高级英语第一册Unit4文章结构+课文讲解+课文翻译+课后练习+答案

高级英语第一册Unit4文章结构+课文讲解+课文翻译+课后练习+答案


2023年12月1日发(作者:红米note 7)

Unit 4 Everyday Use for Your Grandmama

Everyday Use for Your Grandmama

Objectives of Teaching

To comprehend the whole story

To lean and master the vocabulary and expressions

To learn to paraphrase the difficult sentences

To understand the structure of the text

To appreciate the style and rhetoric of the passage.

Important and Difficult points

The comprehension of the whole story

The understanding of certain expressions

The appreciation of the writing technique

Colloquial, slangy or black English

Cultural difference between nationalities in the US

IV. Character Analysis

Dee:

She has held life always in the palm of one hand.

"No" is a word the world never learned to say to her.

She would always look anyone in the eye. Hesitation was no part of her

nature.

She was determined to share down any disaster in her efforts.

I. Rhetorical devices:

Parallelism:

chin on chest, eyes on ground, feet in shuffle

Metaphor:

She washed us in a river of...burned us... Pressed us ...to shove us away

stare down any disaster in her

Everyday Use for your grandmama -- by Alice Walker

Everyday Use for your grandmama

Alice Walker

I will wait for her in the yard that Maggie and I made so clean and wavy yester day

afternoon. A yard like this is more comfortable than most people know. It is not just

a yard. It is like an extended living room. When the hard clay is swept clean as a

floor and the fine sand around the edges lined with tiny, irregular grooves, anyone

can come and sit and look up into the elm tree and wait for the breezes that never

come inside the house.

Maggie will be nervous until after her sister goes: she will stand hopelessly in

corners, homely and ashamed of the burn scars down her arms and legs, eying her

sister with a mixture of envy and awe. She thinks her sister has held life always in

the palm of one hand, that "no" is a word the world never learned to say to her.

You've no doubt seen those TV shows where the child who has "made it" is

confronted, as a surprise, by her own mother and father, tottering in weakly from

backstage. (A Pleasant surprise, of course: What would they do if parent and child

came on the show only to curse out and insult each other?) On TV mother and child

embrace and smile into each other's face. Sometimes the mother and father weep,

the child wraps them in her arms and leans across the table to tell how she would

not have made it without their help. I have seen these programs.

Sometimes I dream a dream in which Dee and I are suddenly brought together

on a TV program of this sort. Out of a cark and soft-seated limousine I am ushered

into a bright room filled with many people. There I meet a smiling, gray, sporty man

like Johnny Carson who shakes my hand and tells me what a fine girl I have. Then

we are on the stage and Dee is embracing me with tear s in her eyes. She pins on my

dress a large orchid, even though she has told me once that she thinks or chides are

tacky flowers.

In real life I am a large, big-boned woman with rough, man-working hands. In

the winter I wear flannel nightgowns to bed and overalls during the day. I can kill

and clean a hog as mercilessly as a man. My fat keeps me hot in zero weather. I can

work outside all day, breaking ice to get water for washing; I can eat pork liver

cooked over the open tire minutes after it comes steaming from the hog. One winter

I knocked a bull calf straight in the brain between the eyes with a sledge hammer

and had the meat hung up to chill be-fore nightfall. But of course all this does not

show on television. I am the way my daughter would want me to be: a hundred

pounds lighter, my skin like an uncooked barley pan-cake. My hair glistens in the

hot bright lights. Johnny Car son has much to do to keep up with my quick and

witty tongue.

But that is a mistake. I know even before I wake up. Who ever knew a Johnson

with a quick tongue? Who can even imagine me looking a strange white man in the

eye? It seems to me I have talked to them always with one toot raised in flight, with

my head turned in whichever way is farthest from them. Dee, though. She would

always look anyone in the eye. Hesitation was no part of her nature.

"How do I look, Mama?" Maggie says, showing just enough of her thin body

enveloped in pink skirt and red blouse for me to know she's there, almost hidden by

the door.

"Come out into the yard," I say.

Have you ever seen a lame animal, perhaps a dog run over by some careless

person rich enough to own a car, sidle up to someone who is ignorant enough to be

kind of him? That is the way my Maggie walks. She has been like this, chin on chest,

eyes on ground, feet in shuffle, ever since the fire that burned the other house to the

ground.

Dee is lighter than Maggie, with nicer hair and a fuller figure. She's a woman

now, though sometimes I forget. How long ago was it that the other house burned?

Ten, twelve years? Sometimes I can still hear the flames and feel Maggie's arms

sticking to me, her hair smoking and her dress falling off her in little black papery

flakes. Her eyes seemed stretched open, blazed open by the flames reflect-ed in

them. And Dee. I see her standing off under the sweet gum tree she used to dig gum

out of; a look at concentration on her face as she watched the last dingy gray board

of the house tall in toward the red-hot brick chimney. Why don't you do a dance

around the ashes? I'd wanted to ask her. She had hated the house that much.

I used to think she hated Maggie, too. But that was before we raised the money,

the church and me, to send her to Augusta to school. She used to read to us without

pity, forcing words, lies, other folks' habits, whole lives upon us two, sitting trapped

and ignorant underneath her voice. She washed us in a river of make-believe,

burned us with a lot of knowledge we didn't necessarily need to know. Pressed us to

her with the serious way she read, to shove us away at just the moment, like

dimwits, we seemed about to understand.

Dee wanted nice things. A yellow organdy dress to wear to her graduation from

high school; black pumps to match a green suit she'd made from an old suit

somebody gave me. She was determined to stare down any disaster in her efforts.

Her eyelids would not flicker for minutes at a time. Often I fought off the temptation

to shake her. At sixteen she had a style of her own' and knew what style was.

I never had an education myself. After second grade the school was closed down.

Don't ask me why. in 1927 colored asked fewer questions than they do now.

Sometimes Maggie reads to me. She stumbles along good-naturedly but can't see

well. She knows she is not bright. Like good looks and money, quickness passed her

by. She will marry John Thomas (who has mossy teeth in an earnest face) and then

I'll be free to sit here and I guess just sing church songs to myself. Although I never

was a good singer. Never could carry a tune. I was always better at a man's job. 1

used to love to milk till I was hooked in the side in '49. Cows are soothing and slow

and don't bother you, unless you try to milk them the wrong way.

I have deliberately turned my back on the house. It is three rooms, just like the

one that burned, except the roof is tin: they don't make shingle roofs any more.

There are no real windows, just some holes cut in the sides, like the portholes in a

ship, but not round and not square, with rawhide holding the shutter s up on the

outside. This house is in a pasture, too, like the other one. No doubt when Dee sees

it she will want to tear it down. She wrote me once that no matter where we

"choose" to live, she will manage to come see us. But she will never bring her friends.

Maggie and I thought about this and Maggie asked me, Mama, when did Dee ever

have any friends?"

She had a few. Furtive boys in pink shirts hanging about on washday after

school. Nervous girls who never laughed. Impressed with her they worshiped the

well-turned phrase, the cute shape, the scalding humor that erupted like bubbles in

lye. She read to them.

When she was courting Jimmy T she didn't have much time to pay to us, but

turned all her faultfinding power on him. He flew to marry a cheap city girl from a

family of ignorant flashy people. She hardly had time to recompose herself.

When she comes I will meet -- but there they are!

Maggie attempts to make a dash for the house, in her shuffling way, but I stay her

with my hand. "Come back here," I say. And she stops and tries to dig a well in the

sand with her toe.

It is hard to see them clearly through the strong sun. But even the first glimpse

of leg out of the car tells me it is Dee. Her feet were always neat-looking, as it God

himself had shaped them with a certain style. From the other side of the car comes

a short, stocky man. Hair is all over his head a foot long and hanging from his chin

like a kinky mule tail. I hear Maggie suck in her breath. "Uhnnnh," is what it sounds

like. Like when you see the wriggling end of a snake just in front of your toot on the

road. "Uhnnnh."

Dee next. A dress down to the ground, in this hot weather. A dress so loud it

hurts my eyes. There are yel-lows and oranges enough to throw back the light of the

sun. I feel my whole face warming from the heat waves it throws out. Earrings gold,

too, and hanging down to her shoulders. Bracelets dangling and making noises

when she moves her arm up to shake the folds of the dress out of her armpits. The

dress is loose and flows, and as she walks closer, I like it. I hear Maggie go "Uhnnnh"

again. It is her sister's hair. It stands straight up like the wool on a sheep. It is black

as night and around the edges are two long pigtails that rope about like small lizards

disappearing behind her ears.

"Wa-su-zo-Tean-o!" she says, coming on in that gliding way the dress makes

her move. The short stocky fellow with the hair to his navel is all grinning and he

follows up with "Asalamalakim, my mother and sister!" He moves to hug Maggie but

she falls back, right up against the back of my chair. I feel her trembling there and

when I look up I see the perspiration falling off her chin.

