Becky: You've learned a lot, haven't you?
John: Since you can keep your skin so young-looking and maintain your figure so
well, you might as well write a book on beauty secrets. Becky: Don't pull my leg. Anyway, you'd do well to try the cucumber treatment on
yourself. Put some cucumber slices on your head. At least they'll keep that bald spot from shining so brightly.
BABAB Task 3
Susan:
Hi, Rebecca, are you all excited about the big trip?
Rebecca: Hi, Susan. I sure am. Mix business and pleasure and travel on an expense
account. Susan:
It looks as if I'll have to pay extra for overweight luggage. How did you manage to fit everything into one suitcase?
Rebecca: You need to pack smart. First, I chose two colors, and then built my
wardrobe around them. Susan:
But we will need clothes for dress, casual wear, and sometimes sort of in-between \
Rebecca: That's all true enough, but I have a pair of black dress slacks, with black
shoes to match. If I wear that with my turquoise silk blouse and a matching necklace and earrings, I will look dressed up. Susan:
Sure you will, but that is only one outfit.
Rebecca: If I wear a T-shirt with the same slacks, I am more casual. Susan:
And you really have two outfits, don't you?
Rebecca: Well, not really, I have three. If I bring a pashmina, or a dress scarf,
I can dress up the T-shirt into casual chic. Susan:
Three outfits? But your suitcase doesn't look nearly that full!
Rebecca: Yes, and if I add a skirt that works with the blouse and the T-shirt, it
increases the number of my wardrobe combinations even more. Susan:
And different accessories, necklaces and scarves, for example, will give you a different look again without adding much weight.
Rebecca: Now my suitcase will be half empty, with lots of room for shopping.
Answers:
She chose two colors, then built her wardrobe around them.
She has a pair of black dress slacks, with black shoes to match. If she wears that with her turquoise silk blouse and a matching necklace and earrings, she will look dressed up.
If she wears a T-shirt with the black dress slacks, she is more casual. If she brings a pashmina, or another dress scarf, she can dress up the T-shirt into casual chic.
Her suitcase will be nearly empty, with lots of room for shopping.
Viewing and speaking > Task 1
Andrew:
Whereas in the 1960s clothing designers were responding to the space age, designers now are responding to the computer age, so they are literally combining clothing with new technology.
Voice-over: In the 1850s the hardworking cow-herders of the American West began
wearing a brand-new style of heavy-duty cotton clothing. Double stitched and fastened with rivets, this functional industrial design solution was the brainchild of young entrepreneur Levi Strauss. The company that now bears his name is developing new industrial design solutions, but this time it's not for cow-herders, it's for the urban nomads of the information age. Voice-over: Jenny Arksey is the designer behind the ICD Plus jacket. Jenny:
This is a new range of clothing we call ICD Plus. And it's the merging of electronics and fashion together. We have a phone, an MP3 player, headphones, and a microphone, and then we have our remote... our remote system here. So once somebody calls you and you have your earphones in, you will hear it ringing, and then all you have to do is to press the phone key, and that will interrupt and you can start speaking straight away into your collar.
Voice-over: To create the ICD Plus range, Levis went into partnership with the
electronics company Philips. Jenny:
Obviously Philips being an electronics industry and Levis being a fashion industry, they're actually quite far apart. So the idea was to bring them together and actually manufacture a finished product.
Voice-over: Like Vexed and C. P. Company, Jenny is designing for the mobile generation. Jenny:
I think this kind of product is very suitable to the modern-day worker
who needs to be connected all the time, all day, to their phone, and to
the music, and to the Internet and to have the ability to just keep moving.
Voice-over: Mobility in this case comes at a price: 600 pounds a shot for the ICD Plus jacket is a serious investment, and with all the wires, earphones, mobile and MP3 player, you might find it a bit fiddly. The flaws are obvious, but this is only the beginning. It's a steppingstone to what we might expect in the future.
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)
combining clothing with new technology brand-new style
new industrial design solutions electronics and fashion into your collar
went into partnership with bring them together the modern-day worker 600 pounds
to what we might expect
Unit 3 Watch out when nature strikes back. Lead in
Basic listening
(1)W: Did you read the paper today? There was an earthquake in Brazil. M:
Yes, but it only measured 3.5 on the Richter scale. I don't think there would be any casualties.
What is the man's opinion of the result of the earthquake?
Q:
(2)W: I'm a bit worried about Susan traveling to southern India. It's the rainy season
there, and there may be landslides.
M:
Susan can take care of herself. She won't go anywhere too risky. Besides, you can always
e-mail her if it makes you feel better. What is Susan doing?
Q:
(3)M: Hi, I thought you were on holiday in Asia! Back already? W:
We never got there! Our travel agent canceled our arrangements because the whole region is flooded. We were so disappointed. We won't get another chance to go this year.
Which of the following statement is true about the woman?
Q:
(4)M: Our flight to Tokyo was delayed by 12 hours. Can you believe it? A typhoon hit
the east coast and it was chaos. W:
I saw it on the news. The flooding and damage were terrible. I don't think anyone was hurt though.
What is the consequence of the typhoon?
Q:
(5)W: Did you see that program last night about volcanoes? It was fascinating! M:
Yes, the weird thing is the molten lava looks so beautiful, yet it's so destructive. And I couldn't believe how far the ash can travel. I'm glad we don't have any volcanoes here!
What is the man's description of lava?
Q:
DACBC Listening in Task 1
Son:
Hi, mom, what are we having for dinner tonight?
Mother: I haven't started yet. Why, have you any requests? Son:
How about tsunami for a change—I don't know what it is, but I heard some Japanese people using the word on the bus the other day. Sounds like a food. Maybe it's similar to sushi.
Mother: Nonsense. Tsunami comes from Japanese words meaning harbor and wave. If
we had a tsunami, it would be the other way around, young man. Son:
Why? What is it?
Mother: I mean it could swallow you up. A tsunami is an enormous series of very