1) a change of pace ½Ú×à±ä»» £¨Ñ§Ï°¹¤×÷ÀÛÁË£¬Òª»»¸öÊÂÇé×ö£¬ÀÍÒݽáºÏµÄÒâ˼£© aSXoYG0\
You can¡¯t do these chemistry experiments all day long. You certainly need a change of pace. zZki9P
2) a far cry from Ïà¾àÉõÔ¶ £¨ÀïÃæÓиöcry£¬ÍùÍùÊǼÓÖØÓïÆøµÄ£© f(?>z!n0
The published book is far cry from the early manuscript. :]=Y1*L\)
3) a phone call away Ò»¸öµç»°Ö®Ô¶£¬Ô¸Òâ¹ýÀ´°ïæ¡£ |C7GI[P
If you need my help, do let me know. Just remember I am a phone call away. /$&~0pk
4) a while back ²»¾ÃÒÔǰ £¨ÕâÀïÓиöback£¬ÌýµÄʱºòҪעÒ⣩ Ai(M06P:h
5) all along Ò»Ö± £¨×¢ÒâÁ¬¶Á£¬ÀàËÆ¡°Å¶ÁËÀË¡±£© roj/GZAy"
I knew it all along. }_@cqx:n^
6) anything but ¾ø¶Ô²» £¨²»ÄÑÀí½â£¬¾ÍÊÇÌý¾õ·´Ó¦Òª¿ì£© e%(zjCA
I was anything but happy about going. r7JILk
7) account for ½âÊÍ £¨Õâ¸öÌ«ÖØÒªÁË£¬Ò»¶¨ÒªºÃºÃ¼ÇÒ䣡£© OA4NXl'
How do you account for it? ruB&&C6)v
8) at sb¡¯s service ԸΪijÈË·þÎñ£¨×¢ÒâŶ£¬ÕâÊǸö·îÏ×ÐͶÌÓ¿ÉÒÔÀí½â³É¡°ËæÊ±ÌýÄúµ÷Dz¡±µÄÒâ˼£© I am at your service at any time. N!9DZEcm
9) around the clock 24Сʱ²»Í££¨ÒѾ³öÏÖN´ÎÁË£© H Y.,f_m
Martha studied around the clock for management exam. y !47!Dn
10) at home with ¶Ô¡..ºÜÊìϤ£¨ºÜÓÐÌØµã£¬ºÃ¼Ç£¬Ï£Íû¿¼£¬¾Í±ãÒËÎÒÁË£©
zRsT6u
She is at home with problems like this. }Jh!B|
11) back out £¨×¢Òâ¹ýȥʱµÄ·¢Òô£¬Óе㡰êþ¿ÎÌס±µÄÒô£© D3;^!ln]D
1) Í˳ö £¨ÓеãˬԼµÄÒâ˼ÔÚÀïÍ·£© w+2:eFi=/
A: Wasn¡¯t Bert supposed to sing tonight? &zb_8y,
B: Yes, but he backed out at last minute .fUqsq
2£©²»ÂÄÐÐ isQ{Xt~K
She finally backed out of her promise. (^eE8j/K
12) be cut out for ÌìÉúÊʺϣ¨Òâ˼¹Ö¹ÖµÄ£¬¿ÉÒÔÀí½â³É´ÓÒ»¶ÑÈËÀïÃæ°Ñsbµ¥¶Àcut out³öÀ´£¬×östh£¬ÕâÑù¾Í˵Ã÷Õâ¸ösbÌìÉúÊʺÏ×öÕâ¸ö£© I¡¯m not cut out to be a hero. s@^GjA[6+
13) be attached to ¶Ô¡¡ÓиÐÇé £¨ð¤ÔÚÒ»Æð£¬µ±È»ÓиÐÇéÁË£¡£© frc>0\
A: I¡¯m amazed that you are still driving that old car of yours. I thought you would have gotten rid of it years ago. {LR?#.
