综合教程5 UNIT1 Working with words and expressions 1) beloved, 2) classics 3) survivor 4) workaholic 5) manufacturing 6) odd 7) finances 8) boarded 9) replacement 10) natural 1) asking around 2) straighten out 3) pick out 4) grabbed at 5)look…in the eye 6) and all that Increasing your word power Board 2. 2) board: n. the cost of meals I pay $30 a week for board and lodging. 3) board: n. a committee of the directors of a company, which is responsible for the management of the company Every decision has to be passed by the board of directors. 4) board: v. get of supply meals and lodging for payment She arranged to board some students from the universities. 5) board: v. get into (a ship or public vehicle) Before boarding the plane, Jenny tried once more to call home. 6)on board: in or on (a ship or public vehicle) Waving goodbye to everyone, she got on board the train. Odd Odd: a. different from what is ordinary or expected Timber? That’s kind of an odd name for a kid. odd: a. separated from its pair or set He’s got a whole drawer full of odd socks. odd: a. (of a number) that cannot be divided by two The houses on this side of the street have all got odd numbers, and on the other side they’ve got even numbers. odd: a. not regular; occasional She does some odd jobs but nothing permanent. Odd: a. (after numbers) rather more than the stated number She looked younger than her 50-odd years. Cloze until 2)interests 3)sandwiches 4)overweight 5)beloved 6)boarded 7)workaholic 8)compete 9)finally 10)precisely 11)coronary 12)acquaintances 13)survived 14)inquiring 15)deceased Translation He died. He worked himself to death, finally and precisely, at 3:00 a.m. Sunday morning, on his day off. his friends and acquaintances not really surprised. To them, He was a perfect Type A, a workaholic, a classic. He worked six days a week, five of them until eight or nine at night, during a time when his own company had begun the four-day week for everyone but the executives. He played a golf game every month but it was work. Other than this, he had no outside “extracurricular interests”.His survivors included his wife Helen and three children. Helen, forty-eight years old had given up trying to compete with his work years ago. Among his “beloved” children, the eldest son didn’t know him well, and the daughter had no shared topics with him. Only the youngest son who was twenty, tried to grab at his father and tried to mean enough to him to keep the man at home. At the funeral, deceased had meant much to the company and would be missed. The sixty-year-old company president told the forty-eight-year-old widow that the fifty-one-year-old and would be hard to replace. By 5:00 p.m. the afternoon of the funeral, the company president had begun to make inquiries about his replacement.