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课文翻译what's he like

课文翻译what's he like
课文翻译what's he like

Let’s talk.

Do you know Mr Y oung?

你知道Mr young吗?

No, I don’t(=do not). Who is he? 不,我不知道。他是谁?He’s (=He is) our music teacher.

他是我们的音乐老师。

Is he young?

他是年轻的吗?

No, he isn’ t (=is not). He’s (=He is) old. 不,他不是。他是年老的。

Is he funny?

他是有趣的吗?

Y es, he is(≠he’s).

是的,他是。

Great! I like funny teachers.

太好了!我喜欢有趣的老师。

Who’s your English teacher?

谁是你的英语老师?

M iss W hite.

怀特小姐。

Is she kind?

她是和蔼可亲的吗?

Y es,she is.

Ask and answer

Who’s M rs S mith?

史密斯太太是谁?

She’s the head teacher. She’s tall. She’s 她是班主任。她是高的。她是strict.

严格的。

Let’s spell

No candy for the baby.小孩不准吃糖

No candy for the baby.小孩不准吃糖

I am sorry, little baby.很抱歉,小孩

But no candy for the baby.但小孩不准吃糖

Let’s talk

Hey, Ms Wang will be our new Chinese 嘿, 王女士将会成为我们的新语文teacher.

老师。

Really? What’s she like?

真的吗?她是怎样的?

She’s(=She is) kind.

她是和蔼可亲的。

Is she strict?

她是严格的吗?

Yes, sometimes.

是的,有时候。

Do you know her?

你了解她吗?

Yes. She’s(=She is)my mother.

是的。她是我的妈妈。

Haha. Cool!

哈哈。酷!

Unit 9 How to Grow Old 课文翻译

Unit 9 How to Grow Old Bertrand A. Russell 1. In spite of the title, this article will really be on how not to grow old, which, at my time of life, is a much more important subject. My first advice would be, to choose your ancestors carefully. Although both my parents died young, I have done well in this respect as regards my other ancestors. My maternal grandfather, it is true, was cut off in the flower of his youth at the age of sixty-seven, but my other three grandparents all lived to be over eighty. Of remoter ancestors I can only discover one who did not live to a great age, and he died of a disease which is now rare, namely, having his head cut off. A great-grandmother of mine, who was a friend of Gibbon, lived to the age of ninety-two, and to her last day remained a terror to all her descendants. My maternal grandmother, after having nine children who survived, one who died in infancy, and many miscarriages, as soon as she became a widow devoted herself to women’s higher education. She was one of the founders of Girton College, and worked hard at opening the medical profession to women. She used to relate how she met in Italy an elderly gentleman who was looking very sad. She inquired the cause of his melancholy and he said that he had just parted fro m his two grandchildren. “Good gracious,” she exclaimed, “I have seventy-two grandchildren, and if I were sad each time I parted from one of them, I should have a dismal existence!” “Madre snaturale,” he replied. But speaking as one of the seventy-two, I prefer her recipe. After the age of eighty she found she had some difficulty in getting to sleep, so she habitually spent the hours from midnight to 3 a.m. in reading popular science. I do not believe that she ever had time to notice that she was growing old. This, I think, is the proper recipe for remaining young. If you have wide and keen interests and activities in which you can still be effective, you will have no reason to think about the merely statistical fact of the number of years you have already lived, still less of the probable brevity of your future. 2. As regards health, I have nothing useful to say since I have little experience of illness. I eat and drink whatever I like, and sleep when I cannot keep awake. I never do anything whatever on the ground that it is good for health, though in actual fact the things I like doing are mostly wholesome. 3. Psychologically there are two dangers to be guarded against in old age. One of these is undue absorption in the past. It does not do to live in memories, in regrets for the good old days, or in sadness about friends who are dead. One’s thoughts must be directed to

Unit 1 A Class Act 课文翻译

Unit 1 A CLASS ACT Florence Cartlidge 1. Growing up in bomb-blitzed Manchester during the Second World War meant times were tough, money was short, anxiety was rife and the pawnshop was a familiar destination for many families, including mine. 2. Yet I could not have asked for more enterprising and optimistic parents. They held our family together with hard work, dignity and bucketloads of cheer. My sturdy and ingenious father could turn his hand to almost anything and was never short of carpentry and handyman work. He even participated in the odd bout of backstreet boxing to make ends meet. For her part, our mum was thrifty and meticulously clean, and her five children were always sent to school well fed, very clean, and attired spotlessly, despite the hard conditions. 3. The trouble was, although my clothes were ironed to a knife-edge, and shoes polished to a gleam, not every item was standard school uniform issue. While Mum had scrimped and saved to obtain most of the gear, I still didn’t have the pres cribed blue blazer and hatband. 4. Because of the war, rationing was in place and most schools had relaxed their attitude towards proper uniforms, knowing how hard it was to obtain clothes. Nevertheless, the girls’ school I attended made it strict policy that each of its students was properly attired, and the deputy headmistress who ran the daily assembly made it her mission to teach me a lesson. 5. Despite my attempts at explaining why I couldn’t comply, and despite the fact that I was making slow progress towards the full uniform, every day I would be pulled out of line and made to stand on the stage as a shining example of what not to wear to school. 6. Every day I would battle back tears as I stood in front of my peers, embarrassed and, most often, alone. My punishment also extended to being barred from the gym team or to not taking part in the weekly ballroom dancing classes, which I adored. I desperately

