonies like animals (by not treating the people in the colonies as human beings).
3. They are born. Then for a few years they work, toil and starve. Finally they die and are buried in graves without a name.