时间:2018-12-02 作者:英语课 分类:CNN美国有线新闻2016年8月


英语课

 Callum: Hello, I'm Callum Robertson. In this special programme we head into the


English country to experience a bit of life in rural Cambridgeshire.
Only 76 km from London the city of Cambridge is in the heart of the
countryside of east England. Cambridge is well known for its university but the
area has a thriving rural as well as academic community.
In today's programme we're going to hear from one member of this community,
Michael Beaumont, a butcher from the Cambridgeshire town of Fulbourn. As
well as being a butcher he has now diversified 1 into cattle production – what
reason does he give for this development?
Michael Beaumont
Right, I'm Michael Beaumont, I'm the local butcher in Fulbourn. About nine years ago we had
a supermarket come quite close to us and to sustain 2 our butchery business, we've gone into
cattle production.
Callum: He moved into cattle production so he could 'sustain' the butchery business – so
he could continue the business and make it successful. A supermarket had
opened near him which was a threat to his business so he had to do something
more than just being a butcher. Listen again. 
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Michael Beaumont
About nine years ago we had a supermarket come quite close to us and to sustain our butchery
business, we've gone into cattle production.
Callum: He goes on to talk about why having his own cattle is an advantage over what
he calls the 'big boys' the supermarkets.
Michael Beaumont
Why we've survived is because we're doing something different to what the supermarkets are.
We can prove that all of our… we've got full traceability on all these cattle. They're all
locally produced etcetera. So, it's a way forward for us as a small butcher's shop competing
with the big boys.
Callum: Producing his own cattle means that the customers know the meat is locally
produced – they have full traceability – they can trace the meant to a particular
cow – essentially 3 this means that they know exactly where the meat has come
from. This is something that you can't tell in a supermarket so as he says, it's a
way forward for them a small butcher's shop. Listen again.
Michael Beaumont
Why we've survived is because we're doing something different to what the supermarkets are.
We can prove that all of our… we've got full traceability on all these cattle. They're all
locally produced etcetera. So, it's a way forward for us as a small butcher's shop competing
with the big boys.
Callum: Michael Beaumont was brought on a farm and has farming in his blood. He
developed an interest in cattle at agricultural college and in a way although
they are competition he thinks the supermarkets have given him a chance to
become more involved in what he really loves doing. What does he say he is
passionate 4 about? 
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Michael Beaumont Dur: 23"
With my agricultural college experience I was always interested in cattle and, in one way, the
supermarket has done me a favour because it's letting me do something else that I really like
to do. I'm passionate about both of them; I'm passionate about how the animals are raised,
what they're fed on, their welfare and also passionate about the meat I sell.
Callum: He says he is passionate about how the animals are raised – how they are fed,
cared for and looked after. He is also passionate about the meat that he sells.
Michael now introduces us to his cattle. The collective noun for cattle is 'herd 5'
and Michael talks about how he got his herd of Limousin cows. He says he
bought them as a present but for which celebration in his life?
Michael Beaumont Dur: 43"
These are a pedigree herd of Limousin; a small herd I've just acquired. The people who had
got them had got about three or four different herds 6 and they wanted to get rid of this one.
So, I got this really as a 40th anniversary wedding present, but, er…, wife said 'that's a bit
different from the box of chocolates that she was going to get me' [laughter]… I think it came
as a bit of a shock for her when I told her I'd actually bought them, but, no, she's accepted
them and she likes them as much as I do.
Callum: He got the herd from another farmer who had three or four herds already and
wanted to get rid of one. To get rid of something means to not have something
anymore – so it could mean to throw something away or sell it, here it means to
sell. Michael bought the herd as a 40th wedding anniversary present! Aah, a
true romantic. How did his wife feel about this? Listen again. 
Cambridgeshire © BBC Learning English
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bbclearningenglish.com
Michael Beaumont
So, I got this really as a 40th anniversary wedding present, but, er…, wife said 'that's a bit
different from the box of chocolates that she was going to get me' [laughter]… I think it came
as a bit of a shock for her when I told her I'd actually bought them, but, no, she's accepted
them and she likes them as much as I do.
Callum: Well at first it was a bit of a shock for his wife – not quite the box of
chocolates she was expecting. But he says she doesn't really mind, she likes
them as much as he does.
Well, that's all from the Cambridgeshire countryside. 

