【转】在新闻中学习单词每日一学(5/12连载至14L)_派派后花园

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[Writing] 【转】在新闻中学习单词每日一学(5/12连载至14L)

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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
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标题

Once again Amazon has taken the public on a thrill ride into the future with another sensational disclosure about its drone deliveries. It has filed a patent for parachute-aided package drops. With this remarkable innovation,whose introduction can surely be just days away, the ordered item is released above your back garden and floats gently down as a little silken canopy opens up above it.

But wait! What if you live in a flat? Or what if you don’t want your package to lie in the damp garden getting weed on by cats all day while you’re at work? Never mind these footling objections. This is progress we’re talking about. While the parachute package descends, the drone hovers nearby, ready to correct any off-course drifting with a burst of compressed air! Then it zooms off.

The futuristic Amazon delivery drone is the 21st-century equivalent of the TV detector van that in scary 1970s ads cruised around the streets, searching for television sets without a licence while a sinister guy in the back famously barked: “... they’re watching Columbo!” But no one ever seemed to see one of these vans in real life. As for Amazon, if it wanted press coverage ... well, buying ads is expensive. But filing sci-fi patents for drones is cheap – and gets acres of publicity.

Doubles all round
These bizarre political times generate exotic forms of vocabulary – “normalisation”, “alternative facts” – and for me one of the most notable is the transformation of an existing phrase: “doubling down”. It used to be a relatively abstruse blackjack term: I first came across it reading the blackjack card-counting classic Beat the Dealer (1962) by the American mathematician Edward O Thorp. Now political pundits use it all the time. But is it misleading?

When caught, politicians increasingly just double their original claim; they brazen it out, hoping to shout down their accusers, to bully and browbeat them with sheer shamelessness – and we call that “doubling down”. But in blackjack, it means being allowed to increase your original bet by up to 100% in return for an extra card. It is a risky but rational move. You can’t change the rules by doing it, you can’t make the dealer throw up their hands and say: “OK, fine, sure – you win.”

But the alternative-fact merchants think of themselves as players and gamblers, in which all that counts is winning. Maybe the doubling-down trope flatters their vanity.

Earning my stripes
Here’s another thing they don’t teach you at parenting school: the horror of the half-term “sleepover”. Your child and their friends have the luxury of nothing to do the next day. But you have to work. Is there anyone to complain to, any descriptive standards body, about the first syllable of the term “sleepover”? Could it not be renamed “sleepdeprivationover”?

My 12-year-old and his friends, having consumed their increasingly substantial body weight in Haribo and Pringles, commenced screaming at each other in the neighbouring bedroom at 10:30pm. It lasted until 6am. Metallica live would have been less noisy. At various points through the long night I tapped on the door and did my unconvincing Tolerant Dad impression, chuckling indulgently: “Come on, boys, settle down! … Ha! Go to sleep now, boys! It’s 3am! … Boys. COME ON. It’s 4am!” And finally: “It’s 5am. Come on.”

It was only as dawn lit up my haggard face that I realised I had been channelling Sergeant Wilson from Dad’s Army: “Would you mind awfully just falling in?”

The boys showed up for breakfast at 7:30, at which point the earsplitting discussion continued, about which variety pack to have.

Since you’re here …
… we’ve got a small favour to ask. More people are reading the Guardian than ever, but far fewer are paying for it. Advertising revenues across the media are falling fast. And unlike many news organisations, we haven’t put up a paywall – we want to keep our journalism as open as we can. So you can see why we need to ask for your help. The Guardian’s independent, investigative journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce. But we do it because we believe our perspective matters – because it might well be your perspective, too.

【精选】

(1) Once again Amazon has taken the public on a thrill ride into the future with another sensational disclosure about its drone deliveries.

(2) It has filed a patent for parachute-aided package drops.

(3) With this remarkable innovation,whose introduction can surely be just days away, the ordered item is released above your back garden and floats gently down as a little silken canopy opens up above it.



【解词】

thrill n. 刺激

sensational a. (1)轰动的; 耸人听闻的 (2)极好的; 绝妙的

disclosure n. 公开; 泄露

drone* n. 无人驾驶飞机(超刚词)

to file a patent for 申请专利

parachute n. 降落伞

innovation n. 创新

to release v. 发布

canopy* n. 顶盖; 苍穹; 树荫



【解句】

第(3)句With this remarkable innovation,whose introduction can surely be just days away, the ordered item is released above your back garden and floats gently down as a little silken canopy opens up above it.

(1)句子的主干为 the ordered item is released above your back garden and floats gently down(连词and连接两个谓语动词is released和floats)。

(2)主干后(句末)连词as引导时间状语从句,as a little silken canopy opens up above it.

(3)句首with this remarkable innovation,whose introduction can surely be just days away整体为介词短语,作全句的状语成分。其中,连词whose引导定语从句修饰innovation.



【译文】

(1)亚马逊再次把公众带向通往未来的充满刺激的旅程,它又一次轰动的披露了其无人机送货。

——Once again Amazon has taken the public on a thrill ride into the future with another sensational disclosure about its drone deliveries.

(2)它已申请降落伞辅助包装空投的专利。

——It has filed a patent for parachute-aided package drops.

(3)这是个了不起的创新,几天后定会采用。预定的包裹在你后花园上空放开,随着上面的一个小绸冠打开,包裹慢慢飘下。

—— With this remarkable innovation,whose introduction can surely be just days away, the ordered item is released above your back garden and floats gently down as a little silken canopy opens up above it.



If everyone who reads our reporting, who likes it, helps to support it, our future would be much more secure.


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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 沙发   发表于: 2017-05-09 0


标题
Next week, Chinese President Xi Jinping will travel to the United States to meet Donald Trump for the first time. But according to Gideon Rachman, the chief foreign affairs commentator for the Financial Times, power is flowing in the opposite direction. Rachman is far from the first analyst to argue that China and other Asian nations are rising while the Western world declines, nor is he the first to cite the now-familiar statistics about China’s ballooning economy and unparalleled manufacturing might. His contribution is to help explain some of the most confounding developments of the day—from the Middle East’s descent into anarchy to the ascent of populist politicians in the West to the emergence of nostalgia as a political force—through his theory of the “Easternization” of international affairs.

“In the twenty-first century,” Rachman writes in his recent book on the concept, “rivalries among the nations of the Asia-Pacific region will shape global politics, just as the struggles between European nations shaped world affairs for over five hundred years from 1500 onward.”

RELATED STORY


How Donald Trump Could Change the World

Trump, in fact, was an early opponent of Easternization, though he used different language. The businessman first expressed some of the core themes of his 2016 campaign—that foolish free-trade deals and greedy allies were draining the United States of its greatness—in the late 1980s, when the Japanese economy was booming and, as the former Bush administration official Peter Feaver has noted, “the joke was that the Cold War was over, and Japan had won.” Today, Trump argues that China is winning—and that America’s losing streak must end.

Ahead of the Trump-Xi summit in Palm Beach, I spoke with Rachman about how he understands Trumpism, how the Trump administration might accelerate Easternization, and what a world dominated by China might actually look like. Below is an edited and condensed transcript of our conversation.

Uri Friedman: You write that you see Donald Trump’s pledge to “Make America Great Again” as a promise to reverse the process of Easternization. What do you mean by “Easternization” and why do you view Trump’s agenda in that context?

Gideon Rachman: What I mean by Easternization is the shift of economic power to Asia and, with that, the shift of political power to the East. And I think that Trump and the many Americans who voted for him, and maybe even some who didn’t, are unsettled by that process. Certainly Trump doesn’t accept it in any way as natural or inevitable that America’s position as the dominant economic and political power would erode. There was definitely a backward-looking nostalgic element to the “Make America Great Again” slogan—[back to] the period when America was the dominant power, the dominant economy, when the world respected American power. Probably the peak of that was the 1950s.

Sometimes Trump explicitly links this to the rise of Asia, as when he says that China has been “raping” the United States. [White House Chief Strategist] Steve Bannon, who is acknowledged as the ideologue of the Trump agenda, gave an interesting interview just after the election where he rejected the idea that globalization, or as he calls it “globalism,” is a good thing. He said what [the globalists have] done is create the middle class in Asia and destroy the middle class in America. If you take that as your intellectual starting point, then that leads you to the [trade] protectionism that Trump is flirting with. He’s a reversal of the [Bill] Clinton and the [George W.] Bush views of the rise of China—that, although it presented challenges, basically it was a good thing, it would create economic opportunities for America, and it would bind the world together, reduce conflict. Trumpism, insofar as it’s a coherent ideology, is very much based on the premise that Americans made a big mistake encouraging the rise of Asia economically.

Friedman: Do you feel that, as power shifts east, nostalgia is becoming a political force in the Western world?

Rachman: Yeah. If I look at my own country, Britain, behind the arguments [in favor of Britain’s vote to exit the European Union], there was a very powerful nostalgia for a sense that, as one pro-Remain guy put it to me, “A lot of the Leave voters think we used to be a great country and now we’re just a member of a club with 28 countries. Luxembourg has a veto and we’re not going to accept that. We want to go back to the way it was.” And Britain, I think, has embarked on a rather perilous course of trying to do that. If you look at Russia—it’s not so much the West as Europe—[Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s slogan could as well be “Make Russia Great Again.” What is Marine Le Pen about in France? It’s “Make France Great Again.” She, like Trump, sees globalism as a force that’s eroding the nation.

But I think it’s particularly difficult for America because it’s pretty obvious to most people in Britain and France, however much they may dislike what’s happened, that we’re not going back ever to the period where they were the dominant global power. I think a lot of Obama’s policies can be read as trying to adjust America as gently as possible to this new reality in ways that are as least damaging as possible for the United States and for the rest of the world. But even within his own mind, there’s a struggle going on; in Asia-Pacific, [the Obama administration] doesn’t say we’re going to accept that China is going to be the dominant power.

Friedman: You mention that you see developments like the Syrian Civil War as a symptom of Easternization. How so?

Rachman: The Middle East since the end of the First World War had been dominated by Western powers. [First] the French and the British. Then, after the Second World War, there’s Cold War rivalry: Russia has elements of influence in the Middle East but America is the dominant power, certainly after the Russians are kicked out of Egypt. There are blips—the Iranian Revolution and so on—but by the first part of the 2000s, all of the key powers have relationships with America: Turkey, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Egypt. Because of what’s happened in recent years [with the Arab Spring and the Iraq War], you suddenly have a sense that America no longer is in control of events in the Middle East. The Europeans, although they make a feeble effort to intervene in Libya, then walk away and leave a vacuum. And then the Russians move [into Syria]. More generally you just have an anarchic situation, with Chinese economic interests very much [at] the fore but the Chinese having no interest in playing a political role.

