導航:首頁 > 英語聽力 > 大學英語自主聽力教程

大學英語自主聽力教程

發布時間:2021-01-17 23:06:24

⑴ 大學英語聽力教程4的聽力原文該在哪裡下載啊,急求

人人聽力有

⑵ 大學英語聽力第一冊教程答案

全新版大學英語綜合教程第一冊課後題答案的下載鏈接(WORD形式)(由於鏈接有問題,請復制下面的所有字元,粘貼到地址欄中來進入下載地址):
http://mail.qq.com/cgi-bin/ftnExs_download?k=&t=exs_ftn_download&code=3876ba35&s=email

⑶ 想要大學英語自主聽力教程1學習卡版的聽力音頻還有答案

新發展大學英語聽力教程1-4冊聽力原文及(si)答(liao)案

⑷ 你有大學英語聽力教程嗎

1由點到面,構建知識網路
對所學的知識點分步地進行梳理、歸納和總結,理清知識脈專絡。從一個簡單屬的語法點或一個核心句型開始延伸,理清它們的變化形式、變化規律以及與時態、語態等的關聯。所謂由點到面,構建知識網路。
2由面到點,加深記憶,查漏補缺
回歸課本,查缺補漏,打好基礎。以單元為單位展開復習,回憶每單元所學的主要內容,包括核心單詞、重點句型和語法,以及需要掌握的對話等。回憶時要有框架,由面到點,比如先通過目錄頁回憶每個單元的話題,然後再回憶細化的知識點。
3聚焦重難點,鞏固易錯點
對每單元中的重點內容(詞彙、句型和語法)和在練習中易錯的點作進一步的復習,解決重點、難點和疑點,加深理解。多看錯題本,攻克錯題。
4經典題目自測,檢驗復習效果
對復習效果進行檢測,會產生成就感或緊張感,從而自覺主動地去學習,同時可以及時調整復習方法。在復習完成時,選取一定數量的題目進行檢測非常有必要。多做典型題,摸清規律,學會舉一反三,但不提倡題海戰術。
想要考個好成績,除了熟練掌握單詞、語法、句型,還要有正確的答題技巧

⑸ 求全新版大學英語綜合教程的聽力材料!

http://www.ebigear.com/SoundTest/PlayResource.php?Res=281|7777700006321&ID=130317
有1-4冊,可下載,注冊時別忘了推薦人寫我的名字哦:fujchj

全新版大學英語綜合教程第一冊01
yang4664371 2005-10-22 22:15:31 0/14431

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

大耳朵背單詞,讓我們時刻在進步: administrate // v.掌管,料理;實施;經營;給予,投(葯)

Unit 1
Growing Up

Part I Pre-reading Task

Listen to the recording two or three times and then think over the following questions:
1. Do you know who John Lennon was?
2. Have you ever heard the song before?
3. What does Lennon think of growing up? Is it easy or full of adventures?
4. Can you guess what the texts in this unit are going to be about?

The following words in the recording may be new to you:

monster
n. 怪物

prayer
n. 祈禱

Part II
Text A

When we are writing we are often told to keep our readers in mind, to shape what we say to fit their tastes and interests. But there is one reader in particular who should not be forgotten. Can you guess who? Russell Baker surprised himself and everyone else when he discovered the answer.

