专八长难句-forstudents
2013年专八真题阅读长难句分析
TEXT A
1.Everything changed in 1833 when the first mass-audience newspaper, The New York Sun, pioneered the u of advertising to reduce the cost of news, thus giving advertirs access to a wider audience. (Para.1)
2.The penny press, followed by radio and television, turned news from a two-way conversation into a one-way broadcast, with a relatively small number of firms controlling the media. (Para.1)
3.And it has made possible entirely new approaches to journalism, such as that practiced by WikiLeaks, which provides an anonymous way for whistleblowers to publish documents. (Para.4)
4.And although this transformation does rai concerns, there is much to celebrate in the noisy, diver, vociferous, argumentative and stridently alive environment of the news business in the ages of the internet. (Para.5)bellboy
TEXT B
1. More than this, Paris is like many other European cities in that the ason of blockbuster cultural events tends to begin in mid- to late fall and so, by the time of winter, most of the cultural treasures of the city are laid out to be admired. (Para.3)
2. The other great reason why Paris in winter is so much better than Paris in spring and fall is that after the end of the August holidays and the return of chic Parisian women to their city, the restaurant-opening ason truly begins hopping. (Para.4)
3. By winter, many of the new restaurants have worked out their kinks(不足,困难)and, once the hype has died down, it is possible to e which restaurants are actually good and which are merely noisy and crowded. (Para.4)
one take
大连日语培训学校4. I think it was this moment of protectiveness that marked the change in my mood and my slowly becoming thrilled with being in Paris. (Para. 6)
TEXT C
1.As smooth as an Olympic swimsuit and honed to aerodynamic perfection, each blade weighs in atcreep什么意思
7,000 kg, and they’re what help make Vestas’turbines the best in the world. (Para.1)
2. Energy taxes were channeled into rearch centres, where engineers crafted designs that would
eventually produce cutting-edge giants like Vestas’3-magawatt (MW) V90 turbine. (Para.2)查韦斯葬礼
综合翻译3. The country gets more than 19% of its electricity from the breeze (Spain and Portugal, the next highest countries, get about 10%) and Danish companies control one-third of the
global wind market, earning billions in exports and creating a national champion from scratch. (Para.3)
4.With Copenhagen t to host all-important U.N. climate change talks in December—where the world hopes for a successor to the expiring Kyoto Protocol—and the global recession beginning to hit environmental plans in capitals everywhere, Denmark’s example couldn’t be more timely. (Para.4)
5.Buffeted by the same supply shocks that hit the rest of the developed world, Denmark launched a rapid drive for energy conrvation, to the point of introducing car-free Sundays and asking business to switch off lights during closing hours. (Para.5)
沈阳成人英语培训TEXT D
1. Maybe she hoped this little amenity would slow the growing inclination of women to stretch each haircut to last four months while nursing our hair back to whatever natural colour we long ago forgot. (Para.1)
2. When I called my husband to ask him to check some specs online, the salesman offered a pre-emptive discount, lest the surfing turn up the same model cheaper in another store. (Para.2)
3. When the mechanic calls to tell you that brakes and a timing belt and other rvices will run
clo to $2,000, it’s time to break out the newly perfected art of the considered pau. (Para.3)
trigger warning意思
4. Restaurants are also caught in a fit of ardent hospitality, especially around Wall Street: Trinity Place
lunoffers $3 drinks at happy hour any day the market goes down, with the slogan “Market tanked? Get tanked!”—which ensures a lively crowd for the closing bell. (Para.4)
5. There’s a chance that eventually we’ll return all this kindness with the extravagant spending that was once decried but now everyone is hoping will restart the economy. (Pa
ra.5)the moment of truth
2012年专八真题阅读长难句分析
TEXT A
1. The Dutch nonprofit has been working to rai awareness of freshwater scarcity since 2008, but it was through the “Green Blue Book”by Thomas M. Kostigen that I was able to e how my own actions
factored in. (Para.3)
2. Tallying up the water footprint of my breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks, as well as my daily do of over-the-counter uppers and downers—coffee, wine and beer—I’m using 512 gallons of virtual water each day just to feed mylf. (Para.7)