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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
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[00:01.16]Passage One
[00:04.34]Did you know that there is a kind of bird that can sew?
[00:09.22]This bird, called the tailor bird,
[00:12.83]uses its mouth as a needle.
[00:15.56]It sews the leaves together in a shape of a cup.
[00:20.49]Then it adds a layer of straw
[00:23.55]to the inside of the cup and lays its eggs there.
[00:27.71]Each bird species1 builds its own special kind of nest.
[00:33.29]The most common materials used for nests
[00:36.46]are grasses, branches and feathers.
[00:40.40]A bird must weave these materials into a nest.
[00:44.45]Just imagine building a house
[00:47.41]without cement or nails to hold it together.
[00:50.79]Another bird is called the weaver2 bird.
[00:54.73]The weaver bird builds its nest that looks like a basket.
[00:59.11]The nest is shaped like a pear with a hole in the middle.
[01:03.93]The hole is the door of the nest.
[01:06.99]A third bird is called the oven bird.
[01:11.04]The oven bird makes a nest that is very solid.
[01:15.52]The nest is made of mud.
[01:18.15]The oven bird forms the mud into the shape of an oven
[01:22.41]and then lets it dry in the sun.
[01:25.47]The sun bakes the mud, making it very hard.
[01:29.42]Not all birds make their homes in branches.
[01:34.00]Some birds build their nests on the ground,
[01:37.51]while others bury their eggs under the ground.
[01:41.13]And some birds do not build nests at all.
[01:45.06]So when you look for nests and eggs
[01:47.92]in the branches of the trees and bushes,
[01:50.22]remember that some nests may be right under your feet.
[01:55.36]Questions 1 to 4 are based on the passage you have just heard.
[02:00.76]1. What does the nest built by a tailor bird look like?
[02:22.00]2. Why is there a hole in the weaver bird's nest?
[02:42.11]3. What is the oven bird's nest made of?
[03:01.15]4. What might surprise us
[03:05.31]about bird's nests according to the speaker?
[03:23.69]Passage Two
[03:26.10]Do you remember a time when people were a little nicer
[03:29.63]and gentler with each other?
[03:32.02]I certainly do.
[03:33.66]And I feel that much of the world
[03:35.85]has somehow gotten away from that.
[03:38.47]Too often I see people rushing into elevators
[03:42.19]without giving those inside a chance to get off first,
[03:45.59]or never saying “thank you”
[03:47.99]when others hold a door open for them.
[03:50.73]We get lazy and in our laziness
[03:54.34]we think that something like a simple “thank you”
[03:57.95]doesn't really matter. But it can matter very much.
[04:02.44]The fact is that no matter how nicely we dress
[04:07.19]or how beautifully we decorate our homes,
[04:10.14]we can't be truly elegant3 without good manners,
[04:14.21]because elegance4 and good manners always go hand in hand.
[04:19.14]In fact,
[04:20.45]I think of good manners as a sort of hidden beauty secret.
[04:24.72]Haven't you noticed that the kindest,
[04:27.67]most generous people seem to keep getting prettier?
[04:31.94]It's funny how that happens, but it does.
[04:35.34]Take the long lost art of saying “thank you”,
[04:39.05]like wearing a little make-up,
[04:41.47]or making sure your hair is neat.
[04:44.09]Getting into the habit of saying “thank you”
[04:46.83]can make you feel better about yourself.
[04:49.45]Good manners add to your image,
[04:52.85]while an angry face makes the best dressed person look ugly.
[04:59.30]Questions 5 to 7 are based on the passage you have just heard.
[05:04.60]5. What is the passage mainly about?
[05:24.22]6. What does the speaker say about people of the past?
[05:45.75]7. According to the speaker,
[05:50.29]how can we best improve our image?
[06:08.26]Passage Three
[06:09.87]For 25 years,I was a full-time5 thief,
[06:14.26]specializing in picking pockets.