大学英语2课文译文

Unit 1 A heated discussion about whether men are braver than women is settled in a rather unexpected way. The dinner party Mona Gardner I first heard this tale in India, where is told as if true -- though any naturalist would know it couldn't be. Later someone told me that the story appeared in a magazine shortly before the First World War. That magazine story, and the person who wrote it, I have never been able to track down. The country is India. A colonial official and his wife are giving a large dinner party. They are seated with their guests -- officers and their wives, and a visiting American naturalist -- in their spacious dining room, which has a bare marble floor, open rafters and wide glass doors opening onto a veranda. A spirited discussion springs up between a young girl who says that women have outgrown the jumping-on-a-chair-at-the-sight-of-a-mouse era and a major who says that they haven't. "A woman's reaction in any crisis," the major says, "is to scream. And while a man may feel like it, he has that ounce more of control than a woman has. And that last ounce is what really counts." The American does not join in the argument but watches the other guests. As he looks, he sees a strange expression come over the face of the hostess. She is staring straight ahead, her muscles contracting slightly. She motions to the native boy standing behind her chair and whispers something to him. The boy's eyes widen: he quickly leaves the room. Of the guests, none except the American notices this or sees the boy place a bowl of milk on the veranda just outside the open doors. The American comes to with a start. In India, milk in a bowl means only one thing -- bait for a snake. He realizes there must be a cobra in the room. He looks up at the rafters -- the likeliest place -- but they are bare. Three corners of the room are empty, and in the fourth the servants are waiting to serve the next course. There is only one place left -- under the table. His first impulse is to jump back and warn the others, but he knows the commotion would frighten the cobra into striking. He speaks quickly, the tone of his voice so commanding that it silences everyone. "I want to know just what control everyone at this table has. I will count three hundred -- that's five minutes -- and not one of you is to move a muscle. Those who move will forfeit 50 rupees. Ready?" The 20 people sit like stone images while he counts. He is saying "...two hundred and eighty..." when, out of the corner of his eye, he sees the cobra emerge and make for the bowl of milk. Screams ring out as he jumps to slam the veranda doors safely shut. "You were right, Major!" the host exclaims. "A man has just shown us an example of perfect self-control." "Just a minute," the American says, turning to his hostess. "Mrs. Wynnes, how did you know that cobra was in the room?" A faint smile lights up the woman's face as she replies: "Because it was crawling across my foot."

新大学法语2(UNITE1-4课文+译文)

新大学法语2(UNITE1-4课文+译文) 新大学法语第二册课文与译文(UNITE1-4) ants05 UNITE 1 Texte A La France La France se trouve en Europe de l'Ouest, elle a une superficie de 550 000 kilomètres carrés. Ce n'est pas un pays vaste,mais elle est plus grande que 2l'Espagne et l'Allemagne. La Grande-Bretagne, avec ses 244 000km, est deux fois plus petite que la France. Elle est entourée de nombreux pays: au nord-est, la Belgique et le Luxembourg; à l'est, l'Allemagne, la Suisse et l'Italie; au sud, l'Espagne et au nord-ouest, elle est séparée de la Grande-Bretagne par la Manche. La France est baignée à l'ouest par l'Atlantique immense et la Manche, au sud par la Méditerranée. En France, il y a beaucoup de montagnes: les Alpes, le Jura, les Vosges et les Pyrénées. La France est arrosée par cinq fleuves: la Seine, la Loire, la Garonne, le Rh?ne et le Rhin. La Seine traverse Paris et se jette dans l'Océan Atlantique comme la Garonne et la Loire, tandis que le Rh?ne, lui, se jette dans la Méditerranée. La Seine est un fleuve de 776km de long. La Loire, avec ses 1010km, est le fleuve le plus long de France.

