时间:2019-01-10 作者:英语课 分类:高中英语人教版高三


英语课

[00:04.78]Lesson 65            1 Reading comprehension 1

[00:12.15]Read the text fast to find answers to these questions.

[00:17.48]1 What was the writer's problem?

[00:22.23]2 What did the wrier 2 learn during this period of her life?

[00:28.00]MY TEACHER(1)

[00:31.95]Before Annie Sullivan came to uor house,

[00:36.62]one or two people had told my mother that I was simple-minded.

[00:42.27]I can understand why.Here was a seven-year-old girl

[00:48.33]who at the age of 19 months had become deaf and blind.

[00:54.18]And because I was deaf,I could not learn to speak.

[00:58.93]Struggling in a world of silence and darkness,

[01:03.97]I must have appeared to them to be simple.

[01:08.65]But this was before Annie Sullivan came to stay.

[01:13.69]She was a lively young woman with patience and imagination.

[01:19.62]A born teacher,

[01:22.89]she thought she could turn a deaf-blind person into a useful human being.

[01:29.55]What a difficult case I must have been to this young teacher!

[01:34.69]I remember the many times she tried to spell words into my small hand.

[01:40.96]But neither words nor letters meant anything to me.

[01:46.89]I thought her finger movements were some kind of game.

[01:51.93]But at last,on April 5th,1887,she reached my understanding.

[01:59.98]About a month after her arrival,she taught me the word"water".

[02:07.24]It happened at the well where I was holding a jar while Annie pumped.

[02:13.80]As the water flowed onto my hand,

[02:17.87]she kept spelling w-a-t-e-r into my other hand with her fingers.

[02:27.02]Suddenly I understood!It was the first joy I had known 4 for years.

[02:34.88]I reached out to Annie's hand.

[02:38.85]She understood I was begging for new words,for the names of the things I touched.

[02:45.69]The words so full of meaning--flew from her hand to mine.

[02:52.17]Those first words were to change my world.

[02:57.63]One of the first things Annice did was to teach me how to play.

[03:03.09]I had not laughed since I became deaf.

[03:07.17]One day she came into my room laughing happily.

[03:11.90]Putting my hand on her face,she spelled l-a-u-g-h.

[03:19.34]Then she touched me lightly on my arm and made me burst 5 into laughter 6.

[03:25.58]Next Annie took me by the hand and taught me how to jump.

[03:31.96]She then immediately spelled the word j-u-m-p for me.

[03:38.72]In a few days I was learning--and enjoying it---like any child.

[03:45.28]Through my hands and fingers,I"heard"the sounds that one hears on a farm,

[03:51.63]the noises made by cows,horses,chickens and pigs.

[03:57.69]She also brought me into touch with everything that could be felt--soil,wood,silk.

[04:05.84]As I look back upon those years,I am struck by Annie's wisdom 7.

[04:11.90]Perhaps she understood me because she herself had always had very weak eyes.

[04:19.55]Lesson 66            1 Reading comprehension

[04:33.01]Read the text fast to find answers to these questions.

[04:38.28]1 Where did the wrter's teacher Annie grow up?

[04:43.74]2 What did Annie help the writer to do?

[04:48.89]MY TEACHER(2)

[04:53.12]Annie was born in a poor family,on April 4th,1866.

[05:00.38]Her mother died when she was eight years old.

[05:04.93]Two years later,her father disappeared,never to be heard from again.

[05:11.69]Annie and her brother were sent to a children's home.there the boy died.

[05:18.35]Four years later,she left the children's home

[05:22.80]and entered an institution for the blind, where she learnt Braille.

[05:29.25]This is a kind of printing that blind people can read

[05:35.60]by touching 8 groups of raised points that are printed on paper.

[05:42.07]Later,an operation helped her to get back part of her sight,

[05:47.82]but she remained at the institution for six years more.

[05:52.89]There she studied the teaching 9 of deaf-blind children.

[05:58.22]One day a letter from my father arrived at the school,asking for a teacher for me


[06:04.75]Annie considered this was just the kind of demanding job she wanted.

[06:10.70]That is how Annie came to be with us.

[06:15.28]Annie was among the first to realize that blind people

[06:20.32]never know their hidden strength until they are treated like normal human beings.

[06:27.40]She never pitied me;she never praised me

[06:33.04]unless what I did was as good as that of the best of a normal person.

[06:39.70]And she encouraged me when I made up my mind to go to college.

[06:44.98]During my years in school,Annie sat beside me in every class.

[06:51.04]She spelled out for me the things that the teacher taught.

[06:56.21]And,because most books were not printed in Braille,

[07:01.54]she herself read them to me by spelling into my hand what was written in the books.

[07:08.49]It took great imagination as well as patience for Annie to teach me to speak.

[07:15.15]Putting both my hands on her face when she spoke 10,

[07:19.90]she let me feel all the movenents of her lips 11 and throat.

[07:25.26]Together we repeated and repeated words and sentences.

[07:31.50]My speech was illformed and not pleasant to hear.

