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Module 8 Unit 1


пα굥´Ê

classic adj. ¾­µäµÄ£¬¹ÅµäµÄ
antique n. ¹Å¶­£¬¹ÅÎï
literary adj. ÎÄѧµÄ
received adj. ±»³ÐÈϵģ¬±»ÈϿɵģ¬¹«ÈϵÄ
wisdom n. Öǻۣ»Ã÷ÖÇ£»Ñ§Ê¶
dust n. »Ò³¾£¬³¾ÍÁ
adaptation n. ¸Ä±à£¬¸Äд
work n. ×÷Æ·£¬Öø×÷
harm n. É˺¦£¬Ë𺦣¬Î£º¦£»Ð°¶ñ£¬
uncertainty n. ²»È·¶¨£¬²»È·ÐÅ£»ÄÑÒÔÔ¤ÁÏ£¬²»¿É¿¿£¬Ò×±ä
tension n. ½ôÕÅ£»½ôÕžÖÊÆ
plot n. £¨Ð¡Ëµ¡¢Ï·¾çµÈµÄ£©Çé½Ú
generous adj. ¿¶¿®µÄ£¬´ó·½µÄ
fortune n. ²Æ¸»£»ÔËÆø£¬ºÃÔË
abrupt adj. ͻȻµÄ£¬ÉúÓ²µÄ
constant adj. ³ÖÐøµÄ£¬²»¶ÏµÄ
reminder n. ÌáÐÑ£¨Ö¸ÈË»òÎ£¬Ìáʾ
shabby adj. Æƾɵģ¬ÆÆÀõģ»±°±É
shallow adj. dz±¡µÄ£¬·ôdzµÄ£»Ç³µÄ
prejudiced adj. ÓÐÆ«¼ûµÄ
companion n. ͬ°é£»°éÂÂ
rigid adj. ËÀ°åµÄ£¬ÑϸñµÄ
civil adj. ÓнÌÑøµÄ£¬ÎÄÃ÷µÄ
bent adj. ¾öÒâµÄ£¬¼«ÏëµÄ
theme n. Ö÷Ì⣬Ö÷Ö¼
wealth n. ²Æ¸»
settle vt. ʹ¶¨¾Ó£»°²¶Ù£¬°²·Å£»½â¾ö
educated adj. Êܹý½ÌÓýµÄ£»ÓнÌÑøµÄ
acquaintance n. Ïàʶ£»ÊìÈË
abnormal adj. ²»Õý³£µÄ£¬·´³£µÄ£¬Òì³£µÄ
abuse vt. Å°´ý£»ÈèÂÀÄÓÃ
criminal n. ×ï·¸
pity vt. ͬÇ飬Á¯Ãõ
reform vt., vi.& n.£¨Ê¹£©¸Ä¹ý×ÔУ¬¸ÄÔ죻¸Ä¸ï£¬¸ÄÁ¼
crime n. ·¸××ïÐУ¬×ï¶ñ
pressure vt. ¶Ô¡­¡­Ê©¼ÓѹÁ¦£¬ÆÈʹ
violence n. ±©Á¦£¬±©ÐÐ
resist vi. & vt. µÖ¿¹£¬·´¿¹£¬µÖÖÆ
misfortune n. ²»ÐÒ£¬ÔÖ»ö
home-made adj. ×ÔÖƵģ»¼ÒÀï×öµÄ£»¹ú²ú
pale adj. µ­µÄ£»°µµ­µÄ£»²Ô°×µÄ£»ÎÞÁ¦µÄ
swiftly adv. ѸËÙµØ
envelope n. ÐÅ·â
brand new ոеģ¬È«ÐµÄ
muddy adj. Õ´ÂúÄà°ÍµÄ£»ÄàÅ¢µÄ
sorrow n. ±¯ÉË£¬Äѹý
sigh n. & vi. ̾Ϣ£¬Ì¾Æø
anger n. ·ßÅ­
dot n. µã£¬Ð¡Ô²µã
gently adv. ÇáÇáµØ£¬ÇáÈáµØ
lovely adj. ¿É°®µÄ
modern-day adj. ÏÖ´úµÄ£¬µ±´úµÄ
ugly adj. ³óªµÄ£¬ÄÑ¿´µÄ
stepmother n. ¼Ìĸ£¬ºóĸ
greedy adj. Ì°À·µÄ
gravity n. ÑÏÖØÐÔ£»µØÇòÒýÁ¦
sugary adj. ÌðµÄ£»º¬ÌǵÄ
mistaken adj. ·¸´íµÄ£»´íÎóµÄ
shade n. É«¶È£»Òñ£¬ÒõÁ¹´¦
cheek n. Á³¼Õ
entertaining adj. ÁîÈËÓä¿ìµÄ£¬ÓÐȤµÄ
poetic adj. ¸»ÓÐÊ«ÒâµÄ£»Ê«¸èµÄ
supreme adj. ×î¸ßµÄ£¬ÖÁÉϵģ¬×¿Ô½µÄ
typical adj. µäÐ͵Ä
reputation n. ÃûÓþ£¬ÃûÉù£¬ÉùÓþ
debt n. Õ®Îñ
transform vt.&vi. £¨Ê¹£©±äÐΣ¬£¨Ê¹£©¸Ä¹Û£¬£¨Ê¹£©¸Ä±ä
urban adj. ³ÇÊеÄ
shorten vt. Ëõ¶Ì£¬Ê¹±ä¶Ì
statue n. µñÏñ£¬ËÜÏñ
publicly adv. ¹«¿ªµØ
exhibit vt. Õ¹ÀÀ£¬Õ¹³ö£¬³ÂÁÐ
exhibition n. Õ¹ÀÀ£¬Õ¹ÀÀ»á
tend vi. Ç÷Ïò£¬ÇãÏò
dreamlike adj. ÈçÃεģ¬Ãξ³°ãµÄ£¬ëüëʵÄ
stress vt. ÖضÁ£»Ç¿µ÷
comparison n. ±È½Ï£¬¶ÔÕÕ£¬±ÈÕÕ

¿ÎÎijöÏÖ¶ÌÓï

1. give one¡¯s opinion on sth
2. have a place in
3. be performed on stage
4. develop the shortcomings of
5. be bent on doing sth
6. make the acquaintance of sb
7. become a servant to sb
8. a pair of brand new sneakers
9. have little/ some talent for
10. from beginning to end
11. donate sth to support sb
12. be intended to be done
13. a guide to poetry
14. recommend sth to sb
15. base sth on sth
16. be set in
17. convince sb to adopt sth
18. be abused by sb
19. force sb back into sth
20. throw sth at sb
21. become famous nationwide overnight
22. involve sth as
23. write in Scots dialect
24. have nothing to do with
25. at a time
26. set sb free from sth
27. be linked to
28. give away
29. be taken to court
30. pressure sb with the threat
31. make sth out of sth
32. hug sth to one¡¯s chest
33. consist of
34. compare sth to sth

35. the antiques of the literary world
36. be left to gather dust
37. an old ¨Cfashioned film
38. an award-winning film
39. a place in the world
40. be make into sth¡­
41. at a time
42. in the early
43. at one time
44. on stage
45. the monument to sb.
46. set sb free from¡­
47. have prejudice against sb.
48. add up to
49. an educated person
50. take sb to court
51. be forced to do sth
52. make sth out of¡­¡­
53. serve as
54. be filled with sorrow
55.have a talent for
56. pin sth to sth¡­
57.get caught
58. have talent for¡­
59. let out a sad sigh
60. a deal of

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1. Mist is a symbol of danger and u_______ in Great Expectations.
2. Is an e_______ person with a lot of money a gentleman ?
3. He made an a_________ turn to avoid hitting another car .
4. Children must swim in the s________ end of the swimming pool.
5. John is b_______ on getting the first place in the following race .
6. The a_______ chair was made in 1628.
7. He graduated from Cambridge University, so he was able to speak s ___________ English.
8. Oliver Twist was written by one of the greatest n______ in the world.
9. Better be envied than p______£¨Á¯Ãõ£©.
10. This is a new kind of glassware that r_______ heat.
11. The hungry boy ate his food g_______£¨Ì°À·µØ£©.
12. He became famous nationwide o_______________.
13. Sunlight is___________ (ʹ±ä»¯) into chemical energy, when it falls on the leaves of plants .
14. He is __________(Õ¹³ö) his paintings at our school .
15. You may praise your child ___________(¹«¿ªµØ).
16. A fool always wants to ____________(Ëõ¶Ì)space and time .
17. She ____________(̾Æø) with relief .
18. The teacher was ____________(ÉúÆø)at him for being late again than before.
19. The dog was his closet _____________(»ï°é).
20. The idea for the film was ____________(¸ù¾Ý)on his childhood dreams.
¶þ£®´ÊÐÎת»»
1. Literary adj¡­_______(n.) 2. dust n¡­._________(adj.)
3. adaptation n. ¡­________(v.) 4. harm n. ¡­____________(adj.)
5. fortune n. ¡­_________(adj.) 6. financial adj. ¡­___________(n.)
7. violence n¡­.____________(adj) 8. shorten v¡­.____________(adj.)
9. tend v¡­._____________(n.) 10. comparison n¡­._________(v.)
Èý£®Ñ¡´ÊÌî¿Õ
at the sight of, as a result, be force to, pick out, let out, hardly, far from, free from would rather¡­ than, unless
1. It was the little girl who began to cry __________ the nurse.
2. He drove after drinking.________, he was fined $100.
3. Surrounded for 3 days, the enemy ___________ to give in.
4. 1¡¯ll ______ something______-for dinner on my way home.
