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发布时间 : 星期四 文章新编英语教程6答案更新完毕开始阅读565106feb94ae45c3b3567ec102de2bd9605de89

新编英语教程6答案

编英语教程(第三版) unit6练习册答案

s=txt>1. changed, promising 2. coming, qualified 3. determined 4. spoken, leading, surprising 5. frightening b.1. giving 2. fascinated, rising / rise 3. singing, to do, making

4. keeping, playing, to be, to see, climbing 5. opening 6. to take, shopping, doing, to do

7. to have remembered, to tell, preparing, to do 8. to watch, to read, reading, watching 9. missing, to tell 10. to be taken 11. swimming, cleaning, to do

12. waiting, seeing, missing, to find, to be

6. demanding 7. pleased, soiled 8. complicated 9. interested, exciting, soaked 10. tiring, tired

c.1. for 2. to 3. of 4. on 5. read 6. across 7. about / for d. 1. speaking 2. before 3. by 4. few 5. developed 6. how 7. writing

8. in 9. until / till 10. opinion 11. by 12. keep 13. excellent 14. time

8. step 9. or 10. of 11. found 12. from 13. ideas 14. used

15. pleasure 16. from 17. yourself 18. in 19. filled 20. trains 21. but

15. the 16. first 17. represent 18. can 19. language 20. making 21. world

22. meeting 23. things 24. attitude 25. for 22. to 23. of 24. only 25. way vi. sentence rewriting a.

1. whenever he … bookshop, he …away from it. 2. whoever he is, he … law. 3. wherever he went, poor … life. 4. whatever you may say, i … thing. 5. however hard he tries, he … satisfactorily

6. don’t …, whoever repeats it. / whoever repeats it, don’t… 7. however annoying his behavior is / may be, we … him. 8. whatever he … say, i … going.

9. keep calm, whatever happens. / whatever happens, keep … 10. the boy…, wherever he is. / wherever …, the boy… b.

1. to his great joy, his uncle … present. 2. much to our relief, the plane … last.

3. to the surprise of the teacher, yang ling had … heart. 4. to our grief, professor hu died of cancer last week. 5. to my satisfaction, his statement is correct.

6. to the disappointment of the students, the book …

bookshops. 7. to their indignation, john was unfairly dismissed.

【篇二:新编英语教程第六册练习册paraphrase答案】

nothing in life is more exciting and rewarding than the sudden flash of light that leaves you a changed person--not only changed, but changed for the better.

the most inspiring and gratifying fact of life is the unexpected spark of enlightenment that makes you different and a better person than before.

2. he came across the street, finally, muffled in his ancient overcoat, shapeless felt hat pulled down over his bald head, looking more like an energetic gnome than an eminent psychiatrist.

at last he walked over from the other side of the street,

wrapped in his old-fashioned overcoat, his bald head covered by a shapeless felt hat. he looked like a dwarfish old man full of energy rather than a well-known psychiatrist.

3. the woman who spoke next had never married because of a sense of obligation to her widowed mother; she recalled bitterly all the marital chances she had let go by.

the next speaker on the tape was a woman who had remained single because she thought she was obliged to take care of her mother who was a widow. she still remembered and told others miserably about all the chances of marriage she had missed. 4. in the end, if you let it become a habit, it can become a real roadblock, an excuse for not trying any more.

eventually, if you form a habit of saying “if only”, the phrase can really turn to an obstruction, providing you with an excuse for giving up trying anything at all.

5. ... you never got out of the past tense. not once did you mention the future.

…you are always thinking of the past, regretting and

lamenting. you did not look forward to what you can do in the future at all.

6. my, my, said the old man slyly. if only we had come down ten seconds sooner, wed have caught that cab, wouldnt we?

the old man said to me trickily, using the phrase “if only” on purpose, “if only we’d got here ten seconds earlier, we’d have caught the cab.” i laughed and understood what he meant. so i followed his advice and said, “next time i’ll run faster”. unit 2

1. moses pleaded a speech defect to rationalize his reluctance to deliver jehovahs edict to pharaoh. moses justified his

unwillingness to pass jehovah’s order to pharaoh, saying that he was “slow of speech”.

2. yet for all the trouble procrastination may incur, delay can often inspire and revive a creative soul.

delay leads to problems. however, in many cases, it can often stimulate the creativity in an artist.

3. he notes that speedy action can be embarrassing or extremely costly.

he points out that hastiness may give rise to decision which turn out to be humiliating or expensive.

4. bureaucratization, which flourished amid the growing

burdens of government and the greater complexity of society, was designed to smother policymakers in blankets of legalism, compromise and reappraisal---and thereby prevent hasty decisions from being made.

excessive red-tape(官样文章;繁文缛节) developed because public administration was expanding in scope and because

society was growing more and more complicated. in this sense, red-tape helped those in charge of policy to be fully engaged in enormous amount of paperwork and judgment, thus making it impossible for an immature decision to result.

5. ...many of my friends go through agonies when they face a blank page.

…many of my friends have a hard time the moment they attempt to put pen to paper. unit 3

1. of course, my father is a gentleman of the old school, a member of the generation to whom a good deal of modern

architecture is unnerving; but i suspect---i more than suspect, i am convinced---that his negative response was not so much to the architecture as to a violation of his concept of the nature of money.

brought up in the old tradition, my father is naturally not prepared to accept the idea of modern architecture; his

objection to it, i would assume, indeed i should say i am pretty sure, is not a result of his strong dislike of the physical building itself, but rather that of his refusal to change his attitude towards money.

2. if a buildings design made it appear impregnable, the institution was necessarily sound, and the meaning of the heavy wall as an architectural symbol dwelt in the prevailing attitude toward money, rather than in any aesthetic theory.

if a building was made to look sturdy/invulnerable, it would be accordingly regarded as reliable, and the significance of the thick walls would be measured not by their artistic value, but by their seeming ability to provide a safe location for money. 3. in a primitive society, for example, men pictured the world as large, fearsome, hostile, and beyond human control.

people in a primitive society, for example, saw the world as an enormous planet full of fear, hatred and disorder.

4.the principal function of todays wall is to separate possible undesirable outside air from the controlled conditions of temperature and humidity which we have created inside.

today a wall serves mainly as a physical means to protect the desired atmosphere inside from being disturbed by anything unwelcome outside.

5. to repeat, it is not our advanced technology, but our

changing conceptions of ourselves in relation to the world that determine how we shall build our walls.

again, the decisive factor that can influence the design of a wall is not the advancement of science and technology, but our ever-changing attitude towards our place in this world. unit 4

1. he was a man of exuberant fancy, and, withal, of an

authority so irresistible that, at his will, he turned his varied fancies into facts.

he was a man rich in whimsies, and intolerant of any act bold enough as to challenge his authority. when his mind caught upon something, absurd as it might be, he would do

everything to make sure that it was done in the way he wished. 2. when every member of his domestic and political systems moved smoothly in its appointed course, his nature was bland