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The chaser 追逐者 中英对照

The chaser 追逐者 中英对照
The chaser 追逐者 中英对照

The Chaser

John Collier Alan Austen, as nervous as a kitten, went up certain dark and creaky stairs in the neighborhood of Pell Street , and peered about for a long time on the dim landing before he found the name he wanted written obscurely on one of the doors.

He pushed open this door, as he had been told to do, and found himself in a tiny room, which contained no furniture but a plain kitchen table, a rocking-chair, and an ordinary chair. On one of the dirty buff-colored walls were a couple of shelves, containing in all perhaps a dozen bottles and jars.

An old man sat in the rocking-chair, reading a newspaper. Alan, without a word, handed him the card he had been given. “Sit down, Mr. Austen,” said the old man very politely. “I am glad to make your acquaintance.”

“Is it true,” asked Alan, “that you have a certain mixture that has—er —quite extraordinary effects?”

“My dear sir,” replied the old man, “my stock in trade is not very large —I don’t deal in laxatives and teething mixtures—but such as it is, it is varied.

I think nothing I sell has effects which could be precisely described as ordinary.”

“Well, the fact is—” began Alan.

“Here, for example,” interrupted the old man, reaching for a bottle from the shelf. “Here is a liquid as colorless as water, almost tasteless, quite imperceptible in coffee, wine, or any other beverage. It is also quite imperceptible to any known method of autopsy.”

“Do you mean it is a poison?” cried Alan, very much horrified.

“Call it a glove-cleaner if you like,” said the old man indifferently. “Maybe it will clean gloves. I have never tried. One might call it a life-cleaner. Lives need cleaning sometimes.”

“I want nothing of that sort,” said Alan.

“Probably it is just as well,” said the old man. “Do you know the price of this? For one teaspoonful, which is sufficient, I ask five thousand dollars. Never less. Not a penny less.”

“I hope all your mixtures are not as expensive,” said Alan apprehensively.

“Oh dear, no,” said the old man. “It would be no good charging that sort of price for a love potion, for example. Young people who need a love potion very seldom have five thousand dollars. Otherwise they would not need a love potion.”

“I am glad to hear that,” said Alan.

“I look at it like this,” said the old man. “Please a customer with one article, and he will come back when he needs another. Even if it is more costly. He will save up for it, if necessary.”

“So,” said Alan, “you really do sell love potions?”

“If I did not sell love potions,” said the old man, reaching for another bottle, “I should not have mentioned the other matter to you. It is only when one is in a position to oblige that one can afford to be so confidential.”

“And these potions,” said Alan. “They are not just—just—er—”

“Oh, no,” said the old man. “Their effects are permanent, and extend far

beyond casual impulse. But they include it. Bountifully, insistently. Everlastingly.”

“Dear me!” said Alan, attempting a look of scientific detachment. "How very interesting!”

“But consider the spiritual side,” said the old man.

“I do, indeed,” said Alan.

“For indifference,” said the old man, “they substitute devotion. For scorn, adoration. Give one tiny measure of this to the young lady—its flavor is imperceptible in orange juice, soup, or cocktails—and however gay and giddy she is, she will change altogether. She will want nothing but solitude, and you.”

“I can hardly believe it,” said Alan. “She is so fond of parties.”

“She will not like them any more,” said the old man. “She will be afraid of the pretty girls you may meet.”

“She will actually be jealous?” cried Alan in a rapture. “Of me?”

“Yes, she will want to be everything to you.”

“She is, already. Only she doesn’t care about it.”

“She will, when she has taken this. She will care intensely. You will be her sole interest in life.”

“Wonderful!” cried Alan.

“She will want to know all you do,” said the old man. “All that has happened to you during the day. Every word of it. She will want to know what you are thinking about, why you smile suddenly, why you are looking sad.”

“That is love!” cried Alan.

“Yes,” said the old man. “How carefully she will look after you! She will never allow you to be tired, to sit in a draught, to neglect your food. If you are an hour late, she will be terrified. She will think you are killed, or that some siren has caught you.”

“I can hardly imagine Diana like that!” cried Alan, overwhelmed with joy.

