[转载]大学英语视听说II听力答案及原文(第三版)unit 5
2012-12-17 21:10阅读:
Unit Five
Part 1 Listening, Understanding
and Speaking
Listening I
Keys
Exercise 1
√1,
√4,
√5,
√6,
√7,
√8
Exercise 2
ACDB
Exercise 3
1) strange, 2) strange force,
3) very steep, 4) at the bottom, 5) watching
6) be punished, 7) in the
darkness, 8)scared, 9)avoid ,10)exam,
11) interpreting dreams, 12)
disappointing, 13) making mistakes, 14) symbol
Exercise 4
Sample
1. I think Jennifer’s nightmare
has something to do with her fear of failure, failure in exams,
failure in living up to her Parents’ expectations etc. She probably
didn’t do well at collage and she had experienced failures. What
she feared in life was represented in her dream.
2. I often have nightmares and
my nightmares are generally the same. One typical nightmare I have
is that I am chased by someone and I try to run fast but I can’t.
And usually when I am about to be caught I
wake up, sometimes sweating all over. I’ve
told people about it and the interpretation given is that my
schedule is too tight most of the time. I don’t know how Freud
would interpret it, but the interpretation seems to make
sense.
Script
Part A
Jennifer is talking to an
interviewer about her nightmare.
Jennifer: It was always the
same. Always. I was in a house, a strange house, and I knew somehow
that I shouldn’t have gone in. But there was some strange force
pulling me. There were some stairs…very steep stairs… and I started
to climb them, and … and then, suddenly fell. Then when I was at
the bottom of the stairs, I suddenly realized that there was
someone…or something else in the house with me, and that these eyes
had been watching me all the time, and… I knew then that something
terrible…was going to happen to me…that I was going to be
punished…because I’d done something I shouldn’t have done. I didn’t
know what it was, but I knew it was wrong, very wrong. Then I could
hear it…whatever it was in the house with me…coming closer in the
darkness, because everything was dark, you see, and it came closer
and closer. And I was scared…and there was nothing, nothing I could
do to avoid it…nothing. I was trapped! Trapped in that dark house
at the bottom of the stairs. There was no way out.
Interviewer: And how
often…
Jennifer: No way out
!
Part B
Interviewer: How often have you
had this nightmare?
Jennifer: When I was in
college, just about every time I had an exam. And then, a few years
later, when I was taking an intensive Italian course in Italy, I
had the same dream again. Just the same as before.
Interviewer: And you discussed
it with a psychoanalyst ?
Jennifer: Yes, later, after I
came back to Los Angles, I started therapy, and this dream came up,
and we discussed it quite a bit.
Interviewer: And what did the
psychoanalyst say?
Jennifer: He said…uh…you have
to be very careful about interpreting dreams, but we both agreed
that the dream was a symbol of my fear of failure…of disappointing
my parents when I was in college, for example, by failing my
dreams, or…or when I was taking that Italian course, I remember how
scared I was sometimes.
Interviewer: Scared of
what?
Jennifer: Of making mistakes in
class, in front of the teacher or the other students. I was always
in fear.
Interviewer: I
see.
Jennifer: And the dream was a
kind of classic symbol of that fear…of the fear of failure. Falling
down stairs in a dream is a symbol of that. The two words are very
similar.
Interviewer: Which…which two
words? Oh, you mean…
Jennifer: Yes, fall-fail,
falling-failure. Very similar, aren’t they?
Listening II
Keys
Exercise 1
1.C 2. A 3. I 4.
H 5. F 6. D 7. J 8. G
Exercise 2
1.Because dreams are closely
related to walking lives.
2.more women have
careers.
3.The possible reasons is that
they are making important decision about career , marriage and life
direction.
4.solve problems.
5.Life experience /Biological
conditioning and social conditioning , life stages and
attitudes.
Exercise 3
Sample
1.
In Chinese culture, fish is a symbol of
prosperity. As a dream symbol, fish, particularly salmon, is
associated with knowledge and intelligence. If you dream about
eating fish, it is believed that you gain knowledge and
wisdom.
2.
In dreams, the snake has many interpretations. It
is regarded as a symbol of temptation or wisdom. It is also
interpreted as someone trying to harm you in underhanded or sneaky
manner. In Chinese culture, it is believed that snake is a symbol
of fortune in a dream.
3.
The sword in a dream is a symbol of power,
authority, protection, or a need to cut away some part or aspect in
your life.
4.
Something that is covered with dust is something
that has not been touched for a long time. Therefore, dust in a
dream may be a symbol of a shut away emotion, fear, or desire
within the conscious.
5.
Houses in dreams are regarded by many
psychoanalysts as representing one’s personality. If you dream
about a beautiful house, you could have a positive self-image. If
you dream that you keep moving from house to house, you may have
been trying different aspects of your personality, or you may be
trying to find out what kind of person you are. And the level of
the room in the house is believed to indicate the depth of a
particular part of personality in you unconscious. But the basement
in a dream, for instance, can be as a symbol of the deepest part
your personality.
6.
Death in ad dream can mean the death or change to
a part of your personality or the end of a certain phase in your
life, For instance, if you dream that a friend dies, it could mean
that you have ended up or you have been feeling the need to end up
a period of time spent with them.
Script
New research shows that dreams
are often distorted reflections of our daily life. many experts now
believe our dreams are so closely related to our waking lives that
we can use them to help us recognize inner conflicts.
According to some experts, men
and women dream differently because of biological and social
conditioning. In a study of 1000 dreams, half from each sex,
experts found that men more often have action dreams .Usually these
are set outdoors or in unfamiliar surroundings. Women dream more
about emotional with loved one , usually in indoor settings. As
more women have careers, their dreams might become more like man’s.
Researchers have found that while housewives
dream more about children , women in the workplace dream
about bosses and colleagues. Small children
who are easily scared dream about frightening animals and monsters
that that chase and attack them. Teenagers dream about romance and
sex.
Some dream researchers found in
a study that people between 21and 34 have more anxiety over issues
of right and wrong in their dreams , possibly because they are
making importance decisions about career , marriage and life
direction . People of age 35 to 49 are much less need for
aggression while awake .After age 65, anxiety about aging appears
much more often in people’s dreams.
If life stages affect our
dreams , so do out attitudes. Studies show that angry people act
out their anger in their dreams, and depressed people sometimes
dream they are victim of rejection.
Creative people often use their
dreams to solve problems. According to the author Naomi Epel, when
some writers , artists or scientists go to sleep , they ask their
subconscious for a dream that will help them solve
problems.