5. This is a secret. Who has ______ it_______?
6. We had_________ time to discuss this problem.
7. This maths problem is________ easy. In fact , it is difficult.
8. Do come at7 o¡¯clock, _______ I call you up.
9. When her son returned, she was ________ anxiety.
10. I _______ play tennis ______ watch TV.
ËÄ£®¾äÐͽṹ
Öصã¾äÐÍ
1. They are novels, plays and poems that were written a long time ago and were so well written and well received that people still read them today. (P2) ËüÃÇÊǺܾÃÒÔÇ°´´×÷µÄС˵£¬Ï·¾çºÍÊ«¸è£¬Ð´µÃºÜºÃ£¬ºÜÊÜ»¶Ó­£¬ Ö±ÖÁ½ñÈÕÈËÃÇÈÔÈ»ÔÚÔĶÁÕâЩ×÷Æ·¡£
so¡­that¡­
so...thatºÍsuch...thatµÄÒâ˼¾ùΪ¡°Èç´Ë¡­¡­ÒÔÖ¡­¡­¡±£¬¶¼ÓÃÀ´Òýµ¼½á¹û×´Óï´Ó¾ä¡£µ«¶þÕßÓ÷¨²»¾¡Ïàͬ£¬ÏÖ¹éÄÉÈçÏ£º
so...that½á¹¹ÖеÄsoΪ¸±´Ê£¬ºóÃæ¸úÐÎÈÝ´Ê»ò¸±´Ê£»such...thatÖеÄsuchΪÐÎÈÝ´Ê£¬ºóÃæ½ÓÃû´Ê (Ãû´ÊÇ°¿ÉÒÔÓÐÐÎÈÝ´Ê»ò¸±´ÊÐÞÊÎ)¡£ÀýÈ磺
He became so angry that he couldn't speak. Ëû±äµÃºÜÉúÆø£¬ÒÔÖÂ˵²»³ö»°À´¡£
It was such a fine day that we went out for a walk. ÄÇÊÇÒ»¸öºÜÇçÀʵÄÈÕ×Ó£¬ÎÒÃdzöȥɢ²½¡£
µ±thatÇ°µÄÃû´ÊÓбíʾÊýÁ¿¶àÉÙµÄmany, much, few, littleµÈÐÞÊÎʱ£¬Ö»ÄÜÓÃso£¬²»ÄÜÓÃsuch¡£ÀýÈ磺
There was so much noise outside that we couldn't hear the teacher. ÍâÃæàÐÔÓÉùºÜ´ó£¬ÒÔÖÂÎÒÃDz»ÄÜÌýµ½ÀÏʦµÄ»°¡£
He had so many falls that he was black and blue all over. ËûµøÁËÕâô¶àµÄõÓ£¬ÒÔÖÂÈ«ÉíÇàÒ»¿é¡¢×ÏÒ»¿éµÄ¡£
×¢Ò⣺ÈôÃû´ÊÇ°µÄlittle½âÊÍΪ¡°Ð¡(µÄ)¡±Òâ˼ʱ£¬ÔòÈÔÓÃsuch, ¶ø²»ÄÜÓÃso¡£ÀýÈ磺
It is such a little sheep that it can't run fast. ËüÊÇһֻСÃàÑò£¬Ëü²»Äܹ»Åܵÿ졣
µ±thatÇ°Êǵ¥Êý¿ÉÊýÃû´ÊÇÒ¸ÃÃû´ÊÇ°ÃæÓÐÐÎÈÝ´ÊÐÞÊÎʱ£¬soÓësuch¿ÉÒÔ»¥»»£¬
¼´£ºso£«adj.£«a/an£«n.£½such£«a/an£«adj.£«n.¡£ÀýÈ磺
She is so good a teacher that we all love her.£½She is such a good teacher that we all love her. ËýÊÇһλºÃÀÏʦ£¬ÎÒÃǶ¼°®Ëý¡£
µ±thatÇ°ÊDz»¿ÉÊýÃû´Ê»ò¸´Êý¿ÉÊýÃû´Êʱ£¬Ôò±ØÐëÓÃsuch£¬²»ÄÜÓÃsoÀ´´úÌæ¡£ÀýÈ磺It was such fine weather that they all went swimming. ÄÇÊǸöºÃÌìÆø£¬ËûÃǶ¼È¥ÓÎÓ¾ÁË¡£
They are such nice apples that we would like to eat them. ËüÃÇÊÇÈç´ËºÃµÄÆ»¹û£¬ÒÔÖÂÎÒÃÇÏë³ÔËüÃÇ¡£
¸ß¿¼Á´½Ó
His plan was such a good one ______ we all agreed to accept it.£¨2006ÉÂÎ÷£©
A. as B. that C. so D. after which
´ð°¸: B.
receive
v. [T] 1) to get or be given sth.: ÊÕµ½
Did you receive my letter?
I received a phone call from your mother.
They received a visit from the police.
She died after receiving a blow to the head.
Members of Parliament received a 4.2% pay increase this year.
2) to be able to hear someone's voice when they are communicating with you by radio: (ÎÞÏßµç)½ÓÊÕ
I'm receiving you loud and clear.
3) to formally welcome a visitor or guest: ½Ó´ý
She stood by the door to receive her guests as they arrived.
4) to react to sth. or someone in a particular way that shows how you feel about it or them: ±»³ÐÈϵÄ,ÊÜ»¶Ó­µÄ
The prime minister's speech was well/warmly/coldly, etc. received by the conference delegates.
receiver
n. [C] (ALSO telephone receiver) the part of the telephone that you hold to your ear and mouth: ½ÓÊÕÆ÷,»°Í²
She picked up the receiver and dialed his number.
¸ß¿¼Á´½Ó
Mary finally __________ Bruce as her life-long companion. (2002 ÉϺ£)
A. received B. accepted C. made D. honoured
´ð°¸¼°½âÎö: B. accept¡­as ½ÓÊÜijÈËΪ¡­¡­ÈÏΪijÈËÊÇ¡­¡­£¬ receive Ç¿µ÷¿Í¹ÛÉÏÊÕµ½¡£acceptÇ¿µ÷Ö÷¹ÛÉϽÓÊÜ¡£
2. Many people do not read them because they think they are old fashioned and boring, and have nothing to do with life today¡­ (P2) Ðí¶àÈ˲»¶Á¾­µäÎÄѧ×÷Æ·ÊÇÒòΪ¾õµÃËüÃǹýʱÁË£¬¿ÝÔ﷦棬Óë½ñÌìµÄÉú»îûÓÐÈκιØϵ¡£
old-fashioned
adj. 1) not modern, belonging to or typical of a time in the past: ¹ýʱµÄ
old-fashioned clothes/ideas/furniture
2) behaving or thinking in a way that is not modern and is more typical of a time in the past: ¸´¹ÅµÄ
She's a bit old-fashioned in her outlook.
old-fashionedÊÇÒ»¸öÓÉÐÎÈÝ´ÊÓëÁ¬×Ö·ûºÍºóÃæ¼ÓedµÄÃû´Ê¹¹³ÉµÄÒ»¸ö×÷ÐÎÈÝ´ÊÓõĺϳɴʣ¬ÀàËƵĴʻ¹ÓÐnoble-minded¸ßÉеģ¬good-temperedÆ¢ÆøºÃµÄ£¬warm-heartedÈÈÐij¦µÄ£¬black-hairedºÚÍ··¢µÄ£¬µÈµÈ¡£
have nothing to do with
Óë...ÎÞ¹Ø
be/have something to do with
to be related to sth. or a cause of sth. but not in a way that you know about or understand exactly: Óë¡­ÓйØ
I'm not sure what he does exactly - it's something to do with finance.
It might have something to do with the way it's made.
3. Why else would many films based on them be successful? (P2) Òª²»È»ÎªÊ²Ã´Ðí¶à¸ù¾Ý¾­µäÎÄѧ¸Ä±àµÄµçÓ°¿ÉÒԳɹ¦ÄØ£¿
else
adv. used after words beginning with any-, every-, no- and some-, or after how, what, where, who, why but not which, to mean other, another, different, additional: ÆäËûµÄ
Everybody else has (= All the other people have) agreed except for you.
If it doesn't work, try something else (= something different).
Let's go before they ask us to visit anyone else (= another person).
It's not my bag. It must be someone else's (= it must belong to another person).
The book isn't here. Where else (= In what other place) should I look?
He came to see you. Why else (= For what other reason) would he come?
After I'd thanked them I didn't know what else (= what other things) to say.
¸ß¿¼Á´½Ó
1. First, it is important to recognize what kind of person you are and which special qualities make you different from. (2005 ºþ±±)
A£®everyone else B£®the other C£®someone else D£®the rest
2. £­I hear they aren¡¯t pleased with the house you¡¯ve chosen for them.
£­Well, _______ could they live in such comfort? (2003±±¾©´º)
A£®where else B£®what else C£®how D£®why
3. If this dictionary is not yours, __________can it be? (2001È«¹ú´º)
A. what else B. who else C. which else's D. who else's
4. ¡ª Victor certainly cares too much about himself.
¡ª Yes. He¡¯s never interested in what ______ is doing. (2005 ÖØÇì)
A. no one else B. anyone else C. someone else D. nobody else
5. I don¡¯t think we¡¯ve met before. You¡¯re taking me for ______. (2005 °²»Õ)
A. some other B. someone else C. other person D. one other
6. I will never know what was on his mind at the time, nor will________. (2004 ½­ËÕ)
A. anyone B. anyone else C. no one D. no one else
´ð°¸¼°½âÎö£º
1. A ¸úÆäÿ¸öÈ˵IJ»Í¬Ö®´¦
2. A ÆäËûʲôµØ·½
3. D ÆäËûÄĸöÈ˵Ä
4. B ÆäËûÈκÎÈË
5. B ÆäËûij¸öÈË
6. B ÆäËûÈκÎÈË
base
n. [C] 1) the bottom part of an object, on which it rests, or the lowest part of sth.: µ××ù£¬¸ù»ù
a crystal glass with a heavy base
At the base of the cliff was a rocky beach.
This cream provides an excellent base for your make-up (= a good bottom layer on which other layers can be put).
2) the activity or people from which someone or sth. gets most of their support, money, etc.: »ù´¡
A strong economy depends on a healthy manufacturing base.
We're aiming to expand our customer base.
3) the main place where a person lives and works, or a place that a company does business from, or a place where there are military buildings and weapons and where members of the armed forces live: »ùµØ
I spend a lot of time in Brussels, but London is still my base.
Nice is an excellent base for (= place to stay when) exploring the French Riviera.
an old naval/military base
v. [T usually + adv. or prep.] ÒÔ¡­Îª»ù´¡
Where is your firm based?
