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格列佛游记英语,格列佛游记电子书

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  • 2024-11-19

格列佛游记英语?Gulliver’s Travels这就是格列佛游记的英文名字,其中人名没变,后面加上所有格,游记就是旅游这个名词变成复数形式就行了。简介:格列佛是一个酷爱旅行的人,他年轻时出过海,周游世界,是海轮上的一名外科医生。最精彩的是他的四次旅游经历:小人国大人国飞岛国和慧马国。那么,格列佛游记英语?一起来了解一下吧。

格列佛游记中英对照pdf

《牛津·书虫》 the oxford world's classics

格列佛游记 gulliver's travels

野性的呼唤the call of the wild

小妇人 little women

大卫.科波菲尔david copperfield

鲁宾孙漂流记robinson

苔丝 Tess

象人

金银岛 treasure island

苏格兰玛丽女王 the scottland queen marie

不平静的坟墓

三怪客泛舟记

世界上最冷的地方

雾都孤儿 Oliver Twist

爱丽丝漫游奇境记 Alice's advanture in wonderland

亡灵岛

阿拉丁和神灯(书虫二) Aladdin and the magic lamp

爱丽丝镜中世界奇遇记

双城记 a tale of two cities

德拉库拉(书虫二) Dracula

爱情与金钱 love and money

在月亮下面

藩德尔的巫师

歌剧院的幽灵 the phanptom of the opera

猴爪

一个国王的爱情故事

哈克贝利·费恩历险记 Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

华盛顿广场(书虫二) Washington square

呼啸山庄 Wuthering Heights

白色死亡(书虫二)

多里安·格雷的画像

牙齿和爪子

铁路少年(书虫二)

勃朗特一家的故事(书虫) The Life of Charlotte Bronté

奥米茄文件(书虫二)

威廉·莎士比亚 william shakespear

秘密花园 the secrect garden

黑骏马

小公主(书虫二) a little princess

邦蒂号暴动(书虫二)

巴斯克维尔猎犬

傲慢与偏见 pride and prejudice

简·爱 Jane Eyre

化身博士

弗兰肯斯坦 Frankenstein

野性的呼唤 the call of the wild

曾达的囚徒

风语河岸柳

神秘及幻想故事集

五个孩子和沙精

远大的前程

星际动物园

圣诞欢歌

远离尘嚣

不平静的坟墓

神秘女人:阿加莎.克里斯蒂(书虫二)

三十九级台阶

格林·盖布尔斯来的安妮

谁谋杀了总统?(书虫二) who kills the president ?

舍洛克福尔摩斯和公爵的儿子(书虫二)

亨利八世和他的六个妻子(书虫二) Henry the 8th and his six wives

诱拐

绿野仙踪(书虫二) the wonderful wizard of oz

克兰福德(书虫二) cranford

劫机(书虫二)

别了,好莱坞先生(书虫二)

神秘女孩儿 the secret girl

背后的黑手

公园漫步

白发男子

温哥华岛 vancouva isle

茶会

在警察局

甜蜜的微笑

公正 justice

希望能帮到你一点吧,有些实在查不到..

给你一个网址吧:http://www.oup.co.uk/worldsclassics/hotclassics/

Houyhnhnms格列佛游记

如果是很老的那就是1996年版的《格列佛游记》,2010也出过一部,名字一样,不过新版比较搞笑,还是看老版有感觉,老版的我只记得主角带了只微型的羊回去。

96年,http://movie.douban.com/subject/1308698/

10年 ,http://movie.douban.com/subject/3279093/

格列佛游记英文概括100字

The Hound of the Baskervilles is a crime novel by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle featuring the detective Sherlock Holmes. Originally serialized in the British Strand Magazine from August 1901 to April 1902, it is set mainly on Dartmoor in Devon in England's West Country but the beginning is set in London.

Plot

The rich landowner Sir Charles Baskerville is found dead in the park of his manor, surrounded by the moorland of Dartmoor, in the county of Devon. He appears to have died from heart attack, but the victim's close friend, Dr Mortimer, is convinced that the death was due to a supernatural creature, which haunts the moor in the shape of an enormous hound with blazing eyes and jaws. Fearing for the safety of Baskerville's heir, his nephew Sir Henry, coming to London from Canada, Dr Mortimer appeals for help from Sherlock Holmes. The doctor also reveals that he found the footprints of a gigantic hound near Sir Charles' dead body but did not report it knowing that no one would have believed him.

