大学英语综合教程第三册 10
教程:大学英语综合教程第三册  浏览:1582  
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    [00:00.00] swap refer to...as bring in gear

    [00:06.33]交换      将…称为    收获      个人用品

    [00:12.67]migrate testimony saturate touch on

    [00:17.42]迁移      证明      使充满     提起

    [00:22.18]designate compress complain to the point

    [00:26.81]选定      压缩      悲叹      相关的

    [00:31.45]look over kick out definition spectrum

    [00:36.27]查阅      赶走      定义      范围

    [00:41.09]dual advantage settle down restless

    [00:52.51]Thanksgiving ,like Sping Festival,brings families back together from across the country.

    [00:59.48]Waiting for her children to arrive.Ellen Goodman reflects on the changing relationship

    [01:06.09]between parents and children as they grow up and leave home,often to settle far away.

    [01:13.67]WHERE IS HOME? by Ellen Goodman

    [01:18.08]“The kids are coming home for the holiday.”

    [01:21.92]2 My friend announces this as we swap recipes and plans for Thanksgiving.

    [01:28.56]3 I stop,amused for a moment at the language we now share. ?°When,?± I ask,

    [01:36.31]“did we become the people who call their adult children, ‘the kids’?”

    [01:42.27]4 We laugh briefly at the passage of time,at thoughts of our own mothers

    [01:41.27]who still refer to us as “the girls,” and then she pauses.

    [01:47.98]5 “When,” asks my old friend, “did our kids become the people who come home only at holidays?”

    [01:55.51]There is a moment as bittersweet as cranberry sauce.

    [02:00.47]6 (1)This is the week when our friends bring in the younger generation,

    [02:04.99]eagerly harvesting them from bulging airports.We noisily arrange children, nieces,nephews,cousins

    [02:13.71]around tables,placing them like good china that we take out for special occasions.

    [02:20.79]7 These energetic offspring do not come over the river and through the woods anymore.

    [02:27.11]They struggle past check-in counters and wrestle their gear into stuffed overhead bins.

    [02:33.98]They migrate back on airlines whose owners pray with their overbooked hearts that the weather will hold.

    [02:41.77]8 (2)It is a testimony to the joyful pull of family that Americans saturated the air and highways this week

    [02:49.97]to return to the place they no longer live but nevertheless call home. To get home for the holidays.

    [02:58.57]9 Yet my old friend has touched,however delicately,on that other truth about a country

    [03:05.54]scattered over generations and geography.We have gone from family life as everyday,from knowing every sock

    [03:15.15]in our children's drawers and every frown on their faces, to welcoming them home to designated guest rooms.

    [03:24.01]10 We have visitation rights in each other's lives now, say my friend, a mother in 617

    [03:31.45]who looks forward to greeting the children from 415 and 011. We keep in touch, we catch up,

    [03:40.68]we say hellos and goodbyes.

    [03:43.42]But we are still trying to learn how to compress "quality time" into small quantities.

    [03:50.55]11 My friend is not complaining. Neither of us longs to return to those wonderful yesterdays.

    [03:58.28]The nests that once felt empty now feel roomy.

    [04:03.06]12 More to the point we raised our children to look over the horizons. We told them, the world is yours,

    [04:11.29]go for it. One by one, they went for it, to 305 and 215 and 406. It is, after all, the American way.

    [04:24.61]13 So we email and travel and are grateful at how much easier it is to keep in touch

    [04:31.77]--at least virtual touch--today than when our parents were young.

    [04:37.70]We take joy in the “kids” creating their own lives.

    [04:42.53]14 Yet at times an unpatriotic thought crosses our minds. Is this American way, this long-distance family,

    [04:53.30]an odd tradition as unique to our people as Thanksgiving?

    [04:59.25]15 We are a nation of movers, founded by people on pilgrimages, populated by those

    [05:07.19]who were willfully or forcibly uprooted. Our national mythology is based on the lure of kicking out and starting fresh.

    [05:17.72](3)We moved west and west again on a promise of the last best place, which turned out to be just a way station.

    [05:26.42]16 Even Robert Frost’s most familiar and most American definition--"home is the place where,

    [05:34.67]when you have to go there, they have to take you in"--has another subtext, Home is not where you stay.

    [05:43.84]17 From the middle of the age spectrum, my friend and I have seen elders move from house to condo,

    [05:51.13]north to south, aging sunbirds still migrating. On the other side of the generational sandwich

    [06:00.38]we watch our children's words. They are "coming home" on Tuesday and "going back home" on Sunday.

    [06:10.10]18 Today many Americans find it hard to answer the question "Where are you from?" Do we all hold dual citizenship?

    [06:20.31]Does the national concern about weaker family ties say less about our feelings than about our geography?

    [06:29.14]19 There questions hang lightly in the November air as we turn the subject

    [06:34.91]from comings and goings of children to the advantages and disadvantages of chestnuts in the stuffing.

    [06:43.04]This is the time, after all, of celebrating reunion, not musings about separation.

    [06:51.06]20 ?°The kids?± are coming home.It is not the scarcity of food that brings us back to this full table.

    [06:59.57]It is each other. And somewhere between the turkey and pies we settle down to savor togetherness.

    [07:08.69]21 (4)Over this Thanksgiving holiday and in this restless country, we stop and feast on family.

    [07:13.74]双重的     优点      定居      一直在动的

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