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1¡D It§@¥ý¦æ¥D»y©M¥ý¦æ»«»yªº¤@¨Ç¥y«¬
She had said what it was necessary to say.
2¡D ±j½Õ¥y«¬
It is not who rules us that is important, but how he rules us.
3¡D "All+©â¶H¦Wµü"©Î"©â¶H¦Wµü+itself"¡]very+§Î®eµü¡^
He was all gentleness to her.
4¡D §Q¥Îµü·J­«´_ªí¥Ü±j½Õ
A crime is a crime a crime.
5¡D "something of"¡]much¡^"to some extent"
"nothing of" ¡]little¡^¡C
"anything of "¡A¥iĶ¬°"¦³ÂI"¡A"²¤·Lµ¥¡C""Ķ¬°²@µL"¡A"¥þµL"¡C
"much of"Ķ¬°"¤j¦³"¡A
"not much of"¥iĶ¬°"ºâ¤£¤W"¡A"ºÙ¤£¤W"¡A
"little of"¥iĶ¬°"´X¥GµL"¡C
something likeĶ¬°"¦³ÂI¹³¡A²¤¦ü¡C"
They say that he had no university education, but he seems to be something of a scholar.
6¡D ¦P®æ¦Wµü­×¹¢¬O«üof«e«áªº¨â­Ó¦Wµü³£«ü¦P¤@­Ó¤H©Îª«¡A"of"¥H¤Î¥¦«e­±ªº¦Wµüºc¤@­Ó§Î®eµüµu»y¡A¥H­×¹¢"of"«á­±ªº¨º­Ó¦Wµü¡C¦p"her old sharper of a father"¡A¥iĶ¬°¡G"¦o¨ºÄF¤l¯ëªº¤÷¿Ë"¡C
Those pigs of girls eat so much.
7¡D as¡Kas¡Kcan¡]may¡^be
It is as plain as plain can be.
8¡D "It is in¡]with¡^¡Kas in¡]with¡^"
It is in life as in a journey.
9¡D "as good as¡K"¬Ûµ¥©ó¡A´N¹³¡A´X¥G¦p¡F¹ê»Ú¤W¡A¨ä¹ê¡A¹ê¦b¡C
The merchant as good as promised the orphan boy, that he would adopt him.
10¡D"many as well¡Kas"©M"might as well ¡Kas" "many as well¡Kas"¥iĶ¬°"»P¨ä¡K¡K¡A¤£¦p¡K¡K¡A§ó¦n"¡A"¥H³o¼Ë°µ¡K¡K¬°©y"¡A"¦p¦P¡K¡K¡A¤]¥i¥H¡K¡K"µ¥µ¥¡C"might as well ¡Kas"ªí¥Ü¤£¥i¯àªº¨Æ¡A¥iĶ¬°"µS¦p¡K¡K"¡A"¥i»P¡K¡K¤@¼Ë¯î­ð"¡A"»P¨ä¨º¼Ë¤£¦p³o¼Ëªº¦n"µ¥µ¥¡C
One may as well not know a thing at all as know it imperfectly.
11¡D"to make¡Kof"ªºÄ¶ªk¡]¨Ï¡K¡K¦¨¬°¡K¡K¡A§â¡K¡K·í§@¡^
I will make a scientist of my son.
12¡D too¡K+¤£©w¦¡"¡Anot¡]never¡^too¡K+¤£©w¦¡"¡A"too¡Knot+¤£©w¦¡
She is too angry to speak.
13¡D only(not, all, but, never) too ¡Kto do so "©M"too ready (apt) + to do"µ²ºc¤¤¡A¤£©w¦¡¤]¨S¦³§_©w·N¸q¡A¤Z¬O"not"¡A"all""butµ¥¦r«á+"too¡Kto¡A"¤£©w¦¡³£¥¢¥h¤F§_©w·N¸q¡A¦b"too ready¡]apt¡^ +to do"µ²ºc¤¤¡A¤£©w¦¡¤]¨S¦³§_©w·N¸q¡C
You know but too yell to hold your tongue.
