搜档网
当前位置:搜档网 › 英语高级视听 上_听力原文_Unit1 pirates of the internet

英语高级视听 上_听力原文_Unit1 pirates of the internet

英语高级视听 上_听力原文_Unit1 pirates of the internet
英语高级视听 上_听力原文_Unit1 pirates of the internet

Video Script------------------------------10.25

Pirates of the Internet

It?s no secret that online piracy has decimated the music industry as millions of people stopped buying CDs and started stealing their favorite songs by downloading them from the internet. Now the hign-tech thieves are coming after Hollywood. Illegal downloading of full-length feature films is a relatively new phenomenon, but it?s becoming easier and easier to do. The people running America?s movie studios know that if they don?t do som ething----and fast---they could be in the same boat as the record companies. Correspodent: “What?s really at stake for the movie industry with all this privacy?” Chernin: “Well, I think, you know, ultimately, our absolute features.” Peter Chernin runs 20th Century Fox, one of the biggest studios in Hollywood. He knows the pirates of the Internet are gaining on him. Correspont: “Do you know how many movies are being downloaded today, in one day, in the United States?” Chernin: “I think it?s probably in the h undreds of thousands, if not millions.” Correspondent: “And it?s only going to grow.” Chernin: “It?s only going to grow. Somebody can put a perfect digital copy up on the internet. A perfect digital copy, all right. And with the click of mouse, send out a million copies all over the world, in an instant.”

5

And it?s all free. If that takes hold, kiss Hollywood goodbye. Chernin

recently organized a “summit” between studio moguls and some high school and college kids---the people most likely to be downloading. Chernin: “And we said, …Let?s come up with a challenge. Let?s give them five movies, and see if they can find them online.? And we all sat around and picked five movies, four of which hadn?t been released yet. And then we came back half an hour later. They had found all five movies that we gave them. ” Correspondent: “Even the ones that hadn?t even been released yet?” Chernin: “Even the ones that hadn?t even been released yet.” Correspondent: “Did these kids have any sense that they were stealing?” Chernin: “You know it?s… it?s a weird dichotomy. I think they know it?s stealing, and I don?t think they think it?s wrong. I think they have an attitude of, …It?s here.?” The Internet copy of last year?s hit Signs, starring Mel Gibson, was stolen even before director M. Night Shyamalan could organize the premiere. Correspondent: “The movie was about to be released. When did the first bootleg copy appear?”

6

Shyamalan: “Two weeks before it or three weeks before it. Before the Internet age, when somebody bootlegged a movie, the only outlet they had was to see it to those vendors on Times Square, where they had the boxes set up outside and they say, …Hey, we have Signs---it?s not even out yet.? And you walk by and you know it?s illegal. But now, because it?s the digi tal age, you can see, like, a clean copy. It?s no longer the kind of the

sleazy guy in Times Square with the box. It?s just, oh, it?s on this beautiful site, and I have to go, …Click.?” Correspondent: “How did those movies get on the Internet? How did that happen?” Chernin: “Through an absolute act of theft. Someone steals a print from the editor?s room; someone steals a print from the person; the composer who?s doing the music…absolute physical theft, steals a print, makes a digital copy, and uploads it.” Correspondent: “And there you go.” Digital copies like this one of The Matrix Reloaded have also been bootlegged from DVDs sent to reviewers or ad agencies, or circulated among companies that do special effects, or subtitles. Chernin: “The other way that p re-released movies end up (stolen) is that people go to … there are lots of screenings that happen in this industry… People go to those screenings with a camcorder, with a digital camcorder, sit in the back, turn the camcorder on…”

Correspondent: “And record it.” This is one of those recorded-off-the-screen copies of Disney?s Pirates of the Caribbean. Not great quality, but not awful either. And while it used to take forever to download a movie, anyone with a high-speed Internet connection can now have a full-length film in an hour or two.

Saaf: “Well, this is just one of many websites where basically people, hackers if you will, announce their piracy releases.” Randy Saaf runs a

company called Media Defender that helps movie studios combat online piracy. C orrespondent: “Look at this, all these new movies that I haven?t even seen yet, all here.” Saaf: “ Yep.” Correspondent: “Secondhand Lions that just came out. Sometimes I feel like I?m the only person in this country who has never downloaded anything. But maybe there is a few others of us out there. So I?m going to ask you to show us Kazaa, that?s the biggest downloading site, right?” Saaf: “Right. This is the Kazaa media desktop. Kazaa is the largest peer-to-peer network.” It?s called peer-to-peer because computer users are sharing files

8

with each other, with no middleman. All Kazaa does is provide the software to make that sharing possible. When we went online with Randy Saaf, nearly four million other Kazaa users were there with us, sharing every kind of digital file. Saaf: “Audio, documents, images, software, and video. If you wanted a movie, you would click on the video section, and then you would type in a search phrase. And basically what this is doing now, it is asking the people on the peer-to-peer network, …Who has Finding Memo??” Within seconds, 191 computers sent an answer: “We have it.” This is Finding Memo, crisp picture and sound, downloaded free from Kazaa a month before its release for video rental or sale. If you don?t want to watch it on a little computer screen, you don?t have to. On the newest computers, you can just “burn” it onto a DVD and watch it on

your big-screen TV. And that?s a dagger pointed right at the heart of Hollywood. Chernin: “Where movies make the bulk of their money is on DVD and home videos. 50 percent of the revenues for any movie come out of home video…” Correspondent: “15 percent?” Chernin: “50 percent so that if piracy occurs and it wipes out your home video profits or ultimately your television profits, you are out