Listening III
Keys
Exercise 1
√2,
√3,
√6
Exercise 2
CBCAC
Exercise 3
Sample
Advantages of
daydreaming
●It helps kill
boring time.
●It helps children
develop and explore their imagination.
●It can reduce a
person’s fear or anxiety.
●It can keep us
awake under dull conditions.
Disadvantages of
daydreaming
●It can be a waste
of time when you spend too much time daydreaming.
●Children’s
problem-solving skills may weaken if they spend too much time
daydreaming instead of putting their imagination into
work.
●When you realize
the wide gap between reality and daydreams, daydreaming can lead to
greater anxiety and deeper frustration.
●It distracts our
attention, and may lead to danger in certain situations, like when
we are driving a car.
Script
Almost all people day dreaming
during a normal day. We tend to daydreaming the most during those
quiet times when we are alone in our cars, sitting in waiting
rooms, or preparing for bed. day dreaming or fantasizing is not
abnormal; it is a basic human characteristic. Most people have
reported that they enjoy their day dreams . Some people have very
probable and realistic daydreams while others have unrealistic
fantasies such as inheriting a million dollars.
Psychologists report that men
daydream as much as women , but subject of their daydreams or
fantasies is different. Men day dream more about being heroes and
good athletes while women tend to daydream about fashions and
beauty. As people grow older, they tend to fantasize less, although
it is still common in old age. Older people tend to daydream a lot
about the past. daydreaming or fantasizing enters into the games of
children. Psychologists believe thatit is very important for
children to participate in fantasy play . It ism a normal part of
their development. It helps children develop and explore their
imagination.
Daydreaming has advantages and
disadvantages In some situations it can reduce a person's fear or
anxiety. can also keep us entertained or awake under dull or boring
condition.Unfortunately, to engage in a daydream or fantasy, we
must divert part of our attention from our environment. When it is
important for us to remain alert and pay attention to what is going
on around us, day dreaming can cause problems.
Listening IV
Keys
Exercise 1
1) parting
2)wrong
3) dream
4)night
5) none
6)seem
7)shore
8) sand
9)fingers
10) grasp
11) save
12) wave
Exercise 1
Sample
1 The fifth line in the first
stanza(诗节),
“That my days have been a dream”, indicates that the poet regarded
his life as a dream.
2 That last two lines of both
stanzas are quite similar in the wording “ Is all that we see or
seem/ But a dream within a dream,” which means that what we see,
appear or hope is even more elusive than the life itself that we
are living, and is, therefore, a dream within a dream.
3 The “grains of the golden
sand” may have referred to the start of the “gold rush” in
California in 1848, the year before the poem was written, Another
interpretation is that it may symbolize the people or things that
the poet had valued and treasured, as he was so eager to “grasp
them with a tighter clasp”.
4) The “pitiless wave” can be
interpreted in two ways. It can be viewed as symbolizing “time”,
which is compared to “tide” in the saying “ Time and tide wait for
no man”. Or it can be interpreted as “death” , which, just as
“time”, sweeps away people around us, no matter how eagerly we’d
like them to stay.
Exercise 3
Sample
1 This poem may have been
addressed to his beloved (could be his wife) in her death bed, who
received a farewell kiss from the poet. This can be seen from the
first two lines: “ Take this kiss upon the brow! And, in parting
from you now,…”
2 The poet’s hope is expressed
in the second stanza. He wished that he could hold onto people and
things that he treasured. But he could not stop the time and death
taking away his beloved, however hard he tried. His helplessness
led to his confusion, which can be seen from more questions posed
by the poet in the second stanza. Physically, the poem is very
interestingly laid out in two stanzas, just like two layers of
dreams: the first being “life”, a dream, and
the second layer “hope”, a dream within a dream, which is more
confusing than the first. This idea is very similar to that in the
movie Inception (《盗梦空间》) --- the more layers of dreams have, the
less stable they become.
3 The poet’s depressing tone
may have resulted from his troubled and miserable life since his
childhood. He felt betrayed by everyone. His mother, who died when
he was a small child; his biological father, who abandoned him; his
step father, who never legally adopted him and who, ultimately,
cast him adrift; and, above all, his young dead wife, a beauty
symbolizing purity and peace in his eyes. Life itself had seemingly
thwarted (挫败) his every hope and effort.
Script
A Dream Within A
Dream
Take this kiss upon the
brow!
And, in parting from you
now,
Thus much let me
avow---
You are not wrong, who
deem
That my days have been a
dream;
Yes if hope has flown
away
In a night, or in a
day,
In a vision, or in
none,
Is it therefore the less
gone?
All that we see or
seem
Is but a dream within a
dream.
I stand amid the
roar
Of a surf-tormented
shore,
And I hold within my
hand
Grains of the golden
sand---
How few! Yet how they
creep
Through my fingers to the
deep,
While I weep---while I
weep!
O God! Can I not
grasp
Then with a fighter
clasp?
O God! Can I not
save
One from the pitiless
wave?
Is all that we see or
seem
But a dream within a
dream?
Part 3 Viewing, Understanding
and Speaking
Keys
Exercise 1
BACD
Exercise 2
1.
too good to be true
2.
various kinds of
3.
igonored
4.
stand
5.
has something to do with
6.
gathering fruit
7.
can’t afford
8.
something wrong with
9.
ripe, at hand
10.
come true
Exercise 4
Sample
I had a dream after I watched
the movie of the Harry Porter series. I was walking down a
street when my shoes turned into a pair of roller skates. I skated
on the pavement, and saw a section of the road suddenly collapsed.
I was about to fall when my roller skaters turned into a
broomstick! And before I knew it, I found myself flying in the sky,
just as Harry Porter did in the movie.
Script
Mary: (She awakes from a sweet
dream) Ah…Darling, everything is so wonderful! The sun, the air,
the water… I feel as if I were in a dream.
John: (He still reads the book
with not much response.) A dream? Yes, a dream.
Mary: Have a look at the
beautiful scenery around you, darling. Don’t you think it’s too
good to be true?
John: Mm, maybe.
Mary: Eh, you aren’t listening
to me. What are you reading now?
John: (He closes the book.)
It’s Freud’s Interpretation of Dreams. Honey, have you ever
wondered what’s … what’s the meaning of you dreams? You might get
some satisfactory explanations for your dreams from this book,
because Freud explains various kinds of dreams in it.