"Don't get up," says Dee. Since I am stout it takes something of a push. You can

see me trying to move a second or two before I make it. She turns, showing white

heels through her sandals, and goes back to the car. Out she peeks next with a

Polaroid. She stoops down quickly and lines up picture after picture of me sitting

there in front of the house with Maggie cowering behind me. She never takes a shot

without making sure the house is included. When a cow comes nibbling around the

edge of the yard she snaps it and me and Maggie and the house. Then she puts the

Polaroid in the back seat of the car, and comes up and kisses me on the forehead.

Meanwhile Asalamalakim is going through motions with Maggie's hand.

Maggie's hand is as limp as a fish, and probably as cold, despite the sweat, and she

keeps trying to pull it back. It looks like Asalamalakim wants to shake hands but

wants to do it fancy. Or maybe he don't know how people shake hands. Anyhow, he

soon gives up on Maggie.

"Well," I say. "Dee."

"No, Mama," she says. "Not 'Dee', Wangero Leewanika Kemanjo!"

"What happened to 'Dee'?" I wanted to know.

"She's dead," Wangero said. "I couldn't bear it any longer, being named after

the people who oppress me."

"You know as well as me you was named after your aunt Dicle," I said. Dicie is

my sister. She named Dee. We called her "Big Dee" after Dee was born.

"But who was she named after?" asked Wangero.

"I guess after Grandma Dee," I said.

"And who was she named after?" asked Wangero.

"Her mother," I said, and saw Wangero was getting tired. "That's about as far

back as I can trace it," I said.

Though, in fact, I probably could have carried it back beyond the Civil War

through the branches.

"Well," said Asalamalakim, "there you are."

"Uhnnnh," I heard Maggie say.

"There I was not," I said, before 'Dicie' cropped up in our family, so why should

I try to trace it that far back?"

He just stood there grinning, looking down on me like somebody inspecting a

Model A car. Every once in a while he and Wangero sent eye signals over my head.

"How do you pronounce this name?" I asked.

"You don't have to call me by it if you don't want to," said Wangero.

"Why shouldn't I?" I asked. "If that's what you want us to call you, we'll call you.

"

"I know it might sound awkward at first," said Wangero.

"I'll get used to it," I said. "Ream it out again."

Well, soon we got the name out of the way. Asalamalakim had a name twice as

long and three times as hard. After I tripped over it two or three times he told me to

just call him Hakim-a-barber. I wanted to ask him was he a barber, but I didn't

really think he was, so I don't ask.

"You must belong to those beet-cattle peoples down the road," I said. They said

"Asalamalakirn" when they met you too, but they didn't Shake hands. Always too

busy feeding the cattle, fixing the fences, putting up salt-lick shelters, throwing

down hay. When the white folks poisoned some of the herd the men stayed up all

night with rifles in their hands. I walked a mile and a half just to see the sight.

Hakim-a-barber said, "I accept some of their doctrines, but farming and raising

cattle is not my style." (They didn't tell me, and I didn't ask, whether Wangero (Dee)

had really gone and married him.)

We sat down to eat and right away he said he didn't eat collards and pork was

unclean. Wangero, though, went on through the chitlins and corn bread, the greens

and every-thing else. She talked a blue streak over the sweet potatoes. Everything

delighted her. Even the fact that we still used the benches her daddy made for the

table when we couldn't afford to buy chairs.

"Oh, Mama!" she cried. Then turned to Hakim-a-barber. "I never knew how

lovely these benches are. You can feel the rump prints," she said, running her hands

underneath her and along the bench. Then she gave a sigh and her hand closed over

Grandma Dee's butter dish. "That's it!" she said. "I knew there was something I

wanted to ask you if I could have." She jumped up from the table and went over in

the corner where the churn stood, the milk in it clabber by now. She looked at the

churn and looked at it.

"This churn top is what I need," she said. "Didn't Uncle Buddy whittle it out of a

tree you all used to have?"

"Yes," I said.

"Uh huh, " she said happily. "And I want the dasher,too."

"Uncle Buddy whittle that, too?" asked the barber.

Dee (Wangero) looked up at me.

"Aunt Dee's first husband whittled the dash," said Maggie so low you almost

couldn't hear her. "His name was Henry, but they called him Stash."

"Maggie's brain is like an elephants," Wanglero said, laughing. "I can use the

churn top as a center piece for the alcove table,”she said, sliding a plate over the

churn, "and I'll think of something artistic to do with the dasher."

When she finished wrapping the dasher the handle stuck out. I took it for a

moment in my hands. You didn't even have to look close to see where hands

pushing the dasher up and down to make butter had left a kind of sink in the wood.

In fact, there were a lot of small sinks; you could see where thumbs and fingers had

sunk into the wood. It was beautiful light yellow wood, from a tree that grew in the

yard where Big Dee and Stash had lived.

After dinner Dee (Wangero) went to the trunk at the foot of my bed and started

rifling through it. Maggie hung back in the kitchen over the dishpan. Out came

Wangero with two quilts. They had been pieced by Grandma Dee and then Big Dee

and me had hung them on the quilt frames on the front porch and quilted them. One

was in the Lone Star pattern. The other was Walk Around the Mountain. In both of

them were scraps of dresses Grandma Dee had worn fifty and more years ago. Bit

sand pieces of Grandpa Jarrell's Paisley shirts. And one teeny faded blue piece,

about the size of a penny matchbox, that was from Great Grandpa Ezra's uniform

that he wore in the Civil War.

"Mama," Wangero said sweet as a bird. "Can I have these old quilts?"

I heard something fall in the kitchen, and a minute later the kitchen door

slammed.

"Why don't you take one or two of the others?” 1 asked. "These old things was

just done by me and Big Dee from some tops your grandma pieced before she died."

"No," said Wangero. "I don't want those. They are stitched around the borders

by machine."

"That'll make them last better," I said.

"That's not the point," said Wanglero. "These are all pieces of dresses Grandma

used to wear. She did all this stitching by hand. Imagine!" She held the quilts

securely in her arms, stroking them.

"Some of the pieces, like those lavender ones, come from old clothes her

mother handed down to her,” I said, moving up to touch the quilts. Dee (Wangero)

moved back just enough so that I couldn't reach the quilts. They already belonged

to her. "Imagine!" she breathed again, clutching them closely to her bosom.

"The truth is," I said, "I promised to give them quilts to Maggie, for when she

marries John Thomas."

She gasped like a bee had stung her.

"Maggie can't appreciate these quilts!" she said. "She'd probably be backward

enough to put them to everyday use."

"I reckon she would," I said. "God knows I been savage ’em for long enough

with nobody using 'em. I hope she will! I didn't want to bring up how I had offered

Dee (Wangero) a quilt when she went away to college. Then she had told me they

were old-fashioned, out of style.

"But they're priceless!" she was saying now, furiously, for she has a temper.

"Maggie would put them on the bed and in five years they'd be in rags. Less than

"that!" "She can always make some more,” I said. "Maggie knows how to quilt.

Dee (Wangero) looked at me with hatred. "You just will not understand. The

point is these quilts, these quilts!"

"Well," I said,, stumped. "What would you do with them?"

"Hang them," she said. As it that was the only thing you could do with quilts.

Maggie by now was standing in the door. I could almost hear the sound her feet

made as they scraped over each other.

"She can have them, Mama,” she said like somebody used to never winning

anything, or having anything reserved for her. "I can 'member Grandma Dee

without the quilts."

I looked at her hard. She had filled her bottom lip with checkerberry snuff and

it gave her face a kind of dopey, hangdog look. It was Grandma Dee and Big Dee

who taught her how to quilt herself. She stood there with her scarred hands hidden

in the folds of her skirt. She looked at her sister with something like fear but she

wasn't mad at her. This was Maggie's portion. This was the way she knew God to

work.

When I looked at her like that something hit me in the top of my head and ran

down to the soles of my feet. Just like when I'm in church and the spirit of God

touches me and I get happy and shout. I did something I never had done before:

hugged Maggie to me, then dragged her on into the room, snatched the quilts out of

Miss Wangero's hands and dumped them into Maggie's lap. Maggie just sat there on

my bed with her mouth open.

"Take one or two of the others," I said to Dee.

But she turned without a word and went out to Hakim-a-barber.

"You just don't understand," she said, as Maggie and I came out to the car.

"What don't I under stand?" I wanted to know.

"Your heritage," she said. And then she turned to Maggie, kissed her, and said,

"You ought to try to make some-thing of yourself, too, Maggie. It's really a new day

for us. But from the way you and Mama still live you'd never know it."

She put on some sunglasses that hid everything above the tip of her nose and

her chin.

Maggie smiled; maybe at the sunglasses. But a real mile, not scared. After we

watched the car dust settle I asked Maggie to bring me a dip of snuff. And then the

two of us sat there just enjoying, until it was time to go in the house and go to bed.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NOTES

1) Alice Walker: born 1944 in Eatonton, Georgia, America and graduated from

Sarah Lawrence College. Her books include The Third Life of Grange Copeland

( 1970 ), Meridian ( 1976 ), The Color Purple(1982), etc.

2)"made it": to become a success, to succeed, either in specific endeavor or in

general

3) Johnny Carson: a man who runs a late night talk show

4)hooked: injured by the horn of the cow being milked

5) Jimmy T: 'T' is the initial of the surname of the boy Dee was courting.