“You will not have to use your imagination,” said the old man. “And, by the way, since there are always sirens, if by any chance you should, later on, slip a little, you need not worry. She will forgive you, in the end. She will be terribly hurt, of course, but she will forgive you—in the end.”

“That will not happen,” said Alan fervently.

“Of course not,” said the old man. “But, if it did, you need not worry. She would never divorce you. Oh, no! And, of course, she herself will never give you the least, the very least, grounds for—uneasiness.”

“And how much,” said Alan, “is this wonderful mixture?”

“It is not as dear,” said the old man, “as the glove-cleaner, or life-cleaner, as I sometimes call it. No. That is five thousand dollars, never a penny less. One has to be older than you are, to indulge in that sort of thing. One has to save up for it.”

“But the love potion?” said Alan.

“Oh, that,” said the old man, opening the drawer in the kitchen table, and taking out a tiny, rather dirty-looking phial. “That is just a dollar.”

“I can’t tell you how grateful I am,” said Alan, watching him fill it.

“I like to oblige,” said the old man. “Then customers come back, later in life, when they are better off, and want more expensive things. Here you are. You will find it very effective.”

“Thank you again,” said Alan. “Good-bye.”

“Au revoir,” said the man.

追逐者

John Collier

Alan Austen, 紧张地像个小猫一样,走上了Pell街一幢邻楼那黑暗的楼梯,那楼梯踩上去竟然还会咯吱响。他在黑暗中摸索了很长时间,努力辨认着看不清的地面,终于来到了一道门前——这道门上隐隐约约有一个他期望看到的名牌。

他推开门,正如被告知地那样。随即他发现他身处在一个小房间中,四周没有家具,唯独一张光秃秃的厨桌,一张摇椅,和一张普通椅子。在其中一面脏兮兮的米色墙面上,有几个架子,上面有大概12个瓶罐。

一个老头坐在摇椅上读着报纸。Alan,一句话都还没说,先递上了一张别人给他的卡。“坐下吧,Alan先生,”老头礼貌地说。“我很荣幸与你认识。”

“这是真的?”Alan问,“你真的有那些效果惊人的特殊药剂?”

“我亲爱的先生啊,”老头回答,“我经营的范围是很广的——我不做泻药和生牙药之类的——但是正如原本一样,范围还是很广泛。我想我卖出的药剂没有一件可以简单地用‘平凡’来形容。”

“额,事实是——”Alan 说。

“这儿,打个比方,”老头打断了他,探身从架子上拿起一个瓶子。“这是一种像水一样无色的液体,几乎无味,放在咖啡、酒和其他饮料里可谓难以觉察。而且它在任何的尸检下几乎都不会暴露。”

“你的意思是它是毒药?”Alan大声叫道,显得很惊恐。

“叫它手套清洁剂,如果你喜欢的话,”老头漠不关心的说。“也许它可以用来清洁手套。我是从来没试过。有人也许还叫它‘生活清洁者’。生命有时候需要一些‘清洁’。”

“我不想要那一类的东西,”Alan说。

“也许这也是吧,”老头说。“你知道它的价格吗?一茶匙的这玩意儿,我的意思是就已经足够做任何事了,我要价5000块。从不减价。一个子也不减。”

“我希望不是所有的药剂都这么贵,”Alan有点不安地说。

“噢亲爱的,不会,”老头说。“假设爱情药剂是这个价位,那它就一点儿也不吸引人了,打个比方。那些需要爱情药剂的年轻人很少有拿得出5000块的。否则他们就不需要爱情药剂了。”

“我很高兴听到这个,”Alan说。

“我是这样看的,”老头说。“用一个商品取悦顾客,那么他会在需要其他的时候回来找你。即使这时他所要的很贵。有必要的话他甚至会存钱来买的。”

“所以,”Alan说,“你真的卖爱情药剂?”

“如果我不卖,”老头说着探身去拿另一瓶药,“我不会向你提到那些的。只有在一个人有能力恩惠别人的前提下,他才是令人信赖的。”

“那些药剂,”Alan 说,“它们不仅是——是——额——”

“哦不,”老头说。“它们的药效是永久的,而且药性远远不止普通的冲动。但它们确实

包含了这样的效果,这样猛烈的、持续的效果。”

“哦天哪!”Alan说,试着装出一副不懂科学的样子。“这太有趣了!”

