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We regret that we are unable to accept telephone orders for personal stationery items. ºÜÒź¶£¬ÎÒÃDz»ÄܽÓÊܸöÈËÎľßÓÃÆ·µÄµç»°¶©¹º¡£

pad

n. [C]

1 several sheets of paper fastened together, used for writing or drawing ±ã¼ã±¾£»ÅÄÖ½²¾ 2 a thick flat object made of cloth or rubber, used to protect or clean sth., or to make sth. more comfortable µæ£»³Äµæ£»»¤µæ

album

n.

[C] a book that you put photographs, stamps, etc. in £¨ÊÕ´æÕÕÆ¬¡¢ÓÊÆ±µÈµÄ£©²¾£¬²á

proclaim

vt.

(fml.) say publicly or officially that sth. important is true or exists Ðû³Æ£»Ðû²¼£»ÉùÃ÷ Britain proudly proclaims that it is a nation of animal lovers. Ó¢¹ú×ÔºÀµØÐû³Æ×Ô¼ºÊÇÒ»¸ö°®»¤¶¯ÎïµÄ¹ú¼Ò¡£

scandal

n.

1 [sing.] a situation that shocks you and makes you angry, esp. one that you think sb. in authority should change £¨ÓÈÖ¸µ±¾Ö±¾Ó¦¸Ä±äµÄ£©ÁîÈËÕ𾪵ÄÊ£¬ÒýÆð·ß¿®µÄÊ It is a scandal that a person can be stopped by the police for no reason. ¾¯²ì¾¹¿ÉÒÔºÁÎÞÀíÓɵØÀ¹ÈË£¬ÕâºÜÁîÈËÕ𾪡£

2 [C] an event in which sb., esp. sb. important, behaves in a bad way that shocks people £¨ÓÈÖ¸Ç£ÉæÖªÃûÈËÊ¿µÄ£©³óÎÅ£¬³óÊÂ

The official got involved in a scandal and was forced to resign weeks later. ÄÇλ¹ÙÔ±¾íÈëÁËÒ»×®³óÎÅ£¬¼¸¸öÐÇÆÚºó±»ÆÈ´ÇÖ°¡£

thrust

v.

(thrust, thrust) push sth. somewhere roughly ÃÍÍÆ£»ÃÍÈû

She never enjoyed the fame that was thrust on her. ¶ÔÓÚÇ¿¼Ó¸øËýµÄÃûÉù£¬Ëý´Óδ¸Ðµ½¹ý¿ªÐÄ¡£

proficiency

n.

[U] a good standard of ability and skill ÊìÁ·£»¾«Í¨

Evidence of basic proficiency in English is part of the admission requirements. ¾ß±¸»ù±¾µÄÓ¢Óï¼¼ÄÜÊÇÈëѧҪÇóµÄÒ»²¿·Ö¡£

moreover

ad.

(fml.) in addition ¡ª used to introduce information that adds to or supports what has previously been said ¶øÇÒ£»ÔÙÕߣ»´ËÍâ

Moreover, they become more concerned about their health as they grow older. ´ËÍâ£¬Ëæ×ÅÄêÁäµÄÔö³¤£¬ËûÃǸü¼Ó¹Ø×¢×Ô¼ºµÄ½¡¿µ¡£

evidently

ad.

used for saying that sth. is obviously true Ã÷ÏԵأ»ÏÔÈ»

She should have been here two hours ago, so she¡®s evidently decided not to come after all. ËýÁ½Ð¡Ê±ÒÔǰ¾ÍÓ¦¸Ãµ½Õâ¶ùÁË£¬ËùÒÔËýÏÔÈ»¾ö¶¨²»À´ÁË¡£

Although Miss Smith was evidently not very well, she continued working throughout the summer. ËäȻʷÃÜ˹С½ãÉíÌåºÜÃ÷ÏÔ²»ÊÊ£¬¿ÉÊÇËý»¹ÊǼá³Ö¹¤×÷ÁËÒ»¸öÏÄÌì¡£

exposure

n.

