大学英语精读文本

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精选大学英语精读文本

  大学英语精读文本

精选大学英语精读文本

  Unit 1

  Text

  Two college-age boys, unaware that making money usually involves hard work, are tempted by an advertisement that promises them an easy way to earn a lot of money. The boys soon learn that if something seems to good to be true, it probably is.

  BIG BUCKS THE EASY WAY

  John G. Hubbell

  "You ought to look into this," I suggested to our two college-age sons. "It might be a way to avoid the indignity of having to ask for money all the time." I handed them some magazines in a plastic bag someone bad hung on our doorknob. A message printed on the bag offered leisurely, lucrative work ("Big Bucks the Easy Way!") of delivering more such bags.

  "I don't mind the indignity," the older one answered.

  "I can live with it," his brother agreed.

  "But it pains me," I said,"to find that you both have been panhandling so long that it no longer embarrasses you."

  The boys said they would look into the magazine-delivery thing. Pleased, I left town on a business trip. By midnight I was comfortably settled in a hotel room far from home. The phone rang. It was my wife. She wanted to know how my day had gone.

  "Great!" I enthused. "How was your day?" I inquired.

  "Super!" She snapped. "Just super! And it's only getting started. Another truck just pulled up out front."

  "Another truck?"

  "The third one this evening. The first delivered four thousand Montgomery Wards. The second brought four thousand Sears, Roebucks. I don't know what this one has, but I'm sure it will be four thousand of something. Since you are responsible, I thought you might like to know what's happening.

  What I was being blamed for, it turned out, was a newspaper strike which made it necessary to hand-deliver the advertising s that normally are included with the Sunday paper. The company had promised our boys $600 for delivering these s to 4,000 houses by Sunday morning.

  "Piece of cake!" our older college son had shouted.

  " Six hundred bucks!" His brother had echoed, "And we can do the job in two hours!"

  "Both the Sears and Ward ads are four newspaper-size pages," my wife informed me. "There are thirty-two thousand pages of advertising on our porch. Even as we speak, two big guys are carrying armloads of paper up the walk. What do we do about all this?"

  "Just tell the boys to get busy," I instructed. "They're college men. They'll do what they have to do."

  At noon the following day I returned to the hotel and found an urgent message to telephone my wife. Her voice was unnaturally high and quavering. There had been several more truckloads of ad s. "They're for department stores, dime stores, drugstores, grocery stores, auto stores and so on. Some are whole magazine sections. We have hundreds of thousands, maybe millions, of pages of advertising here! They are crammed wall-to-wall all through the house in stacks taller than your oldest son. There's only enough room for people to walk in, take one each of the eleven s, roll them together, slip a rubber band around them and slide them into a plastic bag. We have enough plastic bags to supply every takeout restaurant in America!" Her voice kept rising, as if working its way out of the range of the human ear. "All this must be delivered by seven o'clock Sunday morning."

  "Well, you had better get those guys banding and sliding as fast as they can, and I'll talk to you later. Got a lunch date.

  When I returned, there was another urgent call from my wife.

  "Did you have a nice lunch?" she asked sweetly. I had had a marvelous steak, but knew better by now than to say so.

  "Awful," I reported. "Some sort of sour fish. Eel, I think."

  "Good. Your college sons have hired their younger brothers and sisters and a couple of neighborhood children to help for five dollars each. Assembly lines have been set up. In the language of diplomacy, there is 'movement.'"

  "That's encouraging."

  "No, it's not," she corrected. "It's very discouraging. They're been as it for hours. Plastic bags have been filled and piled to the ceiling, but all this hasn't made a dent, not a dent, in the situation! It's almost as if the s keep reproducing themselves!"

  "Another thing," she continued. "Your college sons must learn that one does not get the best out of employees by threatening them with bodily harm.

  Obtaining an audience with son NO. 1, I snarled, "I'll kill you if threaten one of those kids again! Idiot! You should be offering a bonus of a dollar every hour to the worker who fills the most bags.

  "But that would cut into our profit," he suggested.

  "There won't be any profit unless those kids enable you to make all the deliveries on time. If they don't, you two will have to remove all that paper by yourselves. And there will be no eating or sleeping until it is removed."

  There was a short, thoughtful silence. Then he said, "Dad, you have just worked a profound change in my personality."

  "Do it!"

  "Yes, sir!"

  By the following evening, there was much for my wife to report. The bonus program had worked until someone demanded to see the color of cash. Then some activist on the work force claimed that the workers had no business settling for $5 and a few competitive bonuses while the bossed collected hundreds of dollars each. The organizer had declared that all the workers were entitled to $5 per hour! They would not work another minute until the bosses agreed.

  The strike lasted less than two hours. In mediation, the parties agreed on $2 per hour. Gradually, the huge stacks began to shrink.

  As it turned out, the job was completed three hours before Sunday's 7 a.m. deadline. By the time I arrived home, the boys had already settled their accounts: $150 in labor costs, $40 for gasoline, and a like amount

  for gifts—boxes of candy for saintly neighbors who had volunteered station wagons and help in delivery and dozen roses for their mother. This left them with $185 each — about two-thirds the minimum wage for the 91 hours they worked. Still, it was "enough", as one of them put it, to enable them to "avoid indignity" for quite a while.

  All went well for some weeks. Then one Saturday morning my attention was drawn to the odd goings-on of our two youngest sons. They kept carrying carton after carton from various corners of the house out the front door to curbside. I assumed their mother had enlisted them to remove junk for a trash pickup. Then I overheard them discussing finances.

