英語高級視聽說?開學時的考試大概就是考英語吧,比較寬泛,跟高中學的沒什么聯系,基本就是走個過場,完全沒關系,無所謂難不難,隨便做做。準備的東西的話,到學校有的賣的一個大包,包括被子褥子杯子臉盆什么的都有了,那么,英語高級視聽說?一起來了解一下吧。
Unit 2 The new space race
A plan to build the world's first airport for launching commercial spacecraft
in New Mexico is the latest development in the new space race, a race
among private companies and billionaire entrepreneurs to carry paying
passengers into space and to kick-start a new industry, astro tourism.
The man who is leading the race may not be familiar to you, but to
astronauts, pilots, and aeronautical engineers
–
basically to anyone who
knows anything about aircraft design
–
Burt Rutan is a legend, an
aeronautical engineer whose latest aircraft is the world's first private
spaceship. As he told
60 Minutes
correspondent Ed Bradley
when he first
met him a little over a year ago, if his idea flies, someday space travel may
be cheap enough and safe enough for ordinary people to go where only
astronauts have gone before.
The
White
Knight
is
a
rather
unusual
looking
aircraft,
built
just
for
the
purpose of carrying a rocket plane called SpaceShipOne, the first spacecraft
built by private enterprise.
White
Knight
and
SpaceShipOne
are
the
latest
creations
of
Burt
Rutan.
They're part of his dream to develop a commercial travel business in space.
"There will be a new industry. And we are just now in a beginning. I will
predict that in 12 or 15 years, there will be tens of thousands, maybe even
hundreds
of
thousands
of
people
that fly, and
see that
black
sky,"
says
Rutan.
On June 21, 2004, White Knight took off from an airstrip in Mojave, Calif.,
carrying Rutan's spaceship. It took 63 minutes to reach the launch altitude
of 47,000 feet. Once there, the White Knight crew prepared to release the
spaceship one.
The fierce acceleration slammed Mike Melvill, the pilot, back in his seat. He
put SpaceShipOne into a near vertical trajectory, until, as planned, the fuel
ran out.
Still climbing like a spent bullet, Melvill hoped to gain as much altitude as
possible to reach space before the ship began falling back to earth.
By the time the spaceship one reached the end of its climb, it was 22 miles
off course. But it had, just barely, reached an altitude of just over 62 miles
—
the internationally recognized boundary of space.
It was the news Rutan had been waiting for. Falling back to Earth from an
altitude of 62 miles, SpaceShipOne's tilting wing, a revolutionary innovation
called the feather, caused the rocket plane to position itself for a relatively
benign re-entry and turned the spaceship into a glider.
SpaceShipOne glided to a flawless landing before a crowd of thousands.
"After that June flight, I felt like I was floating around and just once in a
while touching the ground," remembers Rutan. "We had an operable space
plane."
Rutan's
"operable
space
plane"
was
built
by
a
company
with
only
130
employees at a cost of just $25 million. He believes his success has ended
the
government's
monopoly
on
space
travel,
and
opened
it
up
to
the
ordinary citizen.
"I concluded that for affordable travel to happen, the little guy had to do it
because he had the incentive for a business," says Rutan.
Does Rutan view this as a business venture or a technological challenge?
"It's a technological challenge first. And it's a dream I had when I was 12,"
he says.
Rutan started
building
model
airplanes
when
he
was seven
years
old, in
Dyenuba, Calif., where he grew up.
"I was fascinated by putting balsa wood together and see how it would fly,"
he remembers. "And when I started having the capability to do contests and
actually win a trophy by making a better model, then I was hooked."
He's been hooked ever since. He designed his first airplane in 1968 and flew
it
four
years
later
.
Since
then
his
airplanes
have
become
known
for their
stunning looks, innovative design and technological sophistication.
Rutan began designing a spaceship nearly a decade ago, after setting up set
up his own aeronautical research and design firm. By the year 2000, he had
turned his designs into models and was testing them outside his office.
"When I got to the point that I knew that I could make a safe spaceship that
would fly a manned space mission -- when I say, 'I,' not the government,
our
little
team
--
I
told
Paul
Allen,
'I
think
we
can
do
this.'
And
he
immediately said, 'Go with it.'"
Paul Allen co-founded Microsoft and is one of the richest men in the world.
His decision to pump $25 million into Rutan's company, Scaled Composites,
was the vote of confidence that his engineers needed to proceed.
"That was a heck of a challenge to put in front of some people like us, where
we're told, 'Well, you can't do that. You wanna see? We can do this," says
Pete Sebold.
Work on White Knight and SpaceShipOne started four years ago in secret.
Both
aircraft
were
custom
made
from
scratch
by a
team of
12 engineers
using layers of tough carbon fabric glued together with epoxy. Designed to
be light-weight, SpaceShipOne can withstand the stress of re-entry because
of
the
radical
way
it
comes
back
into the atmosphere, like
a
badminton
shuttlecock or a birdie.
