hate each other like poison ±Ë´Ë»¥ÏàºÞ͸ name one?s poison
Name your poison,please. ˵³öÄãÒªºÈµãʲô¾Æ°¡¡£
What?s your poison? ÄãÒªºÈʲô¾Æ ¡öillogical adj. ²»ºÏÂß¼µÄ£¬ÎÞÕ·¨µÄ ¡öoctopus n. ÕÂÓã
¡ödelicacy n. ÃÀ棬¼ÑëÈ
Eg.: He considered chicken to be a great delicacy.
delicate adj. ÃÀζµÄ£¬¿É¿ÚµÄ£¬ÇåµµÄ delicious adj. ζµÀÃÀµÄ
¡örepulsive adj. ÁîÈË·´¸ÐµÄ£¬ÁîÈËÉúÑáµÄ disgusting adj.
The dish is repulsive. ¡östomach n. θ
¡öturn v. ¸Ðµ½¶ñÐÄ£¬·Î¸ ¡öfry v. ÓÍÕ¨
fry v.: be cooked in hot oil fried egg ¼å¼¦µ° fried bread fring pan ¼å¹ø fry up ¼ÓÈÈ
Fry up the food, please. fry in one's own fat ×Ô×÷×ÔÊÜ
have other fish to fry ÁíÓÐÒªÊÂÒª×ö Eg: Hello,Lucy, let's go have dinner.
That's good idea, but I have other fish to fry. Thank you very much. ¡öfat n. £¨¶¯Îï¡¢Ö²ÎÓÍ put on fat ³¤ÅÖ£¬·¢ÅÖ
fat adj. ÅÖµÄ ÔËÓôËadj.ʱ³£ºÜ²»Àñò£¬Òò´ËÓÃlarge, heavy, overweight Ìæ´ú¡£ ¡öabuse n. ÈèÂÔðÂî
Don?t abuse your authority.
He greeted his wife with a stream of abuse. ËûÂîÆÞ×ÓµÄÉùÒô²»¾øÓÚ¶ú¡£ ¡ösnail n. ÎÏÅ£
¡öluxury n. ÉÝ³ÞÆ·£¬Õ䯷
The diamond ring is a luxury to me. luxurious adj. Éݳ޵ģ¬ÉÝ»ªµÄ a luxurious hotel ¡öassociate v. ÁªÏëµ½
associate v. connect in one?s mind
A with B °Ñ¡¡¸ú¡¡ÁªÏëµ½Ò»Æð= connect with.
Eg: I can't associate you with your wife. Can you associate snails with delicious food. associate with ==connect with==link with == be bound up with ¡ödespise v. ±ÉÊÓ
despise vt. regard as worthless
Eg.: We despise him for a coward. ÎÒÃǰÑËû¿´×÷Ò»¸öų·ò¡£
look down upon ±ÉÊÓ£¬ÇƲ»Æð
Eg: Don't look down upon anyone. ¡öappeal v. ÒýÆðÐËÖÂ
appeal to sb ÒýÆðijÈËÐËȤ
21
Eg: Eating snails never appeals to me. appeal ÉÏËߣ¬ºôÓõ
appeal for sth. ΪijʶøÉÏËß ¡öshower n. ÕóÓê ¡östroll n. Áï´ï£¬É¢²½
stroll n. slow walking for pleasure in street or in garden.
go for a stroll; take a stroll; == go for a walk; take a walk
stroller É¢²½µÄÈË stroll vi.
He is strolling along the road. ramble º£°¶£¬ÁÖÖеÄÂþ²½
The couple are irambling in the forest. roam ²»°²¶¨µÄƯ²´£¬ÅÇ»² The tramp roams every day. wander Á÷ÀË£¬ÅÇ»²
He has nothing to do, so he is wandering along the street. ¡öimpulse n. ³å¶¯
impulse : a sudden wish to do sth. on impulse ³å¶¯µÄ
He rushed out to catch up (with) the lady on impulse.
be driven by impulse to do sth. Çé²»×Ô½ûµÄ×öijÊÂ
Why did you do it?