  "Geez, we're going to make a lot of money!"

  "We're going to be rich!"

  Investigation revealed that they were offering " for sale or rent" our entire library.

  "No! No!" I cried. "You can't sell our books!"

  "Geez, Dad, we thought you were done with them!"

  "You're never 'done' with books," I tried to explain.

  "Sure you are. You read them, and you're done with them. That's it. Then you might as well make a little money from them. We wanted to avoid the indignity of having to ask you for……"

  New Words

  buck

  n. (sl.) U.S. dollar

  plastic

  a. 塑料的

  n. (pl) 塑料

  doorknob

  n. 门把手

  leisurely

  a. unhurried 从容的,慢慢的

  leisure

  n. free time 空闲时间,闲暇

  lucrative

  a. profitable 有利的;赚钱的

  pain

  vt. cause pain to

  panhandle

  vi. (AmE) beg. esp. on the streets

  delivery

  n. delivering (of letters, goods, etc.)投递;送交

  enthuse

  vi. show enthusiasm

  inquire

  vt. ask

  super

  a. (colloq.) wonderful, splendid; excellent

  snap

  vt. say(sth.) sharply 厉声说

  n. 插页

  normally

  ad. in the usual conditions; ordinarily 通常

  company

  n. 公司

  echo

  vt. say or do what another person says or does; repeat 附和;重复

  ad

  n. (short for) advertisement

  inform

  vt. tell; give information 告知

  porch

  n. (AmE) veranda 门廊

  armload

  n. as much as one arm or both arms can hold; armful

  walk

  n. a path specially arranged or paved for walking 人行道

  unnaturally

  ad. in an unnatural way 不自然地

  quaver

  vi. (of the voice or sound) shake; tremble 颤抖

  truckload

  n. as much or as many as a truck can carry

  department store

  n. store selling many different kinds of goods in separate departments 百货公司

  dime

  n. coin of U.S. and Canada worth ten cents

  dime store

  n. (AmE) a store selling a large variety of low-priced articles; variety store 廉价商品店;小商口店

  drugstore

  n. (AmE) a store that sells not only medicine, but also beauty products, film, magazines, and food 药店,杂货店

  grocery

  n. a store that sells food and household supplies 食品杂货店

  section

  n. part of subdivision of a piece of writing, book, newspaper, etc.; portion (文章等的)段落;节;部分

  cram

  vt. fill too full; force or press into a small space 把……塞满;把……塞进

  stack

  n. an orderly; heap or group of things 一叠(堆、垛等)

  band

  n. flat, thin piece of material 带;带状物

  vt. tie up with a band 捆扎

  rubber band

  n. 橡皮筋

  takeout

  a. (餐馆)出售外卖菜的

  range

  n. the distance at which one can see or hear (听觉、视觉等)的范围

  marvel(l)ous

  a. wonderful; astonishing

  steak

  n. 牛排;大块肉(或鱼)片

  sour

  a. 酸的

  eel

  n. 鳗鲡

  diplomacy

  n. 外交

  encouraging

  a. 鼓舞人心的

  dent

  n. a hollow in a hard surface made by a blow or pressure; initial progress凹痕,凹坑,初步进展

  reproduce

  vt. produce the young of (oneself or one's own kind) 生殖,繁殖

  bodily

  a. of the human body; physical

  harm

  n. damage or wrong 伤害

  audience

  n. the people gathered in a place to hear or see; a chance to be heard 观众;听众;陈述意见的机会

  snarl

  vt. speak in a harsh voice 咆哮着说

  bonus

  n. an extra payment to workers 奖金

  thoughtful

  a. give to or indicating thought 沉思的,思考的

  cash

  n. money in coins or notes 现金

  activist

  n. a person taking an active part esp. in a political movement 激进分子

  work force

  n. total number of workers employed in a particular factory, industry or area 工人总数;劳动人口

  competitive

  a. 竞争的

  organizer

  n. person who organizes things 组织者

  mediation

  n. 调解

  party

  n. one of the people or sides in an agreement or argument 一方;当事人

  gradually

  ad. slowly and by degrees.

  gradual

  a.

  shrink (shrank, shrunk)

  vi. become less or smaller 减少;变小

  deadline

  n. fixed limit of finishing a piece of work 最后期限

  station wagon

  n. 小型客车,客货两用车

  minimum (pl. minima or minimums)

  n. the smallest possible amount, number, etc. 最低限度的量、数等

  minimum wage

  n. the lowest wage permitted by law or by agreement for certain work 法定最工资

  odd

  a. strange; unusual

  goings-on

  n. activities, usu. of an undesirable kind

  carton

  n. a cardboard box for holding goods 纸板箱(或盒)

  curbside

  n. the area of sidewalk at or near curb (curb: 人行道的镶边石)

  enlist

  vt. obtain the support and help of; cause to join the armed forces 取得……的支持和帮助;征募

  trash

  n. waste material to be thrown away; rubbish 垃圾

  pickup

  n. a small light truck with an open back used for light deliveries 小卡车;轻型货车

  overhear

  vt. hear by chance; hear without the knowledge of the speaker(s)无意中听到;偷听到

  finance

  n. money matters; (used in pl.) money; (science of ) the management of funds 财政;钱财;金融

  geez

  int.哎呀,呀

  sale

  n. the act of selling sth.

