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perfectness (n.) ÍêÈ«£¬¾«Í¨£¬·ÖºÁ²»²î

imperfect (adj.) ²»ÍêÃÀµÄ£¬ÓÐȱµãµÄ£¬Î´Íê³ÉµÄ imperfection (n..) ²»ÍêÈ«£¬²»Í걸£¬È±µã imperfectness (n.) ²»ÍêÃÀ£¬²»Í걸 imperfective (adj.) ²»¿ÉÄÜÍêÉÆµÄ

e.g. He needs to perfect his spoken English before going to work in Canada. ËûÐèÒª°ÑÓ¢Óï¿ÚÓïѧºÃ²ÅÄܵ½¼ÓÄôó¹¤×÷¡£

Everyday we should walk on the road of pursuing perfection. ÿһÌìÎÒÃǶ¼Ó¦¸Ã×ßÔÚ×·ÇóÍêÃÀµÄ·ÉÏ¡£

Flawless as he is, he goes along with an imperfect life. ËûÊÇÒ»¸öÍêÃÀµÄÈË£¬È´¹ý×ÅÒ»ÖÖ²¢²»ÍêÃÀµÄÉú»î¡£

5. strong (adj.£©Ç¿×³µÄ£¬Ç¿Áҵ쬼áÇ¿µÄ£¬Å¨µÄ strength (n.) Á¦Æø£¬Á¦Á¿£¬³¤´¦£¬Ç¿¶È strengthen (v.) ¼ÓÇ¿£¬±ä¼á¹Ì strengthless (adj.) ÎÞÁ¦Á¿µÄ

e.g. Reliability is our strong point. ¿É¿¿ÐÔÊÇÎÒÃǵÄÓŵ㡣

I believe in that definition very strongly. ÎÒ¼áÐÅÄǸö¶¨ÒåÊǶԵÄ. We renew our strength in sleep. ÎÒÃÇÒÔ˯ÃßÀ´»Ö¸´ÌåÁ¦¡£

You're too weak; and you'd better strengthen with rich food. ÄãµÄÉíÌåÌ«ÐéÈõÁË£¬µÃ²¹Ñø²¹Ñø¡£

6. shame (n. v.)ÐßÀ¢£¬³ÜÈè shameful (adj.) ¿É³ÜµÄ shameless (adj.) Î޳ܵÄ

shamefulness (n.) ¿É³Ü£¬²»ÃûÓþ shameable (adj.) ÐßÀ¢µÄ

e.g. He felt no shame and no regret. Ëû¼È²»¸Ðµ½ÐßÀ¢£¬Ò²²»¸Ðµ½Òź¶¡£

Are you not ashamed of your shameful behavior? Ä㲻ΪÄãµÄÐÐΪ¿É³Ü¶ø¸Ðµ½ÐßÀ¢Âð? He is a shameless liar. ËûÊÇÒ»¸ö¨DÎ޳ܡ¬µÄÈö»ÑÕß¡£

Thirty years later, when I recall the memory, I still feel a bit of shamefulness to her. 30ÄêÒԺ󣬵±ÎÒ»ØÏëÆðÍùÊ£¬ÒÀ¾É¶ÔËýÓÐÐßÀ¢¸Ð¡£

7. grateful (adj.)¸Ð¼¤µÄ£¬¸ÐлµÄ gratitude (n.) ¸Ð¶÷Ö®ÐÄ

gratify (v.) ʹÂú×㣬ʹ¸ßÐË gratification (n.) Âú×㣬ϲÔÃ

gratuitous (adj.) Ãâ·ÑµÄ£¬ÎÞÔµÎ޹ʵÄ

e.g. I am very grateful for all the help. ÎҸм¤ËùÓжÔÎҵİïÖú¡£ He smiled at them with gratitude. ËûÏòËûÃÇЦÁËЦ±íʾлÒâ¡£ Does it gratify your curiosity? ÕâÊÇ·ñÂú×ãÁËÄãµÄºÃÆæÐÄ£¿

His success is a great gratification to us. ËûµÄ³É¹¦¶ÔÎÒÃÇÊÇÒ»´óϲÊ¡£

8. young (adj.) ÄêÇáµÄ£¬Ã»Óо­ÑéµÄ£¬³õÆÚ

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youngster (n.) ÄêÇáÈË£¬ÉÙÄ꣬С»ï×Ó£¬¶ùͯ youthful (adj.) ÄêÇáµÄ£¬ÓÐÇà´º»îÁ¦µÄ youth (n.) ÄêÇᣬ³õÆÚ£¬Çà´º youthhood (n.) Çà´ºÆÚ£¬ÉÙ׳ÆÚ youthy (adj.) ÄêÇáµÄ£¬ÉÙ׳µÄ youthen (v.) ʹ¡­¡­±äÄêÇá youthify (v.) ʹÏÔµÃÄêÇá

e.g. Celebrations are for young people. Çì×£ÊÇÊôÓÚÄêÇáÈ˵ġ£

My youth and youthful strength fled long ago. ÎÒµÄÇà´ººÍÇà´ºµÄ»îÁ¦ÔçÒÑÏûʧ¡£ There is a little pain in our youthhood. ÎÒÃǵÄÇà´ºÖÐÓÐÒ»µãÍ´³þ¡£

II. Grammar Exercises

1. Some, any, all, each, every and their compounds

Some, any, all, each and every can be used together with other words to build new compounds, such as someone, anywhere, everything, etc. But the basic usages of these words don¡¯t change. For example, generally we still use some- in positive sentences, and use any- in non-affirmative contexts or to refer to non-specific, unspecified things. We still use every- to emphasize we are talking about a group as a whole rather than as individuals. e.g. I was visiting some friends last week.