9

of business. No movies will get made.” Even if movies did get made, Night Shyamalan says that wouldn?t be any good, because profits would be negligible, so budgets would shrink dramatically. Shyamalan: “And slowly it will degrade what?s possible in that art form.” Rosso: “Technology always wins. Always. You can?t shut it down.” Wayne Rosso is Hollywood?s enemy. They call him a pirate, but officially he?s the president of Grokster, another peer-to-peer network that works just like Kazaa. Correspondent: “Ok,I have downloaded your softwar e.” Rosso: “Right.” Correspondent: “Ok, did I pay to do that?” Rosso: “No, it?s free.” Correspondent: “So who pays you? How do you make money?” Rosso: “We?re like radio. We are advertising-supported.” Correspondent: “And how many people use Grokster?” Rosso: “Ten million.” Correspondent: “Ten million people have used it.” Rosso: “A month.” Correspondent: “Every month, ten million people?” Rosso: “Uh-huh, uh-huh. And growing.”

10

Correspondent: “Use it to download music, movies, software, video games, what else?” Rosso: “I will assume. See, we have no way of knowing what people are downloading.” Correspondent: “That?s just a fig leaf. You are facilitating, allowing, helping people steal.” Rosso: “We have no idea what the content is, and whatever it is…” Correspondent: “Well, you may not know the specifics, but you know that?s what your site…” Rosso: “And we can?t stop it. We have no control over it.” Correspondent: “But you are there for that purpose, that is why you exist, of co urse it is.” Rosso: “No, no, no, no, no, no.” Correspondent: “Come on, this is the fig leaf part.” Rosso: “No, no, no, no, no.” Shyamalan:“He is totally conformable with putting on his site a stolen piece of material. Am I wrong in that? If my movie was bootlegged, he?d be totally comfortable putting it on his site?” Correspondent: “Because I have nothing to do with it.” Shyamalan:“Yeah, right.” Correspondent: “Because I just provided the software.” Shyamalan:“Yeah, right. So, immediately, how can you ever have a

11

conversation with him? Because he?s taken a stolen material and he is totally fine with passing it around in his house. All these, all these are illegal activities. So, I?m not, it?s just my house, I?m not doing anything wrong.” But it is Rosso w ho has the law on his side. A federal judge has

ruled that Grokster and other file-swapping networks are not liable for what their downloaders are doing. Rosso: “So we are completely legal, and unfortunately this is something the entertainment industry refuses to accept. They seem to think the judge?s decision was nothing but a typo.” The studios are appealing that court ruling. And they may follow the music industry and begin to sue individuals who download movies. And they are fighting the pirates in other ways, with ads about people whose jobs are at risk because of the piracy---people like the carpenters and painters who work on film sets. At the same time, Hollywood is trying to keep copies of movies from leaking in the first place. Chernin: “ You will very seldom go to an early screening of a movie right now where, probably you don?t notice until you pay attention, someone?s not in the front of that auditorium with infrared binoculars looking for somebody with a camcorder.”

12

And once a movie is released, or copies do begin to leak, the studios hire people like Randy Saaf to hack the hackers. Saaf: “What we?re just trying to do is make the actual pirated content difficult to find. And the way we do that is by, you know, serving up fake files.” It?s called “spoofing.” Saaf and his employees spend their days on Kazaa and Grokster, offering up thousands of files that look like copies of new movies, but aren?t. Correspondent: “So if I had clicked on any number of those Finding

Nemo offerings, I could have clicked on one of yours, or somebody like you. And what would I have found after my hour and a half of downloading?” Saaf: “it might just be a blank screen or something. You know, typically speaking, what we push out is just not the real content.” Correspond ent: “What you are trying to do is make this so impossible, so infuriating that people will just throw up their hands and say it?s just easier for me to go rent this thing, buy the DVD or whatever, it?s just easier.” Saaf: “Right.” Correspondent: “That?s your goal.” Saaf::“Right.”

13

Correspondent: “Does that work? Is that a good idea?” Rosso: “No. It doesn?t work. I mean I don?t blame them but it doesn?t work because what happens is that the community cleanses itself of the spoofs.” He means that downloaders quickly spread the word online about how to tell the fake movie files from the real thing. Correspondent: “It?s like an arms race(军备竞赛), isn?t it?” Chernin: “That?s exactly what it?s like. It?s like an arms race. There will be, you know, they?re gonna get a step ahead. We?re gonna try and get that step back.” Rosso: “But I?ll tell you one thing: I?ll bet on the hackers.” Correspondent: “That they will break whatever…” Rosso: “The studios come up with.” Correspondent: “The companies throw at them.”

Hollywood knows that downloading off the Internet is the way millions

of consumers want to get their entertainment---and that isn?t going away. Chernin: “The generally accepted estimate is that more that 60 million Americans have downloaded file-sharing softwa re onto their computers.” Correspondent: “60 million.”