  Phrases & Expressions

  pull up

  bring or come to a stop (使)停下

  a piece of cake

  (informal) sth. very easy to do

  even as

  just at the same moment as

  know better than

  be wise or experienced enough not (to do sth.) 明事理而不至于

  be at

  be occupied with, be doing

  make a dent (in)

  make less by a very small amount; reduce slightly; make a first step towards success(in)减少一点;取得初步进展

  cut into

  reduce; decrease 减少

  have no business

  have no right or reason 无权,没有理由

  settle for

  accept, although not altogether satisfactory (无可奈何地)满足于

  settle one's account

  pay what one owes 结帐

  quite a while

  a fairly long time

  draw(sb.'s) attention to

  make sb. notice, or be aware of

  for sale

  intended to be sold

  for rent

  available to be rented

  be done with

  stop doing or using; finish 做完,不再使用

  may/might/could as well

  with equal or better effect 不妨,还不如,最好

  Proper Names

  Montgomery Ward

  蒙哥马利—沃德百货公司

  Sears, Roebuck

  西尔斯—罗百克百货公司

  Unit 2

  Text

  Is there anything we can learn from deer? During the "energy crisis" of 1973-1974 the writer of this essay was living in northern Minnesota and was able to observe how deer survive when winter arrives. The lessons he learns about he way deer conserve energy turn out applicable to our everyday life.

  DEER AND THE ENERGY CYCLE

  Some persons say that love makes the world go round. Others of a less romantic and more practical turn of mind say that it isn't love; it's money. But the truth is that it is energy that makes the world go round. Energy is the currency of the ecological system and life becomes possible only when food is converted into energy, which in turn is used to seek more food to grow, to reproduce and to survive. On this cycle all life depends.

  It is fairly well known that wild animals survive from year to year by eating as much as they can during times of plenty, the summer and fall, storing the excess, usually in the form of fat, and then using these reserves of fat to survive during the hard times in winter when food is scarce. But it is probably less well known that even with their stored fat, wild animals spend less energy to live in winter than in summer.

  A good case in point is the whiter-tailed deer. Like most wildlife, deer reproduce, grow, and store fat in the summer and fall when there is plenty of nutritious food available. A physically mature female deer in good condition who has conceived in November and given birth to two fawns during the end of May or first part of June, must search for food for the necessary energy not only to meet her body's needs but also to produce milk for her fawns. The best milk production occurs at the same time that new plant growth is available. This is good timing, because milk production is an energy consuming process — it requires a lot of food. The cost can not be met unless the region has ample food resources.

  As the summer progresses and the fawns grow, they become less dependent on their mother's milk and more dependent on growing plants as food sources. The adult males spend the summer growing antlers and getting fat. Both males and females continue to eat high quality food in the fall in order to deposit body fat for the winter. In the case of does and fawns, a great deal of energy is expended either in milk production or in growing, and fat is not accumulated as quickly as it is in full grown males. Fat reserves are like bank accounts to be drawn on in the winter when food supplies are limited and sometimes difficult to reach because of deep snow.

  As fall turns into winter, other changes take place. Fawns lose their spotted coat. Hair on all the deer becomes darker and thicker. The change in the hair coats is usually complete by September and maximum hair depths are reached by November or December when the weather becomes cold.

  But in addition, nature provides a further safeguard to help deer survive the winter—an internal physiological response which lowers their metabolism, or rate of bodily functioning, and hence slows down their expenditure of energy. The deer become somewhat slow and drowsy. The heart rate drops. Animals that hibernate practice energy conservation to a greater extreme than deer do. Although deer don't hibernate, they do the same thing with their seasonal rhythms in metabolism. Deer spend more energy and store fat in the summer and fall when food is abundant, and spend less energy and use stored fat in the winter when food is less available.

  When the "energy crisis" first came in 1973-1974, I was living with my family in a cabin on the edge of an area where deer spend the winter in northern Minnesota, observing the deer as their behavior changed from more activity in summer and fall to less as winter progressed, followed by an increase again in the spring as the snow melted. It was interesting and rather amusing to listen to the advice given on the radio: " Drive only when necessary," we were told. "Put on more clothes to stay warm, and turn the thermostat on your furnace down." Meanwhile we watched the deer reduce their activity, grow a winter coat of hair, and reduce their metabolism as they have for thousands of years. It is biologically reasonable for deer to reduce their cost of living to increase their chance of surviving in winter.

  Not every winter is critical for deer of course. If the winter has light snow, survival and productivity next spring will be high. But if deep snows come and the weather remains cold for several weeks, then the deer must spend more energy to move about, food will be harder to find, and they must then depend more on their fat reserves to pull them through. If such conditions go on for too long some will die, and only the largest and strongest are likely to survive. That is a fundamental rule of life for wild, free wandering animal such as deer.

  Yes, life—and death, too -- is a cycle that goes round and round, and when animals die their bodies become food for other life forms to use by converting them into energy.

  And the cycle continues.

