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每日新闻听写,冲击IBT听力28

本主题由 rosalineluo 于 2008-4-8 15:16 设置高亮

每日新闻听写,冲击IBT听力28

3.15托福成绩出了,听力只有20. % E) u! v8 Z3 f  x7 H
sellvia启发, 决定继续做个懒人计划第二期:每日听写新闻一篇.  , k1 C0 X. n/ ^
坚持下去,我就不信下次考试突不破28.   所有想提高英语听力的朋友,大家一起参加吧,相互监督.
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- C6 ~! H) K8 R1 P对于材料的选择, 暂时先采用<新闻英语视听说>, 里面的的材料都是来自于 BBC, ABC, CNN 新闻节目. 内容涉及政治,经济,文化,教育,娱乐,体育,科技,自然等多方面.  坚持听写, 我相信提得到提高的将不仅仅是听力.  & w3 ?8 K+ R& a4 M8 E# r
我会每天听写并发放一篇新闻,包含音频和文本.
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, T5 a# w, C1 ~+ B5 G3 j& q  r$ D: S(每天的三个压缩包是一起解压的), A' [. P* h3 g8 u; `$ q0 F2 ]- R

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4月7日
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5 T& ^4 z8 L+ Z' E2 E7 q欢迎大家贴出自己的听力原文.7 q( f- l1 h7 g" y
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[ 本帖最后由 joelle007 于 2008-4-8 15:03 编辑 ]
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4月3日听写及修正 01


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M: Thank you for joining us this evening: Snap Judgements Judgments. Candidates in the political campain campaign are going to spend hundreds of millions of dollars this year trying to influence voters with slick 30-second commercials. But maybe all they need are five-second as ads, even two seconds! ABC's Robert CruwichKrulwich tonight on how important that very first impression is.
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M: Now it's getting interesting, and as these candidates flash by on TV for a second or two, even the briefest glimpse makes an impression. A biger bigger impression than you know.
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W: Yeah, I think you are making an impression.# L7 i  ]/ |$ w  M/ o6 G: z- M4 o

M: Sychology Psychology professor Nalini Ambady knows this, because a few years ago she did an experiment. She asked a bunch of students like this these to come to a classroom here in at Harvard and she showed them shortvideoes videos of teachers they never met. Let me demonstrate. She showed a guy like me, lecturing in a lecture hall. it is except you turned off the sound. So they watched something like this, a teacher teaching with no sound for how long?
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W: These clipse are 10 seconds long.

M: 10 seconds?
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W: ur hurm Uh huh+ Q% d2 H: M6 D, A4 s; f0 w" J& o

M:That is all? & W' U7 y' N. p0 W5 t

W: yeah.
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M: Then, we are recreating this here. The students were asked to rate the teachers in a number of catergerys! g3 ]# d% ^  N$ {
categories
. And those ratings were then compared to a course evaluation filled out by studentswould who'd have the teacher for three days a week for a whole semester. And what happened?

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W: Uhm, there wasa very little difference. It was amazing.
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M: So students who saw the professors for 10 seconds gave the exact same ratings as the students who knew him for months.8 @6 ^/ s/ o. v# n% K  T

W: Precisely, That's exactly what we found.
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M: OK, now just for the fun of it, you get a new set of students and you show them clips of professors that last two seconds. Two seconds with no sound, which is like nothing.
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W: Yeah, it passes by fast.
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M: And after a two-second look, student's ratings are were almost identical to a the full semester evaluation. That is so weird.
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W: Ah, well, we have the same reaction.: y# `5 x# g8 Q; u% a5 }

M: But is if a two-second climpse can tell you that much about a teacher, just possiblely possibly a two-second glance ona the TV can tell you someting important about a candidates for president. From prehistoric times we have evolved to look at faces and make snap judgments: is it he going to hurt me? isit he going to help me?Brains, says Professor Ambady, can decide a lot in two seconds. So quick impressions matter! Robert Krulwich, ABC news.2 `8 S' d- D, ^1 f! b. f( G

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[重点单词]clip-片段剪辑; slick-巧妙的,吸引人的。


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% p' {" f+ g2 ]8 d[ 本帖最后由 joelle007 于 2008-4-8 10:11 编辑 ]
本帖最近评分记录
  • rosalineluo 威望 +2 加油。继续坚持哈 2008-4-8 10:42

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文本(答案)可以晚一些时候传,可以针对大家听出的内容讨论,互改一下,有助于提高~

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4月4日 : 听写及修正 02

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W: Now to the new book by Hielary Hillary Clinton. It gives the formost former First Lady's account of her years in the White House. This is a quiken Mrs Clinton spoke to us exclusively about the Murmur War memoir and how she came to learn all the details surrounding Mollecal Luwise scandle* D% u& m% {- x7 E( N# \
the Monica Lewinsky scandal . She writes simplly simply, "As a wife, I wanted to wring Bill's neck" In the aftermath, Mrs. Clinton said,"The most difficult decissions decisions I have make made in my life is were to stay marry married to Bill and to run for the senontar Senate from New York." But before her husband confirsed confessed, Hillary Clinton was
! i9 M4 ^5 O' v1 fone of his most royal loyal defenders. Bolb Water Barbara Walters has more now from her interview with the author.