He showed
60 Minutes
how it works.
"Feathering the wing is kind of a dramatic thing, in that it changes the whole
configuration of the airplane," he explains. "And this is done in space, okay?
It's done after you fly into space."
"We have done six reentries. Three of them from space and three of them
from lower altitudes. And some of them have even come down upside down.
And the airplane by itself straightens itself right up," Rutan explains
By September 2004, Rutan was ready for his next challenge: an attempt to
win a $10 million prize to be the first to fly a privately funded spacecraft into
space, and do it twice in two weeks.
"After
we
had
flown
the
June
flight,
and
we
had
reached
the
goal of
our
program, then the most important thing was to win that prize," says Rutan.
That prize was the Ansari X Prize
–
an extraordinary competition created in
1996 to stimulate private investment in space.
The first of the two flights was piloted, once again, by Mike Melvill.
September's
flight
put
Melville's skill
and training to
the test.
As
he
was
climbing out of the atmosphere, the spacecraft suddenly went into a series
of rolls.
How concerned was he?
"Well, I thought I could work it out. I'm very confident when I'm flying a
plane when I've got the controls in my hand. I always believed I can fix this
no matter how bad it gets," says Melville.
SpaceShipOne rolled 29 times before he regained control. The remainder of
the flight was without incident, and Melvill made the 20-minute glide back to
the Mojave airport. The landing on that September afternoon was flawless.
Because Rutan wanted to attempt the second required flight just four days
later
, the engineers had little time to find out what had gone wrong. Working
12-hour shifts, they discovered they didn't need to fix the spacecraft, just
the way in which the pilots flew it.
For
the
second
flight,
it
was
test
pilot
Brian
Binnie's
turn
to
fly
SpaceShipOne.
The
spaceship
flew
upward
on
a
perfect
trajectory,
breaking
through
to
space.
Rutan's SpaceShipOne had flown to space twice in two weeks, captured the
X
Prize
worth
$10
million,
and
won
bragging
rights
over
the
space
establishment.
"You know I was wondering what they are feeling, 'They' being that other
space
agency," Rutan
says
laughing. "You know, quite
frankly, I
think the big
guys, the Boeings, the Lockheeds, the nay-say people at Houston, I think
they're looking at each other now and saying 'We're screwed!' Because, I'll
tell you something, I have a hell of a lot bigger goal than they do!"
"The astronauts say that the most exciting experience is floating around in
a space suit," says Rutan, showing off his own plans. "But I don't agree. A
space suit is an awful thing. It constrains you and it has noisy fans running.
Now look over here. It's quiet. And you're out here watching the world go by
in what you might call a 'spiritual dome.' Well, that, to me, is better than a
space suit because you're not constrained."
He
also
has a
vision
for
a
resort
hotel in space,
and says it
all
could be
accomplished in the foreseeable future. Rutan believes it is the dawn of a
new era.
He explains, "I think we've proven now that the small guys can build a space
ship and go to space. And not only that, we've convinced a rich guy, a very
rich guy, to come to
this country and build
a space program to take everyday
people to space."
That "rich guy" is Richard Branson, the English billionaire who owns Virgin
Atlantic Airlines. Branson has signed a $120 million deal with Rutan to build
five spaceships for paying customers. Named "Virgin Galactic," it will be the
world's first "spaceline." Flights are expected to begin in 2008.
"We believe by flying tens of thousands of people to space, and making that
a profitable business, that that will lead into affordable orbital travel," says
Rutan.
Rutan thinks there "absolutely" is a market for this.
With
tickets initially going for $200,000, the market is
limited. Nevertheless,
Virgin Galactic says 38,000 people have put down a deposit for a seat, and
90 of those have paid the full $200,000.
But Rutan has another vision. "The goal is affordable travel above low-Earth
orbit. In other words, affordable travel for us to go to the moon. Affordable
travel. That means not just NASA astronauts, but thousands of people being
able to go to the moon," he says. "I'd like to go. Wouldn't you?"
Episode3
aspects,line up,make the jump,subset,demographic,transcend, popular,fascinated,golf style,against,exudes femininity,level of interest
英語新視野2
, Unit1
II. Listening Skills
1. M: Why don’t we go to the concert today?
W: I’ll go get the keys.
Q: What does the woman imply?
2. W: I can’t find my purse anywhere. The opera tickets are in it.
M: Have you checked in the car?
Q: What does the man imply?
3. M: Are you going to buy that pirated CD?
W: Do I look like a thief?
Q: What does the woman imply?
4. M: Do you think the singer is pretty?
W: Let’s just say that I wouldn’t/t vote for her in the local beauty contest.
Q: What does the woman imply about the singer?
5. M: Have you seen Tom? I can’t find him anywhere.
W: The light in his dorm was on just a few minutes ago.
Q: What does the woman mean?