[Another] example would be Turkey. After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, [Turkish President Mustafa Kemal] Ataturk comes [along] in the 1920s [and] sets Turkey on a course to the West: dress like Europeans, change your alphabet to look like Europeans’, create a secular state. Under [current Turkish President Recep Tayyip] Erdogan, you’re seeing a Turkish leader saying, “We reject the West in many ways. We want to rediscover our Islamic roots. We want to discover the Ottoman hinterland. And we think that you that you [Westerners] are a sick society and that you’re no longer our model.

Even in Israel, [political leaders are] looking very much to economic opportunities in India and China, partly because they [feel] that the Indians and the Chinese [are] pragmatists who [won’t] put them under pressure on human rights or the West Bank. An aide to [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu said to me, “We had a great meeting with the Chinese. Twelve hours and you know how long they spent on the Palestinians?” I said “no.” He said, “Twenty seconds. They’re not interested. What they’re interested in is business deals with us and that suits us.”

“Many of the countries that looked instinctively to America will begin to tilt more toward Beijing.”
Friedman: You spend a lot of the book making the case that Easternization is occurring and describing what it looks like in different parts of the world. There’s less detail on what an Easternized world might actually look like. Can you paint me a picture of it?

Rachman: [The trend] I’m most confident of is [the] growing economic power of Asia. More of the world’s production will come there. More of the world’s trade will come there. China will, for at least 30 years, be easily the most important economic power in Asia.

Many of the countries that looked instinctively to America, both for their markets and for their political leadership, will begin to tilt more toward Beijing. The thing that causes a definitive break [in alliances] is war. The world order we’re living in was remade in 1945 [after World War II] and again after 1989, when the Cold War ends. But absent a dramatic event like a war or the fall of the Berlin Wall, you’re looking at a slower drift where you’ll be in a different place in 20 years’ time but it won’t be obvious that there was a particular event that marked [the shift].

You will have countries like South Korea, Japan to an extent, the whole of Southeast Asia, caring more about what is coming out of Beijing than what is coming out of Washington because that’s where their economic livelihoods [have] gone. That might stretch all the way to Europe, where China is now Germany’s largest trading partner. And so if you have Donald Trump, who is increasingly antagonistic toward Germany, but a booming trade relationship with China, maybe Germany, which throughout my life has been centered on NATO [and] on the EU, begins to think, “Whether or not NATO still continues to exist formally, our relationship with Beijing might be more important than our relationship with Washington in 10, 15 years’ time.”

Another country that’s very strongly in the Western orbit now but is under enormous pressure is Australia, where, as we speak, the Chinese prime minister’s been there and explicitly said, “We don’t want to see you Australians taking sides in the U.S.-Chinese dispute, as you did during the Cold War. Stay neutral.” That’s remarkable. Australians fought with the Americans in the Second World War, [fought] with them in Vietnam, and [Australia] is part of the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing agreement [with the United States]. But overwhelmingly [Australia’s] markets are [in] China now. Now the Australians [are] also very uneasy about the Australian property [and] companies that China’s buying up. But it’s not clear that in the long run they have much of an option but to adapt because the American market is much less important than the Chinese market, and there is a question mark over America’s staying power in the Pacific. Australia, kind of the definition of a country without problems, is really at the cutting edge of these questions about how we adapt to this new world.

Friedman: Do you see the architecture of free trade changing if China becomes more dominant?

Rachman: A lot of that will be dependent on what Trump does. Will Trump trash the [World Trade Organization]? Will he walk away from it if he doesn’t get what he wants? In that case, I think you might start moving toward a much more bilateralized world trading system where the global rules begin to erode and you have people trying to strike deals with individual markets—the Brits trying to strike a deal with America. But I think it also gets China moving quite smartly, as they’ve done in the wake of Trump pulling America out of the [Trans-Pacific Partnership], to create a China-centered free-trade area.

In the aftermath of Trump’s election, there was this famous moment where Xi Jinping comes and gives a speech at Davos. I was in the audience. The conventional thing to say afterwards was, “Isn’t it amazing: China’s now the defender of the globalized order that America has turned against.” But it’s not that surprising because China is the world’s biggest manufacturer. It’s the world’s biggest exporter. Of course it would defend the current system. I remember talking to an EU official afterward and he said, “When Britain was the dominant economy it was the promoter of free trade. When America was the dominant economy it was the promoter of free trade. Now China’s the promoter of free trade, and you can feel the wheels of history turning.”

Friedman: I’ve [seen] in reports by U.S. intelligence officials, a recent report by Brookings, a vision of a [future] world dominated more by China and Russia that is a “spheres of influence” world [for great powers]: China has control over its neighborhood, Russia has control over its neighborhood, the U.S. has more sway in its neighborhood. Do you think that is a likely result of this process of Easternization?

Rachman: I think that is one very plausible outcome. It’s certainly what the Russians want and it’s what the Chinese want. The question [was], up until now, would the Americans be prepared to cede that? Obama and [former U.S. Secretary of State John] Kerry very much rhetorically were opposed to it and, I think, in reality were pretty opposed to it. There was a question about would they have the will to enforce their opposition. The question that begins with Trump is slightly different: Some of what [Trump has said] has implied that he might accept a “spheres of influence” concept—that Russia and maybe China in time, if they respected American commercial interests, would be given more of a free hand politically in their regions. But whether Trump could persuade the American establishment, or “deep state” as we now have to call it, to go along with that is a big question. Whether the vestigial alliances would drag him in anyway—the Japanese certainly wouldn’t accept it, the Poles wouldn’t accept it, and America has treaty commitments to these countries—[is an open question].

There’s an Australian academic I quote in the book called Hugh White who argues that in the long run [a spheres-of-influence model is] where it has to go in Asia—that [otherwise the U.S. and China] will end up with a war. In the end I rejected [that argument] because I think it’s too fatalistic and too deterministic. China is not a stable polity. I don’t think anybody would place bets on the Communist Party still being in charge in 50 years’ time. It seems like a mistake for the West to surrender preemptively. Nobody anticipated what happened in 1989 [with the fall of the Berlin Wall], and nobody can really be sure how things are going to pan out politically.

Friedman: To sum up: If the Easternization process continues, and we look out a decade or two, potentially you could see some traditional U.S. alliances gradually shifting toward China and away from the U.S. Free trade is still there, but the center of gravity is more in China than in the U.S. The international institutions [like the WTO and the United Nations] that we’ve known for decades will still be there. And China may have more influence in its neighborhood, or it may not. Is that a fair summary?

Rachman: Just the last two bits I’d qualify. The international institutions probably will still be there in the sense that they won’t have been formally abolished, but they might [be] hollowed out, whether that’s NATO or the WTO or even the UN. And some parallel structures will have been set up beside them, like the [China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, an alternative to the World Bank], which may have more power than some of the older ones.

And the second thing is: I’m a bit less on the fence about Chinese power than that summary [suggests]. I think the likelihood is that we’re looking at a much more powerful China in 30 years’ time, but we don’t know what’s going to happen politically in China.

Friedman: Based on the evidence so far, do you think the process of Easternization is accelerating under Trump?

Rachman: Yeah. And I think that’s the precise opposite of what he intends. But [that is] the paradoxical result of an America that looks much less reliable. Allies don’t know whether they can trust him. Some allies, like Japan, who have absolutely no alternative to America, have rushed to embrace him. The Brits a little bit. But others—the Europeans, the Australians—are beginning to think, “OK, we’ve got to start hedging our bets.”

Second, to the extent that the isolationist, protectionist tendencies in Trump come to the fore, there’s a voluntary [U.S.] pullback, and that leaves a vacuum for China to move into. The abolition of the Trans-Pacific Partnership is the prime example of that.

Friedman: So you don’t buy the argument that [Trump] is scaling back American overextension [in the world] precisely to make America more powerful so that it can reverse this process of Easternization?

Rachman: I don’t ultimately buy it. If he’s focused on the core group of Trump voters—the guys who used to have a middle-class existence through manufacturing and don’t anymore—there may be some forms of Trump economic policies that give a temporary boost to them. Even there I’m pretty skeptical because I think protectionism doesn’t tend to work that well in the long run. And I think American workers won’t get the jobs if Chinese workers are displaced. It’ll probably be a robot. So I’m not sure he can reverse, even in that quite limited sphere, the effect of Easternization.

【精选】

(1) Next week, Chinese President Xi Jinping will travel to the United States to meet Donald Trump for the first time.

(2) But according to Gideon Rachman, the chief foreign affairs commentator for the Financial Times, power is flowing in the opposite direction.

(3) Rachman is far from the first analyst to argue that China and other Asian nations are rising while the Western world declines, nor is he the first to cite the now-familiar statistics about China’s ballooning economy and unparalleled manufacturing might.

(4) His contribution is to help explain some of the most confounding developments of the day — from the Middle East’s descent into anarchy to the ascent of populist politicians in the West to the emergence of nostalgia as a political force — through his theory of the “Easternization” of international affairs.



【解词】

commentator n. 评论员

the Financial Times 《金融时报》

to cite v. 引用

ballooning economy 蓬勃发张的经济

unparalleled manufacturing might 无以伦比的制造能力

confounding* a. 令人惶惑的(超刚词)

descent n. 下降,衰败

anarchy n. 无政府状态

ascent n. 上升,崛起

populist 平民主义者; 平民论者; 平民党党员; 民粹主义者

emergence n. 出现

nostalgia* n. 思乡,怀旧



【解句】

第(4)句His contribution is to help explain some of the most confounding developments of the day — from the Middle East’s descent into anarchy to the ascent of populist politicians in the West to the emergence of nostalgia as a political force — through his theory of the “Easternization” of international affairs.

(1)句子的主干为 His contribution is to help(主系表结构)。其后的explain some of the most confounding developments of the day为省略了to的不定式短语,作explain的宾语。

(2)句末介词短语through his theory of the “Easternization” of international affairs作explain的方式状语。

(3)破折号内容from the Middle East’s descent into anarchy to the ascent of populist politicians in the West to the emergence of nostalgia as a political force作定语,修饰developments.



【译文】

(1)下周,中国国家主席习近平将前往美国,第一次与唐纳德·特朗普会面。

—— Next week, Chinese President Xi Jinping will travel to the United States to meet Donald Trump for the first time.

(2)但据《金融时报》首席外事评论员吉迪恩·拉赫曼的看法,力量在相反的方向涌动。

—— But according to Gideon Rachman, the chief foreign affairs commentator for the Financial Times, power is flowing in the opposite direction.

