★promptly adv. 准时地
I give him a ring and he call me back promptly.
He was so sleepy that he went to sleep promptly.
on time准时/ in time及时
punctually adv. 守时地
★destroy v. 毁掉;消灭
destroy 强调毁灭,消灭,完全的摧毁
Eg: The earthquake destroyed the city. / You destroyed his dream.
damage 强受损程度不很严重,可以被修复
break 强调弄坏,弄断
Two of the strings were broken.
spoil 强调把事情搅和了
Eg: spoil the party. / spoil the holiday
★remarkable adj. 不寻常的
remarkable adj. : unusual; uncomon; extraordinary
a remarkable event 不同寻常的事件
an extraordinary event
outstanding adj. 突出的, 杰出的,卓越的
Eg: Our headmaster is an outstanding youth.
distinguished adj. 杰出的,卓越的,不同非凡的
eminent adj. 显赫的,杰出的,有名的,优良的
Eg:a distinguished physicist; an eminent surgeon; an eminent judge; a distinguished lawyer
以上都可以用来修饰那些在严肃领域的人,比如科学,医学等等
well-know adj. 强调众所周知的
famous adj. 因卓越的贡献和成绩而流芳百世的
Eg: She is well-known in the musical world. / This is well-known fact.
He is a famous moviestar. / Luxun is famous for his articles.
notorious adj. 臭名昭著的,臭名远扬的; be famous for bad things
infarmous adj. 声名狼藉的(语气较弱)
rnowned adj. 某人或某事以其独特的品质、个性而闻名
Eg: Hangzhou is renowned for its beautiful...
★band n. 帮,团伙
a band of robbers 一伙强盗
mob n. 表示贬义色彩的团伙、帮派
a mob of hooligans 一伙流氓
gang n. 一伙 a gang of thieves
nest n. 窝; a nest of bandits
pack n. 团伙、帮派; a pack of hoodlums
★Florence n. 佛罗伦萨(意大利城市)
★city-state n. (古代)城邦
★hire v. 租出,雇给
hire; rent; let; employ
hire out; rent out 租给
Eg: Does this firm hire out cars? 这家公司出租汽车吗?
rent out租给,雇给:主要强调出租房屋
Eg: He rent out his house to a tourist.
let 出租房屋: let his house / please let your house to me。
hire from/ rent from 租进来
Eg: He hired a car from us. / I rent a room form Mrs. Johnson.
hire 指短期雇佣体力劳动者
引导状语从句修饰 time
Eg: There was a time when mini skirt was in fashion.
employ 指长期雇佣或聘请脑力劳动者
We employed her as our advisor.
The factory employed 500 workers.
He hired two helpers. 他雇佣了两个临时帮手。
★prince n. 君主,诸侯
★Florentine n. 佛罗伦萨人
★funeral n. 葬礼
★dedicate v. 奉献,题献给
dedicate to 奉献给…… 比devote 更为正式而庄重
Eg:He dedicated his first book to his mother.
I devote my time to helping my students.
He dedicates his life to his motherland.
He dedicated his life to science.
put sb of business使某人失业
put sb/sth out of ……使某人失去……
Eg: You are putting me out of patience.
put it out of your mind 忘记这件事情吧!= forget it.
★valiant adj. 英勇的
brave adj. 勇敢的
The boy is brave.
During war, soldiers are valiant.
fearless adj. 大无畏的,无所畏惧的
We are fearless in time of danger.
courageous adj. 有胆量的,有勇气的
★memory n. 纪念
You have a good memory.
in memory of / to the memory of
Eg: if my memory serves me well, you’re Tom.如果我没记错的话,你是Tom。
向某人付大笔大笔的费用
目的是为了换取...作为对...的回报
Eg: He gave me some books in return for my help.
三、【课文精析】
pay large sums of money to sb.
in return forwhen
obtaining: getting
追溯回到:dating back to / date from
Eg.: I knew Jane as long ago as the year 1980.
innediately
使某人失业
put sb. / sth. out of ... 使某人失去......
Eg: You are putting me out of patience.
You have already put everything out of order.
忘记这件事情吧
make the remarkable discovery 做出不同寻常的发现
宁愿而不
Eg.: He would rather die than surrender.
I would rather play tennis than swim.
==would prefer to do……than do
==would prefer doing……to doing
Eg.: He would prefer to die than surrender.