6)"Wa-su-zo-Tean-o!": phonetic rendering of an African dialect salutation

7) "Asalamalakim": phonetic rendering of a Muslim greeting

8) Polaroid: a camera that produces instant pictures

9) the Civil War: the war between the North and the South in the U. S.(1861-1865)

10) branches: branches or divisions of a family descending from a common ancestor

11) Ream it out again: "Ream" is perhaps an African dialect word meaning: "unfold,

display". Hence the phrase may mean "repeat" or "say it once again"

12) pork was unclean: Muslims are forbidden by their religion to eat pork because it

is considered to be unclean.

13) Chitlins: also chitlings or chitterlings, the small intestines of pigs, used for food,

a common dish in Afro-American households

14) rump prints: depressions in the benches made by constant sitting

15) sink: depressions in the wood of the handle left by the thumbs and fingers

Background information

The author wrote quite a number of novels, among them were The Color Purple

普利策小说奖)

and The American Book Awardwhich won the Pulitzer Prize of Fiction

(美国图书奖)

. In 1985, the Color Purple was made into a movie which won great

fame .

Everyday Use for your grandmama /Detailed Study

Everyday Use for Your Grandmama

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Detailed Study of the Text

1. wavy: having regular curves

A wavy line has a series of regular curves along it.

The wavy lines are meant to represent water.

Here in the text the word describes the marks in wavy patterns on the clay ground

left by the broom.

此处加一细曲线图

处加一细曲线图

) *image - 1* (

2. groove: a long narrow path or track made in a surface, esp. to guide the

movement of sth.

A groove is a wide, deep line cut into a surface.

The cupboard door slides open along the groove it fits into.

3. homely: simple, not grand, (of people, faces, etc.,) not good-looking, ugly

If someone is homely, they are not very attractive to look at; uased in Am.E.

4. awe: Awe is the feeling of respect and amazement that you have when you

are faced with sth. wonderful, frightening or completely unknown., wonder

The child stared at him in silent awe.

5. confront: to face boldly or threateningly, encounter

If a problem, task, or difficulty confronts you, or you are confronted with it, it iss sth.

that you cannot avoid and must deal with

I was confronted with the task of designing and building the new system.

6. totter: to move in an unsteady way from side to side as if about to fall, to walk

with weak unsteady steps

The old lady tottered down the stairs.

7. limousine: A limousine is a large and very comfortable car, esp. one with a

glass screen between the front and back seats. Limousines are usually driven by a

chauffeur [ou]

cf:

sedan / saloon is a car with seats for four or more people, a fixed roof, and a boot

(the space at the back of the car, covered by a lid, in which you carry things such

luggage, shopping or tools) that is separate from the seating part of the car

convertible: a car with a soft roof that can be folded down or removed

sports car: a low usu. open car with room for only 2 people for traveling with high

power and speed

coupe [‘ku:pei] a car with a fixed roof, a sloping back, two doors and seats for four

people

station wagon (Am E) / estate car (Br.E) a car which has a long body with a door at

the back end and space behind the back seats

8. gray / grey: used to describe the colour of people’s hair when it changes from

its original colour, usu. as they get old and before it becomes white

9. tacky: (Am.E, slang) shabby

10. overalls: are a single piece of clothing that combines trousers and a jacket.

Your wear overalls over your clothes in order to protect them from dirt, paint, etc.

while you are working

工装裤

The breast pocket of his overalls was filled with tools. ()

11. hog:

a. a pig, esp. a fat one for eating

b. a male pig that has been castrated

c. a dirty person

swine: (old & tech) pig

boar [o:]: male pig on a farm that is kept for breeding

sow [au]: fully grown female pig

12. sledge hammer: large, heavy hammer for swinging with both hands, a large

heavy hammer with a long handle, used for smashing concrete

大麦

13. barley:

大麦

糊状物

14. pancake: a thin, flat circle of cooked batter () made of milk, flour and

eggs. usu. rolled up or folded and eaten hot with a sweet or savory filling inside

15. sidle: walk as if ready to turn or go the other way

If you sidle somewhere, you walk there uncertainly or cautiously, as if you do not

want anyone to notice you

A man sidled up to me and asked if I wanted a ticket for the match..

16. shuffle: slow dragging walk

If you shuffle, you walk without lifting your feet properly off the ground

He slipped on his shoes and shuffled out of the room.

If you shuffle, you move your feet about while standing or move your bottom about

while sitting, often because you feel uncomfortable or embarrassed.

I was shuffling in my seat.

cf:

totter (n.6), sidle(n. 15), shuffle

17. blaze: to burn with a bright flame

A wood fire was blazing, but there was no other light in the room.

n. the sudden sharp shooting up of a flame, a very bright fire

The fire burned slowly at first, but soon burst into a blaze.

榛子

18. sweet gum tree: a large North American tree of the witch hazel () family,

with alternate maplelike leaves, spiny () fruit balls, and flagrant juice

多刺的

美洲金缕梅落叶灌木或小乔木原产于北美和亚洲其分叉小枝从前用为魔杖这寻找地下水

, . . , ,

故俗称魔杖

.

19. dingy: dirty and faded

A building or place that is dingy is rather dark and depressing and does not seem to

have been well looked after,.

This is the dingiest street of the town.

Clothes, curtains, etc. that are dingy are dirty or faded.

20. raise: to collect together

raise an army / raise enough money for a holiday

His wife raised the money by selling her jewellery.

We’re trying to raise funds to establish a scholarship.

21. underneath: (so as to go) under (sth..)

The letter was pushed underneath the door.

Did you find very much growing underneath the snow?

(Here it suggests a repressive and imposing quality in her voice.)

22. make-believe: a state of pretending or the things which are pretended

She lives in a make-believe world / a world of make-believe.

Don’t be afraid of monster - the -believe. the story’s only make

-

The little girl made believe she was a princess.

23. shove: to push, esp. in a rough or careless way

There was a lot of pushing and shoving to get on the bus.

Help me to shove this furniture aside.

If you shove sb. or sth., you push them with a quick, rather, violent movement.

He dragged her out to the door and shoved her into the street.

24. dimwit: (infml) an ignorant and stupid person

dim: faint, not bright

wit: intelligence, wisdom

at one’s wit’s end: at the end of one’s tether

麦斯林纱平纹细布

25. organdy: (Br. E organdie) very fine transparent muslin (, )

with a stiff finish (), very fine rather stiff cotton material used esp. for

最后一层涂饰

women’s dresses

(, )

蝉翼纱玻璃纱

26. pump: low shoe that grips the foot chiefly at the toe and the heel

27. stare down any disaster in her efforts: face up and defeat any disaster with

her efforts

stare down: two people looking at each other persistently until one shifts his eye

28. flicker: to move backwards and forwards unsteadily

shadows flickered on the wall

flickering eyelids

29. stumble: to stop and /or make mistakes in speaking or reading aloud

to catch the foot on the ground while moving along and start to fall

She stumble at/over the long word

He stumbled and stopped reading.

cf:

stammer: to speak or say with pauses and repeated sounds, either habitually or

because of excitement, fear, etc.

stammerer

stutter: to speak or say with difficulty in producing sounds, esp. habitually holding

back the first consonant.

stutterer

30. good-naturedly: naturally kind, ready to help, to forgive, not to be angry

A person or animal that is good-natured is naturally friendly and does not easily get

angry.

a good-natured policeman

31. mossy:

moss: any of several types of a small flat green or yellow flowerless plant that grows

in a thick furry mass on wet soil, or on a wet surface

32. hook: to catch with or as if with a hook

to hook a fish / a rich husband

hooknose

Here: to attack with the horn of the cow

33. soothe: to make less angry, excited or anxious, comfort or calm, to make

less painful

soothing words

soothe one’s feelings

34. shingle: a small thin piece of building material (such as wood) often with one

end thicker than the other for laying in overlapping rows as a covering for the roof

or sides of building

cf: tile; a flat or curved piece of fired clay, stone, or concrete used esp. for roofs,

floors, or walls and often for ornamental work

35. porthole: also port, a small usu. circular window or opening in a ship for light

or air

36. shutter: a. one that shuts

b. movable cover (wooden panel or iron plate, hinged, or separate and detachable)

for a window or door, to keep out light or burglars.

cf: Venetian blinds

The shop front is fitted with rolling shutters.

c. device that opens to admit light through the lens of a camera

37. pasture: land where grass is grown and where cattle feed on it

38. furtive: stealthy, If sb. is furtive, he / she behaves as if he / she wants to

keep sth. secret or hidden

They suddenly looked furtive when I got into the room.

I watched him furtively pencil a note and slip it between the pages.

A woman with furtive look sidled up to me and asked furtively whether I had /

wanted receipts.

39. hang about: to wait or stay near a place without purpose or activity

40. washday: also washing day, the day when clothes are washed

41. impressed with her: impressed by her manner,

42. well-turned: (of a phrase) carefully formed and pleasantly expressed

恰当的词语

恰当的词语

a well-turned phrase:

43. cute: delightfully pretty and often small

If you describe sb. as cute you mean that you find them attractive, often in a sexual

way

44. scald: to burn with hot liquid

He scalded his tongue on / with the hot coffee

scalding: boiling or as hot as boiling

court: If a man courts a woman, he pays a lot of attention to her because he wants

to marry her.

