23) Originally, the doctors believed that his cancer was incurable. After viewing the tumor cells
under a microscope, they found that this form of cancer was curable with surgery. They cried because they were happy for Steve Jobs.
24) He wanted to say that one?s time was limited. So, don?t waste time. Don?t be trapped by
dogma. One should have the courage to follow heart and intuition.
25) He quoted a sentence from The Whole Earth Catalogue and wished them ¡°Stay hungry, stay
foolish¡±.
26) Most students would most probably accept the following points:
i. Be eager to learn and remain intellectually curious all your life. ii. Be open to new ideas and thoughts and never be trapped by dogma or
conventions.
iii. Never feel satisfied with what you have learned or achieved. iv. Always feel hungry for knowledge and success and never rest on your laurels. v. Remain humble and modest no matter how successful you may be. vi. Always be wise enough to know what you really are and have the courage to
follow your curiosity and intuition.
vii. Never assume that you?re the smartest guy in the world and be always ready to
learn from others.
Exercise 2:Text A can be divided into three parts. Now write down the paragraph number(s) of each part and then give the main idea of each in one or two sentences.
Part Paragraph(s) Main Idea
One Two
1 2-18
Steve Jobs starts the commencement address by talking about
his educational background.
He tells three stories from his life. The first story, which is about connecting the dots, tells the graduates to follow their curiosity and intuition. The second story, which is about love and loss, encourages the graduates to find out what they love and keeploving what they do. The third story, which is about death, tells the graduates not to waste their time but to have the courage to follow heart and intuition instead of worrying about others? opinion.
Steve Jobs ends his speech by quoting the sentence ¡°Stay hungry, stay foolish¡± from TheWhole Earth Catalogue.
Three
19-20
3. Key Words and Expressions for Text A
truth be told £¨ÓÃÓÚ±íÃ÷ºóÃæËµ³öµÄÊÇÕæÏà»òÕæ³ÏµÄ»°£©ËµÊµ»°£» ËµÕæµÄ£» ÀÏʵ˵£» ˵¾äÕæÐÄ»°
e.g.1. Look, truth be told, I don?t want to move and live in the country.
2. Truth be told, lions are only on their paws for about 4-5 hours a day. ÊÂʵÉÏ£¬Ê¨×ÓÿÌìÓÃצ×ÓÕ¾Á¢µÄʱ¼äÖ»ÓÐ4-5¸öСʱ¡£
3. Truth be told, I can?t really remember what I did do in those six months. ˵ʵ»°£¬ÎÒÕæµÄ²»¼ÇµÃÄÇÁù¸öÔÂÀïÎÒ×ö¹ýʲô¡£ drop out
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1. [(of)] stop attending or taking part [³£ÓëofÁ¬ÓÃ]²»²Î¼Ó£¬Í˳ö£»ÍËѧ e.g. 1) My mother dropped out of school when she was only 10.
2) She dropped out after 20 kilometers with stomach trouble. 20 ¹«ÀïºóËýÒòθʹ¶øÍ˳öÁ˱ÈÈü¡£
2. To withdraw from established society, especially because of disillusion with conventional values¾Ü¾ø½ÓÊÜ´«Í³¹æ·¶;±÷ÆúÉç»áϰË×
e.g. 1) She encourages people to keep their jobs rather than dropping out to live in a commune.
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2) She longed to drop out of the race and make an independent life for herself. ËýÕæÏëÍÑÀëÕâ¸öȦ×ÓÈ¥¹ý×ÔÓɵÄÉú»î¡£
adopt vt.
1. take (sb. else?s child) into one?s family for ever and take on the full responsibilities in law of a parent ³Ð¼Ì£¬ÊÕÑø
e.g.1) Because she was not economically independent, she was forced to have her baby adopted.
2) Many childless couples adopt children. Ðí¶àÎÞ×ÓÅ®µÄ·ò¸¾ÊÕÑøº¢×Ó¡£
2. to start to deal with or think about something in a particular way ²ÉÈ¡£¬²ÉÄÉ£¬²ÉÓà e.g.1) Parliament adopted a resolution calling for the complete withdrawal of troops.
Òé»á²ÉÄÉÁËÒªÇóÈ«²¿³·¾üµÄ¾öÒé¡£
2) Pupils should be helped to adopt a positive approach to the environment. Ó¦°ïÖúѧÉú¶Ô»·¾³²ÉÈ¡»ý¼«µÄ̬¶È¡£
figure out come to understand or discover by thinking Àí½â£¬Ïë³ö
e.g. 1. I cannot figure out why the teacher always asks me to answer his questions in class.
2. I can?t figure out what he was hinting at. ÎÒÏë²»³öËûÔÚ°µÊ¾Ê²Ã´¡£
drop in visit unexpectedly or informally ˳µÀ°Ý·Ã£¬£¨Î´ÊÂÏÈ֪ͨ¶ø£©Ôì·Ã e.g. 1. Why don?t you drop in for a drink one evening?
2. She spent most of the day dropping in on friends in Edinburgh. ËýÒ»ÌìµÄ´ó²¿·Öʱ¼ä¶¼ÓÃÀ´°Ý·ÃÔÚ°®¶¡±¤µÄÅóÓÑÁË¡£ 3. It?s improper to drop in on him so casually. ÕâÑùððʧʧȥÕÒËû¿É²»ºÃ¡£
call on, see, visit, drop in
ÕâЩ¶¯´Ê»ò´Ê×é¾ùº¬ÓС°°Ý·Ã£¬·ÃÎÊ¡±Ö®Òâ¡£
call on: Éç½»ÉϵÄÕýʽÓÃÓָÎÞÄ¿µÄ¡¢Àñ½ÚÐԵĶÌÔݰݷ㬷ÃÎÊÕßÓë±»·ÃÎÊÕßÖ®¼äÒ»
°ãÖ»ÓÐÉç½»»ò¹«Îñ¹ØÏµ¡£
see: ³£Óôʣ¬º¬Òå¹ã·º£¬¼È¿ÉÖ¸½ÓÊÜËûÈËÀ´·Ã£¬ÓÖ¿Éָȥ·ÃÎÊËûÈË¡£ visit: ÕýʽÓôʣ¬Ç¿µ÷³öÓÚ¹¤×÷ÐèÒªµÄ·ÃÎÊ£¬Ò²Ö¸ÇׯÝÅóÓѼäµÄ¿´Íû¡£
drop in: ¶àÖ¸Ôڼƻ®Ö®Íâ»òÊÂÏÈδ´òÕкôµÄżȻ¡¢Ë³±ã·ÃÎÊ¡£Ò²¿ÉÖ¸²Î¹Û¡£
stumble into sth. become involved in sth. by chanceżȻ¾íÈ룬ÎÞÒâÖоíÈë e.g.1. Jane stumbled into acting after she graduated from a medical college.
2. In a moment he stumbled into a trap, set by bear-catcher. ²»Ò»»á¶ùËû°íµøµ½²¶ÐÜÈËÉèµÄÏÝÚåÀï¡£
3. Not seeing the brick in the path, Carl tripped and stumbled into the wall.
space vt. [usu. pass.] place apart; arrange with spaces between [Ò»°ãÓñ»¶¯Óï̬]£¨Óüä¸ô£©·Ö¸ô¿ª
e.g. 1. You must space out the posts three meters apart according to the requirement.
2. Women once again are having fewer children and spacing them further apart. Å®ÈËÔٴμõÉÙÁËÉúº¢×ÓµÄÊýÁ¿£¬¶øÇÒÉúÓýÖ®¼äÏà¸ôµÄʱ¼äÒ²¸ü³¤ÁË¡£
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