非人勿扰的2016
初级英语听力靠的就是学习方法。1. 兴趣。有兴趣就能学好。2. 通过阅读增加词汇。没有词汇量,就像造房子没有砖块,墙是垒不起来的。3. 培养语感。(比枯燥的学语法要好)4. 多听多说。听说读写,听是基础,说是最终目的。5. 认真踏实循序渐进。6. 扩大方式,多看美剧。7. 要做一定量的题目。题海战书不是最好的,但可以帮你巩固基础。8. 归纳自己的学习方法,比别人的都重要。 参考资料:
super阿狸
我加强英语的方法就是看英文资料片,辅以英语学习软件 然后找一家英语学习中心帮我练口语,上网方便的话,建议去ABC天丅英语中心看下.好.咯 课程针对性强 进步快,有网络就能学英语 不妨做个轻松口语测试体验下吧 若有帮助记得评我最佳哦 ~Section Two A. Page 10 B. 1. (1) F () F . .; at least 0 pounds; .; pounds . (1) 00 pounds. () Only 10.1 pounds. C. 1) She is engaged. ) In the spring. ) Probably in St. Albans. ) Because that’s the place where her parents live. ) They are going to buy a flat or a small house somewhere in South London and settle in. ) No, she is going to give up her present job but she may look for another one when she’s settled in the new place.Section ThreeDictation 1 I have a watch. It is a Swiss watch. It is not new and my friends are sometimes a little rude about it. They tell me to buy a new one. But I do not want a new one. I am very happy with my old watch. Last week it stopped. So I took it to the shop. I did not ask for an estimate. Today I went to get it. Do you how much I had to pay? Five pounds just for cleaning a watch.Dictation Have you ever thought what it is like to be one of those beautiful girls that you see on the front of fason magazines? They meet interesting people, they travel to exciting places, and sometimes they make a lot of money. But they have to work hard. They often have to get up very early in the morning, and of course they have to be very careful about what they eat.Lesson Nine Section OneDialogue 1 She cannot clean the blackboard because there is no duster. Dialogue He can’t drink the milk because it is sour. Dialogue Because he returned the glove that she had lost. Dialogue Because he wants to practice s English
虫子在睡觉
我自己在ABC天丅口语学了.好.一段时间,他们是专门做企业辅导的,学习内容确实对英语帮助很大 可以自己去看看听听课!牛津实用英语语法 闭着眼睛背级单词mp 实用英语写作技巧 英语学习合集 洋话连篇电子教材和MP-人教版 新东方《+1》flash全部教程 英语口语000句电子书及录音[讲] 洋话连篇Ⅲ(视频RM)0集 许国璋电视英语全套 赖世雄 初级美国英语教程入门(mp) 听讲美国口语 00如鱼得水记单词(全) 英语发音10日过关 从开始学英语1-CD 中级美语-赖世雄 赖世雄 精准美国英语发音指南 新概念英语四册图文并茂的PDF课本 新东方大学英语六级0天突破-mp 牛津英语听力-初级(音频) 胡敏读故事记单词 (音频) 00年1月日英语四级考试最新预测卷(三套) 大学英语六级0天突破 (推荐)四级新题型考前辅导资料打包下载 新东方六级0天精美打印版-听力、词汇、阅读、作文 王长喜0年下半年新四级完型填空讲义 IELTS口语及听力 新概念英语mp 大学英语听力mp 英语初级听力mp 英语中级听力mp 英语高级听力mp 中级美国英语 高级听说教程 MP 下载 英语高级听力Listen To Ts Mp + Pdf下载 大学英语听力下载 学英语听力下载大全 英语中级听力mp下载(listen to ts) 英语初级听力mp下载(listen to ts) 新概念英语第二册MP下载 新概念英语第四册 语音下载 新概念英语第三册 语音下载 沛沛英语mp(盒)下载 客居英国听力系列(音像) 《洋话连篇》0集大放送 著名的英语教学片《走遍美国》全部集 英语全集(晰DVD视频全1集) 远程六级听力原文材料下载 远程四级听力原文材料下载 VOA Special English 专题广播 大学英语精读 (修订本) 听力入门1-册 新概念英音版1-册 新概念英音版-册 新概念美音版第1-册 新概念美音版-册 大学英语听力1-册 Listen To Ts 1-册 大学英语四级听力0天突破0分 大学英语六级听力0天突破0分 英语成功经验谈
列那的小屋
比较多,你自己复制吧Jane: Now look, er, what's all this, er, story about you and this car I've been hearing so much about? Everybody else has been hearing it, but you haven't told me. (Mhm) John: Well, I was driving to Norwich with a friend, erm, we teach there and, erm, I was driving behind a Lotus Elan sports-car (Yes) on dual-carriageway and, erm, after about, er, three or four miles, er, behind this car, er, we, we left (the) dual-carriageway and, erm, entered a two-way road. And, er, this Lotus suddenly slowed down for no reason whatsoever. (There ...) Jane: Not a side road or anything? John: No, no, no turning off, no lay-bys, and it just slowed down, and, er, I thought, that's, that's odd and, er, I overtook the Lotus, er, slowly and, erm, looked over at the driver, ... and as I did, I saw him slump over the wheel. Jane: Oh, how awful! John: Yes. Jane: So what did you do next? John: So, erm, I pulled into the kerb about thirty yards or so, er, in front of the Lotus (Yes) and, erm...my, er, passenger and myself got out and we, we walked back towards his car. My friend was on the grass verge and, er, I was in the middle of the road. We never even, erm, reached the car. I was about five yards from the car when, er, suddenly, erm, there was a noise of full acceleration and the car just shot forward—nearly ran me down. So I had to leap for my life. I was absolutely shaken because the car must have missed me by about half an inch or so, (I mean), (How dread...) it just shot past me and I saw my car smashed in front of my eyes. (How dreadful!) Yea, just, just smashed to smithereens, pieces of car flying all over the road and, erm, both cars locked together went down the road and there was a bend at the bottom of the road and I thought well, th..., the next thing is going to be a head-on collision. (Yes, of course.) Erm. But, fortunately, nothing came in the opposite direction and, erm, and then both cars went across the road and, erm, up a grass bank, which ... it was quite a tall bank and, erm, and, er, at the top of the bank there was a large hedge. Well, my car left the Lotus a, and literally took off and shot through the hedge (Oh, goodness!) and landed in a ploughed field. (Yes) But the Lotus veered to the left and got stuck in the hedge, in the thick part of the hedge. And, erm, the acceleration was still on full and the back wheels were tearing up the grass verge, throwing mud and soil, earth and grass all over the road, er, it was just, you know, absolutely terrif ... (How terrify...) Yes, (Yes) because the Lotus, erm, radiator burst and, and there was steam everywhere; it was like a, like a