2021年英语专业八级听力测试test-2

2021-04-13 11:04:00来源:网络

  新东方在线专四专八频道给大家整理的2021年英语专业八级听力测试test-2,希望能够对大家的专四专八考试备考有所帮助,更多有关专四专八的备考内容,欢迎随时关注新东方在线专四专八频道。

  [00:28.49]Test Two

  [00:29.81]SECTION A MINI-LECTURE

  [00:33.05]In this section, you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the lecture ONCE ONLY.

  [00:38.05]While listening,take notes on the important points. Your notes will not be marked,

  [00:43.74]but you will need them to complete a gap-filling task after the mini-lecture.

  [00:47.56]When the lecture is over,you’ll be given two minutes to check your notes,

  [00:52.49]and another 10 minutes to complete the gap-filling task.

  [00:55.66]Now listen to the mini-lecture.

  [00:58.18]In this lecture, we’ll discuss English vocabulary. First, let’s define the term “vocabulary”.

  [01:05.06]What is vocabulary? It usually refers to a complete inventory of the words in a language.

  [01:10.98]But it may also refer to the words and phrases used in the variants of a language, such as dialect, register,

  [01:17.64]terminology, etc. The vocabulary can be divided into active vocabulary and passive vocabulary.

  [01:24.43]The active vocabulary refers to lexical items which a person uses.

  [01:28.80]The passive vocabulary refers to the words which he understands.

  [01:33.06]The English vocabulary is characterized by a mixture of native words and borrowed words.

  [01:38.21]First, about the native words. Most of the native words are of Anglo-Saxon origin.

  [01:43.56]They form the basic word stock of the English language. In the native stock,

  [01:48.38]we find words denoting the commonest things necessary for life,

  [01:52.05]such as those words denoting natural phenomena,divisions of the year, parts of the body,

  [01:57.96]animals, foodstuffs, trees, fruits, human activity.

  [02:02.23]And also other words denoting the most indispensable things.

  [02:05.68]The native stock also includes auxiliary and modal verbs,

  [02:09.61]pronouns, most numerals, prepositions and conjunctions. Though they are small in number,

  [02:17.38]these words play no small part in linguistic performance and communication.

  [02:20.77]Next, we come to borrowed words. Borrowed words are also known as loan-words.

  [02:27.00]They refer to linguistic forms taken over by one language or dialect from another.

  [02:31.93]The English vocabulary has replenished itself by continually

  [02:36.08]taking over words from other languages over the centuries.

  [02:39.04]The adoption of foreign words into the English language began even before the English came to England.

  [02:45.27]We know that the Angles and Saxons formed a part of the Germanic people.

  [02:49.21]Long before the Anglo-Saxons came to England,

  [02:52.38]the Germanic people had been in contact with the civilization of Rome.

  [02:55.98]Thus, Words of Latin origin denoting objects belonging to

  [03:00.60]the Roman civilization gradually found their way into the English language.

  [03:04.22]For example, wine, butter, cheese, inch, mile, mint, etc.

  [03:11.88]When the English, or the Anglo-Saxons, were settled in England, they continued to borrow words from Latin,

  [03:18.10]especially after Roman Christianity was introduced into the island in the sixth and seventh centuries.

  [03:23.90]A considerable number of Latin words were adopted into the English language.

  [03:28.06]These words chiefly signify things connected with religion or the services of the church,

  [03:33.53]such as bishop, candle, creed, monk, priest, and a great many others.

  [03:40.20]The English vocabulary also owes a great deal to the Danes and Northmen.

  [03:46.55]From these settlers, English adopted a surprising number of words of

  [03:50.04]Scandinavian origin that belong to the core-vocabulary today.

  [03:53.87]Such as they, them, their, both, ill, die, egg, knife, low, skill, take, till, though, want, etc.

  [04:08.53]The Norman Conquest in 1066 introduced a large number of French words into the English vocabulary.