14¡D "no more ¡Kthan¡K"¥y«¬
A home without love is no more a home than a body without a soul is a man.
15¡D "not so much¡Kas"©M"not so much as ¡K"µ²ºc¡A"not so much¡Kas"="not so much as ¡K"¡A¨ä¤¤as¦³¶i¥i´«¥Îbut rather¡A¥iĶ¬°¡G"»P¨ä»¡¬O¡K¡K¤ð¶·»¡¬O¡K¡K"¡C¦Ó"not so much as"="without¡]not¡^even¡A"¥iĶ¬°"¬Æ¦Ü¡K¡KÁÙ¨S¦³"¡C
The oceans do not so much divide the world as unite it .
16¡D "Nothing is more¡Kthan"©M"Nothing is so ¡Kas"µ²ºc¡A"Nothing is more¡Kthan"©M"Nothing is so ¡Kas"³£¨ã¦³³Ì°ª¯Å¤ñ¸ûªº·N«ä¡A"Nothing I"¥i´«¥Î"no"¡A"nobody"¡A"nowhere"¡A"little"¡A"few"¡A"hardly"¡A"scarcely"µ¥µ¥¡A¥iĶ¬°"¨S¦³¡K¡K¤ñ¡K¡K§ó¬°"¡A"¹³¡K¡K¦A¨S¦³¤F"¡A"³Ì¡K¡K"µ¥¡C
Nothing is more precious than time.
17¡D "cannot¡Ktoo¡K"µ²ºc,"cannot¡Ktoo¡K"·N¬°"It is impossible to overdo¡K"©ÎªÌ¡A§Y"µL½×«ç¼Ë¡K¡K¤]¤£ºâ¹L¤À"¡C"not"¥i´«¥Î"hardly"¡A"scarcely"µ¥¡A"too"¥i´«¥Î"enough"¡A"sufficient"µ¥
You cannot be too careful.
18¡D "§_©w+but "µ²ºc¡A¦b§_©wµü«á­±ªº"but"¡A¨ã¦³"which not"¡A"who not"¡A"that not"¡Aµ¥µ¥§_©w·N¸q¡Aºc¦¨«e«áªºÂù­«§_©w¡C¥iĶ¦¨"¨S¦³¡K¡K¤£¬O"©Î"¡K¡K³£¡K¡K"µ¥
Nothing is so bad but it might have been worse.
19¡D "§_©w+until (till)"µ²ºc¡A¦b§_©wµü"no"¡A"not"¡A"never"¡A"little"¡A"few"¡A"seldom"µ¥ªº«áÃä©Ò±µ¥Îªº"until/till"¡A¦h¼Æ±¡ªp¤UĶ¬°"ª½¨ì¡K¡K¤~¡K¡K"¡A"­n¡K¡K¤~¡K¡K"¡A§â§_©wĶ¬°ªÖ©w¡C
Nobody knows what he can do till he has tried.
20¡D "not so¡Kbut"©M"not such a ¡Kbut"µ²ºc¡A³o¨â­Óµ²ºc©M"§_©w+but"ªºµ²ºc®t¤£¦h¡A¤£¦P¤§ÂI¬O³o¨â­Óµ²ºc¤¤ªº"but"¬O§t¦³"that¡Knot"·N¨ýªº³sÄòµü¡Aªí¥Üµ{«×¡C¥iĶ¬°"ÁÙ¨S¦³¡K¡K¨ì¤£¯à°µ¡K¡Kªºµ{«×"¡A"¨Ã¤£¬O¡K¡K¤£¡K¡K"¡A"µL½×«ç¼Ë¡K¡K¤]¤£¬O¤£¯à¡K¡K"µ¥¡C
He is not so sick but he can come to school.