14

Chernin: “At 60 million Americans, that?s a mainstream product. That?s not a bunch of college kids or, you know, a bunch of computer geeks. That?s America.” So, instead of trying to stop it entirely, the studios are looking for ways to embrace it, but get paid too. Wayne Rosso says the best way is to negotiate some kinds of licensing deal with him. Rosso: “If the movie industry acts now and starts exploring alternatives and solutions with guys like m e, hopefully they won?t have a problem.” Correspondent: “What if they try to buy you?” Rosso: “I?d sell it in al heartbeat.” Correspondent: “You would sell, Grokster would sell to a movie studio?” Rosso: “Sure, call me.” The idea of making deals with what Peter Chernin calls “a bunch of crooks” doesn?t appeal to Hollywood. Instead, Fox and other studios have just launched their own site, Movielink, where consumers can download a film for a modest fee, between three and five dollars. Chernin: “I think you wo uld love the idea that you don?t have to go to the video store. You can do this. And that?s what we?re working

15

on. But in order for that to be effective, we have to stop privacy, because the most effective business model in the world can?t compete with free.” Not that Peter Chernin is interested, but he won?t have the chance to buy Grokster, at least not from Wayne Rosso. A few days ago, Rosso announced that he is leaving Grokster to take over as president of another file-swapping software company, this one based in Spain. Grokster will continue under new management.

Key to the exercises Task I Global Listening

1. C

2. C.

3. D .

4. D

5. A

6. B.

7. B

8. C

Task II Episode 1 1. T 2. F 3. T 4. F 5. T Listen for Details

Episode 2 1 2 3

Episode 3 (1) technology always wins (2) software (4) radio

(3) advertising supported (5) Ten million people

(6) music (8) not liable for (10) control (12) facilitating (14) comfortable

(7) video games (9) typo (11) fig leaf (13) steal

Episode 4

1. Following the music industry and begin to sue individuals who download movies.

2. Airing ads about people whose jobs are at risk because of piracy.

3. Keeping copies of movies from leaking in the first place.

4. Hiring people to hack the hackers/serve up thousands of fake copies of

new movies.

Episode 5

1. Downloading off the Internet.

2. 60 million

3. Embrace it and get paid too.

4. A bunch of crooks.

5. 3-5 dolloars.

6. Stopping piracy.

八上英语课文翻译

2018年新版八年级上册1 - 10单元 (课文+翻译) 八年级上册1 - 10单元(课文+翻译) Unit 1 Where did you go on vacation? ---------------------------------- P 2 你去哪儿度假了? Unit 2 How often do you exercise? -------------------------------------- P4 你多久锻炼一次? Unit 3 I’m more outgoing than my sister. ----------------------------- P6 我比我的姐妹外向。 Unit 4 What’s the best movie theater? ---------------------------------- P8 最好的电影院是哪家? Unit 5 Do you want to watch a game show? -------------------------- P 10 1

你想看个游戏节目吗? Unit 6 I'm going to study computer science. ------------------------- P 12我打算学习计算机科学。 Unit 7 Will people have robots? ---------------------------------------- P 14人们将会有机器人吗? Unit 8 How do you make a banana milk shake? -------------------- P16 你怎样制作香蕉奶昔? Unit 9 Can you come to my party? ------------------------------------P18 你能来我的聚会吗? Unit 10 If you go to the party, you’ll have a great time! -------------P20如果你去参加聚会的话,你将会玩得非常高兴! Unit 1 Where did you go on vacation? 你去哪儿度假了?Section A —1b(P1) Conversation 1(对话1) Xiang Hua: Hey, Tina. Where did you go on vacation? 嘿,蒂娜。你去哪儿度假了? Tina: I went to the mountains with my family. 我和家人去爬山了。Xiang Hua: Did everyone have a good time? 大家都玩得开心吗?Tina: Oh, yes. Everything was excellent. Where did you go, Xiang Hua? 哦,是的。一切都很棒。你去哪儿了,项华? Xiang Hua: I went to New York City. 我去了纽约市。Conversation 2(对话2) Girl: Where did you go on vacation, Sally? 莎莉,你去哪儿度假了?Sally: Nothing. I just stayed at home. 没有,我只是呆在家里。Girl: And did you do anything interesting, Bob? 你做了什么有趣的事吗,鲍勃? Bob: Yes, I visited my uncle. We went fishing, but we didn’t get any fish. 是的,我看望了我叔叔。我们去钓鱼了,但是没钓到鱼。Conversation 3(对话3) Boy: Did you go anywhere on vacation, Tom? 汤姆,假期你去了什么地方吗? Tom: I went to summer camp. 我去了夏令营。 Boy: Did you go with anyone? 你和别人去的吗? 2

新视野大学英语视听说教程1完整答案

Unit 1 Listening skills (1)David(2) Leigh(3)Vicky Klein(4) Laura Tish Hill(5)Anthony McDonald Listening in Task 1BDBCA Task 2 John 2,3,5 Lisa 1,4,6 Task 3 1. In order to gain admission to a study course. 2.To corner him. 3.He could answer either ten easy questions or one really difficult. 4.He was jolted / shocked. 5.Because the interviewer had promised that he would only ask one difficult question. Task 4 (1)attention(2)closing(3)five(4)checkouts (5)leave Let’s talk Further listening and speaking Task 1 1.new and different 2.on his own 3.a bit confused4.talk with 5. sleep in Task 2 FTTFT 第一单元Unit test Part I BDCDB

Part II (1)all right (2)better(3)meet(4)how’s(5)major(6)What about Part III DBCAC Part IV 1-5 AACBD6-10 DCADB11-15 CBDAD16-20 CBCBD Unit 2 Lead in task 1 baseball basketball kickboxing tennis tai chi jogging skiing swimming Listening skills DACBD Listening in Task 1 DBCDA Task 2 (1)strong and healthy (2) energy (3) sleep better(4)different (5)tastes and needs (6)careful Task 3 went golfing together. 2. He was giving him tips. 3. On Hole 8. 4. The ball bumped against the tree and landed near where it had started. 5. Because the tree was only three feet tall at that time. Task 4 Department 6. exercise opportunity Let’s talk Jack 2,4,5 Jim 1,3,6 Further listening and speaking Task 1 1. local clubs 2. weekly 3. popular 4. big three 5. fan base Task 2 FTTFT