  英语单词速记:http://hi.baidu.com/52ejob/blog/item/c0976231f19ecc12eac4af48.html

  New Words

  Deer

  n. (sing. or pl.)鹿

  romantic

  a. belonging to or suggesting romance; fanciful not practical 浪漫的;幻想的

  turn

  n. a natural tendency; inclination(天生)倾向

  currency

  n. money that is actually in use in a country 通货,货币

  ecological

  a. of or concerning interrelationship of organisms and their environment 生态的

  ecology

  n. 生态学

  convert

  vt. change (from one form, use, etc. into another); cause (a person) to change his beliefs, etc. 使转变;使改变信仰(等)

  excess

  n. the part that is more than enough; the condition of exceeding what is usual or necessary 过量;过度

  reserve

  n. sth. that is being or has been stored for later use 储备(物)

  scarce a. not available in sufficient quantity 缺乏的

  wildlife

  n. animals and plants which live and grow wild

  nutritious

  a. full grown and developed 成熟的;成年的

  female

  a. of the sex that gives birth to young 女(性)的;雌的

  n. a female person, animal or plant

  conceive

  vt. become pregnant with (young); form (an idea, plan, etc.) in the mind 怀(胎);构思

  fawn

  n. a young deer less than a year old

  timing

  n. selection for maximum effect of the precise moment for beginning or doing sth. 时机的选择

  consume

  vt. eat or drink; use; use up 消耗;消费

  region

  n. a place, space or area; a part of the body 地区;(身体的)部位

  ample

  a. plentiful 充裕的

  resource

  n. (pl.) possessions (esp. of a country). in the form of wealth and goods, that help one to do what one wants 资源

  dependent

  a. relying (on another) for support

  male

  a. of the sex that does not give birth to young 男(性)的;雄的

  n. a male person, animal or plant

  antler

  n. the solid, bony horn of a male deer 鹿角,茸角

  deposit

  vt. put or store for safe keeping; (esp. of a liquid, a river) leave lying (a layer of matter)存放;使沉积

  doe

  n. a fully-grown female deer

  expend

  vt. spend or use up 花费;耗尽

  accumulate

  v. make or become greater in number or quantity; collect or gather 积累;积聚

  account

  n. a sum of money kept in a bank which may be added to or taken from 帐户;存款

  spotted

  a. marked with spots

  depth

  n. the state or degree of being deep 深;深度,厚度

  safeguard

  n. a means of protection against sth. unwanted 预防措施

  internal

  a. of or in the inside, esp. of the body 内部的;体内的

  physiological

  a. 生理的;生理学的

  metabolism

  n. 新陈代谢

  hence

  ad. therefore 因此,所以

  expenditure

  n. expending or using up; the amount of money, time, etc. expended 花费;用光;支出额,费用

  somewhat

  ad. by some degree or amount; a little 有点,稍微

  drowsy

  a. sleepy or half sleepy; making one sleepy 困倦的;催眠的

  hibernate

  vi. (of some animals) pass the whole of the winter in a state like sleep 冬眠

  extreme

  n. either end of anything; highest degree 极端

  seasonal

  a. depending on the season; changing with the seasons 季节性的

  rhythm

  n. 节奏

  abundant

  a. more than enough 充足的;丰富的

  cabin

  n. a small roughly built, usu. wooden house 小木屋;茅舍

  melt

  v. cause (a solid) to become liquid; (of a solid ) become liquid (使)融化;(使)熔化

  amusing

  a. funny 逗人笑的;引起乐趣的

  amuse

  vt. cause to laugh or smile

  thermostat

  n. an automatic device for regulating temperature 恒温器

  biologically

  ad. 生物学上

  biological a.

  survival

  n. the fact or likelihood of surviving 幸存

  productivity

  n. the ability or capacity to produce, productiveness 生产力;生产率;多产

  fundamental

  a. basic; most important

  Phrases & Expressions

  go round

  function smoothly

  in the form of

  以…形式

  in point

  appropriate; pertinent 适用的;相关的

  in (good) condition

  in good health, physically fit

  give birth (to)

  bear; (fig.) produce 生(孩)子,产(仔);产生,引起

  draw on

  take or use as a source 利用;动用

  slow down

  (cause to ) go more slowly than usual; (cause to ) live, work, etc. in a less active and intense way (使)慢下来;(使)放松

  turn down

  reduce the force, speed, loudness, etc. of (sth.) by using controls 减弱;关小,调低

  move about

  travel around; go from one place to another

  pull through

  help (sb.) to survive a period of danger or crisis 使渡过危险或危机

  Proper Name

  Minnesota

  明尼苏达(美国州名)

  Unit 3

  Text

  Can you prove that the earth is round? Go ahead and try! Will you rely on your senses or will you have to draw on the opinions of experts?

  WHY DO WE BELIEVE

  THAT THE EARTH IS ROUND?

  George Orwell

  Somewhere or other — I think it is in the preface to saint Joan — Bernard Shaw remarks that we are more gullible and superstitious today than we were in the Middle Ages, and as an example of modern cre一ty he cites the widespread belief that the earth is round. The average man, says Shaw, can advance not a single reason for thinking that the earth is round. He merely swallows this theory because there is something about it that appeals to the twentieth-century mentality.

  Now, Shaw is exaggerating, but there is something in what he says, and the question is worth following up, for the sake of the light it throws on modern knowledge. Just why do we believe that the earth is round? I am not speaking of the few thousand astronomers, geographers and so forth who could give ocular proof, or have a theoretical knowledge of the proof, but of the ordinary newspaper-reading citizen, such as you or me.

  As for the Flat Earth theory, I believe I could refute it. If you stand by the seashore on a clear day, you can see the masts and funnels of invisible ships passing along the horizon. This phenomenon can only be explained by assuming that the earth's surface is curved. But it does not follow that the earth is spherical. Imagine another theory called the Oval Earth theory, which claims that the earth is shaped like an egg. What can I say against it?