21¡D "ºÃ°Ýµü+should¡Kbut "µ²ºc¡A³o­Óµ²ºcªí¥Ü¹L¥hªº·N¥~ªº¨Æ¡A·N¬°"none¡Kbut"¡A¥iĶ¬°"°£¤F¡K¡KÁÙ¦³½Ö·|¡K¡K"¡A"°Z®Æ"¡A"·Q¤£¨ì¡K¡K³º¬O¡K¡K"µ¥¡C
Who should write it but himself?
22¡D "who knows but (that)¡K"©M"who could should¡Kbut"µ²ºc¡A³o­Óµ²ºc¬O¤Ï°Ý§Î¦¡¡A¤@¯ë·NĶ¬°"¦h¥b"¡A"¥ç¥¼¥iª¾"µ¥µ¥¡A¦³®É¤]¥iª½Ä¶¡C
Who knows but (that) he may go?
23¡D "¬è¨Ï¥y+and"©M"¬è¨Ï¥y+or"µ²ºc¡A"¬è¨Ï¥y+and"ªí¥Ü"If¡Kyou¡K"¡A"¬è¨Ï¦W+or"ªí¥Ü"if¡Knot¡K¡Ayou¡C
Add love to a house and you have a home. Aad righteousness to a city and you have a community. Aad truth to a pile of red brick and you have a school.
24¡D "¦Wµü+and"µ²ºc¡A¦b³o­Óµ²ºc¤¤¡A¦Wµüµ¥©óª¬»y±q¥y¡A©Îªí¥Ü±ø¥ó¡A©Îªí¥Ü®É¶¡¡C
A word, and he would lose his temper.
25¡D "as¡K,so¡K"µ²ºc¡A³o¸Ìªº"so"ªº·N«ä¬O"in the same way"¡]¤]¬O¦p¦¹¡^¡C¦¹µ²ºcªí©ú¨â­Ó·§©À¦bµ{«×¤W©MÃöô¤W¬Û¦ü¡C
As rust eats iron, so care eats the heart.
26¡D "if any"µ²ºc¡A"if any"©M"if ever"¡A·N«ä¬O"ªG¯u¦³¡K¡K"¡A"§Y¨Ï¦³¡K¡K"¡Aªí¥Ü¥[±j»y®ð¡C»P¦¹Ãþ¦üªºÁÙ¦³¡G"if anything"¡]¦p¦³¤£¦Pªº¸Ü¡A¦pªGµy¦³°Ï§O¡^¡A"if a day"¡]=at least¡A¦Ü¤Ö¡^¡C
There is little, if any, hope.
27¡D "be it ever(never)so"©M"let it be ever(never)so"µ²ºc¡A³o¸Ì¡A"be it"¤¤ªº"be"¬O¥j­^»y°²³]»y®ðªº¿ò¯d§Î¦¡¡A²{¥N­^»y«h¨Ï¥Î"let it be"¡C"ever so"©M"never so"³£ªí¥Ü¦P¤@·N«ä¡A³£ªí¥Ü"very"¡C
Be it ever so humble (let it be ever so humble), home is home.
28¡D "the last+¤£©w¦¡"©M"the last +©w»y±qµü"µ²ºc¡A³oºØµ²ºc¤¤ªº"last"·N«ä¬O"the least likely"¡A¥Î©ó§_©w©Ê±À½×¡C¥iĶ¬°"³Ì¤£¤j¥i¯àªº"¡A"³Ì¤£¦X¾Aªº"¡A¥Ñ­ì·Nªº"³Ì«á¤@­Ó¡K¡K"Åܦ¨"³Ì¤£¥i¯à¡K¡Kªº¤@­Ó"¡C
He is the last man to accept a bride.
29¡D "so¡Kthat¡K"¥y«¬¡A³o­Ó¥y«¬ªº·N«ä¬O"¦p¦¹¡K¡K¡A¥H­P©ó¡K¡K"¡A¦ý¦b½Ķ¦¨º~»y®É¡A³\¦h±¡ªp¤U¡A¨Ã¤£¬O¤@©w­nĶ¦¨"¦p¦¹¡K¡K¥H­P©ó¡K¡K"¡A¦Ó¬OÅܳqªí¹F¨ä§t¸q¡C
He ran so fast that nobody could catch him up.
