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10.to call for--International trade theories and WTO spirit call for multilateral-trade balance rather than bilateral trade balance. 11.given--Given the two countries'existing economic and trade structure,the United States would continue to have big trade deficit with China. 12.to be attributable to --The US trade deficit may be attributable to structural imbalances and fiscal deficits in the United States rather than the RMB exchange rate III.Ask students to use the following active vocabularies to form sentences as what they have heard from listening(Dictate then remember). 1.to edge--When China finally allowed its currency to edge higher against the dollar last week,many U.S.manufacturers and policymakers countered that the increase was too small to dent the soaring U.S.trade deficit with China. 2.to scrap--With protectionist sentiment mounting on Capitol Hill in recent months,Beijing scrapped a decade-old policy of pegging the renminbi,or yuan, to the dollar. 3.to slap--Why not retaliate by slapping duties on Chinese imports,as Congress has threatened to do? 4.to fuel--China's economic boom is fueled by the huge U.S.appetite for low-cost Chinese appliances,furniture,textiles --and components for the auto and other U.S.industries. 5.leverage--Washington has a lot of leverage over Beijing. 6.access to--China needs access to the U.S.market to create jobs and preserve stability--the No.1 priority in China. 610. to call for -- International trade theories and WTO spirit call for multilateral-trade balance rather than bilateral trade balance. 11. given -- Given the two countries' existing economic and trade structure, the United States would continue to have big trade deficit with China. 12. to be attributable to -- The US trade deficit may be attributable to structural imbalances and fiscal deficits in the United States rather than the RMB exchange rate. III.Ask students to use the following active vocabularies to form sentences as what they have heard from listening (Dictate then remember). 1. to edge -- When China finally allowed its currency to edge higher against the dollar last week, many U.S. manufacturers and policymakers countered that the increase was too small to dent the soaring U.S. trade deficit with China. 2. to scrap -- With protectionist sentiment mounting on Capitol Hill in recent months, Beijing scrapped a decade-old policy of pegging the renminbi, or yuan, to the dollar. 3. to slap -- Why not retaliate by slapping duties on Chinese imports, as Congress has threatened to do? 4. to fuel -- China's economic boom is fueled by the huge U.S. appetite for low-cost Chinese appliances, furniture, textiles -- and components for the auto and other U.S. industries. 5. leverage -- Washington has a lot of leverage over Beijing. 6. access to -- China needs access to the U.S. market to create jobs and preserve stability -- the No. 1 priority in China. 6
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