B: It runs well and I¡¯ve actually been quite attached to it. - FA#hUK$
14) back up '`/1?,=
1) ¶Ñ»ý p?0 a"5Q
The subway is running behind schedule, and traffic is backed up for blocks. I don¡¯t know if we¡¯ll make the 6:30 show.£¨ÄÜÌý¶®Õâ¾äÒ²Ðа¡£¬µ±È»ÄÜÈ«Ìý¶®¸üºÃ£© jVi''#F?f
2) Ö§³Ö £¨Ë×»°ËµµÄºÃ£ºÎÒͦÄ㣡£¡£¡²»¾ÍÊÇÕâ¸öÒâ˼Âï¡«£¡£© qJ5Y}/r
I¡¯ll back it up. xI}]q%V
15) be bound for µ½¡¡µØ·½ £¨Õâ¸öºÜûͷûÄÔ£¬boundÓÐÌøÔ¾µÄÒâ˼£¬ÄѵÀÊÇ¿äÕŵÄ˵·¨£¿ÄãÒªÌøÔ¾µ½Ê²Ã´µØ·½£¿£¿£¡ÔΣ¬Ìý¶®¾ÍÐУ¬Ì«ÎÞÀåÍ·²»ÒªÓÃÁË£© d[-w&[iy
The bus is bound for New England. uH65DI<
16) be (feel) myself ÕÒµ½×ÔÎÒ £¨ºÜÏñfriendsÀïchandler˵µÄ»°£ºI am a real boy!!~£© {hZ_f3o
I¡¯m feeling myself again. .CQ
IN] iD
17) be burned up ÉúÆø £¨ÕþÕþ½²¹ý£¬±»Å»ðµã×ÅÁË£© /G G QO$'
She was really burned up at the news. :HMnU37m W
18) be hard up for £¨Á÷ÐÐÃÀÓïµÚ131¿ÎÓÐÀ²¡«Òâ˼ÊÇ¡°Ê²Ã´Ê²Ã´²»¹»¡±£© `)1_^# k
I¡¯m hard up for clothes, but I have a lot of books. .OX.z~":y
19) be head and shoulders above ºÃÐí¶à £¨ºÃ¼Ç£¬ÒòΪ¿ÉÒÔÏëÏñ×Ô¼ººÍÒ¦Ã÷±È¸ßµÄ¸Ð¾õ¡£¡£°¡Å¶¡£¡£I am not feeling myself!£© BT`
D|<
In calculus, Joe is head and shoulders above his classmates.. %89f<F\V
20) be stuck ¿¨×¡ÁË£¨¼ÇµÃÓÐÒ»¸ö¼«ÎªBTµÄ¶Î×Ó£¬ÊÇ˵һ¸ö³éÌë±»Ö½stuckÁË£¡ÕâôÅݸµÄ´Ê¶ù²»¼Ç˵²»¹ýÈ¥°¡£© I can¡¯t get this window open. It¡¯s stuck. Y.[^3
21) bite off more than one can chew. ̰¶à½À²»Àà £¨Ô½³¤Ô½ÄѼÇѽ¡«but£¨butºóÃæÊÇ´ð°¸Å¶£¡ºÙºÙ£©,Ô½³¤Ô½ºÃÌý³öÀ´Ñ½£¡Å¬Á¦£¡£¡£© :&&Ps4\Sq
A: I hear you¡¯re taking an advanced physics course this semester. Mf
tX~+
B: I think I¡¯ve bitten off more than I can chew. bn~=d@'
22) break new ground ÓÐÁËеÄÍ»ÆÆ £¨maybeÒ»¸ö¸ã¿¼¹ÅµÄÈË·¢Ã÷µÄÕâ¸ö´Ê¶ù°É£¡Ã¿ÌìÄÃ×ÅÂåÑô²ù²åground£© His architectural design broke new ground in the field. cqRIi~`
23) benefit concert ´ÈÉÆÒôÀÖ»á £¨´ÈÉÆ×ÜÊÇÒæ´¦¶à¶à£© F1w~f
<
24) busy signal Õ¼Ïß £¨²»ÄÑÀí½â£¬½¨Á¢Ìý¾õ·´Ó¦£© z )a8
^]`
25) call for e~i
?E
A Ô¤±¨ £¨Óе㾯¸æµÄÒâ˼£© f,)[f M4
The forecast calls for heavy rain again tonight. Aren¡¯t you glad we¡¯ll be getting away from this for a week? m%qah>11
B ÎÊ· £¨ºÜÎÞÖúµÄ¸Ð¾õ£© n;xtUw6\
It¡¯s probably in the new part of town. We¡¯ll have to call for directions. uG${`4
26) call it a day ¾Í´Ë½áÊø (ËÀ¼Ç°É£¬Õâ¸ö¶Î×Óͦ³¤£¬ÏëÏñ¸ö³¡¾°¼ÇסËü) n/=&?#m}d
A: I¡¯m really glad our club decides to raise money for the children¡¯s hospital, and most of the people we¡¯ve phoned seemed happy to contribute. }ytc oIuLf
B: Yeah, I agree. Now we¡¯ve gone through all the numbers on our list now, so I guess we can call it a day. ppM d