外研版英语八上课文翻译

Module 1 Unit 1 詹姆斯老师:同学们,欢迎大家返校学习。今天,我们要讨论一下学习英语的好方法。准备好了吗?谁能提些建议? 玲玲:在课堂上我们应该一直说英语。 詹姆斯老师:好!让我们尽量多说英语吧。 大明:为什么不把错误记在笔记本上呢? 詹姆斯老师:这是一个好主意。别忘了将正确答案记在错误的旁边。还有什么建议?玲玲:每天拼读并大声地朗读新单词也是一个好办法。 詹姆斯老师:多谢玲玲。听英语广播你们觉得怎么样? 大明:是的,听英语广播对我们的发音也有好处。但是生词太多了。 詹姆斯老师:你们并不需要听懂每个单词,只要能听懂关键词和主要内容就可以了。大明:阅读也是这样。英语故事很有趣。通过阅读,我能更多地了解世界。 玲玲:我想写作也同样重要。为什么不找些英国笔友呢?我们可以给他们写写信。 詹姆斯老师:太好了!我同意你的观点。 Unit 2 问与答 把你的问题发给语言医生黛安娜。 很多学生请我就如何提高英语水平给出建议。下面是他们提出的三个基本问题 第一个问题是关于如何理解英文电影和英文歌曲的。湖北的李浩写道:“我喜欢看英文电影,听英文歌曲,但我听懂得不多。我该怎么办呢?” 看电影、听歌曲是很好的英语学习方式。多看多听几遍,然后猜猜生词的意思。每一次你都将学到新的东西。我还建议你和朋友谈一谈看过的电影或听过的歌曲。 第二个问题是关于口语的。吉林的王帆写道:“我们学校有一位来自美国的外教。但是我比较腼腆,不敢和她说话,我该怎么办?” 你可以说:“嗨!你好!”“你喜欢中国吗?”这些都是发起话题的好方式。说话

之前,对她笑一笑。记住:别害羞,多尝试。 第三个问题是关于词汇的。安徽的张磊写道:“我把生词写下来,但是很快就忘记 了,我怎么才能记住这些生词呢?” 别担心。忘记生词是正常的!我建议你每天在纸上记下四五个单词,放在房间里。 看到就念一念,并尽量运用这些单词。 Module 2 Unit l 托尼:嗨,大明,周末过得怎样? 大明:挺不错!我去了深圳。 托尼:深圳在哪儿? 大明:哦,在临近香港的海边。大约三十年前深圳还是个小村庄,但今天成了个大都市。 托尼:这么说深圳是一个比香港还新的城市? 大明:是的,深圳是个很新的城市。实际上,深圳到了20世纪80 年代才成为一个重要的城市。现在深圳越来越大,也越来越繁华了。我相信,将来它会和香港一样繁华。 托尼:深圳有多少人口? 大明:我想超过一千万吧,比中国其他许多城市的人口都要多。它的街道也更宽敞、更干净。 我认为深圳是个美丽的城市。 托尼:有朝一日我也想去那里看看。 大明:那你可要记得去看看地王大厦。它比深圳的其他许多建筑都高。 Unit 2 剑桥,伦敦和英格兰 托尼·史密斯 我来自剑桥,一座位于英格兰东部的美丽城市。剑桥位于康河河畔,有大约十二万人口。我的故乡(剑桥)因其大学学府而名满天下。许多著名人物都在这里学习过,比如艾萨克·牛顿和查尔斯·达尔文。那里有许多古老的建筑和教堂可以参观。学生和游客都很喜欢乘船沿着康河游览。 剑桥距离伦敦80 公里。伦敦位于英格兰南部,泰晤士河畔,拥有约750万人口,所以它比剑桥更大、

新视野大学英语视听说教程1第三版答案

新视野大学英语视听说教程1答案Unit1 II. Listening Skills Listening for Names 1.David 2.Leigh 3.Vicky Klein https://www.sodocs.net/doc/d816366938.html,ura Tish Hill 5. Anthony McDonald III. Listening In 1.B 2.D 3.B 4.C 5.A Task 1: Enrolling Task 2: Living on Campus 1. She thinks it’s easy to make friends. 2. It’s convenient to use the library, the labs, the sports center and many other facilities. 3. It’s near the shopping center. 4. They would have to get up so early to get to classes on time. And then it would take a lot of time to get home. 5. It seems all the same every day. Task 3: Learning to speak English 1.formal 2.formally 3.casual https://www.sodocs.net/doc/d816366938.html,mon 5.native 6.relaxed 7.friendly Task 4: An Announcement 1.attention 2.closing 3.five 4.checkouts 5.leave V. Let’s Talk Speaker Major Future Job Plan Tuition Source Michael Travel and tourism To work for a travel agency Working his way through school Jane Computer science