I should say I was driven by impulse to do it like this.
impulsive adj. ³å¶¯µÄ impulsively adv. ³å¶¯µØ ¡ödozen n. 12¸ö£¬Ò»´ò dozen: agroup of twelve by the dozen ³É´òµÄ dozens of Ðí¶àµÄ
two dozen eggs£¬a dozen roses. (ÆäÓ÷¨ºÍhundred, thousand Ò»Ñù)
a dozen of the (these ) roses ÕâЩõ¹åÖеÄÒ»´ò
Êý´Ê +dozen +ÎïÆ·£º¡¡´ò¡¡£¨ÎïÆ·£© Speak nineteen to the dozen ˵¸ö²»Í£
Eg.: The old lady is speaking nineteen to the dozen.
¡öfancy v.ϲ°®£¬Ï²»¶
Eg.: I don?t fancy living in the cold room. fancy ÏëÏñ£¬ÉèÏ루=image£© £¨±íʾһÖÖ¾ªÑȵÄÐÄÇ飩£¨Æäºó½Ó¶¯Ãû´Ê×ö±öÓ
Fancy meeting you here. ûÏëµ½ÔÚÕâ¶ù¼ûµ½Äã¡£
fancy oneself ×ÔÒÔΪÊÇ£¬×ÔÃü²»·² Do you fancy yourself? Èý¡¢¡¾¿ÎÎľ«Îö¡¿
Key sentence:
People become quite illogical when they try to decide what can be eaten and what cannot be eaten.
ÈËÃÇÔÚ¾ö¶¨³Ôʲô»òÕß²»³ÔʲôµÄʱºò£¬ÍùÍù±äµÃ²»ºÏÇéÀí¡£
µ±Éæ¼°µ½»ò̸¼°µ½ÐðÊö¿Í¹ÛÊÂʵµÄʱºò it comes to sth ¡¡¡¡ it comes to doing sth ¡¡ ÓÃÓÚwhen Òýµ¼µÄʱ¼ä×´Óï´Ó¾ä
Eg.:He never complains when it comes to helping his wife with the house work. for instance == for example consider (to be)...
on the other hand תÕÛÁ¬½Ó´Ê£¬±íʾ¶øÁíÒ»·½Ãæ
at the idea of: at ½é´Ê´îÅä×÷×´Ó±íʾµ±......¾Í......£»Ò»......¾Í...... at the idea of Ò»Ïëµ½ at the sight of Ò»¿´µ½ at the mention of Ò»Ìáµ½
at the news of Ò»Ìýµ½......ÏûÏ¢ at the touth of Ò»´¥Ãþµ½......¶«Î÷ at the sound of Ò»Ìýµ½......ÉùÒô at the thought of Ò»Ïëµ½
Eg.: I was glad at the thought of getting something te eat.
I always love at the mention of ghost story.
stick to + Ãû´Ê==insist on doing sth == persist in doing sth practice ±íʾϰË×£¬×ö·¨ habit±íʾ¸öÈËϰ¹ß
customÉç»áµÄ·çË×»òϰË×
Eg.: Early to bed and early to rise is good habit.
It is now quite common practice for married women not to take their husband?s second name.
The practice of closing shops on Sundays. My practice to study English is to read everyday.
the custum of giving present at Christmas Social customs vary greatly from country to country.
in many northern countries. Key sentence:
The sad truth is that most of us have been brought up to eat certain foods and¡
thatÒýµ¼±íÓï´Ó¾ä£¬ËµÃ÷truthµÄÄÚÈÝ bring up¸§Ñø
Eg.: Joe is born in England, but brought up in France.
She was brought up to beliee that money is the most (great) important thing in life. Ëû´ÓСµ½´óÒ»Ö±ÈÏΪ½ðÇ®ÊÇÉú»îÖÐ×îÖØÒªµÄ¶«Î÷¡£ ±»¶¯Óï̬ÐÎʽ£¬±í×ÔС³¤´ó£¬Ôڳɳ¤µÄ¹ý³Ìµ±ÖÐÒѾϰ¹ßÓÚ......