[07:36.86]But I was delighted to be able to say words that my family

[07:42.63]and a few friends could understand.

[07:46.99]To Annie I owe 3 thanks for this priceless 12 gift of speech.

[07:52.95]It has helped me to serve others.

[07:56.79]My teacher's gifted instruction lived on after her death.

[08:02.25]She had believed in me.I must always keep on trying to do my best.

[08:08.72]"No matter what happens,"she often said,"keep on beginning.

[08:15.18]Each time you fail,start all over again.

[08:20.43]You will grow stronger each time,

[08:25.50]until you can do and finidh what you started out to do.

[08:31.66]Who could count the times Annie tried,failed,and then succeeded?

[08:38.61]What a great teacher!What a great person!

 



n.理解,理解力;领悟
  • The teacher set the class a comprehension test.老师对全班同学进行了一次理解力测验。
  • The problem is above my comprehension.这个问题超出我的理解力。
wry(扭曲的,歪斜的)的比较级形式
vt./vi.欠(债等);感激;把……归功于某人
  • We still owe one hundred dollars for the car.为这部车我们还欠着100美元。
  • We owe it to society to make our country a better place.把国家建设得更美好是我们对社会应尽的责任。
adj.大家知道的;知名的,已知的
  • He is a known artist.他是一个知名的艺术家。
  • He is known both as a painter and as a statesman.他是知名的画家及政治家。
vi.(burst,burst)爆炸;爆破;爆裂;爆发;vt.使…破裂;使…炸破;n.突然破裂;爆发
  • We all held our breath till the bomb burst.我们屏住呼吸直到炸弹爆炸。
  • She suddenly burst into song.她突然唱起歌来。
n.笑,笑声
  • I don't know how my story caused so much laughter.我不知我的故事怎么引起如此大笑。
  • The audience gave way to uncontrollable bursts of laughter.听众忍不住发出一阵阵笑声。
n.智慧,明智的行为,学识,名言,贤人
  • Experience is the mother of wisdom.经验为智慧之母。
  • Ancient Greece was a fountain of wisdom and philosophy.古希腊是智慧和哲学的发源地。
adj.动人的,使人感伤的
  • It was a touching sight.这是一幅动人的景象。
  • His letter was touching.他的信很感人。
n.教学,执教,任教,讲授;(复数)教诲
  • We all agree in adopting the new teaching method. 我们一致同意采取新的教学方法。
  • He created a new system of teaching foreign languages.他创造了一种新的外语教学体系。
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说
  • They sourced the spoke nuts from our company.他们的轮辐螺帽是从我们公司获得的。
  • The spokes of a wheel are the bars that connect the outer ring to the centre.辐条是轮子上连接外圈与中心的条棒。
abbr.logical inferences per second 每秒的逻辑推论n.嘴唇( lip的名词复数 );(容器或凹陷地方的)边缘;粗鲁无礼的话
  • Her lips compressed into a thin line. 她的双唇抿成了一道缝。
  • the fullness of her lips 她丰满的双唇
adj.无价的,极其珍贵的
  • It is a priceless treasure.这是一件无价之宝。
  • The findings could be priceless.这些调查结果可能是极为重要的。
学英语单词
2-amino-5-chloro-4-methyl-benzenesulfonic acid
abridgment
advant
arenaviruss
asymmetric slug
axiom of infinity
azobisformamides
back coupling
beccariola fulgurata
cadmy
Carroll County
cartaceous
central route charge office
charcoal blast-furnace
cheek protector
chroma sampling
cinema projector
co-operating
code walkthrough
digital access and cross-connect system
drain water cooler
dry and wet thermometer
echoperitoneoscope
ethyzine
extended plays
eye doctor
fibrous myxoma
floating point literal
formative technology
freight on linter branch transfers
frolickingly
geared turbine engine
goods insurance
half square
half-time shaft
Hodgkin disease
indoors voice
infant-feeding
kaposis varicelliform eruption
kyrtometer
link(age) ratio
logadoblennorrhea
low frequency dry flashover voltage
Lurgi metal alloy
macroargument
maier
manoeuvring limit
map specifications
milled helicoid worm
Minnipa
Morgan's Bay
MSTV
musculus cricopharyngeus
niffieldite
non-chaotic attractor
orphanotrophia
Outardes, R.aux
paleoartist
para toluene sulfonate
paracentesis of chest
perennial sea island cotton
phimenes curvatus
photogrammetrictriangulation
platy flowagestructure
polesh
potassium diuranate
primary sampling unit
propelled ascent mine
prosciutto
pure air
quick-flashing light with blinks
rare gas element
Salinas, B.das
scheper-hughes
skull muscles
slab straightener
sodium lauryl sulphate
Southington
spacewards
speedin'
splenic tissue
splice junction
strip selection method
strong inversion
sutural cataract
tankerloads
tayloria alpicola broth
technical administration
the kimberley
thermostabilized
threshold function
ticket availability
transires
trial bore hole
twin edger
Verkhnekamskiy Rayon
Våbensted
without a penny to one's name
yardarm iron
zeatin