À¯¿ëÇÑ
»ýȰ¿µ¾î |
| Unit 3. »ý°¢· Ãæ°í·
½À°ü· ÁýÂø |
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| 1. »ý°¢ÇÏ´Ù. |
| I think of her as a friend. |
| I did think of visiting him, but I've changed my mind.
|
| He thinks highly(little) of her. |
| He doesn't think much of his neighbor. |
| . |
| ÀÌ°É ¾î¶»°Ô »ý°¢ÇØ¿ä? |
| a: What do you think of it? |
| b: Terrific! |
|
| What are your thoughts here? |
|
| ¼Ò°¨Àº¿ä? |
| a: How do you feel about this? |
| b: I feel pleasant about it. |
|
| 2. ¿Ö ±×·¸°Ô »ý°¢ÇØ¿ä? |
| a: It must be lunch time already. |
| b: What makes you think so? |
| a: All those employee's coming out of that building.
|
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| 3. ¡ ¶ó°í´Â »ý°¢Áö ¾Ê½À´Ï´Ù.
|
| I don't think it would be out of place to wear that
bright dress to the party. |
|
| a: C'mon, join me, why don't you? |
| b: I really don't think I'd better. Thank you so much,
though. |
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| 4. »ý°¢Çغ¸´Ù. |
| a: This is our final offer. Have we got a deal now?
|
| b: No, not yet. Let me sleep on it, please. |
| a: All right, you think it over and let us know your
decision by tomorrow morning, OK? |
|
| We'll have to sleep on their invitation. |
| I'll give it some thought. |
| On second thought, I'm not quitting. |
|
| »ý°¢ÇÒ ½Ã°£À» ÁֽÿÀ. |
| Let me think a moment. |
|
| Çѹø ´õ »ý°¢ÇغÁ. |
| Think twice before you take over his job. |
|
| 5. °ñ ½Î¸Å°í °øºÎÇÏ´Ù. |
| I've been racking my brain all morning. But I couldn't
solve the problem. |
|
| 6. ÀÌÁ¦ »ý°¢³ª¼ µ¡ºÙÀÌ´Â ¸»Àε¥.
|
| a: Any idea about where we can hold Tom's going- away
party? |
| b: Now I come to think of it, there's great pub just
down the street. |
|
| My father looked worried and, now I came to think of
it, so did my brother |
|
| 7. ÁïÈïÀûÀÎ »ý°¢Àε¥ |
| I can't recall her name off the top of my head.
|
|
| a: Do you happen to know Helen's phone number off the
top of your head? |
| b: I'm afraid that her number escapes me at the
moment. |
|
| 8. ~ °¡ »ý°¢³ª°Ô ÇÑ´Ù. |
| It rings a bell. |
|
| ±×¸¦ º¸´Ï »ý°¢³´Ù. |
| His face rings a bell. |
| Her name rings a bell I can't remember whether I 've
ever met her. |
|
| ±×°É º¸´Ï »ý°¢³ª¿ä? |
| Does it ring a bell with(to) you? |
|
| 9. ¡»ý°¢À» ÇØ³»´Ù. |
| If you come up with a good idea, let me know. |
|
| They came up with a sure fire way to solve it |
|
| The airline has come up with a noble solution to the
problem of jet lag. |
|
| I hit upon good idea. |
|
| 10. ¡°¡ ¹®µæ »ý°¢ÀÌ ³µ´Ù. |
| It came across my mind. |
|
| ¡°¡ ¹æ±Ý »ý°¢³µ¾î¿ä. |
| It just occurred to me that my cousins are out of
town. |
|
| ¼³¸¶ ¡Çϸ®¶ó°í´Â »ý°¢ ¸øÇß´Ù. |
| It never occurred to her to be a successful Broadway
dancer. |
|
| ¡¶ó°í »ý°¢µÇ´Âµ¥¿ä |
| a: Say, what do you think about going to a baseball
game? |
| b: It strikes me that this is a perfect day to go.
|
|
| 11. ±â¾ïÇÏ´Ù. |
| I recall that I read the book. |
| I remember hearing about it on the radio. |
| ·No, how come you can't keep back of things?
You are good for memory, aren't you? |
|
| 12. (À̸§·³¯Â¥·Á¦¸ñÀÌ)¡ ¿¡
»ý°¢ÀÌ ³ªÁö ¾Ê´Ù. |
| I've met him before, but his name escapes me. |
| I'm afraid his name escapes me. |
| It's on the tip of my tongue. |
| What's the name of that flower? I've got it on the tip
of my tongue. |
|
| 13. ¹» ¾ê±âÇÏ·Á°í Çß´ÂÁö
Àؾî¹ö·È½À´Ï´Ù. |
| a: Sorry. I had to answer the phone. |
| b: No problem. As I was saying... Oh, I lost my train
of thought. |
|
| Those motorcycles are so noisy. I've lost my train of
thought. |
|
| 14. ¿Ü¿ì´Ù. |
| Did you memorize your driver's license number? |
| Do you know driver's license number by heart? |
| Do you know the words of our national anthem by rote?