I?ve been brought up to eat fish, just
because my mother is fond of fish as well. He has been brought up to eat fring
potatoes just because his parents are fond of that.
22
He gave much attention to bring up his children.
stick to = keep to; not give up
Eg.: We stick to them all our lives.
I made my decision and I am going to stick to it. (to½é´Ê) stick to the idea stick to the plan
insist on doing sth. ¼á³Ö×öijÊ persist in doing sth. ¼á³Ö×öijÊ Key sentence:
People become quite illogical when they try to decide what can be eaten and what cannot be eaten.
Key sentence:
No creature has received more praise and abuse than the common garden snail.
±È½Ï¼¶±í´ï×î¸ß¼¶µÄ¸ÅÄî
Nobody is more beautiflu than you.
He is more intelligent than anyone else in my class.
The common garden snail often receive more praise and abuse than other creatures.
cooked¹ýÈ¥·Ö´Ê×ö¶¨ÓÓësnails¹¹³É±»¶¯¹ØÏµ¡£ countless: ÎÞÊýµÄ£¬Êý²»¾¡µÄ (=numerous) whoÒýµ¼¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä
associate sth. with sth. °ÑijÎïÓëijÎïÏàÁªÏµ Key sentence:
People there, don?t consider snails to be a great dilicacy.
no garden of his own ûÓÐ×Ô¼ºµÄÍ¥Ôº Robert is forn of snails very much.
The idea never interested me very much... happened to do Ç¡ÇÉ£¬ÅöÇÉ
I happened to be out when he called.
We both happened to be travelling on the same plane.
happen / chance
It happened that I was out when he called. It chanced that I was out when he called. when
±íʾÕýÔÚÕâʱͻȻ£¬Í¨³£Ê¹ÓùýÈ¥½øÐÐʱ£¬¹ýÈ¥Íê³ÉʱµÈ´îÅ䣻λÓÚ¾äÖÐ
He was having a bath when the telephine suddenly rang.
We had not ... like this when ... came in. We were about to start when it rained. snails (that were ) taking a stroll... ÏÖÔÚ·Ö´Ê×ö¶¨ÓÐÞÊÎsnails
on a sudden impulse һʱµÄ£¬³å¶¯µÄ Acting on a sudden impulse, he went shopping to buy several dresses.
Robert was delighted to see me and equally pleased with my little gift. ==Robert was
not only delighted to see me, but also pleased with my little gift. be delighted to do be pleased to do
whenÌØÊâÓ÷¨£¬±íʾ¾ÍÔÚÕâ¸öʱºò reluctantly: unwillingly ²»ÇéÔ¸µÄ to our dismay ʹÎÒÃǸе½¾ªãµµÄÊÇ
Eg.: Before we came back, all the snails had already escaped from the paper bag and had taken complete possession of the hall. take possession Õ¼¾Ý£¬Õ¼ÓÐ
The soldiers took possession of enemies? fort.
The terrorists took possession of the embassy.¿Ö²À·Ö×ÓÕ¼ÁìÁË´óʹ¹Ý¡£ Lesson 24 A skeleton in the cupboard ¡°¼Ò³ó¡± ¡öskeleton n. ÷¼÷Ã
a skeleton in the cupboard==a skeleton in the closet == a family skeleton ¼Ò³ó
It?s time to bring a family skeleton out of the cupboard
skeleton key ÍòÄÜÔ¿³×
a walking skeleton ¹ÇÊÝÈç²ñµÄÈË
reduced to too a skeleton ÊÝµÄÆ¤°ü¹Ç
He has nothing to eat for a couple of days so he has been reduced to too a skeleton. ¡öseemingly adv. ±íÃæÉϵØ
¡örespectable adj. ÌåÃæµÄ£¬ÑŹ۵Ä
respectable decent, graceful, deserving respect: ÌåÃæµÄ£¬ÑŹ۵ģ¬¿É¾´µÄ
Eg.: He is a most respectable man. The tie is for a respectale man only. respectable: ¿É¾´µÄ
respectful : ³äÂú¾´ÒâµÄ£¬×ð¾´È˵Ä
A respectable person is respectful to others. respective ¸÷×ÔµÄ
Eg.:Our students return to their respective classroom.