30¡D "more + than+­ì¯Å§Î®eµü¡]°Æµü¡^"µ²ºc¡A³o¬O±N¤£¦P©Ê½è¥[¥H¤ñ¸û¡A¨ä¤¤ªº"more"¦³"rather"ªº·N«ä¡C
It is more than probable that he will fall.
31¡D "more than +°Êµü"µ²ºc¡A³oºØµ²ºcªí¥Ü°Êµüªºµ{«×¡A¥iĶ¬°"²§±`"¡A"°Z¤î"¡A"¤Q¤G¤À¦a"µ¥¡C
This more than satisfied me.
32¡D "good and ¡K"ªº°Æµü¥Îªk¡AĶ¬°"«D±`"¡A"«Ü"µ¥¡CÃþ¦üÁÙ¦³"nice and ¡K", "fine and ¡K," "lovely and ¡K", "bright and ¡K", "rare and ¡K", "big and ¡K"µ¥¡A§¡ªí¥Üµ{«×¡C
The apples are good and ripe.
33¡D "and that"µ²ºc¡A³o­Ó"and that"À³Ä¶¬°"¦Ó¥B¡K¡K"¡Aªí¥Ü¹ï¥¦«e­±³¯­z³¡¤Àªº»y®ð¥[±j¡A"that"¥Nªí«e­±ªº¾ã­Ó³¯­z³¡¤À¡C
Return to your work , and that at once.
34¡D "at once¡Kand"µ²ºc¡A³o­Óµ²ºcĶ¬°"¬J¡K¡K¤S¡K¡K"¡A°_¬ÛÃö³s±µªº§@¥Î¡A¬Û·í©ó"both¡Kand¡K"¡C
The novel is at once pleasing and instructive.
35¡D "in that¡K"µ²ºc¡A³o­Óµ²ºcªº·N«ä¬O"¦b¨º¤@ÂI¤W¡]¤è­±¡^"¡A¥iĶ¬°"¦]¬°"¡CÃþ¦üªºµ²ºcÁÙ¦³"in this¡K"¡C
The budget is unrealistic in that it disregards increased costs.
36¡D "the name notwithstanding"µ²ºc¡A³o­Óµ²ºc¤¤"notwithstanding"¬O¤¶µü¡A³o­Ó¤¶µü¥i¥H¸m«e¡A¥i¥H¸m«á¡A¤ñ¦p¤]¥i¼g¦¨¡G"notwithstanding the name"¡C°_Åý¨Bª¬»yªº§@¥Î¡C
Some people think of the storage battery as a sort of condenser where electricity is stored.But this is an entirely wrong conception, the name notwithstanding.
37¡D "Every¡Knot"©M"All¡Knot"µ²ºc¡A"Every¡Knot"ªí¥Ü"¤£¨£±o¨C­Ó¡K¡K³£¬O¡K¡K"¡F"All¡Knot"ªí¥Ü"¤£¨£±o©Ò¦³¡K¡K³£¬O¡K¡K"ªº·N«ä¡C
Every man is not polite, and all are not born gentlemen.
38¡D "may as well not¡Kas"µ²ºc¡A¦¹µ²ºc¥iĶ¬°"»P¨ä¡K¡K¤£¦p¤£¡K¡K"¡C
One may as well not know a thing at all as know it but imperfectly.
39¡D "have only to ¡Kdo"µ²ºc¡A¦¹µ²ºcªí¥Ü"¥u¶·¡]®ø¡^¡K¡K´N¯à¡K¡K"ªº·N«ä¡C
We have only to turn to that extraordinary discovery made by Edison to see the significance of it.
40¡D "not (no) ¡Kunless¡K"¥y«¬
No increase in output can be expected unless a new assembly line is installed.
41¡D "better¡Kthan¡K"¥y«¬
Better my life should be ended by their hate, than that hated life should be prolonged to live without your love.