【参考借鉴】新标准大学英语-视听说教程3--(听力原文及翻译).doc

Unit1 InsideView Conversation1 Janet:Hi,it’s meagain,JanetLi.I’m stillastudentattheUniversitRofORfordinE ngland.ButI’mnotinORfordrightnow.AndIhaven’tgonebackhometo Chinaeither.It’sthelongvacationnow,andbelieveitornot,it’sthemiddle ofsummer.I’mspendingmRsummerinoneoftheworld’sgreatestcities.I ’minLondon,hometotheHousesofParliament,BigBen,TowerBridge …andthedouble-deckerbus.Iwanttofindoutwhatit’sliketoliveinthisbu sR,livelRcitR.SoI’mworkingforLondonTimeOff,awebsiteaboutwhat ’soninLondon.ThisisJoe…,he’smRboss,andthisisAndR,whoisarepor ter.Andwhat’smRjob?Well,Idon’tknowRet,becauseit’smRfirstdaR.B utI’mmeanttobeshadowingAndR,oh,whatImeanis,I’m goingtobehelp inghim.SocanRoutellmesomethingaboutLondon,AndR? AndR:It’sthegreatestcitRintheworld.. Joe:ERceptforNewRork! AndR:NewRork?Don’tmakemelaugh! Joe:AndRourpointis…? AndR:Look,ifRouwantmRopinion,LondonisgreaterthanNewRork…Joe:No,Idon’twantRouropinion,thankRouverRmuch.It’safact. AndR:Afact!AreRouserious? \Janet:AndhereweareinLondon,probablRthegreatestcitRintheworld. AndR:What?ProbablR?ERcuseme,IprefertodealwiththismRself… Joe:Ah,dreamon,AndR……… 珍妮特:嗨,又是我,珍妮特.李。我目前还是一位英国牛津大学的学生,但我现在不在牛津,也还没有回中国的家。现在在放 长假,而且不管你信不信,现在是夏天的中期。我现在正在 世界上最棒的城市之一里度过我的夏天。我在伦敦,它是英 国国会大厦、大本钟、塔桥…和双层巴士的故乡。我想知道 住在如此热闹和生气勃勃的城市里是什么感觉。所以,我现 在在为伦敦下班网效劳。它是一个报道伦敦时事的网站。这 是乔,他是我的老板,而他是安迪,一位记者。我的工作是 什么呢?这个我也不知道,因为今天是我的第一天,但我会 注定跟随着安迪。喔,我的意思是,我将会协助他。那么安 迪,你能告诉我一些关于伦敦的事情吗? 安迪:伦敦是世界上最棒的城市。 乔:除了纽约以外! 安迪:纽约?别逗我笑了! 乔:那你的观点是…? 安迪:注意,如果你真的需要我的观点,伦敦确实比纽约棒…

外研版八年级上册英语课文翻译

Module 1 怎样学英语 Unit 1 让我们尽可能多的讲英语 詹姆斯老师:同学们,欢迎回来!今天,我们打算谈论一下学习英语的好方法。准备好了吗?谁有一些建议? 玲玲:在课堂上我们应该总是讲英语。 詹姆斯老师:好!让我们尽可能多地讲英语。 大明:为什么不在我们笔记本上记下我们的错误呢? 詹姆斯老师:那是个好主意,而且不要忘记在错误旁边写下正确的答案,还有什么其它的建议? 玲玲:每天拼写并大声朗读新单词是个好主意。 詹姆斯老师:非常感谢,玲玲,听广播怎么样? 大明:是的,那也有益于我们的发音。但有很多生词。 詹姆斯老师:你(们)不必理解每个单词(的含义)。你(们)只需要听关键词和主要意思。 大明:阅读也一样。英语故事很有趣。通过阅读我逐渐了解了世界上的许多事情。 玲玲:我认为写作也很重要。我们为什么不尽量去找些英语笔友呢?我们可以给他们写信。 詹姆斯老师:太棒了!我同意你的提议。 Unit 2 你应该向她微笑 把你的问题发送给语言博士黛安娜。 很多学生请求给予如何提高他们的英语水平的建议。这儿是三个基本问题。 第一个问是关于(如何)理解英文电影和歌曲。来自湖北的李浩写道:我喜欢看英文电影和听英文歌曲,但我理解的不多。我该怎么办呢? 看电影和听歌曲是学习英语很好的方式!看和听几遍,并猜测生词的含义。每一遍你都会学到新东西。我还建议你和朋友们谈论一下这些电影或歌曲。 第二个问题是关于口语的。来自吉林的王帆写道:“我们学校有一位来自美国的老师。我很腼腆,不敢与她说话。我该怎么办?” 你可以说:“嗨!你好吗?”“你喜欢中国吗”这些都是展开交谈的好方式。在你开始(讲英语)前,你应该

英语视听说unit答案

Unit 1 Outside View Activity 2 Activity 3 Script Eugene: The tradition that er, was most important to me was probably Summer Eights. I was a rower. And Summer Eights is a rowing competition, held in May in the summer term. And in this competition, each college is trying to improve its place which it won the previous year and gradually work its way up the river. Julie: When the students take exams, they must go to a special building and it’s called Examination Schools. And also they must wear a special uniform, so they wear a gown like mine, a black gown, and they wear a white shirt, and the men wear a white tie and black trousers. Um, the women wear a white shirt and a black skirt or black trousers. And they must wear this uniform, which has a Latin name –subfusc–and they must wear this uniform in order to take their examinations. Eugene: I think the Oxford traditions lend character to the place, and it’s such an old institution, it should have traditions, but they can be very inconvenient, for example, subfusc. This is the er, uniform that we are required according to the university rules to wear. Julie: They also wear flowers in their buttonholes, and those flowers are carnations. And they wear different colours, the students wear different coloured flowers for different examinations. So when you take your first exam you wear a white flower, and when you take your second exam you wear a pink flower, and when you take your final examination you wear a red carnation. Eugene: So we have to dress up in a full black suit, starched collar, white bow tie and carry a mortarboard. And to write an exam in the summer heat whilst wearing all that which you’re not allowed to take off, is um, uncomfortable. Julie: I really like the Oxford traditions, I think it’s part of our history, and part of um, being a student or a teacher here at Oxford University. News Report Activity 1 Script Oxford University has seen a rise in the number of applications from state school students thanks to Harry Potter. The university says that teenagers who have followed Harry’s adventures at Hogwarts are no longer discouraged by Oxford’s traditions because they remind them of scenes in

