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(1) simile Ã÷Ó÷

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I wandered lonely as a cloud. ( W. Wordsworth: The Daffodils ) ÎÒÏñÒ»¶ä¸¡ÔƶÀ×ÔÂþÓΡ£

They are as like as two peas. ËûÃÇÁ½¸ö³¤µÃһģһÑù¡£

His young daughter looks as red as a rose. ËûµÄСٶùÃæÅÓºìµÃÏó¶äõ¹å»¨¡£ ¢Ù The oratorial£¨ÐÛ±çµÄ£© storm that Clarence Darrow and Dudley Field Malone blew up in the little court in Dayton swept like a fresh wind though the schools¡­

¢Ú I see also the dull£¨³Ù¶ÛµÄ£©, drilled£¨ÑµÁ·ÓÐËØµÄ£©, docile£¨Ò×ѱ·þµÄ£©, brutish£¨´ÖÒ°µÄ£© masses of the Hun soldiery plodding£¨³ÁÖØ»ºÂýµØ×ߣ© on like a swarm£¨Èº£© of crawling locusts£¨»È³æ£©.

£¨2£© metaphor °µÓ÷

°µº¬µÄ±ÈÓ÷¡£AÊÇB»òB¾ÍÊÇA¡£

All the world¡¯s a stage, and all the men and women merely playersÑÝÔ±. ( William Shakespeare )Õû¸öÊÀ½çÊÇ×ùÎę̀£¬ÄÐÄÐŮŮ£¬ÑÝÔ±¶øÒÑ¡£

Education is not the filling of a pailͰ, but the lighting of a fire. ( William B. Yeats ) ½ÌÓý²»ÊÇ×¢ÂúһͰˮ£¬¶øÊǵãȼһ°Ñ»ð¡£

¢Ù It is a vast£¨¾Þ´óµÄ£©, sombre£¨ÓÇÓôµÄ£© cavern£¨¶´Ñ¨£© of a room,¡­ ¢Ú Mark Twain --- Mirror of America

¢Û main artery£¨¸ÉÏߣ©of transportation in the young nation's heart

¢Ü We shall fight him by land, we shall fight him by sea, we shall fight him in the air, until, with God¡¯s help, we have rid the earth of his shadow and liberated its peoples from his yoke£¨¼ÏËø£©.

¢Ý The dye-market, the pottery market and the carpenters¡¯ market lie elsewhere in the maze of vaulted streets which honeycomb the bazaar. A ¢Þ the last this intermezzo came to an end¡­ ¢ß ...the epidemic of gold and silver fever...

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¢à Twain began digging his way to regional fame...

¢á Mark Twain honed and experimented with his new writing muscles...

£¨3£© metonymy ½è´ú£¬×ªÓ÷

ÓÃÒ»ÊÂÎïµÄÃû³ÆÀ´´úÌæÁíÒ»ÊÂÎµ±È»ÕâÒ»ÊÂÎïÓëÁíÒ»ÊÂÎïÊÇÓйØÁªµÄ¡£ The White House has denied the report that more troops will be sent to Iraq. He lives by the pen. (=writing). ËûÒÔд×÷ΪÉú¡£

He is too fond of the bottle (=drinking). Ëû̫̰±­ÁË¡£ ¢Ù ...his pen would prove mightier than his pickaxe£¨¸ä£© £¨4£© synecdoche ÌáÓ÷ ÒÔ²¿·ÖÖ¸´úÕûÌå