45. flashy: over-ornamented, unpleasantly big, bright, etc. and perhaps not of

good quality Something that is flashy is so smart, bright and expensive that you find

it unpleasant and perhaps vulgar

a flashy sports car / cheap flashy clothes

46. recompose:

compose: to make (esp. oneself) calm, quiet, etc.

Jean was nervous at first but soon composed herself.

47. kinky: (esp. of hair) having kinks

kink: a backward turn or twist in hair, a rope, chain, pipe, etc.

48. wriggle: to twist from side to side

49. loud: attracting attention by being unpleasantly colourful

50. rope: (of 2 or more mountain climbers) to be fastened together with the

same rope

(I think the word here means the plaits or the pigtails are fastened together

51. gliding: to move noiselessly in a smooth, continuous manner, which seems

easy and without effort

glider: a plane without an engine

52. something of a(n)... : (infml) rather a(n), a fairly good

You use the expression something of in the following ways. If you say that a person

or thing has something of a particular quality, feeling, etc., you mean that they have

it to some extent.

If you say that a person is something of an actor, something of a poet, etc., you

mean that the person can act, write poetry, etc. to some extent

Dr. Mitra, a scholar and something of a philosopher

If you say that a situation is something of a mystery / a surprise, etc., you mean

that it is slightly mysterious, slightly surprising

He is something of a book collector / a liar / a musician.

I am something of a carpenter myself, you know.

make sth. of oneself: be successful

He is a clever boy--- I hope he'll make sth. of himself.

53. peek: (infml) to look at sth. quickly, esp. when one should not

They caught him peeking through the hole at what was going on in the room

peep: to look at sth. quickly and secretly

It’s rude to peep at other people’s work.

He took a peep at the back of the book to find out the answers to the questions.

Peek & Peep are not clearly distinguishable when denoting to see what is concealed,

or hidden.

peer: to look very carefully or hard, esp. as if not able to see well

She peered through the mist, trying to find the right path.

He peered at me over the top of his glasses.

54. stoop: to bend the head and shoulders forwards and down

55. cower: to bend low and draw back as from fear, pain, shame, cold etc.

56. go through motions with Maggie’s hand:

Here “motions” refer to trying to shake hands with Maggie.

If you go through the motions, you say or do sth. that is expected of you without

being very sincere or serious about it. Or you pretend to do sth. by making the

movements associated with a particular action.

The doctor was sure that the man wasn’t ill, but he went ough thrthe motions of

examining him.

I can go through the motions of putting imaginary food into my mouth.

57. limp: lacking strength or stiffness

n. a way of walking with one foot dragging unevenly

v. to walk with an uneven step, one foot or leg moving less well than the other

58. There you are: I told you so.

There you are. I knew I was right. That’s whatI expected. I knew you couldn’t trace

it further back.

There I was not: You are not right.

crop up: arise, happen or appear, unexpectedly

Some difficulties have cropped up at work so I’ll be late coming home tonight.

Literally the sentence in the text could possibly understood as follows:

I was not there before the name “Dicie” appeared in our family, so

But “There I was not” is obviously a quick, short cut answer to “there you are”.

59. Model A car: in 1909 Henry Ford mass-produced 15 million Model T cars and

thus made automobiles popular in the States. In 1928 the Model T was discontinued

and replaced by a new design - the Model A - to meet the needs for growing

competition in car manufacturing.

Here he thinks she is quaint, attractive because it is strange and something rather

old fashioned

60. ream: sl. say it, spit it

61. out of the way: not blocking space for the forward movement of

(Here there must be one misunderstanding either by me or by the editor who

explains that as:

We overcame the difficulty and managed to pronounce it at last)

I will move the chair out of your way.

He ran through the crowd, pushing people out of his way.

Her social life got in the way of her studies.

We got the name out of the way: we finished talking about it, we set the problem

aside.

When we got topic A out of the way, we discuss topic B.

62. trip: If you trip over something, you knock your foot against something

when you are walking and lose your balance so that you fall or nearly fall.

I tripped and

She tripped over a

He put each foot down carefully to avoid tripping up.

Here: to make a mistake as in a statement or behaviour

This lawyer always tries to trip witness up by asking confusing questions.

63. salt-lick shelters: shelters where blocks of rock salt were kept for cattle to

lick

64. style: The style of a particular person or group is all the general attitudes,

likes, dislikes, and ways of behaving that are characteristic of them.

Purple is not my style.

Raising cattle is not my style: I am not interested in raising cattle.

65. gone and married: colloq.

宽叶羽衣甘蓝

66. collard:

宽叶羽衣甘蓝

67. go on through the chitlins etc.

chitlins: also chitlings, chitterlings: the intestines of hogs esp. when -prepared as

food

68. greens: green vegetables

69. talk a blue streak: speak very fast and very much

blue streak: sth. that moves very fast, a constant stream of works

streak: thin line or band, different from what surrounds it

70. rump: the part of an animal at the back just above the legs. When we eat

后腿部的牛排

this part of a cow it is called a rump steak ()

(humour) of a human being the part of the body one sits on, bottom

71. her hand closed over the butter dish: A butter dish is a small rectangular

container which you can simply put your hand close over

72. if I could have: here if means whether

73. churn: a container in which milk is moved about violently until it becomes

butter , Am.E a large metal container in which milk is stored or carried from the farm

(, )

搅乳器盛奶罐

74. clabber: (not found in Longman or Collins) curdle --- to form into curds,

cause to thicken

75. whittle: to cut (wood) to a smaller size by taking off small thing pieces

76. dasher: a devise having blades for agitating a liquid or semisolid

77. centerpiece: The centerpiece of a set of things that is greatly admired is sth.

that you show as the best example of the set

The centerpiece of the modern navy is the nuclear submarine.

78. alcove: an alcove is a small area in a room which is formed by one part of a

wall being built further back than the rest of the wall. a partially enclosed extension

凹室

凹室

(see. Oxford) of a room, often occupied by a bed or by seats,

79. to do with the dasher: use the dasher to make sth. artistic

I’ll do sth. artistic with the dasher

I don’t know what to do with those books, what to use them for, where to put them

Someone who is artistic is able to create or appreciate good painting, sculpture.

Something that is artistic relates to art or to artists. A design, arrangement, pattern,

etc. that is artistic is beautiful or attractive

80. sink: a depression (part of a surface lower than the other parts) in the land

surface

(The rain collected in several depressions on the ground.)

81. rifle: to search through and steal everything valuable out of a place

The thieves rifled his pockets of all their contents.

The burglar rifled the safe.

The bad boy rifled the apple tree.

Here in the text, the word “rifle” means to look thorough to see what to take, and

indicates that Dee was trying to find sth. she did not deserve.

82. hung back: be unwilling to act or move

The bridge looked so unsafe that we all hung back in fear.

83. piece: to make by joining pieces together

84. quilt: to sew, stitch in layers with padding in between

85. Lone Star and Walk Around the Mountain pattern

86. scrap: small piece, bit

a scrap of paper

Scrap of bread were thrown to the birds.

There was not a scrap of food left, we’ve eaten it all.

87. teeny: teeny weeny: also teensy weensy (used esp. to children) very small

88. top: the most important or worthiest part of anything

89. priceless: of great value

cf: invaluable, priceless, expensive, costly, dear, precious, sumptuous, luxurious

valueless: worthless, useless

90. temper: particular state or condition of the mind with regard to anger, an

angry, impatient or bad state of mind John is in a temper today.

91. stump: n. the part of a plant, (esp. a tree) remaining attached to the root

after the trunk is cut

v. put an unanswerable question to, puzzle, perplex

If something stumps you, you cannot think of any solution or answer for it

The question has stumped philosophers since the beginning of time.

.It’s unusual for Jeremy to be stumped for an answer

You’ve go me stumped there.

92. snuff: tobacco made into powered for breathing into the nose, esp. used in

former times

93. dopey: [‘doupi] showing dullness of the mind or feelings caused or as if

caused by alcohol or a drug, sleepy and unable to think clearly, stupid

94. hangdog: (of an expression on the face) ashamed, guilty, cowed

95. portion: an individual’s lot, fate, or fortune, destiny, one’s share of good and evil

Utter disaster was my portion.

What would be my portion on the day the enemy invaded?