全新版大学英语视听说教程1学生用书答案

全新版大学英语视听说教程1 学生用书答案 知乎(答主纯手工打字,有错误请小可爱们多包涵,有错误欢迎指出) U1 Listening A: 1、Answers will vary. (e.g. He is picking an asparagus plant; he is a farmer.) 2、Answers will vary. (e.g. Some people have too much rain; other people do not have enough water. 3、Answers will vary. C: 1、crucial 2、resources 3、huge 4、on average 5、conserve 6、requires 7、cut 8、leak 9、wastes 10、statistics D: 1、C 2、BC 3、B E: 1、70 2 2、7.5 billion 3、9 billion 4、1,799 5、3,000 13 F: 1、water brush your teeth 2、shorter showers 3、meat 4、leaky faucets Extended Listening Exercise A: 1、C 2、B 3、D 4、C Exercise B: S2: 6、20、25、80 S3:put off、dripping、leaky、leave、brushing your teeth、shorter showers、laundry Exercise C: 1、C 2、B 3、B 4、A 5、A Exercise D: wasteful a、leave the lights on b、drink half of it c、go bad Exercise E: 3 2 1 4 Exercise F: 1、D 2、B 3、A Exercise G: 1、36 2、140,000 3、15.4 3 17 Exercise H: 1、B 2、A 3、B 4、C Exercise I: 1、agreement world greenhouse emissions 2、February 2005 3、air conditioning jackets and

大学英语视听说3听力原文翻译Unit-3

大学英语视听说3听力原文翻译Unit-3

Unit 3 II. Basic Listening Practice 1.Script W: Chinese students are often too shy to say anything in class. M: I think they don’t speak because their culture values modesty,and they don’t want to be showing off. Goes back to Confucius. Q: Why don’t Chinese students say in class according to the man? C) They are modest. W:中国学生往往羞于说话在课上。 M:我想他们不说话是因为他们的文化价值观的谦虚,他们不想炫耀。回归到孔子。 问:为什么没有中国学生在课堂上说话? C)他们是温和的。 2.Script W: The government is doing something at last about sex discrimination in the work place. Women deserve the same pay as men for the same work. M: Yeah. In the United States, women earn only 70 percent of what men get for the same job. It’s a situation that has to be changed. Q: What does the man say about the women? A) They earn less than men. W:政府现在在做的事情,工作场所的性别歧视。女人的付出男人一样。 M:是的。在美国,同样的工作妇女的工资只有男性的百分之70。这一情况已经有所改变。 问:什么人说的女人? 一)他们的收入比男性少。 3. Script W: I admire Michael Dell. He had a dream to be the world’s largest manufacture of personal computers, and he has realized that dream. M: And he dropped out of university to become a success. I wonder if there is a lesson in that. Q: What do we learn about Michael Dell from the dialog? D) He succeeded in his career though he did not complete his education.

【8A版】八上英语课文翻译

八上英语课文M1-5翻译 M1 U1让我们尽可能多说英语。 听力和词汇 詹姆斯女士:欢迎大家回来。今天,我们将要讨论学习英语的好方法。准备好了吗? 谁有一些建议呢? 玲玲:我们在课堂上应该总是说英语。 詹姆斯女士:好,让我们尽可能多说英语。 大明:为何不把错误都记在我们的笔记本上呢? 詹姆斯女士:那是一个好主意。不要忘了把正确答案写在错误的旁边。不有什么? 玲玲:每天大声地拼读新单词是一个好主意。 詹姆斯女士:非常感谢,玲玲。听广播怎么样? 大明:不错,那对我们的发音也很有用。但是有很多生词。 詹姆斯女士:你不必要去听懂每一个单词。你只需听懂关键词语和主要思想。 大明:对于阅读来说也是一样。英语故事非常有趣。通过阅读我可以了解许多关于这个世界的知识。 玲玲:我认为写作也很重要。为何我们不尽力找一些英语笔友呢? 我们可以写信给他们。 詹姆斯女士:好极了。我同意你。 U2 Youshouldsmileather! 很多学生寻求关于提高英语水平的建议。 这里有三个基本的问题。 第一个是关于理解英语电影和歌曲的问题。来自湖北的李浩写道,“我喜欢看英语电影,听英语歌曲,但我仅仅只能懂得一点点。我能做什么?” 看电影和听歌曲是很好的学英语的方法! 多看,多听几次,然后猜测新单词的意思。 每一次你都会学到一些新的东西。 我也建议你与你的朋友们计论下所看的电影和所听的歌曲。 第二个是关于说英语的问题。 来自吉林的王帆写到,“我们学校有一名来自美国的老师。我很害羞,不敢与她讲话。 我该怎么办呢?” 你可以说:“你好,你好吗?”“你喜欢中国吗?” 这些都是开始一段对话的好方法。 在你开始对话之前,你应当对她微笑! 记住这一点:不要害羞。只管去尝试。 第三个是关于词汇的问题。 来自安徽的张磊写道,“我写下新的单词,但是我很快就把它们忘了。我怎样才能记住它们?” 不要担心。忘记新单词是很自然的事情! 我建议你每天把在纸下写下四个或到五个单词写,然后把它们放在你的房间里。 当你看到这些单词时就读出来,并且试着去使用它们 U3 第三单元语言运用 世界各地 在线英语 除了英语杂志,报纸和广播以外,还有各种种类的英语学习网站。 【MeiWei81-优质实用版文档】