1. We are lack of hands. £¨hands Ö¸´úÈËÊÖ£¬ÀͶ¯Á¦£©

2. The case had erupted round my head. £¨headÖ¸´úÕû¸öÈË£©

£¨5£© personification ÄâÈË

°ÑÎï±ÈÓ÷³ÉÈË¡£ÔÚÐÞ´ÇѧÉÏ£¬ÄâÈË·¨ÊÇÖ¸°Ñ·ÇÈ˵Ķ«Î÷(È綯Îï¡¢Ö²Îï¡¢ÎïÌå¡¢³éÏó¸ÅÄîµÈ)µ±×÷ÈËÀ´Ãèд£¬²¢¸³ÓèËüÃÇÒÔÈ˵ÄÌØÐÔ¡¢Íâ±í¼°»î¶¯·½Ê½µÈ¡£ ¢Ù Every here and there, a doorway gives a glimpse of a sunlit courtyard, perhaps before a mosque or a caravanserai, where camels lie disdainfully£¨ÇáÃïµÄ°ÁÂýµÄ£© chewing their hay£¨¸É²Ý£©¡­

¢Ú ...to literature's enduring gratitude...£¨ÎÄѧµÄ³ÖÐø¸Ð¼¤£© ¢Û The grave world smiles as usual...

¢Ü Bitterness fed on the man...£¨Í´¿àΪÈËÀàÌṩʳÎ

£¨6£© transferred epithet ÒÆ¾Í ÐÞÊÎ×ªÒÆ

°Ñ±¾Ó¦¸ÃÓÃÀ´ÃèÊö¼×ÊÂÎï״̬µÄ¶¨ÓïÈ¥ÐÎÈÝÒÒÊÂÎ¶øÒÒÊÂÎïÈ´¸ù±¾²»¾ß±¸ÕâÖÖÐÔÖÊ»ò¹¦ÄÜ¡£(×ªÒÆÃèÊö´Ê; ÒÆ¾ÍÐ޴Ǹñ£©

¢Ù Darrow had whispered throwing a reassuring arm round my shoulder ¢Ú The obese£¨¼«Îª·ÊÅֵģ© body shook in an appreciative chuckle. ¢Û

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£¨7£© hyperbole ¿äÕÅ

ÕâÊÇÒ»ÖÖ¹ÊÒâ¿ä´óÆä´Ê»òÑÔ¹ýÆäʵ(overstatement)µÄÐÞ´ÇÊÖ·¨£¬ÆäÌØµãÊǶԱí´ï¶ÔÏó½øÐÐÓÐÎ¥³£Ê¶»ò²»ºÏÂß¼­µÄ¿äÕÅÐÔÃèд£¬ÒÔ´ËÀ´È¡µÃÇ¿ÁÒµÄÐÞ´ÇЧ¹û¡£ ÓÃÊý×Ö£¬ÐÎÈݴʸ±´Ê×î¸ß¼¶£¬È«ÊÀ½ç£¬ÐéÄâÓïÆø

¢Ù The roadway is about twelve feet wide, but it is narrowed every few yards by little stalls where goods of every conceivable kind are sold. ¢Ú It is a vast, sombre£¨ÓÇÓôµÄ£¬ÑϾþµÄ£© cavern£¨¶´Ñ¨£© of a room so thick with dust of centuries. ¢Û ...cruise through eternal boyhood and ...endless summer of freedom... ¢Ü The trial that rocked the world

¢Ý His reputation as an authority on Scripture is recognized throughout the world.\

£¨8£© oxymoron ì¶ÜÐÞÊη¨

Parting is such sweet sorrow. ( ±ðÀëÊÇÕâÑùÌðÃ󵀮àÇå) a thunderous silence ÎÞÉùʤÓÐÉù a mournful optimist ±¯É˵ÄÀÖ¹Û