“但是想想看精神层面的作用,”老头说。

“我确实想了,”Alan说。

“那些本来对你漠不关心的人,”老头说,“这些药剂会教给她们奉献。”“那些冷眼看低你的人,则是崇拜。”给年轻女孩一点这个——它的味道在橙汁、汤和鸡尾酒里边根本无法察觉——然后无论这个女人原本多么轻浮,多么对男人不在意、不专一,她会完完全全地改变的。她会渴望孤独,还有你。

“我不敢相信,”Alan说,“她是一个那么喜欢派对的女孩。”

“她再也不会喜欢了,从今以后,”老头说。“她会生怕你去见那些派对女孩。”

“她真的会嫉妒?”Alan狂喜地大叫。“为了我?”

“是的,她会想要成为你的全部。”

“她早已经是我的全部了。她只是根本不在意而已。”

“她会在意的。当她用了这个药,她会非常迫切地在意。你将成为她生命中唯一的乐趣。”

“太好了!”Alan惊叫。

“她会想要知道你的一切,”老头说。“一天里面所有那些发生在你身上的事情。每一个字。她会想要知道你在想什么,为何你突然发笑,为何你看上去忧伤。”

“这就是爱啊!”Alan大叫。

“是的,”老头说。“她将会多么体贴地照顾你啊!她再也不会让你疲劳、让你坐在通风口、或者不吃饭。如果你迟到了1个小时,她会恐慌的要死。她会以为你被杀了,或者被女妖精俘获了。”

“真是难以想象那样的Diana!”Alan被喜悦填满地叫道。

“你将不用再去想象,”老头说。“而且,还有,因为世界上小妖精总是很多,如果你偶然在以后有所偏心,也完全不用担心。她最后一定会原谅你的花心。当然了,她会被伤得很重,但是她无论如何也会原谅你的——在最后。”

“这种事情不会发生的,”Alan信誓旦旦地说。

“当然不会,”老头说。“但是万一发生了,你没必要担心。她绝对不会背弃你。哦不!还有,当然,她本身就永远不会给你一点,一丝一毫的安宁的。”

“那么要多少钱,”Alan说,“这个美妙的药剂。”

“亲爱的,它不像手套清洁剂,或者说生活清洁者,我有时候这么叫它。不。那个要5000块,一毛都少不得。一个人要活到比你大多了,才会去考虑买那样的东西。那毕竟是要人存一段时间钱的。”

“那么至于爱情药剂?”Alan说。

“噢,这个啊,”老头说着,打开了厨桌的抽屉,拿出一个又小又脏的空药瓶子。“这个一瓶只要1块钱。”

“我简直无法形容我的感激,”Alan说,看着老头倒满药瓶。

“我喜欢奉献和恩惠,”老头说。“然后顾客们就会回来,在他们的一生中,当他们更加富有的时候,到那时他们会想要更昂贵的东西。给你。你会发现它很管用的。”

“再次感谢你,”Alan说。“再见。”

“Au revoir,”老头说。

综英4 课文翻译

Key to Translation(Page 187) 1. She seems to take little pleasure in doing such things. 2. The professor told us that the tradition of landscape painting could date from the prehistoric age. 3. After attending the lecture of the famous writer, he decided to give up medicine and take to literature. 4. Let’s dispense with the formalities and go directly into the discussion. 5. These animals run extraordinarily fast and in consequence their hunting methods are very efficient indeed. 6. The police searched every house in the district for the escaped criminal, but to no avail. 7. Parents tend to take very great pride in the achievements of their children. Key to Translation (Page 206) 1.Many developing countries, after independence, were afflicted with economic problems to begin with. 2. In order to protect domestic industries, the government decided to impose anti-dumping tariff on imported products. 3. Knowledge without practical experience counts for little. 4. Thousands of people were forced to abandon their homes to the invading enemy troops. 5. I’ve lived in Shanghai so long that I’ve looked upon the city as my second hometown. 6. The roof will have to be propped up while repairs are being carried out. 7. In (the) face of great hardship, he managed to keep his sense of humor. Key to Translation (Page 230) 1. They usually leave off work at 5 o’clock, but today they have to work overtime. 2. All the museums and art galleries in the city are open to the public for free / free of charge. 3. It’s very discouraging to be sneered at by them all the time. 4. She has been a little run down lately and the doctor has advised her to take a short holiday. 5. The whole city is bathed in a sea of joy today. 6. It’s very dark outside, and the sky is covered, as it were, with a black curtain. 7. I booked two film tickets by phone yesterday in the name of Thomas. Key to Translation (Page 309) 1. The tourists cheered with excitement when they saw water cascading down the mountainside. 2. Owing to the policy of reform, the small town is thriving day by day. 3. Could you read through this for me and highlight the important points? 4. At times I wonder if rote learning is worthwhile. 5. The superstitions that used to prevail in Old China are disappearing gradually. 6. Thanks to the improvement in export sales, the company has successfully fulfilled its marketing plan.