  Against the Oval Earth man, the first card I can play is the analogy of the sun and moon. The Oval Earth man promptly answers that I don't know, by my own observation, that those bodies are spherical. I only know that they are round, and they may perfectly well be flat discs. I have no answer to that one. Besides, he goes on, what reason have I for thinking that the earth must be the same shape as the sun and moon? I can't answer that one either.

  My second card is the earth's shadow: When cast on the moon during eclipses, it appears to be the shadow of a round object. But how do I know, demands the Oval Earth man, that eclipses of the moon are caused by the shadow of the earth? The answer is that I don't know, but have taken this piece of information blindly from newspaper articles and science booklets.

  Defeated in the minor exchanges, I now play my queen of trumps: the opinion of the experts. The Astronomer Royal, who ought to know, tells me that the earth is round. The Oval Earth man covers the queen with his king. Have I tested the Astronomer Royal's statement, and would I even know a way of testing it? Here I bring out my ace. Yes, I do know one test. The astronomers can foretell eclipses, and this suggests that their opinions about the solar system are pretty sound. I am, to my delight, justified in accepting their say-so about the shape of the earth.

  If the Oval Earth man answers — what I believe is true — that the ancient Egyptians, who thought the sun goes round the earth, could also predict eclipses, then bang goes my ace. I have only one card left: navigation. People can sail ship round the world, and reach the places they aim at, by calculations which assume that the earth is spherical. I believe that finishes the Oval Earth man, though even then he may possibly have some kind of counter.

  It will be seen that my reasons for thinking that the earth is round are rather precarious ones. Yet this is an exceptionally elementary piece of information. On most other questions I should have to fall back on the expert much earlier, and would be less able to test his pronouncements. And much the greater part of our knowledge is at this level. It does not rest on reasoning or on experiment, but on authority. And how can it be otherwise, when the range of knowledge is so vast that the expert himself is an ignoramus as soon as he strays away from his own specialty? Most people, if asked to prove that the earth is round, would not even bother to produce the rather weak arguments I have outlined above. They would start off by saying that "everyone knows" the earth to be round, and if pressed further, would become angry. In a way Shaw is right. This is a credulous age, and the burden of knowledge which we now have to carry is partly responsible.

  New Words

  preface

  n. an introduction to a book or speech 前言,序

  gullible

  a. easily deceived or cheated esp. into a false belief; credulous 易受骗的;轻信的

  superstitious

  a. full of superstition; believing in superstitions 迷信的

  cre一ty

  n. a tendency to believe to readily 轻信

  cite

  vt. mention as an example; quote (a passage, book, etc.) 举出;引出

  widespread

  a. found or distributed over a large area 分布广的;普遍的

  advance

  vt. put or bring forward; offer 提出

  appeal

  vi. please, attract or interest 投合所好;有感染力;有吸引力

  mentality

  n. way of thinking, outlook; mental power or capacity 心理,思想;脑力

  exaggerate

  vt. think, speak or write of as greater than is really so; overstate 夸张;夸大

  sake

  n. end, purpose 缘故

  geographer

  n. a specialist in geography

  ocular

  a. of, for, by the eyes; based on what has been seen 眼睛的;凭视觉的

  theoretical

  a. of or based on theory

  citizen

  n. 公民;市民

  refute

  vt. prove (a statement) to be untrue; prove (a person) to be mistaken 驳斥

  mast

  n. a long upright pole of wood or metal for carrying flags or sails on a ship 桅杆

  funnel

  n. a metal chimney for letting out smoke from a steam engine or steamship (蒸汽机,轮船等的)烟囱

  invisible

  a. that can not be seen

  horizon

  n. the line where the sky seems to meet the earth or sea 地平线

  phenomenon (pl. phenomena)

  n. 现象

  curve

  vt. bend so as to form a line that has no straight part 使成曲线

  n. a continuously bending line without angles 曲线

  follow

  vi. result or occur as a consequence, effect, or inference 结果产生;得出

  spherical

  a. shaped like a ball 球形的

  oval

  n.& a. (anything which is) egg-shaped 卵形的(东西), 椭圆的(东西)

  card

  n. 纸牌

  analogy

  n. comparison of things that have a certain likeness; similarity 类比; 相似

  promptly

  ad. quickly and willingly 敏捷地;迅速地

  prompt a.

  body

  n. =celestial body 天体

  disc

  n. 圆盘

  cast

  vt. throw or drop; cause (light or shadow) to appear (on) 扔,投; 投射

  eclipse

  n. the total or partial hiding of one celestial body by another (天文学)食

  booklet

  n. a small book, usu. with a paper cover 小册子

  exchange

  vt. give and receive (one thing in return for another) 交换

  trump

  n. 王牌

  royal

  a. for, belonging to, or connected with a king or queen 皇家的; 王室的

  statement

  n. expression in words; a written or spoken declaration, esp. of a formal kind 陈述;声明

  ace

  n. (纸牌中的)"A"牌,爱司

  foretell

  vt. tell beforehand; predict 预言

  solar

  a. of the sun

  the solar system

  the sun and the planets which revolve round it

  justify

  vt. give a good reason for; show to be just, right or reasonable 证明……是正当的;为…辩护

  say-so

  n. an authoritative pronouncement; one's unsupported assertion 权威性声明;无证据的断言

  Egyptian

  n.,a. (native) of Egypt 埃及人;埃及的

  predict

  vt. announce or tell beforehand; forecast 预言

  bang

  ad. with a sudden loud noise; with a sudden impact 砰地

  navigation

  n. the act or process of navigating 航海

  calculation

  n. the act of adding, subtracting, multiplying, or dividing to find a result 计算

  calculate vt.