96. heritage: property that descends to an heir, sth. transmitted by or acquired

from

Everyday Use for your grandmama (Vocabulary)

(Vocabulary)

波状的;有起伏的

波状的;有起伏的

( adj. ) :likecharacteristic ofor suggestive of waves

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

;纹

narrow furrow or hollow cut in a surface with a tool()( n.) :a long

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

elm ( adj.) : designating a family(Ulmaceae)of trees growing largely in the

榆科的

榆科的

NTemperate Zone[]

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

蹒跚而行

staggertotter ( v.) :be unsteady on one's feet

蹒跚而行

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

配有司机

esp. one driven by a chauffeur(limousine ( n.) :any large luxurious sedan

高级轿车

)

高级轿车

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

运动员似的

动员似的运动员似的

sporty ( adj.) :characteristic of a sport or sporting man

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

劣等的;破旧的;粗俗的

neglectedunrefinedvulgartacky ( adj.) : untidy

劣等的;破旧的;粗俗的

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

lightweightloosely woven woolen cloth with a slightly napped flannel ( n.) :a soft

法兰绒

法兰绒

surface

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

barley ( n.) :a cereal grass(Hordeum vulgare and related species)with dense

大麦

each made up of three singlebearded spikes of flowersseeded spikelets

大麦

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

lame (adj. ) :crippleddisabledesp. having an injured leg or foot that makes one

瘸的;残废的

瘸的;残废的

limp

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

羞怯或偷偷地侧身行

) :move sidewaysesp. in a shy or stealthy manner()sidle ( v

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

拖着脚走

拖着脚走

shuffle ( n.) :a slow dragging walk

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

像纸的

在厚薄、质地等方面像纸的

papery ( adj.) :thinlightetc1ike paper()

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

昏暗的,不明亮的;不干净的;

grimydingy (adj.) :dirtycolorednot bright or clean

无光泽的;弄脏了的

无光泽的;弄脏了的

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

makebelieve ( n.) :n. pretensefeigningadj. pretendedfeigned

假装;虚假②

假装的;虚假的

假装的;虚假的

sham

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

蠢人,笨蛋,傻子

simpleton[]dimwit ( n.) :[slang]a stupid person

蠢人,笨蛋,傻子

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

.蝉

crisp cotton fabric used for dressescurtainsetcorgandy ( n.) : very sheer

翼纱;玻璃纱一种细薄的透明布

()

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

一种浅口无带皮鞋

种浅口无带皮鞋一种浅口无带皮鞋

pump ( n.) :a lowcut shoe without straps or ties

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

摇曳,摇动;晃动

) :move with a quicklightwavering motionflicker ( v

摇曳,摇动;晃动

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

生了苔的;多苔的;

mossy ( adj.) : full of or covered with moss or a mosslike growth

苔状的

苔状的

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

牛等以角抵破,抵伤

) :attack with the hornsas a bullgore()hook ( v

抵破,抵伤

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

wedgeshaped piece of woodslate, etc1aid with others in a shingle ( n.) :a thin

屋顶

series of overlapping rows as a covering for roofs and the sides of the houses

板;木瓦

板;木瓦

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

船侧采光、

as for admitting light and air(porthole ( n.) :an opening in a ship's side

通气的舷窗;舱口

)

舷窗;舱口

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

as if to hinder observationrawhide ( adj. ) :done or acting in a stealthy manner

鬼鬼祟祟的,偷偷摸摸的;秘密的

鬼鬼祟祟的,偷偷摸摸的;秘密的

surreptitiousstealthysneakysecret

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

esp. in a delicate or dainty way[cute ( adj.) :[Amcolloq]pretty or attractive

漂亮的,俏的,迷人的;逗人喜爱的

]

漂亮的,俏的,迷人的;逗人喜爱的

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

措辞尖锐的

辞尖锐的措辞尖锐的

scalding ( adj.) :fierce in attacking in words

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

usually sodium or potassium hydroxidelye ( n.) :any strongly alkaline substance

.碱液

making soapetcused in cleaning

.碱液

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

使恢复镇静

使恢复镇静

recompose ( v. ) : restore to composure

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

矮胖的;结实的

sturdyshort and thicksetstocky ( adj.) :heavily built

矮胖的;结实的

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

尤指头发绞缠的;纽结的;弯曲

tightly curledespof hair()kinky (adj.) :full of kinks

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

) :twist from side to sideeither in one place or when moving alongwriggle ( v

蠕动;扭动

蠕动;扭动

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

常用复数耳环,耳饰

]earring ( n.) :[usup1.] an ornament worn on the ear[

耳环,耳饰

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

手镯

手镯

bracelet ( n.) :an ornamental band or chain worn about the wrist or arm

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

腋下,腋窝

腋下,腋窝

armpit ( n.) :the hollow place under the arm at the shoulder

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

)small creatures which are reptileswith a lizard ( n.) :any of several types of(usu

蜥蜴

蜥蜴

rough skin4 legsand a long tail

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

) :a small mark or sunken place in the middle of he stomach1eft when nave ( z

肚脐

肚脐

the connection to the mother(the umbilical cord)was cut at birth

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

搂抱;紧抱

) :hold(someone)tightly in the armshug ( v

搂抱;紧抱

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

出汗;汗

汗;汗出汗;汗

perspiration ( n.) :the act or action of sweating

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

) :glance or look quickly and furtivelyesp. through an opening or from peek ( v

偷看;窥视

尤指从缝隙或隐蔽处偷看;窥视

behind something()

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Polaroid ( n.) :[short for Polaroid Land Camera]a portable camera that develops the

film negative internally and produces a print within seconds after the process is

initiated (Polaroid Land Camera)()

的缩略式一种即照即成相片的照相机波拉罗伊德照相

机;拍立来照相机

照相机

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

屈身;弯腰

) :bend(the head and shoulders)forwards and downstoop ( v

身;弯腰屈身;弯腰

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

eat(something)with small bitesnibble ( v.) :take small bites(out of something)

咬,细食;一点点地咬

咬,细食;一点点地咬

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

抢拍;用快照拍摄

) :take a snapshot ofsnap ( v

拍;用快照拍摄抢拍;用快照拍摄

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

.柔软的

flacciddroopingwiltedetclimp (adj.) :1acking or having lost stiffness

.柔软的

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

用于

) :(used in crop up)arisehappenor appearunexpectedly(crop up)crop ( v

突然出现;突然发生

突然出现;突然发生

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

trip [trip] :(used inrip over)make an awkward mistake in(something such as

口.

出差错;卡壳,支吾

用于在语言上出差错;卡壳,支吾

words)(trip over)()

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

livingor being driven ( n.) :a number of cattle or other large animals feeding

牛群;畜群

牛群;畜群

together

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

( n.) :a kind of kale(Brassica oleracea acephala) whose coarse leaves are

羽衣甘蓝

羽衣甘蓝

borne in tufts

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

猪等的小肠供食用

used for food[]()() ( n.) :[p1.]the small intestines of pigs

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

](used in talk a blue streak)talk much and rapidly[]streak ( n.) :streak [colloq

连珠炮似地谈话;滔滔不绝地讲话

连珠炮似地谈话;滔滔不绝地讲话

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

臀部

]rump ( n.) :[humor](of a human being)the part of the body one sits on[

臀部

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

churn ( n.) :a container in which milk is moved about violently until it becomes

butter()

搅乳器用以搅拌牛乳而制成黄油

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

酸牛奶

酸牛奶

clabber ( n.) :thickly curdled sour milk

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

木头

) :cut(wood)to a smaller size by taking off small thin pieces() whittle ( v

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

奶油搅拌

as in a churnetc()dasher ( n.) :a rotating device for whipping cream

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

a bowl of flowersetcfor the center of a table( n.) :an ornament

在桌子中央的装饰品如花瓶等

()

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

凹室如早餐座

as a breakfast nook() alcove ( n.) :a recessed section of a room

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

esp. one in which water collects sink ( n.) :[geo1]an area of slightly sunken land

渗坑;洼地

渗坑;洼地

or disappears by evaporation or percolation into the ground

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

抢劫,掠夺

building etc)pillageplunder(rifle ( v. ) :ransack and rob(a place

)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

小片;碎片

bitfragmentshredscrap ( n.) :a small piece

小片;碎片

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

的口语体

的口语体

teeny ( adj.) :[colloq]variation of the word “tiny” tiny

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

使劲关门等;砰地把门等

) :shut or allow to shut with force and noise()()slam ( v

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

淡紫色的

) :palepurplelavender ( adj

淡紫色的

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

使困惑;使茫然不知所措

) :[colloq]puzzleperplexbaffle[]( v

使困惑;使茫然不知所措

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

使磨擦

) :(cause to)rub roughly()( v

磨擦

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

]( n.) :[Am]the edibleredberrylike fruit of the wintergreen[

铺白珠树的果实

铺白珠树的果实

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

气味,气息

气味,气息

snuff ( n.) :smellscent

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

感觉迟钝的;迷迷糊

stupid[]()dopey ( adj.) :[colloq]mentally slow or confused

糊的,昏昏沉沉的;愚蠢的;呆傻的

糊的,昏昏沉沉的;愚蠢的;呆傻的

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

羞愧的

羞愧的

hangdog (adj) :ashamed and cringing

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(Expressions)

意外出现,偶然出现

意外出现,偶然出现

crop up: vto appear unexpectedly or occasionally

All sorts of difficulties have

例:

例:

.在工作中,各种各样的困难意想不到地出现了。

.在工作中,各种各样的困难意想不到地出现了。

cropped up at work

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

我会慢慢习惯的,我说,你给我再念一遍吧。

就这样,我们很快就不再提名字发音问题了。阿萨拉马拉吉姆的名字有两倍那么长,三倍那

么难念。我试着念了两三次都念错了,于是他就叫我干脆称呼他哈吉姆阿巴波就行了。我本想问

他究竟是不是开巴波理发店的,但我觉得他不像是个理发师,所以就没有问。 你一定属于马

()