42¡D "as it were"¬O¤@­Ó«D±`±`¥Îªº´¡¤J»y¡A·N«ä¬O"¦n¶H"¡A"¥i¥H»¡"µ¥¡C
Apiece of iron near a magnet, though apparently separate from it , feels, as it were, the threads of this attachment.
43¡D ½ÆÂøµ²ºc¡A¦b¤U­±¨Ò¥y¤¤¡A¥Ñ©óanyoneªº©w»y±q¥y¹Lªø¡A§â¿×»ymust realize´£¨ì©w»y±q¥y¤§«e¡C
Though faith and confidence are surely more or lass foreign to my nature, I do not infrequently find myself looking to them to be able, diligent, candid, and even honest. Plainly enough, that is too large an order, as anyone must realize who reflects upon the manner in which they reach public office.
44¡D "not¡Kany more than¡K"¬°¡G"¤£¯à¡K¡K¡A¥¿¦p¤£¯à¡K¡K"¡C
One cannot learn to sketch and express himself graphically only by reading about it any more than one can learn to swim while standing by the pool.
45¡D "By that as it may"¬O"Let it be that as it may"ªº¬Ù²¤§Î¦¡¡A¬O¥Ñ"be"¤Þ°_ªº¥t¥~¤@ºØ°²³]µ²ºc¡A·N«ä¬O"ÁöµM¦p¦¹¡A¾¨ºÞ³o¼Ë"¡C
It is said that the nerve poison is the more primitive of the two, that the blood poison is, so to speak, a new product from an improved formula. Be that as it may, the nerve poison does its business with man far more quickly than the blood poison.
46¡D "if at all"¬O¤@­Ó¥Ñ"if"¤Þ°_ªº¥D¿×µ²ºc¤£§¹¾ãªºµu¥yµ²¬°"§Y±N¡K¡K"¡A"§Y¨Ï¡K¡K"µ¥¡C
I can see only with great difficulty, if at all.
47¡D ¥Ñthere¤Þ°_ªº¥y«¬®e©ö²£¥Í½ÆÂøªº¥y¤lµ²ºc.
There have been opened up to the vast and excellent science, in which my work is the beginning, ways and means by which other minds more accurate than wine will explore its remote corners.
48¡D "range from ¡Kto¡K"µ²ºc¡C³o¬O¤@­Ó±`¨£µ²ºc¡AĶ®É«Ü¦h±¡ªp¤UÀ³Åܳq³B²z¡A¤£¯à§¹¥þ¨Ì¾aÃã¨å¤WªºÄÀ¸q¡C
Computer applications range from an assembly line completely run by computers to a children toy responding to remote signals.
49¡D "the way¡K"µ²ºc
I always thought she was a common-sense person who discussed things the way they ought to be discussed.
50¡D ½ÆÂø»«¸Éµ²ºc
In recent years, the development of sensitive and accurate measuring equipment has made it possible to measure the acuity of hearing of any individual at different frequencies.
51¡D ¬Y¨Ç¤À¹jµ²ºc
1¡^ °Êµüµu»y¬ÛÃö³¡¤À³Q¤À¹j¡]·í"make use of "¡A"take notice of"¡A"pay attention to"¡A
µ¥°Êµüµu»yÅܦ¨³Q°Ê»yºA®É¡^¡C
Use is made of solar energy in heating houses.
2¡^Âù­«©w»y¤Þ°_ªº¤À¹j¡C
But there is of culture another view, in which not solely the scientific passion, the sheer desire to see things as they are, natural and proper in an intelligent being, appears as the ground of it.
52¡D "to be doing¡Kwhen¡K"¬O¤@­Ó¥y«¬¡A¦hĶ¬°"¬Y¤H¥¿¦b°µ¡K¡K®É¡A¬ðµM¡K¡K"¡C¦b²³æªº¥y¤l¤¤®e©ö¬Ý¥X¡A¤@¥¹¥y¤lÅܱo½ÆÂø¤@¨Ç¡A¥i¯à´N¤£¤Ó®e©öÃѧO³oºØ¥y«¬¡C
She said she and a friend had gone out to dinner that night, and were walking home together at about 10 o'clock, when a "very big, very tall man", accosted them and demanded their purses.
