(完整)高考英语阅读理解记叙文类讲义

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1、基础知识

a)词:“查单词”

b)句:“画括号”

i.基本知识:句子=主干+修饰=主干+(介短/从句/非谓/时状)

ii.基本步骤:给介短从句非谓时状画括号,把句子化整为零!

c)段:“标主题”

2、解题能力

学单词最好的方法

记叙文(2015浙江D)

unite 联合v.

United States of America 美利坚合众国

United Kingdom 联合王国

United Nations 联合国

desire 欲望n.v.

want to do sth

= plan to do sth

= desire to do sth

= have a great desire to do sth

= look forward to doing sth.

= be longing/thirsty for doing sth

(As for sth) 至于..呢

As for the reasons,…至于理由呢,…

share 分享v.n.

canine 犬类的adj.*

lust 欲望*n.

(In 2004), (when my daughter Becky was ten), she and my husband, Joe, were united (in their desire)(for a dog). (As for me), I shared none (of their canine lust). 他们买狗我不想

plead 恳求v.

take care (of sb/sth) 照顾某人或某物

walk sb/sth 陪sb/sth一起走,溜sb/sth

walk the dog 溜狗

walk JJ to the bus stop 陪JJ走到公交站牌

feed 喂,养

feed/support my family 养家糊口

bathe 给…洗澡v.

But why, they pleaded. “Because I don’t have time (to take care) (of a dog).” “But we’ll do it.” “Really? You’re going (to walk the dog)? Feed the dog? Bathe the dog?” “Yes, yes, and yes.” “I don’t believe you.” “We will. We promise.” 谈判过程

cute 可爱的adj.

puppy 小狗狗n.

while 当…时候;然而

receive 收到v.

accept 接受v.

that “说”(引导名从时)

track 踪迹,轨迹n.

keep track of sth/sb. 跟踪sth/sb.

shoot 射击v.

one’s shot某人的决定

schedule 时间表,日程表n.(s-che-du-le“死车堵了”)

vet 兽医n.

appointment 约会n.

look up 往上看 查字典

human 人类n.

small 小号S号

medium 中号M号

large 大号L号

extra 额外的adj.

XXS= extra extra small

XL= extra large

calculate 计算v.

sucker 胆小鬼,好欺负的人n.

pack 包n.打包v.

They didn’t.(From day two) -- everyone wanted to walk the cute puppy that first day -- , neither thought (to walk the dog). (While I was slow) (to accept) (that I would be the one) (to keep track of her shots), (to schedule her vet appointments), (to feed and clean her), Misty knew this (on day one). (As she looked up) (at the three new humans) (in her life) (small, medium, and large), she calculated, “The medium one is the sucker (in the pack).”我照顾狗

【周三】

Quickly , she and I developed something very similar to a Vulcan mind meld (心灵融合) . She’d look at me with those sad brown eyes of hers, beam her need, and then wait, trusting I would understand — which, strangely, I almost always did. In no time, she became my feet as I read, and splaying across my stomach as I watched television.

Even so, part of me continued to resent walking duty. Joe and Becky had promised. Not fair, I’d balk (不心甘情愿地做) silently as she and I walked . “Not fair,” I’d loudly remind anyone within earshot upon our return home.

Then one day — January 1 , 2007 , to be exact — my husband’s doctor uttered an unthinkable word: leukemia ( 白血病) .With that, I spent eight to ten hours a day with Joe in the hospital, doing anything and everything I could to ease his discomfort. During those six months of hospitalizations, Becky, 12 at the time, adjusted to other adults being in the house when she returned from school. My work colleagues adjusted to my taking off at a moment's notice for medical emergencies. Every part of my life changed; no part of my old routine remained.

Save one: Misty still needed walking. At the beginning, when friends offered to take her through her paces, I declined because I knew they had their own households to deal with.

【周四】

As the months went by, I began to realize that I actually wanted to walk Misty. The walk in the morning before I headed to the hospital was a quiet, peaceful time to gather my thoughts or to just be before the day's medical drama unfolded. The evening walk was a time to shake off the day's upsets and let the worry tracks in my head go to white noise.

When serious illness visits your household, it's, not just your daily routine and your assumptions about the future that are no longer familiar. Pretty much