  calculator n. 计算器

  counter

  n. sth. of value in bargaining; a return attack, such as a blow in boxing 讨价还价的本钱;回击,反击

  precarious

  a. insecure; depending upon mere assumption 不安全的;根据不足的,靠不住的

  exceptionally

  ad. unusually

  authority

  n. power to influence; power to give orders and make others obey 权威;权力

  ignoramus

  n. an ignorant person 无知的人

  stray

  vi. wander away; (of thoughts or conversation) move away from the subject 走离;离题

  specialty

  n. a special field of work or study 专业

  outline

  vt. indicate the main ideas or facts of

  n. a systematic listing of the important points of a subject 提纲

  press

  vt. demand or ask for continuously 催促,逼迫

  credulous

  a. tending to believe sth. on little evidence, arising from cre一ty 轻信的

  burden

  n. sth. difficult to bear; load 重负;负荷

  Phrases & Expressions

  follow up

  pursue or investigate closely; take further action after (sth.) 深入研究或调查;采取进一步行动

  for the sake of

  for the good or advantage of; for the purpose of 为了…的利益;为了

  throw/shed light on

  make clear; explain 使明白,使明朗;解释

  and so forth

  and so on

  as for

  with regard to, concerning 至于

  may well (not)

  be very likely (not) to 完全(不)可能

  bring out

  show; offer to the public 拿出;使显出;推出(新产品等)

  aim at

  have as one's target, objective, etc.

  fall back on

  turn to for support 求助于

  rest on

  depend on, rely on

  stray away from

  wander from; move from 偏离

  start off

  begin; depart

  in a way

  to a certain extent; a little; somewhat 在某种程度上

  Proper Names

  Saint Joan

  圣女贞德

  Bernard Shaw

  萧伯纳

  Unit 4

  Text

  Jim Thorpe, an American Indian, is generally accepted as the greatest all-round athlete of the first half of the 20th century. Yet the man, who brought glory to his nation, had a heartbreaking life. What caused his sadness and poverty?

  JIM THORPE

  Steve Gelman

  The railroad station was jammed. Students from Lafayette College were crowding onto the train platform eagerly awaiting the arrival of the Carlisle Indian school's track and field squad. No one would have believed it a few months earlier. A school that nobody had heard of was suddenly beating big, famous colleges in track meets. Surely these Carlisle athletes would come charging off the train, one after another, like a Marine battalion.

  The train finally arrived and two young men — one big and broad, the other small and slight — stepped onto the platform.

  "Where's the track team?" a Lafayette student asked.

  "This is the team," replied the big fellow.

  "Just the two of you?"

  "Nope, just me," said the big fellow. "This little guy is the manager."

  The Lafayette students shook their heads in wonder. Somebody must be playing a joke on them. If this big fellow was the whole Carlisle track team, he would be competing against an entire Lafayette squad.

  He did. He ran sprints, he ran hurdles, he ran distance races. He high-jumped, he broad-jumped. He threw the javelin and the shot. Finishing first in eight events, the big fellow beat the whole Lafayette team.

  The big fellow was Jim Thorpe, the greatest American athlete of modern times. He was born on May 28,1888, in a two-room farmhouse near Prague, Oklahoma. His parents were members of the Sac and Fox Indian tribe and he was a direct descendant of the famous warrior chief, Black Hawk.

  As a Sac and Fox, Jim had the colorful Indian name Wa-Tho-Huck. Which, translated, means Bright Path. But being born an Indian, his path was not so bright. Although he had the opportunity to hunt and fish with great Indian outdoorsmen, he was denied opportunity in other ways. The United States government controlled the lives of American Indians and, unlike other people, Indians did not automatically become citizens. It was almost impossible for an Indian to gain even a fair education and extremely difficult, as a result, for an Indian to rise high in life.

  Young Bright Path seemed destined to spend his life in the Oklahoma farmland. But when he was in his teens, the government gave him the chance to attend the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania. Soon Carlisle was racing along its own bright path to athletic prominence. In whatever sport Jim Thorpe played, he excelled, He was a star in baseball, track and field, wrestling, lacrosse, basketball and football. He was so good in football, in fact, that most other small schools refused to play Carlisle. The Indian school's football schedule soon listed such major powers of the early twentieth century as Pittsburgh, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Penn State and Army.

  Thorpe was a halfback. He was six feet one inch tall, weighed 185 pounds and had incredible speed and power. He built upon these natural gifts daily. He would watch a coach or player demonstrate a difficult maneuver, then he would try it himself. Inevitably, he would master the maneuver within minutes.

  During every game, opponents piled on Thorpe, trampled him, kicked him and punched him, trying to put him out of action. They were never successful. Years later someone asked him if he had ever been hurt on the field. "Hurt?" Thorpe said. "How could anyone get hurt playing football?"

  But Jim never played his best when he felt he would have to no fun playing. "What's the fun of playing in the rain?" he once said. And his Carlisle coach, Pop Warner, once said, "There's no doubt that Jim had more talent than anybody who ever played football, but you could never tell when he felt like giving his best."

