ÐÂÎűêÌ⣺ÉϺ£ÆÕÍÓÇøsatÅàѵѧУ¾ßÌ嵨ַ
ÉϺ£satÊÇÉϺ£satÅàѵѧУµÄÖØµãרҵ£¬ÉϺ£ÊÐÖªÃûµÄsatÅàѵ»ú¹¹£¬½ÌÓýÅàѵ֪ÃûÆ·ÅÆ£¬ÉϺ£satÅàѵѧУʦ×ÊÁ¦Á¿ÐÛºñ£¬È«¹ú¸÷´ó³ÇÊоùÉèÓзÖУ£¬Ñ§Ð£»¶ÓÄãµÄ¼ÓÈë¡£
ÉϺ£satÅàѵѧУ·Ö²¼ÉϺ£ÊÐ»ÆÆÖÇø,Ðì»ãÇø,³¤ÄþÇø,¾²°²Çø,ÆÕÍÓÇø,Õ¢±±Çø,ºç¿ÚÇø,ÑîÆÖÇø,ãÉÐÐÇø,±¦É½Çø,¼Î¶¨Çø,ÆÖ¶«ÐÂÇø,½ðÉ½Çø,ËÉ½Çø,ÇàÆÖÇø,·îÏÍÇø,°°É½Â·,ÖÐɽÎ÷·,»ª¶¦´óÏÃ,³çÃ÷ÏØµÈµØ,ÊÇÉϺ£Êм«¾ßÓ°ÏìÁ¦µÄsatÅàѵ»ú¹¹¡£
My ears are burning.
[×ÖÃæÒâ˼] ÎҵĶú¶äÔÚ·¢ÉÕ¡£
[½âÊÍ] ÔÚÎ÷·½Ò²ÓÐÈËÏàÐÅ£¬ÄãµÄ¶ú¶ä·¢ÈÈ£¬ÄÇÊÇÓÐÈËÔÚÆäËüµØ·½ÒéÂÛÄã¡£ÖйúÈË»¹ÓÐ×ó¶úÉÕºÍÓÒ¶úÉÕµÄÇø±ð£¨ºÃ»°ºÍ»µ»°µÄÇø±ð£©¡£ÕâÊǸоõµ½±ðÈËÔÚ˵ÆðÄãµÄʱºò˵µÄÒ»¾ä»°¡£
¡¾¼Ç¡¿·¢Òô¼ÇÒ䣺¡°Åú×¼¡±¡úÇÝÁ÷¸ÐÆÚ¼ä£¬Ñø¸ë×ÓÒ²Òª¾¹ýÅú×¼¡ú¸ë×Ó
¡¾Àý¡¿Warm and moist air from the Pacific Ocean is forced upward as it crosses the Sierra Nevada. À´×Ô̫ƽÑóµÄÅ¯ÊªÆøÁ÷ÔÚ¾¹ýÄÚ»ª´ïɽÂöʱ±»ÆÈÏòÉÏÒÆ¶¯¡£
Such a lot of adventures we\'re having !
Freshmen \' s psychological problems and its guidance
ËûÖÜÉíÓÐÒ»ÖÖÆæ¹ÖµÄ¸Ð¾õ¡£
¡¾Àý¡¿Harriet was an important forerunner to the realistic movement that became popular later in the 19th century. ¹þÀïÌØÊÇ19ÊÀ¼ÍÄ©Á÷ÐеÄÏÖʵÖ÷ÒåÔ˶¯ÖеÄÒ»Î»ÖØÒªÏÈÇýÕß¡£
B£ºÎÒÃǵÄÈ··¢ÏÖÁËÒ»°Ñ¡£ÄãÈ¥ÊÛÆ±¹ñ̨¿´¿´¡£Ê§Îï¶¼½»µ½ÄǶùÁË¡£
Caprice
n. ¹ÖÏë·¨·Ö½âΪcap+rice£¬capÊÇ Ã±×Ó £¬riceΪ ´óÃ× £¬ÁªÏëÒ»¸öÇé¾°£ºÎÒÃÇÆ½Ê±°Ñ´óÃ×¶¼ÊÇ·ÅÔÚÃ׸×Àï»òÃ×´üÀµ«ÓÐÒ»¸öÈË˵£¬ÎÒ²»ÓÃÃ׸××°´óÃ×£¬Ò²²»ÓÃÃ×´ü×°´óÃ×£¬ÎÒÒªÓÃñ×ÓÀ´×°´óÃ×£¬Õâ¸öÈ˵ÄÕâ¸öÏë·¨¾ÍÊǹÖÏë·¨
¡¾ÅÉ¡¿analogous£¨a. ÀàËÆµÄ£©
¡¾Àý¡¿Like all artists, jazz musicians strive for an individual style. ¾ôÊ¿ÒôÀÖ¼ÒÈçͬËùÓÐÒÕÊõ¼ÒÒ»Ñù£¬¶¼Á¦ÇóÌåÏÖ¸öÈË·ç¸ñ¡£
Moreover, we\'ve kept the price close to the costs of production.
ÔÙ˵£¬ÕâÒѾ°Ñ¼Û¸ñѹµ½Éú²ú·ÑÓõıßÔµÁË¡£
¡¾Àý¡¿I'm counting on you to make notes from the history lecture. ÎÒÕýÖ¸Íû×ÅÄã¼ÇÀúÊ·¿ÎµÄ±Ê¼ÇÄØ¡£
comprehend [kmprhend] v. Àí½â£¬Áì»á£¨understand, grasp£©
¡¾¼Ç¡¿À´×Ôgene£¨»ùÒò£©£«tic¡ú»ùÒòµÄ
µÚÒ»´ÎÂõÈëÕâ¸ö³ÇÊУ¬Î񵀮Þ×ÓºÍÎÒ¾´Î·µØ¶¢×ŸßÂ¥´óÏã¬Óµ¼·µÄ½ÖµÀ£¬½ôÕŵÄÉú»î½Ú×à¡£
ÃÀ¹úÈËÔÚÁ˽⡢½á½»Ò»¸öÐÂÅóÓѵÄʱºò£¬±È½Ïϲ»¶Á˽â¶Ô·½µÄ»°ÌâÖ®Ò»¾ÍÊÇÌåÓý°®ºÃ£¬²¢Ï£ÍûÕÒµ½Ö¾Í¬µÀºÏµÄÌåÓý°®ºÃÕߣ¬¿ªÕ¹ÏÂÒ»²½µÄ½»ÓÑ¡£
had to shout. They both want to leave. LISE: We\'ll have to leave
soon, Aunt Janet.
ANET JANET: Yes , of course you can have some tea , dear. I\'ll go
and make some.
JANE: Oh no, Lise. Stop her! You\'d better say it louder.
LISE: WE\'LL HAVE TO LEAVE, AUNT JANET.
UNCLE DAVID: You can\'t leave yet. I want to hear some more about
Canada.
LISE: But I must go back and look after Malcolm. Oh dear, thhear. I
MUST GO BACK
AND LOOK AFTER MALCOLM.
AUNT JANET: Why, what\'s the matter with him?
LISE: I TOLD YOU, AUNT JANET. HE ISN\'T WELI..
AUNT JANET: But I thought you said he was in the hotel. Where are
you staying?
LISE: We\'re camping. . . WE\'RE CAMPING.
AUNT JANET: In this weather? Well, I\'m not surprised Malcolm isn\'t
ÉϺ£satÅàѵѧУ³É¾ÍÄãµÄÃÎÏëÖ®Âá£Ñ§sat¾ÍÀ´ÉϺ£satÅàѵѧУ