Unit 9 How to Grow Old 课文翻译

Unit 9 How to Grow Old Bertrand A. Russell 1. In spite of the title, this article will really be on how not to grow old, which, at my time of life, is a much more important subject. My first advice would be, to choose your ancestors carefully. Although both my parents died young, I have done well in this respect as regards my other ancestors. My maternal grandfather, it is true, was cut off in the flower of his youth at the age of sixty-seven, but my other three grandparents all lived to be over eighty. Of remoter ancestors I can only discover one who did not live to a great age, and he died of a disease which is now rare, namely, having his head cut off. A great-grandmother of mine, who was a friend of Gibbon, lived to the age of ninety-two, and to her last day remained a terror to all her descendants. My maternal grandmother, after having nine children who survived, one who died in infancy, and many miscarriages, as soon as she became a widow devoted herself to women’s higher education. She was one of the founders of Girton College, and worked hard at opening the medical profession to women. She used to relate how she met in Italy an elderly gentleman who was looking very sad. She inquired the cause of his melancholy and he said that he had just parted fro m his two grandchildren. “Good gracious,” she exclaimed, “I have seventy-two grandchildren, and if I were sad each time I parted from one of them, I should have a dismal existence!” “Madre snaturale,” he replied. But speaking as one of the seventy-two, I prefer her recipe. After the age of eighty she found she had some difficulty in getting to sleep, so she habitually spent the hours from midnight to 3 a.m. in reading popular science. I do not believe that she ever had time to notice that she was growing old. This, I think, is the proper recipe for remaining young. If you have wide and keen interests and activities in which you can still be effective, you will have no reason to think about the merely statistical fact of the number of years you have already lived, still less of the probable brevity of your future. 2. As regards health, I have nothing useful to say since I have little experience of illness. I eat and drink whatever I like, and sleep when I cannot keep awake. I never do anything whatever on the ground that it is good for health, though in actual fact the things I like doing are mostly wholesome. 3. Psychologically there are two dangers to be guarded against in old age. One of these is undue absorption in the past. It does not do to live in memories, in regrets for the good old days, or in sadness about friends who are dead. One’s thoughts must be directed to

音响专业术语中英对照

专业音频术语中英文对照 A AAC automatic ampltiude control 自动幅度控制 AB AB制立体声录音法?Abeyancd 暂停,潜态 A-B repeat A-B重复?ABS absolute 绝对得,完全得,绝对时间 ABSamerican bureau ofstanda rd 美国标准局?ABSS autoblank secrion scanning 自动磁带空白部分扫描Absti me绝对运行时间?A、DEF audio defeat音频降噪,噪声抑制,伴音静噪 ADJ adj ective 附属得,附件?ADJ Adjust 调节 ADJ acousticdelay line声延迟线 Admission 允许进入,供给 ADP acousticdata processor音响数据处理机 ADP(T) adapter 延配器,转接器ADRES automaticdynamic range expansion system?动态范围扩展系统 A DRM analog todigital remaster 模拟录音、数字处理数码唱盘 ADS audio distribution system 音频分配系统 A、DUB audio dubbing配音,音频复制,后期录音 ADV advance 送入,提升,前置量?ADV adversum对抗 ADV advance r 相位超前补偿器?Adventure惊险效果 AE audio erasing 音频(声音)擦除 AE auxiliary equipment 辅助设备Aerial天线 AESaudio engineering society美国声频工程协会AF audio fidelity 音频保真度?AF audio frequency音频频率 AFC active field control自动频率控制?AFC automaticfrequency control 声场控制 Affricate 塞擦音?AFL aside fade listen 衰减后(推子后)监听 A-fader 音频衰减 AFM advance frequency modulation 高级调频 AFS acoustic feedback spea ker 声反馈扬声器 AFT automatic fine tuning 自动微调 AFTAAS advancedfast time acousti canalysis system?高级快速音响分析系统 After 转移部分文件 Afterglow余辉,夕照时分音响效果 Again st 以……为背景 AGC automatic gain control 自动增益控制AHDaudiohigh density音频高密度唱片系统 AI advanced integrated预汇流AI amplifier input 放大器输入 AI artificial intelligence 人工智能AI azimuth indi cator 方位指示器 A-IN 音频输入 A-INSEL audio input selection 音频输入选择 Alarm 警报器 ALC automatic level control自动电平控制?ALC automatic load control自动负载控制