He was based in (= He lived in or was at a military establishment in) Birmingham during the war.
-based
suffix
a Manchester-based company
community-based programs
base sth. on sth. phrasal verb
If you base sth. on facts or ideas, you use those facts or ideas to develop it:
The film is based on a short story by Thomas Mann.
4. He first published many novels one chapter at a time in newspapers, and some were later performed on stage. (P2) ËûµÄÐí¶àС˵Æð³õÊÇÔÚ±¨Ö½ÉÏÁ¬ÔØ, ÿ´ÎÒ»ÕÂ, ÓÐЩ×÷Æ·ºóÀ´±»°áÉÏÁËÎę̀.
at a time
dealing with things separately: ÿ´Î,Ò»´Î
If you raise your hands, I¡¯ll answer your questions one at a time.
Frank took the stairs two at a time.
Because of his work, he is often away for weeks at a time.
time³£ÓöÌÓï¼°Ó÷¨
once upon a time
used at the beginning of children's stories to mean 'a long time ago': ºÜ¾ÃºÜ¾ÃÒÔÇ°
Once upon a time there was a beautiful young princess with long golden hair.
Once upon a time people knew the difference between right and wrong, but nowadays nobody seems to care.
at the same time
despite this: Óë´Ëͬʱ,¾¡¹ÜÈç´Ë
No-one likes conflict, but at the same time we have to deal with this problem.
all the time
continuously: Ò»Ö±,×ÜÊÇ
I wish you'd stop criticizing me all the time.
for the time being
for a limited period: ÔÝʱ
Leave the ironing for the time being - I'll do it later.
in no time (ALSO in next to no time)
very quickly or very soon: ºÜ¿ì,²»¾Ã
The children ate their dinner in no time.
We'll be home in next to no time.
ahead of time
in advance: ÌáÇ°
Let's meet for lunch. I'll call you ahead of time to fix up exactly when and where.
at any time
ever: ÈκÎʱºò
Parking is not allowed here at any time.
at (any) one time (ALSO at a time or at any given time)
at or during any particular point or moment in the day:
Only a certain number of people are allowed in the building at any one time.
I'm sorry, but I'm too busy to help you now - I can only do one thing at a time.
at the time
at the particular point when sth. was thought of or done: µ±Ê±,´Ëʱ
It seemed like a good idea at the time.
in time
early enough:¼°Ê±
I got home just in time - it's starting to rain.
If we don't hurry up, we won't be in time to catch the train.
We arrived in good time (= We arrived early) for the start of the match.
from time to time
sometimes but not often: ʱ²»Ê±µÄ
From time to time I still think of her
at one time
in the past: Ôø¾­,Ò»¶È
At one time, George Eliot lived here.
on stage
stage
n. [C] 1) the area in a theatre which is often raised above ground level and on which actors or entertainers perform: Îę̀
Hamlet is on stage for most of the act.
The orchestra went on/off stage to great applause.
The play is a stage adaptation of William Golding's novel.
The opera singer returns to the London stage (= will perform again in London) this summer.
2) a particular area of public life: ÕþÖÎÎę̀
The president was extremely popular on the world stage but was disliked in his own country.
v. [T] 1) to arrange and perform a play or show: °²ÅÅÒ»²¿Ï·µÈ
The local drama group is staging a production of the musical 'Grease'.
2) to organize an event: ×éÖ¯
Barcelona staged the Olympic Games in 1992.
staging
n. [C] the performance of a play or show: ±íÑÝ
The production is a modern staging of the fairy tale 'Cinderella'.
be on the stage
to be an actor:
Her daughter is an artist and her son is on the stage.
go on the stage
to become an actor:
At the age of ten, he decided that he wanted to go on the stage.
5. By his death, one of England¡¯s greatest writers is lost to the world. (P2) ËûµÄÈ¥ÊÀÁîÊÀ½çʧȥÁËÒ»¸ö×îΰ´óµÄÓ¢¹ú×÷¼Ò¡£
death
the end of life: ËÀÍö
The disease causes thousands of deaths a year.
Do you believe in life after death?
He never got over the death of his daughter.
to death
until you die: Ö±µ½ËÀ
The animals burned to death in the barn.
He choked to death on a fish bone.
The traitor was put to death (= killed as a punishment).
bored/frightened, etc. to death
extremely bored/frightened, etc. Ñá·³/¿Ö¾åµ½¼«µã
the death of sth.
the cause of the end of life, or the end or destruction of sth.:
The failure of the family business was the death of him.
That child will be the death of me (= is always doing something which upsets me)!
die a/the death UK (US die a natural death)
to fail and end:
The play, like so many before it, died the death after a week.
6. Great Expectation is set in England in the early 1800s. (P3)¡¶Ô¶´óÇ°³Ì¡·ÒÔÊ®°ËÊÀ¼Í³õµÄÓ¢¸ñÀ¼Îª±³¾°¡£
be set in
v. [T usually + adv. or prep.] setting, set, set
to put sth. in the stated place or position: °²Ö㬷ÅÖÃ
He set a vase of flowers on the table.
The campsite is set in the middle of a pine forest.
Our house is set back from the road.
If a story, film, etc. is set in a particular time or place, the action in it happens in that time or place: µçÓ°£¬¹ÊʵÈÒÔ¡­¡­Îª±³¾°
'West Side Story' is set in New York in the late 1950s.
set ³£ÓöÌÓï
set about sth. phrasal verb
to start to do or deal with sth.: ¿ªÊ¼×ö¡­
[+ ing form of verb] I've no idea how to set about changing a tyre on a car.
I tried to apologize, but I think I set about it the wrong way.
set about sb. phrasal verb LITERARY
to attack someone: Ï®»÷,¹¥»÷
Her attacker set about her with a knife.
set sth. aside phrasal verb
to save sth., usually money or time, for a special purpose: ´¢ÐîÇ®µÈ
He had some money in an account that he'd set aside for his kids.
[+ to infinitive] I set aside half an hour every evening to hear Erik read.
set sth. aside phrasal verb
to decide that you will not be influenced by your own feelings or opinions because they are not important at a particular time: ²»¹Ü,ºöÂÔ
In times of war people tend to set aside political differences.
Setting aside the question of cost, what do you think of the idea in principle?
set sth. back phrasal verb
to reduce sth. to a weaker or less advanced state: ¼õÉÙ
This result has set back their chances of winning the competition.
set sth. down phrasal verb
to write or print sth., especially to record it in a formal document: ¼ÇÏÂ,дÏÂ
The rules of the club are set down in the members' handbook.
set sth. off phrasal verb
to cause an activity or event, often a series of events, to begin or happen: ʹ·¢Éú
The court's initial verdict in the police officers' trial set off serious riots.
to cause a loud noise or explosion, such as that made by a bomb or an alarm (= a warning sound), to begin or happen: ʹ±¬Õ¨
Terrorists set off a bomb in the city centre.
Somebody set the alarm off on my car.
set out phrasal verb
to start an activity with a particular aim: ×ÅÊÖ×ö¡­
She set out with the aim of becoming the youngest ever winner of the championship.
[+ to infinitive] They set out to discover a cure for cancer.
set sth. out phrasal verb
to arrange sth., usually a number of things, in an attractive or organized way: °²ÅÅ,×éÖ¯
The market was full of brightly coloured vegetables set out on stalls.
Every evening Michael sets out the breakfast things on the table, ready for the morning.
set an example
to behave in a way that other people should copy: Ê÷Á¢°ñÑù
You should be setting a good example to your younger brother.
set sth./sb. on fire
to cause sth. or someone to start burning: ʹ×Å»ð
A peace campaigner had set herself on fire in protest at the government's involvement in the war.
set fire to sth./sb.
to cause sth.or someone to start burning:
Soldiers had chased the protesters into a warehouse and set fire to it.
set light to sth. UK
to cause something to start burning:
The lamp caught fire and set light to the curtains.
lay/set the table
to put a cloth, knives and forks, etc. on the table in preparation for a meal: °Ú·Å²Í¾ß
Could you lay the table for lunch, please?
¸ß¿¼Á´½Ó
It's ten years since the scientist _______on his life's work of discovering the valuable chemical. (2004 ½­ËÕ)
A. made for B. set out C. took off D. turned up
´ð°¸¼°½âÎö£ºÑ¡B. ×ÅÊÖ¿ªÊ¼×ö¡­
7. Pip¡¯s sister seldom has a kind word to say, but Joe is a kind and simple man, who would rather die than see any harm come to Pip.£¨P3£©Æ¤ÆյĽã½ã¼¸ºõûÓÐʲôÉÆÑÔºÃÓµ«ÇÇÈ´ÊÇÒ»¸ö´¾ÆÓÉÆÁ¼µÄÈË£¬ËûÄþÔ¸ËÀÒ²²»Ô¸Òâ¿´µ½Æ¤ÆÕÊܵ½ÈκÎÉ˺¦¡£
would rather
The phrase would rather means ¡®prefer to do sth.¡¯. It is usually shortened to ¡¯d rather in informal English.
I¡¯d rather have a quiet night in front of the TV.
We could go to the park for a picnic next Sunday if you would rather do that.
She¡¯d rather go shopping in the afternoon.
The phrase would rather¡­ than ¡­ means ¡®to prefer to do sth. rather than do sth. else¡¯.
I¡¯d rather stay at home than go shopping in the crowded department store.
I¡¯d rather go to the cinema to watch a new film than watch an old one at home.
She¡¯d rather read storybooks than watch cartoon films.
¸ß¿¼Á´½Ó
To enjoy the scenery, Irene would rather spend long hours on the train _____ travel by air. (2004 È«¹ú)
A. as B. to C. than D. while
´ð°¸: C
8. Mist is symbol of danger and uncertainty in Great Expectations. (P3)¡¶Ô¶´óÇ°³Ì¡·ÖÐÎíÊÇΣÏպͲ»È·¶¨ÐÔµÄÏóÕ÷¡£
symbol
n. [C] 1) a sign, shape or object which is used to represent sth. else: ÏóÕ÷
A heart shape is the symbol of love.
