时间:2018-12-27 作者:英语课 分类:一起听英语


英语课

 苏格兰高原也是苏格兰的一大特色,那里风景壮丽.....


Callum: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English, I'm Callum Robertson and joining me


today for the first time is Finn, hello Finn


Finn: Hello Callum.


Callum: One of my favourite places in the world is the Highlands of Scotland. Is that a


place you are familiar with Finn?


Finn: Absolutely, very familiar.


Callum: And could you describe: where are the Highlands and what are the Highlands?


Finn: Well the Highlands are a group of mountains in the north west of Scotland. Very


barren 2 mountains but an incredibly beautiful part of the country and popular with


people who like hill-walking and camping and things like that.


Callum: Well as always in 6 Minute English we start with a question. And today's is about


traditional Highland 1 dress. Where would a Highlander 3 in traditional dress wear his


sporran? Would it be …


a: on his head?


b: around his waist?


c: on his feet?


 


Finn, do you know this one?


Finn: I think I have an idea! I would say b: around his waist. 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 2 of 4


Callum: Well we'll find out if you're right later on.


As we've said the Scottish Highlands is a beautiful place with its mountains and


valleys. We could describe it as having a grandeur 4 - a 'grandeur'. What does that


mean Finn?


Finn: Well, it's a noun and it's used for a place that has a particularly impressive quality.


Now it's often used to describe natural landscapes – so we could say that the


Scottish Highlands has a breathtaking grandeur.


Callum: That's right. But all is not well in the Highlands. Its grandeur is being spoiled and


has been spoiled for many years. What's causing this problem? Here's BBC


reporter James Cook


James Cook


For thousands of years the grandeur of this landscape has been marred 5 by the misery 6 of the midge.


But now they're being trapped by researchers from Edinburgh. Here they are fighting a big battle


with the tiniest of monsters.


Callum: Finn, what's causing the problems in the Highlands?


Finn: Well it’s something called the midge, which is also known as the midgie. The


reporter called it the misery of the midge.


Callum: Yes, he used the phrase that 'the grandeur of the landscape has been marred by the


misery of the midge'.


Finn: 'Marred by the misery of the midge'. Yes, lots of words beginning with 'm' –


'marred by the misery of the midge'. 'Marred by' means 'spoiled by' or 'ruined by' –


and he's referring to the unhappiness or misery caused by the midge. And later in


the report he calls the midge the 'tiniest of monsters'.


Callum: So the midge is called the 'tiniest of monsters' – but what is a midge? 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 3 of 4


Finn: Well a midge, or a midgie, as I like to call it, are very small flying insects which


bite, and they are all over the Highlands.


Callum: We'll learn a little more about midges shortly but let's listen to the first part of the


report again.


James Cook


For thousands of years the grandeur of this landscape has been marred by the misery of the midge.


But now they're being trapped by researchers from Edinburgh. Here they are fighting a big battle


with the tiniest of monsters.


Callum: BBC reporter James Cook there. So why are the midges so bad? What makes them


monsters? Dr Alison Blackwell is working on ways to control midges. She


describes what they do.


Dr Alison Blackwell


A midge has a set of mouth parts that like shearing 7 scissors and they cut a hole in your skin and


create a pool of blood and then they put their mouth parts in and suck from that. And that itself


can be very painful. Every tourist you speak to has had a midgie experience and I myself have left


campsites early because the midges have been so bad.


Callum: So Finn, what makes midges so bad?


Finn: Well, Dr Blackwell there describes their mouth parts as like a pair of shearing


scissors. Now, so not just an ordinary pair of scissors, but scissors with a rough


blade, like a saw. So when they bite, and they do like to bite, they cut a hole in


your skin and then they drink your blood and that can be very painful.


Callum: And she goes on to say that every tourist has experienced them.


Finn: Yes, and she herself has ended her holiday early because they were so bad.


Callum: Let's listen again 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 4 of 4


Dr Alison Blackwell


A midge has a set of mouth parts that like shearing scissors and they cut a hole in your skin and


create a pool of blood and then they put their mouth parts in and suck from that. And that itself


can be very painful. Every tourist you speak to has had a midgie experience and I myself have left


campsites early because the midges have been so bad.


Callum: Dr. Blackwell there. Now I think we have to say Finn here that midges are tiny,


tiny insects – it's not like there are huge beasts flying around Scotland drinking the


blood of the tourists!