Dr Mortimer tells Holmes and Watson of the so-called Baskervilles' curse that has, he believes, been killing the Baskerville heirs for centuries, in revenge for the misdeeds of one Sir Hugo Baskerville, who lived at the time of Oliver Cromwell. According to the legend, Hugo Baskerville was an evil man with a sadistic streak. He became infatuated with a yeoman's daughter and one evening kidnapped her and imprisoned her in his bedchamber. The maiden managed to escape while he was carousing with his friends. A drunken and furious Hugo cried that he would give his body and soul to the Powers of Evil if he could only overtake her. He rode after her onto the Moor, his hunting hounds upon her scent and his friends in pursuit. Some hours later his friends heard bloodcurdling screams and followed the sound to the bodies of Hugo and the girl. She had died from fear and fatigue, while a giant spectral hound stood over Sir Hugo's body. With his friends watching, the hound ripped out Hugo's throat and disappeared into the night.

Holmes soon discovers that Sir Charles had been waiting for someone. He was found with his face contorted into a ghastly expression. His footprints suggested that he was desperately running away from something. It was known that elderly Sir Charles' heart was not strong, and that he planned to go to London the next day. Intrigued by the case, Holmes meets with Sir Henry, who has arrived from Canada and is visibly upset to have received a cryptic note delivered to his hotel room, where no one knew he would be staying, warning him to stay away from the moor. Holmes recognizes the cut-out letters from the previous day’s Times, suggesting that the sender was a person of education. Only the word "moor" is handwritten. He marks the sputtering of the pen and the lack of ink, suggesting that the pen and ink were from a hotel. The fact that the letters were cut with small nail scissors suggests a woman, as does the scent of perfume. The latter detail Holmes keeps to himself. Sir Henry has also had a new boot stolen.

Holmes asked if there were any other relatives besides Henry. Mortimer tells him that Charles had two brothers. Henry was the son of the elder Sir Henry who settled in Canada raised him in both Canada and the USA. Another brother, Sir Roger, was known to be the family black sheep. A blackguard, wastrel, and inverterate gambler, he had left for South America to avoid creditors and died there alone.

Despite the note's warning, Sir Henry insists on visiting Baskerville Hall. As Sir Henry leaves Holmes' Baker Street apartment, Holmes and Dr Watson follow him and spy a man with a fake-looking black beard in a cab also following him. He escapes when chased but Holmes catches the cab number. Holmes then stops in at the messenger office and employs a young boy, Cartwright, to go around to the hotels and look through the wastepaper in search of a cut-up copy of the Times.

By the time they return to the hotel, Sir Henry has had another boot stolen, an old one now. When the first missing boot is discovered before the meeting is over, Holmes begins to realize they must be dealing with a real hound (hence the emphasis on the scent of the used boot). When conversation turns to the man in the cab, Dr Mortimer says that Barrymore, the servant at Baskerville Hall, has a beard, and a telegram is sent to check on his whereabouts. The inheritance is also discussed – while it is a sizable amount, the next in line is James Desmond, an older man with few interests in wealth.

At the end of the meeting, it is decided that, Holmes being tied up in London with other cases, Watson will accompany Sir Henry to the Hall and report back in detail. Later that evening, telegrams from Cartwright (who was unable to find the newspaper) and Baskerville Hall (where Barrymore apparently is) bring an end to those leads. Also, a visit from John Clayton, who was driving the cab with the black-bearded man, is of little help. He does say that the man told him that he was the detective Holmes, much to the surprise and amusement of the actual Holmes.

Dr Mortimer, Watson, and Sir Henry set off for Baskerville Hall the next day. The baronet is excited to see it and his connection with the land is clear, but the mood is soon dampened. Soldiers are about the area, on the lookout for the escaped convict Selden. Barrymore and his wife tell the baronet that they want to depart from the area as soon as is convenient, and the Hall is, in general, a somber place. Watson has trouble sleeping that night, and hears a woman crying, though the next morning Barrymore denies that could have happened.