3)有观点认为中国和其他亚洲国家的崛起而西方世界在衰落,拉赫曼绝非是第一位持有这种观点的分析人士。他也并非是引用中国日益增长经济和无与伦比的制造能力有关统计数字的第一人。

——Rachman is far from the first analyst to argue that China and other Asian nations are rising while the Western world declines, nor is he the first to cite the now-familiar statistics about China’s ballooning economy and unparalleled manufacturing might.

(4)他的贡献是帮助解释一些当今最混乱的动态,解释依据是他有关国际事务的“东方化”理论,动态包括中东陷入混乱状态、西方的民粹主义政治家的升起以怀旧情结作为政治力量的出现。

—— His contribution is to help explain some of the most confounding developments of the day — from the Middle East’s descent into anarchy to the ascent of populist politicians in the West to the emergence of nostalgia as a political force — through his theory of the “Easternization” of international affairs.


[ 此帖被曲径戎在2017-05-09 13:30重新编辑 ]
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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 板凳   发表于: 2017-05-09 0
Re:【转】在新闻中学习单词每日一学




标题

It has become apparent that America’s airlines, much like America’s president, have absolutely no shame. They seem to care only about profit and treat the people they supposedly serve like chattel, cattle or criminals.

This week’s installment of airlines reaching new lows is brought to you by United – you know, the people who spend tens of millions of dollars on fancy adverts urging you to “Fly the Friendly Skies”, while seemingly going out of their way to make the skies as unfriendly as possible.

The story has been everywhere over the last 24 hours and you’ve probably seen the graphic video. United overbooked a flight and, having only realized this after the flight had boarded, tried to force a few randomly selected passengers off. One man refused to vacate the seat he paid for and, thus, had a reasonable expectation of sitting in. Security officers dragged the 69-year-old grandfather off the plane screaming. This was all caught on video and went viral.

You’d think that United might have balked at this PR disaster and issued a groveling apology. Particularly as the incident comes hot on the heels of last month’s controversy around United denying boarding to two teenage girls because they were wearing leggings. But no.

The furore was followed by perhaps the most half-assed sorry-not-sorry in the history of corporate apologies, with United Airlines CEO Oscar Munoz expressing regret for “having to re-accommodate these customers”. Yes, that’s right, they translated “dragged a man out of a plane screaming” into “re-accommodate”.

Thanks to United Airlines, is flying while Asian something to fear?
Steven W Thrasher
Steven W Thrasher  Read more
Somewhere, in the depths of United HQ, there is a team of copywriters tasked with systematically wringing any actual meaning out of the English language and transforming it into hollow, hyphenated platitudes.

But, really, is anyone actually surprised at United’s lack of compunction? Thanks to deregulation and industry consolidation, the power relationship between airlines and customers is dramatically skewed in airlines’ favour. Carriers can basically do whatever they like and get away with it. After all, what are you going to do? Take a bus?

Short of boycotting flying altogether there’s basically no way for customers to hold airlines to account. So we just hand them our money and grin and bear it. We expect airlines to be awful. And low expectations are lucrative; while airlines like to cry poor to justify incessant cost-cutting, last year global airlines made profits of $35bn.

The industry-wide of practice of overbooking, which the United episode brought to light, is just one example of the airline industry’s hubris at work. In theory, overbooking should be good for everyone. It ensures that more seats are full and should help drive ticket prices down. However, there aren’t enough regulations in place to protect customers from overbooking, which means airlines can deny boarding to passengers without offering adequate compensation.

United offered passengers $800 to get off the plane before it brought in the security guards. Federal law in America means it could have gone up to $1,350 but no further. Surely there should be a minimum cap on compensation due to overbooking, not a maximum cap?

While airlines across the world appear to be engaged in a race to the bottom when it comes to customer experience, it is America’s airlines which stand out as exceptionally awful. The enormous amount of consolidation in the American airline industry means that there is very little competition. Brands that try to compete on customer experience rarely last long. Indeed, Alaska Airlines recently announced it was killing off the Virgin America brand earlier this year.

Over the last few years the Gulf Carriers – Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways and Emirates – have been making inroads into the American market. These airlines put more of an emphasis on customer service and the threat of competition has caused much uproar amongst the big American carriers.

Rather than attempting to better their own service and compete in that regard, however, American airlines have been looking to their government to try and stifle competition – claiming that they can’t possibly compete with Gulf carriers because they have more money.

In February the CEOs of American Airlines, United and Delta asked to meet with secretary of state Rex Tillerson to discuss “the massive subsidization of three state-owned Gulf carriers – Qatar Airways, Etihad Airways and Emirates – and the significant harm this subsidized competition is causing to US airlines and US jobs.”

Weirdly, shortly after this demand for a meeting, the US Department of Homeland Security announced a ban on electronics larger than a mobile phone which targeted 10 Middle Eastern airports and nine airlines – including the major Gulf carriers which American carriers are so outraged by.

There have been accusations that this is simply a roundabout way of stifling competition rather than furthering national security. And, indeed, the electronics ban does appear to achieve very little in terms of national security. If you’re committed enough to turn your Kindle into a bomb you’ll probably also be able to figure out that you can still take said Kindle on a flight to the US with another airline.

The latest United debacle is unlikely to be the last time airlines hit the news for appalling behavior. For far too long airlines have been allowed to treat their customers in a way no other business would be allowed to get away with. It’s time that passengers demand more regulation and show airlines that this behaviour really doesn’t fly.

Since you’re here …
… we’ve got a small favour to ask. More people are reading the Guardian than ever, but far fewer are paying for it. Advertising revenues across the media are falling fast. And unlike many news organisations, we haven’t put up a paywall – we want to keep our journalism as open as we can. So you can see why we need to ask for your help. The Guardian’s independent, investigative journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce. But we do it because we believe our perspective matters – because it might well be your perspective, too.

If everyone who reads our reporting, who likes it, helps to support it, our future would be much more secure.
美联航的事情想必孩子们已经通过新闻了解了。今天的文章选自于《卫报》(下面给了你们链接,好好去看看)。原文的标题为“America's airlines are shameless. But United has just set a new low”。
在理解今天文章的时候,多注意分析作者的评价和态度。
【回音壁】(1)get upset about是一个搭配,其中get相当于be动词的使用。
(2)我们所给的每日一学的文章与考试的试题难度相当。由于我按照命题要求对文章进行了改写,所以难度比外刊的原文要低一些。


【精选】

(1) It has become apparent that America’s airlines, much like America’s president, have absolutely no shame.

(2) They seem to care only about profit and treat the people they supposedly serve like chattel, cattle or criminals.

(3) The latest United debacle is unlikely to be the last time airlines hit the news for shocking behavior.

(4) For far too long airlines have been allowed to treat their customers in a way no other business would be allowed to get away with.

(5) It’s time that passengers demand more regulation and show airlines that this behaviour really doesn’t fly.



【解词】

It has become apparent that ... 已经明显的是

absolutely ad. 绝对地

supposedly ad. 可能;按照推测;恐怕

chattel*, cattle or criminals 动产、牛和罪犯

debacle* n. 崩溃(超刚词)

to get away with 侥幸成功,逃脱处罚

regulation n. 规定,规章



【解句】

第(5)句It’s time that passengers demand more regulation and show airlines that this behaviour really doesn’t fly.

(1)句子的主干为It’s time that ...(这一部分是主干,it为形式主语)。连词that后面要求should do虚拟语气表达或do(原形)虚拟语气表达。换言之,demand和show两个动词都是原形;两个动词又and连接。

(2)此外,show airlines that this behaviour really doesn’t fly中的连词that引导show的宾语从句。



【译文】

(1)与美国的总统颇为相似,美国航空公司厚颜无耻,这已经很明显。

——It has become apparent that America’s airlines, much like America’s president, have absolutely no shame.

(2)它们似乎只关心利润,把他人想当然地视为动产、牲口和罪犯去对待。

——They seem to care only about profit and treat the people they supposedly serve like chattel, cattle or criminals.

(3)航空公司由于令人震惊的行为而成为新闻,美联航最近的溃败不可能是最后一次。

——The latest United debacle is unlikely to be the last time airlines hit the news for shocking behavior.

(4)长期以来竟然任凭航空公司以其他行业不可能的方式对待顾客,而航公公司却不遭受责罚。

——For far too long airlines have been allowed to treat their customers in a way no other business would be allowed to get away with.

(5)是时候顾客们要求更多的规定了而且是时候让航空公司知道这种行为不会逍遥法外了。

—— It’s time that passengers demand more regulation and show airlines that this behaviour really doesn’t fly.



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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 地板   发表于: 2017-05-09 0
Re:【转】在新闻中学习单词每日一学




标题

Tim Wu is the author of “The Attention Merchants” and a professor at Columbia University Law School.

Thirty years ago, we accepted secondhand smoke, sugary sodas for kids and tanning salons as simple facts of life. What will we think is crazy 30 years from now? That we lived without enough sleep? Treated animals so badly?

If psychologist and marketing professor Adam Alter is right, the answer may be our use of addictive technologies. By his account, we have casually let ourselves become hooked in a manner not unlike Victorians taking cocaine and opium, thinking it no big deal. We, like them, are surprised at the consequences.

Alter’s sweep is broad: He includes not just the more obvious addictive technologies such as slot machines and video games, but the whole sweep of social media, dating apps, online shopping and other binge-inducing programs. He takes in everything whose business model depends on being irresistible (which today is most things). If he’s right, most of us are nursing at least a few minor “behavioral addictions” and perhaps a major one as well. By the end of his enjoyable yet alarming book, “Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked,” you may be convinced that Alter is right and want to seriously rethink the behavioral addictions in your life.

Some people object to the use of the word “addiction” for anything other than a physical dependence on substances such as heroin and alcohol. But Alter, a marketing professor with a PhD in psychology, argues that any distinction is meaningless. Anything, he says, can be addictive — it comes down to its role in your life. If your actions “come to fulfill a deep need, you can’t do without them, and you begin to pursue them while neglecting other aspects of your life, then you’ve developed a behavioral addiction.” He is careful to point out that many behavioral addictions aren’t medical matters requiring treatment. But more likely than not, you have some behavior that you return to, uncontrollably, and that interferes with your goals. Alter posits that “half of the developed world is addicted to something, and for some people that something is a behavior.”

  (Penguin Press)
Alter directs his sharpest criticism at those who are intentionally designing addictive technologies — that is, much of the high-tech industry. Sometimes a new technology causes addiction by accident — no one designed email to be addictive — but often the result is willful. There is something dark about the deliberate creation of technologies meant to destroy whatever is left of the public’s self-regulation. Yet as Alter documents in case after case, using tricks and techniques such as unpredictable rewards, a misleading sense of early mastery and pop tunes that stay in your head, many if not most entertainment and technological products are now specifically designed to addict their users.