53¡D "too¡Kto"¥y«¬
Then I remembered how often I, too, had been indifferent to the grandeur of each day, too preoccupied with petty and sometimes even mean concerns to respond to the splendor of it all.
54¡D "so much that¡K"¥y«¬
But he developed gradually a very musical English. He learnt to write sentences that fall away on the ear with a misty languor and it delighted him so much that he could never have enough of it.
55¡D "when"¤Þ¾Éª¬»y±q¥y¦³®É¨Ã¤£¦nĶ¡A¤£¯à¤@¬Ý¨ìwhen±q¥y´N¦Ò¼{Ķ¬°"·í¡K¡Kªº®É­Ô"¡A¥¦ÁÙ¦³³\¦hºØĶªk¡C
Anything is better than not to write clearly. There is nothing to be said against lucidity, and against simplicity only the possibility of dryness. This is a risk that is well worth taking when you reflect how much better it is to be bold than to wear a curly wig.
56¡D "not¡Kbecause¡K"¡A¦³®É¥i§_©w«e­±¡A¦³®É¥i§_©wbecause¥»¨­¡A©¹©¹¥X²{ª[¸q¡CÀ³®Ú¾Ú¤W¤U¤å­±§P©w¡C
In 1600 the earth was not the center of the universe because the majority then supposed it was; nor, because she had more readers, was Ella wheeler Wilcox a better poet than Father Hopkins.
57¡D "so¡Kthat, such¡Kthat"¬O¤@­Ó´¶³qªº¥y«¬¡A¦ý¦b¦P¤@­Ó¥y¤lùئ³¨â³B¨Ï¥Î¥¦«o¤ñ¸û¤Ö¨£¡C
The truth is, that in one point of view, this matter of national literature has come to such a pass with us, that in some sense we must turn bullies, else the day is lost, or superiority so far beyond us, that we can hardly say it will ever be ours.
58¡D "by doing¡K"µ²ºc¡C³o­Óµ²ºcªº·N«ä¬O"³q¹L¡]°µ¡^¡K¡K"¡A¦ý½Ķ¹ê½î¤¤¤£¯à©ëªd©ó³oºØÄÀ¸q¡A¤£¤Ö±¡ªp¤U»Ý­nÆF¬¡Åܳq¡C
The hippos, by depositing dung in the water, fed the fish that support the storks that destroy the rare trees.
59¡D ¤U­±¨Ò¥y¬°¤@­Ë¸Ë¥y¡A¥D»y«Üªø¡A¦Ó¥B¤S§t¦³«D±`½ÆÂøªº¥y«¬¡C³o¬O¥H§Î®eµü§@ªí»yªº­Ë¸Ë¡A½Ķ¹ê½î¤¤¦h§â­Ë¸Ë³¡¤ÀĶ¨ì³Ì«e­±¡C
No less obvious is the fact there are great numbers of people so constituted or so brought up that they cannot get so much pleasure out of processes and experiences resulting in a poorer life less full of meaning.
60¡D "what¡Kof"¥y«¬
I can not say of myself what Johnson said of Pope: He never passed a fault unamended by indifference, nor quitted it by despair. I do not write as I do; I write as I can.
61¡D ­^»yªº¤@­Ó²ßºD¥Îªk¬O¡G·í§_©w¿×»ythink¡]believe¡^®É¡A¹ê»Ú¤W¬O§_©w¨ä«á­±ªº»«»y±q¥y¡C§_©w´N¸¨¦b»«»y±q¥y¤W¡C³o¼Ë»«»y±q¥y´NÅܦ¨¤FÂù­«§_©w¡AĶ®É¥i¥H«öÂù­«§_©wĶ¡A¤]¥i«öªÖ©w¨ÓĶ¡C
It is a valuable work. I do not think anyone writes so well that he cannot learn much from it.