1 [sing., U] the chance to experience new ideas, ways of life, etc. ½Ó´¥£»ÌåÑé

Exposure to a second language should take place in elementary school. º¢×ÓÃÇÓ¦¸Ã´ÓСѧ¾Í¿ªÊ¼½Ó´¥µÚ¶þÓïÑÔ¡£

For as yet unknown reasons, I had come through five years of exposure to a fatal virus without being infected. ÓÉÓÚijÖÖδ֪µÄÔ­Òò£¬ÎÒÓëÒ»ÖÖÖÂÃüµÄ²¡¶¾½Ó´¥ÁËÎåÄêÈ´Ïà°²ÎÞÊ£¬Ã»±»¸ÐȾ¡£

2 [U] when sb. is in a situation where they are not protected from sth. dangerous or unpleasant ±©Â¶

The doctor told Penny that too much exposure to the sun is bad for the skin and may cause cancer. Ò½Éú¶ÔÅíÄÝ˵ÔÚÌ«Ñôµ×ÏÂɹ̫¾Ã¶ÔƤ·ôÓк¦£¬¿ÉÄÜ»áÖ°©¡£

adequate

a.

enough in quantity or of a good enough quality for a particular purpose ×ã¹»µÄ£»³ä·ÖµÄ£»ºÏºõÐèÒªµÄ

People accused the governor of failing to take adequate measures which could have prevented the disaster. ÈËÃÇÖ¸Ôð¸ÃÖݳ¤¶Ô±¾À´¿ÉÒÔ±ÜÃâµÄÔÖÄÑûÓвÉÈ¡³ä·ÖµÄ´ëÊ©¡£

adequately

ad.

×ã¹»µØ£»³ä·ÖµØ

Some students are not adequately prepared for higher education. ÓеÄѧÉúûÓгä·ÖµØ×¼±¸ºÃ½ÓÊܸߵȽÌÓý¡£

competent

a.

having enough skills or knowledge to do sth. to a satisfactory standard ºÏ¸ñµÄ£»ÄÜ¸ÉµÄ My secretary is perfectly competent, but she doesn¡®t have much patience. ÎÒµÄÃØÊé·Ç³£Äܸɣ¬µ«ÊÇËýûÓжàÉÙÄÍÐÄ¡£

jerk

n.

[C] a sudden quick movement Ã͵ÄÒ»¶¯£»â§È»Ò»¶¯

The old bus started with a jerk, so the passengers shook all of a sudden. ÄÇÁ¾¾ÉµÄ¹«¹²Æû³µÃ͵ØÒ»¶¯£¬³µÉϵij˿Ͷ¼Í»È»Ò¡»ÎÁËһϡ£

jerky

a.

moving roughly with many starts and stops £¨ÔÚÐнøÖУ©²»Æ½Îȵ쬵ßô¤µÄ

After the bus came to a jerky halt, the passengers got off the bus hurriedly. ¹«¹²Æû³µµßô¤×ÅÍ£ÏÂÀ´ÒԺ󣬳˿ÍÃǶ¼´ÒæÏ³µÁË¡£

function

n.

[C, U] the purpose that sth. has, or the job that sb. or sth. does £¨ÊÂÎïµÄ£©¹¦ÄÜ£¬×÷Ó㻣¨Ä³È˵ģ©Ö°Ôð

One of the chief functions of education is to equip future citizens with their places in

society.½ÌÓýµÄÖ÷ÒªÖ°ÄÜÖ®Ò»ÊǰïÖúδÀ´µÄ¹«ÃñÔÚÉç»áÉÏÕÒµ½×Ô¼ºµÄλÖᣠvi.

work or operate in the correct way Õý³£¹¤×÷£»Õý³£ÔËת

If the Internet stopped functioning, the consequent losses could be measured in tens of billions of dollars. Èç¹ûÒòÌØÍøÍ£Ö¹ÔË×÷£¬Óɴ˲úÉúµÄËðʧ¿ÉÓÃÊý°ÙÒÚÃÀÔªÀ´ºâÁ¿¡£

span

n.

[C] a period of time between two dates or events £¨Á½¸öÈÕÆÚ»òʼþÖ®¼äµÄ£©Ê±¾à£¬ÆÚ¼ä Property gained within the span of marriage such as salary is considered jointly owned property. »éÒö´æÐøÆÚ¼ä»ñµÃµÄ²Æ²ú£¬È繤×Ê£¬¶¼ÊÓΪ·òÆÞ¹²Í¬²Æ²ú¡£

The average life span for Americans is now more than 74 years. ÃÀ¹úÈËµÄÆ½¾ùÊÙÃüÏÖÔÚ³¬¹ýÁË74Äê¡£

scratch

n. [C]

1 (from ~) from a point where nothing has been there, so you have to do everything yourself ´ÓÁ㿪ʼ£»´ÓÍ·¿ªÊ¼£»°×ÊÖÆð¼Ò