Finn: Now they're tiny, they're really really small. But, what they lack in size they make


up for in number. Sometimes when you're walking in the Highlands you'll see


ahead of you what looks like a little cloud. But now this cloud is not a water cloud


or a rain cloud, it's a cloud of midgies. There's so many that they look like a black


cloud. But let's not let it put us off going to the Highlands, though.


Callum: No, I'd certainly still recommend the Highlands as a place to visit. It is beautiful


but just be sure to get some good insect repellent and suitable clothing.


Well just time now for the answer to today's question. Where would a Highlander


in traditional dress wear his sporran?


Finn, you said?


Finn: I said b: around his waist.


Callum: And of course you'd be right because a sporran is a kind of a purse, isn't it? Where


you can keep your money.


Finn: Keep you money, and your whisky!


Callum: Well that's all we time for today, but do join us again next time for another 6


Minute English. Good bye.


Finn: Goodbye. 



1 highland
n.(pl.)高地,山地
  • The highland game is part of Scotland's cultural heritage.苏格兰高地游戏是苏格兰文化遗产的一部分。
  • The highland forests where few hunters venture have long been the bear's sanctuary.这片只有少数猎人涉险的高山森林,一直都是黑熊的避难所。
2 barren
adj.贫瘠的,不(生)育的,没有结果的
  • The place used to be a stretch of barren land.早先这里是一片不毛之地。
  • The barren land could produce little food.那贫瘠的土地几乎不长庄稼。
3 highlander
n.高地的人,苏格兰高地地区的人
  • They call him the highlander, he is Rory McLeod! 他们叫他寻事者,他是罗瑞·麦克劳德! 来自互联网
4 grandeur
n.伟大,崇高,宏伟,庄严,豪华
  • The grandeur of the Great Wall is unmatched.长城的壮观是独一无二的。
  • These ruins sufficiently attest the former grandeur of the place.这些遗迹充分证明此处昔日的宏伟。
5 marred
adj. 被损毁, 污损的
  • The game was marred by the behaviour of drunken fans. 喝醉了的球迷行为不轨,把比赛给搅了。
  • Bad diction marred the effectiveness of his speech. 措词不当影响了他演说的效果。
6 misery
n.痛苦,苦恼,苦难;悲惨的境遇,贫苦
  • Business depression usually causes misery among the working class.商业不景气常使工薪阶层受苦。
  • He has rescued me from the mire of misery.他把我从苦海里救了出来。
7 shearing
n.剪羊毛,剪取的羊毛v.剪羊毛( shear的现在分词 );切断;剪切
  • The farmer is shearing his sheep. 那农夫正在给他的羊剪毛。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • The result of this shearing force is to push the endoplasm forward. 这种剪切力作用的结果是推动内质向前。 来自辞典例句
学英语单词
AC-electronic motor
acute toxic encephalopathy
adaptive multibeam phased array
additional extended coverage
agricultural experiment
alkali-resisting paint
all cut-set
anticoding strand
arail
ashizawa
bare-faced tenon
bio-defense
bleed out
bogotifies
Bream, Julian(Alexander)
business barometer
Cabadbaran R.
calorie meter
cavalettis
celtis occidentaliss
ColifosPhosphorylcholine
connecting strand
cornucoquimba feijann
cotoneaster niteus rehd .et wils
Delphinium glaciale
deposition process
desimirs
diploid merogony
doubling up method
dynamic reversibility
ech
elastic caulking material
erusibite
EUNDH (equivalent unit derated hour)
fifoot
firm-commitment offering
foordite
Franchise agreement
full-floating stub axle
gland steam control valve
go on shift
head-hunted
hilda taba teaching strategies
Hongdo
Hydrangea macrophylla hortensis
infantry battalion
input/output efficiency
itinerating auditor
Juso
Kajuru
Kliprivier
Lactobacilius helveticus
loss of biodiversity
M. Eng.
maize picker husker
Malet
mercurialities
mescocolloid
minicomic
model reference adaptive control system
Morolong
multirole
North Truro
oil flotation
osney
outage time
outvoiced
partial double error detecting
pedlock
Pinnaticosta
pressure-sensitive pat
principiate
propeller blade speed
protection of outer radiation
rate of utilization of working time of equipment
refusewagon
regional verification office
resonant grounder system
resubduing
retunes
rfas
Rifadin
Saint Peter's sandstone
salted and dried food
self-consistent scheme
shergars
simplemindedly
single-status
sisting
soothsays
sovereign debt
spirillum minus rat-bite fever
stability of dam foundation
steriliser
telluric effluvium
three crystal electron interferometer
transvaalin
Tricladida
ustilaginaceaes
vacuum shelf dryer
zetta-volt