Mary: It must be a very
interesting book! Otherwise, you wouldn’t have ignored me. It seems
to me that I’m not as attractive as Freud.
John: Yes, it really
is.
Mary: Yes? ! You mean I’m not
charming enough? I can hardly stand your rudeness.
John: Of course not. I mean
it’s really an interesting book. Freud says that everything in our
dreams has something to do with our real life.
Mary: Really? I often dream I’m
gathering fruit in an orchard. What does fruit represent in our
dreams?
John: It predicts good fortune.
You’ll be rich, honey.
Mary: But the fact is we still
can’t afford to buy a house.
John: I have to admit that’s
absolutely true. I spent about all I had on our
honeymoon.
Mary: Well, there must be
something wrong with your interpretations, darling, I doubt whether
dreams can predict the future.
John: Before I can be more
exact, you have to give me more details.
Mary: What further information
do you need?
John: Well, honey, could you
tell me what the color of the fruit is in your dreams?
Mary: Er…the fruit doesn’t seem
to be ripe. In my dreams, I think it’s green.
John: I’ve got it. If the color
of the fruit is green, you can’t be rich immediately, because only
ripe fruit is interpreted as good fortune at hand.
Mary: Oh? Are you sure about
that?
John: Definitely. I’ve just
looked it up in Freud’s book.
Mary: Then we’ll just have to
wait and see?
John: That’s right, honey. Do
you have any other happy dreams?
Mary: Yes. I had another one
just now. It was so sweet that I smiled from ear to ear. Would you
like to have another try, Mr. Freud?
John: It’s my pleasure, madam.
What happened in this dream? I guarantee you I can give you another
good explanation.
Mary: When I was dozing, I
dreamed that you gave me a beautiful diamond necklace as memento of
our wonderful honeymoon, what do you think that means?
John: (He understands his
wife’s actual intention and tries to find a way out.) Er…Er… I’m
not sure. Er…maybe I’m not knowledgeable enough! But anyway I can
turn to the book for help. Wait a minute!
Mary: Take it easy, darling!
I’m…I’m sure you know how you can make it come true.
John: Too bad!
Mary: What’s
wrong?
John: (He smiles cunningly at
his wife.) I’m afraid Freud didn’t tell me how to interpret a
daydream, only dreams at night.
Mary: Daydream?!
John: Yes, it must be a
daydream since you had it during the day.
Part 3 Video Appreciation and
Singing for Fun
Video Appreciation
Keys
Exercise 1
DEFF
Exercise 2
1)
Mix the sound
2)
Drag you back
3)
seagulls
4)
taking a walk
5)
police siren
6)
pulls off the earphones
7)
alarming dreams
Exercise 3
1)
remained alert
2)
sounds of danger
3)
the reason
4)
are reliant on
5)
alive
Exercise 4
Sample
●
I
fell asleep after a session of yoga to a light, soft background
music once. I dreamed that I was lying on a beach, basking in the
sun, with the waves lapping gently against the rocks, and seagulls
flying over me. It was so comfortable and relaxing that I felt
energetic again after I woke up from the nap.
●
I
once traveled by train and saw a young mother fast asleep, with the
passengers around chattering away. However, she seemed to be very
alert to her 3- or 4-year-old’s cry, even if it was in a very low
voice. As I saw it, we can sleep through the sounds that we don’t
care about, but tend to be dragged back to wakefulness by sounds
that worry us.
●
I
dreamed about taking a math test once before my college entrance
examination. I was still struggling with one tough problem when the
bell rang sharply, which signaled the end of the test. I felt like
being paralyzed in my seat, unable to move a single inch. When I
woke up in misery and sweat, I found the bell was nothing but my
alarm clock. To a college entrance exam taker, the bell is indeed a
very threatening sound signal.
Script
Episode 1
We live in a world of incessant
sounds. During our waking hours, our ears are bombarded with noise.
But what happens when we’re asleep? Sleep takes up a third of our
lives, and that’s when we’re at our most vulnerable. So our sense
of hearing never goes off duty. Even as we sleep our ears detect
sounds,and our brain analyses them. But why is it that some noises
feature in our dreams, while others can wrench us from our sleep?
Weird Science goes into the sleeping brain and our evolutionary
past to find out. Every night when we go to sleep our senses shut
down, except for our sense of hearing, which stays alert to sounds
beyond the bedroom. Sounds are just tiny movements of the air
molecules around us, funneled down the ear canal to the eardrum.
The moving air makes the eardrum vibrate, and these vibrations are
amplified by the tiniest bones in the body and passed to the
fluid-filled cochlea. Here, the vibrations send ripples through the
fluid which move rows of microscopic hair cells. These create
electrical signals sent to the brain.
Episode 2
The brain may mix the sound
into the visuals of your dreams, or drag you back to wakefulness.
At Swansea University, Dr. Mrak Blaggrove studies the impact of
different noises on the brains of sleeping volunteers. These
electrodes allow Mark to monitor Sarah’s brainwaves while she
sleeps. Once there are signs that she’s dreaming, he can test the
effects of different sounds on her dreams. First she gets a blast
of seagulls through her headphones. She sleeps through the noise.
But has it changed her dream? (Hi Sarah) Mark waits for a couple of
minutes, and then wakes her up and asks what she was dreaming about
( I was on a hilltop…Uh huh). Sarah’s dream was of taking a walk on
a windy hilltop. An hour later, Sarah is asleep and dreaming again.
Now, the test is a threatening sound --- a police siren. It’s no
louder than the seagulls, and for a while, she sleeps through the
noise. But then she stirs, and, half-conscious, she pulls off the
earphones. Can she remember what she was dreaming about before the
noise disturbed her? (Yeah, um ambulances…) Amazingly, even while
she was asleep, Sarah heard the sirens and they triggered vivid,
alarming dreams. The sound eventually convinced her sleeping brain
to wake up.
Episode 3
So why does the brain deal with
sounds in such different ways? The answer can be found in our
prehistoric past. Our ancestors needed sleep, but it made them more
vulnerable to attack by predators. To safeguard them, their sense
of hearing remained alert, listening for the sounds of danger. Now
the sounds are different, but the reason for hearing in your sleep
is jus the same. For a third of your life, you’re reliant on your
sense of hearing to keep you alive. Hopefully!
