新编英语教程5上ANEWENGLISHCOURSELEVEL5(Unit17课文整理).doc
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1、Unit 1TEXT I (P 1)Hit the Nail on the Head Alan Warner1. Have you ever watched a clumsy man hammering a nail into a box? He hits it first to one side, them to another, perhaps knocking it over completely, so that in the end he only gets half of it into the wood. A skillful carpenter, on the other ha
2、nd, will drive home the nail with a few firm, deft blows, hitting it each time squarelyon the head. So with language; the good craftsman will choose words that drive home his point firmly and exactly. A word that is more or less right, a loose phrase, an ambiguous expression, a vague adjective, will
3、 not satisfy a writer who aims at clean English. He will try always to get the word that is completely right for his purpose.2. The French have an apt phrase for this. They speak of “le mot juste”, the word that is just right Stories are told of scrupulous writers, like Flaubert, who spent days tryi
4、ng to get one or two sentences exactly right. Words are many and various; they are subtle and delicate in their different shades of meaning, and it is not easy to find the ones that express precisely what we want to say. It is not only a matter of having a good command of language and a fairly wide
5、vocabulary; it is also necessary to think hard and to observe accurately. Choosing words is part of the process of realization, of defining our thoughts and feelings for ourselves, as well as for those who hear or read our words. Someone once remarked: “How can I know what I think till I see what I
6、say?” This sounds stupid, but there is a great deal of truth in it.3. It is hard work choosing the right words, but we shall be rewarded by the satisfaction that finding them brings.The exact use of language gives us mastery over the material we are dealing with. Perhaps you have been asked “What so
7、rt of a man is so-and-so?” You begin: “Oh, I think hes quite a nice chap but hes rather” and then you hesitate trying to find a word or phrase to express what it is about him that you dont like, that constitutes his limitation. When you find the right phrase you feel that your conception of the man
8、is clearer and sharper.4. Some English words have a common root but are used in very different senses. Consider human and humane, for example. Their origin is the same and their meanings are related, but their usage is distinct. A human action is not the same thing as a humane action. We cannot spea
9、k of a Declaration of Humane Rights.-There is a weapon called a humane killer, but it is not a human killer.5. We dont have to look far afield to find evidence of bad carpentry in language. A student, replying to an invitation to dinner, finished his letter: “I shall be delighted to come and I am lo
10、oking forward to the day with anxiety.” Anxiety carries with it suggestions of worry and fear. What the writer meant was possibly eagerness. Anxiety has some kinship with eagerness but it will not do as a substitute in this context.6. The leader of a political party in Uganda wrote a letter to the P
11、ress which contained this sentence:Let us all fight this selfishness, opportunism, cowardice and ignorance now rife in Uganda and put in their place truth, manliness, consistency and singularity of mind.7. This stirring appeal is spoilt by a malapropism in the last phrase, the word singularity. What
12、 the writer meant, I think, was singleness of mind, holding steadfastly to the purpose in mind, without being drawn aside by less worthy objects. Singularity means oddity or peculiarity, something that singles a man out from other men.8. Without being a malapropism, a word may still fail to be the r
13、ight word for the writers purpose, the “mot juste”. A journalist, writing a leader about Christmas, introduced a quotation from Dickens by saying:All that was ever thought or written about Christmas is imprisoned in this sentenceImprisonment suggests force, coercion, as if the meaning were held agai
14、nst its will. It would be better to write contained or summed up. Epitomized might do, though it is rather a clumsy-sounding word. Searching a little farther for the “mot juste” we might hit on the word distilled. This has more force than contained or summed up. Distillation suggests essence and we
15、might further improve the sentence by adding this word at the beginning:The essence of all that was ever thought or written about Christmas is distilled in this sentence.English has a wide vocabulary and it is a very flexible language. There are many different ways of making a statement. But words t
16、hat are very similar in meaning have fine shades of difference, and a student needs to be alive to these differences. By using his dictionary, and above all by reading, a student can increase his sensitivity to these shades of difference and improve his ability to express his own meanings exactly.9.
17、 Professor Raleigh once stated: “There are no synonyms, and the same statement can never be repeated in a changed form of words.” This is perhaps too absolute, but it is not easy to disprove. Even a slight alteration in the wording of a statement can subtly shift the meaning. Look at these two sente
18、nces:(1) In my childhood I loved to watch trains go by.(2) When I was a child I loved watching trains go by.At first glance these two sentences are exactly the same. But look more closely and you will see that there are very tiny differences. In my childhood is a shade more abstract than When I was
19、a child. Watching perhaps emphasizes the looking at trains a little more than to watch. This is a very subtle example, and it would be possible to argue about it, but everyone would at once agree that there is a marked difference between the next two statements:(1) He died poor.(2) He expired in ind
20、igent circumstances.In one sense expired is a synonym for died and in indigent circumstances for poor, but when the whole statement is considered, we cannot maintain that the two are the same. The change in words is a change in style, and the effect on the reader is quite different. It is perhaps ea
21、sier to be a good craftsman with wood and nails than a good craftsman with words, but all of us can increase our skill and sensitivity with a little effort and patience. In this way we shall not only improve our writing, but also our reading.10. English offers a fascinating variety of words for many
22、 activities and interests. Consider the wide range of meanings that can be expressed by the various words we have to describe walking, for example. We can say that a man is marching, pacing, patrolling, stalking, striding, treading, tramping, stepping out, prancing, strutting, prowling, plodding, st
23、rolling, shuffling, staggering, sidling, trudging, toddling, rambling, roaming, sauntering, meandering, lounging, loitering, or creeping. 11. The foreign student of English may be discouraged and dismayed when he learns that thee are over 400,000 words in the English language, without counting slang
24、. But let him take courage. More than half of these words are dead. They are not in current use. Even Shakespeare used a vocabulary of only some 20,000 words. The average Englishman today probably has a vocabulary range of from 12,000 to 13,000 words. It is good to make tour vocabulary as complete a
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