新视野大学英语第三版视听说4.docx
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1、Unit 1 How we behave is who we are Listening to the world Sharing P = Pasha; W1 = Woman 1, etc.; M1 = Man 1, etc. Part 1 P: Hello. City life can be quite impersonal, so I try to smile at people and thank them whenever they behave kindly, but some forms of anti-social behavior really do get on my ner
2、ves. Today Im talking to people about good and bad behavior. What kind of behavior in public places gets on your nerves? Part 2 W1: I think what mostly gets on my nerves is when people listen to their music really loudly on a stereo when youre on the train, or in a lift. I think thats a bit antisoci
3、al. M1: Um, probably noise more than anything actually. Um, I suppose its one of those sorts of things you see in effect in towns, areas now get louder and louder probably later into the night as well. W2: Well, screaming babies, in, like shops and just generally around and the parents, kind of stan
4、ding there and not really, just kind of ignoring the child and you just want to, just, tell the baby to just “shut up” but, obviously, you cant. M2: Loud noise: people with loud voices. Er, people, er, bad manners. W3: When youre on public transport, like on a train, and couples start kissing in fro
5、nt of you. M3: Smoking within the vicinity. Um, as someone who personally doesnt smoke, er, I find it, it can, er . it can get on my nerves at times. Part 3 P: Give a recent example of when you experienced good or bad manners. M3: The other day, just as an example, um, recent lack of manners I think
6、, was in a a local park and er, there was a rubbish bin nearby, but that person instead of taking the extra effort to just simply walk over and drop it in, decided carelessly to just drop their rubbish on the ground where they were. M1: I travel a lot on the trains and things like that, so I find, i
7、ncreasingly, the actual noise on trains from people using mobile phones, things like that really. W1: Well, recently, its Ive seen it a few times, you know, when, when youre shopping or when youre in a restaurant and youre trying to and youre speaking to the person thats serving you and maybe somebo
8、dys, theyre on their phone, or theyre not really paying attention. You see that quite a lot, I think, in London particularly. W3: On the bus this morning, when an old gentleman got on and someone got up to give him a seat. Part 4 P: Do you think our attitude towards behavior changes as we get older?
9、W1: Yeah, I think it does. I think as you get older, you become, probably, a bit more intolerant of certain, sort of, anti-social behavior and, as, when youre younger youre probably not as aware of it. M2: I think the older people, er, definitely appreciate manners, good behavior and a good attitude
10、. M1: I suppose so. I suppose we learn how to be more tolerant of it. Um, we can be, probably, more short-tempered of it because weve probably had it all of our lives and we want it to, sort of, come to an end, but I think we learn how to, sort of, either walk away from it or ignore it, that sort of
11、 things. W2: Yeah, definitely. W4: It becomes more important as you get older. You have to impress more people, therefore, be more polite. W2: Yeah, and you gain a conscience as you get older as well. As kids, like, you just say whatever you want to each other, kids, but you kind of realize what you
12、 can and cant say as you get older. Listening I = Interviewer; S1 = Speaker 1, etc. Part 1 I: Now Ive always thought it has to do with what time of day youre born. I arrived at 10 oclock at night and consequently Im an owl coming to life late in the evening and capable of dancing till dawn which is
13、a pity really because this job requires that I am a lark, getting up every morning at 5:30. Well, which are you and why? Part 2 S1: I am up usually between five and half past most mornings. Im bright and breezy. I sing in the morning. Im wide awake. I love watching the sunrise. Whenever we go on hol
14、iday, my husband thinks Im mad because quite often I get up with a camera, and Im out there at half past four, five oclock in the morning watching the sunrise and taking photographs. And I just love it. It is just so peaceful and so beautiful. Its a lovely part of the day. S2: Definitely not a morni
15、ng person. Evening, without a doubt. I despise getting up with a passion. There is a real, real sense of dread, and, oh no, and theres sort of lots of denial about no, it didnt really go off. And I sort of set it again for five minutes later, then I set it again for another five minutes later, and I
16、 stay there until the absolute last second. S3: If Im groggily out at nine or 10 in the morning, I do look at other people walking their dogs, or, walking along with a bounce in their step and I just think, “Where does it come from? How can you do that? Should I just eat more vegetables or more frui
17、t or should I get up earlier to be more awake?” None of it works. S4: My father and my mother are very much sort of early birds, and so when I was a teenager Id sleep in and Id have comments all the time like, “You youre sleeping your life away”, “Youve wasted the best part of the day”, and its take
18、n me until very, very recently actually to be able to stop the guilt at getting up late . S5: Late evening is best for me to be focusing rather than partying. Thats when Im really thinking straight. Everyones going to sleep at home here when Im really mentally becoming most awake. Thats when I reall
19、y feel at my sharpest. S6: At the end of the day, nine oclock, 10 oclock, Im exhausted, and so I want to go to bed. Anybody mentions “party” to me and I cringe. S7: David and I always joked before we had children that it would be great because he would be great in the mornings and I would be great i
20、n the evenings, and to a certain extent thats true, but finding time in the middle just to talk to one another is trickier. I: What are you, lark or owl? And what are the effects? Do let us know on the message board on the website. Viewing Desmond Morris: Back in the late 1960s, I was sitting in thi
21、s very restaurant on the island of Malta talking to my publisher. I drew his attention to the fact that, over the other side of the road there were two men who were gesticulating in a particular way. The way they were holding their palms to one side was fascinating me, and he said, “You know, you lo
22、ok at people the way that a bird-watcher looks at birds,” and I said, “Yeah, I suppose you could call me a man watcher.” As soon as I said it, it was as if Id fired a starting gun on a major new project, one that was to engross me for many years to come and take me to over 60 different countries. I
23、was going to do for actions what dictionary makers had done for words. I began making huge charts naming every facial expression, every gesticulation, every movement, every posture. I kept at it for month after month. One of the first problems I encountered was that even the simplest human action, s
24、uch as the handshake, has countless variations. Sometimes its reduced to a mere palm touch, as with these Masai elders in East Africa. But in other countries it becomes more elaborate. In Mali in West Africa the handshaker briefly touches his own forearm as the palms clasp. In Morocco the handshaker
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