Singing for fun
Lyrics
I Have a Dream
I have a dream, a song to
sing
To help me cope with
anything
If you see the wonder of a
fairy tale
You can take the future, even
if you fail
I believe in angels, something
good in everything I see
I believe in angels, when I
know the time is right for me
I’ll cross the stream, I have a
dream
Oh yeah
I have a dream, a
fantasy
To help me through
reality
And my destination makes it
worth the while
Pushing through the darkness,
still another mile
I believe in angels, something
good in everything I see
I believe in angels, when I
know the time is right for me
I’ll cross the stream, I have a
dream
I have a dream, a song to
sing
To help me cope with
anything
If you see the wonder of a
fairy tale
You can take the future, even
if you fail
I believe in angels, something
good in everything I see
I believe in angels, when I
know the time is right for me
I’ll cross the stream, I have a
dream
I’ll cross the stream, I have a
dream
Part 4 Further Speaking and
Listening
Further Listening
Listening I
Keys
Exercise 1
5>7>4>1>6>3>8>2
Exercise 2
CABDBDC
Script
In 1865 ,in a small town in
Germany ,a little boy was very sick. His name was Max
Hoffman.
“Will our son die ?” Max’s
parents asked the doctor.
“Maybe,” the doctor said
quietly .”Stay with Max .Keep him warm .That’s all you can do
.”
For three days Max lay in his
bed . Then he died .He was only five years old .
Max’s parents buried their son
in the town cemetery .That night Max’s mother had a terrible dream.
She dreamed that Max was moving in his coffin . She screamed in her
sleep.
“Sh ,sh,” her husband said.
“It’s all right .You had a bad dream.”
The next night Max’s mother
screamed in her sleep again . She had the same terrible
dream.
On the third night Max’s mother
had another bad dream. She dreamed that Max was crying . She got
out of bed and got dressed. “Quick! Get dressed ,” she told her
husband . “We’re going to the cemetery .I want to see Max. I want
to dig up his coffin.”
At four o’clock in the morning
Max’s parent and a neighbor hurried to the cemetery .They dug up
Max’s coffin and opened it . There was Max .He looked dead. But he
wasn’t lying on his back . He was lying on his side.
Max’s father carried Max home .
Then he ran to get the doctor .For an hour the doctor rubbed whisky
on Max’s lips and warmed his body. Then Max opened his eyes .Max
was alive ! A week later he was playing with his
friends.
Max Hoffman died—really died—in
the United State in 1953. He was 93 year old .
Listening II
Keys
Exercise 1
TFFTFT
Exercise 2
1)
pushing
2)
away
3)
friend’s house
4)
burned to death
5)
the dead
6)
in front of
7)
kids’ minds
8)
making money
Script
(A couple is talking about
their 8-year-old daughter ,Debbie .They also have a son ,Barry ,who
is 16.)
Mother : I had to go in to
Debbie twice last night .She was having these terrible nightmares!
She was screaming and shouting and she kept trying to push me away
.She was yelling , “Don’t hurt me ! Don’t hurt me !”
Father : What was wrong with
her then ?
Mother : I don’t know. I
couldn’t get a word out of her when she woke up this
morning
Father: Does Barry know
anything about it ? Didn’t she go with him to his friend’s
yesterday afternoon ? Wait a minute , I’ll
give him a shout . Barry ! Come here , Will you ?
Barry: What’s up?
Father: Didn’t you say you were
going to watch a video at your friend’s yesterday?
Mother: Well, what exactly did
you watch ? Debbie’s been having the most terrible
nightmares.
Barry: Oh, I don’t know ! Some
film his dad had left lying around . About a man who had been
burned to death in a car crash, who came back from the dead to take
revenge on young girls . He tears them to bits and eats them. It
was a young girl , see , who ran in front of his car and made him
crash . Don’t know why it’s giving her nightmares. It was really
stupid , if you ask me ! Anyway, she didn’t have to watch it . did
she ?
Mother: You should have more
sense at your age . You should have stopped her watching
it.
Father: I blame the people who
made films like that. They shouldn’t be allowed to make them . They
must be really sick! All they care about is making money –they
don’t care they are doing to kids’ minds.
Listening III
Keys
Exercise 1
ACDBC
Exercise 2
TTTT FFTT
Script
Dear Editor,
Your paper is great . I read
with great interest your interpretation of dreams of teeth falling
out .It is the same interpretation that many others use as well :
needing to be heard etc. I myself had this dream repeatedly and was
dying to know what it meant , as is was always confusing and
disturbing . However , I was always unsatisfied with the “ needing
to be heard ” thing.
Your might note that many
people who have this dream are feeling worried , depressed or
frightened as their teeth are falling out painlessly .Sometime they
even try to keep the teeth from falling out . Finally I came up
with a different interpretation , which fitted me much better . In
fact , I’ve had fewer dreams of this sort now .So I thought you
might be interested .For me , the dream means I am talking TOO MUCH
. It means thoughtlessness ,telling secrets , gossiping unwisely .
And it’s my subconscious warning me .Now ,if I have this dream ,I
know I have been unwise with my big mouth ! Trying to cram the
teeth back in , or stop them falling out ,or trying to find a
dentist , actually means trying to stop the words or gossip from
coming out , and the feelings of depression are reflecting the
regret of being too revealing –usually to an enemy . I am much more
aware of this now and not such a big mouth ! Maybe you could add to
your interpretation,
Best,
Katie
Listening IV
Keys
Exercise 1
DCBD
Exercise 2
TFTFFT
Script
Sleep is something we generally
associate with living creatures. Of course, it is true that a
lot of animals sleep, but
zoologists are not certain that primitive forms of animals life,
like worms and snails, even really sleep. On
the other hang, animals such as bears sleep for 4 or 5 months
every year.
The amount of sleep a human
being needs depends on age, the individual and possibly
race. .For example, doctors think that
pre-school children need between 10 and12 hours a night; school
children between 9 and 11 hours, and adults between 7and9 hours.
There are exceptional cases of old people who
sleep only between 2 and 3 hours a day and continue to be active
and healthy. The sleep requirements of
different races also appear to be different. Japanese people, for
example, sleep, sleep fewer hours than Europeans.
It is not known for certain if
certain if mental activity (apart from dreaming) occurs when a
person is asleep. However, it is certainly
true that some people can wake up at a specific, pre-determined
time. There are also stories about mathematicians who solve
difficult problems during sleep, because their
subconscious minds continue working on the problem.
Some types of unpleasant dreams
(or ‘‘nightmares’’)are quite common, the dreams is taking
a test, but is not properly prepared. he is
falling from a tree ,or an animal or thing is chasing
him. Some people say these last two occur
because man’s ancestors lived in trees and were in
constant danger from wild
animals.