¡öconceal v. Òþ²Ø£¬ÒþÂ÷
conceal : hide, ±Èhide¸ü¼ÓÕýʽ£¬ÓïÆøÇ¿ÁÒ conceal sth. from sb.
Eg.: He concealed his disappoint from his friends.
He concealed his bets from his wife.
When the mother coming, the little girl hid behind the curtain. hide, hid, hidden ¡övivid adj. Éú¶¯µÄ
vivid Éú¶¯µÄ£¬èòèòÈçÉúµÄ,ÏÊÑ޵쬻îÆÃµÄ Eg.: There is a vivid proverb. vivid blue ±ÌÀ¶É«
he is vivid with life. ËûÊÇÉúÆø²ª²ª¡£ Yours discription is really vivid. more vivid, the most vivid
¡ödramatic adj. ÁîÈ˼¤¶¯µÄ£¬¿ÛÈËÐÄÏÒµÄ dramatic ±Èexciting¸ü¼ÓÇ¿ÁÒ
The dramatic things is still vivid in his mind.
23
¡öruin v. »Ù»µ
¡öheroine n. Å®Ö÷È˹« ¡öfiction n. С˵ fiction ºÍnovel
fiction (¼¯ºÏÃû´Ê)²»¿ÉÊý (poetry ) novel ijһ²¿¾ßÌåµÄС˵ (poem)
I prefer reading fiction to hearing about real invent.
¡övarying adj. ²»Í¬µÄ =various
different Óë......²»Ò»Ñù
My idea differents from yours. ¡ömedicine n. ҽѧ
¡öguestroom n. £¨¼ÒÍ¥Öеģ©À´¿Íס·¿ ¡öunpack vt. £¨´ÓÏäÖУ©È¡³ö
¡östack adj. £¨ÕûÆëµØ£©¶Ñ·Å£¬ÅÅ·Å stack up the books
The housewife is stacking up the clothing. ¡öunderclothes n. ÄÚÒÂ
underclothing, underwear ¡ödrawer n. ³éÌë ¡öpetrify v. ʹ¾ª´ô = shock, dumbfound
Heard the news I was petrified. ¡ödangle v. Ðü¹Ò ¡ösway v. Ò¡°Ú
¡öunsympathetic adj. ²»±íͬÇéµÄ£¬ÎÞ¶¯ÓÚÖ﵀ sympathetic ͬÇéµÄ
sympathy n. in sympathy ͬÇ鵨 £¨= sympathetically £© ¡ömedical adj. ҽѧµÄ Èý¡¢¡¾¿ÎÎľ«Îö¡¿ howÒýµ¼±öÓï´Ó¾ä
has some terrible secret
which Òýµ¼µÄ¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä£¬ÐÞÊÎ˵Ã÷secret
seemingly: 9=from appearence )´Ó±íÃæÉÏ¿´À´£¬
a seemingly respectable person:±íÃæÉÏÊÜ×ðÖØµÄÈË
possess:(= have got, own )
²»¶¨Ê½to×÷¶¨ÓÐÞÊÎ˵Ã÷vivid saying, À´ÃèÊöÕâÖÖ³¡¾°¡£
some¡ª±íʾ¡°Ä³Ò»¸ö¡±£¬ÐÞÊε¥Êý¿ÉÊýÃû´Ê ruin ·ºÖ¸¸ÅÄ±íʾ»Ù»µµÄ¹ý³Ì²»ÊÇÒ»ÏÂÍê³ÉµÄ £¨spoil £©
The rain ruined / spoiled our holiday.
destroy: °Ñƾ½èijÖÖÍâÁ¦À´ÆÆ»µºÍ´Ý»ÙÊÂÎÍêÈ«´Ý»Ù
The earthquake destroyed almost entired city.
damage: ²àÖØÇ¿µ÷°Ñ¡Åª»µ£¬µ«ÊÇ¿ÉÒÔÐÞ¸´ one's hair stands on end :ijÈ˸е½Ã«¹Çã¤È»µÄ I thought I was alone in my room until I heard the mysterious noice again, and my hair stands on end.
