黄葵-陈情是什么意思
meet是什么意思
篇一:meet & meet
with
meet 与 meet with 的区别
两者的基本义均为“遇到”,其用法和区别大致如下:
1.
表示约见某人、迎接某人、认识某人等,通常要用 meet。如:
Where shall
we meet (each other)? 我们在什么地方见面?
We went
to the station to meet her. 我们去车站接她。
Glad
to meet you. 认识你很高兴。
2. 表示偶然遇到某人,可用 meet 或
meet with;表示偶然遇到某物,通常用 meet with。
如:
I
met (with) an old friend in the street yesterday.
昨天我在街上遇到一位老朋友。 I
sometimes met with such fish
in the market. 我有时在市场上见到那样的鱼。
注:若表示在阅读
时偶然遇到某词或短语等,则可以用 meet 或meet with。如:
I’ve met (with) this word many
times in my
reading. 我在阅读中多次见过这个词。
3.
对于困难、不幸、失败、拒绝、反对、暴力等不利的东西,若是指主观上的应付通常
用
meet,若是指客观上的遭遇则通常用 meet with,有时也用 meet。如: Heroes
can meet
danger bravely. 英雄能够临危不惧。
We’ll try our best to meet the difficulty.
我们将尽力对付困难。
He met (with) an accident on
his way home. 他在回家的路上出了意外(车祸)。 I met (with)
a
lot of difficulties in the work. 我在工作中遇到很多困难。
4. 表示满足需要、符合要求、达到希望等,通常用 meet;
表示受到欢迎、得到支持、
获得批准等,通常有 meet with。如:
Does this meet your needs? 这能满足你的需要吗?
We’ll try to meet the demands of the people.
我们要尽力满足人民的要求。 They met with
a warm welcome.
他们受到热烈欢迎。
The planapproval. 该计划获得批准。
篇二:2014 新PEP 五年级上册 课文全翻译
Unit 1 what’s he
like?
第一单元 他是什么样的?
注意:他喜欢什么? What
does he like?
课文:
This is Amy.
She’s quiet. She’s very hard-working.
这是埃米。她很文静。她学习努力。 That
is Wu yifan. He’s very
clever. He’s polite, too. 那是吴一凡。 他非常聪明。他也很有礼貌。
Hello. My name is Oliver.你们好,我叫奥利弗。
1
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Hi. 你好。
Hello. 你好。
Ms. Wang will be our new Chinese
teacher.王女士将要成为我们新语文老师。 What’s she
like?她什么样?
She’s very kind.她很和蔼。
Is she
strict?她要求严格吗?
Yes, sometimes. 是的,有时严格。
We have a new PE teacher. He’s a good
football player. 我们有一个新体育老师。
他是一个优秀的足球运动员。
Cool!太棒了!
Let’s try让我们试试
Wu
yifan and Oliver see Mr. Li. Look at the pictures
below. Listen and tick.
吴一凡和奥利弗看到李先生。看下面的图片。听并打勾。
Let’s talk让我们谈话
Wu yifan: Do you know Mr. Young? 你知道杨先生吗?
Oliver: No. I don’t. Who is he?不,我不知道。他是谁?
Wu yifan: He’s our music teacher.他是我们的音乐老师。
Oliver: Is he young?他年轻吗?
Wu yifan:
No, he isn’t. He’s old. 不,他不年轻。他老了。
Oliver: Is he funny?他有趣吗?
Wu yifan: Yes,
he is.是的,他有趣。
Oliver: Great! I like funny
teachers.太好了!我喜欢有趣的老师。
Talk about your
teachers:说说你们的老师:
Who’s your English
teacher? 谁是你们的英语老师?
Miss White.怀特小姐。
Is she kind?她和蔼吗?
Yes, she is.是的,她和蔼。
Let’s learn 让我们来学习
Who’s your art
teacher?谁是你们的美术老师。
Mr. Jones. 琼斯先生。
Is he young?他年轻吗?
Yes, he is.是的,他年轻。
Ask and answer问和答
Who’s Mrs. Smith?史密斯太太是谁?
She’s the head teacher. She’s tall. She’s
strict.她是校长。她很高。她要求严格。
Let’s spell让我们拼写
Choose one sentence from above and
write.从上面选一句并写下来。
Let’s try 让我们试试
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Ms Wang is a new teacher here.