It was impossible to see anything in the dark.

Everyone was waiting to hear the results. (= All were waiting to hear the results.)

Practice: Put in some, any, each, every or one of their compounds. 1. I had __________ reason to believe that she would keep my secret.

2. I must get to the shops __________ or other this afternoon. I haven¡¯t got _________ in the house for supper.

3. In a rugby league game __________ side has 13 players. 4. She left her handbag __________ and now she can¡¯t find it.

5. They sought solace in religion from the harshness of their __________ lives.

6. Do you know ________ who would be interested in a position as a receptionist in our office? We need _________ with a really friendly manner.

Keys: 1. every

2. sometime, anything (¨DSometime or other¡¬ means sooner or later.)

3. each (Each emphasizes that we are thinking of the two sides separately.) 4. somewhere 5. everyday

6. anyone, someone

2. Countable and uncountable nouns

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Common nouns can be classified into 1) countable nouns and uncountable nouns, or 2)

individual nouns, collective nouns, material nouns and abstract nouns. Usually individual nouns and collective nouns are countable while material nouns and abstract nouns are uncountable. But sometimes abstract nouns and material nouns can be countable if they are used in specific sense, for example with an attribute.

e.g. My children are a great joy (an attribute) to me.

His room, at sixteen dollars a day, was a disappointment (something specific, and something that disappoints people).

Sri Lanka produces many teas (many kinds of tea).

Practice: Choose the best answer.

1. The earthquake caused ______ to the district.

A. damage B. a damage C. damages D. the damage 2. As everyone knows, warm ______ is comfortable in winter. A. clothes B. clothings C. cloth D. clothing

3. ______ of English is essential for those who apply for the post. A. Good knowledge B. A good knowledge C. Good knowledges D. The good knowledge 4. Clint will give us _______ on our grammar study.

A. an advice B. some advice C. some advices D. advices 5. Ten years had elapsed, I found she had ________.

A. a few white hairs B. much white hair C. a little white hairs D. few white hair

Keys: 1. A 2. D 3. B 4. B 5. A

3. Prepositions

Prepositions are a class of structural words that indicate various semantic relations between words or expressions. Some adjectives, nouns and verbs can collocate with prepositions to form adjective phrases, noun phrases and verb phrases.

e.g. His parents will be disappointed with her if she fails the exam.

I would support a ban on smoking in restaurants.

He doesn¡¯t seem to care about the effect smoking has on him.

Practice: Insert suitable prepositions in the following sentences.

1. I object ________ being kept waiting. Why are you always late ________ appointments? 2. I have no intention ________ lending Dan any more money.

3. After years of service in the Cairo embassy, M. Lapierre has become extremely adept ________ Middle East diplomacy.

4. There is no doubt that she can produce work that is equal ________ anyone else¡¯s in her class. 5. Although he had no criminal record, police are inquiring ________ some of Wilson¡¯s business deals.

6. A lot of Japanese students of English have difficult ________ the pronunciation of ¨Db¡¬s and ¨Dv¡¬s.

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Keys:

1. to, for 2. of 3. at / in 4. to 5. into 6. in

III. Translation exercises

1. Õâ¸öµØÇøµÄ¾¯²ìÖªµÀÄÇЩС͵¾­³£³öûÓÚÄÄЩµØ·½¡£(hang out) Explanation:

If you \often stay with him. Translation:

The police in this district know where the thieves usually hang out. Practice:

Îҿɲ»Ïë×ÜÊǺÍÕâȺÈË»ìÔÚÒ»Æð¡£

I don't always want to hang out with the group.

ÊÖÀïÓÐÁËÇ®£¬Õ⺢×ÓÈ¥ÁËÆäËûÄêÇáÈËϲ»¶È¥µÄµØ·½¡£

Having money to burn, the child goes to places where other young people just like them hang out.

×÷Ϊº¢×Ó£¬ÎÒÃǺÍĸÇ×Éú»îÔÚ²»Í¬µÄÊÀ½çÀÕâÊÇÒ»¸öĸÇ׳£³öÏÖµÄÊÀ½ç¡£

As teenagers we live in a different world from our mothers, a world where mothers hang out on the peripheries.

2. ÕâЩǩÊðµÄЭÒ齫³åÆÆ¶Ô×ÔÓÉóÒ×ÉèÖõÄËùÓÐÕϰ­¡£(break down) Explanation:

\working together and having a successful relationship with each other. If something breaks down, it fails to work. Translation:

The agreement signed will break down all the barriers to free trade. Practice:

ÓÐʲôÄܱ£Ö¤Ëü²»»áÇáÒ׳ö¹ÊÕÏ£¿

What guarantee do I have that it won't break down easily? µ±Óû§¹¤×÷ʱ£¬Ê¹Óù¤¾ßµÄÊýÁ¿Ì«¶à½«»áÓ°Ï칤×÷ЧÂÊ¡£

The efficiencies break down when the quantity of tools in a user¡¯s working set gets too large.

ÓÐÁ˺¢×Ó£¬·òÆÞÖ®¼ä¾Í»áÇ×ÃÜÆðÀ´£¬´òÆÆÄ¿Ç°±Ë´ËÖ®¼äÎÞÐεĸôºÒ¡£

Children would bring the husband and wife close together and break down this invisible barrier.

3. ËûÊÇÎÒ×îºÃµÄÅóÓÑ¡£¼ÈÈ»ËûÐèÒªÎҵİïÖú£¬Îҿɲ»ÄܶÔËûÖÃÖ®²»Àí¡£(turn one¡¯s back on) Explanation:

If someone turns his back on you, he refuses to help you when you are in need of help. Translation:

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