WRITING FOR MYSELF

Russell Baker

The idea of becoming a writer had come to me off and on since my childhood in Belleville, but it wasn't until my third year in high school that the possibility took hold. Until then I'd been bored by everything associated with English courses. I found English grammar ll and difficult. I hated the assignments to turn out long, lifeless paragraphs that were agony for teachers to read and for me to write.
When our class was assigned to Mr. Fleagle for third-year English I anticipated another cheerless year in that most tedious of subjects. Mr. Fleagle had a reputation among students for llness and inability to inspire. He was said to be very formal, rigid and hopelessly out of date. To me he looked to be sixty or seventy and excessively prim. He wore primly severe eyeglasses, his wavy hair was primly cut and primly combed. He wore prim suits with neckties set primly against the collar buttons of his white shirts. He had a primly pointed jaw, a primly straight nose, and a prim manner of speaking that was so correct, so gentlemanly, that he seemed a comic antique.
I prepared for an unfruitful year with Mr. Fleagle and for a long time was not disappointed. Late in the year we tackled the informal essay. Mr. Fleagle distributed a homework sheet offering us a choice of topics. None was quite so simple-minded as "What I Did on My Summer Vacation," but most seemed to be almost as ll. I took the list home and did nothing until the night before the essay was e. Lying on the sofa, I finally faced up to the unwelcome task, took the list out of my notebook, and scanned it. The topic on which my eye stopped was "The Art of Eating Spaghetti."
This title proced an extraordinary sequence of mental images. Vivid memories came flooding back of a night in Belleville when all of us were seated around the supper table — Uncle Allen, my mother, Uncle Charlie, Doris, Uncle Hal — and Aunt Pat served spaghetti for supper. Spaghetti was still a little known foreign dish in those days. Neither Doris nor I had ever eaten spaghetti, and none of the alts had enough experience to be good at it. All the good humor of Uncle Allen's house reawoke in my mind as I recalled the laughing arguments we had that night about the socially respectable method for moving spaghetti from plate to mouth.
Suddenly I wanted to write about that, about the warmth and good feeling of it, but I wanted to put it down simply for my own joy, not for Mr. Fleagle. It was a moment I wanted to recapture and hold for myself. I wanted to relive the pleasure of that evening. To write it as I wanted, however, would violate all the rules of formal composition I'd learned in school, and Mr. Fleagle would surely give it a failing grade. Never mind. I would write something else for Mr. Fleagle after I had written this thing for myself.
When I finished it the night was half gone and there was no time left to compose a proper, respectable essay for Mr. Fleagle. There was no choice next morning but to turn in my tale of the Belleville supper. Two days passed before Mr. Fleagle returned the graded papers, and he returned everyone's but mine. I was preparing myself for a command to report to Mr. Fleagle immediately after school for discipline when I saw him lift my paper from his desk and knock for the class's attention.
"Now, boys," he said. "I want to read you an essay. This is titled, 'The Art of Eating Spaghetti.'"
And he started to read. My words! He was reading my words out loud to the entire class. What's more, the entire class was listening. Listening attentively. Then somebody laughed, then the entire class was laughing, and not in contempt and ridicule, but with open-hearted enjoyment. Even Mr. Fleagle stopped two or three times to hold back a small prim smile.
I did my best to avoid showing pleasure, but what I was feeling was pure delight at this demonstration that my words had the power to make people laugh. In the eleventh grade, at the eleventh hour as it were, I had discovered a calling. It was the happiest moment of my entire school career. When Mr. Fleagle finished he put the final seal on my happiness by saying, "Now that, boys, is an essay, don't you see. It's — don't you see — it's of the very essence of the essay, don't you see. Congratulations, Mr. Baker."
(797 words)

New Words and Expressions

off and on
from time to time; sometimes 斷斷續續地;有時

possibility
n. 可能(性)

take hold
become established 生根,確立

bore
vt. make (sb.) become tired and lose interest 使(人)厭煩

associate
vt. join or connect together; bring in the mind 使聯系起來;使聯想

assignment
n. a piece of work that is given to a particular person(分配的)工作,任務,作業

turn out
proce 編寫;生產,製造

agony▲
n. very great pain or suffering of mind or body (身心的)極度痛苦

assign
vt. give as a share or ty 分配,分派

anticipate
vt. expect 預期,期望

tedious
a. boring and lasting for a long time 乏味的;冗長的

reputation
n. 名聲;名譽

inability
n. lack of power, skill or ability 無能,無力

inspire
vt. fill (sb.) with confidence, eagerness, etc. 激勵,鼓舞

formal
a. (too) serious and careful in manner and behavior; based on correct or accepted rules 刻板的,拘謹的;正式的,正規的

rigid
a. (often disapproving) fixed in behavior, views or methods; strict 一成不變的;嚴格的

hopelessly
ad. very much; without hope 十分,極度;絕望地

excessively
ad. 過分地

out of date
old-fashioned 過時的

prim
a. (usu. disapproving) (of a person) too formal or correct in behavior and showing a dislike of anything rude; neat 古板的,拘謹的;循規蹈矩的;整潔的

primly ad.