Watson checks with the postmaster and learns that the telegram was not actually delivered into the hands of Barrymore, so it is no longer certain that he was at the Hall, and not in London. On his way back, Watson meets Jack Stapleton, a naturalist familiar with the moor even though he has only been in the area for two years. They hear a moan that the peasants attribute to the hound, but Stapleton attributes it to the cry of a bittern, or possibly the bog settling. He then runs off after a specimen, but Watson is not alone for long before Beryl Stapleton, Jack's sister, approaches him. Mistaking him for Sir Henry, she urgently warns him to leave the area, but drops the subject when her brother returns. The three walk to Merripit House (the Stapleton’s home), and during the discussion, Watson learns that Stapleton used to run a school. Though he is offered lunch and a look at Stapleton’s collections, Watson departs for the Hall. Before he gets far along the path, Miss Stapleton overtakes him and dismisses her warning. Watson notices that the brother and sister don't look very much alike.

Sir Henry soon meets Miss Stapleton and becomes romantically interested, despite her brother’s intrusions. Watson meets another neighbor, Mr. Frankland, a harmless eccentric whose primary pastime is initiating lawsuits. Barrymore draws increasing suspicion, as Watson sees him walk with a candle into an empty room, hold it up to the window, and then leave. Realizing that the room’s only advantage is its view out on the moor, Watson and Sir Henry are determined to figure out what is going on.

Meanwhile, during the day, Sir Henry continues to pursue Miss Stapleton until her brother runs up on them and yells angrily. He later explains to the disappointed baronet that it was not personal, he was just afraid of losing his only companion so quickly. To show there are no hard feelings, he invites Sir Henry to dine with him and his sister on Friday.

Sir Henry then becomes the person doing the surprising, when he and Watson walk in on Barrymore, catching him at night in the room with the candle. Barrymore refuses to answer their questions, since it is not his secret to tell, but Mrs. Barrymore’s. She tells them that the runaway convict Bruce Selden is her brother and the candle is a signal to allow him to get food. When the couple returns to their room, Sir Henry and Watson go off to find the convict, despite the poor weather and frightening sound of the hound. They see Selden by another candle, but are unable to catch him. Watson notices the outlined figure of another man standing on top of a tor with the moon behind him, but he likewise gets away.

Barrymore is upset when he finds out that they tried to capture Selden, but when an agreement is reached to allow Selden to escape out of the country, he is willing to repay the favor. He tells them about a mostly-burnt letter asking Sir Charles to be at the gate at the time of his death. It was signed with the initials L.L. Dr Mortimer tells Watson the next day that it could be Laura Lyons, Frankland’s daughter who lives in Coombe Tracey. When Watson goes to talk to her, she admits to writing the letter after Stapleton told her Sir Charles would be willing to help her, but says she never kept the appointment.

Frankland has just won two law cases and invites Watson in, as his carriage passes by, to help him celebrate. Barrymore had previously told Watson that another man lived out on the moor besides Selden, and Frankland unwittingly confirms this, when he shows Watson through his telescope the figure of a boy carrying food. Watson departs the house and goes in that direction. He finds the dwelling where the unknown man has been staying, goes in, sees a message reporting on his own activities, and waits.

Holmes turns out to be the unknown man, keeping his location a secret so that Watson would not be tempted to come out and so he would be able to appear on the scene of action at the critical moment. Watson’s reports have been of much help to him, and he then tells his friend some of the information he’s uncovered – Stapleton is actually married to the woman passing as Miss Stapleton, and was also promising marriage to Laura Lyons to get her cooperation. As they bring their conversation to an end, they hear a scream and the sounds of a man being pursued by the hound.

They take off running and when they see the body, they mistake it for Sir Henry. As their misery and regret grow, they realize it is actually the escaped convict Selden, the brother of Mrs Barrymore, dressed in the baronet’s old clothes (which had been given to Barrymore by way of further apology for distrusting him). Then Stapleton appears, and while he makes excuses for his presence, Holmes pretends to be returning to London.