27) cash the paycheck ¶ÒÏÖ¹¤×Ê £¨×¢Òâ¹ýȥʱ̬µÄ·¢Òô£© !D7/Ja
28) come what may ²»¹ÜÔõÑù £¨Ôø¼ÇµÃ£¬ÓÐÈ˰ÑËü·Òë³É£ºÀ´°É£¡ÎåÔ£¡ Come! What£¨ÓïÆø´Ê£¬²»·Ò룩,May!£© zq8z#FN
We¡¯ll pick you up tomorrow at eight, come what may. 1WfN_JKB5
29) department chair ϵÖ÷ÈÎ £¨Ìý¸ö¼¸´ÎÏëÍü¶¼ÄÑ£© 6HCP1`gg
I didn¡¯t write that memo to the department chair. z%hB=V!~91
30) dirt cheap ·Ç³£±ãÒË £¨ÄÜÌý¶®cheap¾ÍÐС«£¡dirtÒ²Óм¦Ã«ËâÆ¤Èý°ËʵÄÒâ˼£¬¼ûfriends¡££© 2(\~z@g
A: You¡¯ve already furnished your apartment? Hd
U1gV>
B: I¡¯ve found some used furniture that was dirt cheap. W&A22jO.1
31) dog tired ÌØ±ðÀÛ£¬Í¬Ò壺run down; worn out; out of steam £¨ÃÀ¹úÈË×ܰ®Óù·À´ËµÃ÷ÎÊÌâ£¬ËÆºõûÓй·¾Í²»¹»ÐÎÏó²»¹»Á¢Ìå²»¹»Éú¶¯²»¹»´«Éñ£¬ËùÒÔ¼ÇסÕâÖØÒªµÄ¹·¹·°É£© j;=+5PY
I¡¯m dog tired these days. I¡¯m working on seven articles. B;SYO>.W
32) down jacket ÓðÈÞ·þ £¨ÕâËã¸öcommonsense¡£¡£ÀäÁ˾ʹӵØÉϼðÆðÓðÈÞ·þ´©£¬´©ÉÏÖ®ºó¹ýÓÚÓ·Ö×£¬Ë¤µ¹Ôڵأ¬³¹µ×downµô£© IMmoq={(z
33) fall back on ÒÀÀµ £¨Óе㡰ÊÔ×ÅÍÑÀ룬µ«ÖÕ¾¿·¢ÏÖûÓÐʲôʲô²»ÐУ¬»¹ÊDZð³ÑÇ¿¡±µÄÒâ˼£© `$JPF Z
A: Were you able to understand that French novel without any help from the teacher? JY(_}AAu
B: I did pretty well, but I had to fall back on my dictionary occasionally. ^*C8BzcH
34) fill a prescription °´´¦·½×¥Ò© £¨Í¦ÊìÁË£¬ÔÙ¼ÓǿһÏ£© |O%`-2p]p
Would you please fill this prescription for me? ac6L3=u\
35) food for thought ÁîÈË˼¿¼µÄ¶«Î÷£¨ºÜ¾ßÓÐÃÔ»óÐÔѽ£¡¾«ÉñʳÁ¿·Ç³£ÖØÒª£¬Ã»ÓÐËüÓÖÒª¶ª·ÖÀ²£¡£©£»Í¬Ò壺thought-provoking There is a lot food for thought in what he had to say. (%rO'X
36) for nothing Ãâ·Ñ £¨Õâ¸öÓ÷¨ºÜÓÐÒâ˼£¬»¹ÓÐÖÖ˵·¨¸üÓÐÒâ˼£ºYou are good for nothing.ºÜ¶ñ¶¾µÄÆÀÅбðÈ˵ϰ£¬²»µ½Íò²»µÃÒÑ£¬²»Òª¶Ô±ðÈ˽²Å¶£¬ÉË×Ô×ðµÎ£© C:"Al-
To pay to see that movie would be foolish, when you can see it on TV for nothing£¨free£©. yEJ}!/
37) get of on the wrong foot ¿ªÊ¼ÊÂÇé¾Í×ö´íÁË £¨´Ó½Å¿ªÊ¼¾Í´íÁË£¬ÓеãÏñÎÒÃÇÖйú»°¡°Äã´ò¸ù¶ùÆð¾Í´íÁË£¡¡±£© I got off on the wrong foot, and I don¡¯t have any idea which way to turn now. : P>Wd3m
38) get a lot out of something ´Ó¡¡Ñ§µ½ºÜ¶à ryy".'v
The training program was difficult, but she got a lot out of it.£¨ÓÃÔÚÕâ¾ä»°ÖУ¬¾ÍºÜÈÝÒ×ÈÃÈËconfused£© *)gbKXb
39) get at Ïë˵ £¨ºÃ´Êѽ£¡¿ÚÓïÓøоõºÜµØµÀ£© 3WZ]9v{k
Do you understand what I¡¯m getting at? X-|Lg.s
40) get on one¡¯s nerve ÈÇÅ£¬ÈÃijÈËÐÄ·³¡££¨Á¬ÀÏ×ÓÉñ¾¶¼¸ÒÉÏ£*****et on£©£¬»îµÄ²»ÄÍ·³ÁË£¿£© HFu#-}iNV
A: Why did you come to the meeting late? I left a message with your roommate about the time change.