商品说明书中英文对照

商品说明书中英文翻译对照 【药物名】对乙酰氨基酚 【其他名称】乙酰氨基酚;扑热息痛;退热净;醋氨酚;Acetaminophen;N-acetyl-P-aminophenol 【英文名称】Paracetamol 【适应症】用于感冒及流感,发热,减轻中度疼痛如关节痛、神经痛、肌肉痛、头痛、偏头痛、痛经、牙痛等症状。对阿司匹林过敏或不适应的患者应用本品尤为适宜。 【用法与用量】口服:成人每次300-500毫克,日2-3次。儿童每日2-3次,每次2-3岁50-100毫克;4-6岁100-150毫克;7-9岁150-200毫克;10-12岁200-250毫克;12岁以上250-500毫克;1岁以下儿童避免使用。 【注意事项】 (1)对阿司匹林过敏者一般对本品不发生过敏,但也有因对阿司匹林过敏而发生哮喘的病人中,少部分人在服用本品后发生轻度支气管痉挛性反应,因此,对阿司匹林过敏者慎用。 (2)孕妇和哺乳期妇女慎用。 (3)服用本品后如出现红斑或水肿症状,应立即停药。 【不良反应】一般剂量较少引起不良反应,对胃肠道刺激小,不会引起胃肠道出血。但也偶可引起恶心、呕吐、出汗、腹泻及面色苍白等不良反应。长期大量用药,对肝、肾均有损害,尤其是肾功能低下者,可能出现肾绞痛或急性肾功能衰竭。另外还可发生高铁血红蛋白血症。 【禁忌症】 (1)对本品过敏者禁用。

(2)1岁以下儿童及新生儿因肝、肾功能发育不全,应避免使用。 (3)酒精中毒、患肝病或病毒性肝炎时,本品有增加肝脏毒性作用的危险,应禁用。 (4)肾功能不全者禁用。 【限定剂型】片剂,咀嚼片,缓释片,泡腾片,分散片,胶囊剂,口服溶液剂,滴剂,糖浆剂,颗粒剂,泡腾颗粒剂,栓剂。 【药物贮藏】应在阴凉干燥处密闭保存。 【药物配伍】1、长期饮酒或正在应用其他肝酶诱导剂时,尤其是巴比妥类或其他抗痉挛药的患者,连续使用本品,有发生肝脏毒性反应的危险。 2、长期大量与阿司匹林、其他水酸盐制剂或其他非甾体抗炎药合用时(如每年累积用量达1000克,应用3年以上),可明显增加肾毒性的危险。 3、与抗病毒药剂多夫定合用时,会增加毒性,应避免同时应用。 4、与抗凝血药合用时可增加抗凝血作用,故要调整抗凝血药的用量。Paracetamol Main Use :Pain, fever Active Ingredient :Paracetamol Manufacturer :Non-proprietary How does it work? This medicine contains the active ingredient paracetamol, which is a medicine used to relieve mild to moderate pain. It is also useful for reducing fever. It is not fully understood how paracetamol produces these effects. Paracetamol can be used to relieve mild to moderate aches and pains associated with conditions such as headaches, migraine, toothache, teething, colds and flu. It is also useful for reducing fever and discomfort associated with colds and flu and following vaccinations.