Listen and tick.王女士是一位新来的老师。听并打勾。 What
is Ms
Wang like?王女士是什么样的?
口 quiet 文静的口 friendly
友好的 口 funny 有趣的
Let’s talk让我们谈话
Chen Jie: Hey, Ms Wang will be our new Chinese
teacher.嘿,王女士将要成为我们新语文老
师。
John:
Really? What’s she like?真的吗?她什么样的?
Chen
Jie: She’s kind. 她的和蔼的。
John: Is she
strict?她要求严格吗?
Chen Jie: Yes, sometimes.
是的,有时严格。
John: Do you know her?你认识她吗?
Chen Jie: Yes. She’s my mother!是的。她是我妈妈!
John: Ha-ha. Cool! 哈哈。太酷了!
What are
your teachersfriends like? Talk with your partner.
你的老师或朋友们是什么样的?和你的好伙伴说一说。
What’s Chen
Jie like? 陈洁是什么样的?
She’s quiet. 她很文静。
Let’s learn 让我们来学习
What’s Wu yifan like?
吴一凡是什么样的?
He’s hard-working. 他学习很努力。
Match and say 比一比,说一说
What’s he like?
他是什么样的?
He’s polite. 他很有礼貌。
He’s
polite. 他很有礼貌。
She is shy.她很害羞。
They are helpful.他们是乐于助人的
They are hard-
working. 他们学习很努力。
截止到这里!!!!!
Read and
write读与写
Meet Robin!遇见罗宾
Sept, 1st,
Tuesday9月1日,星期二
I have a robot! His name is
Robin. My grandpa made him!
我有一个机器人!他的名字叫罗宾。我的爷爷做的他!
Robin is short
but strong. He is really clever. He can speak
Chinese and English.
罗宾个子矮但很强壮。他真的很聪明。他会说汉语和英语。
He is hard-working. He is very helpful at
home.他很努力。他在家里非常有帮助。
He is strict, too. He
makes me finish my homework!他也很严格。他让我完成我的家庭作业!
What is Robin like? Read and tick or
cross.罗宾是什么样的?读并打勾或叉。
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Design a robot of your own. Draw and write about
himher.
给自己设计一个机器人。画下并写一下他她。
Let’s
check让我们检查一下
Listen and circle.听并圈出。
Miss Chen is a maths an English
teacher.陈小姐是一个数学英语老师。
Mr Grey is a music
Chinese teacher. 格雷先生是一个音乐语文老师。
Listen
again and answer.再听一次并回答。
What is Miss Chen
like?陈小姐是什么样的?
What is Mr Grey
like?格雷先生是什么样的?
Let’
s wrap it
up让我们圆满结束它
Think and match. 想一想并连线搭配。
Choose and write.选择填写。
篇三:作者简介
Sylvia Plath (October 27, 1932 – February 11,
1963) was an American poet, novelist, and
short-story writer. Born in Boston,
Massachusetts, she studied at Smith College and
Newnham
College at the University of
Cambridge, before receiving acclaim as a poet and
writer. She married
fellow poet Ted Hughes in
1956; they lived together in the United States and
then England, and had
two children, Frieda and
Nicholas. Plath suffered from depression for much
of her adult life, and in
1963 she committed
suicide. Controversy continues to surround the
events of her life and death, as
well as her
writing and legacy.
Plath is credited with
advancing the gee of confessional poetry and is
best known for her two
published collections,
The Colossus and Other Poems and Ariel. In 1982,
she won a posthumous
Pulitzer Prize for The
Collected Poems. She also wrote The Bell Jar, a
semi-autobiographical novel
published shortly
before her death. Early life.
Plath was
born on October 27, 1932, in the Massachusetts
Memorial Hospital, in Boston's
Jamaica Plain
neighborhood. Her mother, Aurelia Schober Plath
(1906–1994), was a first-generation
American
of Austrian descent, and her father, Otto Plath
(1885–1940), was from Grabow, Germany.
