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新概念第三册课文翻译及学习笔记:Lesson33

新概念第三册课文翻译及学习笔记:Lesson33
新概念第三册课文翻译及学习笔记:Lesson33

新概念第三册课文翻译及学习笔记:Lesson33

【课文】

We have all experienced days when everything goes wrong.

A day may begin well enough, but suddenly everything seems to get out of control. What invariably happens is that a great number of things choose to go wrong at precisely the same moment. It is as if a single unimportant event set up a chain of reactions. Let us suppose that you are preparing a meal and keeping an eye on the baby at the same time. The telephone rings and this marks the prelude to an unforeseen series of catastrophes. While you are on the phone, the baby pulls the tablecloth off the table smashing half your best crockery and cutting himself in the process. You hang up hurriedly and attend to baby, crockery, etc. Meanwhile, the meal gets burnt. As if this were not enough to reduce you to tears, your husband arrives, unexpectedly bringing three guests to dinner.

Things can go wrong on a big scale as a number of people recently discovered in Parramatta, a suburb of Sydney. During the rush hour one evening two cars collided and both drivers began to argue. The woman immediately behind the two cars happened to be a learner. She suddenly got into a panic and stopped her car. This made the driver following her brake hard. His wife was sitting beside him holding a large cake. As she was thrown forward, the cake went right through the windscreen and landed on the road. Seeing a cake flying through the air, a lorry driver who was drawing up alongside the car, pulled up all of a sudden. The lorry was loaded with empty beer bottles and hundreds of them slid off the back of

the vehicle and on to the road. This led to yet another angry argument. Meanwhile, the traffic piled up behind. It took the police nearly an hour to get the traffic on the move again.

In the meantime, the lorry driver had to sweep up hundreds of broken bottles. Only two stray dogs benefited from all this confusion, for they greedily devoured what was left of the cake. It was just one of those days!

【课文翻译】

我们大家都有过事事不顺心的日子。一天开始时,可能还不错,

但突然间似乎一切都失去了控制。情况经常是这样的,许很多多的事

情都偏偏赶在同一时刻出问题,好像是一件无关紧要的小事引起了一

连串的连锁反应。假设你在做饭,同时又在照看孩子。这时电话铃响了。它预示着一连串意想不到的灾难的来临。就在你接电话时,孩子

把桌布从桌子上扯下来,将家中的陶瓷餐具半数摔碎,同时也弄伤了

他自己。你急急忙忙挂上电话,赶去照看孩子和餐具。这时,饭又烧

糊了。好像这个切还不足以使你急得掉泪,你的丈夫接着回来了,事

先没打招呼就带来3个客人吃饭。

就像很多人最近在悉尼郊区帕拉马塔发现的那样,有时乱子会闹

得很大。一天傍晚交通最拥挤时,一辆汽车撞上前面一辆汽车,两个

司机争吵起来。紧跟其后的一辆车上的司机碰巧是个初学者,她一惊

之下突然把车停了下来。她这个停使得跟在后头的司机也来个急刹车。司机妻子正坐在他身边,手里托着块大蛋糕。她往前一冲,蛋糕从挡

风玻璃飞了出去掉到马路上。此时,一辆卡车正好从后边开到那辆汽

车边上,司机看见一块蛋糕从天而降,紧急刹车。卡车上装着空啤酒瓶。成百只瓶子顺势从卡车后面滑出车外落在马路上。这又引起一场

唇枪舌剑的争吵。与此同时,后面的车辆排成了长龙,警察花了将近

一个小时才使车辆又开起来。在这段时间里,卡车司机不得不清扫那

几百只破瓶子。只有两只野狗从这个片混乱中得到好处,它们贪婪地

吃掉了剩下的蛋糕。这就是事事不顺心的那么一天!

【生词和短语】

prelude n. 序幕,前奏

unforeseen adj. 意料之外

series n. 系列

catastrophe n. 大祸,灾难

crockery n. 陶器,瓦器

suburb n. 郊区

collide v. 猛撞

learner n. 初学者

panic n. 惊慌,恐慌

windscreen n. (汽车的)挡风玻璃

alongside prep. 在……的旁边,与……并排slide v. 滑

stray adj. 离群的

confusion n. 混乱

greedily adv. 贪婪地

devour v. 狼吞虎咽地吃

【知识点】

词汇

【unforeseen】

构词:foresee→foreseen→unforeseen

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