Thechaser追逐者中英对照

The Chaser John Collier Alan Auste n, as n ervous as a kitte n, went up certa in dark and creaky stairs in the n eighborhood of Pell Street , and peered about for a long time on the dim landing before he found the n ame he wan ted writte n obscurely on one of the doors. He pushed ope n this door, as he had bee n told to do, and found himself in a tiny room, which contained no furn iture but a pla in kitche n table, a rock in g-chair, and an ordinary chair. On one of the dirty buff-colored walls were a couple of shelves, containing in all perhaps a doze n bottles and jars. An old man sat in the rock in g-chair, read ing a n ewspaper. Ala n, without a word, handed him the card he had been given. 人Sit down, Mr. Austen, said the old man very politely. 人I am glad to make your acqua intance. 人Is it true, asked Alan, 人that you have a certain mixture that has ! er ! quite extraordinary effects? 人My dear sir, replied the old man, 人my stock in trade is not very large ! I don …t deal in laxatives and teething mixtures ! but such as it is, it is varied. I think nothing I sell has effects which could be precisely described as ordin ary. 人Well, the fact is ! began Alan. 人Here, for example, interrupted the old man, reaching for a bottle from the shelf. 人Here is a liquid as colorless as water, almost tasteless, quite imperceptible in coffee, wine, or any other beverage. It is also quite imperceptible to any known method of autopsy. 人Do you mean it is a poison? cried Alan, very much horrified. 人Call it a glove-cleaner if you like, said the old man indifferently. 人Maybe it will clean gloves. I have never tried. One might call it a life-cleaner. Lives need cleaning sometimes. 人I want nothing of that sort, said Alan. 人Probably it is just as well, said the old man. 人Do you know the price of this? For one teaspoonful, which is sufficient, I ask five thousa nd dollars. Never less. Not a penny less. 人I hope all your mixtures are not as expensive, said Alan apprehe nsively. 人Oh dear, no, said the old man. 人It would be no good charg ing that sort of price for a love poti on, for example. Young people who n eed a love poti on very seldom have five thousa nd dollars. Otherwise they would not n eed a love poti on. 人I am glad to hear that, said Alan. 人I look at it like this, said the old man. 人Please a customer with one article, and he will come back whe n he n eeds another. Even if it is more costly. He will save up for it, if n ecessary. 人So, said Alan, 人you really do sell love potions? 人If I did not sell love potions, said the old man, reaching for another bottle, 人I should not have mentioned the other matter to you. It is only whe n one is in a positi on to oblige that one can afford to be so con fide ntial. 人And these potions, said Alan. 人They are not just ! just ! er ! 人Oh, no, said the old man. 人Their effects are permanent, and exte nd far bey ond casual impulse. But they in clude it. Boun tifully, in siste ntly. Everlast in gly. 人Dear me! said Alan, attempting a look of scientific detachme nt. "How very in teresti ng! 人But consider the spiritual side, said the old man.

综英翻译

1.As it was a formal dinner party, I wore formal dress, as mother told me to. 2.His girlfriend advised him to get out of/ get rid of his bad habit of smoking before it took hold. 3.Anticipating that the demand for electricity will be high during the next few months, they have decided to increase its production. 4.It is said that Bill has been fired for continually violating the company’s safety rules. -- Bill is said to have been fired for .... 5.It is reported that the government has taken proper measures to avoid the possibility of a severe water shortage. / The local government is reported to have taken ... Susan lost her legs because of a car accident. For a time, she didn’t know how to face up to the fact that she would never be able to walk again. One day, while scanning some magazines, a true story caught her eyes. It gave a vivid description of how a disabled girl became a writer. Greatly inspired, Susan began to feel that she, too, would finally be able to lead a useful life.

