CHAPTER 1PERSONAL IDENTIFICATION AND PEOPLE
第一章个人情况与人们Unit1Personal Identification and People 个人情况与人们
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 2HOME AND FAMILY
第二章家 与 家 人Unit2Home and Family 家与家人
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 3ENVIRONMENT
第三章环境Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 4WEATHER AND CLIMATE
第四章天气与气候Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 5FOOD AND DRINK
第五章饮食Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 6FREE TIME ACTIVITIES
第六章闲 暇 活 动Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 7 DAILY LIFE
第七章日 常 生 活Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 8SHOPPING
第八章购物Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 9HOLIDAYS
第九章假日Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 10PLACES
第十章地方Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
学习成果期中测试卷
笔试部分
笔试部分参考答案
笔试部分听力录音稿
口试部分
CHAPTER 11TRAVEL
第十一章旅游Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 12HEALTH AND FITNESS
第十二章健康与保健Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 13SERVICES
第十三章服务Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 14SOCIAL RELATIONS
第十四章社 会 关 系Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 15JOBS AND OCCUPATION
第十五章工作与职业Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 16CURRENT AFFAIRS
第十六章时事Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 17EDUCATION
第十七章教育Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 18POPULAR SCIENCE
第十八章科 普 知 识Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 19HISTORY
第十九章历史Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
CHAPTER 20GEOGRAPHY
第二十章地理Unit
Dialogues & Monologue
Passage
Words and Expressions
Notes
Exercises
Supplementary Reading
学习成果期末测试卷
笔试部分
笔试部分参考答案
笔试部分听力录音稿
口试部分333附录附录一对话/独白、课文问题答案
附录二听力练习录音稿
附录三课后练习答案
附录四单词表
1Daisy is introducing Sally to Smith.
Daisy:Good morning, Smith. Could I take a few minutes of your time?
Smith:Oh, it’s you, Daisy! What can I do for you?
Daisy:May I introduce my friend Sally to you, Smith? She’s an outstanding student in our college. She speaks good English. And also she is good at operating computer.
Sally:How do you do, Smith?
you, Sally. I have heard a little about you from Daisy. Would you like to work for two months in my company?
Sally:Of course I’d love to. I really want to get some real experience through my work here.
Smith:OK, please come to work at 8∶00 tomorrow morning.
Sally:See you tomorrow. Goodbye!2Alice receives Jack in a morning.
Alice:Good morning. Jack:Good morning. Is this Mr. Brown’s office?
Alice:Yes, that’s right. Can I help you?
Jack:I have an appointment with Mr. Brown at 10 o’clock.
Alice:Your name, please, sir?
Jack:Jack Clark. Alice:Just a moment. Oh, yes, Mr. Clark from Universal Trade Corporation. Would you please take a seat, Mr. Clark?I’ll tell Mr. Brown you are here.
Jack:Thank you.
Alice:(To Mr. Brown on his extension)Hello, Mr. Brown, Mr. Clark is here for his appointment... OK. (To Mr. Clark)Mr. Brown will come down to see you in a minute.
Jack:Thank you very much.
Alice:You’re welcome.3A couple are talking about their neighbour, Mr. Wang.
Wife:Darling, do you know anything about our new neighbour, Mr. Wang?
Husband:Nothing except that he goes to work at 7∶30 every morning.
Wife:He is quite special.
Husband:Special?What’s special about him?
Wife:Well, for one thing, he is Wang Li’s boyfriend. Mrs. Li has told me that.
Husband:What else?
Wife:He’s from a distant village three years ago with only 20 yuan in his pocket but now...
Husband:What has happened?
Wife:He has set up his company with about 200 employees. It’s reported that he has built a new school for his poor hometown.
Husband:A ragstoriches story!4The following monologue is about the life of a famous American—Benjamin Franklin.