|
|
| ¡±â¾ï·ÂÀÌ ÁÁ´Ù(³ª»Ú´Ù). |
| She has a good(bad) memory for names. |
|
| 15. ±ôºý ÀØÀº °Ô ÀÖ¾î. |
| I forgot something. |
|
| ÀØÀº ¹°°Ç ¾ø¾î¿ä? |
| Are you sure you have everything? |
|
| (¹Ùºü¼) ±ôºý ÀØ´Ù. |
| His name has slipped from my memory. |
| I meant to go to the drugstore on my way home, but it
slipped my mind. |
| Maybe something slipped your mind. |
|
| ÀØÀ» ¼ö°¡ ¾ø¾î¿ä. |
| I can't get her out of my mind. |
| I'll be out of your sight, but I hope not out of your
mind. |
|
| ±¦Âú¾Æ, ½Å°æ ²¨! |
| Forget it, it's over. |
|
| 16. ±×·± ±â¾ïÀ϶û ½Ï ÀذÔ. |
| You'd better get this behind you. You've got a whole
lot of life ahead of you. |
|
| 17. ÀØÁö¸¶! |
| Please bear that in mind. |
|
| a: Shall we go to another bar after this one? |
| b: Bear in mind that tomorrow is a workday. |
|
| Mind you, that's not allowed. |
|
| a: Tom is really not doing his work well this week.
|
| b: Well, keep it in mind that his father just passed
away. |
|
| Mark my word! I'm gonna get for this. |
|
| 18. ÀØÁö ¸»°í ¡ÇØÁÖ¼¼¿ä. |
| Remember to mail the letter. |
| Please remember to call me at six. |
|
| 19. (ÀØÁö ¸»°í) ²À ¡ÇØ¿ä. |
| Make sure that you lock the door behind you when you
go out. |
| Before you leave for the airport, make sure you have
your tickets with you. |
| Make sure to fix the emergency fire extinguisher.
|
| Be sure to take umbrella with you. |
| Be sure to close the door after YOU. |
|
| ¡¾Êµµ·Ï Á¶½ÉÇØ¿ä. |
| Be careful not to leave the gases turned on. |
|
| 20. ÀÌ·± ½ÄÀ¸·Î »ý°¢Çغ¾½Ã´Ù.
|
| a: My job is really boring these days. |
| b: Look at it this way, Tom. A boring job is better
than no job at all. |
|
| 21. »ý°¢À» ¹Ù²Ù´Ù. |
| What changed you mind? |
| I'm sorry. I changed my mind. |
|
| a: I heard you were going to Miami. Have you changed
your mind? |
| b: Yeah. I've decided to go to Atlanta instead.
|
|
| 22. ¡´Â¡¸¦ »ý°¢³ª°Ô ÇÑ´Ù. |
| He reminds us of his father. |
| The station building reminds me of a temple. |
| Oh, that reminds me. I saw Helen in town today.
|
|
| 23.¡¸¦ »ó±â½ÃÄÑ¾ß µÇ°Ú¾î¿ä? |
| a: Mr. Frank, need I remind you that we start work
here at 9:00 sharp? |
| b: I'm sorry, Mr. Bradley. I was delayed in traffic.
|
|
| a: Now, Tom, need I remind you of your weekly chores?
|
| b: Mom, I'll clean my room on Friday when I come home
from school. |
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| 24. ¡´Â ¾ÈµÇÁö ¾Ê°Ú¾î¿ä? |
| We don't want to hold up the traffic. |
| You don't want to go there, it's much too crowded.
|
|
| a: Hurry up! we don't want to be late for our
appointment. |
| b: I'll be right with you. |
|
| 25. ´©°¡ ±×·± »ý°¢À» Çß¾î¿ä? |
| a: There's a new vending machine that serves cocktails
in glasses! |
| b: Who could have thought? |
|
| Who would have thought she'd end up dancing for a
living? |
|
| 26. ¿Ö ±×·¸°Ô »ý°¢ÇØ¿ä? |
| a: I think I'd better learn to spell correctly?
|
| b: Oh, what makes you think so? |
|
| »ý°¢ÇÒ ¼ö ¾ø´Â ÀÏÀÌ´Ù. |
| That's unthinkable! |
| It would have been unthinkable ten years earlier to
choose a woman as party leader. |
|
| 27. °á½ÉÇÏ´Ù. |
| I haven't made up my mind yet. |
|
| a: I can't decide whether to order fish or chicken.
|
| b: Well, make up your mind. The waiter is coming to
take our order. |
|
| ¡Çϱâ·Î °á½ÉÇÏ´Ù. |
| a: What have you decide to do? |
| b: I've decide to go home. |
|
| He is determined to fight to the last. |
| You should resolve to lose weight. |
|
|
| 28. ¡Çϵµ·Ï ¹«½¼ ÁþÀÌ¶óµµ ÇÒ°Å´Ù.