It may be the first time in years when you have had to start from scratch making new friends. Õâ¿ÉÄÜÊǶàÄêÀ´µÄµÚÒ»´ÎÄã²»µÃ²»´ÓÍ·¿ªÊ¼½á½»ÐÂÅóÓÑ¡£

2 a thin mark or cut on the surface of sth. or on sb.¡®s skin £¨Îï¼þ»òƤ·ôÉϵģ©¹ÎºÛ£¬»®ºÛ The scratch on the watch was almost too minute to see. ÊÖ±íÉϵĻ®ºÛ¼¸ºõСµÃ¿´²»¼û¡£

tune

vt.

1 (also ~ up) make small changes to an engine so that it works as well as possible µ÷Õû£¬µ÷½Ú£¨·¢¶¯»ú£©Ê¹´ïµ½×î¼Ñ״̬

In order to keep drivers safe, mechanics are urged to make sure that car engines are properly tuned up. ΪÁ˱£Ö¤Ë¾»úµÄ°²È«£¬Ò»¶¨Òª¶Ø´Ù»úеʦȷ±£Æû³µ·¢¶¯»úÒѵ÷ÕûºÃ¡£ 2 make small changes to a musical instrument so that it will produce the correct notes Ϊ£¨ÀÖÆ÷£©µ÷Òô£¬¶¨ÏÒ

Someone is coming tomorrow to tune the piano. Ã÷Ìì»áÓÐÈËÀ´¸ø¸ÖÇÙµ÷Òô¡£

adjust

v.

change or move sth. slightly to improve it or make it more suitable for a particular purpose µ÷Õû£»µ÷½Ú

The figures have been adjusted for inflation. Êý¾ÝÒòͨ»õÅòÕͶø×÷Á˵÷Õû¡£ vi.

get used to a new situation by changing your ideas or the way you do things ÊÊÓ¦ He soon adjusted to army life. ËûºÜ¿ì¾ÍÊÊÓ¦Á˾ü¶ÓÉú»î¡£

destination

n.

[C] the place that sb. or sth. is going to Ä¿µÄµØ£»ÖÕµã

Not only did he help me find the right bus, he also accompanied me to my destination and paid the entrance fee to the museum. Ëû²»µ«°ïÎÒÕÒµ½ÁËÕýÈ·µÄ¹«³µ£¬»¹ÅãÎÒµ½´ïÁËÄ¿µÄµØ£¬²¢ÎªÎÒÖ§¸¶Á˽øÈ벩Îï¹ÝµÄÃÅÆ±¡£

precise

a.

exact, clear and correct ¾«È·µÄ£»×¼È·µÄ

In preparing scientific reports, a student should explain his findings in precise language. ÔÚ×¼±¸¿ÆÑ§±¨¸æÊ±£¬Ñ§ÉúÓ¦¸ÃÓþ«È·µÄÓïÑÔÀ´½âÊÍËûµÄ·¢ÏÖ¡£

beneficial

a.

having a good effect ÓÐÀûµÄ£»ÓаïÖúµÄ£»ÓÐÓõÄ

The researcher is attempting to show how parents can have beneficial conversations with their children. ÕâλÑо¿ÕßÕýÊÔͼʾ·¶¸¸Ä¸¿ÉÒÔÈçºÎ¸úËûÃǵĺ¢×ÓÕ¹¿ªÓÐÒæµÄ¶Ô»°¡£

asset

n.

1 [C] a major benefit ÓÐÀûÌõ¼þ£»³¤´¦

Knowing a foreign language is an important skill, a major social and business asset that will bring new life to the worlds of travel and entertainment. ¶®ÍâÓïÊÇÒ»ÃÅÖØÒªµÄ¼¼ÄÜ£¬ÊÇ´Ù½øÉç½»ºÍÉÌóµÄÒ»¸öÓÐÀûÌõ¼þ£¬Ëü»á¸øÂÃÓκÍÓéÀÖÒµ´øÀ´ÐµÄÉú»ú¡£

2 [C, usu. pl.] the things that a company owns, that can be sold to pay debts ×ʲú£»²Æ²ú In addition to the money in a bank account, my assets include my house, my car, and my furniture. ³ýÁËÒøÐÐÕË»§ÀïµÄÇ®ÒÔÍ⣬ÎÒµÄ×ʲú»¹°üÀ¨·¿×Ó¡¢³µ×ӺͼҾߡ£

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