新视野大学英语网站第一册读写教程听力

新视野大学英语听说教程(第二版)第一册Unit1听力原文_百度文库
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新视野大学英语听说教程(第二版)第一册Unit1听力原文|新​视​野​大​学​英​语​听​说​教​程​(​第​二​版​)​U​n​i​t听​力​原​文
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&&& 《新视野大学英语》是国务院批准的教育部&面向21世纪振兴行动计划&的重点工程&新世纪网络课程建设工程&项目系列教材之一。 由国家级名师上海交通大学郑树棠教授担任总策划和教材总主编,清华大学、上海交通大学和东北大学等全国十余所大学几十名资深教授和中青年骨干教师共同设计、编写和制作的教育部普通高等教育&十五&国家级规划教材,教育部大学英语推荐教材。&
&& 《听说教程》配合《读写教程》展开并组织听、说训练。
II. Listening Skills Listening for Names 1. Doris: Good morning. Can I help you? David: Yes. I need to change one of my courses. Doris: Ill see what we can do. Whats your name, please? David: My names David Brown. Doris: Your first name again? David:
II. Listening Skills Identifying Numbers M: The stadium looks pretty big. How many people does it seat? W: It holds around 20,000. They say more than 18,000 Tickets have been sold. Q: How many tickets are left now? W: I was planning on signing up for
II. Listening Skills Understanding Times and Dates 1. W: Oh, look at the clock. Its 5:15. Ill be late for Jennifers birthday party! I was supposed to leave at 5 oclock. M: Dont worry! You still have some time. The clock is twenty minutes fast. Q: Wha
II. Listening Skills Listening for Telephone Numbers 1. W: Im wondering if the weather will be good for us to go cycling on Saturday. M: Lets call the weather office. I know the phone number. Its 661-3047. If the weather is going to be bad, well have
II. Listening Skills Listening for Peoples Food Preferences 1. M: Jenny, the main courses here are steak, chicken or fish. Each comes with rice. So, what looks good to you? W: Gee, I had chicken last night, and I often eat fish for dinner. Maybe Ill
II. Listening Skills Listening to People Talk About Health M: I havent been to see my doctor for a very long time. Im worried that hell be angry with me for not having a physical examination for so long. W: Which is more important, the doctors feelin
II. Listening Skills Identifying Prices M: I want two correction pens and a notebook. How much are they? W: $ 1.95 for each correction pen. $ 5.00 for the notebook. Q: How much does the man have to pay? W: Ooh, its only $9.8. I bet Jane would love th
II. Listening Skills Listening for Rents or Charges M: Look at this ad! One bedroom apartment, with kitchen and bathroom. Its close to our school, and the price is only $250 a month. W: But I want an apartment at least $50 cheaper. Q: What is the hig
II. Listening Skills Making Calculations W: It sounds expensive. Why did they charge you so much for repairing the computer? M:Well, its $25 for labor to start with. A new modern cost another 50 bucks. On top of that I needed a new battery, and it
II. Listening Skills Identifying the Main Information M: For the winter break some friends want me to go on a trip with them, but my uncle in Hong Kong would also like me to visit him. What should I do? W: You may miss your uncle and be sorry about n新视野大学英语读写教程第一册 Unit8[C]
时间: 23:13:45 来源: 编辑:alex
新视野大学英语读写教程第一册 Unit8[C]Section CGreat IdeasSome of the most important inventions of the past 2,000 years may surprise you.Want to get rich? Become famous? You don't have to be a film star or a basketball player or a musician. You can do it by becoming an inventor. Over the past 2,000 years inventors have created machines and articles that have changed the world.And it's not just the big ideas like computers, printing presses and steam engines (蒸汽机) that become big things.Just think how the past 2,000 years would be different without these &small& big ideas:It's a clean sweepIn 1871, American inventor Ives McGaffey realized that if you turned an air pump (气泵)the opposite way, you would have a machine that could pick up dirt. He called his machine an aspirator(吸气器). The huge device was powered by a steam engine.Another American, James Murray Spangler, designed a much lighter machine in 1907 with an electric engine. He sold the idea, now called a vacuum cleaner(真空吸尘器),to a man named William H. Hoover. The company is still making Hoover vacuums and we're a little bit cleaner for it.Stuck on youInventors get interested when they find out people don't like the way something works.One day in 1923, young lab worker Richard Drew from the Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing(制造)Company heard workers in an automobile body shop complaining. It seems they could not find the right kind of tape to put on cars while they painted them. Either the tape stuck too much and ruined the paint job or it fell off too soon and the paint ran onto another part of the car.Drew spent two years creating a tape that stuck just enough. We know it now as masking tape. But Drew wasn't done. In 1930, he created a see-through, water-proof(防水的), cellophane(薄膜)adhesive(胶粘剂). The company called it Scotch tape and started selling it by the ton.Accidents can work wondersIn the late 1940s, engineer Percy L. Spencer of the Raytheon Company was experimenting with high-frequency(高频率)radio waves. These had been used to find enemy planes and ships in World War II. Spencer noticed the waves had made a chocolate bar(块)in his pocket soft. Could these waves be used to heat food?Spencer soon invented the microwave oven(微波炉), which made millions of dollars for Raytheon and millions of bags of popcorn(爆米花)for kids everywhere.Geniuses need not apply(应用,努力)Alexander Graham Bell was a teacher of the deaf. He did not know much about electricity. That was probably a good thing because most electricity masters did not think a voice could be sent over a wire. In three years of day and night effort, Bell figured out how to send sound over a changing electric current. He got his patent(专利)on the telephone on March 7, 1876. It is one of the most valuable patents ever given by the U.S.Keep your trousers onIn 1907, engineer Gideon Sundback got interested in improving a &hookless(无钩的)fastener(扣件)& patented in 1893. It was supposed to do away with the tiring work of buttoning the many buttons on clothes of the day. But the fastener did not work well.For years Sundback lay awake half the night trying to solve the problem. In 1913 he designed a hookless fastener that worked. But no one made much money on the invention until a Canadian businessman decided to call it a &zipper(拉链)&. Soon millions were sold every year and trousers everywhere stopped falling down.Now that's a tiny — yet BIG — idea.
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新视野大学英语第二版视听说教程第一册听力答案及录音
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听力练习录音文本和答案
ii. listening skills
listening for names
1. doris: good morning. can i help you?
david: yes. i need to change one of my courses.
doris: i’ll see what we can do. what’s your name, please?
david: my name’s david brown.
doris: your first name again?
david: david. d-a-v-i-d.
the boy is called
by his first name.
2. nancydr. lang.
doris: just a minute and i’
nancy: nancy leigh.
doris: is “lee” your last name?
nancy: no, it’’t it?
nancy’s last name is
3. doris: i’’ll have to go to the financial aid office before you can register.
doris if she needs a loan.
: laura tish hill.
doris: tish? that’s an unusual middle name. would you mind spelling that for me?
laura: sure. t-i-s-h. i was named after my mother.
laura’s full name is
well, you need to complete the form for your parking pass. your name, please?
anthony: anythony mcdonald.
are you “mc”
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