Exercise 11-11: Presidential Candidates' Debate CD 4 Track 48 Thəprezədənt təmrrou nidiz əxpectədiniz stidəv thəyoonyən mesəj təprəpouz fedrəl səbzədeez təhelp lou(w)inkəmfmleez ouvrkəm thəsou-kld dijədəl dəvid. Izidənəpropree...
Exercise 11-10: Practical ApplicationU.S./Japan Trade Friction CD 4 Track47 Listen to the following excerpt, and compare the two versions. Forty years after the end of World War II, Japan and the U.S. are again engaged in conflict.Trade frictions, wh...
Exercise 11-9: Your Compound Nouns and Complex Verbs CD 4 Track 46 Using your compound nouns from Ex. 11-8, choose a verb and putit through all the changes.Remember that it helps to have a verb that startswith a vowel. Add explanatory words to round...
Exercise 11-8: Your Own Compound Nouns CD 4 Track 45 Pause the CD and build up your own compound nouns, both subject and object. 图片1...
Exercise 11-7: Compound Nouns and Complex Verbs CD 4 Track 44 No matter how complex the verb gets, remember to follow the basic Dogs eat bones intonation,where you stress the nouns. For the noun intonation, stick with the basic set phrase or descript...
Exercise 11 -6: Pick a Peak CD 4 Track 43 Repeat the following paragraph and words after me. Boldfaced elements represent the [ē] sound.The [i] is only marked with underscoring. People who pick peaks weekly seem to need to appear deep in order to be...
Exercise 11-5: Take a High-Tech Tack CD 4 Track 42 Repeat the following paragraph and words after me. Sāy, Rāy, tāke a tack. A high-tack tack? No, Rāy, a high-tech tack, eight high-tech tacks, tāke them.Then find a wāy to māke a plāce for the...
Exercise 11-4: Lax Vowels Practice Paragraph CD 4 Track 41 Again, go over this paragraph and mark the lax vowels, starting with []. The first one (of about 12possible) is in hello or American. The first [i] sound (of 9 to 22) may be found in is. (The...
Exercise 11-3: Lax Vowels CD 4 Track 40 As we saw in Chapter 8, these are the lax vowels. 图片1...
Exercise 11 -2: Tense Vowels Practice Paragraph CD 4 Track39 Go through the subsequent paragraph and mark all the tense vowels, starting with [ā] (there are 12here). The first one is name [nim], not [nm]. The first [ē] sound (14) is the American. T...