3Kc
B: She has a very short memory and it really gets on my nerve sometimes. -&I)3
41) give credibility to ÏàÐÅ R=yn4>I
A: did you hear about Jim? hg_@Ui@[z
B: I wouldn¡¯t give that rumor any credibility. £¨Õâ¾ä²»´í£¬²»ÒªÀÏ˵I do not believe that£© $TyV<
G
42) go to one¡¯s head ijÈË×Ô¸º£¨Õâ¸ö¶ÌÓïÔÚgoogleÉϲéÓÐÁ½¸öÒâ˼£¬Ò»¸öÊÇ˵ºÈ¾ÆÈÃijÈËÍ·ÄÔÇá΢ÐË·Ü£¬¾ÍÊÇÍ·ÄÔ·¢ÈÈ¡£ÁíÍâÒ»¸ö½âÊÍÊÇformerµÄÒýÉêÒâ˼£¬Ö¸ÓÉÓڳɹ¦ºÍÔÞÉÍ£¬Ê¹Ä³ÈË×Ô¸ºÆðÀ´¡£½áºÏÆðÀ´Àí½â£¬¾ÍÃ÷°×Õâ¸ö¶Î×ÓÀ²£© vY&[=2=
A: Have you noticed how John¡¯s changed since he became student government president? AC;ja$A#
B: I think the whole thing has gone to his head, and he used to be so sociable and open. 6," 86
43) graduation announcements ±ÏÒµµäÀñÇë¼í £¨ºËÐÄÔÚÇë¼íÉÏ£¬¶à¼Ó×¢Òâѽ£©
Q>]FO
Have you ordered your graduation announcements? r8x<-u4
44) groan about ±§Ô¹ £¨¶ÔʲôʲôÉëÒ÷£¬²»ÊDZ§Ô¹ÄѵÀÊÇÐ˷ܵģ¿Ã»Ìý˵¹ý¡£¡££© 0\*[7!`s
How come Michael¡¯s always groaning about something? D|lp3\`%
45) guest lecturer ¿Í×ù½ÌÊÚ £¨ÍêÈ«ÖÐÎÄ·Ò룬µ±´Ê»ã¼Çס£© 2x%Xx3!
46) hand-me-down Ë͵Ķ«Î÷ £¨ÇëÊÕ Ï ÎÒ µÄÀñÎ 2MaHD}1Jw
A: What a gorgeous jacket. It must have cost a fortune. e=S51q_0
B: Not at all. It¡¯s a hand-me-down. £¨Ëµ»°ºÃ²»·çÁ¹¡£¡££© %2>ya>/M
47) hand down Ò×Èç·´ÕÆ £¨Õâ¸ö·ÒëÃ£¡£© vDl6TKXcu
Lee won the chess match hands down. "l0z?u
48) have a way with Éó¤ £¨¶ÔʲôʲôºÜÓа취£© l>p S23
Bonnie really has a way with words }j9V0`Q
49) hold the grudge ¼Ç³ð £¨ÎÒ¾õµÃ·Òë³É»³ºÞÔÚÐĸüºÃÒ»µã£© +72[*_ <
A: I wish I hadn¡¯t hurt Mary¡¯s feelings like that. You know I never meant to. $KDH"J
B: The great thing about Mary is that she doesn¡¯t hold the grudge. #'s}=i}y"C
50) in next to no time ÂíÉÏ £¨ºÃÍæ¡«¼Çס£¬ÏëÆðGUN&ROSEµÄÄÇÊ×RIGHT NEXT TO THE HELL£© 0G@sj7)]
A: Are you going to be using the copying machine long? bf#@YkE
B: I¡¯ll be through in next to no time. _t
l
51) quitting time Ï¿Îʱ¼ä£¨¿ÚÓïÖУ¬I quit!!Òâ˼ÊÇ¡°ÎÒ²»¸ÉÁË£¡¡±£¬Ï¿ο©£¡ÊÇ¿ÉÒÔ¶Ô×Ô¼ºËµÎÒ²»¸ÉÁ˵Äʱºò£¡£© I¡¯m glad it¡¯s almost quitting time. 2;!,:bFb
52) take it over ÖØÐÞ£¬½Ó¹Ü jY: )W*TXt
Don failed physics and had to take it over. S!\4,6
53) with flying colors ³É¹¦ £¨³É¹¦Ö®ºó£¬Ã¼·ÉÉ«Î裩 {xW HKsI>,
A: How did Ellen do on her American History exam? ao+lL
Cr
B: She passed with flying colors. R&lJ& SgC
54) You can bet your life µ±È» £¨Ëõ˵£¬¿ÉÒÔ±ä³ÉYou bet!£© H>zX8qP+
A: Will Prof. Smith come to class on time? U%<E9G594
B: You can bet your life.