  Football, though, did not provide Thorpe with his finest hour. He was selected for the United States Olympic track team in 1912, and went to Sweden with the team for the Games. On the ship, while the other athletes limbered up, Thorpe slept in his bunk. In Sweden, while other athletes trained, Thorpe relaxed in a hammock. He never strained when he didn't feel it necessary.

  Thorpe came out of his hammock when the Games began, to take part in the two most demanding Olympic events. He entered the pentathlon competition, a test of skill in five events: 200-meter run, 1500-meter run, broad jump, discus and javelin; and the decathlon competition, a series of ten events: 100-meter run, 400-meter run, 1500-meter run, high hurdles, broad jump, high jump, pole vault, discus, javelin and shot put. Though most athletes were utterly exhausted by the decathlon alone, Thorpe breezed through both events, his dark hair flopping, his smile flashing, his muscled body gliding along the track. He finished first in both the pentathlon and decathlon, one of the great feats in Olympic history.

  "You sir," King Gustav V of Sweden told Thorpe as he presented him with two gold medals, "are the greatest athlete in the world." And William Howard Taft, the President of the United States, said, "Jim Thorpe is the highest type of citizen."

  King Gustav V was correct, but President Taft was not. Though Jim Thorpe had brought great glory to his nation, though thousands of people cheered him upon his return to the United States and attended banquets and a New York parade in his honor, he was not a citizen. He did not become one until 1916. Even then, it took a special government ruling because he was an Indian.

  Jim Thorpe was a hero after the Olympics and a sad, bewildered man not too much later. Someone discovered that two years before the Olympics he had been paid a few dollars to play semiprofessional baseball. Though many amateur athletes had played for pay under false names, Thorpe had used his own name. As a result, he was not technically an amateur when he competed at Stockholm as all Olympic athletes must be. His Olympic medals and trophies were taken away from him and given to the runners-up.

  After this heartbreaking experience, Thorpe turned to professional sports. He played major league baseball for six years and did fairly well. Then he played professional football for six years with spectacular success. His last professional football season was in 1926. After that, his youthful indifference to studies and his unwillingness to think of a nonsports career caught up with him. He had trouble finding a job, and his friends deserted him. He periodically asked for, but never was given back, his Olympic prizes. From 1926 until his death in 1953, he lived a poor, lonely, unhappy life.

  But in 1950 the Associated Press held a poll to determine the outstanding athlete of the half-century. Despite his loss of the Olympic gold medals and a sad decline in fortune during his later years, Thorpe was almost unanimously chosen the greatest athlete of modern times.

  New Words

  jam

  v. fill or block up (the way) by crowding; (cause to ) be packed, pressed, or crushed tightly into a small space 堵塞;(使)塞满

  platform

  n. a raised flat surface built along the side of the track at a railway station for travellers getting on or off a train 月台

  await

  vt. wait for; look forward to

  track

  n. a course for running or racing; track-and-field sports, esp. those performed on a running track 跑道;径赛运动;田径运动

  field

  n. an area, esp. circled by a track where contests such as in jumping or throwing are held; the sports contested in this area 田赛场地;田赛运动

  squad

  n. a small group of persons working, training, or acting together; the smallest military unit, usually made up of eleven men and a squad leader 小队;班

  charge

  vi rush in or as if in an attack 向前冲;冲锋

  Marine

  n. a member of the U.S. Marine Corps (美国)海军陆战队士兵或军官

  battalion

  n. military unit made up of several companies 营

  broad

  a. wide, large across 宽的,广阔的

  nope

  ad. (AmE sl.) no

  compete

  vi. take part in a race, contest, etc.' try to win sth. in competition with sb. else 比赛;竞争

  sprint

  n. short race; dash 短跑

  vi. run at one's fastest speed, esp. for a short distance

  hurdle

  n. a light frame for people or horses to jump over in a race 栏;跳栏

  broad(-) jump

  n.& vi. (AmE) (do) a long jump 跳远

  javelin

  n. light spear for throwing (usu. in sport) 标枪

  shot

  n. the heavy metal ball used in the shot put 铅球

  tribe

  n. 部落

  descendant

  n. a person descended from another or from a common stock 子孙;后裔

  warrior

  n. a man who fights for his tribe; a soldier or experienced fighter 斗士,勇士;(老)战士

  colorful

  a. full of color; exciting the senses or imagination 艳丽的;丰富多彩的

  hunt

  v. go after (wild animals) for food or sport; search (for) 追猎,打猎;搜寻

  outdoorsman

  n. a man, such as a hunter, fisherman, or camper, who spends much time outdoors for pleasure

  deny

  vt. say that (sth.) is not true; refuse to give 否认;拒绝给予

  destine

  vt. (usu. passive) intend or decide by fate; intend for some special purpose 命中注定;预定

  farmland

  n. land used or suitable for farming 农田

  teens

  n. the period of one's life between and including the ages of 13 and 19

  prominence

  n. the quality or fact of being prominent or distinguished 凹出;杰出

  prominent a.

  excel

  vi. be very good (in or at sth) 突出,超常

  wrestling

  n. a sport or contest in which each of two opponents tries to throw or force the other to the ground 摔跤(运动)

  wrestle v.