[06:16.78]Where I come from in southeast London,
[06:19.95]that's an honorable profession.
[06:22.24]Anyone can break into a house and steal things,
[06:26.18]but picking somebody's pocket takes skill.
[06:30.12]My sister and I
[06:32.42]were among the most successful pickpocket6 teams in London.
[06:36.47]We worked in hotels and theatre lobbies7, airports,
[06:41.17]shopping centers and restaurants.
[06:44.24]Now we don't steal anymore,
[06:46.75]but this crime is worldwide.
[06:49.48]Here's how to protect yourself.
[06:51.91]Professional pickpockets8 do not see victims,
[06:56.40]only handbags, jewels and money.
[06:59.69]Mothers with babies, the elderly,
[07:02.74]and the disabled are all fair game.
[07:05.26]My preferred target was the lone9 female,
[07:08.11]handbag at her side, the right side to be exact.
[07:11.83]So if I'm next to her,
[07:13.58]I can reach out cautiously10 with my right hand across my body.
[07:17.41]Only about one woman in a thousand carries her bag on the left,
[07:23.10]and I tend to steer11 clear of them.
[07:25.72]Women whose bags are hanging in front of them
[07:29.22]are tricky12 for the pickpocket
[07:31.02]as there isn't a blind side.
[07:33.43]If you want to make it even harder,
[07:35.72]use a bag with handles rather than a strap13.
[07:39.23]For men,
[07:40.21]one of the best places to keep a wallet
[07:42.95]is in the back pocket of tight trousers.
[07:45.35]You will feel any attempt to move it.
[07:48.64]Another good place
[07:50.18]is in the buttoned up inside pocket of a jacket.
[07:53.57]There is just no way in.
[07:55.98]Even better, keep wallets attached to a cord
[07:59.81]or chain that is fastened to a belt.
[08:02.76]A pickpocket needs targets who are relaxed and off guard.
[08:07.90]The perfect setting is a clothing store.
[08:11.51]When customers wander among the racks,
[08:14.69]they are completely absorbed in the items they hold up.
[08:18.52]The presence of a uniformed security guard is even better.
[08:22.79]A false sense of security makes a pickpocket's job much simpler.
[08:30.35]Questions 8 to 11 are based on the passage you have just heard.
[08:35.96]8. Why does the speaker say that picking somebody's pocket
[08:41.65]is an honorable profession in southeast London?
[08:59.37]9. According to the speaker,
[09:03.52]who is most likely to become a victim of pickpockets?
[09:22.68]10. In the speaker's opinion,
[09:26.29]what's the best place for the man to keep his wallet?
[09:44.57]11.What is the perfect setting
[09:48.07]for picking pockets according to the speaker?
1 species | |
n.物种,种群 | |
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2 weaver | |
n.织布工;编织者 | |
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3 elegant | |
adj.优美的,文雅的,简练的,简结的 | |
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4 elegance | |
n.优雅;优美,雅致;精致,巧妙 | |
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5 full-time | |
adj.满工作日的或工作周的,全时间的 | |
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6 pickpocket | |
n.扒手;v.扒窃 | |
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7 lobbies | |
n.(公共建筑物进口处的)门厅( lobby的名词复数 );(英国议会的)民众接待厅;议会休息室;(就某问题企图影响政治家的)游说议员的团体 | |
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8 pickpockets | |
n.扒手( pickpocket的名词复数 ) | |
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9 lone | |
adj.孤寂的,单独的;唯一的 | |
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10 cautiously | |
adv.小心地,谨慎地;小心翼翼;翼翼 | |
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11 steer | |
vt.驾驶,为…操舵;引导;vi.驾驶 | |
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12 tricky | |
adj.狡猾的,奸诈的;(工作等)棘手的,微妙的 | |
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13 strap | |
n.皮带,带子;v.用带扣住,束牢;用绷带包扎 | |
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