Thechaser追逐者中英对照

The Chaser John Collier Alan Auste n, as n ervous as a kitte n, went up certa in dark and creaky stairs in the n eighborhood of Pell Street , and peered about for a long time on the dim landing before he found the n ame he wan ted writte n obscurely on one of the doors. He pushed ope n this door, as he had bee n told to do, and found himself in a tiny room, which contained no furn iture but a pla in kitche n table, a rock in g-chair, and an ordinary chair. On one of the dirty buff-colored walls were a couple of shelves, containing in all perhaps a doze n bottles and jars. An old man sat in the rock in g-chair, read ing a n ewspaper. Ala n, without a word, handed him the card he had been given. 人Sit down, Mr. Austen, said the old man very politely. 人I am glad to make your acqua intance. 人Is it true, asked Alan, 人that you have a certain mixture that has ! er ! quite extraordinary effects? 人My dear sir, replied the old man, 人my stock in trade is not very large ! I don …t deal in laxatives and teething mixtures ! but such as it is, it is varied. I think nothing I sell has effects which could be precisely described as ordin ary. 人Well, the fact is ! began Alan. 人Here, for example, interrupted the old man, reaching for a bottle from the shelf. 人Here is a liquid as colorless as water, almost tasteless, quite imperceptible in coffee, wine, or any other beverage. It is also quite imperceptible to any known method of autopsy. 人Do you mean it is a poison? cried Alan, very much horrified. 人Call it a glove-cleaner if you like, said the old man indifferently. 人Maybe it will clean gloves. I have never tried. One might call it a life-cleaner. Lives need cleaning sometimes. 人I want nothing of that sort, said Alan. 人Probably it is just as well, said the old man. 人Do you know the price of this? For one teaspoonful, which is sufficient, I ask five thousa nd dollars. Never less. Not a penny less. 人I hope all your mixtures are not as expensive, said Alan apprehe nsively. 人Oh dear, no, said the old man. 人It would be no good charg ing that sort of price for a love poti on, for example. Young people who n eed a love poti on very seldom have five thousa nd dollars. Otherwise they would not n eed a love poti on. 人I am glad to hear that, said Alan. 人I look at it like this, said the old man. 人Please a customer with one article, and he will come back whe n he n eeds another. Even if it is more costly. He will save up for it, if n ecessary. 人So, said Alan, 人you really do sell love potions? 人If I did not sell love potions, said the old man, reaching for another bottle, 人I should not have mentioned the other matter to you. It is only whe n one is in a positi on to oblige that one can afford to be so con fide ntial. 人And these potions, said Alan. 人They are not just ! just ! er ! 人Oh, no, said the old man. 人Their effects are permanent, and exte nd far bey ond casual impulse. But they in clude it. Boun tifully, in siste ntly. Everlast in gly. 人Dear me! said Alan, attempting a look of scientific detachme nt. "How very in teresti ng! 人But consider the spiritual side, said the old man.

新大学法语1第二版课文翻译

Comment allez-vous ? - Bonjour, madame. - 您好,夫人。 - Bonjour, monsieur. Comment allez-vous? - 您好,先生。您好吗? - Très bien, merci. Et vous? - 很好,谢谢,您呢? - Moi aussi, merci. - 我也很好,谢谢。 - Salut, Fanny. - 你好,法妮。 - Salut, Yves. - 你好,伊夫。 - Comment ?a va? - 你好吗? - ?a va bien, merci. Et toi? - 很好,谢谢。你呢? - Moi, ?a va. (…) Tiens! Qui est-ce? - 我(也)很好…… 呦,这是谁? - C’est ma s?ur, Emma. - 这是我妹妹,艾玛。 - Bonjour, Emma.

- 你好,艾玛。 - Bonjour, Yves. - 你好,伊夫。 Qui est–ce ? - Bonjour, Jacques. - 你好,雅克。 - Bonjour, Eric. - 你好,埃里克。 - Je te présente madame Durant. Elle est ingénieur. - 给你介绍一下,(这是)杜朗夫人。她是工程师。 - Enchanté. Je m’appelle Jacques Rivière. Je suis professeur. - 很高兴(认识你)。我叫雅克?里维埃。我是教师。 - Enchantée, monsieur Rivière. - 很高兴(认识你),里维埃先生。 - Alice, c’est toi? Salut! - 阿丽丝,是你啊?你好。 - Salut, Jean. Tiens! Qui est-ce? - 你好,让。呦,这是谁? - C'est ma s?ur - 我妹妹。 - Quel est son nom? - 她叫什么名字?