It is worth stepping back and asking how technological innovation and the deliberate programming of addiction have come to be so closely linked. In earlier days, inventions such as the internal-combustion engine, the zipper or the calculator weren’t solely intended to create some kind of habit in their users. They were about progress, creating a new comfort or efficiency. But today a large number of the products emerging from the world’s mightiest tech firms are geared toward getting people to do things they might not otherwise do. “The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads,” scientist Jeff Hammerbacher once said. “That sucks.”

The deeper reason for this, I suspect, is an enormous shift in the business models of the high-tech industry. Companies are moving away from the creation of rewarding technologies for human enhancement, such as the calculator or the bicycle, and toward technologies meant to lure people to devote large amounts of time and attention to them — think Facebook or BuzzFeed. Something like a bicycle or a calculator didn’t need to be addictive to be valuable. But for a product like Facebook, success and user addiction are the same thing.

Should you try to avoid all behavioral addictions or just some of the more technologically rigged ones? After all, many of life’s greatest passions and satisfactions are rewarding and somewhat addictive — surfing, collecting antiques or hunting for mushrooms, for instance. Satisfying work can be addictive as well. In Alter’s estimation, any of these things could become dangerous addictions if one loses the “ability to choose freely whether to stop or continue the behavior” and experiences “adverse consequences” in life. This suggests that the key to thriving in the 21st century is wise management of our various addictions, which would sound like a science fiction dystopia if it wasn’t true.

Alter thinks there is little chance we can resist temptation. He draws on the words of design ethicist Tristan Harris, who contends that the problem isn’t a lack of willpower. Rather, Harris says, “there are a thousand people on the other side of the screen whose job it is to break down the self-regulation you have.” Outmatched, it is clear we need to draw hard lines — like quitting social media and not using devices in the home — as opposed to trying to fight temptation in the moment. While he is a little vague in his prescriptions, Alter is pushing for long-term cultural change and a reprogramming of our lives to create spaces that are free from addictive technology.

That seems right, but I’d take it slightly further. Within the tech world itself, we need to designate the deliberate engineering of addiction as an unethical practice. More broadly, we need to get back to rewarding firms that build technologies that augment humanity and help us do what we want, as opposed to taking our time for themselves.

As the examples of secondary smoke or opium suggest, we are capable of eventually learning from our mistakes, and my hope is that we’ll look back at this moment as the era when high tech hit rock bottom and we began to take a hard look at how we could do better.

IRRESISTIBLE
The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked
By Adam Alter

Penguin Press. 354 pp. $27
“insidious”这个超纲词在外刊中高频出现。前缀“in”含义“里面”,词根“sid”(sit,位于),后缀“ous”(状态或属性) —— “处在暗中状态”,其中文含义为“隐伏的,潜在的; 暗中为害的; 阴险的; 狡猾的”。
今天的文章选自于《华盛顿邮报》(2017年3月),文章标题为“Subtle and insidious, technology is designed to addict us”。从这个标题,孩子们能够明了作者对于技术的态度吗?
【回音壁】
关于孩子们多次反映单词读音的问题,这个问题我询问了有关技术人员,在微信中无法实现点击读音的功能。


【精选】

(1) Alter’s sweep is broad: He includes not just the more obvious addictive technologies such as slot machines and video games, but the whole sweep of social media, dating apps, online shopping and other binge-inducing programs.

(2) He takes in everything whose business model depends on being irresistible (which today is most things).

(3) If he’s right, most of us are nursing at least a few minor “behavioral addictions” and perhaps a major one as well.

(4) By the end of his enjoyable yet alarming book, “Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked,” you may be convinced that Alter is right and want to seriously rethink the behavioral addictions in your life.



【解词】

sweep n. 范围

addictive a. 使成瘾的;上瘾的

slot machines 老虎机

dating apps 约会应用程序

binge*-inducing 引诱放纵的

irresistible a. 无法抵御的

to nurse v. 培育

to hook v. 引上钩; 牢牢抓住



【解句】

第(3)句By the end of his enjoyable yet alarming book, “Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked,” you may be convinced that Alter is right and want to seriously rethink the behavioral addictions in your life.

(1)句子的主干为you may be convinced(主谓结构)。其后连词that引导convinced的宾语从句。

(2)在宾语从句 that Alter is right and want to seriously rethink the behavioral addictions in your life中,连词and连接两个并列分句。to seriously rethink是一个分裂不定式的用法。

(3)句首By the end of his enjoyable yet alarming book, “Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked”介词短语作地点状语。



【译文】

(1)阿尔塔(Alter)所谈范围很广,他不仅包括了那些更为明显的让人上瘾的技术(比如老虎机和视频游戏),而且包括了社交媒体、约会应用程序、在线购物和其他诱导狂欢的程序。

——Alter’s sweep is broad: He includes not just the more obvious addictive technologies such as slot machines and video games, but the whole sweep of social media, dating apps, online shopping and other binge-inducing programs.

(2)他包括了商业模式取决于让人束手就擒的所有东西(今天大多都这样)。

—— He takes in everything whose business model depends on being irresistible (which today is most things).

(3)如果他是对的,我们大多数人都在培育至少一些微小的 “行为成瘾”,而且也许也有一个严重上瘾的东西。

—— If he’s right, most of us are nursing at least a few minor “behavioral addictions” and perhaps a major one as well.

(4)他的书名为《无法抗拒:让人上瘾的技术的兴起以及让我们上钩的生意》,该书令人愉快且令人惊慌。读完后你也许心悦诚服,阿尔塔是对的,而且他想要我们认真反思生活中的行为成瘾。

——By the end of his enjoyable yet alarming book, “Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked,” you may be convinced that Alter is right and want to seriously rethink the behavioral addictions in your life.



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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 4楼  发表于: 2017-05-09 0
Re:【转】在新闻中学习单词每日一学




标题

养老金、救济金等概念在考试中时常出现。今天的文章选自于《卫报》(2017年2月),标题为“The baby boomers have enjoyed the good times”(婴儿潮一代人已经 ...)。“婴儿潮”这一概念也很重要哟。
【精选】

(1) Since the financial crash, pensioners have won the race for higher incomes (discounting the mega-rich and their soaring salaries).

(2) Official figures show that the government’s triple lock on the state pension, which guarantees a minimum 2.5% rise each year, and the monster payouts from guaranteed final salary schemes have propelled tens of thousands of pensioners up the income scale while the finances of working households languish below pre-crash levels.

(3) A report from the Resolution Foundation published today confirms that the average pensioner income is higher than that of a working-age person.



【解词】

pensioner n. 领养老金的人

to discount v. 不考虑

mega-rich a. 巨富

triple a. 三倍的

to guarantee v. 保证,担保

minimum a. 最少量

monster n. 庞大的

payout n. 花费,支出

scheme n. 计划,方案

to languish* v. 变的衰弱



【解句】

第(2)句Official figures show that the government’s triple lock on the state pension, which guarantees a minimum 2.5% rise each year, and the monster payouts from guaranteed final salary schemes have propelled tens of thousands of pensioners up the income scale while the finances of working households languish below pre-crash levels.

(1)句首Official figures show that(主谓 + that引导宾语从句)。

(2)在从句中,主语是句子的主干为the government’s triple lock A and the monster payouts B (连词and连接两个主语)have propelled (谓语部分)tens of thousands of pensioners C(宾语部分)。C = up the income scale,为宾语补语。

(3)细节分析:A = on the state pension, which guarantees a minimum 2.5% rise each year, 整个部分为介词短语,作定语修饰lock。其中连词that引导定语从句修饰pension。B = from guaranteed final salary schemes,整个部分为介词短语修饰payouts.

(4)最后,连词while引导让步状语从句。while the finances of working households languish below pre-crash levels.



【译文】

(1)自从经济奔溃,领退休金者就已经赢得了争取更高收入的竞赛(不考虑巨富和其增加的收入)。

——Since the financial crash, pensioners have won the race for higher incomes (discounting the mega-rich and their soaring salaries).

(2)官方数据表明,政府对国家退休金的三重控制(这保证这每年最少2.5%的增加),以及最终保障工资计划带来的庞大支出,这两个因素推高了数万领取退休金者的收入,而工作者家庭的经济状况仍停滞于奔溃前的水平。

——Official figures show that the government’s triple lock on the state pension, which guarantees a minimum 2.5% rise each year, and the monster payouts from guaranteed final salary schemes have propelled tens of thousands of pensioners up the income scale while the finances of working households languish below pre-crash levels.

(3)今天发表的一份“决议基金”的报告确认,普通领退休金者的收入比工作年龄人的收入要高。

—— A report from the Resolution Foundation published today confirms that the average pensioner income is higher than that of a working-age person.





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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 5楼  发表于: 2017-05-10 0




标题


The wage freeze we are living through is the longest since Victorian times. The public sector pay cap means that many employees entered 2017 facing cuts to real pay. Nurses, police officers, ambulance drivers and firefighters are all earning less than they did five years ago. And though the gender pay gap for men and women in their 20s has narrowed to 5%, overall women still earn an average of 18% less.

Treated like dirt, these teaching assistants have become the lions of Durham
Aditya Chakrabortty
Aditya Chakrabortty  Read more
So how can the powerless get their voices heard? Once trade unions were the obvious answer, but 55% of today’s workforce in Britain has never been in a union. Break this down by age, and the picture is even starker. Of those aged 16 to 24, fewer than 10% are unionised; and for 25- to 35-year-olds, the robust and energetic drivers of the economy, it’s only one in five. Although films such as Made in Dagenham, about the 1968 strike by female workers at Ford’s Dagenham car plant, reminded us of women’s role in union history, media coverage more often harks back to the 1970s stereotype of blokes, beer and sandwiches. And the continuing dispute between Southern rail and the unions, which flared up with another strike on Wednesday, does little to dispel this myth.

But something significant has changed: contrary to stereotypes, union membership among women is now higher than it is for men. The average member today is a woman in her 40s in the public sector. Meanwhile, last May’s survey of trade union membership by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills showed growth in both public and private sector membership. The survey also found that the union wage premium – the gap between the hourly earnings of union members and non-members – was 16% in the public sector and 7% in the private sector.

Many unions are working hard to adapt to changes in the economy and the structure of employment. But they are crucial in our age of zero-hours and sessional contracts, tribunal fees and no effective civil legal aid for male and female workers in employment disputes. An age in which the worst workplaces resemble totalitarian regimes where employees are told how to dress, who they are allowed to talk to, and when to use the toilet – and are monitored by robots or wearable tracker devices such as sociometric badges.

