时间:2019-02-19 作者:英语课 分类:听播客学英语


英语课

   The big news story this week was the great Market Rasen earthquake.


  We have lots of earthquakes in Britain. There are about 200 every year, but most of them are so small that people do not notice them
  The earthquake this week – in the early hours [ie between midnight and about 4am] of Wednesday morning – was different, however. It was of course, very small compared with earthquakes in other countries. But it was the biggest earthquake in Britain for 25 years, and people could feel it over a large part of England.
  The epicentre of the earthquake was close to a small town in eastern England called Market Rasen. Very little happens in Market Rasen. It is famous for …well, it isn’t famous for anything really. There is a racecourse and a man who wrote the lyrics 1 for one of Michael Jackson’s songs once went to school there. Several web-sites tell me that Charles Dickens, the famous 19th century novelist 2, described Market Rasen as “the sleepiest town in England”. However, I can’t find where Charles Dickens said this, so I don’t know if it is true.
  But everyone, and everywhere, can be world famous for 15 minutes. Market Rasen’s 15 minutes of fame was this week. On Wednesday, newspaper and TV reporters set to work to write the story of the great Market Rasen earthquake. Here are some of the things that they found :
  teacups rattled 3 in Bedfordshire;
  toothpaste fell off a bathroom shelf in Halifax;
  cupboard doors flew open in Tipton, near Birmingham;
  a radio jumped up and down in London;
  a glass of water rattled on a bedside table in Chester;
  some chimneys 4 were damaged in Yorkshire;
  a piece of stone fell off the church at Market Rasen.
  ...and a glass of water rattled on a bedside table in Chester.
  Photo by bram_app/flickr.
  As you can see, there was no story for the journalists to find. No-one was killed; only 1 person was injured 5; and damage to buildings was small. So why was the Market Rasen earthquake the big news story of the week?
  I think it is because the earthquake was an experience which everyone shared. On Wednesday morning, everyone had a personal story to tell. Some people could say how they woke up in the night. Their houses shook, and they heard a deep rumbling 6 sound. Some people knew immediately that it was an earthquake. Other people said that they were frightened because they did not know what had happened. Some people ran out of their houses to see what was happening. Other people stayed in bed and went back to sleep. And other people said that they had not woken up at all – they had slept straight through the earthquake. So, for a few hours on Wednesday morning, everyone in England could talk about the same thing.
  When people try to describe something like an earthquake, they often use the expressions “it was like…” or “it was as if…”. I found these descriptions in the newspapers:
  it was as if a giant was shaking my house;
  it was like a bomb had exploded;
  it was like a train very close to the house;
  it was as if someone had hit the house;
  it was like a plane had crashed;
  it was like a heavy lorry 7 passing the house;
  it was as if a train was going under the house;
  it was like there was a big animal on the roof.
  Listen to English will be back next week with more important news stories.

n.歌词
  • music and lyrics by Rodgers and Hart 由罗杰斯和哈特作词作曲
  • The book contains lyrics and guitar tablatures for over 100 songs. 这本书有100多首歌的歌词和吉他奏法谱。
n.小说家
  • He is really a fruitful novelist.他真是一位多产的小说家。
  • A good novelist needs great power of conception.一个好的小说家需要丰富的想象力。
慌乱的,恼火的
  • The truck jolted and rattled over the rough ground. 卡车嘎吱嘎吱地在凹凸不平的地面上颠簸而行。
  • Every time a bus went past, the windows rattled. 每逢公共汽车经过这里,窗户都格格作响。
n.烟囱( chimney的名词复数 );烟筒;(岩石间可供攀登的)狭孔;狭缝
  • the silhouette of chimneys and towers 烟囱和塔楼的轮廓
  • You can differentiate between the houses by the shape of their chimneys. 你可以凭借烟囱形状的不同来区分这两幢房子。 来自《简明英汉词典》
adj.受伤的
  • Our best defender is injured and won't be able to play today.我们最佳的防守员受伤了,今天不能参加比赛。
  • The injured men have been dug out of the snow.受伤人员从雪中被挖了出来。
n.(英)卡车;(=<美>truck)
  • The old man was run down by a big lorry.那个老人被一辆大卡车撞倒了。
  • A lorry ran down the hill out of control.卡车失去了控制,直往山下冲去。
学英语单词
abusages
aditus orbitalis
anagalactic nebula
Angemuk
anti-political
Antoinette,Marie
Aoneian fount
aortae
asequence
automatic data plotter
backs onto
belid
bobbitt
breech ring
cefamezin
cellar area
Cinnamomum pedatinervium Meissn.
composite sill
cross shaft guide
cyberjournal
day wage
dentiate
depliator
dialyzer(-ser)
discrete-time comtroller
dura mater
ebrechtella pseudovatia
enzyme chemistry
extended enterprise
fallingin
faraday roation switches
Faraway Place
filled-system thermometer
flagstone walk
forensicist
Fort Hall Indian Reservation
fresh fish carrier
gas(-lubricated) bearing
General Tariff Rate
genus Vinca
glass blister
haircares
hard-type modulator
heterozyme
hopyard
instantaneous attribute
inversion of control
isopropyl benzoate
Lao Ta
leave a bad taste in your mouth
left lymphatic duct
letter frequency in English
limiter in analog computing
lowtemperature cabinet
make harbour
manual telephone office
marchal
mohebian
morowe
motor pedicab
mycena chlorophos
negotiablecharacter of document
non-core
non-yielding assets
nonmalleable
nonsquamous
ochlerotatus
old socks
polyhelicenes
potash metasomatism
preferrred
Prymnesiaceae
Pyridine-4-Carboxaldehyde
Rabiea
reach rod eye
realties
rental and maintenance
resin-rich mica tape
revivifier
S.M.
Saint-Leger
Sajzī
sandwich-boxes
sangfroid
semiclosed-type impeller
setting centrifuge
show a clean pair of heels
silicone gel filled breast prosthetic implantation
strength of gear tooth
subject heading language
subsellia
subspecialize
syllogisms
syncholia
the lever of finance and taxation
theatricism
to lay it on the line
truthwards
up-beat
venae transversa scapulae
vote by secret ballot
wheatsheaf