Plath's
father was an entomologist and was professor of
biology and German at Boston University;
he
also authored a book about bumblebees. On April
27, 1935, Plath's brother Warren was born
and
in 1936 the family moved from 24 Prince Street in
Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, to 92 Johnson
Avenue, Winthrop, Massachusetts. Plath's
mother, Aurelia, had grown up in Winthrop, and her
maternal grandparents, the Schobers, had lived
in a section of the town called Point Shirley, a
location mentioned in Plath's poetry. While
living in Winthrop, eight-year-old Plath published
her
first poem in the Boston Herald's
children's section. In addition to writing, she
showed early
promise as an artist, winning an
award for her paintings from The Scholastic Art &
Writing Awards
in 1947.
Otto Plath died
on November 5, 1940, a week and a half after
Plath's eighth birthday, of
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complications following the amputation
of a foot due to untreated diabetes. He had become
ill
shortly after a close friend died of lung
cancer. Comparing the similarities between his
friend's
symptoms and his own, Otto became
convinced that he, too, had lung cancer and did
not seek
treatment until his diabetes had
progressed too far. Raised as a Unitarian
Christian, Plath
experienced a loss of faith
after her father's death, and remained ambivalent
about religion
throughout her life. He was
buried in Winthrop Cemetery; visiting her father's
grave prompted
Plath to write the poem Electra
on Azalea Path. After his death, Aurelia Plath
moved her children
and her parents to 26
Elmwood Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts in 1942. In
one of her last prose
pieces, Plath commented
that her first nine years themselves off like a
ship in a
bottle—beautiful inaccessible,
obsolete, a fine, white flying myth
High School
(now Wellesley High School) in Wellesley,
graduating in 1950.
College years
Smith College, in Northampton, Massachusetts
In 1950, Plath attended Smith College and excelled
academically. She wrote to her mother,
and
during the summer after her third year of college
Plath was awarded a coveted position as
guest
editor at Mademoiselle magazine, during which she
spent a month in New York City. The
experience
was not what she had hoped it would be, and it
began a downward spiral. She was
furious at
not being at a meeting the editor had arranged
with Welsh poet Dylan Thomas—a writer
whom she
loved, said one of her boyfriends, than life
around the White
Horse bar and the Chelsea
Hotel for two days hoping to meet Thomas, but he
was already on his
way home. A few weeks later
she was to slash her legs to see if she had enough
courage to commit
suicide. Many of the events
that took place during that summer were later used
as inspiration for
her novel The Bell Jar.
During this time she was refused admission to the
Harvard writing seminar.
Following
electroconvulsive therapy for depression, Plath
made her first medically documented
suicide
attempt in late August 1953 by crawling under her
house and taking her mother's sleeping
pills.
She survived this first suicide attempt after
lying unfound in a crawl space for three days,
later
writing that she
whirling
blackness that I honestly believed was eternal
spent the next six
months in psychiatric care,
receiving more electric and insulin shock
treatment under the care of Dr.
Ruth Beuscher.
Her stay at McLean Hospital and her Smith
scholarship were paid for by Olive
Higgins
Prouty, who had successfully recovered from a
mental breakdown herself. Plath seemed to
make
a good recovery and returned to college. In
January 1955, she submitted her thesis The Magic
Mirror: A Study of the Double in Two of
Dostoyevsky's Novels and in June, graduated from
Smith
with highest honors.
She obtained
a Fulbright scholarship to study at Newnham
College and the University of
Cambridge in
England, where she continued actively writing
poetry and publishing her work in the
student
newspaper Varsity. At Newnham, she studied with
Dorothea Krook, whom she held in high
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regard.[18] She spent her first year
winter and spring holidays traveling around
Europe.[4]
Career and marriage Plath's
stay at McLean Hospital inspired her novel The
Bell Jar Plath first
met poet Ted Hughes on
February 25, 1956, at a party in
Cambridge. In a 1961 BBC interview
The
couple married on June 16, 1956, at St George the
Martyr Holborn in the London
Borough of Camden
with Plath's mother in attendance, and spent their
honeymoon in Benidorm.
Plath returned to
Newnham in October to begin her second year.