The wheel in the Indian flag is a symbol of peace.
2) sth. that is used to represent a quality or idea:
Water, a symbol of life, recurs as an image throughout her poems.
3) an object can be described as a symbol of sth. else if it seems to represent it because it is connected with it in a lot of people's minds:
The private jet is a symbol of wealth.
4) a number, letter or sign used in mathematics, music, science, etc: ·ûºÅ
The symbol for oxygen is O2.
9. Excited by his move to London, Pip can hardly wait to begin his new life. (P3) °áµ½Â׶ØÈÃƤÆÕÐ˷ܲ»ÒÑ£¬ËûÆȲ»¼°´ýµØ¿ªÊ¼ÁËËûµÄÐÂÉú»î¡£
hardly
adv. only just; almost not: ¼¸ºõ²»
I could hardly hear her at the back.
The party had hardly started when she left.
He hardly ate anything/He ate hardly anything.
We hardly ever (= almost never) go to concerts.
Hardly had a moment passed before the door creaked open.
adv. certainly not: µ±È»²»
You can hardly expect a pay rise when you've only been working for the company for two weeks!
Well don't be angry with me - it's hardly my fault that it's raining!
¸ß¿¼Á´½Ó
1. I must be getting fat - I can ______ do my trousers up. (2004 È«¹ú)
A. fairly B. hardly C. nearly D. seldom
2. It is ______ any wonder that his friend doesn¡¯t like watching television much. (2004 ¹ã¶«)
A. no B. such C. nearly D. hardly
3. Fred is second to none in maths in our class, but believe it or not, he ______passed the last exam. (2000 ÉϺ£)
A. easily B. hardly B. actually D. successfully
´ð°¸¼°½âÎö:
1. B. ÎÒ¿ã×Ó¼¸ºõÀ­²»ÉÏÈ¥ÁË.
2. D. It¡¯s hardly any wonder =It¡¯s no wonder ÄѹÖ(²»×ãΪ¹Ö)
3. B. ûͨ¹ýÉϴεĿ¼ÊÔ.
10. Pip is bent on becoming a gentleman and winning Estella¡¯s love. (P3) ƤÆÕÒ»ÐÄÒª³ÉΪһÃûÉðÊ¿£¬Ó®µÃ°®Ë¹ÌØÀ­µÄ·¼ÐÄ¡£
bend
v. [I or T] (bent, bent) 1) to (cause to) curve: (ʹ)ÍäÇú
I bent down and picked up the coins lying on the road.
Now, bend forward/over and touch your toes!
Make sure you bend your knees when you're picking up heavy objects.
The road bends to the left after the first set of traffic lights.
After her fall she complained that she couldn't bend her leg properly.
2) to unwillingly accept the opinions or decisions of other people: Ïò¡­¡­Çü·þ
The local council was forced to bend to public pressure.
n. [C] a curved part of sth.: ÍäÍ·
There's a bend in the pipe so you can't see from one end to the other.
The car came round the bend on the wrong side of the road.
be bent on
means to be completely determined to to do sth. bad.
The crowd of young people was bent on violence.
Their actions show clearly that they are bent on destroying his career.
11. a large sum of (P5)
sum
n. [C] 1) an amount of money: Ò»±ÊÇ®
Huge sums of money are spent on national defense.
He'll get £50 000 from the company when he retires, which is a tidy (= large) sum.
HUMOROUS I worked for three whole weeks for which I received the princely (= very low) sum of $100.
2) a calculation, especially a simple one, using such processes as adding, subtracting, multiplying or dividing: ¼ÆËã
I remember how much I hated doing sums when I was at school.
n. [S] the whole number or amount when two or more numbers or amounts have been added together: ×ÜÊý
The sum of thirteen and eight is twenty-one.
in sum
considered as a whole: ×ܵÄÀ´¿´
The meeting was, in sum, a disaster.
the sum of
all of sth.: ËùÓеÄ
I'm afraid that's the pitiful sum of my knowledge on the subject!
sum up phrasal verb
When a judge sums up towards the end of a trial, he or she makes a speech to the jury telling them again of the main matters they should consider in the case. ½á°¸×ܽá
sum (sth./sb.) up phrasal verb
to describe or express briefly the important facts or characteristics about sth. or someone: ×ܽá
The best way of summing up the situation in our office is to say that it is 'absolute chaos'.
I'd just like to sum up by saying that it's been a tremendous pleasure to work with you.
He's a small man with a big ego - that about sums him up, doesn't it?
sum sb./sth. up (OPINION) phrasal verb [M]
to quickly form an opinion about someone or sth.: ѸËÙÐγɹ۵ã
She summed up the situation quickly and took charge.
12. make the acquaintance of (P5)
acquaintance
n. [C] a person that you have met but do not know well: ¼û¹ýµÄÈË
a business acquaintance
[U] FORMAL used in some expressions about knowing or meeting people:
It was at the Taylors' party that I first made his acquaintance (= first met him).
I wasn't sure about Darryl when I first met her, but on further acquaintance (= knowing her a little more) I rather like her.
[U] FORMAL knowledge of a subject:
Sadly, my acquaintance with Spanish literature is rather limited.
have a nodding acquaintance with sb./sth.
to know someone slightly or have a slight knowledge of a subject:
She has only a nodding acquaintance with the issues involved.
Íê³É¾ä×Ó
1. ÓÉËÕͯµÄС˵¸Ä±àµÄеçÓ°½«ÔÚÏÂÖÜÒ»¹«Ó³.
A new film __________ __________Su Tong¡¯s novels is to __________ __________ next Monday.
2. ÓëÕâ¸ö°¸×ÓÓйØϵµÄÈËÉÏÖܶ¼±»´þ²¶ÁË.
All the people_________ __________the case were _______ last week.
3. Ó빺ÎïÏà±È,ËýÄþÔ¸´ôÔÚ¼ÒÀï, ¸´Ï°¹¦¿Î.
Rather than _________ __________ ,she would _________ at home ,__________ over her lessons.
4. µ±Äã½²ÄǸöЦ»°Ê±,ÎÒϲ»¶.
I like __________ ___________ you told that joke .
5. ËûÕý×¼±¸À뿪ͻȻÌýµ½ÓÐÈ˽ÐËû.
He was about to leave ________ he heard himself ___________.
6. Jack ¹ýÈ¥Ò»ÐÄÏë³ÉΪһÃûÂÉʦ,µ«ºóÀ´Ëû³ÉÁËÎÄѧר¼Ò.
Jack used to ________ ________ ________ law as a profession ,but he was an expert on literature.
7. ÎÒ¶®µÃһЩ·¨Óï,µ«²¢²»Ì«Á˽â,
I ________some _________ with French ,but I don¡¯t know it well.
8. ºþÀïµÄÓãËÀ¹âÁË,ÕâºÍÎÛȾÓйØϵÂð?
The fish in the lakes ________ __________ ,dose it ________ anything _______ ______ with pollution ?
9. µ±ÎÒÃÇ´¦ÓÚÀ§¾³Ê±ºò,²»ÒªÍ»È»×ö³ö¾ö¶¨.
Don¡¯t _________ an __________ ___________ when we are in trouble .
10. µ±ÄãÏñÄÇÑù˵»°Ê± ,ÎÒÏëÆðÁËÄãµÄ¸¸Ç×.
You _______ me __________ your father when you say like that.
Î壮Óï·¨Ó¦ÓÃ(Negative statements)
1. Çé̬¶¯´Ê+not
2. notÓëÆäËû´ÊÁ¬ÓÃ
3. notÓÃÓÚif´Ó¾äÖÐ
a list of the most commonly used negative words:
no, not, never, neither, hardly, seldom, few, little, barely¡­
a list of the most commonly used negative expressions:
on no account, in no circumstances, never before, nowhere, at no time, by no means¡­
There are some other patterns which can be used to express negation.
1 too + adjective +to-infinitive
In this pattern too, with the meaning ¡®very¡¯, is used before an adjective. After the adjective, an infinitive is used to mean ¡®(somebody) cannot do¡¯ or ¡®something cannot be done¡¯. Sometimes for somebody can be used before the infinitive.
My father is too old to have such a long journey. (=My father is very old and cannot travel so long.)
She is too happy to say a word at the party. (=She is so happy that she cannot say anything at the party.)
The box is too heavy to carry. (=The box is so heavy that no one can carry it.)
The house is too expensive for us to buy. (=The house is so expensive that we cannot buy it.)
2 few + a countable noun; little +an uncountable noun
When we use few to modify a countable noun, we mean ¡®not many¡¯, and the noun should be in its plural form. When we use little to modify an uncountable noun, we mean ¡®not much¡¯. And few or little here has the negative meaning.
Few students in our class have ever read Katherine Mansfield¡¯s short stories. (=Not many/Only one or two students in our class have ever read Katherine Mansfield's short stories.)
We have little rain all this summer. (=It almost does not rain during this summer.)
Because few or little has the negative meaning, we do not use the negative form in question tags.
e.g.
Few people liked his painting at that time, did they?
There is little ink in the bottle, is there?
Turn the following into negative statements:
1. They¡¯re listening to pop music now.
2. Many people can speak English nowadays.
3. You must make your bed after you get up every day.
4. His mother has a beautiful car.
5. We need a pen and piece of paper.
6. I need wear a warm coat.
7. The old man always goes for a walk in the park after supper.
8. The doctors volunteer in the countryside every year.
9. Mike does sports in the afternoon.
10. You¡¯d better talk with your parents right now.
Áù£®·­Òë¾ä×Ó
1. ÕâÖÖ·½·¨ºÜÉÙÔÚÕâʹÓÃ, ÊÇÂð?
