µ±Ç°Î»ÖãºÊ×Ò³ > ÐÂÊÀ¼ÍÑо¿Éú¹«¹²Ó¢Óï½Ì²ÄÔĶÁAµÚ1-14µ¥Ôª´ð°¸+¿ÎÎÄ·Òë(È«)
Il. Vocabulary Study i l. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. unifodistinguish/rascertarecogniuniqoutlet rm ecognize ined zed ue 7. 8. rigid 9. 10. 11. l2. tactile secure acquisifruitffoundattion ul ion ii l. 2. 3. 4. 5. train 6. detercumulatinnatwarpeunderlimined ive e d e 7. zest 8. 9. 10. a 11. 12. imposed precemarkeforbidconsistpt d ding ency iii l. for 2. for 3. to 4. in 5. on 6. on 7. out 8. as 9. at l0. 11. in / l2. As beyond at l3. l4. to l5. up about, from
29
III. Cloze
1.A 2. D 3.B 4.B 5. A 6. D 7. D 8.C 9.B l0.A
ll.C l2.C l3.A 14. D 15.B l6.D 17.C 18.A l9.B 20.A
lV. Translation.
1.ÈËÃÇÆÕ±éÈÏΪº¢×ÓÔÚ¼ÒÀïµÄ¸§ÑøÓëËûÃÇÔÚѧУËù½ÓÊܵĽÌÓýÃܲ»¿É·Ö¡£
It is generally accepted that the upbringing of the child within the home is closely related to the education of the child in school.
2.Õ²Äݸ¥ÊÇ¡¶Å¦Ô¼ÏÈÇýÂÛ̳±¨¡·£¨New York Herald Tribune£©µÄÈËÊ¿Ƴ¤£¬ÔÚÕâ¼Ò±¨Ö½ÀïËý»¹¸ºÔ𹫹²¹ØÏµ·½ÃæµÄÌØÔ¼ÉçÂÛ¹¤×÷¡£
Jennifer is the chief of personnel for the New York Herald Tribune, where she is also responsible for special editorial work in the field of public relations. 3.½Ü¸¥Á½ÄêǰÔÚËýÃÃÃõÄÉúÈÕ¾Û»áÉÏÈÏʶÁËÂÞ˹£¬´ÓÄÇÒÔºó£¬ËûÃÇÁ½ÈËÒ»ÖÂͨ¹ýµç×ÓÓʼþÁªÏµ£¬½Ü¸¥Ô½Á˽âÂÞ˹£¬Ëû¾ÍԽϲ»¶Ëý¡£
It was two years ago that Jeff met Rose at his sister¡¯s
birthday party. They have been
30
communicating with each other by e-mail since then; the more Jeff knows Rose, the more he likes her. 4.Õâ¸ö´ëÊ©²»½öÓÐЧµØÎªÏ¸ڹ¤ÈËÌṩÁ˾ÍÒµ»ú»á£¬¶øÇÒ»¹ÓÐЧµØ¿ØÖÆÁËÎï¼ÛÉÏÕÇ¡£
This new measure is effective not only in providing job opportunities for the laid-off workers, but in limiting price increases.
5.ͬÑù£¬ËûÃǶÔÕâÒ»ÒõıµÄÕþÖκ;¼Ã±³¾°ÈÏʶµÃ²»¹»³ä·Ö¡£
Similarly/Likewise, they insufficiently treated the political
and
economic
background
of
the
conspiracy.
6.´ó¹æÄ£µÄ»õ±ÒͶ×Ê£¬Ò»·½ÃæÂú×ãÁ˾¼Ã¸ßËÙÔö³¤µÄÐèÒª£¬ÁíÒ»·½ÃæÒ²Ôì³ÉÁËͨ»õÅòÕÍ¡£
Tremendous capital input has met the needs of rapid economic growth on the one hand and has caused the inflation on the other.
V. Writing Practice
1. (5) Now they scan their list of events and decide
which can be used and which must be discarded.
(2) They begin by listing the events they plan to
31
relate and arranging them in time order. (6) Before they go any further with their
organization, they decide what will determine the plane 2 sentences.
(1) They usually jot down all of the events related
to their subject.
(8) After they have determined the planes of their
ideas, they then revise and add any connectors that are necessary to the reader¡¯s understanding of the narrative.
(3) Next, they look over the chronological listing and form a purpose for their paragraph
(9) With the steps completed, they have a unified
paragraph with the details arranged in time sequence.
(4) At this point, they write the topic sentence and state the purpose as the controlling idea.
(7) At the same time, they decide what material is necessary to support these plane 2 sentences.
2. Comments:
A paragraph that has sentences that do not relate to or discuss the controlling idea lacks unity. The
32
¹²·ÖÏí92ƪÏà¹ØÎĵµ