首页
登录
职称英语
For my proposed journey, the first priority was clearly to start learning Ara
For my proposed journey, the first priority was clearly to start learning Ara
游客
2025-05-10
0
管理
问题
For my proposed journey, the first priority was clearly to start learning Arabic. I have never been a linguist. Though I had traveled widely as a journalist, I had never managed to pick up more than a smattering of phrases in any tongue other than French, and even my French, was laborious for want of lengthy practice. The prospect of tackling one of the notoriously difficult languages at the age of forty, and trying to speak it well, both deterred and excited me. It was perhaps expecting a little too much of a curiously unreceptive part of myself, yet the possibility that I might gain access to a completely alien culture and tradition by this means was enormously pleasing.
I enrolled as a pupil in a small school in the center of the city. It was run by a Mr Beheit, of dapper appearance and explosive temperament, who assured me that after three months of his special treatment I would speak Arabic fluently. Whereupon he drew from his desk a postcard which an old pupil had sent him from somewhere in the Middle East, expressing great gratitude and reporting the astonishment of local Arabs that he could converse with them like a native. It was written in English. Mr Beheit himself spent most of his time coaching businessmen in French, and through the thin, partitioned walls of his school one could hear him bellowing in exasperation at some confused entrepreneur: "Non, M. Jones. Jane suis pas francais. Pas, Pas, Pas! "(No Mr.Jones, I’m NOT French, I’m not, not, NOT!). I was gratified that my own tutor, whose name was Ahmed, was infinitely softer and less public in approach.
For a couple of hours every morning we would face each other across a small table, while we discussed in meticulous detail the colour scheme of the tiny cubicle, the events in the street below and, once a week, the hair-raising progress of a window-cleaner across the wall of the building opposite. In between, bearing in mind the particular interest I had in acquiring Arabic, I would inquire the way to some imaginary oasis, anxiously demand fodder and water for my camels, wonder politely whether the sheikh was prepared to grant me audience now. It was all hard going. I frequently despaired of ever becoming anything like a fluent speaker, though Ahmed assured me that my pronunciation was above average for a Westerner. This, I suspected, was partly flattery, for there are a couple of Arabic sounds which not even a gift for mimicry allowed me to grasp for ages. There were, moreover, vast distinctions of meaning conveyed by subtle sound shifts rarely employed in English. And for me the problem was increased by the need to assimilate a vocabulary, that would vary from place to place across five essentially Arabic-speaking countries that practiced vernaculars of their own: so that the word for "people", for instance, might be nais, sah’ab or sooken.
Each day I was mentally exhausted by the strain of a morning in school, followed by an afternoon struggling at home with a tape recorder. Yet there was relief in the most elementary forms of understanding and progress. When merely got the drift of a torrent which Ahmed had just released, I was childishly elated. When I managed to roll a complete sentence off my tongue without apparently thinking what I was saying, and it came out right, I beamed like an idiot. And the enjoyment of reading and writing the flowing Arabic script was something that did not leave me once I had mastered it. By the end of June, no-one could have described me as anything like a fluent speaker of Arabic. I was approximately in the position of a fifteen-year old who, equipped with a modicum of schoolroom French, nervously awaits his first trip to Paris. But this was something I could reprove upon in my own time. I bade farewell to Mr Beheit, still straggling to drive the French negative into the still confused mind of Mr Jones. [br] It is known from the passage that the writer ______.
选项
A、had a good command of French
B、couldn’t make sounds properly when learning Arabic
C、spoke highly of Mr Beheit’s achievements in language teaching
D、didn’t like Ahmed’s style of teaching
答案
B
解析
第三段提到"there are a couple of Arabic sounds which not even a gift for mimicry allowed me to grasp for ages",说明作者的一些阿拉伯语发音很有困难。而A、C、D三项或是文中明确表达了相反的含义,或是没有提到。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/4069596.html
相关试题推荐
Ofalltheareasoflearningthemostimportantisthedevelopmentofattitud
Ofalltheareasoflearningthemostimportantisthedevelopmentofattitud
Ofalltheareasoflearningthemostimportantisthedevelopmentofattitud
Formyproposedjourney,thefirstprioritywasclearlytostartlearningAra
Formyproposedjourney,thefirstprioritywasclearlytostartlearningAra
Formyproposedjourney,thefirstprioritywasclearlytostartlearningAra
Meantime,roadconstructionis______onthesiteofaproposedTumanRiverTria
Youshould______atleastthreedaysforthejourney.A、expectB、permitC、accept
In1984,PresidentRonaldReaganproposedthattheUnitedStatesconstructalau
Whenthedoctorproposedtohimlongwalksinthefreshair,Mr.Parkadmitted_
随机试题
[originaltext]W:Frank,wejustgotoursalesfiguresinandthenumbersareve
【B1】[br]【B7】A、otherB、someC、othersD、anotherD词义辨析题。通读第三段可知,该段是在讲长颈鹿血压很高的话为什么
Theworldisnotonlyhungry,butthirstyforwater.Thatmayseem【B1】______
施工项目管理的对象是()。A.施工项目 B.工程项目 C.施工材料 D.
既能祛风湿,又能补肝肾,还能安胎的药物是A.续断 B.桑寄生 C.杜仲 D
男性,65岁,反复发作左侧肢体偏瘫,6~10小时后完全恢复正常,头颅CT未见异常
读下图,完成下题。 为减轻图中平原地区的农业灾情,宜采取的主要措施是(
元朝末年流传的一首小令中写道:“堂堂大元,奸佞专权,开河变钞祸根源,惹红巾万千。
根据《保险公司偿付能力报告编报规则第6号:认可负债》的规定,保险公司募集的定期次
电缆通用外护层数字为23表示的含义为( )。A.双钢带聚乙烯护套 B.双钢带聚
最新回复
(
0
)