Unit7TheChaser课文翻译综合教程三

Unit 7 The Chaser John Henry Collier 1 Alan Austen, as nervous as a kitten, went up certain dark and creaky stairs in the neighborhood of Pell Street, and peered about for a long time on the dim hallway before he found the name he wanted written obscurely on one of the doors. 2 He pushed open this door, as he had been told to do, and found himself in a tiny room, which contained no furniture but a plain kitchen table, a rocking-chair, and an ordinary chair. On one of the dirty buff-coloured walls were a couple of shelves, containing in all perhaps a dozen bottles and jars. 3 An old man sat in the rocking-chair, reading a newspaper. Alan, without a word, handed him the card he had been given. “Sit down, Mr. Austen,” said the old man very politely. “I am glad to make your acquaintance.” 4 “Is it true,” asked Alan, “that you have a certain mixture that has … er … quite extraordinary effects?” 5 “My dear sir,” replied the old man, “my sto ck in trade is not very large — I don’t deal in laxatives and teething mixtures —but such as it is, it is varied. I think nothing I sell has effects which could be precisely described as ordinary.” 6 “Well, the fact is …” began Alan. 7 “Here, for example,” interrupted the old man, reaching for a bottle from the shelf. “Here is a liquid as colourless as water, almost tasteless, quite imperceptible in coffee, wine, or any other beverage. It is also quite imperceptible to any known method of autopsy.” 8 “Do you mean it is a poison?” cried Alan, very much horrified. 9 “Call it a glove-cleaner if you like,” said the old man indifferently. “Maybe it will clean gloves. I have never tried. One might call it a life-cleaner. Lives need cleaning sometimes.” 10 “I want nothing of that sort,” said Alan. 11 “Probably it is just as well,” said the old man. “Do you know the price of this? For one teaspoonful, which is sufficient, I ask five thousand dollars. Never less. Not a penny less.” 12 “I hope all your mixtures are not as expensive,” said Alan apprehensively.

新大学法语12册课后翻译练习答案(全)

一 1.这是一张我祖父母的结婚照。 C’est une photo de marriage de mes grand-parents. 2.我父亲是教师,我母亲是职员。 Mon père est professeur, ma mère est employée. 3.他的表妹是独生女。 Sa cousine est fille unique. 4.你的姑妈和叔叔都是记者吗? Ta tante et ton oncle sont tous journalists? 5.我们的祖父母不是工人。 Nos grand-parents ne sont oas ouvriers. 6.巴黎春天的天气怎么样? Quel temps fait-il à Paris, au printemps? 7. 在北京,什么季节经常刮风? à Beijing,il fait souvent du vent en quelle saison? 8. 夏季,天亮的很早,黑的很晚,是吗? En été, il fait jour tot et il fait nuit t ard, n’est-ce pas? 9. 北京的秋季天气非常好,不常下雨。 En automne, il fait beau, est il ne pleut pas souvent à Beijing. 10. 冬天,天气很冷,人们在家里生火取暖。 En hiver, il fait froid. On fait du feu à la maison. 11. 马丁向一位朋友大厅大学食堂的地址。 Martin demande à un ami l’addresse de Resto-U. 12. 大学生很喜欢在学生食堂吃饭。 Les étudiants aiment bien manger au Resto-U. 13. 在那里,人们吃得好,花钱却不多。 On y mange bien, mais on ne paie pas beaucoup. 14. 中午,我们只喝水,不喝酒。 A midi, on boit seulement de l’eau, on ne boit pas de vin. 15. 中国人在餐桌上花费很多时间吗? Les Chinois passent-ils beaucoup de temps à table? 16. 不管冬夏,尼古拉总是起得很早。 Nicolas se lève toujours tot, hiver comme été. 17. 尼古拉的弟弟非常想和他一起去上学。 Le frère de Nicolas a env ie d’aller à l’école avec elle. 18. 我姑妈住在一个美丽又宁静的小村庄。 Ma tant habite dans un petit village beau et calme. 19. 你愿意负责这项有趣的工作吗? Veux-tu t’occuper de ce travail intéressant? 20. 在路上,我们走的很快,因为我们不想迟到。 En route, nous marchons très vite, car nous ne voulons pas étre en retard. 21. 春燕到巴黎已经有二十天了。 Chun Yan est à Paris depuis 20 jours.

最新Unit 1 A Class Act 课文翻译

Unit 1 1 A CLASS ACT 2 3 Florence Cartlidge 4 5 1. Growing up in bomb-blitzed Manchester during the Second World War 6 meant times were tough, money was short, anxiety was rife and the pawnshop was a familiar destination for many families, including mine. 7 8 9 2. Yet I could not have asked for more enterprising and optimistic 10 parents. They held our family together with hard work, dignity and 11 bucketloads of cheer. My sturdy and ingenious father could turn his hand 12 to almost anything and was never short of carpentry and handyman work. 13 He even participated in the odd bout of backstreet boxing to make ends 14 meet. For her part, our mum was thrifty and meticulously clean, and her 15 five children were always sent to school well fed, very clean, and attired 16 spotlessly, despite the hard conditions. 17 18 3. The trouble was, although my clothes were ironed to a knife-edge, 19 and shoes polished to a gleam, not every item was standard school uniform 20 issue. While Mum had scrimped and saved to obtain most of the gear, I 21 still didn’t have the pres cribed blue blazer and hatband. 22 23 4. Because of the war, rationing was in place and most schools had 24 relaxed their attitude towards proper uniforms, knowing how hard it was

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