时间:2019-01-10 作者:英语课 分类:高中英语人教版必修


英语课

[00:08.80]The united kingdom

[00:11.08]Reading

[00:10.08]Puzzles in geography

[00:13.21]There is no need to debate any more

[00:16.97]about why different words are used to describe the four countries:

[00:21.23]England, wales, Scotland 1 and northern Ireland.

[00:24.99]You can easily clarify 2 and problems if you study british history.

[00:29.96]First there was England.

[00:32.59]Wales was linked to England in the 13th century ad .

[00:37.14]now when people refer to England you find wales included as well.

[00:42.89]Great Britain was the name given when England and wales were joined to Scotland .

[00:49.34]it happened in 1603

[00:52.39]when king james of Scotland became king of England and wales as well.

[00:57.75]To their surprise,

[01:00.39]the three countries found themselves united peacefully instead of by war.

[01:06.21]However,

[01:07.36]just as they were going to get Ireland connected to form the united kingdom.

[01:12.01]The southern part of that country broke away

[01:14.94]to form its own government.

[01:16.69]So only northern Ireland joined with England,

[01:21.13]wales and Scotland

[01:22.64]to become the united kingdom and this was shown to the world in a new flag called the union jack 3.

[01:30.01]Although the four countries do work together in some areas(for example,

[01:35.57]in international relations) they are still very different.

[01:39.55]For example, northern Ireland,

[01:42.50]England and Scotland

[01:44.33]have developed different educational and legal systems

[01:48.06]as well as different football teams for competitions like the world cup!

[01:53.34]England is the largest of the four countries

[01:57.39]and for convenience

[01:59.35]it is divided roughly 4 into three zones.

[02:02.19]The zone nearest france is called the south of England,

[02:06.35]the middle zone is called the midlands,

[02:08.80]and the one nearest to Scotland is known as the north.

[02:13.30]You find most of the population settled in the south,

[02:17.32]but most of the large industrial cities in the midlands and north of England.

[02:22.49]Although many of the cities are not as large as those in china,

[02:27.53]they have famous football teams and some even have two.

[02:31.79]However, these industrial cities built in the 19th century

[02:37.15]do not have the historical attractions of other places.

[02:41.17]For those you have to go to older but smaller towns first built by the romans.

[02:48.01]There you will find out more about british history and culture.

[02:53.16]The greatest historical treasure of all is London with its museums,

[02:58.83]art collections, theatres, parks and buildings.

[03:03.08]It has the oldest port built by the romans in the lst century ad,

[03:08.94]the oldest building begun by the anglo-saxons

[03:13.01]in the 1060s

[03:14.76]and the oldest castle constructed by later Norman rulers in 1066.

[03:20.93]but London has been in fluenced only by some invaders 5 of England.

[03:25.94]The first invaders,the Romans ,

[03:29.60]left their towns and roads. The second,

[03:33.57]the anglo-saxons, left their language and their the fourth,

[03:45.32]the Normans, left castles and words for food.

[03:49.87]if you look around the British countryside,

[03:53.34]you will find evidence of all these invaders.

[03:59.30]if you are going to make your trip to the united kingdom worthwhile!

[04:03.74]Using language

[04:10.87]Sightseeing in London

[04:14.79]Worried about the time available,

[04:18.55]zhang pingyu had made a list of the sites

[04:21.61]she wanted to see in London.

[04:23.25]Her first delight was going to the tower.

[04:26.91]It was built long ago by the Norman invaders of ad 1066.

[04:33.16]fancy! This solid, stone, square tower had remained standing 6 for one thousand years.

[04:41.70]Although the buildings had expanded around it,

[04:44.86]it remained part of a royal palace and prison combined.

[04:48.91]To her great surprise,

[04:51.86]zhang pingyu found the queen's jewels guarded by special royal soldiers who,

[04:57.71]on special occasions 7,

[04:59.62]still wore the four-hundred -year-old uniform of the time of queen Elizabeth i


[05:06.54]There followed st pau1's cathedral

[05:09.10]built after the terrible fire of London in 1666.

[05:13.51]it looked splendid when first built!

[05:16.47]Westminster abbey, too, was very interesting.

[05:20.12]It contained statues in memory of dead poets and writers,

[05:24.56]such as Shakespeare.

[05:26.31]Then just as she came out of the abbey,

[05:29.34]pingyu heard the famous sound of the clock, big ben,

[05:33.16]ringing out the hour.

[05:34.99]She finished the day by looking at the outside of Buckingham palace,

[05:39.82]the queen's house in London. Oh ,she had so much to tell her friends!

[05:45.25]The second day the girl visited Greenwich

[05:49.01]and saw its old ships and famous clock that sets the world time.

[05:53.06]What interested her most was the longitude 8 line.

[05:57.11]It is an imaginary 9 line dividing the eastern and western halves of the world

[06:01.48]of the world and is very useful for navigation 10.

[06:05.24]It passes through Greenwich,

[06:08.01]so pingyu had a photo taken so pingyu had a photo taken standing on either side of the line.