Despite the rise of the “gig economy” and job insecurity, and the ideological onslaught against workers’ rights in the government’s Trade Union Act 2016, there have been a number of recent practical victories by unions over the taxi app Uber, the food delivery empire Deliveroo and the delivery firm CitySprint. Similar cases against the courier companies Addison Lee, eCourier and Excel will follow this year.



Guardian Today: the headlines, the analysis, the debate - sent direct to you
Read more
Democracy is not just about voting in a general election every four or five years. As one senior national union organiser described it, we have lurched into a situation where clocking into work involves clocking out of liberal western democracy. A healthy employment relationship should not involve giving up our rights as citizens within working hours. Being closely timed, micro-monitored and controlled are invasions of human dignity.

The GMB organiser Nadine Houghton, a rising star among women trade unionists, wrote recently that working-class women were the unsung heroes of 2016. Teaching assistants in Derby and Durham, 95% of whom are female, took action against pay cuts of up to 25%. Female hospital workers, cleaners, hostesses and catering staff took on the multinational private contractor Aramark in the South London and Maudsley NHS Trust. Two Ecuadorian cleaners, members of the United Women of the World Union, launched the campaign against Philip Green’s Topshop for a living wage.

Striking machinists at Ford Dagenham’s car plant in June 1968
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Striking machinists at Ford Dagenham’s car plant in June 1968 Photograph: Bob Aylott/Getty Images
And unions are now taking the concerns of their women members on board more than ever. The TUC leader, Frances O’Grady, champions its work on equalities issues. It is also developing a range of policy and campaign work in previously neglected areas, such as tackling discrimination against older women. A recent TUC seminar on the menopause was packed out, and attended by male health and safety officers from the rail and fire brigade unions. Aslef, the train drivers’ union, has negotiated a menopause workplace agreement, and Wales TUC has done a survey on this issue. Work on abortion rights, sexual harassment and violence against women continues to be a priority.

Although most unions are still led by men, there are a number of impressive women deputies; moreover, female trade unionists took Labour seats in parliament in 2015, and have had jobs in Jeremy Corbyn’s shadow cabinet. For example, Angela Rayner, the shadow education minister, was a care worker from Stockport who became a rep and then a senior steward for Unison. Kate Osamor, the shadow international development secretary, and Rachael Maskell, until her recent resignation the shadow environment secretary, both entered politics via Unite.

We can’t let Silicon Valley companies and their spin undermine workers’ rights
Jason Moyer-Lee
Read more
Theresa May pays lip service to fair play on equal pay; but her government is doing nothing to alleviate the austerity that hits women hardest, and will hit harder still if it fails to protect employment rights when we leave the EU.

  O’Grady called on ministers to “help parents to share out caring responsibilities more equally and challenge workplace discrimination full on”.


Next month’s TUC Women’s Conference begins on International Women’s Day, which emerged over a century ago directly out of the activism of women in the labour movement, demanding better pay and conditions as well as the vote. Today equal pay and the gender pay gap are increasingly at the forefront of trade union campaigning. By finding new ways to support its female members, the movement is growing anew from some of its strongest roots.

Since you’re here …
… we’ve got a small favour to ask. More people are reading the Guardian than ever, but far fewer are paying for it. Advertising revenues across the media are falling fast. And unlike many news organisations, we haven’t put up a paywall – we want to keep our journalism as open as we can. So you can see why we need to ask for your help. The Guardian’s independent, investigative journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce. But we do it because we believe our perspective matters – because it might well be your perspective, too.

If everyone who reads our reporting, who likes it, helps to support it, our future would be much more secure.

首先想想“unions”的含义是什么?“union”可表达“永结同心”,但是如果文章标题是“With women at the forefront, the unions are relevant again”,那么......。本文选自于《卫报》(2017年6月)。
【回音壁】上次有一个词汇题consider,可以按照for example的理解和用法理解。
【精选】

(1) So how can the powerless get their voices heard?

(2) Once trade unions were the obvious answer, but 55% of today’s workforce in Britain has never been in a union.

(3) Break this down by age, and the picture is even starker.

(4) Of those aged 16 to 24, fewer than 10% are unionised; and for 25- to 35-year-olds, the robust and energetic drivers of the economy, it’s only one in five.

(5) Although films such as Made in Dagenham, about the 1968 strike by female workers at Ford’s Dagenham car plant, reminded us of women’s role in union history, media coverage more often harks back to the 1970s stereotype of beer and sandwiches.

(6) And the continuing dispute between Southern rail and the unions, which flared up with another strike on Wednesday, does little to dismiss  this myth.
【解词】

to get their voices heard 让他人听到自己的观点

trade unions 行业工会

stark* a. 完全的(超刚词)

robust and energetic drivers of the economy 经济的强劲推动力量

Made in Dagenham 这部影片讲述的是1968年,850名英国福特汽车公司位于戴根纳姆(Dagenham)的工厂女工走上街头罢工抗议工作待遇的性别歧视。这场罢工很快席卷全英国,最终帮助实现了英国女性和男性员工的同工同酬。

to remind ... of 提醒

media coverage 媒体报道

to hark* back to 重提; 回忆起(过去的事)(超纲)

stereotype* n. 固定形象,陈词滥调

to flare up v. 闪现



【解句】

第(6)句Although films such as Made in Dagenham, about the 1968 strike by female workers at Ford’s Dagenham car plant, reminded us of women’s role in union history, media coverage more often harks back to the 1970s stereotype of beer and sandwiches.

(1)句子的主干为media coverage more often harks back to the 1970s stereotype of beer and sandwiches(主谓宾结构)。

(2)句首although引导让步状语从句,主语为films,谓语为reminded us of women’s role in union history.

(3)其中,about the 1968 strike by female workers at Ford’s Dagenham car plant介词短语修饰film.



【译文】

(1)怎样才能让弱势者的声音被他人听到?

—— So how can the powerless get their voices heard?

(2)曾几何时,行业工会便是答案所在;但是,当今在英国55%的工人从未参加过工会组织。

——Once trade unions were the obvious answer, but 55% of today’s workforce in Britain has never been in a union.

(3)按照年龄段分析,这种情况更为严酷。

—— Break this down by age, and the picture is even starker.

(4)年龄在16到24岁的人中,不到10%的人加入工会。而25岁至35岁的人是经济的强劲驱动力,可只有20%的人加入工会。

—— Of those aged 16 to 24, fewer than 10% are unionised; and for 25- to 35-year-olds, the robust and energetic drivers of the economy, it’s only one in five.

(5)1968年电影《达格南制造》中描述了达格南福特汽车工厂的女工举行了罢工,尽管电影提醒了我们女性在工会发展中的作用,但媒体报道更多提到的是70年代啤酒和三明治的刻板印象。

——Although films such as Made in Dagenham, about the 1968 strike by female workers at Ford’s Dagenham car plant, reminded us of women’s role in union history, media coverage more often harks back to the 1970s stereotype of beer and sandwiches.

(6)南方铁路和工会之间持续的争论,在星期三再次爆发,但这并没有消除这个神话。





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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
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标题

今天的文章选自于《华盛顿邮报》2017年3月的文章,原文标题为“Should healthy people have to pay for chronic illnesses?”
【回音壁】孩子们说道:每天进步一点点。其实学习的事情的确如此。但是,我相信:等你们进入考场时,所发的感叹就不止是进步啦 —— 没准还有与我们平时阅读时一模一样的文章哟。


【精选】

(1) House Speaker Paul Ryan received a considerable dose of criticism for his comment that “the fatal conceit of Obamacare” is that “the people who are healthy pay for the people who are sick.”

(2) Critics were probably too quick to dismiss Ryan’s remarks as ignorant.

(3) What he said reflects a long-standing vision of many on the right about who should pay for the chronically ill.

(4) Spreading the costs so that healthy people pay more than their own care likely will warrant in a given year is one option.

(5) But that’s not the solution Republicans have traditionally favored.

(6) Their answer for health care, as for old-age support, is to put a greater burden on individuals to pay for the costs they incur.



【解词】

considerable a. 相当的

dose n. 一次,一番,一份

fatal a. 致命的

conceit n. 自负,傲慢

to dismiss ... as 把...视为...而不加考虑

remark n. 话语

ignorant a. 无知的

chronically adv. 慢性地

to warrant v. 使有必要,使正当

option n. 选择

to incur v. 招致



【解句】

第(4)句Spreading the costs so that healthy people pay more than their own care likely will warrant in a given year is one option.

(1)句子的主干为Spreading the costs ... is one option (主系表)。

(2)连词so that 引导目的状语从句,即healthy people pay more than their own care likely will warrant in a given year. 在这个目的状语从句中,又有一个than的比较状语从句。



【译文】

(1)众议院议长保罗·莱恩评论说,“‘奥巴马医改计划’的致命自负”是“健康的人为生病的人买单”,他也由于这一观点而招致了大量的批评。

—— House Speaker Paul Ryan received a considerable dose of criticism for his comment that “the fatal conceit of Obamacare” is that “the people who are healthy pay for the people who are sick.”

(2)评论家们反应太快,并没有把莱恩的话视为无知。

——Critics were probably too quick to dismiss Ryan’s remarks as ignorant.

(3)在他的言语中反映着许多右派人士关于谁应该为慢性病买单的长期看法。

——What he said reflects a long-standing vision of many on the right about who should pay for the chronically ill.

(4)分摊成本以至于在特定的一年内健康人群支付的要比医疗可能须要的多,这种分摊是一种选择。

——Spreading the costs so that healthy people pay more than their own care likely will warrant in a given year is one option.

(5)但那并不是共和党人历来青睐的解决方案。

——But that’s not the solution Republicans have traditionally favored.

(6)他们对医疗保健的的回答,就像对养老问题的回答一样,就是让造成花销的个人去担当更大的负担。

—— Their answer for health care, as for old-age support, is to put a greater burden on individuals to pay for the costs they incur.





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标题

Surprising stories about Winston Churchill just keep on coming. He has long been praised for his courage, wisdom, eloquence and many other qualities, but people have been amazed to learn this week that he was also a scientific visionary.

The revelation comes from the US National Churchill Museum in Missouri, where the astrophysicist Mario Livio uncovered Churchill’s “lost” 1939 essay about the possible existence of alien life, titled Are We Alone in the Universe? It demonstrates a remarkably high level of scientific literacy and far-sightedness, Livio points out. Yet this is only part of a much bigger story, too long neglected. Churchill had a long career as a topical science writer and he appreciated the importance of new breakthroughs to the development of civilisation better than any other leading western political leader of the past century.