店的,但我觉得他不像是个理发师,所以就没有问。

路那边的那些养牛部族,我说。那些人见人打招呼也是说阿萨拉马拉吉姆,但他们不同人握

手。他们总是忙忙碌碌的:喂牲口,喂牲口,修篱笆,扎帐篷,堆草料,等等。当白人毒死了一些牛以后,

他们总是忙忙碌碌的:

那些人便彻夜不眠地端着枪戒备。为了一睹这种情景,我走了一英里半的路程。

那些人便彻夜不眠地端着枪戒备。为了一睹这种情景,我走了一英里半的路程。

哈吉姆阿巴波说,我接受他们的一些观念,但种田和养牛却不是我干的事业。他们没有

”(

告诉我,我也没开口去问,万杰萝迪伊究竟是不是同他结婚了。

())

我们开始坐下吃饭,他马上声明他不吃羽衣甘蓝,猪肉也不干净。万杰萝却是猪肠、玉米面万杰萝却是猪肠、玉米面

我们开始坐下吃饭,他马上声明他不吃羽衣甘蓝,猪肉也不干净。

包、蔬菜,什么都吃。吃红薯时她更是谈笑风生。一切都令她高兴,就连我们仍在使用着当初她

爸爸因为买不起椅子而做的条凳这种事情也令她感兴趣。

爸爸因为买不起椅子而做的条凳这种事情也令她感兴趣。

啊,妈妈她惊叫道。接着转头向着哈吉姆阿巴波。我以前还从来不知道这些条凳有这么

!”

可爱,在上面还摸得出屁股印迹来,她一边说着,一边将手伸到屁股下面去摸凳子。接着,她

叹了一口气,她的手放在迪伊外婆的黄油碟上捏拢了。对了她说。我早知道这儿有些我想问

!”

您能不能给我的东西。她离桌起身,走到角落处,那儿放着一个搅乳器,里面的牛奶已结成了

酸奶。她看了看搅乳器,又望了望里面的酸奶。

酸奶。她看了看搅乳器,又望了望里面的酸奶。

这个搅乳器的盖子我想要,她说。那不是巴迪叔叔用你们原有的一棵树的木头做成的吗

?”

是的,我说。

我说。

啊哈,她兴高采烈地说。我还想要那根搅乳棒。

那也是巴迪叔叔做的吗巴波问道。

?”

巴波问道。

迪伊万杰萝仰头望着我。

()

仰头望着我。

那是迪伊姨妈的第一个丈夫做的,麦姬用低得几乎听不见的声音说。他的名字叫亨利,

但人们总叫他史大西。

麦姬的脑袋像大象一样,万杰萝说着哈哈大笑。我可以将这搅乳器盖子放在凹室餐桌中

央做装饰品,她一边拿一个托盘盖在搅乳器上,一边说道。至于那根搅乳棒,我也会想出一个

艺术化的用途的。

她将搅乳棒包裹起来,把柄还露在外头。我伸手将把柄握了一会儿。不用将眼睛凑近去细

看也可以看出搅乳棒把柄上由于长年累月握着搅动而留下的凹陷的握痕。那上面的小槽子很多,

你可以分辨出哪儿是拇指压出的印子,哪儿是其他手指压出的印子。搅乳棒的木料取自大迪伊和

史大西住过的庭院中长的一棵树,木质呈浅黄色,甚是好看。

史大西住过的庭院中长的一棵树,木质呈浅黄色,甚是好看。

晚饭后,迪伊万杰萝走到放在我床脚边的衣箱那儿,开始翻找起来。麦姬在厨房里洗碗,

()

故意延挨着不愿早出来。万杰萝忽然从房里抱出两床被子。这两床被子是迪伊外婆用一块块小布

片拼起来,然后由迪伊姨妈和我两人在前厅的缝被架上绗缝而成的。其中一床绘的是单星图案,

另一床是踏遍群山图案。两床被子上都缝有从迪伊外婆五十多年前穿过的衣服上拆下来的布片,

还有杰雷尔爷爷的佩兹利涡旋纹花呢衬衣上拆下来的碎布片,还有一小块褪了色的兰布片,大小

只相当于一个小火柴盒,那是从依兹拉曾祖父在南北战争时穿的军服上拆下来的。

只相当于一个小火柴盒,那是从依兹拉曾祖父在南北战争时穿的军服上拆下来的。

妈妈,万杰萝用莺声燕语般的甜蜜声调问,我可不可以把这两床被子拿走我听到厨房

?”

里有什么东西掉落地上的声音,紧接着又听见厨房的门砰地关上的声音。 你何不拿另外一两床

我问道。然后由大迪伊和我两人缝起来的旧被子。这两床还是你外婆去世前用布条拼起来,

不,万杰萝说。我不要那些被子。那些被子的边线都是机缝的。

那样还耐用一些,我说。

我说。

这一点并不重要,万杰萝说。这两床被子都是用外婆曾穿过的衣服拆成布片,然后由她

靠手工一针一线拼缀而成的。想想看吧她生怕别人会抢去似的牢牢抓住被子,一边用手在上面

!”

抚摸。

抚摸。

那上面有些布片,比如那些淡紫色的布片,还是从她妈妈传给她的旧衣服上拆下来的,

我说着便伸手去摸被子。迪伊万杰萝往后退缩,让我摸不着被子。那两床被子已经属于她了。

()

你看多不简单她又低声赞叹了一句,一边把被子紧紧抱在怀里。

!”

她又低声赞叹了一句,一边把被子紧紧抱在怀里。

问题是,我说,我已说好等麦姬和约翰托马斯结婚时将那两床被子送给麦姬的。

她像挨了蜂蜇似的惊叫了一声。

她像挨了蜂蜇似的惊叫了一声。

麦姬可不懂这两床被子的价值她说。她可能会蠢得将它们当成普通被子来使用。

!”

我也认为她会这样,我说。上帝知道这两床被子我留了多久,一直都没有人用它们。我

希望她来用我不想说出迪伊万杰萝上大学时我送给她一床被子的事。她当时对我说那被子老

!”()

掉牙了,没个样子。

掉牙了,没个样子。

可那两床被子是无价之宝呀她此时这样说着,样子很是生气她是很爱生气的。麦姬

!”——

将会把它们放在床上每天用,那样的话,五年之后,那两床被子就会变成破烂了,还用不了五

破了她会再重新缝,我说。麦姬学会了缝被子。

!”“

迪伊万杰萝恶狠狠地看着我。你不懂,关键是这些被子,这两床被子

()!”

那么说,我真有点茫然不解,便问道,你要那两床被子作什么呢

?”

把它们挂起来,她说道。似乎这就是被子所能派上的唯一的用场。

她说道。似乎这就是被子所能派上的唯一的用场。

麦姬这时正站在门口,我几乎能听见她的双脚互相摩擦发出的声音。

麦姬这时正站在门口,我几乎能听见她的双脚互相摩擦发出的声音。

让她拿去吧,妈妈,她说着,就像一个已经习惯于从来也得不到什么,或从来没有什么东

西属于她一样。不要那些被子我也能记得迪伊外婆。

我紧紧地盯视着她。她的下嘴唇上沾满了黑草莓汁,这使她看起来有一种迟钝而又羞惭的神

色。她能自己缝制被子是迪伊外婆和大迪伊教的。她站在那儿,将一双疤痕累累的手藏在裙褶缝

里。她怯生生地望着她姐姐,但并没有对她姐姐生气。这就是麦姬的命运,她知道这就是上帝的

安排。

安排。

我这样看着她时,突然产生了这样一种感觉:似乎头顶上受了什么东西的敲击,其力量白头

顶直透脚心。这就像在教堂里受到上帝的神力感动后激动得狂喊乱叫时的那种感觉。于是,我做

了一件以前从未做过的事:将麦姬一把搂过来,把她拉进卧房里,然后一把从万杰萝小姐手中夺

过被子放到麦姬的大腿上。麦姬就这样坐在我的床上,麦姬就这样坐在我的床上,一副目瞪口呆的样子。一副目瞪口呆的样子。 你拿两床别的被

过被子放到麦姬的大腿上。麦姬就这样坐在我的床上,一副目瞪口呆的样子。

子吧,我对迪伊说。

我对迪伊说。

但她一声不吭就转身出屋.往哈吉姆阿巴波身边走去。

但她一声不吭就转身出屋.往哈吉姆阿巴波身边走去。

你完全不懂,当我和麦姬来到汽车旁边时,她说。

当我和麦姬来到汽车旁边时,她说。

我不懂什么我问道。

?”

我问道。

你的遗产,她说。随后,她转向麦姬,吻了吻她,说,麦姬,你也该努力活出个人样儿

来啊。现在我们所处的是新时代。但照你和妈妈现在仍过着的这种生活来看,你是绝对体会不到

这一点的。

她戴上一副大太阳镜,把下巴和鼻尖以上的整个面孔全遮住了。

她戴上一副大太阳镜,把下巴和鼻尖以上的整个面孔全遮住了。

麦姬笑起来了,大概看到太阳镜发笑的吧,但这是真正的喜悦的笑,一点没有害怕的意思。

目送汽车远去,车轮扬起的灰尘消失后,我叫麦姬给我舀来一碗草莓汁。然后我们娘儿俩便坐下

来细细地品味着,直到天时已晚才进屋就寝。

来细细地品味着,直到天时已晚才进屋就寝。

Everyday Use for your grandmama EXERCISES 4

EXERCISES 4

I. Give brief answers to the following questions, using your own words

as much as possible:

1) In real life what kind of woman is the mother

2) What kind of woman would Dee like her mother to be?