Unit Five
Part 1 Listening, Understanding
and Speaking
Listening I
Keys
Exercise 1
√1,
√4,
√5,
√6,
√7,
√8
Exercise 2
ACDB
Exercise 3
1) strange, 2) strange force,
3) very steep, 4) at the bottom, 5) watching
6) be punished, 7) in the
darkness, 8)scared, 9)avoid ,10)exam,
11) interpreting dreams, 12)
disappointing, 13) making mistakes, 14) symbol
Exercise 4
Sample
1. I think Jennifer’s nightmare
has something to do with her fear of failure, failure in exams,
failure in living up to her Parents’ expectations etc. She probably
didn’t do well at collage and she had experienced failures. What
she feared in life was represented in her dream.
2. I often have nightmares and
my nightmares are generally the same. One typical nightmare I have
is that I am chased by someone and I try to run fast but I can’t.
And usually when I am about to be caught I
wake up, sometimes sweating all over. I’ve
told people about it and the interpretation given is that my
schedule is too tight most of the time. I don’t know how Freud
would interpret it, but the interpretation seems to make
sense.
Script
Part A
Jennifer is talking to an
interviewer about her nightmare.
Jennifer: It was always the
same. Always. I was in a house, a strange house, and I knew somehow
that I shouldn’t have gone in. But there was some strange force
pulling me. There were some stairs…very steep stairs… and I started
to climb them, and … and then, suddenly fell. Then when I was at
the bottom of the stairs, I suddenly realized that there was
someone…or something else in the house with me, and that these eyes
had been watching me all the time, and… I knew then that something
terrible…was going to happen to me…that I was going to be
punished…because I’d done something I shouldn’t have done. I didn’t
know what it was, but I knew it was wrong, very wrong. Then I could
hear it…whatever it was in the house with me…coming closer in the
darkness, because everything was dark, you see, and it came closer
and closer. And I was scared…and there was nothing, nothing I could
do to avoid it…nothing. I was trapped! Trapped in that dark house
at the bottom of the stairs. There was no way out.
Interviewer: And how
often…
Jennifer: No way out
!
Part B
Interviewer: How often have you
had this nightmare?
Jennifer: When I was in
college, just about every time I had an exam. And then, a few years
later, when I was taking an intensive Italian course in Italy, I
had the same dream again. Just the same as before.
Interviewer: And you discussed
it with a psychoanalyst ?
Jennifer: Yes, later, after I
came back to Los Angles, I started therapy, and this dream came up,
and we discussed it quite a bit.
Interviewer: And what did the
psychoanalyst say?
Jennifer: He said…uh…you have
to be very careful about interpreting dreams, but we both agreed
that the dream was a symbol of my fear of failure…of disappointing
my parents when I was in college, for example, by failing my
dreams, or…or when I was taking that Italian course, I remember how
scared I was sometimes.
Interviewer: Scared of
what?
Jennifer: Of making mistakes in
class, in front of the teacher or the other students. I was always
in fear.
Interviewer: I
see.
Jennifer: And the dream was a
kind of classic symbol of that fear…of the fear of failure. Falling
down stairs in a dream is a symbol of that. The two words are very
similar.
Interviewer: Which…which two
words? Oh, you mean…
Jennifer: Yes, fall-fail,
falling-failure. Very similar, aren’t they?
Listening II
Keys
Exercise 1
1.C 2. A 3. I 4.
H 5. F 6. D 7. J 8. G
Exercise 2
1.Because dreams are closely
related to walking lives.
2.more women have
careers.
3.The possible reasons is that
they are making important decision about career , marriage and life
direction.
4.solve problems.
5.Life experience /Biological
conditioning and social conditioning , life stages and
attitudes.
Exercise 3
Sample
1.
In Chinese culture, fish is a symbol of
prosperity. As a dream symbol, fish, particularly salmon, is
associated with knowledge and intelligence. If you dream about
eating fish, it is believed that you gain knowledge and
wisdom.
2.
In dreams, the snake has many interpretations. It
is regarded as a symbol of temptation or wisdom. It is also
interpreted as someone trying to harm you in underhanded or sneaky
manner. In Chinese culture, it is believed that snake is a symbol
of fortune in a dream.
3.
The sword in a dream is a symbol of power,
authority, protection, or a need to cut away some part or aspect in
your life.
4.
Something that is covered with dust is something
that has not been touched for a long time. Therefore, dust in a
dream may be a symbol of a shut away emotion, fear, or desire
within the conscious.
5.
Houses in dreams are regarded by many
psychoanalysts as representing one’s personality. If you dream
about a beautiful house, you could have a positive self-image. If
you dream that you keep moving from house to house, you may have
been trying different aspects of your personality, or you may be
trying to find out what kind of person you are. And the level of
the room in the house is believed to indicate the depth of a
particular part of personality in you unconscious. But the basement
in a dream, for instance, can be as a symbol of the deepest part
your personality.
6.
Death in ad dream can mean the death or change to
a part of your personality or the end of a certain phase in your
life, For instance, if you dream that a friend dies, it could mean
that you have ended up or you have been feeling the need to end up
a period of time spent with them.
Script
New research shows that dreams
are often distorted reflections of our daily life. many experts now
believe our dreams are so closely related to our waking lives that
we can use them to help us recognize inner conflicts.
According to some experts, men
and women dream differently because of biological and social
conditioning. In a study of 1000 dreams, half from each sex,
experts found that men more often have action dreams .Usually these
are set outdoors or in unfamiliar surroundings. Women dream more
about emotional with loved one , usually in indoor settings. As
more women have careers, their dreams might become more like man’s.
Researchers have found that while housewives
dream more about children , women in the workplace dream
about bosses and colleagues. Small children
who are easily scared dream about frightening animals and monsters
that that chase and attack them. Teenagers dream about romance and
sex.
Some dream researchers found in
a study that people between 21and 34 have more anxiety over issues
of right and wrong in their dreams , possibly because they are
making importance decisions about career , marriage and life
direction . People of age 35 to 49 are much less need for
aggression while awake .After age 65, anxiety about aging appears
much more often in people’s dreams.
If life stages affect our
dreams , so do out attitudes. Studies show that angry people act
out their anger in their dreams, and depressed people sometimes
dream they are victim of rejection.
Creative people often use their
dreams to solve problems. According to the author Naomi Epel, when
some writers , artists or scientists go to sleep , they ask their
subconscious for a dream that will help them solve
problems.