2. ËýÄþÔ¸ÏÂÎçÈ¥¹ºÎï¡£
3. ¹ÅµäС˵Öо­³£ÓÃһЩÒâÏóÀ´Ôö¼ÓÐËȤ, ½ôÕźÍÎÄÕµÄÉîÒå¡£
4. ËûÒ»µ½Ñ§Ð£¾Í¿ªÊ¼¹¤×÷¡£
5. ËûÃǵÄÐÐΪÇå³þµØÏÔʾÁËËûÃÇÒ»ÐÄÒª²ÉÈ¡±©Á¦¡£
6. ²»Òª°ÑÎÒ¶ªÁ˹¤×÷Ò»ÊÂй¶³öÈ¥,ÐÐÂð£¿
7. ÎÒÃÇÒ»¿´µ½ËûÆæ¹ÖµÄÒ·þ¶¼Ð¦ÁË¡£
8. ¼èÐÁµÄÉú»îºÍÐéÈõµÄÌåÖÊËõ¶ÌÁËÅí˹µÄÉúÃü¡£
9. ÄÇÊÇʹ¸ÃµØÇøÓÉɳĮ±äΪÕÓÔóµÄÆøºòµÄ³¹µ×¸Ä±ä¡£
Æߣ®µ¥ÏîÑ¡Ôñ
1. I¡¯ve tried very hard to improve my English. But by no means _____ with my progress.
A. the teacher is not satisfied B. is the teacher not satisfied
C. the teacher is satisfied D. is the teacher satisfied
2. Isn¡¯t it time you _____down to ______ the papers?
A get, mark B. get ,be marked C. got, being marked D. got, marking
3. With the food ___________ good, it was sold out soon.
A. to taste B. taste C. tasting D. tasted
4. It¡¯s no longer a question now ___________ man can land on the moon.
A. that B. which C. whether D. what
5. Nuclear science should be developed to benefit the people _______ harm them.
A. more than B. other than C. rather than D. better than
6. His failure in the experiment suggested that he ______his teacher¡¯s proper instructions.
A. shouldn¡¯t have followed B. shouldn¡¯t follow
C. mustn¡¯t have followed D. hadn¡¯t followed
7. The great changes _____ have taken place _____ carrying out the economic reform in our country.
A. may not; unless B. never ; but for C could not; without D. would, bedsides
8. I didn¡¯t expect you can finish the work in three days, ____________
A. don¡¯t I B. do I C. can you D. can¡¯t you
9. Sean¡¯s strong love for his countries is ___________ in his recently published poems.
A. relieved B. reflected C. responded D. recovered
10. There have been several new events ___________ to the program for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games
A. add B. to add C adding D. added
11. One of the best ways for people to keep fit is to _____ healthy eating habit.
A. grow B. develop C. increase D. raise
12. --- Is this raincoat yours? ---- No, mine ____ there behind the door.
A. is hanging B. has hung C. hangs D. hung
13. It is staying up late last night that _______ my being late for work.
A. got to B. ended up with C. devoted to D. led to
14. If I drive in this city myself, I¡¯ll probably get lost because I haven¡¯t got ___ good sense of ___ direction.
A. a; ²»Ìî B. the; ²»Ìî C. a; the D. the; a
15. ____ to nuclear radiation, even for a short time, may produce variants of genes in human body.
A. Exposed B. Being exposed C. Having exposed D. After being exposed
16 ¨C Have you _____ some new idea ? -- Yeah. I¡¯ll tell you later.
A. come about B. come into C. come up with D. come out with
17. At the end of the meeting, it was announced that an agreement ________.
A. has been reached B. had been reached C. has reached D. had reached
18. House prices have increased greatly and they are ______ the reach of those with average incomes.
A. over B. within C. beyond D. below
19. Although the old sofa ______ too much space, they still held on it for future use.
A. took up B. took over C. took place D. took on
20. ¨C Do you think the housing price will keep ____ in the years to come ?
--- Sorry, I have no idea.
A. lifting up B. going up C. bringing up D. growing up
°Ë£®Reading strategy
Reading a persuasive essay
In a peersuasive essay, the author tries to convince the reader to adapt a certain point of view. In this essay, the author wants us to appreciate classic literature. At the beginning, she asks us to reconsider our ideas about classic literature. She tells us that although we may think classic literature is old-fashioned and boring, it is still relevant today. You can¡¯t find classics in bookshops and libraries and many films are even based on them.
The author gives us interesting facxts about dickens and his book. She gives us enough information to make us interested but not enough to give away the story. If by the end of the essay, we want to read the book, then the author has written a good persuasive essay.
¾Å£®¿ÎÎĸ´Êö
ÎÄÕ½ṹ
1.Passage A£¨Reading£©
Classics are the ________ of the literary world. They are novels, plays and poems that were written a long time ago and were so _____ _____ and _____ ______ that people still read them today. The language used in them is quite ______ from the language used today, which ____ them difficult to read., but I don¡¯t think they have disappeared and still have a _____ in the world today. Many films _____ on them are very successful. In 1998,a modern adaptation of Dicken¡¯s novel Great Expectation _____ in cinemas. Great Expectation____ ____ ____ England in the early 1800s.Pip is the main _____.He also tells the story of Great Expectation. Pip lives with his sister and his brother-in-law, who ____ ____ die than see any harm come to Pip. When Pip was 7 years old, he met a man in a ____ filed of tombs. Many years later, the man gives Pip a lot of money, and the _____ sets him free _____ financial worries. Then Pip is ____ on becoming a gentleman and winning a girl¡¯s love. By the end of the story Pip has ____ a lot.
2£®Passage B£¨Project£©
Robert Burns, Scoland¡¯s supreme _______ hero, has a _____ for being funny and charming.___ he came from a poor family with many debts and did not ever make a lot of _____.After his first book of _____ was published, he became famous ______ overnight, but he was not any richer and continued to ______ his living by farming. The monument ____ him was first publicly exhibited in 1877.About 30000 people attended this first exhibition. The poem ¡°A red, Red Rose¡± was ____ in 1794.It was ______ to be a song. Love is the theme of the poem. Maybe Burns simply wrote this poem to say goodbye to a loved one.
Ê®£®Writing
½üÆÚ£¬ÖÐѧƸÇëÍâ½ÌÖ®·çÓúÑÝÓúÁÒ£¬ÇëÄã½áºÏϱí¶ÔÆäÀû±×·¢±í×Ô¼ºµÄ¹Ûµã¡£
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3. Íâ¹úÈ˲»Á˽âÖйúѧÉúµÄÌص㡣
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ʮһ. ÈÎÎñÐÍÔĶÁ
Millions of women use cosmetics, often called ¡°make-up¡±. The cosmetics industry is one of the biggest in the world. Most large stores sell cosmetics, and there are always shops at airports selling them cheaply.
The word ¡°cosmetics¡± refers to anything that people put on their faces to make them look better. Lipstick, face powder and cream, and eye make-up are the most popular. Although more women than men use cosmetics, there are cosmetics for men as well as women.
Some people even have cosmetic surgery to make their faces look different. They have the shapes of their noses and eyes changed.
The most widely used cosmetic is probably lipstick, as many women who do not wear any other make-up will often put on a little lipstick.
Lipstick is made by mixing together different oils and colors. The mixture is then allowed to get hard and is cut into the shape of a small pencil. When a woman presses the lipstick to her lips, the end of it becomes soft, and some of it sticks to her lips, giving them extra color.
Cosmetics were probably first used in India, but it was the Egyptians, six thousand years ago, who made the most use of them. Rich Egyptian women painted their eyes green and black. They used a red color to paint pretty designs on their fingernails, the palms of their hands and the soles of their feet. Pictures of Cleopatra always show her wearing a lot of make-up.
The Romans also used cosmetics. They liked to make their skin very white and to paint their eyes. They also used a kind of lipstick.
In England at one time, very rich women had baths in milk to make their skin beautiful. They also used a lot of sweet-smelling powder to stop people smelling their bodies, which were often very dirty because they did not wash very often or change their clothes.
Title: Cosmetics
Definition Anything that people put on their(1) ×þ¡ø to make them look better Main users (2) ×þ¡ø
Main (3)×þ¡ø Lipstick, face powder and cream, and eye make-up Most popular product Lipstick
Producing(4) ×þ¡ø Mix together different oils and colors. The mixture gets hard and is cut into the(5) ×þ¡ø of a small pencil .
General(6) ×þ¡ø (7) ×þ¡ø The use of cosmetics
India Cosmetics was first used here.
(8) ×þ¡ø Cosmetics got widely used.
Rome The skin and eyes were(9) ×þ¡ø with cosmetics
England Rich women had baths in milk; used a lot of sweet-smelling (10) ×þ¡ø .
²Î¿¼´ð°¸
Ò»£®µ¥´ÊÓ¦ÓÃ
1. uncertainty 2.educated 3.abrupt4. shallow 5. bent 6.antique
7.standard 8.novelists 9.pitied 10.resists 11. greedily 12.overnight
13.transformed 14.exhibiting 15.publicly 16.shorten 17.sighed 18.angrier
19.companion 20. based
¶þ£® ´ÊÐÎת»»
1. literature 2. dusty 3. adapt 4. harmful 5. fortunate 6. finance
7. violence 8. short 9. tendency 10. compare
Èý£®Ñ¡´ÊÌî¿Õ
1. at the sight of 2. As a result 3. was forced to 4.pick¡­ out 5.let out,
6. harly, 7.far from 8. unless 9. free from 10.would rather¡­ than
ËÄ£®¾äÐͽṹ
Íê³É¾ä×Ó
1. based on, be released 2. related to, arrested 3. go shopping, stay, going
4. it, when 5. when called 6. be bent on 7. have, acquaintance
8. died out , have , to do 9. make , decision abruptly 10. remind , of
Î壮Óï·¨Ó¦ÓÃ
1. They aren¡¯t listening to pop music now.
2. Many people can¡¯t speak English nowadays.
3. You don¡¯t have to make your bed after you get up every day.
4. His mother doesn¡¯t have a beautiful car
5. We don't need a pen and piece of paper.
6. I needn¡¯t wear a warm coat.
7. The old man seldom goes for a walk in the park after supper.
8. The doctors don¡¯t volunteer in the countryside every year.
9. Mike doesn¡¯t do sports in the afternoon.
10. You¡¯d better not talk with your parents right now.
Áù£®·­Òë¾ä×Ó
1. This method is seldom used here, is it?
2. She¡¯d rather go shopping in the afternoon
3. Classic novels often have symbols which add interest, tension or deeper meaning to the text.
4. Hardly had he arrived at the school when he began the work.
5. Their actions show clearly that they are bent on violence.
6. Don¡¯t let it out about me losing the job, will you?
7. We all laughed at the sight of his strange clothes. / We all laughed when we caught sight of his strange clothes.
8. A hard life and a weak constitution shortened Robert Burn¡¯s life.
9. That was a complete change of climate which transformed the area from a desert into a swamp.
Æߣ®µ¥ÏîÑ¡Ôñ
1-5D DCAC 6-10 D CCBD 11-15 BADAB 16-20.CBCAB
¾Å£®¿ÎÎĸ´Êö
Passage A
1. antiques 2. well written 3. well received 4. different 5. makes
6. place 7. based 8. appeared 9. is set in 10. character
11. would rather 12. misty 13.fortune 14.from 15. bent.