  [04:15.53]French adoptions were found in almost every section of the vocabulary.

  [04:19.24]For example, in the section of law, there are such words as justice, evidence, pardon;

  [04:25.48]in the section of warfare, there are conquer, victory; in religion, there are grace, repent, sacrifice;

  [04:33.69]in architecture, there are castle, pillar, tower; in finance, there are pay, rent, ransom;

  [04:42.65]in rank, there are prince, princess; in clothing, there are collar, mantlet; in food,

  [04:51.29]there are dinner, feast, sauce, etc. In the first 43 lines of the Prologue to Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales,

  [04:59.99]there are 39 words of French origin. We can see the English vocabulary takes in so many words from French.

  [05:06.98]And in the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the Renaissance swept Europe.

  [05:12.56]It was a revival of art and literature based on ancient Greek learning.

  [05:16.39]The Renaissance opened up a new source for the English vocabulary to enrich itself.

  [05:21.09]And English borrowed many words from Greek through the medium of Latin, such as crisis, topic, coma, etc.

  [05:29.30]a wide range of learned affixes are also from Greek, such as

  [05:34.22]bio-, geo-, hydro-, auto-, homo-, para-, -ism, -logy, -graph, -meter, -gram and many others.

  [05:45.92]From the sixteenth century forward, there was a great increase in the number of languages,

  [05:50.73]and English borrowed many words from these languages.

  [05:53.26]French continued to provide a considerable number of new words, for example,

  [05:58.29]trophy, vase, moustache, unique, soup. English borrowed a lot of words from Italian in the field of art,

  [06:06.28]music and literature, for example, model, sonnet, opera, quartet, etc.

  [06:11.96]there was also a Spanish element in English,

  [06:15.32]for example, potato, cargo, parade, cigar.

  [06:19.81]Besides, German, Portuguese and Dutch were also fertile sources of loan words,

  [06:24.62]for example, dock, zinc and plunder are from German; cobra, buffalo and pagoda are from Portuguese;

  [06:32.72]tackle, buoy and skipper are from Dutch.

  [06:36.11]At the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with a growth of international

  [06:40.91]trade and the urge to colonize the known world,

  [06:43.87]English made a number of direct adoptions from languages spoken outside Europe.

  [06:48.36]Some examples are: sultan and ghoul from Arabic, lichi and typhoon from Chinese,

  [06:55.14]shah and shawl from Persian, yoghurt from Turkish, czar from Russian.

  [07:02.14]Since the end of the Second World War, still more loan words have been incorporated into the English vocabulary

  [07:09.07]For example, cuisine from French, sushi from Japanese, mao tai from Chinese, and many others.

  [07:16.39]In the twentieth century,

  [07:17.98]it should be observed that English has created many words out of Latin and Greek elements,

  [07:22.36]especially in the field of science and technology,

  [07:25.09]such as antibiotic, astronaut, auto-visual, autolysis, etc.

  [07:32.52]Although all these Latin and Greek derived words are distinctly learned or technical, they do not seem

  [07:39.75]and, in this respect, they are very different from the recent loanwords from living languages,

  [07:44.56]such as cappuccino, angst, and sputnik.

  [07:48.27]Thus, for the Modern English period a distinction must be made

  [07:52.09]between the adoptions from living languages

  [07:54.29]and the formations derived from the two classical languages.

  [07:57.34]That’s the end of today’s lecture. Next time we’ll concentrate on English word formation.

  [08:02.49]Thank you for your attention!

  以上就是新东方在线专四专八频道给大家整理的2021年英语专业八级听力测试test-2,希望对大家有所帮助,更多备考内容,欢迎随时关注新东方在线专四专八频道。



专四专八精选好课 暖心助学

新东方好老师 手把手带学

本文关键字: 英语专八 专八

2020专四专八复习备考必备资料

关注新东方在线服务号回复【专四/专八词汇】

更多资料
更多>>
更多内容
更多>>
更多好课>>
更多>>
更多资料