During this time, they both
became deeply
interested in astrology and the supernatural,
using Ouija boards. In early 1957,
Plath and
Hughes moved to the United States and from
September 1957 Plath taught at Smith
College,
her alma mater. She found it difficult to both
teach and have enough time and energy to
write
and in the middle of 1958, the couple moved to
Boston. Plath took a job as a receptionist in
the
psychiatric unit of Massachusetts
General Hospital and in the evening took creative
writing
seminars given by poet Robert Lowell
(also attended by the writers Anne Sexton and
George
Starbuck). Both Lowell and Sexton
encouraged Plath to write from her experience and
she did so.
She openly discussed her
depression with Lowell and her suicide attempts
with Sexton, who led her
to write from a more
female perspective. Plath began to conceive of
herself as a more serious,
focused poet and
short-story writer. At this time Plath and Hughes
first met the poet W. S. Merwin,
who admired
their work and was to remain a lifelong friend.
Plath resumed
psychoanalytic treatment in
December, working with Ruth Beuscher.
Chalcot Square, near Primrose Hill in London,
Plath and Hughes' home from 1959
Plath and
Hughes traveled across Canada and the United
States, staying at the Yaddo artist
colony in
New York State in late 1959. Plath says that it
was here that she learned
own weirdnesses,but
she remained anxious about writing confessionally,
from deeply personal
and private material. The
couple moved back to the United Kingdom in
December 1959 and lived in
London at 3 Chalcot
Square, near the Primrose Hill area of Regent's
Park, where an English Heritage
plaque records
Plath's residence.[24] Their daughter Frieda was
born on 1 April 1960 and in
October,
[23]Plath published her first collection of
poetry, The Colossus. In
February 1961,
Plath's second pregnancy ended in miscarriage;
several of her poems,
including Hill
Fieldsaddress this event.[25] In August she
finished her
semi-autobiographical novel The
Bell Jar and immediately after this, the family
moved to Court
Green in the small market town
of North Tawton in Devon. Nicholas was born in
January 1962.[23]
In mid-1962, Hughes began to
keep bees, which would be the subject of many
Plath poems.[4]
In 1961, the couple rented
their flat at Chalcot Square to Assia and David
Wevill. Hughes was
immediately struck with the
beautiful Assia, as she was with him.[26] In June
1962, Plath had had a
car accident which she
described as one of many suicide attempts. In July
1962, Plath discovered
Hughes had been having
an affair with Assia Wevill and in September the
couple separated.[23]
6 9
Beginning in October 1962, Plath experienced a
great burst of creativity and wrote most of
the poems on which her reputation now rests,
writing at least 26 of the poems of her posthumous
collection Ariel during the final months of
her life.[23][27][28] In December 1962, she
returned
alone to London with their children,
and rented, on a five-year lease, a flat at 23
Fitzroy Road—only
a few streets from the
Chalcot Square flat. William Butler Yeats once
lived in the house, which bears
an English
Heritage blue plaque for the Irish poet. Plath was
pleased by this fact and considered it a
good
omen.
The northern winter of 1962–3 was one
of the coldest in 100 years; the pipes froze, the
children—now two years old and nine
months—were often sick, and the house had no
telephone.[29] Her depression returned but she
completed the rest of her poetry collection which
would be published after her death (1965 in
the UK, 1966 in the US). Her only novel, The Bell
Jar,
came out in January 1963, published under
the pen name Victoria Lucas, and was met with
critical
indifference.[30]
23 Fitzroy
Road, near Primrose Hill, London, where Plath
committed suicide Death
Dr. John Horder, a
close friend who lived near Plath, prescribed her
antidepressants a few
days before her death.
Knowing she was at risk alone with two young
children, he says he visited
her daily and
made strenuous efforts to have her admitted to a
hospital; when that failed, he
arranged for a
live-in nurse. Commentators have argued that
because
antidepressants may take up to
three weeks to take effect, her
prescription from Horder would not necessarily
have helped. Others say that Plath's
American
doctor had warned her never again to take the
antidepressant drug which she found
worsened
her depression but Dr. Horder had prescribed it
under a proprietary name which she did
not
recognize. The nurse was due to arrive at nine
o'clock the morning of 11 February 1963 to help
Plath with the care of her children. Upon
arrival, she could not get into the flat, but
eventually
gained access with the help of a
workman, Charles Langridge. They found Plath dead
of carbon
monoxide poisoning in the kitchen,
with her head in the oven, having sealed the rooms
between
herself and her sleeping children with
wet towels and
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