Passage B
1. literary 2. reputation 3. Unfortunately 4. money 5. poetry
6. nationwide 7.earn/make 8. to 9. published 10. intended
Ê®£®Writing
Several years ago, when a foreigner appeared in China, many people would gather around and stared at him or her as if they were watching a rare animal.
However, it¡¯s not uncommon to meet some foreigners even in middle schools now. There¡¯s no doubt that schools will be better known. What¡¯s more, it¡¯s good for students to develop interest in English study as well as learn more about foreign cultures. Meanwhile, their oral English will be improved a lot. On the other hand, some foreigners, though well paid, find it difficult to get used to the way of life in a foreign country and they sometimes worry about their safety. The most important thing is that they are not quite familiar with the students. As a result, many students can¡¯t benefit from them.
ʮһ.ÈÎÎñÐÍÔĶÁ
1. faces 2. Women 3. products 4. process 5. shape 6. history
7.countries 8. Egypt 9. Painted 10. powder
Module 8 Unit 2
пα굥´Ê

universal adj. ÆÕ±éµÄ£¬¹²Í¨µÄ£¬¹«Èϵģ»ÓîÖæµÄ
splendid adj. ¼«ºÃµÄ£»×³ÀöµÄ£¬»Ô»ÍµÄ£¬¹â»ÔµÄ
star vt. ÓÉ¡­¡­Ö÷ÑÝ£¬ÓÉ¡­¡­µ£ÈÎÖ÷½Ç£¬Ê¹¡­¡­³ÉΪÃ÷ÐÇ
musician n. ÒôÀÖ¼Ò
cast vt. Ñ¡ÅÉ¡­¡­°çÑÝij½ÇÉ«£»Îª£¨Ï·¾ç¡¢½ÇÉ«£©Ñ¡ÅÉÑÝÔ±
butterfly n. ºûµû
cold-hearted adj. Àä¿áµÄ£¬ÎÞÇéµÄ
marriage n. ½á»é£¬»éÒö
correctly adv. ÕýÈ·µØ£»Ç¡µ±µØ
outdoor adj. »§ÍâµÄ£¬ÊÒÍâµÄ£¬Ò°ÍâµÄ
handsome adj. Ó¢¿¡µÄ
triangle n. Èý½ÇÐΣ»Èý½Ç¹Øϵ
unconditional adj. ÎÞÌõ¼þµÄ
dare vi. ¸Ò£¬¸ÒÓÚ£¬µ¨¸Ò
disturbing adj. ·³Äյģ¬ÄÕÈ˵Ä
terrify vt. ¿ÖÏÅ£¬Ê¹¸Ðµ½¿Ö²À
torture vt. & n. ÕÛÄ¥
guard n. ÎÀ±ø£¬»¤ÎÀÈËÔ±
affection n. ¸ÐÇ飻ϲ°®£»°®Ä½
aloud adv. ´óÉùµØ
stage vt. ÉÏÑÝ£¬±íÑÝ
direct vi. & vt. µ¼ÑÝ£»Ö¸»Ó£¬Ö¸µ¼
heartbreaking adj. ÁîÈËÐÄËéµÄ
component n. ³É·Ö£¬×é³É²¿·Ö
breathless adj. ´­²»¹ýÆøÀ´µÄ£¬ºôÎü¼±´ÙµÄ
authentic adj. ÕæʵµÄ£¬¿ÉÐŵÄ
fluent adj. Á÷ÀûµÄ£¬Á÷³©µÄ
condemn vt. ÅÐÐÌ£¬´¦ÐÌ£»Ç´Ôð£¬ÉùÌÖ
superb adj. ¼«ºÃµÄ£¬°ôµÄ
privilege n. Ìرð´ýÓö£»ÌØȨ
desire n., vi. & vt. Ô¸Íû£¬¿ÊÍû£¬ÓûÍû
hire vt. ¹ÍÓã»×âÓ㻳ö×â
performer n. ±íÑÝÕß
unemployment n. ʧҵ
tremble vi. & n. ²ü¶¶£¬·¢¶¶
status n. µØ룬Éí·Ý£»ÇéÐΣ¬×´Ì¬
tutor n. Ö¸µ¼½Ìʦ£¬¼ÒÍ¥½Ìʦ
symphony n. ½»ÏìÀÖ£¬½»ÏìÇú
bachelor n. µ¥Éíºº£»Ñ§Ê¿Ñ§Î»
ballet n. °ÅÀÙÎ裻°ÅÀÙÎè¾ç£»°ÅÀÙÎèÀÖÇú
fame n. ÃûÉù£¬ÉùÓþ
transatlantic adj. ¿ç´óÎ÷ÑóµÄ
voyage n. º½º£ÂÃÐÐ
jazz n. ¾ôÊ¿ÀÖ
slavery n. Å«Á¥ÖƶÈ
swing n. Ò¡°Ú£»Ò¡°ÚÀÖ vi. & vt. Ò¡°Ú£¬Ò¡»Î
decline n. & vi. Ë¥Â䣬˥°Ü£»Ï½µ
pianist n. ¸ÖÇÙÊÖ£¬¸ÖÇÙÑÝ×à¼Ò
violinist n. СÌáÇÙÊÖ£¬Ð¡ÌáÇÙÑÝ×à¼Ò
trend n. ÇãÏò£¬Ç÷ÊÆ£¬³±Á÷
mixture n. »ìºÏ£»»ìºÏÎï
guitar n. ¼ªËû
discrimination n. ÆçÊÓ£»±æ±ð£¬Çø±ð
promoter n. ÍÆÏúÉÌ£¬ÍƹãÕߣ»´Ù½øÕß
prayer n. Æíµ»£¬ÆíÇó£¬Ô¸Íû
draft vt. Õ÷ÕС­¡­ÈëÎ飻Æð²Ý£¬²ÝÄâ n. ²Ý¸å
regain vt. ÖØлñµÃ£¬»Ö¸´
frontier n. Ç°ÑØ£¬ÁìÓò
appeal n. ÎüÒýÁ¦
break up ½âÉ¢£¬½âÌ壬·ÖÊÖ
phenomenon n. ÏÖÏó
mental adj. ¾«ÉñµÄ£¬ÐÄÀíµÄ
haircut n. ·¢Ê½£»Àí·¢
catalogue n. Ŀ¼£»³ªÆ¬Ä¿Â¼£»²úƷĿ¼

¿ÎÎijöÏÖ¶ÌÓï

1. be set in
2. fall in love (with sb)
3. exercise control over sb
4. be upset by
5. leave ¡­ in one¡¯s hands
6. tell the difference between ¡­ and ¡­
7. serve as
8. earn sb a gold record
9. take a brief look at sth
10. the founding father of
11. be intended for sth
12. make a fortune
13. regain his earlier charm
14. imagine doing sth
15. take on
16. allow sb to do sth
17. be desperate to do sth
18. the key components of sth
19. develop one¡¯s interest
20. a number one hit
21. play an important role in sth
22. an essential part of sth
23. lead to sth
24. turn out to be sth
25. break up
26. be perfect for
27. be drunk with
28. break one¡¯s promise
29. win one¡¯s affection
30. consist of
31. deserve one¡¯s status as ¡­
32. make friends with sb
33. split up
34. see sb as
35. go into a bit of decline
36. release one¡¯s album
37. be based on

Ò»£®µ¥´ÊÓ¦ÓÃ
¸ù¾Ýµ¥´ÊµÄÊ××Öĸ»òººÓïÒâ˼ÌîдÕýÈ·µ¥´Ê£¬×¢ÒâÐÎʽ±ä»¯
1. Music has been called ¡®the u language¡¯ because people do not need to speak the same language to understand it.
2 .After months of overworking, Jack was suffering from m and physical exhaustion.
3. Shylock was a c ______ £¨Àä¿áµÄ£©moneylender, who was always cruel to the people who borrowed money from him.
4. He was found guilty and c to death.
5. Big Joe Tuner never achieved much fame when he was alive mainly because there was still racial d_______ in the USA then.
6. The film is a (ÁîÈËÐÄËéµÄ)love story.
7. That man is with£¨×íÐÄÓÚ£©power.
8. Princess Turandot (ÕÛÄ¥)Liu , and Liu kills herself.
9. She speaks (Á÷ÀûµÄ) Italian.
10. An orchestra is a group of m that mostly play classic music.
11. Bill spent two weeks in the hospital r his strength after the operation.
12. If the factory is closed, many people will face u .
13. She went to live abroad after the break-up of her (»éÒö).
14.The pain caused the boy to cry (´óÉùµØ).
15. Rain and snow are (ÏÖÏó) of the weather.
16. Not only did she speak (ÕýÈ·µØ),but she spoke easily.
17. When she came out of the water, she was t with cold.
18. All the while she was (ʹ¡­¡­¸Ðµ½¿Ö¾å) by the fear that she had cancer.
¶þ£®´ÊÐÎת»»
1. marriage n. --- __________ (v.) 2. recite v. ---__________ £¨n.£©
3. unemployment n. --- __________(·´) --- __________ (v.)
4. mixture n. ---__________ (v)
5. promoter n. --- __________(v.) --- __________(n.¶¯×÷)
6. universal adj. --- __________(n) 7. fluent adj. --- __________(n.)