  lacrosse

  n. 长曲棍球(运动)

  football

  n. 橄榄球(运动)

  power

  n. a person, group or nation that has authority or influence 握有大权的人物;有影响的机构;强国

  halfback

  n. (橄榄球、足球等)前卫

  incredible

  a. too extraordinary to be believed, unbelievable 难以置信的

  coach

  n. a person who trains sportsmen for games, competitions, etc. 教练

  demonstrate

  vt. explain by carrying out experiments or by showing examples 用实验或实例说明;演示

  maneuver

  n. a skillful move or trick, intended to deceive, to gain sth., to escape, or to do sth. 机动动作;策略;花招

  opponent

  n. a person who is on the other side in a fight, game, or discussion 对手;反对者

  trample

  vt. step heavily with the feet on; crush under the feet 踩;践踏

  punch

  vt. strike (sb. or sth.) hard with the fist 用拳猛击

  Olympic

  a. of or connected with the Olympic Games

  limber

  v. make or become flexible (使)变得柔软灵活

  bunk

  n. a narrow bed fixed on the wall, e.g. of a cabin in a ship or in a train 床铺,铺位

  hammock

  n. a hanging bed of canvas or rope network, e.g. as used by sailors, or in gardens (帆布或网状)吊床

  strain

  vi. make violent efforts; strive hard 尽力,使劲

  demanding

  a. making severe demands 要求高的;苛求的

  pentathlon

  n. an athletic contest in which each contestant takes part in five events 五项运动

  competition

  n. competing; contest; match

  discus

  n. a heavy, circular plate of rubber, plastic or wood with a metal rim 铁饼

  decathlon

  n. an athletic contest consisting of ten events 十项运动

  shot put

  n. a competition to throw a heavy metal ball the furthest distance 推铅球

  utterly

  ad. completely; totally

  utter a.

  breeze

  vi. move or go quickly and in a carelessly confident way 轻快地行动

  flop

  vi. move or bounce loosely 扑动

  flash

  vi. give out sudden, brief light or flame; shine or gleam 闪光;闪烁

  glide

  vi. move in a smooth continuous manner which seems easy and without effort 滑动,滑行

  feat

  n. an act showing great skill, strength, or daring; a remarkable deed, notable esp. for courage 武功;技艺;功绩

  glory

  n. high fame and honour won by great achievements; sth. deserving respect and honour 光荣,荣誉;荣誉的事

  banquet

  n. a dinner for many people, at which speeches are made, in honour of a special person or occasion 宴会

  ruling

  n. an official decision 裁决

  Olympic

  n. Olympic Games 奥林匹克运动会

  professional

  a. done by, played by, or made up of people who are paid 职业的

  n. a person who lives on the money he earns by practising a particular skill or sport 以特定职业谋生的人

  amateur

  n. a person playing a game, taking part in sports, etc. without receiving payment 业余爱好者

  a. of, by, or with amateurs; not paid lacking skill 业余的

  technically

  ad. in technical terms; in a technical sense; according to fixed rules 技术上;按规则

  trophy

  n. a prize given for winning a race, competition, or test of skill 奖品

  runner-up

  n. a player or team that comes second in a contest 亚军

  heartbreaking

  a. causing great sorrow or grief; extremely distressing 令人心碎的

  league

  n. a group of sports clubs or teams that play matches among themselves 联赛协会

  spectacular

  a. strikingly grand or unusual 壮观的;惊人的

  season

  n. the period of time during which a sport is played 赛季

  youthful

  a. young; having the qualities of young people

  indifference

  n. absence of interest or feeling 不关心,冷漠

  indifferent a.

  periodically

  ad. at regular intervals, every now and then

  outstanding

  a. much better than most others; very good 杰出的

  despite

  prep. in spite of

  decline

  n. losing of power, strength, wealth, or beauty; falling to a lower level 衰落;下降

  unanimously

  a. with complete agreement; without a single opposing vote 一致地;无异议地区性

  Phrase & Expressions

  track and field

  the sport or athletic events, such as running, jumping and weight throwing performed on a running track and on the adjacent field 田径运动

  play a joke on sb.

  do sth. to make other people laugh at someone 同某人开玩笑

  put……out of action

  stop……working, make……unfit for a typical activity 使停止工作;使不再起作用;使失去战斗力

  limber up

  make the muscles stretch easily by exercise, esp. before violent exercise (比赛等前)做准备活动

  take part in

  have a share or part in; join in 参加

  breeze through

  proceed with effortlessly in a carefree manner 轻而易举地完成

  in one's hono(u)r/in

  向……表示敬意;为庆祝……;为纪念……

  hono(u)r of

  catch up with

  have the expected ill effect or result on 对……产生预期恶果

  Proper Names

  Thorpe

  索普

  Lafayette College

  拉斐德学院

  Carlisle Indian School

  卡尔印第安人学校

  Prague

  布拉格(文中指美国地名)

  Oklaboma

  俄国拉何马(美国州名)

  Sac and Fox

  印第安人部落之一

  Black Hawk

  黑隼(印第安人首领名)

  pennsylvania

  宾夕法尼亚(美国州名)

  Pittsburgh

  匹兹堡(美国城市)

  Penn

  (short for) Pennsylvania

  Pop Warner

  波伯.沃纳

  Sweden

  瑞典

  Gustav V

  古斯塔夫五世

  William Howard Taft

  威谦.霍华德.塔夫脱

  Stockholm

  斯德哥尔摩(瑞典首都)

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