2011下半年公共英語(yǔ)三級(jí)考試PETS3級(jí)學(xué)習(xí)筆記(8)

字號(hào):

下半年P(guān)ETS考試備考已經(jīng)拉開(kāi)帷幕,為了幫助大家備考,從本期開(kāi)始我們將為大家整理一系列公共英語(yǔ)三級(jí)考試PETS3級(jí)學(xué)習(xí)筆記,希望對(duì)大家備考有幫助。
    Dialogues /monologues:
    1、we lived with a cousin in Dallas for 2 years.
    lived with:與……同住(寄宿在…家)
    2、I have to do a load of laundry today.
    我今天還得洗完一筐衣服。
    3、I think my parents would have liked to live overseas for at least 20 more years.
    我想(要不是這樣),父母可能還要在海外生活至少20年。(虛擬語(yǔ)氣,實(shí)際上父母已經(jīng)
    回國(guó)了)
    4、A lot of proposals floating around state legislatures are aimed at throwing the children of illegal immigrants out of public schools. Do you find such ideas helpful?
    許多旨在從公立學(xué)校驅(qū)逐非法移民子女的提議日日涌向州立法團(tuán)體,您認(rèn)為這些辦法有益嗎?(floating是“未決定的”)
    Passage:
    I got a chance to actually meet an online friend in real life when I went on vacation to San Francisco. I‘d left a note in my live Journal telling everyone where I’d be going. When I went online at the hotel, I found a comment from my friend Kim telling me that she lived nearby in Palo Alto, and asking if I wanted to get together.
    After checking with my parents, I rushed back to the computer to let her know that I cloud meet her on my way back too Los Angeles. We exchanged cell phone numbers and set up a meeting place and time. After hanging up, though, I began to get nervous. I had known her for a few months, but meeting someone in person is a lot different than chatting over the internet, and I was worried it wouldn’t turn out well.
    We both brought people with us for safety reasons—I brought my parents and she brought a friend—and met in front of a bookstore. I got there a few minutes early, and instructed my parents to please try not to embarrass me. I didn’t see her at first, but after a few minutes, we both recognized each other.
    Even though I’d never met her before, I felt like I knew her from all the times we’d talked online. We talked about graphic design, the classes we were taking, clubs we were in and college, which we were both stressed out about since California schools are so competitive and it’s becoming harder to get accepted into good universities. My parents seemed to have a good time too—my dad got into some incredibly involved science conversation with Kim’s friend Derrick.
    The meeting lasted less than an hour, since I had to get home. At the end, we hurried outside to take photos with each other, them said goodbye. Even though the meeting was short, it was a lot of fun, and we made plans to get together again if I came up north or she visited near Los Angeles. Now, we talk online several times a week. Before we had only a few conversations a month.
    Meeting Kim helped my parents and I get more used to the idea of online and offline life intersecting. I’m glad to have found friends whom I never would have discovered otherwise.