severe
a. completely plain; causing very great pain, difficulty, worry, etc. 樸素的;嚴重的,劇烈的

necktie
n. tie 領帶

jaw
n. 頜,顎

comic▲
a. 滑稽的;喜劇的
n. 連環漫畫(冊)

antique
n. 古物,古玩

tackle
vt. try to deal with 處理,應付

essay
n. 散文,小品文;論說文

distribute
vt. divide and give out among people, places, etc. 分發,分配,分送

finally
ad. at last 最終,終於

face up to
be brave enough to accept or deal with 勇敢地接受或對付

scan
v. look through quickly 瀏覽,粗略地看

spaghetti
n. 義大利式細面條

title
n. a name given to a book, film, etc. 標題,題目
vt. give a name to 給…加標題,加題目於

extraordinary
a. very unusual or strange 不同尋常的;奇特的

sequence
n. 一連串相關的事物;次序,順序

image
n. a picture formed in the mind 形象;印象;(圖)像

alt
n. a fully grown person or animal 成年人;成年動物

humor
n. 心情;幽默,詼諧

recall
vt. bring back to the mind; remember 回想起,回憶起

argument
n. 論據,論點;爭論

respectable
a. (of behavior, appearance, etc.) socially acceptable 可敬的;體面的;文雅的

put down
write down 寫下

recapture
vt. (lit) bring back into the mind; experience again 再現;再次經歷

relive
vt. experience again, esp. in one's imagination 再體驗,重溫

violate
vt. act against 違背,違反

compose
vt. write or create (music, poetry, etc.) 創作

turn in
hand in (work that one has done) 交(作業)

command
n.,v.命令,指令

discipline
n. punishment; order kept (among school-children, soldiers, etc.) 懲罰,處分;紀律

what's more
in addition, more importantly 而且,此外;更有甚者

contempt▲
n. 輕視,輕蔑

ridicule
n. making or being made fun of 嘲笑,嘲弄;被戲弄

open-hearted
a. sincere, frank 誠摯的

hold back
prevent the expression of (feelings, tears, etc.) 控制(感情、眼淚等)

avoid
vt. keep or get away from 避免

demonstration
n. act of showing or proving sth. 表明;證明

career
n. 生涯,事業;職業

seal
n. 印,圖章

essence▲
n. the most important quality of a thing 本質;精髓

congratulation
n. (usu. pl) expression of joy for sb.'s success, luck, etc. 祝賀,恭喜

Proper Names

Russell Baker
拉賽爾·貝克

Belleville
貝爾維爾(美國地名)

Fleagle
弗利格爾(姓氏)

Allen
艾倫(男子名)

Charlie
查理(男子名)

Doris
多麗絲(女子名)

Hal
哈爾(男子名,Henry, Harold的昵稱)

Pat
帕特(女子名,Patricia的昵稱)
請點擊這里查看當前其他網友為該聽力資料提供的聽力原文,如果您能找到更好的聽力原文,請點擊這里提供更好的聽力原文,如果被採用,您將會獲得100到300金幣的獎勵!

Thank you!
本聽力資料僅供試用,若感覺不錯,歡迎至音像書店購買正版全套資料。合作單位:

-=點擊鏈接在新窗口打開聽力原文=-

⑹ 哪兒有大學英語聽力教程(上外版)的mp3下載地址

你好,我是兔兔禿90,用網路網盤分享給你,點開就可以保存,鏈接永專久有效^_^鏈接:屬https://pan..com/s/10l5r9FXDkpfRCtHdxlAe2Q 提取碼:0000

⑺ 大學英語聽力教程(上外的)mp3

我也沒有
你可以到上外的官網上去下載啊
書上應該有網址的吧

⑻ 大學英語綜合教程聽力MP3

這兒有
http://jpkc.xhu.e.cn/C53/Course/Index.htm

閱讀全文

與大學英語自主聽力教程相關的資料

熱點內容
老公的家教老師女演員 瀏覽:788
圓明園題材電影有哪些 瀏覽:806
歐洲出軌類型的電影 瀏覽:587
看電影可以提前在網上買票么 瀏覽:288
有沒有什麼可以在b站看的電影 瀏覽:280
今晚他要去看電影嗎?翻譯英文。 瀏覽:951
林默燒衣服的那個電影叫什麼 瀏覽:133
哈莉奎茵與小丑電影免費觀看 瀏覽:509
維卡克里克斯演過哪些電影 瀏覽:961
什麼算一下觀看的網站 瀏覽:710
大地影院今日上映表 瀏覽:296
朱羅紀世界1免費觀看 瀏覽:311
影院容納量 瀏覽:746
韓國最大尺度電影 瀏覽:130
八百電影 瀏覽:844
手機影院排行榜在哪看 瀏覽:182
韓國有真做的電影么 瀏覽:237
歐美愛情電影網 瀏覽:515
一個女的去美國的電影 瀏覽:9
金希貞的妻子的朋友 瀏覽:610