[06:12.63]The last day she visited Karl Marx's Statue in highgate cemetery 11.

[06:18.06]It seemed strange that the man who had developed communism

[06:22.43]should have lived and died in London.

[06:24.38]Not only that,

[06:26.24]but he had worked in the famous reading room of the library of the british museum.

[06:31.10]Sadly the library had moved from its original place

[06:35.46]into another building and the old reading room was gone.

[06:39.22]But she was thrilled by so many wonderful treasures

[06:43.06]from different cultures displayed in the museum.

[06:46.22]When she saw many visitors enjoying looking at the beautiful old Chinese pots

[06:52.15]and other objects on show, she felt very proud of her country.

[06:56.80]The next day pingyu was leaving London for Windsor castle.

[07:02.37]"perhaps I will see the queen?" she wondered as she fell asleep



n.苏格兰
  • He has been hiking round Scotland for a month.他围着苏格兰徒步旅行了一个月。
  • Scotland is to the north of England.苏格兰在英格兰之北。
v.澄清,阐明,使变得清晰;净化
  • I am happy to clarify any points that are still unclear.我愿意说明任何仍然不清楚的地方。
  • Can you clarify this long sentence?你能把这个长句子解释清楚吗?
n.插座,千斤顶,男人;v.抬起,提醒,扛举;n.(Jake)杰克
  • I am looking for the headphone jack.我正在找寻头戴式耳机插孔。
  • He lifted the car with a jack to change the flat tyre.他用千斤顶把车顶起来换下瘪轮胎。
adv.概略地,粗糙地,粗鲁地
  • If you treat your coat so roughly,it will be worn out soon.你如果这么糟蹋你的外套,它很快就不能穿了。
  • The island is roughly circular in shape.这个岛屿大致是圆形的。
入侵者,侵略者,侵入物( invader的名词复数 )
  • They prepared to repel the invaders. 他们准备赶走侵略军。
  • The family has traced its ancestry to the Norman invaders. 这个家族将自己的世系追溯到诺曼征服者。
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的
  • After the earthquake only a few houses were left standing.地震过后只有几幢房屋还立着。
  • They're standing out against any change in the law.他们坚决反对对法律做任何修改。
n.机会( occasion的名词复数 );时刻;原因;需要
  • The prosecution stated that intercourse had occurred on several occasions. 控诉方称发生过数次性交。
  • He has been late on numerous occasions. 他已经迟到过无数次了。
n.经线,经度
  • The city is at longitude 21°east.这个城市位于东经21度。
  • He noted the latitude and longitude,then made a mark on the admiralty chart.他记下纬度和经度,然后在航海图上做了个标记。
adj.想象中的,假想的,虚构的,幻想的;虚数的
  • All the characters in this book are imaginary.此书中的所有人物都是虚构的。
  • The boy's fears were only imaginary.这小孩的恐惧只是一种想象。
n.航行;航海;航空
  • The compass is an instrument of navigation.罗盘是导航仪器。
  • Navigation is difficult on this river because of hidden rocks.由于多暗礁,在这条河上航行很困难。
n.坟墓,墓地,坟场
  • He was buried in the cemetery.他被葬在公墓。
  • His remains were interred in the cemetery.他的遗体葬在墓地。
学英语单词
acoprosis
adolescence subculture
Alicia Markova
annular cowling
anti-hierarchical
Aspirin-DL-ly-sine
Austis
B.S.
battlecruiser
boot storm
Brant.
Broxcil
cage compound
Calcibromin
calkil
carry the torch
Central London Railway
coiled aluminium alloy sheet
collatitious
combinatorial structure
commissure of bulbs
constant-level tube
coordinate conversion
depletion syndrome
dilatings
document preparation
EICDT
El Valle
electrostatic generators
endermosis
essence of chicken with ganoerma lucidum
etio-
extraordinary wave component
fast-walking
fauquier
fingertipped
finish to gauge
fluid inclusion
fluoform
foam quartz glass
food-chains
gain a hearing
gekhts
ground-to-ground transmission
half-time score
header blank
heteroromanticism
historio-
hot-gas supply duct
igboes
in fyll rig
incomplete closing of tongue rail
inflatons
ironic errors
junta de energia nuclear
kauluamine
keyboard equivalent
leopardesses
lifter roller
load elongation curve
machine-oriented programming language
media advocacy strategy
mercury vapor rectifier
metallic currency-based economies
mission roofing tile
multicontact gang switch
mutable class
nemorosum
nephrocirrhosis
non-metal chemical mechinery works
overenunciate
peak on-state voltage
percids
Plant Breeding and Acclimatization Institute
postcardiotomy pericarditis
prioritising
product of sets
pterocladiella capillacea
racing crab
reclaim of compensation
reversible hack saw blade
rhytid-
rolling meadows
routing protocol performance
run command error message
separate flat
shape pattern
stay upon someone's leisure
strip mall
sub-post
superior ramus of ischium
synchro-fly cutter
temporary guy
terminal table
the summit of
trichloracetic acids
umbeshadow
urethral obstruction
w.parker
weeping spruce
wind-threw
wunderman