时间:2019-01-23 作者:英语课 分类:一起听英语


英语课

玛雅预言世界末日是在2012年发生,然并卵,什么事情也没有,是我们误解了玛雅预言吗?


Alice: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English: we’ll be


talking about a story in the news and learning some vocabulary along the way.


I’m Alice and joining me today is Kaz. Hi Kaz.


Kaz: Hi there Alice.


Alice: Now, if you’re listening to this programme on the 21 December 2012 or after,


then I’m very happy to say that the world hasn’t ended.


Kaz: Alice, what do you mean the world hasn’t ended?


Alice: Well, according to the ancient Mayan civilisation 1, the people who lived in Central


America 4,000 years ago, the world was supposed to end on December 21, 2012.


Kaz: I see. Well, thank goodness they got the day wrong.


Alice: It’s very interesting though, because the ancient Mayan calendar said December


21 2012 marked the end of a 5,000 year cycle. We’ll find out more in a minute,


but first my question of the day. Kaz, December 21 is an important day in the


calendar because it is usually the shortest day of the year in the northern


hemisphere 2.


Now, what’s the word in English for this? Is it:


a) the winter equinox


b) the winter solstice


c) midwinter


Kaz: I’d say midwinter.


Alice: Well, as usual, we won’t hear the answer until the end of the programme. Now


let’s find out more about the Mayan people and their calendar, which dates back


over 5,000 years. Professor Pedro Yac, from Guatemala, held a ceremony on a


beach in Havana, Cuba, to mark the end of the Mayan calendar cycle. December


21, 2012 may not mark the end of the world, but Yac hopes people will use it as


a day to think about what is important in life:


Professor Pedro Yac:


Enough of the culture of fear. We should stop planting fear. Not in the present generations, not


in the future generations. We have to return to our roots. We are the children of mother


earth. When we forget this everything becomes complicated.


Alice: So, Professor Pedro Yac says he hopes humanity 3 returns to its roots – to think


about where we came from, how we were created.


Kaz: He says people are children of mother earth – the earth is considered to be the


source of all living things.


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2012


Page 2 of 4


Alice: And he thinks that when people forget where they come from, everything


becomes complicated.


Kaz: Interesting. He says we should stop planting fear – spreading fear.


Alice: What’s really interesting is how many people believe that the end of the world


will happen soon. According to a poll 4 by Reuters IPSOS earlier this year, nearly


10% of people believe that the end of the world is nigh - is coming. Here are two


interesting pieces of language to listen out from the next speaker. "Humanity’s


time on earth is up", which means people will die out, and "Doomsday". What’s


Doomsday Kaz?


Kaz: Doomsday is the name given to the day the world will end.


Alice: Here’s reporter Tom Santorelli:


Reporter Tom Santorelli:


Last May a Reuters IPSOS poll found that nearly 10% of people worldwide go along with the


interpretation 5 that humanity’s time on earth is up. The Doomsday prediction has spawned 7 a


glut 8 of films and books on the subject.


Alice: Reporter Tom Santorelli says the Doomsday prediction has spawned a glut of


films and books about the end of the world. A glut of – it means a lot of.


Kaz: And he used the verb 'spawned' – we usually hear that in the terms of frog spawn 6,


the thousands of little eggs a frog lays, which grow very fast.


Alice: And as the world hasn’t ended, I wonder what we can conclude from the end of


this Mayan calendar cycle. Here’s archaeologist Richard Hensen, who says it


marks a new era – a new period in time.


Archaeologist Richard Hensen:


What we see is a new era. We are privileged to witness and enjoy the end of one era that


started 3,114 years before Christ. It’s rare to have an opportunity like this to experience a


very important date.


Alice: Archaeologist Richard Hensen, who says we are privileged, fortunate, to witness


and enjoy the end of one era, and experience a new one.


Kaz: He says it’s rare to have an opportunity like this to experience a very important


date.


Alice: Now, that question I asked you at the beginning of the programme, Kaz. What’s


the name in English for the event that usually happens on or around December


21 every year in the northern hemisphere?


Kaz: And I said midwinter.


Alice: Well, it’s a bit of a trick question. Midwinter can be around December 21, but we


usually think of it as a longer period of time. And the winter equinox doesn’t


exist. Equinox means that the day is the same length as the night – so that


usually happens in March and September. So the answer I was looking for is ‘the


winter solstice’. It’s the day when the sun at noon is at its lowest altitude above


the horizon.