In an age of robots, schools are teaching our children to be redundant
George Monbiot
George Monbiot  Read more
Although Churchill had no great aptitude for science, from his days as a solider he believed he needed to have a basic appreciation and knowledge of the subject if he were to achieve his ambition of becoming prime minister. As a subaltern in India, he read Charles Darwin as well as the author who probably most shaped his appreciation of science and its role in military and civilian life: HG Wells. Soon after Churchill became an MP, he made it his business to have a quiet dinner with Wells, whose every book Churchill claimed to have read twice.

In 1914, Wells published his scientific romance The World Set Free, in which he introduced the term “atomic bombs”. Churchill first alluded to these weapons – each “no bigger than an orange” but “able to blast a township at a stroke” – in his 1925 essay Shall We All Commit Suicide? The essay is shot through with a Wellsian fear of dreadful new weapons, especially chemical ones, which threatened to change the entire nature of warfare, as battlefield conflicts between soldiers became less important than scientists working in the back rooms.

By the time Churchill published this essay, his relations with Wells had cooled, and he began to take scientific advice from Frederick Lindemann, a professor of physics at Oxford University. Though widely disliked as a prig, Lindemann was undoubtedly smart and had an enviable gift for setting out complicated scientific ideas in an accessible way. No less important for Churchill, Lindemann was as loyal as a lapdog and always eager to offer his advice, not only on science but every other subject under the sun.

Churchill built his reputation as a politician exceptionally well-versed in technical matters
Through Lindemann’s lucid briefings, Churchill built his reputation as a politician exceptionally well-versed in technical matters and able to knock out entertaining essays on science. The literacy that so impressed Livio in the article on alien life is most appropriately attributed to Lindemann, although Churchill will also have benefited from his reading of Olaf Stapledon’s science-fiction masterpiece, Last and First Men, which was published in 1930.

A year later, Churchill published his famous essay Fifty Years Hence, a 4,000-word meditation on the effects that science might have in the future. It looked ahead to a wide variety of new developments, including wireless telephones, the potential of robots, the artificial cultivation of animals in laboratories and, above all, the release of nuclear energy to power societies and build weapons of unprecedented destructiveness. Churchill wrote that scientists were looking for “the match to set the bonfire alight”. Eight weeks after the essay’s publication, a Cambridge experimenter discovered the match, the sub-atomic particle he called the neutron.

Even more widely read than Fifty Years Hence was Churchill’s foray into science journalism for the News of the World. In the 1930s, when he was in the political wilderness, he wrote several articles about possible future applications of new science. One of his themes, briefed by Lindemann, of course, was the possible impact of nuclear technology at a time when another war was looming. Most leading physicists at the time were extremely sceptical that this type of energy was likely to be important in the foreseeable future. But Churchill had other ideas. In late 1937, he explained to millions of readers that nuclear energy may soon be captured, with potentially frightening consequences. Less than 12 months later, nuclear fission was discovered by two scientists working in Berlin, capital of Hitler’s Germany. From a scientific point of view, he was supremely well-equipped to deal with the impending nuclear age.

But Churchill’s interest in science is not news to scholars. His writings – in almost every draft – have been publicly available among his papers which are stored the magnificent Archives Centre in Churchill College, Cambridge. A few years ago, his archive was made available online. His essay on aliens was not in fact lost, but hidden in plain sight.

From those papers, we can see that Churchill still has much to teach his successors. One Sunday in April 1926, when Churchill was chancellor of the exchequer and preparing his budget, he set aside his papers for the morning and dictated a summary of quantum theory. Can anyone seriously imagine any political leader today using their downtime to brush up on their understanding of string theory?
英语语言大师除了莎士比亚外,还有丘吉尔(Churchill)。考研翻译中时常出现人物评论,涉及各领域的牛人,比如:Darwin, Newton, Whorf, Beethoven等等。
今天的文章标题为“Churchill’s scientific papers reveal an even greater politician than we thought”。我们一起分享原文吧。
【回音壁】基础班讲义有关译文和解析明天上传新浪博客。
【精选】



(1) Although Churchill had no great aptitude for science, from his days as a solider he believed he needed to have a basic appreciation and knowledge of the subject if he were to achieve his ambition of becoming prime minister.

(2) As a subaltern in India, he read Charles Darwin as well as the author who probably most shaped his appreciation of science and its role in military and civilian life: HG Wells.

(3) Soon after Churchill became an MP, he made it his business to have a quiet dinner with Wells, whose every book Churchill claimed to have read twice.



【解词】

aptitude n. 天资,能力

to achieve his ambition 实现抱负

prime minister 首相

subaltern* 陆军中尉

to shape v. 塑造,影响

to claim v. 声称



【解句】

第(2)句As a subaltern in India, he read Charles Darwin as well as the author who probably most shaped his appreciation of science and its role in military and civilian life: HG Wells.

(1)句子的主干为he read Charles Darwin(主谓宾)。句首as a subaltern in India介词短语作状语。

(2)连词as well as连接Darwin和the authr。连词who引导定语从句who probably most shaped his appreciation of science and its role in military and civilian life: HG Wells修饰the author.

(3)句末HG Wells与the author为同位语。



【译文】

(1)尽管丘吉尔在科学上没有伟大的天赋,但从他当兵的那天起,他认为如果要实现成为首相的抱负,他就需要对该主题有一个基本的认知和了解。

——Although Churchill had no great aptitude for science, from his days as a solider he believed he needed to have a basic appreciation and knowledge of the subject if he were to achieve his ambition of becoming prime minister.

(2)在印度当陆军中尉时,他认真阅读了Charles Darwin的作品,还有HG Wells作品,后者可能影响了他对科学的重视以及对科学在军事和民用中作用的重视。

——As a subaltern in India, he read Charles Darwin as well as the author who probably most shaped his appreciation of science and its role in military and civilian life: HG Wells.

(3)丘吉尔成为国会议员后不久,他在晚餐时间都会安静阅读Wells的作品,并声称Wells的书都读过两遍。

—— Soon after Churchill became an MP, he made it his business to have a quiet dinner with Wells, whose every book Churchill claimed to have read twice.




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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 8楼  发表于: 2017-05-10 0



标题

If you had to guess the organ that has undue influence on your emotions, your mood, even your choices, what would you guess? The brain? Sure, but what else? The heart—that mythological seat of the soul? Not quite. The stomach? You’re getting warmer. Would you believe it’s the large and small intestine, collectively known as the gut? More specifically, it’s the trillions of bacteria—the microbiota—that live in your gut. Each of us carries up to four and a half pounds of bacteria around in our guts at any given time. More than 100 trillion microbes live down there. That’s as many cells as make up the rest of your body.
Now, this crowd is mostly good guys, and they do important work, to the extent that some scientists advocate classifying these collective microbiota as its own organ. Aside from helping digest our food, they protect us from disease, neutralize some of the toxic by-products of the digestive process, and make it harder for bad bacteria to set up shop. In short, your gut does way more than just digest everything from Cheetos to camembert.
But it turns out gut bacteria may also affect how we feel. Who knew the next frontier in mental well-being would lead right to the toilet? With that lovely image in mind, here are 3 big ways our microbiota are connected to our mental health.
toxic n. 毒素



【解句】

第(1)句Then the crowd of 100 trillion microbes living in the gut is mostly good guys, and they do important work, to the extent that some scientists advocate classifying these collective microbiota as its own organ.

(1)句子切分点在连词and位置。连词and连接的两个分句Then the crowd of 100 trillion microbes living in the gut is mostly good guys, and they do important work. 在第1分分句中living the gut是现在分词修饰microbes.

(2)连接词to the extent that引导状语从句。

(3)从句主干为some scientists (主语) advocate (谓语) classifying these collective microbiota as its own organ(动名词作宾语)。其中classify ... as 为搭配关系。



【译文】

(1)那么,肠道中的100兆微生物群体大多是有益的,它们发挥重要作用,在某种程度上,一些科学家主张将这些集体微生物分类为身体的器官。

——Then the crowd of 100 trillion microbes living in the gut is mostly good guys, and they do important work, to the extent that some scientists advocate classifying these collective microbiota as its own organ.

(2)除了帮助消化食物外,它们还保护我们免受疾病的侵害,化解消化过程中副产品的毒性以及使坏菌更难“开业”。

——Aside from helping digest our food, they protect us from disease, neutralize some of the toxic by-products of the digestive process, and make it harder for bad bacteria to set up shop.

(3)但是,结果表明肠道细菌也可能影响我们的感受。

——But it turns out gut bacteria may also affect how we feel.  \




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举报 只看该作者 9楼  发表于: 2017-05-10 0



标题

It is widely accepted that when popular figures descend into corruption, they do so a little at a time. Consider the case of Bernie Madoff, the perpetrator of the largest Ponzi scheme in history. According to some accounts, his far-reaching fraud began with making up a few figures on some client investment reports. Over time, this seemingly minor peccadillo snowballed into a $65 billion swindle.
But is this “slippery slope” view of corruption really accurate? New research published in Psychological Science suggests the answer may be “not always.” Instead, acts of corruption may often emerge all at once: right at the moment a person in power is granted a “golden opportunity.” This has implications for everything from banks to corporations—as well as for the current state of American politics.
The purpose of this study (conducted, in part, by the last two authors of this article) was to investigate the conditions that lead people to behave corruptly. To do this, we created the so called the “corruption game.” The corruption game takes place in a series of five rounds. Subjects play the role of a CEO of a construction company. The aim of the CEO in each round is to win a contract worth $120,000. To accomplish this, the CEO must outbid a competitor in an auction run by a government official. The CEO can place bids in $10,000 increments from $0 to $50,000. In the event that the CEO and the competitor bid the same amount, the contract is split evenly between them. This is known as the “fair bidding” process.
To circumvent the fair bidding process, the CEO is given the opportunity to bribe the government official. This causes the official to bestow the full value of the contract on CEO in the event of a tie.
Subjects are assigned to two conditions. In the “slippery slope” condition, opportunities to bribe increase gradually. First, subjects are given the opportunity to make a Small Bribe: to invite the public official to a banquet. If they choose this option, the public official will give them an advantage in 50% of subsequent ties. Subjects are then given the opportunity to offer the Big Bribe: an expenses-paid trip to Paris. By accepting this offer, the official agrees to give the CEO unfair advantage on all subsequent ties.
The other experimental condition is the “steep cliff” condition. In this condition, subjects are simply given the chance to offer the Big Bribe.
Simply put, the conditions differ solely according to whether or not the Big Bribe is preceded by a Small Bribe.
The main question was: in which condition would players bribe more? If the “slippery slope” theory is true, more people should enact the Big Bribe when it’s preceded by the smaller. On the other hand, if more people bribe in the “steep cliff” condition, it would suggest that they are more likely to break rules of morality when given an unexpected opportunity.
The results supported the second conclusion. More people attempted to bribe the public official when the opportunity for corruption was presented all-at-once than little-by-little. This effect held true across several variations of the study, including those run online and in person, and using both imaginary and actual money. When the right moment arises, people leap at the chance to swindle.
Precisely why people are more prone to corruption when they are given a golden opportunity remains to be determined. Past research on dishonesty shows that, because people feel an intense need to see themselves as moral and just, they are most likely to act dishonestly when they feel they are justified in doing so. The worst crooks are the ones who can convince themselves they’re angels.
Perhaps, then, the reason corruption happens on a “steep cliff” is that it is easier for people to maintain this angelic self-image when they commit a single, solitary sin than when they sin repeatedly over time. They are better able to rationalize their behavior, telling themselves it’s just a “one time thing.”
Alternatively, the “golden opportunity” may give people the feeling that they’re finally getting what they deserve.
Whatever the underlying explanation, the results of this experiment shed some light on the current American political situation. The 2016 Presidential election thrust into power a man whose relationship to ethics is tenuous at best. Moreover, members of his administration, shunted to the sidelines during Obama’s tenure, have suddenly been granted heretofore unimagined responsibility. This opens the door for golden opportunities to work the levers of power in unscrupulous ways. Citizens concerned with upholding basic moral standards in the American political system should be on the lookout, not just for a gradual unraveling of ethical principles, but also for swift and egregious attempts to undermine the system for personal gain.  
今天文章摘自于《科学美国人》(2017年2月),标题为“The path to wrongdoing is sometimes more like a cliff than a slippery slope”。