cloud of steam and smoke, and, er, the first thing, erm, of course, we thought of doing was to get the driver out (Well, of course.) Yes. (Quite) So, erm, we tried to get the passenger door open, (Yes) but it was locked, so we had to climb through the hedge and, er, get round to the driving-door. Well, by that time, there was so much steam we couldn't see, so it was a matter of fumbling in the, in the steam and smoke and thinking any moment the car was going to explode. Jane: Yes, it wasn't on fire, in fact, that, at that point, was it? John: No, no, it wasn't on fire, but, erm, with the noise of the engine, an... and all the steam it was just you know, very, frightening. (Oh, how dreadful!) Erm, well we managed to get the driver out, turn the ignition off. We laid him in the mud actually because it was a ploughed field and, (Yes) er, I ran out in the road and shouted for help and, erm ... er, a car driver told me help, er, was already on its way and, erm, I, er, managed to get blankets from people that had stopped and, er, we tried to make the man comfortable, and erm ... a man appeared shortly afterwards and he was from a nearby American airbase and, er, he was a medical man, so he was able to, erm, (Examine him) e... examine him and, er, I helped him, tried to, you know, er, make the man, er, well, you know, do all we could for the man. Erm ... Jane: He was unconscious, was he? John: Yes, yes; ... and then the police, a... police arrived and (the) fire brigade (Yes) and, er, ... er, we were told to, er, leave the scene by the police and go to the police station and, erm, there we had to make a statement, (Yes, of course.) and, er, I had to have a breathalyser test, and... Jane: But they thought you'd been in the car ... of course they did. Yes. John: Because, because they thought I'd, th... they automatically thought I'd been driving the car (Of course. Yes) and, er, when I told them the story they had to apologize for giving me a breathalyser and they said, 'Gosh,' you know, 'how, how incredible'. Jane: So, what happened to the man? John: And, erm, we were in the middle of making the statements and, erm, the telephone rang and the, the policeman, erm, was told that, that the man was dead, (Oh!) and, erm, and then two days later we had to attend a Coroner's inquest where we were told that the man had died of a heart attack and, in fact, he was dead, erm, before he crashed into my car. Jane: Oh-h-h! What an alarming story! How dreadful! John: Yes.Today the Federal Aviation Administration reviewed that five air traffic controllers based in Kansas City have been taken off the job because of drug use. Earlier this month thirteen controllers at the southern California centre were removed from their jobs for off-duty drug use. Also today the FAA continued to investigate alleged drug use at the nation's sixth largest airlines, US Air. NPR's Wendy Kaufman reports. "Drug use, even off-duty, is banned for controllers under Federal Aviation Administration rules. So far the FAA has conducted investigations into alleged drug use by controllers at two facilities—Palmdale in southern California and now Kansas City. In southern California thirty-four controllers were taken off their radar scopes. Pending the outcome of investigation, thirteen tested positive for drugs, and we were told they could quit or enter a treatment program, or opt for treatment. In Kansas City thirty-six controllers were investigated. The five who tested positive for drugs have all agreed to undergo treatment. Three controllers are still under investigation. The proportion of drug users is small. Of the roughly five hundred controllers at the two facilities only seventy were suspect, and of those only eighteen tested positive for drugs. Air traffic control supervisors say they don't see drug use as a serious problem in their work force. Still as one FAA official put it, one drug user is one too many. Right now there is no routine drug testing for controllers though that will change around the first of the year. There will be pre-employment urine test and test along with the annual physical exam. According to the FAA, there has never been a fatal accident involving a major US airline in which alcohol or drug abuse was a factor for the controllers or for the pilots. But there have been a sizeable number of fatal accidents in which commuter pilots, air taxi pilots and private pilots had been drinking, and a much smaller number of cases in which drugs were a factor. On another matter, drug use, or, more precisely, alleged drug use by flight crews at US Air has been front-page news in Pittsburgh, the airline's operating base. A grand jury is conducting an investigation into alleged drug use, sales and distribution. Over the weekend, a Pittsburgh press newspaper quoted area hospital officials, who said they had treated about twenty US Air flight crew members for cocaine overdoses. US Air acknowledges that one pilot nearly died of an overdose. He had last flown on September 7th, and was taken to the hospital on September 10th. The airline has removed him from flight duty, and the FAA is considering revoking his medical certificate that would mean he could not fly any aircraft. Meanwhile the FAA is conducting an investigation of the airline and is working