1.B 2.B3.D 4.C 5.A
III. Listening In
Task 1: Encore!
As soon as the singer completed the song, the audience cried, “Encore! Encore!” The singer was delighted and sang the song again. She couldn’t believe it when the audience shouted for her to sing it again. The cycle of shouts and songs was repeated ten more times. The singer was overjoyed with the response from the audience. She talked them and asked them why they were so much audience in hearing the same song again and again. One of the people in the audience replied, “We wanted you to improve it; now it is much better.”
1.F 2.T 3.F 4.T 5.F
Task 2: The Carpenters
W: They play “Yesterday Once More” all the time on the campus radio. Do you like it?
M: I do. I never get tired of it. I like the Carpenters. Their voices are so beautiful and clear. I guess that’s why they’re so popular.
W: I like the way their voices blend. There were just two of them, brother and sister, right?
M: Yes, Richard and Karen I think they were. She died I think.
W: Yes, anorexia. It is hard to believe that someone so beautiful would starve herself to death.
M: It’s a problem everywhere in the world, including China, I’m afraid. Women worry too much about their appearances, and are so crazy about losing weight.
W: Well, let’s go for lunch before we go to the concert.
1. beautiful and clear 2. blend well 3. sister 4. worry too much 5. more important
Task 3: Mozart
Mozart was a fascinating musician and composer whose fame continues to grow more than two centuries after his death. He was born in Salzburg, Austria, in 1756. Before the age of four, he had shown great musical talent. His father then decided to let him start taking harpsichord lessons. The boy’s reputation as a musical talent grew fast. At five, he was composing music. Form that time on, Mozart was performing n concerts and writing music. By his early teens, he had mastered the piano, violin and harpsichord, and was writing symphonies and operas. His first major opera was performed in Milan in 1770, when he was only fourteen. At fifteen, Mozart became the conductor for an orchestra in Salzburg. In 1781, he left for Vienna, where he was in great demand as both a performer and a composition teacher. His first opera was a success. But life was not easy because he was a poor businessman, and his finances were always in a bad state. His music from the next decade was not very popular, and he eventually fell back on his teaching jobs for a living. In 1788 he stopped performing in public, preferring only to compose. He died in 1791 at the age of thirty-five. Although he lived only a short life, he composed over 600 works.
1. Which of the following is true of Mozart? D
2. How long has Mozart’s fame lasted? A
3. Which of the following is true of the four-year-old Mozart? B
4. What could Mozart do at the age of six? C
5. Which of the following is not mentioned as one of Mozart’s accomplishments while he was in his early teens? C
請采納答案,支持我一下。
我就是這個學校這個專業的學生,還有一年畢業,對這個專業很了解。
這個英國的學校是諾桑比亞大學,他與我們學校建立的合作項目,學制是4.5+1,畢業可得到北京中醫藥大學大學的文學學士學位和諾桑比亞大學管理學碩士學位,一年學費7000英鎊左右,可能會有變化,他的排名你可洞段以在網上查到,已經有一批學生到英國學習了,如果你想了解更多這個專業的情況,我把qq給你發郵件留言芹顫搭嫌拿均可405549696
樓上說的比較詳細了,再稍微補充一些。專業是健康科學管理,Health Sciences (management). 性質屬于自費留學,去不去也是自愿,只不過是兩校間有個合作項目,手續什么的走起來相當方便。
關于學校和專業的實力,中等偏上吧,不算太優秀。第一批出國的是我同班同學,跟他們聊天感覺褒貶不一,把優缺點給你稍微總結一下吧。
最大的優點就是節省時間!醫學英語本科學制5年,如果走這個項目的話可以提前一個學期出國,就是本科學到四年半的時候(大五第一學期之后的那個寒假)就可以出國了,我同學們就是今年1月份走的。然后英國碩士研究生的學制就是1年,這樣到12月底就畢業了。雖然根據英國的相關規定要到來年6月份才能拿到畢業證學位證什么的,但是學校在12月份已經可以給你開具證明,不影響找工作。而普通在國內的研究生要到畢業之后才入學,一般是3年,少數2年,沒有一年滴!這樣一來我出國的同學們在像我這樣在國內讀研的同學上學半年之后,研究生就畢業了……這個是最讓我眼饞的一點!
再有一個相當明顯的優點就是手續簡單!無論從本校還是諾大方面,校方需要的手續方面那是一路大開綠燈,可以說完全沒有阻礙。再加上都是很多學生一起,有集團作戰優勢,就是到外面辦手續一般也不會遇到什么麻煩。
以上就是英語高級視聽說的全部內容,英語口語、英語聽力、英語高級視聽說、英語文體與寫作、劍橋商務英語、商務英語翻譯、實用商務公關英語口語、外貿函電寫作、文秘英語、國際貿易實務、外事實務、IT職業英語、涉外禮儀、檔案管理等。管理系堅持專業設置貼近市場、。