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W: Senator Clinton has never before spoken about her feelings or about any conversation she had with her husband during the dark days of 1998, Monica Lewinsky scandal until now. In her book, living in history, due on out Monday, and now in our interview, Mrs Clinton reveals that from the monent the very first headline revoke broke the story. Bill Clinton lied not only to the country about this relationship, bu he lied to her as well% |5 G, s/ H& Y1 A

W: And he told me that it was not true.
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W: Did you believe him?
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W: I did believe him.) G3 I% F$ J" R) U, b2 X

M: more, one more fess false rumor.
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W: That is what I believed, yes.
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M: Even as the late night phone calls between the President and the intern were discovered and logs of gifts and visits became public. Senator Clinton says she examed cross-examined her husband again and again, and still the President claimed nothing happened until just two days before he was to testify under oath about the affair. On Saturday and it was fifth, August 15, you husband woke you up.
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M: That was probably the worst moment uh, that I can even imagine anyone going through because what he told me that morning was that he did not leveled with me or anyone els, he had not told me the whole truth about what the relationship was. And I was fieras furious, I was unfounded dumfounded, I was, you know, just beside myself with anger and disappointment.) n  i/ G8 @' E, I$ Z- F9 L

W: Mrs. Clinton goes on to tell of the very painful days that followed, and the many, many months that she continued2 E- q& K& P2 z  F3 x3 `
her duties as the First Lady while still uncertain about the relationship.
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M: The jury was really out about whether the marriage was would survive, whether I wanted it to survive. ' f) N; L( f7 _
W: Barbara Walter's complete interview will air at ABC's special this Sunday night at 7 o'clock Eastern Time.
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3 p. U/ ^( o8 V( r) a' L* d/ X9 L[ 本帖最后由 joelle007 于 2008-4-8 10:13 编辑 ]

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期待LZ的后续更新
勇敢地人一样可以哭,并且哭了可以再哭,不过哭完后会擦干眼泪,站起来面对生活,而懦弱的人,从此一蹶不振。

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4月5日听写及修正 03

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M: Finally this evening," Growing Up to Be President." According to ABC news poll, There aren't many teernagers teenagers who want to do it these days. ABC's Judy molly Muller try tryied to find out why.

W: This advanced history class at Ala LA's University High School is studying in the presidential candidates.

M: Kerry is a senator, who else she you
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W: Dean!

M: Dean, Who is Dean.

W: Howard Dean!

M: But most teenagers have little interest in ever running for president themselves. While 54 percent of teenagers aged 12 to 17 believe they could be president, 79 percent say they would not want the job.

W: They don't ideanize idealize   W/ b" B; Y" Q& ~9 M3 x
politicians in that way when I grew up.

M: Of course, there are reasons for that.

W: We have seen president after president smeared with corruption and just scandal after scandal.

M: Modern presidents have come on in the tense under intense media sgrudme scrutiny and pressure. 20 percent of teens said basically who needs it. But the main reason they give gave was after
4 u; A/ ]9 W  g' y1 F9 ^either a lack of interest in policy plitics or other career plans.

W: It is nothing to be enthusiastic about it, you know, it is not like a concert.

M: Today, student, young person wants to be a doctor or a lawyer. And that's " U( U* H/ l5 _0 _2 m( A/ ~6 ?
those are
very individual jobs and I get the money, I get the BMW, I get the recide's( e/ \  h; C& d
Mercedes-Benz.

W: The students we spoke to with are not typical, three of the four say they would like to be the president.

M: I would be inerrestid in having a career in politics and hopefully the president presidency because the job you can do so much for so many* E* X! H# @* Q9 x1 u. z& j
people. But the more typical lack of the interest is of concern of the the to educators.

W: What troubling is whether it means that they are less interested in politics in general, which means that they would are not as likely to vote and not as likely to become to engaged in civic affairs in their community.