|
| a: Why don't you ask her out? |
| b: she turned down twice already. I'd give anything to
have a date with her. |
|
| 29. Á¶½ÉÇØ¿ä. |
| Watch it! |
|
| a: Watch out! The path along here is pretty slippery.
|
| b: Okay. I'll be careful. |
|
| Watch out for those berries. They look good but
they'll makes you sick. |
| These stairs are wet and slippery. Watch your step.
|
| Look out, a car is coming. |
|
| a: Hey, here comes that troublesome customer. |
| b: Heads up, everybody! |
|
| a: Be careful of that dog nextdoor. He bites. |
| b: Yes, he chased me yesterday. |
|
| Take care not to drop it! |
|
| 30. ¸» Á¶½ÉÇØ! |
| Hold your tongue! |
| Would you mind holding your tongue? |
| Watch your language. Supposing your mother heard it,
what would she say? |
| a: In our school there are lots of slit¡eyed kids.
Chink, Japs, Koreans, Vietnamese.... you name it. |
| b: Hey, watch your language. That's a racial slur.
|
| a: I'm sorry. What I mean is we have a lot of
minorities in our school. |
|
| 31. ¿Ö ¸» ¸øÇØ? |
| Why don't you thank Mr. Frank for the nice present,
Tom? Cat got your tongue? |
|
| ¸»À» Âü´Ù. |
| She was really making me angry, but I bite my tongue.
|
|
| 32. µÚ¸¦ Á¶½ÉÇØ! |
| a: Bill, behind you! |
| b: Thanks. that bicycle almost ran into me! |
|
| a: Behind you, Bill! |
| b: What is it, Tom? |
| a: That guy was trying to pick your pocket. |
|
| 33.¡¸¦ Çϰï Çß´Ù. |
| I used to smoke myself, but I quit last year. |
| Here's the park we used to play at. |
|
| ¡¿¡ Àͼ÷ÇØÁö´Ù. |
| He is used to American food. |
|
| ¡¿¡ Àͼ÷ÇØÁö´Ù. |
| It always takes time to get used to a new place.
|
| Don't worry about the new job. You will soon get used
to it. |
|
| 34. ¡¹ö¸©ÀÌ ÀÖ´Ù. |
| She is rich, but unfortunately she has a habit of
shoplifting. |
| I had a bad habit of biting my nails, but I stopped.
|
|
| ¡ÀÇ¡ ¹ö¸©À» °íÄ¡´Ù. |
| I broke my son the habit of lying. |
|
| °íÄ¡±â ¾î·Á¿î ¹ö¸© |
| a: Are you still smoking? |
| b: Yes, it's though habit to break. |
|
| ³¡ ÇÏ´Â ½À°üÀº ¾ø´Ù(ÇÏÁö ¾ÊÀº ÀÏÀ»
Çß´Ù°í ¿ì±æ ¶§) |
| I'm not in the habit of lying to my father. |
|
| 35. ³ªÀ̰¡ µé¾î ¡½À°üÀ» ¾È ÇÏ°Ô µÇ´Ù.
|
| She used to bite her nails but seems to have grown out
of it. |
| He's grown out of his clothes. |
|
| 36.¡¸¦ ±ÔÄ¢À¸·Î Çϰí ÀÖ´Ù. |
| I generally make it a rule to be up by 7. |
|
| a: The company make it a rule to give every employee
two day off a week. |
| b: Sounds natural to me. |
|
| 37. ±æµéÀÌ´Ù. |
| I bought a new car yesterday, and I'm going to break
it in. |
| She is a good secretary material. I'm going to break
her in. |
| You wear them a while, and they'll break in. |
|
| 38. ÁýÂøÇÏ´Ù. |
| a: How do you keep in shape? |
| b: I stick to my diet and exercise a lot. |
| a: Ah, so that's your secret. |
|
| I have to stick to it. It's my bread¡and¡butter.
|
|
| °í¼öÇÏ´Ù. |
| Most painters stick to their own style of painting.
|
|
| ´Þ¶óºÙ´Ù. |
| Wet clothes stick to the skin. |
|
| 39. ¾ÖÂøÀ» °¡Áö´Ù. |
| a: Looks like your blouse has had it. |
| b: I know, but I'm so attached to it. I can hardly
throw it away. |
|
| a: Aren't you tired of wearing that tie? |
| b: I'm so attached to it. I can hardly throw it away.
|
|
| 40. ¡¿¡ °ñ¸ôÇϰí ÀÖ´Ù. |
| a: What are you into these days? |
| b: (I'm into) Dancing, swimming and uh-drinking.
|
|
| She is into romantic novels these days. |
| I am not into modern music any more. |
| He is heavily into yoga. |
|
| 41. °ü½É»ç°¡ ¹¹¿ä? |
| What are her interests? |
|
| a: My main concern is the price. May I ask one thing?
|
| b: I have a question on this. |
|
| Èï¹Ì°¡ ¾ø´Ù. |
| Playing golf has little appeal for me. |
|
| ¡¿¡ È£ÀǸ¦ º¸ÀÌ´Ù. |
| Does she go for older men? |