时间:2019-02-19 作者:英语课 分类:听播客学英语


英语课

   In today’s podcast, we are going to talk about a birthday, and learn the English words for some of the things which you may find in a newspaper.


  First, the birthday. 190 years ago, on 5 May 1821, people in Manchester were able to buy the first edition of a new newspaper, the Manchester Guardian 1. It was a weekly newspaper, though it became a daily a few years later. It had 4 pages, and it cost 7 old pence (see the podcast on Old Money, New Money which explains what “old pence” were.) Seven pence was very expensive, but the high price was because there was a tax on newspapers. In fact, the government took 4 pence in tax for every copy sold.
  Coincidentally, 5 May 1821 was also the day when the French Emperor Napoleon died, in exile on the British island of St Helena in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. But the new Manchester Guardian did not report this important event, because the news that Napoleon had died took several weeks to reach Europe. Instead, the front page of the new newspaper carried a notice asking for information about a lost dog.
  In fact, until 50 or 60 years ago, it was normal for serious newspapers to have advertisements and notices on their front page, and news stories inside. It was only in 1952 that the Manchester Guardian started to print news stories on the front page. The editor of the paper did not like the change, but the paper’s owners thought that the newspaper needed to be more up-to-date.
  As well as news, most newspapers contain editorials – that is, articles where the editor of the paper or his staff tell us what they think about important issues and events. The Manchester Guardian generally supported liberal and progressive policies in its editorials. This was in contrast to most of the other serious newspapers in Britain, which supported moderate or right-wing policies.
  The Manchester Guardian became famous for typographical errors – or “typos” as we sometimes call them. Sometimes, there were sentences where the letters were so mixed up that it was impossible to understand them. People made fun of the typos by calling the paper the “Grauniad” (which is “Guardian” with the letters mixed up). Unfortunately, modern technology means that there are many fewer typographical errors today than there used to be, but you can relive the good old days in the quiz attached to this podcast, where there are some typographical errors for you to decipher.
  In 1959, the paper dropped “Manchester” from its title and became simply “The Guardian”. And in 1976, it moved its headquarters from Manchester to London. The paper believed that it could not be a proper national newspaper unless it was in London. Nowadays, unfortunately, London dominates the political and cultural life of England, and it seems that few important things happen anywhere else. (Scotland however is different. Scotland has a life of its own!).
  I read the Guardian every day. My parents used to read it too, in the days when it was still the Manchester Guardian. I read the news stories, both the national news and the international news. There is also a section of financial news, and of course there are the sports pages. There are advertisements for jobs, and a section called “Lonely Hearts” with little advertisements from people who are looking for partners. (I see that there is a lady who is looking for a charming and mature man in his 40s. I would reply, but I think my wife might object).
  Then there is an important section called “Comment and Debate” which contains articles about politics, and a page of letters from readers. There are obituaries 2, which means articles about the lives of people who have died recently. And of course there are reviews – of new books, films, plays and music. Some people go straight to the crossword 3 . There are in fact two crosswords 4 in the Guardian, an easy one and a cryptic 5 crossword. In a cryptic crossword, the clues are indirect and often play with the different meanings which English words can have. If I can solve two or three of the clues in the cryptic crossword, I think I am doing well.
  However, my very favourite bit of the Guardian, the bit that I turn to first every morning, is the Sudoku. Sudoku is a Japanese puzzle where you have to fit the right numbers into a grid 6 of squares. Ten years ago, no-one in Britain had ever heard of Sudoku. Then suddenly, almost overnight, Sudoku arrived. Today, all our newspapers have Sudoku puzzles, but the Guardian Sudoku is definitely the best.
  If you have to wait a long time for the next podcast, it will be because I have found a particularly difficult and interesting Sudoku to solve.

n.监护人;守卫者,保护者
  • The form must be signed by the child's parents or guardian. 这张表格须由孩子的家长或监护人签字。
  • The press is a guardian of the public weal. 报刊是公共福利的卫护者。
讣告,讣闻( obituary的名词复数 )
  • Next time I read about him, I want it in the obituaries. 希望下次读到他的消息的时候,是在仆告里。
  • People's obituaries are written while they're still alive? 人们在世的时候就有人给他们写讣告?
n.纵横字谜,纵横填字游戏
  • He shows a great interest in crossword puzzles.他对填字游戏表现出很大兴趣。
  • Don't chuck yesterday's paper out.I still haven't done the crossword.别扔了昨天的报纸,我还没做字谜游戏呢。
纵横填字谜( crossword的名词复数 )
  • Doing crosswords gives the mind some exercise. 做纵横字谜游戏能锻炼脑筋。
  • He spends all his time on crosswords and other trifles. 他把所有的时间都用在做纵横填字游戏和其他无聊的活动上。
adj.秘密的,神秘的,含义模糊的
  • She made a cryptic comment about how the film mirrored her life.她隐晦地表示说这部电影是她人生的写照。
  • The new insurance policy is written without cryptic or mysterious terms.新的保险单在编写时没有隐秘条款或秘密条款。
n.高压输电线路网;地图坐标方格;格栅
  • In this application,the carrier is used to encapsulate the grid.在这种情况下,要用载体把格栅密封起来。
  • Modern gauges consist of metal foil in the form of a grid.现代应变仪则由网格形式的金属片组成。
标签: 英语播客
学英语单词
Aegadean Islands
aerodynamics at very high altitude
airscrew-propelled vessel
along shore current
ancient ape
assert yourself
auxiliary and protective equipment
Baja California
Bazita, Dj.
belt mouldboard plow
Blaster worm
Bol'shoy Kuvay
bordered surface
cartoon test
cash flow forecasting
Chainat, Changwat
contracture of plantar fascia
count oneself lucky
deadstarted
dewire
dhoby
direct distance dialing
edding
editorial-we
El Sombrero
euphylline
fall in
feel cheap
flexitarianism
forcing pipe
free-speech
gamemasters
genus Diplodocus
geological condition type of coal mine
hanks
harbo(u)r land area
homoallylic alcohol
immunoelectroadsorption
insnared
international double litigation
interrogation points
interstage amplifier
intrusion signature
iron-monticellite
ischemic nephritis
karaoke bar
land subsidence
least square polynomial fit
lichen systematics
light ship condition
Lipizzaner
lonafarnib
match test
Michael Miles
monkey-in-the-middle
multiboards
narrow-bank amplifier
nationalist leaders
needletails
nocardiasis of hair
NSC48626
obligeant
open continuous homomorphism
open-buck inclinable press
partition data set
pay band
pewchair
phaltan
pie-powders
producer/consumer problem
pseudodifferential equations
quadrisyllabic, quadrisyllabical
raeder
rotating connection
rotor
scoring function
selection tool
special limitations on the foreign tax credit
sphenofrontal suture
squall (sq)
subprime mortgage crisis
Sukunahikona
sulfugator
superdomains
supporting tissue
tailye
tearable
than ever
thread milling
timura
track planter
transuding
tueni
undetermined constant
unforgivably
unthriftiness
upperimpression
uterine colic
wash one's hands in invisible soap
washer-dryer
wluine
write drum statement