Dudley Field Malene called my conviction a, \

£¨9£© euphemism ίÍñÓï

×÷ΪһÖÖÐ޴Ǹñ£¬Euphemism (ίÍñ)Ö¸µÄÊÇÒÔ½ÏÎÄÑÅ¡¢Ôöú»òÎÂÍñµÄ˵·¨À´´úÌæ´ÖÒ°¡¢´Ì¶ú»òֱ¶µÄ˵·¨¡£ËüÄܽèÖúÓïÒô¡¢Óï·¨¡¢´Ê»ã¼°ÆäËûÐÞ´ÇÊֶΣ¬µÃÌ嵨±í´ïÉú»îÖÐÄÇЩʹÈËÞÏÞΡ¢ÈÇÈ˲»¿ì¡¢ÕÐÈËÑá¶ñ»òÁîÈ˿־åµÄÊÂÎï¡£ÆäÖ÷ÒªÐÞ´Ç×÷ÓÃÊÇÔÚÓïÑÔ±í´ïÉϼõÉٴ̼¤ÐÔºÍÃô¸ÐÐÔ£¬´Ó¶øÆðµ½Ò»ÖÖ»º³å»òÃÀ»¯×÷Óá£

Ó¢ÓïίÍñÓïÊýÁ¿Öڶ࣬ÆäÔËÓ÷¶Î§Éæ¼°µ½Éç»áÉú»îÖîÁìÓò£¬´óÖ¿ɸÅÀ¨ÎªÒÔÏÂËĸö·½Ãæ

Óйؼ²²¡¡¢²Ð¼²¡¢Ë¥ÀÏ¡¢ËÀÍöµÄίÍñÓï

¢Ù ¡­ a motley band of Confederate guerrillas who diligently avoided contact with the enemy. ¢Ú ...men's final release from earthly struggle

£¨10£© Irony·´Óï

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the use of words to express something different from and often opposite to their literal meaning. ·´ÓïÓôÊÓï±í´ïÓëËüÃǵÄ×ÖÃæÒâ˼ÏàÒì»òÏà·´µÄÓ÷¨ Thanks to his brilliant leadership, our company is now bankrupt. You are really good. You ruined everything. ¢Ù Hiroshima¡ªthe ¨Dliveliest¡¬ city in Japan

¢Ú ¡­ until we are marching backwards to the glorious age of the sixteenth century

£¨11£© sarcasm ·í´Ì

a cutting, often ironic remark intended to wound. ÊÇÖ¸ÓüâËá¿Ì±¡µÄ»°¶Ô¸öÈ˵Äȱµã¡¢¹ýʧ¡¢Éç»áµÄ³ó¶ñÏÖÏó»òºÚ°µÃæ½øÐм¥·í¡¢ÍÚ¿à,³£ÊÇÓÐÒâµØÉ˺¦ËûÈ˵ĸÐÇé,ËùÒÔ³£º¬ÓнÏÇ¿µÄ±áÒå¡£

My friend the attorney-general says that John Scopes knows what he is here for,\drawled. \Íç¹Ì) are rampant, and it is a mighty strong combination. ¢Ù There is some doubt about that.

(12) ridicule£¨³ó»¯¡¢³°Ð¦£©

ÓÐÒ⼤Æð¶ÔijÈË»òijʵÄÃïÊÓµÄЦ»ò¿´²»ÆðµÄ¸ÐÇé,

ͨ³£Ö¸ÓÃһЩ²»Ì«ÉÆÒâµÄ»ò¿´ÆðÀ´±È½Ï»¬»üºÍ¿äÕŵÄÓïÑÔ¶Ô²»Á¼µÄ»òÓÞ´ÀµÄÐÐΪ½øÐнÒ¶ºÍÅúÆÀ¡£ ¢Ú Bryan, ageing and paunchy, was assisted

¢Û Resolutely he strode to the stand, carrying a palm fan like a sword to repel his enemies.

¢Ü Bryan mopped his bald dome in silence.

£¨12£© pun Ë«¹Ø

¢Ù DARWIN IS RIGHT ¨C INSIDE.

¢Ú Benjamin Franklin: ¨DIf we don¡¯t hang together, we shall most assuredly hang

separately.¡¬ (Peter stone and Sherman Edwards. 1776) Èç¹ûÎÒÃDz»ÄܽôÃܵØÍŽáÔÚÒ»Æð£¬ÄǾͱØÈ»·ÖÉ¢µØ×ßÉϽÊÐ̼ܡ£

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£¨13£© parallelism ÅűÈ

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