Holmes and Watson return to Baskerville Hall, where over dinner, the detective stares at Hugo Baskerville's portrait and then it hits him. Calling Watson over after dinner he covers the hair to show the face to reveal none other than Jack Stapleton. This provides the motive in the crime – with Sir Henry gone, Stapleton could lay claim to the Baskerville fortune. When they return to Mrs. Lyons’s place, they get her to admit Stapleton’s role in the letter setup, and then they go to meet a Det. Lt. Lestrade at the station whom Holmes has called in by a telegram .

Under the threat of advancing fog, Watson, Holmes, and Lestrade lie in wait outside Merripit House, where Sir Henry has been dining. When the baronet leaves and sets off across the moor, the hound is soon let loose. It really is a terrible beast, but Holmes and Watson manage to shoot it before it can hurt Sir Henry, as well as discovering that its hellish appearance was acquired by means of phosphorus. They discover the beaten Mrs. Stapleton bound and gagged in the bedroom, and when she is freed, she tells them of Stapleton’s hideout deep in the Great Grimpen Mire. When they head out the next day to look for him, they are not able to find him, as he is dead having being sucked down into the foul and bottomless depths of the mire and Holmes and Watson only find Sir Henry's boot used by Stapleton to give the hound Sir Henry's scent.

Gulliver's Travels (1726, amended 1735), officially Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, in Four Parts. By Lemuel Gulliver, First a Surgeon, and then a Captain of several Ships, is a novel by Irish author Jonathan Swift that is both a satire on human nature and a parody of the "travellers' tales" literary sub-genre. It is Swift's best known full-length work, and a classic of English literature.

The book became tremendously popular as soon as it was published. (John Gay said in a 1726 letter to Swift that "it is universally read, from the cabinet council to the nursery" [1] ); since then, it has never been out of print.

Plot summary

The book presents itself as a simple traveller's narrative with the disingenuous title Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, its authorship assigned only to "Lemuel Gulliver, first a surgeon, then a captain of several ships". Different editions contain different versions of the prefatory material which are basically the same as forewords in modern books. The book proper then is divided into four parts,

Part I: A Voyage to Lilliput

Part II: A Voyage to Brobdingnag

Part III: A Voyage to Laputa

Part IV: A Voyage to Houyhnhnms

格列佛游记英文原版pdf

The first volume is made, miura (SIMS) travels. People in the narrative gulliver travel. Here, with six inches long, place oneself among them, like the lofty mountains. The court with little tricks, faction disputes. The school and wear high heels with a low wear shoe attack, irreconcilable blood feud. The second volume is BuDing block nanowires (adult) travels. Gulliver in pukou, made of a monster, but an BuDing to block, he like nanoscale generally small weasel.my field. Gulliver as little thing in a suitcase, to the town of performance exhibition. Later, the king summoned his KangKaiChenCi, he boasted of his homeland, the great, the law of the wise, and political justice, but the king was a uniform and refuted.

典范英语10格列佛游记

Gulliver'sTravelsrecountsthestoryofLemuelGulliver,apractical-mindedEnglishmantrainedasasurgeonwhotakestotheseaswhenhisbusinessfails。

《格列佛的故事》讲述了一个名叫李默尔·格列佛的人的故事,他是一位受过训练的英语实用主义者,在生意失败时接受了培训。

Inadeadpanfirst-personnarrativethatrarelyshowsanysignsofself-reflectionordeepemotionalresponse,Gullivernarratestheadventuresthatbefallhimonthesetravels。

在第一人称叙述中,格列佛很少表现出自我反省或情绪反应,他讲述了他在旅行中遇到的最冒险的事情。

Gulliver'sadventureinLilliputbeginswhenhewakesafterhisshipwrecktofindhimselfboundbyinnumerabletinythreadsandaddressedbytinycaptorswhoareinaweofhimbutfiercelyprotectiveoftheirkingdom。

以上就是格列佛游记英语的全部内容,1、格列佛游记(Gulliver's Travels)作品以里梅尔·格列佛(又译为莱缪尔·格列佛)船长的口气叙述周游四国的经历。通过格列佛在利立浦特、布罗卜丁奈格、飞岛国、慧骃国的奇遇,反映了18世纪前半期英国统治阶级的腐败和罪恶。2、老人与海(The Old Man and the Sea)该作围绕一位老年古巴渔夫。

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