【NPR边听边练】致力于提供新鲜有趣、饶有意味的时讯资料,致力于通过精听的方式促进听力提高,致力于不断开阔眼界和深入了解美国观点。
精听建议:
先完整地把一条新闻听一到三遍,争取掌握大意。然后,一句一句精听,力争每句话都听明白。遇到实在不懂的地方,再听写。
下面的文本材料中空缺部分里面要填的词都很简单,不过是一些值得注意的连读或者典型的美式发音哦,有些语速比较快。试试看,你能不能全部写对?
(参考文本,欢迎指出错误^^)
Take a second and imagine one of those yellow yellow smiley faces. ___1___, now imagine 50 billion smiley faces floating in a drop of water. That is what scientists are made, have made rather (更正确地), using DNA. It turns out that ___2___ our genetic code and being a basic building block of life, DNA is also great for making incredibly tiny structures. NPR's Nell Boyce reports.
For years ___3___ have been using DNA to build really simple shapes like cubes that are 1,000 times thinner than a human hair. They've done it by laboriously (费力地) designing small snippets of DNA that will ___4___ into the desired form. But a new method for building things with DNA is so much faster and easier. Even a high school student could think up a shape like a star or snowflake, and then make a DNA version within a week. Paul Rothemund came up with the idea at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. "Even by the time I was making smiley faces, I didn't really believe that the method worked ___5___."
■填空答案■
参考答案:
1. And if that's not bad enough
2. in addition to holding
3. chemists
4. hook themselves up
5. as well as it did
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