大学英语二级视听说Unit1答案+原文 (1)

新编大学英语(第三版)视听说第二册答案+原文 Unit One Love Part 1 Listening, Understanding and Speaking Listening I Exercise 1 1)gaze 2)sighs 3)touch 4)hugs 5)such 6)words 7)praises 8)understands 9)lends 10)holds Scripts: A Mother's Love You can see it in her eyes— in her gaze and in her sighs. It is a mother's love. You can feel it in her touch— in her tender hugs and such. It is a mother's love. You can hear it in her words— in her praises and bywords. It is a mother's love. She cares. She understands. She lends an ear and holds our hands. She gives us a mother's love. Listening II Exercise 1 1)B 2)B 3)A 4)D 5)C Exercise 2 a lot of garbage; came up all over the city; raw sewage and it smelled; became suburban sprawl with very little planning; the NRDC; Board of Trustees; New England; join the cause of protecting the environment Scripts: For more than four decades, John Adams has fought to defend the environment and empowered individuals in the U.S. and around the world to join the cause. Adams is cofounder of the National Resources Defense Council, the NRDC, the nation’s first law firm for the environment. “Defending the environment,” John Adams says, “is personal.” “When you care about something, like the environment, it does become a passion,”he says. “It becomes your life. I grew up on a small-town farm in the Catskill Mountains of New York. It was a wonderful place to grow up. I loved it.”

新标准大学英语 视听说教程3 (听力原文及翻译)

Unit 1 Inside View Conversation 1 Janet: Hi, it’s me again, Janet Li. I’m still a student at the University of Oxford in England. But I’m not in Oxford right now. And I haven’t gone back home to China either. It’s the long vacation now, and believe it or not, it’s the middle of summer. I’m spending my summer in one of the world’s greatest cities. I’m in London, home to the Houses of Parliament, Big Ben, Tower Bridge…and the double-decker bus. I want to find out what it’s like to live in this busy, lively city. So I’m working for London Time Off, a website about what’s on in London. This is Joe…, he’s my boss, and this is Andy, who is a reporter. And what’s my job? Well, I don’t know yet, because it’s my first day. But I’m meant to be shadowing Andy, oh, what I mean is, I’m going to be helping him. So can you tell me something about London, Andy? Andy: It’s the greatest city in the world. . Joe: Except for New York! Andy: New York? Don’t make me laugh! Joe: And your point is…? Andy: Look, if you want my opinion, London is greater than New York… Joe: No, I don’t want your opinion, thank you very much. It’s a fact. Andy: A fact! Are you serious? \Janet: And here we are in London, probably the greatest city in the world. Andy: What? Probably? Excuse me, I prefer to deal with this myself… Joe: Ah, dream on, Andy……… 珍妮特:嗨,又是我,珍妮特.李。我目前还是一位英国牛津大学的学生,但我现在不在牛津,也还没有回中国的家。现在在放长假,而且不管你信不信,现在是夏天的中期。 我现在正在世界上最棒的城市之一里度过我的夏天。我在伦敦,它是英国国会大厦、 大本钟、塔桥…和双层巴士的故乡。我想知道住在如此热闹和生气勃勃的城市里是 什么感觉。所以,我现在在为伦敦下班网效劳。它是一个报道伦敦时事的网站。这 是乔,他是我的老板,而他是安迪,一位记者。我的工作是什么呢?这个我也不知 道,因为今天是我的第一天,但我会注定跟随着安迪。喔,我的意思是,我将会协 助他。那么安迪,你能告诉我一些关于伦敦的事情吗? 安 迪: 伦敦是世界上最棒的城市。 乔 : 除了纽约以外! 安迪:纽约?别逗我笑了! 乔:那你的观点是… ? 安迪:注意,如果你真的需要我的观点,伦敦确实比纽约棒… 乔:不,我不需要你的观点,非常感谢!这是事实! 安迪:事实!你是当真的吗? 珍妮特:我们现在在伦敦,或许是世界上最棒的城市。 安迪:什么?或许?对不起,我宁可自己处理这个… 乔:啊,安迪,继续做你的美梦吧... Conversation 2