M: Even parents afflicted are conflicted about the issue. Back in 1988, 41 percent of parents surveyed said they wanted0 f1 p1 j! X9 [) n
would want their child to grew up to be president. By 1999, that had dropped to 30 percent. The old saying was,"
7 l3 w! u2 `- \+ _& X! oAmerica: where any kid can grow up to be president."
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Judy Muller, ABC. P% [) n, F, y9 l
News, Los Angeles

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回复 5# rosalineluo 的贴子

谢谢支持~ 偶会继续一直坚持下去的~

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回复 5# rosalineluo 的贴子

4月6日 听写及修正 04


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M: Finally coming to us this evening:" Behind Every Successful Man." With all the attention pay paid to the political presidential candidates. there is sometimes a danger of overlooking the political strengths of their wives. The most influential is, of course, Laura Bush. First ladies always have clout. The question is: what do they do with it. ABC's Terry
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Rang Morran has been on the road with Mrs. Bush.

M: These days Laura Bush is already putting in long hours in on the campain campaign trip trial. The Bush campaign sees the First Lady as a major
' V, V; O9 U( i1 d+ {1 nassert asset to woo the independent voters in key swing states including Arktells Arkansas. Her style is low-key and as a former school teacher, she usually emphasises emphasizes her signiture signature education issue.

M: We want teachers with diverse acdemic academic background. But this campaign is shaping up to be tight and targh tough, with her husband already the focus of sharp tax attacks by Democrans Democrats on his credibility and current character.

W: I don't know he
2 M  [7 L* h9 A+ C1 N; K& \if you ever get hardened to it.

M: Does it hurt?

W: Sure. I mean, no one wants to see somebody they love characterized in a way that they are not. You know, you just go ahead.

M: On this trip, for the first time, Mrs. Bush spoke out on the controversy surrounding the president's service in the National Guard decades ago, before she met him.

M: But you knew, or you say you know that he was pulling guard in our band
9 e( k% Q+ Q/ b& Y$ Q/ Eduty in Alabama.

W: Absolutely.

M: How?

W: Of course. Well, because he told me he was. And, you know, the records had been shown. He wouldn't have gotten an hornerable honorable discarge. If he hadn't pulled this his duty.

M: And She has harsh words for Democrac Democratic Party Chairman Terry Mecolla McAuliffe who has leveled the charge that her husband was award AWOL at that time.

W: I don't think it is fear fair to really lie about, um, allegations that get about someone like the Democratic National Chairman did.

M: He lied

W: He made it up, I guess I should say.! p4 R2 A+ x+ M) i# e# ]

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& v' L" R- {' ?% {[ 本帖最后由 joelle007 于 2008-4-8 13:37 编辑 ]

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4月6日  听写及修正  05

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M: Tonight Andy Rooney turns to a speechwriter.


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M: Years ago, I was asked to write a speech for President Nixon. I didn't do that, but i wish President Brush would ask me to write a speech for him now. Here is what I write if he ask me to, which is unlikely. My fellow Americans, the word "fellow" includes women and in political speeches. My fellow Americans, one of the reasons we invaded Iraq was because I suggested Saddam saying Hussein has had someting to do with terry's terrorist attack and on the World Trade Center. No avident evidence said says so, so I wish I hadn't said it. I said we were going to get Saddam Hussein. To be honest, we don't know whether we got him or not. Probably not. I said we would get Osama bin Laden and wipe out al Qaeda. We haven't been able to do that either. I am as disappointed as you are. I probably shouldn't have said Iraq had nuclear weapons. Our guys in and the UN have looked down under the every bed in Iraq and can't find one. In one speech, I told you Saddam Hussein tried to buy the makings for of nuclear bobs bombs from Africa. That was a mistake and I wish I hadn't said that. I get bad information sometimes just like you do. I may first On May 1, I declared major combat was over and gave you the impression the war was over. I shouldn't have declared that. Since then 215 American soldiers have been killed in Iraq. As the person who sent them there, how terrible do you think that makes me feel? I promised to leave no child behind when it comes to education. Then I asked for an additional 87 billion dollars for Iraq. Eighty-seven billion must have has to come from somewhere. I hope the kids aren't going to have to pay for it, during now in school or later when they eurake are your age. When I landed on the deck of the carrier, I wish they hadn't put up the sign saying"Mission Accomplished." It isn't accomplished. Maby it should have been"Mission Impossible." I have make some mistakes and I regret it. Let me just read your excepts excerpts from something my father wrote five years ago in his book, A World Transformed. I firmly believed we should not march into the bad day Baghdad. To occupy Iraq would instantly shatter our coalicion coalition, turning the whole Abra Arab world against us and make a broken tyron tyrant, into a latter-day Arab hero. This is my father writing this. Assigning young soldiers to a frutlishantfruitless hunt for a securely entrenched dictator and condemning them to fight in what would be an unwinnable urban guerrilla war. We should all take our fathers' advice. That is the speech I writer for President Bush. No charge.


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[ 本帖最后由 joelle007 于 2008-4-8 14:57 编辑 ]

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