时间:2019-01-25 作者:英语课 分类:词汇大师(Wordmaster)


英语课

AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on Wordmaster: English teacher Lida Baker 1 explains the use of the words "after" and "before."


  LIDA BAKER: "I'm going to say a few sentences and I just want you to tell me two things: Is the sentence correct? And if it's correct, which action happened first? Are you ready?"

RS: "Let's go."

LIDA BAKER: "OK, sentence number one: 'After I wash the dog, comma, I'll call my grandmother, period.'"

RS: "That's good."

LIDA BAKER: "So you think it's correct. OK, and which thing happened first: washing the dog or calling the grandmother?"

RS: "Washing the dog."

AA: "Washing the dog."

LIDA BAKER: "That's correct. Let me give you another sentence: 'I'll wash the dog, period. Afterwards, or after that, comma, I'll call my grandmother, period."

RS: "Sounds OK to me."

AA: "Yeah."

RS: "So you'll wash the dog first."

LIDA BAKER: "That's right."

AA: "I think there's a trick question number three coming up here."

LIDA BAKER: "That's -- you know me so well, Avi [laughter]. Here comes number three: 'I'll wash the dog, period. After, comma, I'll call my grandmother, period.'"

RS: "Now that's incorrect."

LIDA BAKER: "Good! But that is the mistake that a lot of people learning 2 English make."

AA: "Why don't you say that again slowly, just so we catch it here."

LIDA BAKER: "I'll wash the dog. After, I'll call my grandmother.'"

RS: "You have no subject in there. After what?"

AA: "What if you said 'After that, I'll call my grandmother'?"

LIDA BAKER: "Exactly!"

RS: "Or 'afterwards' -- "

LIDA BAKER: "That's correct."

RS: "Or 'afterwards,' you can say."

LIDA BAKER: "That's right. So the confusion 3 is that English has two different ways of connecting the actions that we're talking about.

"We have the word 'after,' which in technical terms we can call a subordinator. It's used in what are called complex sentences, which consist of two parts and they have a comma in the middle.'

"But we also have the word 'afterwards' or 'after that' which function in the say way. And what they do is they come at the beginning of a sentence and they have a comma after them."

RS: "And they're transition 4 words."

LIDA BAKER: "They're transition words, right. So English has both of these. But there are some languages that have only one; they only have the word 'after.' So students who are unaware 5 of the fact that English has two different ways of structuring the meaning here get confused and they put -- they overgeneralize and use the word 'after' and they put it in the wrong place.

"Because what they don't understand is that in English -- and this is so counterintuitive, it's exactly the opposite of what you would expect if you were learning this language -- the word 'after' signals the first event."

RS: "It signals the end of the first event."

LIDA BAKER: "Right. You can put it that way as well. But the point is, doesn't it make more sense that the word 'after' --if you put yourself in the position of an English learner, wouldn't it make more sense if the word 'after' signaled the second event?

"Because there's this potential for confusion with the words 'before' and 'after.' And you can alleviate 6 that confusion by avoiding those words and very simply writing 'and then.'

"Now actually we haven't said anything yet about the word 'before.' But it's the same case. If I say, 'Every morning, I take a shower before I eat breakfast,' what happens first?"

RS: "You take the shower."

AA: "Yeah."

LIDA BAKER: "You take the shower. And yet the second event starts with the word 'before.' See how confusing that is?"

AA: "Ohhh."

LIDA BAKER: "Here's how I would teach this: I would give students a set of written sentences containing the words 'before' and 'after.' And I would ask students to write the numbers one and two above the verbs, and identify which action happened first and which action happened second. And at the same time notice where we put the words 'before' and 'after,' so that they can begin to associate the words 'after' and 'before' with the appropriate action. In other words, the first action or the second action. So that's how I would start."

AA: English teacher Lida Baker, in Los Angeles. Her newest book is a listening-speaking text called "Real Talk," published by Pearson/Longman.

RS: And that's Wordmaster for this week. Our e-mail address is word@voanews.com and our segments 7 are all posted, at voanews.com/wordmaster. With Avi Arditti, I'm Rosanne Skirble.



n.面包师
  • The baker bakes his bread in the bakery.面包师在面包房内烤面包。
  • The baker frosted the cake with a mixture of sugar and whites of eggs.面包师在蛋糕上撒了一层白糖和蛋清的混合料。
n.学问,学识,学习;动词learn的现在分词
  • When you are learning to ride a bicycle,you often fall off.初学骑自行车时,常会从车上掉下来。
  • Learning languages isn't just a matter of remembering words.学习语言不仅仅是记些单词的事。
n.困惑,迷乱,混淆,混乱,骚乱
  • His answers to my questions have only added to my confusion.他对我的问题的回答只是使我更加困惑不解。
  • His unexpected arrival threw us into total confusion.他的突然来访使我们完全不知所措。
n.转变,变迁,过渡
  • Adolescence is the period of transition between childhood and adulthood.青春期是童年与成年之间的过渡时期。
  • They all support a peaceful transition.他们全部都支持和平过渡。
a.不知道的,未意识到的
  • They were unaware that war was near. 他们不知道战争即将爆发。
  • I was unaware of the man's presence. 我没有察觉到那人在场。
v.减轻,缓和,缓解(痛苦等)
  • The doctor gave her an injection to alleviate the pain.医生给她注射以减轻疼痛。
  • Nothing could alleviate his distress.什么都不能减轻他的痛苦。
部分( segment的名词复数 ); 瓣; [计算机](字符等的)分段; [动物学]节片
  • He is eating oranges in segments. 他正在一瓣瓣地吃橘子。
  • Gene cloning provides a means of purifying and propagating specific DNA segments. 基因克隆化提供了一种纯化和扩增特定DNA片段的方法。
学英语单词
a game changer
Abaji
Alzano
basic orifice factor
bathyscaph
Bertrand, Joseph
block-like structure
broadcasts
carnochan
channel control character
cirque step
cleave the pin
clude
compensating lens
content architecture level
copy-and-paste
cruising missile
dahabeah, dahabeeyah, dahabiah
de Saussure
disaster assistance response team
equilateral roof
evaporating dish,evaporating pan
exterior walls
extra-atmospheric space
forty-
Frigg
fuming tin chloride
gamophyte
Gelineau's syndrome
general licence
gilkey
glandular preparations manufacture
gross dry weight
grouping of blood stain
groupmate
high-silicon iron
honey-comb meat
identity cipher
infundibular stenosis
insoluble azo color
jablonica p.
juxtarestiform
Kbal Stung, Phnom
Kedron
keramist
ketoaldoses
key witness
knifings
Křinec
light-minutes
lubrication problem
machinery control and surveillance
magnetic pull
man and material hoist
margo lateralis
marking up price
mask programmable read-only-memory
meniscus effect
Miskolc
mouthfuck
nervi dorsalis scapulae
nipple swedged
oiltight hatch cover
onion cloth
operational store
otogenic
Oxytropis avisoides
physical variable
plastic phenomena
price of award
projective minimal surface
pseudodragon
public sector of agriculture
r/m
Radix Glycyrrhizae
repacking expenses
rosebed
rosenzweigs
rotary cam type automatic voltage regulator
RTTY
sacrificial victim
sand load
science students
Sheerness
Shortland Bluff
shwe
single association control function
SOS (symbolic operating system)
system decision
tenor saxophonist
the Galilean
thyrostachys siamensis (kurz)gamble kyaung-wa
tippeton
veteran car
vinyl chloride-vinylidene chloride resin
volcanology
weldable structural steel
whole-systems
wide forms
window analyzer
wood louse