Unit7TheChaser课文翻译综合教程三

Unit 7 The Chaser John Henry Collier 1 Alan Austen, as nervous as a kitten, went up certain dark and creaky stairs in the neighborhood of Pell Street, and peered about for a long time on the dim hallway before he found the name he wanted written obscurely on one of the doors. 2 He pushed open this door, as he had been told to do, and found himself in a tiny room, which contained no furniture but a plain kitchen table, a rocking-chair, and an ordinary chair. On one of the dirty buff-coloured walls were a couple of shelves, containing in all perhaps a dozen bottles and jars. 3 An old man sat in the rocking-chair, reading a newspaper. Alan, without a word, handed him the card he had been given. “Sit down, Mr. Austen,” said the old man very politely. “I am glad to make your acquaintance.” 4 “Is it true,” asked Alan, “that you have a certain mixture that has … er … quite extraordinary effects?” 5 “My dear sir,” replied the old man, “my sto ck in trade is not very large — I don’t deal in laxatives and teething mixtures —but such as it is, it is varied. I think nothing I sell has effects which could be precisely described as ordinary.” 6 “Well, the fact is …” began Alan. 7 “Here, for example,” interrupted the old man, reaching for a bottle from the shelf. “Here is a liquid as colourless as water, almost tasteless, quite imperceptible in coffee, wine, or any other beverage. It is also quite imperceptible to any known method of autopsy.” 8 “Do you mean it is a poison?” cried Alan, very much horrified. 9 “Call it a glove-cleaner if you like,” said the old man indifferently. “Maybe it will clean gloves. I have never tried. One might call it a life-cleaner. Lives need cleaning sometimes.” 10 “I want nothing of that sort,” said Alan. 11 “Probably it is just as well,” said the old man. “Do you know the price of this? For one teaspoonful, which is sufficient, I ask five thousand dollars. Never less. Not a penny less.” 12 “I hope all your mixtures are not as expensive,” said Alan apprehensively.

飞机专业术语(英汉对照)

1、the airframe 机身,结构 2、The front (fore) part 前部 3、The rear (aft) part 后部 4、port 左旋(舵) 5、starboard 右旋(舵) 6、the inboard engine or inboards 内侧发动机 7、the outboard engine or outboards 外侧发动机 8、the nose 机头 9、the belly 腹部 10、the skin 蒙皮 11、the windscreen or windshield 风挡 12、the wing 机翼 13、the trailing edge 机翼后缘 14、the leading edge 机翼前缘 15、the wing tip 翼尖 16、the control surface 操纵面 17、ailerons 副翼 18、flaps (inboard flap,outboard flap,leading edge flaps) 襟翼(内侧襟翼,外侧襟翼,前缘缝翼) 19、spoilers (inboard\outboard spoiler)(spoiler down\up) 阻力板,扰流板(内、外侧扰流板)(扰流板放下、打开) 20、slats 缝翼 21、elevators (elevator control tab) 升降舵(升降舵操纵片) 22、rudder (rudder control tab) 方向舵(方向舵操纵片)

23、flap angle 襟翼角 24、flap setting 襟翼调整 25、the full flap position 全襟翼位置 26、a flapless landing 无襟翼着陆 27、the landing gear 起落架 28、stabilizer 安定面 29、the nose wheel 前轮 30、gear locked 起落架锁定 31、the wheel well 起落架舱 32、the wheel door 起落架舱门 33、a tyre 轮胎 34、to burst 爆破 35、a deflated tyre 放了气的轮胎 36、a flat tyre 走了气的轮胎 37、a puncture 轮胎被扎破 38、to extend the flaps (to retract the flaps) 放下襟翼(收上襟翼) 39、gear extention (gear retraction) 起落架放下(起落架收上) 40、The gear is jammed. 起落架被卡死。 41、The flaps are jammed. 襟翼被卡死。 42、the emergency extention system 应急放下系统 43、to crank the gear down 摆动放下起落架 44、the brakes 刹车