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2012


Page 3 of 4


Kaz: I see. So, that usually occurs in the northern hemisphere sometime around


December 21.


Alice: Yes that’s right. And before we go Kaz, could you read us some of today’s words


and phrases?


Kaz: I’d be delighted. We heard:


equinox


solstice


return to our roots


mother earth


spawned


a glut of


Alice: Thanks Kaz. And please join us again soon for more 6 Minute English from


bbclearningenglish.com.


Bye for now.


Kaz: Bye.



n.文明,文化,开化,教化
  • Energy and ideas are the twin bases of our civilisation.能源和思想是我们文明的两大基石。
  • This opera is one of the cultural totems of Western civilisation.这部歌剧是西方文明的文化标志物之一。
n.半球,半球地图
  • This animal is to be found only in the Southern Hemisphere.这种动物只有在南半球才能找到。
  • In most people,the left hemisphere is bigger than the right.多数人的左脑比右脑大。
n.人类,[总称]人(性),人道[pl.]人文学科
  • Such an act is a disgrace to humanity.这种行为是人类的耻辱。
  • We should treat animals with humanity.我们应该以仁慈之心对待动物。
n.民意测验,民意调查,选举投票
  • The result of the poll won't be known until midnight.选举结果要到午夜才能揭晓。
  • They expected a heavy poll.他们期望会有很高的投票数。
n.解释,说明,描述;艺术处理
  • His statement admits of one interpretation only.他的话只有一种解释。
  • Analysis and interpretation is a very personal thing.分析与说明是个很主观的事情。
n.卵,产物,后代,结果;vt.产卵,种菌丝于,产生,造成;vi.产卵,大量生产
  • The fish were madly pushing their way upstream to spawn.鱼群为产卵而疯狂地向上游挤进。
  • These fish will lay spawn in about one month from now.这些鱼大约一个月内会产卵。
(鱼、蛙等)大量产(卵)( spawn的过去式和过去分词 ); 大量生产
  • The band's album spawned a string of hit singles. 这支乐队的专辑繁衍出一连串走红的单曲唱片。
  • The computer industry has spawned a lot of new companies. 由于电脑工业的发展,许多新公司纷纷成立。
n.存货过多,供过于求;v.狼吞虎咽
  • The glut of coffee led to a sharp drop in prices.咖啡供过于求道致价格急剧下跌。
  • There's a glut of agricultural products in Western Europe.西欧的农产品供过于求。
学英语单词
'toons
absolute mean deviation
aggregometer
Agropoli
air-cooled graphite moderated reactor
aldehydic hydrogen
allomerisms
apex of earth motion
apodized aperture
beat-box
Bidens coronata
branded goods
broad-bean plants
Bulsār
candelabras
cheque board scan
cismadinone
Cleveland steamers
cmos gate array
contiguous sea area
cotton core
covariants
dahira obliquifascia
Danjuro
darkness adaption
directed set
divine-mind
dorsal tegmental nucleus
economic recession
epidote amphibolite
femtowebers
framework of fault
get too big for one's boots
hard right
Harmsworth, Harold Sidney
high-moisture grain silage
housekeeping digit
hydrofine
hydroiodination
industrial radiology
Itard-Cholewa sign
kaga
Kovel'
latricia
let something slide
manitology
meristoderm
Montsec
neutral position of brush
NOESY
nondefinable
nonstructural
observe measure s
periodontologists
physical shape
pincloth
polydelphous
polymorphic transition
poure
pure space science
quality circles
qualling
quantum step
Raphidia
recall of witness
regulize
reinforced concrete fence
renal embolism
reticulated veins
round mallet
scifier
selective conversion
self-murderer
sensitive plate processing
shaker convyer
sheet-ice
side tilt car
slimy waste material
small business management
smoothing by free hand
soil depleting crop
solar blind photomultiplier
speed matching
ST_easy-and-difficult_causing-difficulties-for-oneself-or-others
state correspondence error
strip a peg
super highway
tackle pulley
tar cooler box
telegraph selector
the book of fate
thread mill
three-putts
tighter than the barkon a tree
trisomy 18 syndrome
undivined
uniflow cooler
value insured rail traffic
wall of sound
whoopee do
Yemurtla
zookeep