“If you would not be forgotten as soon as you are dead and rotten, either write things worth reading, or do things worth writing.” America has never forgotten Benjamin Franklin because he did both. He became famous for being a scientist, an inventor, a statesman, a printer, a philosopher, a musician, and an economist. Today, we honor Ben Franklin as one of our Founding Fathers and as one of America’s greatest citizens. He was born in 1706 in Boston, Massachusetts. His mother and father were of Puritan religion. They left England and moved to the English colony of Massachusetts to escape persecution for their religion. Franklin left school when he was ten and worked for his father for two years. Then he went to work on his brother’s newspaper. He became the editor of this paper when he was sixteen. He went to Philadelphia then and bought his own newspaper. He worked hard and by the age of 24 he was one of the most successful men there. In 1732
Franklin published a book “Poor Richard’s Almanac”. Most almanacs contained information for farmers, such as information about the days and weeks of the year and about the weather. To his almanac, Franklin added wise sayings of observations about life; some of these sayings are still famous today. For example, “Early to bed, early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise,” and “Waste not, want not,” and “A penny saved is a penny earned.”
Ambulance Girl
When I became a volunteer EMT, my friends were puzzled. They knew me to be deeply terrified of sick and dying people. If there was an accident on the road, I tucked my head in my hands to avoid seeing blood or broken glass.
My husband and I had been married 30 years. We loved to travel, read and write. But at age 52, I felt stuck in a midlife funk, cut off from others. Passing the local firehouse one day, I saw a sign: “Volunteers wanted: Fire/EMT.” The EMT part pointed to everything cowardly in me—my fear of death and disease. Maybe I could help others if I did this and could also save myself by facing what scared me most.
As time goes by, I was able to work through my fears. Now I understand that the closest I have ever felt to God is in the back of an ambulance. When I rush out to help sick strangers, I am part of something larger than myself. Sometimes I truly connect with someone who I would never have met otherwise—as I did with Nellie.
One midnight, the AIDS hospice needed help. A colleague and I were shown to a bedroom. Lying there was a thin black woman with wild hair. When I was given a printout of her medical history, I thought, this lady should be dead over ten times. She had AIDS, hepatitis and TB. She had had brain surgery. Tonight she had a seizure.
“Hello, I’m Clarissa, are you in pain?” I asked. She replied by cursing at me. I didn’t take offense.
When I rode alone with her in the back of the ambulance as another EMT drove, I reread the printout. Nellie was 33 years old. No previous address. No family members. No next of kin. Her whole life as presented here was just a list of medicines, symptoms and illnesses. One line caught my attention: Hobbies. Nellie’s hobbies were sewing and gospel singing. I could not sew, but I loved gospel music.
“Nellie, it says here that you like gospel music, ” I asked. I expected another curse, but it didn’t come. “I really like Shirley Caesar, ” I continued, thinking of the singer’s heartbreaking song about a mother’s love for her ungrateful son, pouring her soul into every word.
Suddenly Nellie’s eyes moved back and forth. “I like her too, ” Nellie said weakly. I was stunned she could speak. I started naming other gospel singers. With each one, Nellie nodded back, and I saw her try to smile. I was not a singer, but I decided to pretend that I was. It was not unthinkable that Nellie might die during this ride to the hospital, that I would be the last face she ever saw, the last voice she ever heard. I wanted to say something meaningful to her, something other than “Where does it hurt?” So I started singing, and I held Nellie’s hand as I sang.
We reached the hospital, and she was wheeled to one of the ER rooms. I touched her thin shoulder. “Nellie, ” I said. She fixed her eyes on me. “Take care of yourself.” She gave me one long last look, and then turned her face to the wall.
When I climbed back into the ambulance, there was no more trace of Nellie. The driver had cleaned and sanitized everything. “Let’s go, ” I told him. As the ambulance pulled out, I felt like crying. But my eyes remained dry, like Nellie’s. Hobbies: sewing and gospel music, I thought as we glided in the darkness of the night toward home.
……