make/set one's hair stand on end: ʹijÈ˸е½Ã«¹Çã¤È»µÄ
in her youth:ÔÚËýÄêÇáʱ
everyone
every one ofÓë½é´Êof Á¬ÓÃʱҪ·Ö¿ª
it is all very well but ²»Ô޳ɲ»ÂúÒâµÄ·´Ó¡°ºÃµ¹ÊǺ㬵«ÊÇ¡¡¡±
Eg: It is all very well for them to ask me to do it, but I am too busy.
It is all very well for you to suggent taking a few days rest, but how can finish our work in time.
occur: ij¸öʼþ³öºõÒâÁϵķ¢Éú£¨Õýʽ£© happen: ij¸öʼþ³öºõÒâÁÏ·¢Éú take place: ʼþ¸ù¾Ý°²ÅÅ¡°¾ÙÐС±
Eg.: When did the accident happen / occur? It occured to me that / to do.
It occured to me to open the window. When will the wedding take place? To varying degrees: ´Ó²»Í¬½Ç¶ÈÀ´½² whichÒýµ¼¶¨Óï´Ó¾äÐÞÊÎsecret
learn: Á˽âij¸öÊÂʵ£¬Ñ§Ï°Ä³ÖÖ֪ʶ¡¢¼¼ÄÜ know ÖªµÀij¸öÊÂʵ£¬¾ßÓÐij·½ÃæµÄ֪ʶ¡¢¼¼ÄÜ£¬ÈÏʶ¡¢Á˽âij¸öÈË£¨×´Ì¬¶¯´Ê£¬²»ÄÜÓÃÓÚ½øÐÐʱ̬£© I learned that I had passed the test. She knows about computers.
She is learning about computers.
instead of + doing----±íʾÏà·´¡¢Ã»ÓС¢È¡¶ø´úÖ®µÄÊÇ......
stood in front of sth. petrified: Õ¾Ôڡǰ£¬Ä¿µÉ¿Ú´ô
frightened: ÔÚij¸öÌØ¶¨µÄ³¡ºÏÏ£¬Êܵ½¾ªÏÅ terrified:±íʾ¾ªÏŵij̶ȣ¬¸ü¼ÓÇ¿ÁÒ£¬¸Ðµ½¿Ö²À afraid (of ): ±íʾһÖÖ״̬£¬ÓÀ¾ÃÐԵĿ־å it gave me the impression that:¸øÄ³ÈËÒÔÓ¡Ïó
make a lasting impression on sb: ¸øÄ³ÈËÒÔ²»¿ÉÄ¥ÃðµÄÓ¡Ïó
have a false impression of sb: ¶ÔijÈËÓдíÎóµÄ¿´·¨
give sb impression that: ¸øÄ³ÈËÓ¡Ïó
impress sb with sth Óá¸øÄ³ÈËÁôÏÂÓ¡Ïó be about to do sth.: ¼´½«£¬¾ÍÒª¡£°µÊ¾¶¯×÷¼´½«·¢Éú£¨¶àÓëwhenÁ¬Óã©
I was about to go to bed when there was a knock at the door.
leap out at sb. Ìø³öÀ´ÆËÏòijÈË drop----ÊÇÎÒËù·¢³öµÄÖ÷¶¯¶¯×÷£¬ËùÒÔÓÃ-ingÐÎʽ as if Òýµ¼ÐéÄâÓïÆø
Lesson 25 The Cutty Sark ¡°¿¨µÙÈø¿Ë¡±ºÅ·«´¬
¡öimpressive adj. ¸øÈËÉî¿ÌÓ¡ÏóµÄ This is a impressive thing. impression n. Ó¡Ïó
make a lasting impression on sb: ¸øÄ³ÈËÒÔ²»¿ÉÄ¥ÃðµÄÓ¡Ïó
have a false impression of sb: ¶ÔijÈËÓдíÎóµÄ¿´·¨
give sb impression that: ¸øÄ³ÈËÓ¡Ïó impress vt.