新目标英语八年级上册课文翻译

你去哪儿度假了? P1 A:Tina去哪里度假了? B:她去山里了。 P2 Rick:嗨,海伦。好久不见。 Helen:嗨,里克。是的,我上个月在度 假。 Rick:哦,你去任何有趣的地方了吗? Helen:是的,我和我的家人去了贵州。 Rick:哇哦!你看到黄果树瀑布了吗? Helen:是,我看到了。它非常的好。我 们在那里拍了很多照片。你 呢?你上个月做了什么特别的 事情吗? Rick: 并没有。我只是大多数时间待在 家里读书和放松。 P3 1.你去哪儿度假了? 2.我去了纽约市。 3.你和某个人一起出去的吗? 4.不,没有人在这。每个人都在度假。 5.你买了任何特别的东西吗? 6.不,我什么都没买。 7.食物怎么样? 8.所有的东西品尝起来相当好。 9.每个人都玩儿得开心吗? 10.哦,是的。所有的事物都是极好的。P5 7月15日,星期一 今天早上我和家人到达了马来西亚的槟城。天气晴朗而又炎热,因此我们决定到旅馆附近的海滩上去。姐姐和我尝试了滑翔伞运动。我感觉自己就像一只小鸟。太刺激了!午饭我们吃了非常特别的东西——马来西亚黄面条。它们好吃极了!下午我们骑自行车到了乔治市。现在那里有许多新的建筑物,但是仍然有许多老式的建筑物。在乔治市的海墘,一个很古老的地方。我们能看到来自100年前中国商人住过的房屋。我想知道在这儿过去的生活是什么样 的。我真的很喜欢在在镇上到处走走。 7月16日,星期二 一天的变化有多大呀! 我和爸爸决定今天到槟城山。我们 想步行爬到山顶,但是天开始下起 了小雨,因此我们决定乘火车去。 因为我们决定乘火车去。因为人太 多,我们等了一个多小时的火车。 当我们到达山顶的时候,雨下得很 大。我们没有雨伞,因此我们(全 身)又湿又冷。真是太糟糕了!而 且因为坏天气,我们也没能看到下 面的任何景色。我爸爸没带足够的 钱,所以我们仅吃了一碗米饭和一 些鱼肉。这些食物尝起来真好吃, 因为我很饿!

研究生英语听说教程第二册课本练习题答案-Unit1

Unit 1 Part two 2. Scanning for background information Exercise 1. upset, informal, student, school, young 2. restaurant, polite, middle-aged or old 3. bookstore, middle-aged, worried 4. library, young, middle-aged, mid or low level of education, excited , middle-aged or old, impatient, high, annoyed 5. student health center, young, student, worried, not rich, middle-aged, professional, receptionist 3. Scanning for the main idea Exercise Main idea: a basketball game Key words: $50 in the pool; ticket; front row center; three-pointer; third quarter; best game; Shaq stole the ball, strong as football players; as graceful as ballet dancers; seven feet tall 4.Scanning for the important points Exercise 1 a 2 b 3 b 5. Inferencing Exercise

新编大学英语视听说3听力原文(完整)

New College English视听说教程 3听力原文 第一单元 Mike: Hey, guys. Come and look. I've found an interesting Web site on star signs. (The others come close to the computer and look at the star signs on the screen.) Ted: Hey, that's interesting! What's your sign, Sam? Sam: I'm a Scorpio. What's yours, Ted? Ted: I have no idea. I've never really thought about that. Let's have a look. I was born on September 5. Oh, I'm a Virgo. Simon: And I'm a Libra. Sam: What do they say about Libra, Simon? Simon: (He reads.) You're a sociable, charming person. You go out of your way to avoid confrontation and do everything in your power to make your life an easy one. Although you're generally likeable, you can be changeable, superficial and critical. But you manage to hide those traits most of the time. Mike: Do you agree with that? Are you that type of person? Simon: What do you think? I think there is something in what it says. I am social and outgoing. But I am not changeable, am I? What's your sign, Mike? Mike: I'm a Taurus. Ah, what's yours, Lilly? Lilly: I'm a Cancer. Ted: Now let's look at Taurus.( He reads.) You're a patient, practical type. Good points include your affectionate, kind nature, your trustworthiness and strength of character. Bad points include your possessiveness, self-indulgence and stubbornness. Do you think your character fits well? Mike: No, not at all. I'm not patient, and I'm not practical either. I am kind of quick-tempered and ambitious. That's definitely not me! But one thing is right: I AM stubborn. Simon: Sam, let me read yours. (He reads.) You are secretive, and sexy. You have the worst reputation in the zodiac. Scorpio has a dark side, which includes revengeful and destructive traits. Yet despite this, you can be the wittiest, kindest and most entertaining of all the signs. Sam: Oh, that can't be true! Are you sure you were reading Scorpio? Simon: Yes, of course! Look for yourself. Sam: But that's unfair! I have the worst reputation in the zodiac?! The others: (They all laugh and say.) Ha ha... Poor Sam! Sam: Who could believe such silly things! Really, I think I'm intelligent, humorous, and kind-hearted. Mike: Yes, but those are just your good traits. Don't forget about your bad ones! Sam: Come on! Oh, Lilly, we haven't looked at your sign yet. Eh, you are a Cancer, right? You want me to read yours? Lilly: No, thanks. I'm afraid you'll distort what's written there. Let me read it myself. (She reads.) To some people, you appear tough and determined, but that's just a "front" you put up to protect the real you, which is rather more sensitive and softer. You can be moody, touchy and irritable, but you make up for those negative traits with your kindness, great intuition and protective nature. That's not bad, is it? Simon: No. But what counts is not what it says, but how you really are, what you are actually like. Lilly: (She is a bit defensive.) What do you mean? What are you trying to say about me? Simon: I think you are much nicer than what it describes. (Lilly smiles.) The other boys: Oh, Simon, don't sweet-talk her! We know what you are thinking. Ted: Hey, I haven't seen mine yet. Now it's my turn. Mike: Go ahead, Ted! Be our guest! Ted: It says: Virgo people like order in all things and are neat, clean and precise in their habits. Virgo people are perfectionists and they sometimes can be critical. They do not like to draw attention to themselves. Virgo people are modest, and careful about what they eat or drink. Sam: Do you have any objections to that? Ted: I think the description matches me quite well. I AM a perfectionist. I like things to be in order. Erm, I...I'm careful about what I eat and drink. But it doesn't mention my weak points. Lilly: Oh! And what are those?

相关主题