with the grand jury and the FBI. I'm Wendy Kaufman in Washington.Lectures and Note-taking Note-taking is a complex activity which requires a high level of ability in many separate skills. Today I'm going to analyse the four most important of these skills. Firstly, the student has to understand what the lecturer says as he says it. The student cannot stop the lecture in order to look up a new word or check an unfamiliar sentence pattern. This puts the non-native speaker of English under a particularly severe strain. Often—as we've already seen in a previous lecture—he may not be able to recognize words in speech which he understands straight away in print. He'll also meet words in a lecture which are completely new to him. While he should, of course, try to develop the ability to infer their meaning from the context, he won't always be able to do this successfully. He must not allow failure of this kind to discourage him however. It's often possible to understand much of a lecture by concentrating solely on those points which are most important. But how does the student decide what's important? This is in itself another skill he must try to develop. It is, in fact, the second of the four skills I want to talk about today. Probably the most important piece of information in a lecture is the title itself. If this is printed (or referred to) beforehand the student should study it carefully and make sure he's in no doubt about its meaning. Whatever happens he should make sure that he writes it down accurately and completely. A title often implies many of the major points that will later be covered in the lecture itself. It should help the student therefore to decide what the main point of the lecture will be. A good lecturer, of course, often signals what's important or unimportant. He may give direct signals or indirect signals. Many lecturers, for example, explicitly tell their audience that a point is important and that the student should write it down. Unfortunately, the lecturer who's trying to establish a friendly relationship with his audience is likely on these occasions to employ a colloquial style. He might say such things as 'This is, of course, the crunch' or 'Perhaps you'd like to get it down'. Although this will help the student who's a native English-speaker, it may very well cause difficulty for the non-native English speaker. He'll therefore have to make a big effort to get used to the various styles of his lecturers. It's worth remembering that most lecturers also give indirect signals to indicate what's important. They either pause or speak slowly or speak loudly or use a greater range of intonation, or they employ a combination of these devices, when they say something important. Conversely, their sentences are delivered quickly, softly, within a narrow range of intonation and with short or infrequent pauses when they are saying something which is incidental. It is, of course, helpful for the student to be aware of this and for him to focus his attention accordingly. Having sorted out the main points, however, the student still has to write them down. And he has to do this quickly and clearly. This is, in fact, the third basic skill he must learn to develop. In order to write at speed most students find it helps to abbreviate. They also try to select only those words which give maximum information. These are usually nouns, but sometimes verbs or adjectives. Writing only one point on each line also helps the student to understand his notes when he comes to read them later. An important difficulty is, of course, finding time to write the notes. If the student chooses the wrong moment to write he may miss a point of greater importance. Connecting words or connectives may guide him to a correct choice here. Those connectives which indicate that the argument is proceeding in the same direction also tell the listener that it's safe time to write 'Moreover', 'furthermore', 'also', etc., are examples of this. Connectives such as 'however', 'on the other hand' or 'nevertheless' usually mean that new and perhaps unexpected information is going to follow. Therefore, it may, on these occasions, be more appropriate to listen. The fourth skill that the student must develop is one that is frequently neglected. He must learn to show the connections between the various points he's noted. This can often be done more effectively by a visual presentation than by a lengthy statement in words. Thus the use of spacing, underlining, and of conventional symbols plays an important part in efficient note-taking. Points should be numbered, too, wherever possible. In this way the student can see at a glance the framework of the lecture.The Way We Were Memories, light the corners of my mind, Misty water colour memories, Of the way we were, Scattered pictures of the smiles we left behind, Smiles we gave to one another, For the way we were, Can it be that it was all so simple then, Or has time rewritten every line, If we had the chance to do it all again, Tell me, would we, could we. Memories may be beautiful and yet, What's too painful to remember, We simply choose to forget, So it's the laughter we will remember, Whenever we remember the way we were, The way we were.
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