impress sb. ¸øÄ³ÈËÁôÏÂÓ¡Ïó
24
impress sb with sth Óá¸øÄ³ÈËÁôÏÂÓ¡Ïó ¡östeamship n. ÕôÆûÂÖ´¬ ¡övessel n. ÂÖ´¬£¬´óľ´¬
vessel£¨ÕýʽµÄ´Ê»ã£©¿É´úÌæship,boat. ÓÃÓÚÎÄѧÌå
a sailing vessel, a fishing vessel
boat ±ÈshipС£¬¿ÉÒÔÌæ»»ship(·ÇÕýʽÎÄÌå) a fishing boat
¡öera n. ʱÆÚ£¬Ê±´ú era: ¡°¼ÍÔª¡±£¬ µØÇò¡¢ÈËÀàÉç»áÀúÊ·ÉϵÄÒ»¸öºÜ³¤µÄʱÆÚ£¬ÒÔÌØ±ðÊÂÎï»ò·¢Õ¹Îª±êÖ¾ the beginning of new era the end of old era
times:ÀúÊ·ÉϵÄÒ»¸ö½×¶Î¡±Ê±´ú£¬Ê±ÆÚ¡± in ancient times in classic times Roman times
age: ÌØ¶¨µÄÀúÊ·½×¶Î£¨´óд£¬¹¹³ÉרÓÐÃû´Ê£© a stone age ʯÆ÷ʱ´ú the space age Ì«¿Õʱ´ú This is a beganning of era
¡öJava n. צÍÛ£¨Ó¡¶ÈÄáÎ÷ÑÇÒ»µº£© ¡örudder n. ¶æ
¡öroll v. µßô¤£¬Ò¡°Ú ¡östeer v. ÕÆÎÕ·½Ïò
steer: ¼Ýʻˮ·½»Í¨¹¤¾ß£¬Ç¿µ÷ÕÆÎÕ·½Ïò£¬µ¼º½ drive: ¿ªÆû³µ£¬»ð³µ pilot: ²Ù×ÝÂÖ´¬£¬·É»ú
He steers the boat suddenly. He piloted his plane. ¡ötemporary adj. ÁÙʱµÄ temporary jobs / house temporarily adv. temporariness n.
==transient:¶ÌÔݵģ¬Ë²¼äµÄ ·´Ò壺permanent: ÓÀ¾ÃµÄ contemporary: µ±´ú µÄ ¡öplank n. ´ó¿éľ°å ¡öfit v. °²×°
¡öEquator n. ³àµÀ ¡ödelay n. µ¢Îó Èý¡¢¡¾¿ÎÎľ«Îö¡¿
one of the most famous ...×îÖøÃûµÄ......Ö®Ò» Key sentence:
She stands on dry land and is visited by thousands of people each year. dry land:½µØ
Key sentence:
She serves as an impressive reminder of the great ships of the past. serve as:(=act as )¡°Æð¡×÷Óá±
impressive reminder :Éî¿ÌµÄÓ¡Ïó£¬×÷Ϊ......µÄ»ØÒä
replace vt. ==take place of stemship:Æû´¬
sailing ship /sailing vessel: ·«´¬
match:( = be equal to )Óë......ÏàÆ¥µÐ£¬Ïà±È match in / for
The only other ship to match her was the Thermopylae.
¶¯´Ê²»¶¨Ê½to×÷¶¨ÓÐÞÊÎthe only other ship Key sentence:
Both these ships set out from Shanghai on June 18th, 1872 on an exciting race to England.
Key sentence:
This race, which went on for exactly four months, was the last of its kind. It marked the end of the great tradition of ships with sails and the beginning of a new era.
which----Ö¸´úthis race, Òýµ¼·ÇÏÞ¶¨ÐÔ¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä
·«´¬£ºships with sail, sailing ships, sailing vessels
marked the end of : ±êÖ¾¡µÄ½áÊø Key sentence:
The first of the two ships to reach Java after the race had begun was the Thermopylae,... ¿É¸ÄΪ£ºafter the race had begun the first of the two ships to reach Java was the Thermopylae,...
take the lead: ´¦ÓÚÁìÏȵØÎ»== go into the lead
lose the lead: ʧȥÁìÏȵØÎ»
in the lead: ´¦ÓÚÁìÏȵØÎ»£¨×´Ì¬£© take over the lead: È¡µÃÁìÏȵØÎ» Key sentence:
she was struck by a very heavy storm during which her rudder was torn away.