Listening III
Keys
Exercise 1
√2,
√3,
√6
Exercise 2
CBCAC
Exercise 3
Sample
Advantages of
daydreaming
●It helps kill
boring time.
●It helps children
develop and explore their imagination.
●It can reduce a
person’s fear or anxiety.
●It can keep us
awake under dull conditions.
Disadvantages of
daydreaming
●It can be a waste
of time when you spend too much time daydreaming.
●Children’s
problem-solving skills may weaken if they spend too much time
daydreaming instead of putting their imagination into
work.
●When you realize
the wide gap between reality and daydreams, daydreaming can lead to
greater anxiety and deeper frustration.
●It distracts our
attention, and may lead to danger in certain situations, like when
we are driving a car.
Script
Almost all people day dreaming
during a normal day. We tend to daydreaming the most during those
quiet times when we are alone in our cars, sitting in waiting
rooms, or preparing for bed. day dreaming or fantasizing is not
abnormal; it is a basic human characteristic. Most people have
reported that they enjoy their day dreams . Some people have very
probable and realistic daydreams while others have unrealistic
fantasies such as inheriting a million dollars.
Psychologists report that men
daydream as much as women , but subject of their daydreams or
fantasies is different. Men day dream more about being heroes and
good athletes while women tend to daydream about fashions and
beauty. As people grow older, they tend to fantasize less, although
it is still common in old age. Older people tend to daydream a lot
about the past. daydreaming or fantasizing enters into the games of
children. Psychologists believe thatit is very important for
children to participate in fantasy play . It ism a normal part of
their development. It helps children develop and explore their
imagination.
Daydreaming has advantages and
disadvantages In some situations it can reduce a person's fear or
anxiety. can also keep us entertained or awake under dull or boring
condition.Unfortunately, to engage in a daydream or fantasy, we
must divert part of our attention from our environment. When it is
important for us to remain alert and pay attention to what is going
on around us, day dreaming can cause problems.
Listening IV
Keys
Exercise 1
1) parting
2)wrong
3) dream
4)night
5) none
6)seem
7)shore
8) sand
9)fingers
10) grasp
11) save
12) wave
Exercise 1
Sample
1 The fifth line in the first
stanza(诗节),
“That my days have been a dream”, indicates that the poet regarded
his life as a dream.
2 That last two lines of both
stanzas are quite similar in the wording “ Is all that we see or
seem/ But a dream within a dream,” which means that what we see,
appear or hope is even more elusive than the life itself that we
are living, and is, therefore, a dream within a dream.
3 The “grains of the golden
sand” may have referred to the start of the “gold rush” in
California in 1848, the year before the poem was written, Another
interpretation is that it may symbolize the people or things that
the poet had valued and treasured, as he was so eager to “grasp
them with a tighter clasp”.
4) The “pitiless wave” can be
interpreted in two ways. It can be viewed as symbolizing “time”,
which is compared to “tide” in the saying “ Time and tide wait for
no man”. Or it can be interpreted as “death” , which, just as
“time”, sweeps away people around us, no matter how eagerly we’d
like them to stay.
Exercise 3
Sample
1 This poem may have been
addressed to his beloved (could be his wife) in her death bed, who
received a farewell kiss from the poet. This can be seen from the
first two lines: “ Take this kiss upon the brow! And, in parting
from you now,…”
2 The poet’s hope is expressed
in the second stanza. He wished that he could hold onto people and
things that he treasured. But he could not stop the time and death
taking away his beloved, however hard he tried. His helplessness
led to his confusion, which can be seen from more questions posed
by the poet in the second stanza. Physically, the poem is very
interestingly laid out in two stanzas, just like two layers of
dreams: the first being “life”, a dream, and
the second layer “hope”, a dream within a dream, which is more
confusing than the first. This idea is very similar to that in the
movie Inception (《盗梦空间》) --- the more layers of dreams have, the
less stable they become.
3 The poet’s depressing tone
may have resulted from his troubled and miserable life since his
childhood. He felt betrayed by everyone. His mother, who died when
he was a small child; his biological father, who abandoned him; his
step father, who never legally adopted him and who, ultimately,
cast him adrift; and, above all, his young dead wife, a beauty
symbolizing purity and peace in his eyes. Life itself had seemingly
thwarted (挫败) his every hope and effort.
Script
A Dream Within A
Dream
Take this kiss upon the
brow!
And, in parting from you
now,
Thus much let me
avow---
You are not wrong, who
deem
That my days have been a
dream;
Yes if hope has flown
away
In a night, or in a
day,
In a vision, or in
none,
Is it therefore the less
gone?
All that we see or
seem
Is but a dream within a
dream.
I stand amid the
roar
Of a surf-tormented
shore,
And I hold within my
hand
Grains of the golden
sand---
How few! Yet how they
creep
Through my fingers to the
deep,
While I weep---while I
weep!
O God! Can I not
grasp
Then with a fighter
clasp?
O God! Can I not
save
One from the pitiless
wave?
Is all that we see or
seem
But a dream within a
dream?
Part 3 Viewing, Understanding
and Speaking
Keys
Exercise 1
BACD
Exercise 2
1.
too good to be true
2.
various kinds of
3.
igonored
4.
stand
5.
has something to do with
6.
gathering fruit
7.
can’t afford
8.
something wrong with
9.
ripe, at hand
10.
come true
Exercise 4
Sample
I had a dream after I watched
the movie of the Harry Porter series. I was walking down a
street when my shoes turned into a pair of roller skates. I skated
on the pavement, and saw a section of the road suddenly collapsed.
I was about to fall when my roller skaters turned into a
broomstick! And before I knew it, I found myself flying in the sky,
just as Harry Porter did in the movie.
Script
Mary: (She awakes from a sweet
dream) Ah…Darling, everything is so wonderful! The sun, the air,
the water… I feel as if I were in a dream.
John: (He still reads the book
with not much response.) A dream? Yes, a dream.
Mary: Have a look at the
beautiful scenery around you, darling. Don’t you think it’s too
good to be true?
John: Mm, maybe.
Mary: Eh, you aren’t listening
to me. What are you reading now?
John: (He closes the book.)
It’s Freud’s Interpretation of Dreams. Honey, have you ever
wondered what’s … what’s the meaning of you dreams? You might get
some satisfactory explanations for your dreams from this book,
because Freud explains various kinds of dreams in it.
Mary: It must be a very
interesting book! Otherwise, you wouldn’t have ignored me. It seems
to me that I’m not as attractive as Freud.