62¡D "to have not¡K(as) to see¡K"¤¤ªº¤£©w¦¡¤]¦³§_©w·N¨ý¡C
He had not the good breeding to see that simplicity and naturalness are the truest marks of distinction.
63¡D "It occurred to sb. that¡K"·N¬°"¬ðµM·Q¨ì"¡A"It dawned on sb.that¡K"."¬ðµM·Q°_"µ¥¡C ±q¥y¬O·Q°_ªº¤º®e¡C
I remember once being on a bus and looking at a stranger. He suddenly looked back at me-i.e.our eyes met. My instinctive reaction was to avert my gaze. It occurred to me that if I had continued to maintain eye contact, I would have been rude and aggressive.
64¡D "It follows that¡K"="It happens as a result¡K"±`±`³QĶ¬°"¥Ñ¦¹¥i¨£"¡A"¦]¦¹"¡A"±q«e"¡A"¥i¥H±ÀÂ_"µ¥µ¥¡C
It follows that the housewife will also expect to be able to have more leisure in her life without lowering her standard of living. It also follows that human domestic servants will have completely ceased to exist.
65¡D "that's all there is to it "¡A·N«ä¬O"¤]¤£¹L¦p¦¹¦Ó¤w"¡C¥i®Ú¾Ú¤W¤U¤åµø±¡ªp³B²z¡C
If I'm touched, I'm touched-that's all there is to it.
66¡D "The chances are that¡K"¬O¤@¥y«¬¡AĶ¬°"¦³¥i¯à¡K¡K"¡C
The chances are you will never attempt that speed with poetry or want to race though some passages in fiction over which you wish to linger.
67¡D Feel, see, leave¤Þ°_»«»yªº»«»y¸É¨¬»y¡A©Î¦b³Q°Ê»yºA¤¤¤Þ°_¥D»y¸É¨¬»yªº¬Y¨ÇºD¥Î¥y«¬¡A¦³®Ésee©Mfeel³o¨â­Óµüªº³Q°Ê¦¡¤£¤j¦nĶ¡C¹J¨ì³oºØ±¡ªpÀ³«õ±¸¨ä²`¼h§t¸q¡A¤£­n©ëªd©óªí­±§Î¦¡¡C
The education of the young is seen to be of primary importance.
68¡D ¬Y¦¹¥Hno, nowhere, never, not¡Kbout, not¡Kany, nothing but, hardly, scarcely, seldomµ¥§_©wµü»y¤Þ¥Xªº¤@¨Çµ²ºc¡C
I never go past the theatre but I think of his last performance.
69¡D ¬Y¨Ç¥Îchoice between, to know better, whether or, should have avoided(©Îdone better)µ¥ªí¥Ü±q¨âºØ°µªk¤¤¿ï¨ú¤@ºØ§ó¦nªº°µªk
Then we are faced with a choice between using technology to provide and fulfil needs which have hitherto been regarded as unnecessary or, on the other hand, using technology to reduce the number of hours of work which a man must do in order to earn a given standard of libing.
70¡D ¬Y¨Ç¬Ù²¤±¡ªp¡AÀ³²M³æ½T»{¬Ù²¤ªº¤º®e¡C
The country had grown rich, its commerce was large, and wealth did its natural work in making life softer and more worldly, commerce in deprovincializing the minds of those engaged in it.
71¡D ­×¹¢¦¨¤À¡]¥]¬A©w»y¡B©w»y±q¥y¡B¦P¦ì»y±q¥yµ¥¡^¦h¦Óªø¡C
Across the court from the Manhattan apartment that I have occupied for the past few years is a dog that often hurls insults into the darkness, a few of which my dog refuses to accept and makes a tart reply.
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Of course, nobody was hurt this time, because we had all been to dinner, none of us being novices excepting Hastings; and he having been informed by the minister at the time that he invited him that in deference to the English custom the had not provided any dinner.

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THey are very useful.
Thanks for sharing.

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