He would prefer dying to surrendering.
would rather: sooner + that从句 (过去式)
Eg: I would rather that you were not here. 我宁愿你不在这儿。
Eg: I would rather that I didn't see you. 我宁愿没见到你。
life work 毕生的事业
Eg.: I want to have the tree cut down.
a band of…… 一伙…………
settled near Florence 定居在Florence附近
===become famous
Eg.: They soon made quite a name for themselves as pop singers.
promptly:
put a man out out of business:
put it out of your mind
Obtaining...
as long ago asKey sentence:
John hawkwood’s discovery was quite remarkable.
would rather do sth than do sth
Six hundred years ago...
make a name for himself
come to / get to 渐渐的
come to be known 渐渐的被人所熟知
在和平期间
in times of……在……期间
大踏步行军
Eg.: I come to be known to my students.
I got to know him.
无论什么时候
交战 at war with 与……交战
表示出租
who指代 prince
he demanded: Hawkwood demanded
=== would promise to do
burn down烧毁/ burn up烧光 / burn out 烧空
Eg.: the house was burned out only...
in spite of this 尽管如此
给某人举行国葬
Children always appreciate small gifts of money. Father, of course, provides a regular supply of pocket-money, but uncles and
aunts are always a source of extra income. With some children, small sums go a long way. If sixpences are not exchanged for
sweets, they rattle for months inside money-boxes. Only very thrifty children manage to fill up a money-box. For most of them,
sixpence is a small price to pay for a satisfying bar of chocolate.
My nephew, George, has a money-box but it is always empty. Very few of the sixpences I have given him have found their way
there. I gave him sixpence yesterday and advised him to save it. Instead, he bought himself sixpence worth of trouble. On his way
to the sweet shop, he dropped his sixpence and it rolled along the pavement and then disappeared down a drain. George took off
his jacket, rolled up his sleeves and pushed his right arm through the drain cover. He could not find his sixpence anywhere, and
what is more, he could not get his arm out. A crowd of people gathered round him and a lady rubbed his arm with soap and
butter, but George was firmly stuck. The fire-brigade was called and two firemen freed George using a special type of grease.
George was not too upset by his experience because the lady who owns the sweet shop heard about his troubles and rewarded
him with a large box of chocolates.
◆appreciate v. 欣赏,感激
wheneverat war
hirein times of peace
march into
would offer to dogive sb. a state funeral
一、【Text】课文
There was a time when the owners of shop and businesses in Chicago had to pay large sums of money to gangsters in return for
'protection'. If the money was not paid promptly, the gangsters would quickly put a man out of business by destroying his shop.
Obtaining 'protechon money' is not a modern crime. As long ago as the fourteenth century, an Englishman, Sir John Hawkwood,
made the remarkable discovery that people would rather pay large sums of money than have their life work destroyed by
gangsters.
Six hundred years ago, Sir John Hawkwood arrived in Italy with a band of soldiers and settled near Florence. He soon made a
name for himself and came to be known to the Italians as Giovanni Acuto. Whenever the Italian city-states were at war with each
other, Hawkwood used to hire his soldiers to princes who were willing to pay the high price he demanded. In times of peace,
when business was bad, Hawkwood and his men would march into a city-state and, after burning down a few farms, would offer
to go away if protection money was paid to them. Hawkwood made large sums of money in this way. In spite of this, the Italians
regarded him as a sort of hero. When he died at the age of eighty, the Florentines gave him a state funeral and had a picture
painted which was dedicated to the memory of 'the most valiant soldier and most notable leader, Signor Giovanni Haukodue'.
二、【New words and expressions】生词和短语
◆gangster n. 歹徒,强盗
◆Chicago n. 芝加哥 (美国城市)
◆protection n. 保护
◆promptly adv. 准时地
◆destroy v. 毁掉;消灭
◆remarkable adj. 不寻常的
◆band n. 帮,团伙
◆Florence n. 佛罗伦萨(意大利城市)
◆city-state n. (古代)城邦
◆hire v. 租出,雇给
◆prince n. 君主,诸侯
◆Florentine n. 佛罗伦萨人
◆funeral n. 葬礼
◆dedicate v. 奉献,题献给
◆memory n. 纪念
◆valiant adj. 英勇的
★gangster n. 歹徒,强盗
a band of gangsters 一伙强盗
robber 抢劫犯,抢劫者;
bandit 强盗,土匪
brigand (书面用语) 强盗,土匪,盗贼,草寇
hooligan 流氓,不良分子
hoodlum (口语)罪犯,恶汉
rascal (口语)淘气,捣蛋鬼
★Chicago n. 芝加哥 (美国城市)
★protection n. 保护
protection money 保护费
protect v. protect from
We must protect our eyes from the sunshine.
protective adj. 保护的
protector n.保护者
protege n. 被保护者