8. prayer n. --- __________£¨v.£© 9.unconditional(adj. )---__________(·´)
Èý£®Ñ¡´ÊÌî¿Õ
exercise control over, transform into, break one¡¯s promise, be desperate to,
turn out, apply for, for the first time, be drunk with, play a leading role,
consist of, break up, be married to, cut short, fall in love with, be set in,
be intended for, the first time, devote¡­ to , live with, turn in, turn into
1. The company _________ an international corporation from a family business.
2. He ________ see her that he waited outside her house the whole night.
3. If you want to be successful, you should always remember ¡°never _______¡±. In other words, you should keep your words.
4. The children are easily affected by the outside world. We should do something to _______ them to ensure they do not make serious mistakes.
5. When I met the foreigner ________, I was too shy to speak an English word.
6. The man is a person who________ power, so we all dislike him.
7. He had high prestige among the workers, and he _________in the strike.
8. Those flowers __________ your mother on her fiftieth birthday, but as she is away, I would be glad if you accept them.
9. After working together for many years, they ________each other.
10. ________ I met an American, I was too shy to speak an English word to him.
11. The interviewer _______ his guest in mid-sentence.
12. The police _______ the crowd to stop the fighting.
13. As we know, a chess set _______ 32 chessmen.
14. The film _______ the USA in the 19th century.
15. I was told that she______ a rich man for nearly a month.
16. He used to _______ his teaching when he was young.
17. I regret to inform you that your son has been ______ to the police for breaking the street lights.
18. I don¡¯t enjoy the situation, but I can _______ it.
19. She is the only one of the girls who ______ the position in the company.
20. The actress who had been thought highly of ______ to be a great disappointment.
ËÄ£®¾äÐͽṹ
1. universal adj.
the Universal Declaration of Human ÊÀ½çÈËȨÐûÑÔ/ ÓîÖæµÄ £»È«ÊÀ½çµÄ
a universal rule ÆÕ±é¹æÂÉ/ ÆÕͨµÄ£»Ò»°ãµÄ£»È«ÌåµÄ=general
a universal meter ͨÓõç±í/ ͨÓõÄÍòÄܵÄ
2. witness
n.Ä¿»÷Õߣ¬Ö¤ÈË£¬Ö¤¾Ý
A witness told the police how the fire started,
vt.Ä¿¶Ã£¬Ä¿»÷£¬×÷Ö¤£¬ËµÃ÷
He witnessed the accident on the highway.
Ex:
After the explosion,the policeman did a lot of work to find out some clues from the ____-
A. lookers-on B. viewers C. people D. witness
3. star n. the North/polar star±±¼«ÐÇ
a shooting star Á÷ÐÇ
The sun is a star ¡­ÊǺãÐÇ
a five pointed star Îå½ÇÐÇ/ [ÐÇ×´Îï]
a film star [Ã÷ÐÇ]
In the list the starred questions are the most difficult. (starred; starring) [³£Óñ»¶¯Ì¬]ÓÃÐÇ£¨»òÐÇ×´ÎװÊΣ»¼ÓÐǺÅ
an old film starring Charlie Chaplin ÒÔ¡­ÎªÖ÷ÑÝ
Á·Ï°£º
We know something about the play which ________ Wang Ji.
A. stars B. starring C. to star D. having starred
4. cast vt.¼°Îﶯ´Ê
vt. Ͷ£»Å×£»ÖÀ£»ÍÑÂä
-He shut me up in the copper jar and had it cast into the sea.
-Ëû°ÑÎÒ½ûïÀÔÚ̳×ÓÀ²¢½ÐÈË°Ñ̳×ÓÅ×Èë´óº£¡£
-The fisherman cast his net into the water. ÓæÃñ°ÑÍøÈöÔÚË®Àï¡£
-The horse cast a shoe. ÂíÍÑÁËÌãÌú¡£
Ñ¡ÅÉÑÝÔ±£¬·ÖÅɽÇÉ«
He was cast for the part of Yang Zirong.Ëû°çÑÝÑî×ÓÈÙ¡£
The part was cast to him.Õâ¸ö½ÇÉ«·ÖÅä¸øËûÑÝ¡£
5£®be set in ÒÔ¡­Îª±³¾°
The book is set in the 17th century Spain.Õâ±¾ÊéÊÇÒÔ17ÊÀ¼ÍµÄÎ÷°àÑÀΪ±³¾°¡£
6£®for the first time µÚÒ»´Î£¬Ê״Σ¬
the first time µÚÒ»´Î×öijʵÄʱºò£¨Òýµ¼Ê±¼ä×´Óï´Ó¾ä£©
Á·Ï°£º
________ (µÚÒ»´Î) I went abroad. I could hardly understand what the foreigners said.
This is __________ (µÚ¶þ´Î)that you have been late this week.
This is the first time she had been out with him alone.=This is the first time _____ her being out with him alone.
The first time the second time
7. take on ³ÊÏÖ³ö¡­£»ÑÝÒï
take on£ºÕÐÊÕ£¬¹ÍÓ¶£¬½ÓÄÉ£¬Ôö¼Ó£¨ÈËÊÖ£©£»³Ðµ££¨ÈÎÎñ¡¢Ö°Ô𣩣¬½ÓÊÜ£¨½ÇÉ«¡¢Ö°Î»£©
Her eyes took on a hurt expression ËýµÄÑÛ¾¦ÀïÁ÷¶³öÊÜίÇüµÄÉñÇé
Ex:·­ÒëÏÂÁоä×Ó£º
The company is taking on new staff.
He is always ready to take on heavy responsibilities.
Jackie Chen is going to take on the leading role in this movie.
8£®be drunk with ×íÐÄÓÚ...£¬¶Ô...³ÕÃÔ£¬ÌÕ×íÓÚ...
He is drunk with success
Á·Ï°£º
translate:²»Òª³ÁÃÔÓÚÍøÂç¡£Don¡¯t be drunk with internet.
They are drunk with making a fortune. ËûÃdzÕÃÔÓÚÅöÔËÆø¡£
9. dare vt/vi
He dare speak in public.
He dare to speak in public.
10.exercise control over ¶Ô...ʵʩ¿ØÖÆ£¬¿ØÖÆ
We should think of a way to exercise control over our expenses.
lose control of/be(get) out of control ʧȥ¿ØÖÆ
be in control of sth ÔÚ¡£¡£¡£¿ØÖÆÏ£¬Ö¸»Ó£¬¹ÜÀíijÊÂÎï
under the control of ±»¡£¡£¡£¿ØÖÆ×Å
bring/get sth.under control;be under controlÒÖÖÆ£»¿ØÖÆ
Á·Ï°£º
·­Òë1£©He exercise his right as a citizen.ËûÐÐʹ×÷Ϊ¹«ÃñµÄȨÀû
2£©Teachers exercise authority.ÀÏʦÐÐʹȨÀû¡£
11£®terrify vt.¿ÖÏÅ£¬Ê¹¸Ðµ½¿Ö²À
The thunderstorm terrified the child.´óÀ×Óê°ÑÕ⺢×ÓÏÅ»µÁË¡£
terrified adj.º¦Åµģ¬ÏÅ»µÁ˵Ä
The animals were terrified by the storm.¶¯Îï±»·ç±©ÏÅ»µÁË
They were terrified by his sudden appearance.ËûµÄͻȻ³öÏÖ£¬°ÑËûÃÇÏÅÁËÒ»Ìø¡£
The children were terrified of being scolded.ÄǺ¢×Óº¦Å°¤Âî¡£
12.threaten v. ¿ÖÏÅ£¬Íþв£»Ô¤Ê¾V¡­µÄÐ×Õ×£»ÓС­µÄΣÏÕ
He threatened to make the phone public.
Ëû¿ÖÏÅ˵Ҫ°ÑÄÇÕÅÕÕƬ¹«¿ª¡£
The heavy black clouds threaten a storm.ÎÚÔÆÃܲ¼Ô¤Ê¾×ű©·çÓ꽫µ½À´¡£
The robber threatened me with a gun.
threaten sb with deathÓÃËÀÍþвijÈË
threaten to do sthÍþвҪ×öıÊÂ
13£®condemn vt.ÅÐÐÌ£¬´¦ÐÌ£»ÉùÌÖ£»Ç´Ôð
Most people are willing to condemn violence of any sort as evil.
ÈκÎÈ˶¼Ô¸Òâ°ÑÈκα©Á¦ÐÐΪÊÓΪ¶ñÐмÓÒÔÇ´Ôð¡£
Ïà¹Ø´îÅ䣺be condemned to death±»ÅÐËÀÐÌ£»be condemned to±»Ðû¸æ...
condemn a person for theft£ºÅÐijÈ˵ÁÇÔ×ï
be condemned to a life imprisonment£º±»ÅÐÎÞÆÚͽÐÌ
Á·Ï°£º
The judge _______ him for fraud.
A. denounced B. condemned C. charged D. accused
KEY:A
II. Íê³É¾ä×Ó
1. ¼¸Î»ÊÀ½ç¶¥¼¶¸è³ª¼Òµ£µ±Ö÷ÑÝ£¬Ðí¶àÖйúÒôÀÖ¼ÒÒ²²Î¼ÓÁËÑݳö¡£
It _________ some of the world¡¯s great singers. Many Chinese _________ were also _______.
2. Ëü±ä³ÉÁËÒ»¸öÃÀÀö¶øÁîÈËÐÄ×íµÄ°®Çé¹Êʵķ¢ÉúµØ¡£
It has been _________ _________the _______ ________a beautiful and ________ love story.
3. ²»¿ÉÄÜÓбÈÕâ¸üºÃµÄ³¡¾°ÁË¡£
There ________ _________ be a __________ setting.
4. ¹ÊÊÂËæºóÑÝÒïÁË·¢ÉúÔÚ¿¨À­·ò¡¢Í¼À¼¶äºÍÁø¶ùÈýÈËÖ®¼äµÄ¾­µäÈý½ÇÁµÇé¡£
The story then _________ ________ a classic love ________ _______ Calaf, Turandot and Liu.