John: Yes, it really
is.
Mary: Yes? ! You mean I’m not
charming enough? I can hardly stand your rudeness.
John: Of course not. I mean
it’s really an interesting book. Freud says that everything in our
dreams has something to do with our real life.
Mary: Really? I often dream I’m
gathering fruit in an orchard. What does fruit represent in our
dreams?
John: It predicts good fortune.
You’ll be rich, honey.
Mary: But the fact is we still
can’t afford to buy a house.
John: I have to admit that’s
absolutely true. I spent about all I had on our
honeymoon.
Mary: Well, there must be
something wrong with your interpretations, darling, I doubt whether
dreams can predict the future.
John: Before I can be more
exact, you have to give me more details.
Mary: What further information
do you need?
John: Well, honey, could you
tell me what the color of the fruit is in your dreams?
Mary: Er…the fruit doesn’t seem
to be ripe. In my dreams, I think it’s green.
John: I’ve got it. If the color
of the fruit is green, you can’t be rich immediately, because only
ripe fruit is interpreted as good fortune at hand.
Mary: Oh? Are you sure about
that?
John: Definitely. I’ve just
looked it up in Freud’s book.
Mary: Then we’ll just have to
wait and see?
John: That’s right, honey. Do
you have any other happy dreams?
Mary: Yes. I had another one
just now. It was so sweet that I smiled from ear to ear. Would you
like to have another try, Mr. Freud?
John: It’s my pleasure, madam.
What happened in this dream? I guarantee you I can give you another
good explanation.
Mary: When I was dozing, I
dreamed that you gave me a beautiful diamond necklace as memento of
our wonderful honeymoon, what do you think that means?
John: (He understands his
wife’s actual intention and tries to find a way out.) Er…Er… I’m
not sure. Er…maybe I’m not knowledgeable enough! But anyway I can
turn to the book for help. Wait a minute!
Mary: Take it easy, darling!
I’m…I’m sure you know how you can make it come true.
John: Too bad!
Mary: What’s
wrong?
John: (He smiles cunningly at
his wife.) I’m afraid Freud didn’t tell me how to interpret a
daydream, only dreams at night.
Mary: Daydream?!
John: Yes, it must be a
daydream since you had it during the day.
Part 3 Video Appreciation and
Singing for Fun
Video Appreciation
Keys
Exercise 1
DEFF
Exercise 2
1)
Mix the sound
2)
Drag you back
3)
seagulls
4)
taking a walk
5)
police siren
6)
pulls off the earphones
7)
alarming dreams
Exercise 3
1)
remained alert
2)
sounds of danger
3)
the reason
4)
are reliant on
5)
alive
Exercise 4
Sample
●
I
fell asleep after a session of yoga to a light, soft background
music once. I dreamed that I was lying on a beach, basking in the
sun, with the waves lapping gently against the rocks, and seagulls
flying over me. It was so comfortable and relaxing that I felt
energetic again after I woke up from the nap.
●
I
once traveled by train and saw a young mother fast asleep, with the
passengers around chattering away. However, she seemed to be very
alert to her 3- or 4-year-old’s cry, even if it was in a very low
voice. As I saw it, we can sleep through the sounds that we don’t
care about, but tend to be dragged back to wakefulness by sounds
that worry us.
●
I
dreamed about taking a math test once before my college entrance
examination. I was still struggling with one tough problem when the
bell rang sharply, which signaled the end of the test. I felt like
being paralyzed in my seat, unable to move a single inch. When I
woke up in misery and sweat, I found the bell was nothing but my
alarm clock. To a college entrance exam taker, the bell is indeed a
very threatening sound signal.
Script
Episode 1
We live in a world of incessant
sounds. During our waking hours, our ears are bombarded with noise.
But what happens when we’re asleep? Sleep takes up a third of our
lives, and that’s when we’re at our most vulnerable. So our sense
of hearing never goes off duty. Even as we sleep our ears detect
sounds,and our brain analyses them. But why is it that some noises
feature in our dreams, while others can wrench us from our sleep?
Weird Science goes into the sleeping brain and our evolutionary
past to find out. Every night when we go to sleep our senses shut
down, except for our sense of hearing, which stays alert to sounds
beyond the bedroom. Sounds are just tiny movements of the air
molecules around us, funneled down the ear canal to the eardrum.
The moving air makes the eardrum vibrate, and these vibrations are
amplified by the tiniest bones in the body and passed to the
fluid-filled cochlea. Here, the vibrations send ripples through the
fluid which move rows of microscopic hair cells. These create
electrical signals sent to the brain.
Episode 2
The brain may mix the sound
into the visuals of your dreams, or drag you back to wakefulness.
At Swansea University, Dr. Mrak Blaggrove studies the impact of
different noises on the brains of sleeping volunteers. These
electrodes allow Mark to monitor Sarah’s brainwaves while she
sleeps. Once there are signs that she’s dreaming, he can test the
effects of different sounds on her dreams. First she gets a blast
of seagulls through her headphones. She sleeps through the noise.
But has it changed her dream? (Hi Sarah) Mark waits for a couple of
minutes, and then wakes her up and asks what she was dreaming about
( I was on a hilltop…Uh huh). Sarah’s dream was of taking a walk on
a windy hilltop. An hour later, Sarah is asleep and dreaming again.
Now, the test is a threatening sound --- a police siren. It’s no
louder than the seagulls, and for a while, she sleeps through the
noise. But then she stirs, and, half-conscious, she pulls off the
earphones. Can she remember what she was dreaming about before the
noise disturbed her? (Yeah, um ambulances…) Amazingly, even while
she was asleep, Sarah heard the sirens and they triggered vivid,
alarming dreams. The sound eventually convinced her sleeping brain
to wake up.
Episode 3
So why does the brain deal with
sounds in such different ways? The answer can be found in our
prehistoric past. Our ancestors needed sleep, but it made them more
vulnerable to attack by predators. To safeguard them, their sense
of hearing remained alert, listening for the sounds of danger. Now
the sounds are different, but the reason for hearing in your sleep
is jus the same. For a third of your life, you’re reliant on your
sense of hearing to keep you alive. Hopefully!
