[听力原文]
M: The train leaves every 30 minutes. You’ re five minutes late for the 7:30 train.
W: Sorry, I have to catch the next train.
[听力原文]
M: The train leaves every 30 minutes. You’re five minutes late for the 7:30 train.
W: Sorry, I have to catch the next train.
M: The train leaves every 30 minutes. You’re five minutes late for the 7:30 train.
W: Sorry, I have to catch the next train.
[听力原文]
16Counting every calorie you consume, spending an entire weekend cooking healthy meals for the following week, finding even more time to exercise, sure, these weight-loss strategies do work, but they can be awfully time-consuming. So follow these guides to lose weight.
17The first guide is to keep good food close. Laziness plays a bigger role in your food choices—both good and bad—than you might think, suggests another study published in Appetite. People prefer to eat the food near them but not their favorite food which is far from them. So put the good food near you, then you can eat healthy.
17The second one is to save the salad for last. Salad comes with your meal; just eat it at the end of your meal. By eating it last, it will give your brain a chance to catch up with your stomach so you realize that you aren’t as hungry as when you started your meal. Just make sure you skip the creamy dressings.
Th
A. Don’t eat meat at supper.
B. Find even more time to exercise.
C. Count every calorie you consume.
D. Spend an entire weekend cooking healthy meals.
[听力原文]
M: The bus leaves every 10minutes. You’re five minutes late for the 6:30 bus.
W: Sorry, I have to catch the next bus.
[听力原文]
M: Have you got every thing now
W: No. I still have to get a pound of butter, two pounds of meat, and some oranges.
[听力原文]
M: Have you decided where you are going to live when you are married
W: I want to live in the city near my work place.
[听力原文]
W: Where did you say you put the glasses
M: I didn’t say, but keep looking till you find them.
[听力原文]
W: Where did you say you found this bag
M: It was lying under a big tree between the park and the apartment building.
[听力原文]11-15
Every artist knows in his heart that he is saying something to the public. Not only does he want to say it well, but he wants it to be something which has not been said before. He hopes the public will listen and understand -- he wants to teach them, and he wants them to learn from him.
What visual artists like painters want to teach is easy to make out but difficult to explain, because painters translate their experiences into shapes and colors, not words. They seem to feel that a certain selection of shapes and colors, out of the countless billion possible, is exceptionally interesting for them and worth showing to us. Without their work we should never have noticed these particular shapes and colors, or have felt the delight which they brought to the artist.
Most artists take their shapes and colors from the world of nature and from human bodies. Their choices indicate these aspects of the world are worth looking at, that they contain beauti
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