5. ͼÀ¼¶ä²»¹ËÒ»ÇеØÏëÖªµÀËûµÄÃû×Ö£¬ËýÍþв¡¢¿ÖÏÅÁø¶ù¡£
Turandot is ________ ________ learn his name and _________ and _________ Liu
6. ¸è¾çÔÚÒ»¶ÎÃÀÃîµÄÖÕÇú¶þÖسªÖнáÊø¡£
The opera __________ __________ a beautifully- _________ final _________.
7. Ëû³ÆµÃÉÏÊÇ×îÊÜ»¶Ó­µÄ×÷Çú¼ÒÖ®Ò»¡£
He __________ his _________ as one of the most popular composers.
8. Õâ´Î±íÑÝÈÃÎÒ¼¤¶¯µÃÆÁסºôÎü¡£
The performance left me ____________ _____________ excitement.
Î壮Óï·¨Ó¦Óã¨Ê¡ÂÔ£©
Ê¡ÂÔÊÇÓ¢ÓïÖеÄÒ»ÖÖ±ÜÃâÖظ´£¬Í»³ö¹Ø¼ü´ÊÓ²¢Ê¹ÉÏÏÂÎĽôÃÜÁ¬½ÓµÄÓï·¨ÊֶΡ£Ó¢ÓïÖУ¬Ê¡ÂÔµÄÔ­ÔòÊǼȲ»Ëðº¦Óï·¨½á¹¹£¬Í¬Ê±ÓÖ²»ÄܲúÉúÆçÒå¡£
1£® ²»Ê¹ÓÃÌæ´ú´ÊµÄÊ¡ÂÔ
£¨1£© Ê¡ÂÔÖ÷Óï
I have done more than (what ) is required.
(You) Open the window and the door for me,please.
£¨2£© Ê¡ÂÔÖ÷νÓï»òÖ÷νÓïµÄÒ»²¿·Ö
Why (do) not (you) say goodbye to your lovely cousin ?
(Are you ) Ready ?Try to answer these questions in your own words.
£¨3£© Ê¡ÂÔ±öÓï
---Which of them is better ?
---Well,it is hard to tell (which of them is better).
£¨4£© Ê¡ÂÔ±íÓï
---Are you hungry ?
---Yes, I am (hungry).
£¨5£© Ê¡ÂÔËùÓиñºóÃæµÄÃû´Ê
Jack and his sister stayed in his uncle¡¯s(home) during the summer vacation.
The girl¡¯s handwriting is much better than his brother¡¯s (handwriting).
£¨6£© Ê¡ÂÔ¶¨Óï´Ó¾äÖеĹØϵ´ú´Ê
¹Øϵ´ú´Êthat, which, whomÔÚ¶¨Óï´Ó¾äÖÐ×÷±öÓïʱͨ³£¶¼¿ÉÒÔÊ¡ÂÔ¡£È磺
The book (that) he bought last week is written by Guo Jingming.
Here is the wonderful book (which )I have read many times.
The man (whom) you had said hello to was my English teacher.
£¨7£© ²»¶¨Ê½ÖеÄÊ¡ÂÔ
a Ó¢ÓïÖÐΪ±ÜÃâÖظ´£¬¾­³£Ê¡ÂÔÉÏÏÂÎÄÒÑÌáµ½µÄ¶¯´ÊÔ­ÐΣ¬Ö»±£Áô²»¶¨Ê½ÖеÄ
СƷ´Êto£»ÕâÀද´ÊÓУºexpect, forget, hope, intend, mean, prefer, refuse, try, want,
wish, would likeºÍloveµÈ¡£È磺
She asked me to dance with her, but I didn¡¯t want to (dance with her).
---Do you want to give us a lecture about how to use an English dictionary?
---No,I prefer not to (give a lecture about how to use an English dictionary)
b ÔÚhave to, need, ought to, be going to, used toµÈºóÊ¡ÂÔ¶¯´Ê¡£È磺
I really didn¡¯t want to go there with him, but I had to (go there with him).
c ÔÚijЩÐÎÈݴʵȺóÊ¡ÂÔºóÃæµÄ¶¯´Ê¡£È磺
---Will you join in our discussion ?
---I¡¯ll be glad to (join in your discussion).
d Èç¹û²»¶¨Ê½ÖдøÓÐbe, have, have beenµÈ£¬Í¨³£±£Áôbe, have, have been¡£È磺
---Did he pass the driving test ?
---No, but he ought to have (passed the driving test).
2£®Ê¹ÓÃÌæ´ú´ÊµÄÊ¡ÂÔ
£¨1£© ͨ³£Çé¿öÏ£¬ÔÚÊ¡ÂÔÁËij¸ö´Ê¡¢¶ÌÓï»ò¾ä×Óʱ£¬»¹ÐèÒªÓÃij¸öÌæ´ú´Ê¡£³£ÓõÄÌæ´ú´ÊÓУºdo /does /did,so,not,neither,norºÍthe sameµÈ¡£
ÓÃÖú¶¯´Êdo /does /didÀ´Ìæ´úÉÏÏÂÎijöÏֵĶ¯´Ê£¬ÒÔÃâÖظ´¡£È磺
She speaks English more fluently than her elder sister does.
£¨2£© ÓÃso¿ÉÌæ´úµ¥´Ê¡¢¶ÌÓï»ò¾ä×Ó£¬×÷believe, be afraid, expect, do, fear, hope, suppose, say, think µÈµÄ±öÓï¡£È磺
---Will it be fine tomorrow?
---I hope so. (I hope that it will be fine tomorrow.)
3. ³£¼ûµÄÊ¡ÂԽṹ
Ê¡ÂÔµÄÌØÊâÓ÷¨£º
1£®µ±¼¸¸ö²»¶¨Ê½²¢ÁÐʱ£¬µÚÒ»¸ö²»¶¨Ê½Í¨³£±£Áôto£¬¶øºóÃæµÄ²»¶¨Ê½Í¨³£Ê¡ÂÔto¡£
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3£®Possible / necessary Óëif, when, where, whenever, whereverµÈÁ¬ÓÃʱ×ÜÊÇÊ¡ÂÔ¡°it is¡±µÈ¡£
4£®as¡­as possible ½á¹¹³£±í´ï¡°¾¡¿ÉÄÜ¡­¡­¡±¡£
5£®if only ºó³£¼ÓÒ»¸öÐéÄâ¾ä£¬±í´ï¡°ÒªÊÇ¡­¡­¾ÍºÃÁË¡±¡£
6£®what if / though¾äʽ³£ÓÃÀ´±íʾ¡°ÒªÊÇ / ¼´Ê¹¡­¡­Ôõô°ì¡±¡£
7£®what / how about ³£ÓÃÀ´Ìá³ö½¨Òé»òÕ÷Çó¶Ô·½Òâ¼û¡£
8£®why / why not ³£¸ú¶¯´ÊÔ­ÐΣ¬ÓÃÀ´Ñ¯ÎÊΪʲô»òΪʲô²»¡£
9£®ÔÚÏÂÁжÌÓï»ò½á¹¹ÖÐv-ing֮ǰµÄ½é´Ê¿ÉÊ¡ÂÔ¡£
have difficulty / trouble (in) doing sth.
spend / waste / pass¡­ (in / on) doing sth.
There is no use / good (in) doing sth.
stop / prevent ¡­ (from) doing sth.
be busy (in) doing sth.
have a good / pleasant / hard time (in) doing sth.
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1. If (he is) given more intention, the boy could have turned out better.
2. Tom raised his hand as if (he was going) to say something.
3. ¨CYou should have thanked her before you left.
---I meant to, but when I was leaving I could find her anywhere.
4. ---Do you think it¡¯s going to rain over the weekend?
---I believe not.
5. ¨CWhat do you think made Mary so upset?
----Losing her new bicycle(made her so upset).
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1. Don¡¯t come in unless ________.
A. inviting B. inviting to C. invited to D. being invited to
2. ¡ªI usually go there by train. ¡ªWhy not ________by boat for a change?
A. to try going B. try to go C. to try and go D. try going
3.The doctor did what he could ________the boy£¬but in vain.
A. save B. to save C. saving D .saved
4. All the girl wants ________do is ________stay at home and study hard.
A. /£»to B .to£»to C to£»/ D. either B or C
5.Although ________to stop£¬he kept on working.
A. tell B. told C. was told D .having told
6.Ask him to take you home________ possible.
A .at B. while C .if D. if they
7. The English book for kids is the best of its kind ________.
A .that has ever been made B .ever made
C. ever been made D .has ever been made
8. Look out for cars ________the street.
A. when crossed B. when crossing C. if you crossed D. while you are crossing
9. She worked very hard ________still rather poor in health.
A. though she B. although she C .though D. although was
10.¡ªWhat happened to the boy? He¡¯s making so much noise.
¡ªHe wanted to play football£¬but his mother warned him ________.
A. not B. to C .not to D.²»Ìî
11.¡ªAre you a film star? ¡ª________.
A. Yes£¬I was B.I used to be C.I used to D. I¡¯m used to
12.Frightened by the noise in the night£¬the girl did not dare ________in her room.
A. sleeping B. to sleeping C. sleep D .slept
13. ¡ªThey have done a good job. ¡ª________.Let¡¯s go to congratulate them.
A. So they have done B .So they have C. So have they D .So is it
14.He smokes a lot. Does his father ________?
A. smoke so B. smoke that C .do so D .did that
15. ¡ªPlease don¡¯t make a noise. ¡ª _______. I¡¯ll be as quiet as a mouse.
A. No, I won¡¯t B. No, I will C. Yes, I¡¯ll D. Yes, I won¡¯t
16. ¡ª Is it raining this afternoon? ¡ª I ______.
A. don¡¯t hope so B. hope not C. don¡¯t hope to D. hope not to
17. When ______, he has nothing to live on.
A. being outside home B. outside home C. leaves home D. he leave home
18. ¡ª Will he go on a trip this weekend? ¡ª If he _____.
A. wants B. will want C. wants to do D. wants to
19. Why don¡¯t you arrange your trip _____ you did last summer?
A. in the way which B. the way which C. the way D. by the way that
20. Cold chicken is delicious _____ salad.
A. when eaten with B. when to eat with C. when to be eaten with D. when eating with
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