Singing for fun
Lyrics
I Have a Dream
I have a dream, a song to
sing
To help me cope with
anything
If you see the wonder of a
fairy tale
You can take the future, even
if you fail
I believe in angels, something
good in everything I see
I believe in angels, when I
know the time is right for me
I’ll cross the stream, I have a
dream
Oh yeah
I have a dream, a
fantasy
To help me through
reality
And my destination makes it
worth the while
Pushing through the darkness,
still another mile
I believe in angels, something
good in everything I see
I believe in angels, when I
know the time is right for me
I’ll cross the stream, I have a
dream
I have a dream, a song to
sing
To help me cope with
anything
If you see the wonder of a
fairy tale
You can take the future, even
if you fail
I believe in angels, something
good in everything I see
I believe in angels, when I
know the time is right for me
I’ll cross the stream, I have a
dream
I’ll cross the stream, I have a
dream
Part 4 Further Speaking and
Listening
Further Listening
Listening I
Keys
Exercise 1
5>7>4>1>6>3>8>2
Exercise 2
CABDBDC
Script
In 1865 ,in a small town in
Germany ,a little boy was very sick. His name was Max
Hoffman.
“Will our son die ?” Max’s
parents asked the doctor.
“Maybe,” the doctor said
quietly .”Stay with Max .Keep him warm .That’s all you can do
.”
For three days Max lay in his
bed . Then he died .He was only five years old .
Max’s parents buried their son
in the town cemetery .That night Max’s mother had a terrible dream.
She dreamed that Max was moving in his coffin . She screamed in her
sleep.
“Sh ,sh,” her husband said.
“It’s all right .You had a bad dream.”
The next night Max’s mother
screamed in her sleep again . She had the same terrible
dream.
On the third night Max’s mother
had another bad dream. She dreamed that Max was crying . She got
out of bed and got dressed. “Quick! Get dressed ,” she told her
husband . “We’re going to the cemetery .I want to see Max. I want
to dig up his coffin.”
At four o’clock in the morning
Max’s parent and a neighbor hurried to the cemetery .They dug up
Max’s coffin and opened it . There was Max .He looked dead. But he
wasn’t lying on his back . He was lying on his side.
Max’s father carried Max home .
Then he ran to get the doctor .For an hour the doctor rubbed whisky
on Max’s lips and warmed his body. Then Max opened his eyes .Max
was alive ! A week later he was playing with his
friends.
Max Hoffman died—really died—in
the United State in 1953. He was 93 year old .
Listening II
Keys
Exercise 1
TFFTFT
Exercise 2
1)
pushing
2)
away
3)
friend’s house
4)
burned to death
5)
the dead
6)
in front of
7)
kids’ minds
8)
making money
Script
(A couple is talking about
their 8-year-old daughter ,Debbie .They also have a son ,Barry ,who
is 16.)
Mother : I had to go in to
Debbie twice last night .She was having these terrible nightmares!
She was screaming and shouting and she kept trying to push me away
.She was yelling , “Don’t hurt me ! Don’t hurt me !”
Father : What was wrong with
her then ?
Mother : I don’t know. I
couldn’t get a word out of her when she woke up this
morning
Father: Does Barry know
anything about it ? Didn’t she go with him to his friend’s
yesterday afternoon ? Wait a minute , I’ll
give him a shout . Barry ! Come here , Will you ?
Barry: What’s up?
Father: Didn’t you say you were
going to watch a video at your friend’s yesterday?
Mother: Well, what exactly did
you watch ? Debbie’s been having the most terrible
nightmares.
Barry: Oh, I don’t know ! Some
film his dad had left lying around . About a man who had been
burned to death in a car crash, who came back from the dead to take
revenge on young girls . He tears them to bits and eats them. It
was a young girl , see , who ran in front of his car and made him
crash . Don’t know why it’s giving her nightmares. It was really
stupid , if you ask me ! Anyway, she didn’t have to watch it . did
she ?
Mother: You should have more
sense at your age . You should have stopped her watching
it.
Father: I blame the people who
made films like that. They shouldn’t be allowed to make them . They
must be really sick! All they care about is making money –they
don’t care they are doing to kids’ minds.
Listening III
Keys
Exercise 1
ACDBC
Exercise 2
TTTT FFTT
Script
Dear Editor,
Your paper is great . I read
with great interest your interpretation of dreams of teeth falling
out .It is the same interpretation that many others use as well :
needing to be heard etc. I myself had this dream repeatedly and was
dying to know what it meant , as is was always confusing and
disturbing . However , I was always unsatisfied with the “ needing
to be heard ” thing.
Your might note that many
people who have this dream are feeling worried , depressed or
frightened as their teeth are falling out painlessly .Sometime they
even try to keep the teeth from falling out . Finally I came up
with a different interpretation , which fitted me much better . In
fact , I’ve had fewer dreams of this sort now .So I thought you
might be interested .For me , the dream means I am talking TOO MUCH
. It means thoughtlessness ,telling secrets , gossiping unwisely .
And it’s my subconscious warning me .Now ,if I have this dream ,I
know I have been unwise with my big mouth ! Trying to cram the
teeth back in , or stop them falling out ,or trying to find a
dentist , actually means trying to stop the words or gossip from
coming out , and the feelings of depression are reflecting the
regret of being too revealing –usually to an enemy . I am much more
aware of this now and not such a big mouth ! Maybe you could add to
your interpretation,
Best,
Katie
Listening IV
Keys
Exercise 1
DCBD
Exercise 2
TFTFFT
Script
Sleep is something we generally
associate with living creatures. Of course, it is true that a
lot of animals sleep, but
zoologists are not certain that primitive forms of animals life,
like worms and snails, even really sleep. On
the other hang, animals such as bears sleep for 4 or 5 months
every year.
The amount of sleep a human
being needs depends on age, the individual and possibly
race. .For example, doctors think that
pre-school children need between 10 and12 hours a night; school
children between 9 and 11 hours, and adults between 7and9 hours.
There are exceptional cases of old people who
sleep only between 2 and 3 hours a day and continue to be active
and healthy. The sleep requirements of
different races also appear to be different. Japanese people, for
example, sleep, sleep fewer hours than Europeans.
It is not known for certain if
certain if mental activity (apart from dreaming) occurs when a
person is asleep. However, it is certainly
true that some people can wake up at a specific, pre-determined
time. There are also stories about mathematicians who solve
difficult problems during sleep, because their
subconscious minds continue working on the problem.
Some types of unpleasant dreams
(or ‘‘nightmares’’)are quite common, the dreams is taking
a test, but is not properly prepared. he is
falling from a tree ,or an animal or thing is chasing
him. Some people say these last two occur
because man’s ancestors lived in trees and were in
constant danger from wild
animals.