时间:2018-12-04 作者:英语课 分类:词汇大师(Wordmaster)


英语课

AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on Wordmaster -- how a piece of land between Europe and Asia got the name "America."


RS: The name honors the Italian-born explorer and navigator Amerigo Vespucci. "America" first appeared on a world map in fifteen-oh-seven, over what we now call South America.


AA: Only one copy of America's so-called birth certificate is known to survive. It's now in the hands of the Library of Congress here in Washington.


RS: But the library has to raise ten-million dollars to buy it from a German prince. The big map was housed for more than three-hundred-fifty years in his family's castle.


AA: Now here's the story of the map: Amerigo Vespucci first set out for this part of the world in fourteen-ninety-nine.


RS: But, let's not forget Christopher Columbus. He set out for the New World seven years earlier, in fourteen-ninety-two.


AA: Right, but when Columbus touched land he thought he was in Asia. It was Vespucci who writes of finding a "Mondus Novus," Latin for "New World." Professor David Woodward at the University of Wisconsin is editor of "The History of Cartography." He says Vespucci's published account of what he had found inspired the German cartographer Martin Waldseemuller to put "America" on the map, and to explain his reasoning in a book called "Introduction to Cosmography."


TAPE: CUT ONE -- WOODWARD


"In that book he says, 'I don't see why anybody should rightly forbid naming this fourth part of the world Amerige, land of Americus, as it were, after its discoverer, Americus, a man of acute genius. Or America, in as much as Europe and Asia have received their names from women."


RS: OK, you recognize the name "America" -- but what about "Americus" and "Amerige"? Americus is simply Latin for Amerigo.


AA: But Professor Woodward believes "Amerige" was actually a play on words by Waldseemuller and another young scholar. They changed the g-o in Amerigo to g-e, the same Greek root as in "geography," by implication "land," to come up with "land of Americus."


TAPE: CUT TWO -- WOODWARD/SKIRBLE/ARDITTI


WOODWARD: "I'm not sure that they really expected people to seriously agree with them that this new world should be named after Amerigo Vespucci."


RS: "So did they not know that Columbus had been there first?"


WOODWARD: "They had knowledge of the Columbian voyages to the islands of the Caribbean, but not up to the mainland and Columbus himself you got the remember didn't know that he'd really reached the mainland either."


RS: "Is there anything in the literature about Amerigo Vespuci, about his reaction -- or did he ever see this?"


AA: "Did he get royalties 1 from that?"


WOODWARD: "There's no reaction in the literature at all that I've seen."


RS: "So what you're saying here, it's really the power of the press, it's printed in a booklet and finds its name on a map."


WOODWARD: "There were three times as many editions of Amerigo Vespuci's little publication published as there were of the record of Columbus' voyages. It was far more popular as a piece of literature."


RS: "So more copies in print, puts the name on the map."


WOODWARD: "And more editions in languages other than Latin."


AA: That was Professor David Woodward at the University of Wisconsin.


RS: Columbus never saw Waldseemuller's map and its tribute to Vespucci -- Columbus died in fifteen-oh-six, a year before it came out. Now interestingly, the mapmaker removed the name "America" a few years later.


RS: But by then, others had started using it, so the name stuck. Before we go, a little quiz -- do you say the "United States is" or the "United States are"?


AA: We were surprised to learn that the answer used to be "are." That changed after the eighteen-sixties. After the Civil War, "United States" became "is."


AA: University of Maryland history professor Gary Gerstle says it that before the Civil War, you were first a citizen of your state, then of the country. But after the pro-Union north defeated the Confederate states of the South, citizenship 2 became something granted directly by the federal government.


TAPE: CUT THREE -- GERSTLE


"It's not just the drive for unity 3, though, it's not just 'let's pull together,' but it's also the very particular assertion made by the unionists, the republicans, that the Union was supreme 4 and no state of the United Sates had a right to secede 5 from the Union."


RS: That's all for this week. Write us at VOA Wordmaster, Washington DC 20237 USA or word@voanews.com. With Avi Arditti, I'm Rosanne Skirble.


MUSIC: "America"/West Side Story [movie soundtrack, recorded in Hollywood in August of 1960]



1 royalties
特许权使用费
  • I lived on about £3,000 a year from the royalties on my book. 我靠着写书得来的每年约3,000英镑的版税生活。 来自辞典例句
  • Payments shall generally be made in the form of royalties. 一般应采取提成方式支付。 来自经济法规部分
2 citizenship
n.市民权,公民权,国民的义务(身份)
  • He was born in Sweden,but he doesn't have Swedish citizenship.他在瑞典出生,但没有瑞典公民身分。
  • Ten years later,she chose to take Australian citizenship.十年后,她选择了澳大利亚国籍。
3 unity
n.团结,联合,统一;和睦,协调
  • When we speak of unity,we do not mean unprincipled peace.所谓团结,并非一团和气。
  • We must strengthen our unity in the face of powerful enemies.大敌当前,我们必须加强团结。
4 supreme
adj.极度的,最重要的;至高的,最高的
  • It was the supreme moment in his life.那是他一生中最重要的时刻。
  • He handed up the indictment to the supreme court.他把起诉书送交最高法院。
5 secede
v.退出,脱离
  • They plotted to make the whole Mississippi Valley secede from the United States.他们阴谋策划使整个密西西比流域脱离美国。
  • We won't allow Tibet to secede from China and become an independent nation.我们决不允许西藏脱离中国独立。
学英语单词
Ampelopstin
annot.
antipellagra
Armairic's syndriome
asporogenous yeasts
bekoes
benzcinnoline
boneless
bounce e-mail
brabourne
catatonsis
compressing barrier
compression rod
cryptobioses
cylindrarthrosis
data base data model
date corrector click
document term matrix
down to go
emersons
environment pointer pair
environmental noise valuation
equitable share of world export trade
frat-tastic
fricka fracka
high speed neutron
historical circumstances
Holmudden
hornblenditic
hot air fan
how the land lies
Ibn Najm, Hawr
indirect protection
infielder
INSTGASE
internal capital
itaconic
marrowbone
material cycling in forest
mathematical inversion
molecular speed measurement
mung
Nivankyul
nonbasal
nonrevenue passenger
orange balsam
orthoericssonite
oscillating jet method
overhand cut and fill stoping
paddlane
Paltauf's nanism
pictographic numeral
pinkeen
plasmologen
plug in assembly
plumb the depths of
plutonium recycle reactor
popular conical projection
poxon
reciprocal linear
reciprock
relational data base capability
resazurin test
reserve for uncollected taxes
rheum rhabarbarums
rogett
rubbles
salicylamides
schwannoma of kidney
shells
single silk covered
spring accumulator
stepstools
Stokesian fluid
supersuppressor
suspender web
syringadenosus
thin source
top ... part
touching for
trachyneis aspera unilatera
transverse crosstalk
twin fallss
unassented bond
unobsequiousness
vector space isomorphism
veer and haul
vertical band-saw
warbly
water-soluble fluid
well supplied
wellborn
Western Turkestan
what is ... on
wheel papilla
whoo-whoop
willmer
Would you please pass the salt
wy-
xerophytic feature
zygophyllums