3) How does the mother act when she meets a strange white man?

4) What kind of girl is Maggie?

5) Why do you think colored people asked fewer questions in 1927?

6) Why does the mother say Dee will never bring her friends to visit

them? What does this tell about Dee? Give other instances to prove your

point.

7) Why did Dee want the quilt so much?

8) Why did Maggie want the quilt?

9) Why did Dee visit her mother and sister?

10) What is the mother's feeling toward Dee? How is it changed in the

course of the story?

11) What is implied by the subtitle ' for your grandmama'’?

II. Paraphrase:

1) She thinks her sister has held life always in the palm of one hand

2)"no" is a word the world never learned to say to her

3) Johnny Carson has much to do to keep up with my quick and witty

tongue.

4) It seems to me I have talked to them always with one foot raised in

flight

5) She washed us in a river of make-believe

6) Burned us with a lot of knowledge we didn't necessarily need to

know

7) Like good looks and money, quickness passed her by.

8) A dress to the ground, in this hot weather.

9) You can see me trying to move a second or two before I make it.

10) Anyhow, he soon gives up on Maggie.

11) Though, in fact, I probably could have carried it back beyond the

Civil War through the branches.

12) Every once in a while he and Wangero sent eye signals over my

head.

13) Less than that.

14) This was the way she knew God to work.

III. Translate the following into Chinese:

1) In real life I am a large, big-boned woman with rough, man-working

hands. In the winter I wear flannel nightgowns to bed and overalls during

the day. I can kill and clean a hog as mercilessly as a man. My fat keeps

me hot in zero weather. I can work outside all day, breaking ice to get

water for washing; I can eat pork liver cooked over the open fire minutes

after it comes steaming from the hog. One winter I knocked a bull calf

straight in the brain between the eyes with a sledge hammer and had the

meat hung up to chill before nightfall. But of course all this does hot

show on television. I am the way my daughter would want me to be: a

hundred pounds lighter, my skin like an uncooked barley pancake. My

hair glistens in the hot bright lights. Johnny Carson has much to do to

keep up with my quick and witty tongue.

2) But that is a mistake. I know even before I wake ever knew

a Johnson with a quick tongue? Who can even imagine me looking a

strange white man in the eye? It seems to me I have talked to them

always with one foot raised in flight, with my head turned in whichever

way is farthest from them. Dee, though. She would always look anyone in

the eye, Hesitation was no part of her nature.

3) I used to think she hated Maggie, too. But that was be-fore we

raised the money, the church and me, to send her to Augusta to school.

She used to read to us without pity; forcing words, lies, other folks'

habits, whole lives upon us two, sitting trapped and ignorant underneath

her voice. She washed us in a river of make-believe, burned us with a lot

of knowledge we didn't necessarily need to know. Pressed us to her with

the serious way she read, to shove us away at just the moment, like

dimwits, we seemed about to understand.

4) I never had an education myself. After second grade the school

was closed down. Don't ask me why: in 1927 colored asked fewer

questions than they do now. Sometimes Maggie reads to me. She

stumbles along good-naturedly but can't see well. She knows she is not

bright. Like good looks and money, quickness passed her by. She will

marry John Thomas (who has mossy teeth in an earnest face) and then

I'll be free to sit here and I guess just sing church songs to myself.

Although I never was a good singer. Never could carry a tune. I was

always better at a man's job. I used to love to milk till I was hooked in the

side in '49. Cows are soothing and slow and don't bother you, unless you

try to milk them the wrong way.

IV. Replace the following italicized words with more formal words or

expressions:

1) even though she has told me once that she thinks orchids are tacky

flowers.

2) like dimwits, w e seem to understand. ( )

3) and hanging from his chin like a kinky mule tail ( )

4) Impressed with her they worshiped her well-turned phrases

5) I heard Maggie go "Uhnnnh" again. ( )

6) It looks like Asalamalakim wants to shake hands but want to do it

fancy. ( )

7) "Well," said Asalamalakim, "There you are." ( )

8) After I tripped over it two or three times he told me to just call him

Hakim-a-barber. ( )

9) "You must belong to the beef-cattle people down the road," I said. ( )

10) She talked a blue streak over the sweet potatoes. ( )

V. Complete the following elliptical sentences:

1) Dee, though.

2) Never could carry a tune.

3) Like when you see the wriggling end of a snake just in front of your

foot on the road.

4) Dee, next. A dress down to the ground, in this hot weather.

5) Earrings gold, too, and hanging down to her shoulders.

6) "No,

7) "Why shouldn't I?" I asked.

8)Always too busy: feeding the cattle, fixing the fences,putting up

Mama," she says. "Not 'Dee, ' Wangero Leewanika Kemanjo!”

Mama,"

salt-lick shelters, throwing down the hay.

9) "Uncle Buddy whittle that, too?" asked the barber.

10) "Imagine!" she breathed again, clutching them to her bosom.

. The following sentences all contain metaphors or similes. Ex-plain

their meaning in plain, non-figurative language.

1) I am the way my daughter would want me to be: ... my skin like an

uncooked barley pancake.

2) It seems to me I have talked to them always with one foot raised in

flight.

3) Impressed with her they worshiped her well-turned phrases,the

cute shape, the scalding humor that erupted like bubbles in lye.

4) He flew to marry a cheap city girl from a family of ignorant flashy

people.

5) And she stops and tries to dig a well in the sand with her toe.

6) "Maggie's brain is like an elephant's,” Wangero said, laughing.

7) You didn't even have to look close to see where hands pushing the

dasher up and down to make butter had left a kind of sink in the wood.

8) "Mama, " Wangero said, sweet as a bird.

9) She gasped like a bee had stung her.

10) It's really a new day for us.

VII. Explain how the meaning of the sentences is affected when the

italicized words are replaced by the words in brackets. Pay attention to

the shades of meaning of the words.

1) It is like an extended living room. (large)

2) She will stand hopelessly in corners, homely and ashamed of the

burn scars down her arms and legs. (helplessly, embarrassed by)

3) Dee and I are suddenly brought together on a TV program of this

sort. (like this one)

4) Out of a dark and soft-seated limousine I am ushered into a bright

room filled with many people. (car)

5) Furtive boys in pink shirts hanging about on washday after school.

(sly)

6) Bracelets dangling and making noises when she moves her arms

up to shake the folds of the dress out of her armpits. (hanging)

7) After dinner Dee (Wangero) went to the trunk at the foot of my bed

and started rifling through it. (suitcase, searching)

8) "Imagine!" she breathed again, clutching them closely to her

bosom. (breathed)

VIII. The following are rhetorical questions requiring no answers.

Turn them into statements without changing the main ideas.

1) A pleasant surprise, of course: What would they do if parent and

child came on the show only to curse out and insult each other?

2) Who ever knew a Johnson with a quick tongue?

3) Who can ever imagine me looking a strange white man in the eye?

4) Why don't you do a dance around the ashes?

5) "Why don't you take one or two of the others?” I asked.

IX. Choose the appropriate set phrase from the list below for each blank.

Make changes where necessary.

to put up to bring up to bring together

to crop up to keep up with to hand down

out of style with a style to stick to

by hand to hang to hang about

to hang down to hang back to carry back

1) Serious trouble_______ when Martin thought the problem of his

college education was solved.

2) The soldiers________ barricades of live wire around the whole area.

3) The work that Group A is doing is too difficult for me. I'm afraid that

I won't be able to_________ them.

4) That matter was_______ at the Committee meeting that very

afternoon.

5) I'm not sure that John and Mary can be______

6) He noticed several furtive and rough-looking guys_______ the bus

stop.

7) Everyone approved of the project but when we asked for volunteers

they all ______

8) A colored reproduction of Raphael ____________ on the wall over

the fireplace.

9) The waterfall was running down from the high cliff so smoothly that

it looked like a piece of silver cloth ________from the sky.

10) These ceremonies have been __________through the centuries,

and remain practically unchanged.

11) What surprised me most was the amount of work still done____

12) You can put that frock away, for it is already_____

13) All the paintings were exquisite. It was obvious that the artist did

every one of them______

14) Did the letter arrive or through the post?

15) I've got some glue my fingers.

16) The sound of the seagull me to my childhood holidays to the

seaside.

X. The narrator uses a number of images of animals in describing people

or things. Point them out and then put them into Chinese.

XI. The narrator says, "I never had an education myself." What are some

of the characteristics of her use of language (such as choice of words,

sentence structure and grammar) that suit this background of hers?