1 diversified
adj.多样化的,多种经营的v.使多样化,多样化( diversify的过去式和过去分词 );进入新的商业领域
  • The college biology department has diversified by adding new courses in biotechnology. 该学院生物系通过增加生物技术方面的新课程而变得多样化。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • Take grain as the key link, develop a diversified economy and ensure an all-round development. 以粮为纲,多种经营,全面发展。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
2 sustain
vt.保持,供养,维持,支持,经受
  • During the war we had just enough food to sustain us.战争期间,我们的食物仅够维持生活。
  • These four posts sustain the entire building.这四根柱子支撑着整座建筑物。
3 essentially
adv.本质上,实质上,基本上
  • Really great men are essentially modest.真正的伟人大都很谦虚。
  • She is an essentially selfish person.她本质上是个自私自利的人。
4 passionate
adj.热情的,热烈的,激昂的,易动情的,易怒的,性情暴躁的
  • He is said to be the most passionate man.据说他是最有激情的人。
  • He is very passionate about the project.他对那个项目非常热心。
5 herd
n.兽群,牧群;vt.使集中,把…赶在一起
  • She drove the herd of cattle through the wilderness.她赶着牛群穿过荒野。
  • He had no opinions of his own but simply follow the herd.他从无主见,只是人云亦云。
6 herds
兽群( herd的名词复数 ); 牧群; 人群; 群众
  • Regularly at daybreak they drive their herds to the pasture. 每天天一亮他们就把牲畜赶到草场上去。
  • There we saw herds of cows grazing on the pasture. 我们在那里看到一群群的牛在草地上吃草。
学英语单词
3-aminomethylene-bis
a detention jail
a win - win situation
access originator
aircraft trainer
alkaloid reagent
Arctic Monkeys
art of
auntient
aurocyanides
badly-damaged
ball top
Barnmeen
canfield reagent
carpellary scale
cesura
chloride retention
claw pincer
coddlings
coil clamper
compiler base
congresscritters
contact thermometre
controlled direct current generator
crush a cup
davyhume
Dialpak
driven rod
dusicyon gymnocercus
dylhistine
emmew
Enfé(Anfah)
ethypicone
evynnis japonica
exponent of uncorrelation
fine grained graphite
flashs
float relay
floating aquatic plants
flowerseller
fluorinated hydrocarbon propellant
flux reversal
font value
food manufacturer
Fortrat parabola
fulminant malarial epidemic
gene mutation rate
give someone walking papers
go
good maintained track
Grotthus mechanism
hand puncher
high barometric pressure
impellors
Ince-Goldstein method
incompletely filled groove
jigamarees
kyphosus cinerascens
La Tour-du-Pin
laser ellipticity measuring instrument
launching of caisson
load frequency
lower interlock realy
Maktoob
medium-pressure pump
MGPS
monkeys might fly out of my butt
off the way
output pull down resistor
overhead crossing
pantopoda
penile urethra
penjing art
peospective
physical-chemical
plastics industries
polybenzimidazole adhesive
precision of prediction
present-day
productibility of soil
Pyxine
queen regents
rectovaginal
red cell cast
river deposition coast
separable kernel
sequence-independent
shearing punch
silksutur
specific torque coefficient
statistical coverage interval
Staurogyne chapaensis
substantial shareholding
sulci terminalis
suppressed length
the dole queue
to deal with
tribal chief
trust worthiness
tuberculosis of testis
unnormalized
xylophoned