“wrongdoing”是一个概念外延较大的概念,在不同语境中表达不同的内含。在今天的文章中的“wrongdoing”和“corruption, perpetrator,fraud”照应。
【精选】

(1) It is widely accepted that when popular figures descend into corruption, they do so a little at a time.

(2) Consider the case of Bernie Madoff, the perpetrator of the largest Ponzi scheme in history.

(3) According to some accounts, his far-reaching fraud began with making up a few figures on some client investment reports.

(4) But is this “slippery slope” view of corruption really accurate?

(5) New research published in Psychological Science suggests the answer may be “not always.”

(6) Instead, acts of corruption may often emerge all at once: right at the moment a person in power is granted a “golden opportunity.”

(7) This has implications for everything from banks to corporations — as well as for the current state of American politics.



【解词】

to descend into corruption 陷入腐败

Consider the case of 考虑一下这种情况:

perpetrator* n. 犯罪者

the Ponzi scheme  庞氏骗局

According to some accounts 据一些报道

far-reaching 意义深远的

fraud* n. 欺骗;骗子;诡计(超刚词)

slippery slope 灾难性的急剧下滑

to emerge v. 出现

all at once 突然

to grant v. 准许; 授予

implications n. 影响



【解句】

第(2)句Consider the case of Bernie Madoff, the perpetrator of the largest Ponzi scheme in history.

(1)这个句子虽不复杂,但consider的用法值得注意。第(2)句引出某种事实或细节,以说明上文表述的观点。其英语解释为“important or relevant to a viewpoint”。

(2)现给出一个完形填空的题目,以检测孩子们的理解:1. [A] Suppose [B] Consider [C] Observe [D] Imagine。原文为Research on animal intelligence always makes us wonder just how smart humans are. (1) ____, the fruit-fly experiments described by Carl Zimmer in the Science Times.

(3)本题应该选择[B]。



【译文】

(1)人们普遍认为,当受欢迎的人物陷入腐败时,他们也是循序渐进。

——It is widely accepted that when popular figures descend into corruption, they do so a little at a time.

(2)想一想史上最大的庞氏骗局的犯罪人Bernie Madoff。

——Consider the case of Bernie Madoff, the perpetrator of the largest Ponzi scheme in history.

(3)根据某些说法,他影响深远的骗术是编造一些客户投资报告上的数字开始的。

—— According to some accounts, his far-reaching fraud began with making up a few figures on some client investment reports.

(4)但是,这种腐败“急剧下滑”观点真的准确吗?

——But is this “slippery slope” view of corruption really accurate?

(5)发表在《心理科学》的新的研究表明,答案可能是“不总是”。

——New research published in Psychological Science suggests the answer may be “not always.”

(6)相反,腐败行为可能突然出现:在合适的时空某人获得了“黄金机会”。

——Instead, acts of corruption may often emerge all at once: right at the moment a person in power is granted a “golden opportunity.”

(7)从银行到公司,那都有重大影响 —— 对美国政治的现状也有重大意义。

——This has implications for everything from banks to corporations — as well as for the current state of American politics.




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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 10楼  发表于: 2017-05-11 0



标题
If you had to guess the organ that has undue influence on your emotions, your mood, even your choices, what would you guess? The brain? Sure, but what else? The heart—that mythological seat of the soul? Not quite. The stomach? You’re getting warmer. Would you believe it’s the large and small intestine, collectively known as the gut? More specifically, it’s the trillions of bacteria—the microbiota—that live in your gut. Each of us carries up to four and a half pounds of bacteria around in our guts at any given time. More than 100 trillion microbes live down there. That’s as many cells as make up the rest of your body.
Now, this crowd is mostly good guys, and they do important work, to the extent that some scientists advocate classifying these collective microbiota as its own organ. Aside from helping digest our food, they protect us from disease, neutralize some of the toxic by-products of the digestive process, and make it harder for bad bacteria to set up shop. In short, your gut does way more than just digest everything from Cheetos to camembert.
But it turns out gut bacteria may also affect how we feel. Who knew the next frontier in mental well-being would lead right to the toilet? With that lovely image in mind, here are 3 big ways our microbiota are connected to our mental health.
如果你认为今天文章有可信度(credibility),那么应该在考研过程中调节好你的饮食。今天的文章摘自于《科学美国人》(2017年2月),标题为“Is Your Gut Making You Depressed or Anxious?”
【回音壁】“given”的确是“give”的过去分词,但“given”若作形容词,可理解为“规定的;特定的”;若作介词,可理解为“考虑到,鉴于”(when you consider sth)。具体情况据语境决定。
【精选】

(1) Then the crowd of 100 trillion microbes living in the gut is mostly good guys, and they do important work, to the extent that some scientists advocate classifying these collective microbiota as its own organ.

(2) Aside from helping digest our food, they protect us from disease, neutralize some of the toxic by-products of the digestive process, and make it harder for bad bacteria to set up shop.

(3) But it turns out gut bacteria may also affect how we feel.



【解词】

trillion n. 万亿,兆

microbe n. 微生物

gut n. 消化道,内脏

to the extent that 到...这种程度上

to advocate v. 倡导

to classify (as)v. 分类

collective a. 集体的

microbiota n. 小型生物群(构词:micro 小 + bio 生物)

organ n. 器官

to digest v. 消化

to neutralize v. 使无效,抵消

toxic n. 毒素



【解句】

第(1)句Then the crowd of 100 trillion microbes living in the gut is mostly good guys, and they do important work, to the extent that some scientists advocate classifying these collective microbiota as its own organ.

(1)句子切分点在连词and位置。连词and连接的两个分句Then the crowd of 100 trillion microbes living in the gut is mostly good guys, and they do important work. 在第1分分句中living the gut是现在分词修饰microbes.

(2)连接词to the extent that引导状语从句。

(3)从句主干为some scientists (主语) advocate (谓语) classifying these collective microbiota as its own organ(动名词作宾语)。其中classify ... as 为搭配关系。



【译文】

(1)那么,肠道中的100兆微生物群体大多是有益的,它们发挥重要作用,在某种程度上,一些科学家主张将这些集体微生物分类为身体的器官。

——Then the crowd of 100 trillion microbes living in the gut is mostly good guys, and they do important work, to the extent that some scientists advocate classifying these collective microbiota as its own organ.

(2)除了帮助消化食物外,它们还保护我们免受疾病的侵害,化解消化过程中副产品的毒性以及使坏菌更难“开业”。

——Aside from helping digest our food, they protect us from disease, neutralize some of the toxic by-products of the digestive process, and make it harder for bad bacteria to set up shop.

(3)但是,结果表明肠道细菌也可能影响我们的感受。

——But it turns out gut bacteria may also affect how we feel.  \


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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 11楼  发表于: 2017-05-11 0




标题

今天的文章选自于《新科学家》(2017年3月),原文标题为“Your Facial Bone Structure Has a Big Influence on How People See You”。
【回音壁】
五月份是该开始做一些真题的时候了。有些孩子问到:怎么做法?我的建议是:
(1)要么整套试一试?
(2)要么把阅读部分当做整体试一试?
(3)要么一篇一篇试一试?
总之,建议:
(1)先做一下;
(2)在看解析(可参见我的新浪博客中的真题解析部分);
(3)在暑假强化听课后,再分析一遍(届时肯定还有新的发现)!
【精选】

(1) We can alter our facial features in ways that make us look more trustworthy, but don’t have the same ability to appear more competent.

(2) A face resembling a happy expression, with upturned eyebrows and upward curving mouth, is likely to be seen as trustworthy while one resembling an angry expression, with downturned eyebrows, is likely to be seen as untrustworthy.

(3) However, competence judgments are based on facial structure, a trait that cannot be altered, with wider faces seen as more competent.



【解词】

to alter v. 改变;更改

facial features 面部特征

trustworthy a. 值得信赖的

competent a. 能干的,胜任的

upturned eyebrows 上翘的眉毛

upward curving mouth 向上弯曲的嘴

downturned eyebrows 下弯的眉毛

trait n. 特性,特点



【解句】

第(2)句A face resembling a happy expression, with upturned eyebrows and upward curving mouth, is likely to be seen as trustworthy while one resembling an angry expression, with downturned eyebrows, is likely to be seen as untrustworthy.

(1)句子的主干为A face ... is likely to be seen as trustworthy.

(2)其中,resembling a happy expression, with upturned eyebrows and upward curving mouth这部分可视为现在分词短语修饰face;其中,with的介词短语又充当状语。

(3)连词while之后one resembling an angry expression, with downturned eyebrows, is likely to be seen as untrustworthy作让步状语。

(4)代词one指代face。其余分析与第(2)点相似。



【译文】

(1)我们能够以让我们看起来更可信的方式改变我们的面部特征,但是要让自己看起来更能干,我们却无能为力。

——We can alter our facial features in ways that make us look more trustworthy, but don’t have the same ability to appear more competent.

(2)眉毛上翘、嘴型向上弯曲的带有幸福表情的面孔,有可能被视为可信赖的,而眉毛下弯带有愤怒表情的面孔可能被视为是不可信赖的。

——A face resembling a happy expression, with upturned eyebrows and upward curving mouth, is likely to be seen as trustworthy while one resembling an angry expression, with downturned eyebrows, is likely to be seen as untrustworthy.