XII. Translate the following sentences into English, (using the following

words or expressions- to look sb. in the eyes, to burn ... to the ground, to

match, over, despite, to confront, to recompose, to imagine, to stick to,

to trace ... to):

1)

2)为人什么任何

3)不严

4)衬衫

5)

6)么也不

7)为什么人

8)两个恐怖

9)

10)使她大了下

11

12他们他们

XIII. Topic for oral work: Compare the three women in the story.

XIV. Write a short composition on: My Family

I .

1)In real life the mother was a large, big-boned woman with rough,

man-working hands.

2)Dee like her mother to have a slender figure and a fair skin,

glistening hair and a quick and witty tongue.

3)When she meets a strange white man, she always avoids looking

him in the eye and is ready to go away.

4)Maggie is an innocent, timid and kind-hearted girl.

5) Because they were more seriously looked down upon by white

men at that time, and they were not as awaken as they are today.

6)Because Dee doesn't like her friends to see the poor state her

family is in, which she thinks is shameful. This tells us that Dee is

somewhat a snob. Another instance to prove this is that she wants

nice things.

7)Because it was old and stitched by hand instead of by machine.

So that she could use them for decoration showing to the people she

was associated with.

8)Maggie wanted the quilt because she could remember her

grandma better, who taught her to do needle work.

9)Because she wanted to get some valuable heritages of the family,

mainly out of her vanity.

10)At first the mother liked Dee because of her beauty, taste, and

education. But with the development of the story, her love was

transferred to a dislike because of Dee's egotism, which was obviously

revealed when she insisted on taking the quilts while her sister Maggie

gave up keeping it willingly to satisfy her desire.

11)It's implied that the story is written in honor of the grandma

mentioned in it and that the ordinary old thing may be something

precious for the young.

.

1)She thinks that her sister has a firm control of her life.

2)She could always have anything she wanted, and life was

extremely generous to her.

3)The popular TV talk show star, Johnny Carson, who is famous for

his witty and glib tongue, has to try hard if he wants to catch up with

me.

4)It seems to me that I have talked to them always ready to leave

as quickly as possible.

5)She imposed on us lots of falsity.

6)imposed on us a lot of knowledge that is totally useless to us

7)She is not bright just as she is neither good-looking rich.

8)Dee wore a very long dress even on such a hot day.

9)You can see me trying to move my body a couple of seconds

before I finally manage to push myself up.

10)Soon he knows that won't do for Maggie, so he stops trying to

shake hands with Maggie.

11)As I see Dee is getting tired of this, I don't want to go on either.

In fact, I could have traced it far back before the Civil War along the

branches of the family tree.

12)Now and then he and Dee communicated through eye contact

in a secretive way.

13)If Maggie put the old quilts on the bed, they would be in rags

less than five years.

14)She knew this was God's arrangement.

. See the translation of the text.

IV.

1)inelegant

2)a stupid person/a simpleton

3)tightly curled

4)expressed or worded well/felicitous

5)say (used to describe dialogue)

6)as if shake hands in a fancy and elaborate way

7)I knew you couldn't trace it further back

8)mispronounced, failed to pronounce it correctly

9)people who bred and fatten cattle for meat

10)talked much and rapidly

V.

1)Dee, however, is not like me.

2)I could never carry a tune.

3)It was like the reaction you have when you see the wriggling end

of a snake just in front of your foot on the road.

4)Dee comes out of the car next. She is wearing a dress long

. enough to touch the ground, in spite of this hot weather

5)Her earrings are goldtooand they are hanging down to her

shoulders

6)"NoMama”she says "My name is not Dee nowit has changed

into Wangero Leewanika Kemanjo!”

7)“Why shouldn't I call you by your new name?'’

8)Those people were always too busy

9)"Did Uncle Buddy whittle that one, too?” asked the barber

10)“Imagine that she did all the stitching by hand!” e shbreathed

againclutching them to her bosom

Ⅵ.

1)…my complexion had a smooth and creamy texture

2)…uncomfortably and nervouslywanting to get away as soon as

possible

3)…the quick and great humor that would make everybody laugh

immediately

4)He wasted no time in marrying a contemptible city girl from a

family of ignorant ostentatious and vulgar people

5)…move her feet in great discomfort

6)"Maggie's brain is very slow”Wangero said, laughing

7)…slightly sunken areas

8)"Mama”Wangero said in an extremely sweet voice

9)She breathed suddenly in painful surprise

10)For us colored peoplethis is a new eraand we must seize our

opportunities

Ⅶ.

意为加长的加大的指空间大,宽敞。

1)extendedlarge

指没有希望或指望;指没人帮助或保护;

2)hopelesslyhelplessashamed

指因为自卑感而感到卑微或尴尬;指感到不自在,举止失态。

embarrassed

带有贬义,暗示这种电视节目质量低劣,档次不高;

3)of this sortlike this

one

无贬义。

是大型豪华轿车,由一专职司机驾驶,有一玻璃板把司机与乘

4)limousine

客隔开;可指各种汽车。

car

俩。指做事偷偷摸摸,心中有鬼;指长于欺骗,玩弄伎俩。

5)furtive sly

意为在空中摇荡;指把东西挂起来。

6)danglinghanging

指存放东西或旅行用的大箱子,用木头或别的材料做成;

7)trunksuitcase

指放衣服的旅行箱,常由皮革类材料制造。意为抢劫或掠夺在这里是一

rifling(

种夸张,说明母亲的行为很不满是一个通用的词,不带感情色

Dee)search

彩。

意思是轻声地说,低语;是固定词组意为如释

8)breathebreathe again,

重负,松了一口气。

Ⅷ.

1)A pleasant surpriseof courseThis is much better than a

situation in which the parent and child came on the show only to curse

out and insult each other

2)None of the Johnsons had a quick tongue

3)I could never possibly look a strange white man in the eye.

4)1 know you hated the house and so you are very glad to see the

house being burnt down

5)You may take one or two of the other quilts

Ⅸ.

1)cropped up 2)put up 3)keep up with 4)brought

up 5)brought together 6)hanging about 7)hung back

8)hung 9)hanging down 10)handed down 11)by hand

12)out of style 13)with a style 14)by hand 15)stuck to

16)carried back

Ⅹ.

小公牛 奶牛

1)hog2)bull calf3)dog4)cow

5)mule6)snake7)sheep8)lizard9)fish

骡子 蜥蜴

lO)cattle

Ⅺ.

Since she never had an education herselfshe tended to use simple

wordsfragmented sentences and other ungrammatical sentencesTo

she used “like” to introduce a clause instead of give one example

“as”

XII

1)A big fire burned to the ground more than 300 homes in the slum

neighborhood.

2)If you are upright and not afraid of losing anything, you will be

able to look anyone in the eye.

3) Despite the flood, the losses in agricultural production were not

that serious.

4) This blouse doesn't match the color or the style of the skirt.

5)Let's talk about the matter over a cup of coffee.

6)I can't imagine you doing disgraceful things.

7)He couldn't imagine why people were opposed to his suggestions.

8)Stepping off from the car, the official was confronted by two

terrorists.

9)As long as we stick to these principles, we will surely be

successful.

10)She was shocked at the news, but before long she recomposed

herself.

ll)It is very difficult to trace this quotation to its source.

12)Their way of life could be traced to the ancient traditions

handed down to them by their ancestors more than one thousand

years ago.

XlII. Omitted.

XlV.

My Family

Ours is a big family. My father is a worker who lives in a lo-cal city.

Both my oldest uncle and second uncle set up house-keeping in the

countryside. My youngest uncle is a teacher and lives far from us.

Great changes have taken place in my family since the beginning of

the reform and opening policy.

In the late 1970s, our big family had a get-together and discussed

the problem of my grandma's residence. Those were hard times. No

one took the initiative to live with her. Each family had a skeleton in

the cupboard. Oldest uncle had room only e-n0ugh to shelter them

from the wind and rain. He had to tighten his belt to keep the family

pot boiling. Second uncle had nothing but four bare walls to face and

led a dog's life. Youngest uncle was said to be living in a dormitory and

couldn't even afford a trip back. My father lived in a bungalow which

was a doll's house thing and had to eke out our livelihood. But it was

better anyway. My grandma lived on with us.

Such was my family at that time. Each family of the big ex-tended

family was in financial straits.

In the early 1990s, my big clan held another family meeting and

still my grandma's residence was discussed. But great changes had

occurred. Each smaller family was "fighting" for the chance to live

with grandma. The meeting began in a merry atmosphere. My father

started, "The government has established a system of floor wages

and ceiling working hours. We have a steady income and regular

leisure time. Besides, we have a well-furnitured apartment. " Oldest

uncle hastened, "The state has legalized us to be engaged in

household sideline production, so I have set up a small but rather

profitable poultry farm. Moreover, there is more spacious room. "

Second uncle would't fall behind, "I have contracted to run a large

stretch of land and engage many farm hands. I profit a lot from it. I

have more leisure time. " Eventually, as regards the peace in the

country-side, my grandma moved to second uncle, youngest uncle

took a flight back and told us he had just bought a flat.

That was my family about 10 years later. Each smaller family lived

in abundance.

Now, oldest uncle is manager of a large-scale poultry farm and

second uncle's farm has been mechanized.

To sum up, the spring wind of the reform and opening policy has

led to great changes and my family is well on the way toprosperity.


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