...was struck by a very heavy storm... ÑÏÖØµØÓöµ½ÁËÓ꣯ѩ
be caught in the rian/snow Óöµ½ÁËÓ꣯ѩ during ½é´Ê£¬ÓÃÓÚ¹ØÏµ´ú´Êwhich ֮ǰ£¬during the race, during the storm
torn away = destroyed , pull down
it became impossible to steer her (Ê¡ÂÔµôfor captain)
there was a danger that+ͬλÓï´Ó¾ä ¡¡»áÓÐΣÏÕ
the captain called in at a port to have a new rudder fitted,
call in at: £¨´¬£©Í£¿¿£¬£¨ÈË£©°Ý·Ã to = in order to, so as to ¡°Ä¿µÄÊÇ¡± have sth. done:
but by now the Thermopylae was over five hundred miles ahead. by now = so far
at tremendous speed:ÒÔ¼«¿ìµÄËÙ¶È
considering Á¬½Ó´Ê£¬ÓÃÀ´Òýµ¼ÍêÕûµÄÓï¾ä considering that¿¼Âǵ½¡¡¡
So we should forgive him considering that he is ill badly.
Key sentence:
There is no doubt that if she had not lost her rudder she would have won the race easily.
There is no doubt that...==without any doubt ¡°ºÁÎÞÒÉÎÊ¡°
There is some doubt + wh- ...
Eg.: There is no doubt that he is guilty. There is some doubt whether he is guilty. if ----Óë¹ýÈ¥ÊÂʵÏà·´µÄÐéÄâ
If the Houses of Parliament had not been burned down in 1834, the great clock would never have been erected.
If you talked less and ate more, we would both enjoy our dinner. take the lead lose the lead call in at
with great difficulty at tremendous speed It seemed certain that
Lesson 26 Wanted: a large biscuit tin Õ÷¹º´ó±ý¸ÉͲ
¡öinfluence v. Ó°Ïì have effect on
Eg.: Literature and art have great influence of people?s idelogy.
Don?t be influenced by bad examples. under the influence ofÊܡӰÏì Eg.: We are under the influnce of advertisements.
have influence over sb ÓÐ×óÓÒijÈ˵ÄÄÜÁ¦ Eg.: A teacher has influence over his students.
exercise influence on sb's behalf ΪijÈ˶ø¾¡Á¦
on sb's behalf ΪijÈ˵ÄÀûÒæ
Eg.: The boss exercises influence on his employee?s behalf.
Çø±ð£ºinfluence / affect
influence:ͨ¹ýȰ˵£¬ÐÐΪ£¬°ñÑùÀ´¸Ä±äÒ»¸öÈ˵ÄÐÐΪ»ò˼Ï룬ÊÇÇ±ÒÆÄ¬»¯µÄÓ°ÏìÁ¦ affect: ¶Ô......²úÉú²»Á¼Ó°Ïì
Eg.: The bad examples will affect a lot number of students . influential adj.ÓÐÓ°ÏìÁ¦µÄ ¡öpride v. ½¾°Á pride vt. & n.
pride oneself on Ϊ¡¸Ðµ½½¾°Á¡¢¿äÒ«£½take pride in / be proud of
²»ÄÜÓÃÓÚ½øÐÐʱ̬»ò±»¶¯Óï̬
Eg.:He prided himself on his driving skill. pride n.
in the pride of ´¦ÓÚ×î¼Ñ״̬£¨¶¥·å£©
Eg: She is still young and in the pride of her beauty.
put one?s pride in one?s pocket:¿ØÖÆ×Ô×ðÐÄ ¡ötaste n. ¼øÉÍÁ¦
Eg.: She has excellent taste in dress. 25