(3)然而,有关能力的判断基于的是面部结构,是某种不能改变的特征,面部越宽越被视为越能干。

—— However, competence judgments are based on facial structure, a trait that cannot be altered, with wider faces seen as more competent.

【衍生词汇】

-bio- (生命,活力)

biologically (生物学地);

biography (传记);

autobiography (自传);

bio-economy (生物经济);

biomass ((单位面积或体积内的)[生态] 生物量);

biotic community(生物群落);

biostatistician(生物统计学家) ;


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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 12楼  发表于: 2017-05-11 0



标题

“lobby”(游说)在英语文化中未必含有贬义,其英语解释为:an attempt to persuade a government or council that a particular law should be changed or that a particular thing should be done。今天的文章标题为:The business case for soil. 选自于《自然》2017年3月文章。

【回音壁】dismiss一词考点不在于“解雇”。考点含义为“you decide or say that it is not important enough for you to think about or consider”(不考虑,不理会),与reject意义相近。


【精选】

(1) Businesses should join researchers in lobbying for better soil policies and practices.

(2) International legislation should be a priority.

(3) Making the case will require compelling narratives that describe the benefits of action over inaction, equivalent to, for example, the 2 °C global-warming goals.

(4) For instance, what would a 2% loss in soil carbon mean in terms of production and water storage, carbon emissions and socio-economic costs?

(5) Or what would a 40% degradation in soil resources mean in those terms?



【解词】

to lobby for 为了争取...游说

legislation n. 立法

priority n. 优先权

compelling a. 有说服力的

narrative n. 描述,记述

equivalent to 对等,等同

in terms of 就...而言

carbon emission 碳排放

degradation n. 衰败



【解句】

第(3)句Making the case will require compelling narratives that describe the benefits of action over inaction, equivalent to, for example, the 2 °C global-warming goals.

(1)句子的主干为making the case will require compelling narratives (主谓宾)。

(2)连词that引导定语从句修饰narratives.

(3)副词短语for example作插入语。

(4)名词短语equivalent to the 2 °C global-warming goals与前文benefits的构成同位语。



【译文】

(1)企业应与研究人员一起游说,争取改善土壤政策和做法。

——Businesses should join researchers in lobbying for better soil policies and practices.

(2)应该优先考虑的是国际立法。

——International legislation should be a priority.

(3)找到理由将需要有说服力的叙述,以说明有所为比无所为带来哪些益处,比如相当于2°C全球变暖的目标。

——Making the case will require compelling narratives that describe the benefits of action over inaction, equivalent to, for example, the 2 °C global-warming goals.

(4)例如,就生产和水储存、碳排放和社会经济成本而言,2%的土壤碳损失意味着什么?

——For instance, what would a 2% loss in soil carbon mean in terms of production and water storage, carbon emissions and socio-economic costs?

(5)或者就这些方面而言,40%的土壤资源退化意味着什么?

——Or what would a 40% degradation in soil resources mean in those terms?



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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 13楼  发表于: 2017-05-12 0



标题
Debts accumulated during university years are so high that students are suffering from mental ill health and cannot afford to buy food, according to new research.

Sky-high tuition fees and the rising cost of living have been blamed for “overwhelming” stress levels felt by the majority of students, with one in seven admitting they have been chased by debt collectors as a result of missing rent payments.

A survey commissioned by financial technology company Intelligent Environments found three-quarters of students who receive maintenance loans feel stressed about the amount of debt they accumulate while studying, with over a third (39 per cent) saying they cannot afford their weekly food shop.


READ MORE
Disadvantaged teenagers four times less likely to apply for university
Over a quarter of students admitted to missing rent payments, with three in five polled (58 per cent) running out of money completely before their next payment is due.

Estelle Clarke, advisory board member for the Intergenerational Foundation, said the findings were particularly concerning in light of recent Government moves to sell off student loan debts to private companies.

She said: “There is an undisputed negative relationship between debt and mental health. Being unable to pay bills is particularly stressful.

“Student loans put unnecessary pressure on borrowers because they are so expensive. It is upsetting to think of students depriving themselves of food and perhaps enduring loneliness, trapped in their rooms because they cannot afford to eat or go out.

“Unfortunately, the proposed sales of student loans could well make the situation even worse,” she added. “This grossly unfair reality has serious implications for mental health.”

David Webber, managing director at Intelligent Environments, called the results “worrying” and suggested banks could do more to support younger customers, in particular in managing their finances.

But industry experts warn the figures are reflective of a higher education system that is becoming increasingly unaffordable, forcing students to take out unmanageable loans they will never be able to pay off.

Ucas figures released earlier this month pointed to a dramatic fall in student application numbers from the UK and abroad, fuelling fears many students are being put off higher education due to the financial implications.
美国大学生债务太高,造成了许多问题。今天的文章摘选于《独立报》(2017年2月),原文标题为“University debts so high students are suffering 'increased mental health problems' and 'can't afford food'”。

【回音壁】(1)far from含义为“远离; 远非”,是一个隐含否定的表达,例如:“far from being relaxed(远未放松)”。(2)记住:我们只是周日休息,孩子们整理所学。
【精选】

(1) A significant proportion of students with maintenance loans said they rely on additional sources of income to get through the term, with two-thirds turning to parents or other family members in times of need.

(2) Debts accumulated during university years are so high that students are suffering from mental ill health and cannot afford to buy food, according to new research.

(3) Sky-high tuition fees and the rising cost of living have been blamed for “overwhelming” stress levels felt by the majority of students, with one in seven admitting they have been chased by debt collectors as a result of missing rent payments.



【解词】

proportion n. 比例

maintenance loans n. 生活费贷款

to turn to 求助于

to accumulate v. 积累

sky-high tuition fees 天价学费

to blame ... for 因…怪罪,责怪

to admit v. 承认

debt collectors 追债的人



【解句】

第(3)句Sky-high tuition fees and the rising cost of living have been blamed for “overwhelming” stress levels felt by the majority of students, with one in seven admitting they have been chased by debt collectors as a result of missing rent payments.

(1)句子的主干为 Sky-high tuition fees and the rising cost of living have been blamed for “overwhelming” stress levels(主语 + 谓语被动语态 + for),blame ... for ...是一个搭配。之后,过去分词短语felt by the majority of students修饰levels.

(2)逗号之后的部分为独立主格结构:with one in seven admitting ....

(3)现在分词admitting之后省略连词that,后面为admitting的宾语从句,即they have been chased by debt collectors as a result of missing rent payments。



【译文】

(1)相当比例的进行生活费贷款的学生表示,他们依靠额外的收入来源来渡过一个学期,有三分之二的学生在困难时求助于家长和其他家庭成员。

——A significant proportion of students with maintenance loans said they rely on additional sources of income to get through the term, with two-thirds turning to parents or other family members in times of need.

(2)根据新的研究,大学期间积累的债务是如此之高,以至于学生患精神疾病,没钱购买食物。

——Debts accumulated during university years are so high that students are suffering from mental ill health and cannot afford to buy food, according to new research.

(3)天价学费和增加的生活费被认为是造成多数学生“压力山大”的原因,七分之一的学生承认由于没有清偿租金被讨债人追债。

——Sky-high tuition fees and the rising cost of living have been blamed for “overwhelming” stress levels felt by the majority of students, with one in seven admitting they have been chased by debt collectors as a result of missing rent payments.


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[忆1012 1113——/6.29] [婚礼8.29][周年11.04]Ugly people and more troubl.
举报 只看该作者 14楼  发表于: 2017-05-12 0




标题

,有多少期有关词根和词缀的内容。就常考的考点而言,估计有那么几十个吧?
【精选】

(1) Physicians are noticing an influx of patients whose illnesses are directly or indirectly related to global warming.

(2) “I view this as one of the largest environmental health crises of our time because of the many pathways in which climate affects us — be it from direct heat effects and heat waves in urban centers, ground-level smog, ozone red alert days, stuffy air masses and warmer temperatures, to some infectious diseases,” said Jonathan Patz, director of the Global Health Institute at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

(3) The group, called the Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health, intends to advocate for climate change and health awareness among the public and policymakers.



【解词】

physician n. 内科医生

influx* n. (超纲词)

pathway n. 途径,路径

smog n. 烟雾

ozone red alert days 臭氧红色警戒日

stuffy air masses 闷热的空气

infectious a. 传染的

consortium* n. 财团; 组合,共同体 (超纲词)

to advocate v. 倡导



【解句】

第(2)句I view this as one of the largest environmental health crises of our time / because of the many pathways / in which climate affects us / — be it from direct heat effects and heat waves in urban centers, ground-level smog, ozone red alert days, stuffy air masses and warmer temperatures, / to some infectious diseases.

(1)句子的主干为 I view this as one of the largest environmental health crises of our time(主谓补结构)。其中view ... as 为搭配关系,as之后为补语结构。

(2)介词because of引导原因状语because of the many pathways in which climate affects us。其中,连词which引导宾语从句in which climate affects us修饰pathways。in which ...即in pathways.

(3)破折号后be it from ... to ... 是一个虚拟语气用法,“不论 ... 还是 ...”,它解释上文pathways in which climate affects us的具体内容。

(4)介词from后的名词短语作宾语,即direct heat effects and heat waves in urban centers, ground-level smog, ozone red alert days, stuffy air masses and warmer temperatures。介词to后some infectious diseases.



【译文】

(1)医生注意到大量患有与全球变暖有直接或间接关系疾病的病人来就医。

——Physicians are noticing an influx of patients whose illnesses are directly or indirectly related to global warming.

(2)麦迪逊威斯康星州大学全球健康学院的主任Jonathan Patz说,“我认为这是一次我们这个时代最大的环境健康危机之一,原因是气候影响我们的各种途径 —— 不论是城市中心的直接热效应和热浪、地表烟雾、臭氧红色警报日、闷热的空气和炙热的气温,还是一些传染性疾病。”

—— “I view this as one of the largest environmental health crises of our time because of the many pathways in which climate affects us — be it from direct heat effects and heat waves in urban centers, ground-level smog, ozone red alert days, stuffy air masses and warmer temperatures, to some infectious diseases,” said Jonathan Patz, director of the Global Health Institute at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

(3)该组织又称为气候和健康医疗协会联盟,打算在公众和政策制定人中宣传气候变化和健康意识。

—— The group, called the Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health, intends to advocate for climate change and health awareness among the public and policymakers.


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举报 只看该作者 15楼  发表于: 2017-05-14 0
谢谢分享。
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