中英文对照说明书

前言 Preface 感您使用燃烧控制研究院生产的就地点火控制柜装置。 本公司的就地点火控制柜装置是燃烧控制研究院自主开发生产的高品质就地控制装置,在使用系列本程控装置之前请您仔细阅读该手册以保证正确使用并充分发挥其优越性。 本说明书对就地控制柜(以下简称控制柜)的操作和安装方法等做了详细的介绍。使用控制柜以前,在阅读本说明书的基础上,进行安全正确使用。Thank you for choosing the Local Ignition Control Cabinet designed by our company. The local ignition control device is explored by our company for the ignition control of boiler. This manual describes installation and operation of the cabinet clearly, please read this manual before using. 容介绍Brief introduction 本手册介绍了点火控制柜的组成、安装、配线、功能参数、日常使用维护及对故障的处理 The manual includes the cabinet’s components, installation, wiring, data, maintenance, and troubleshooting. 读者对象Applicable readers 本书适合下列人员阅读This manual is applicable for 设备安装人员、维护人员、设计人员 Installer, maintenance man, and designer 本书约定Stipulation 符号约定Symbol stipulations 说明提醒操作者需重点关注的地方 Points operator should pay attention to 由于没有按要求操作可能造成死亡或重伤的场合危险! This symbol indicates death or GBH that may occur as a result

综英翻译

Lesson 1 1. An imbalance between the rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailment of republics. 贫富不均乃共和政体最致命的疾病。 2. Their poverty is a temporary misfortune, if they are poor and meek, they eventually will inherit the earth. 他们的贫穷只是一种暂时性的不幸,如果他们贫穷但却温顺,他们 最终将成为世界的主人。 3. Couples in love should repair to R. H. Macy’s, not their bedrooms. 热恋的夫妇应该在梅西百货商店过夜,而不是他们的新房 4. The American beauty rose can be produced in the splendor and fragrance which bring cheer to its beholder only by sacrificing the early buds which grow up around it. And so is in economic life. It’s merely the working out of a law of the nature and a law of God. 美国这朵玫瑰花以其华贵与芳香让观众倾 倒,赞不绝口,而她之所以能被培植就是因为在早期其周围的花蕾被插 掉了,在经济生活中情况亦是如此。这是自然规律和上帝的意志在起作 用。 5. (It has become) an economically not unrewarding enterprise. (它已成为)经济上收入不菲的行业。 6. There is...no form of oppression that is quiet so great, no constriction on thought and effort quiet so comprehensive, as that which come from having no money at all. 没有哪种压迫比身无分文更厉害,也没有哪种对思想和行为的束缚 比一无所有来得更全面彻底。 7. Freedom we rightly cherish. Cherishing it, we should not use it as a cover for denying freedom to those in need.

Unit7TheChaser练习的答案解析综合教程三

Unit 7 The Chaser Key to the Exercises Text comprehension I. Decide which of the following is likely to happen after the story. C II. Judge, according to the text, whether the following statements are true or false. 1. F (Refer to Paragraph 5. The old man says that his stock in trade is not very large, but it is varied and has extraordinary effects.) 2. F (Refer to Paragraphs 11 and 1 3. The price of a glove-cleaner, as he calls it, is very high, five thousand dollars for a teaspoonful, but the love potion is very cheap.) 3. F (Refer to Paragraph 19. The old man claims that the effects of love potions are permanent.) 4. T (Refer to Paragraphs 24 and 28. Austen says that Diana is fond of parties and, although she is everything to him already, she does not care about his love at all. That is why he decides to go to the old man for the love potion and whenever the old man mentions the magic of his potion, he can't help "crying." From that, we can see the man loves the girl very much.) 5. F (The old man sells the love potions almost for nothing because by doing so his customers will come back for a much dearer commodity, the glove-cleaner, to help them out. It is the "death potion" that the old man makes most of his profits from, and intends to sell to his customers.) III. Answer the following questions. 1. What the old man means is that a young man who falls in love one-sidedly is seldom rich enough to win a girl's heart. His words imply that money is one of the crucial factors for love. If a man is not rich, he can rarely expect to be loved by a girl. 2. Refer to Paragraphs 19 to 37. The love potion has powerful, everlasting effects. To begin with, it may produce sexual desire in the person who takes it. And on the spiritual side, it can replace indifference with devotion and scorn with adoration. It will make a gay girl want nothing but solitude and her lover's company. She will feel jealous of him when her lover is with other girls; she will want to be everything to him. She will be only interested in her lover and take every concern of him. Even if he slips a bit, she will forgive him though terribly hurt. In a word, she will fall in love with him if she drinks the love potion. 3. Refer to Paragraphs 39 to 43. It is an irony, by which the author seems to imply that love is far from being precious or desirable. It is easy for a man to fall in love, yet it is hard

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