时间:2018-12-27 作者:英语课 分类:一起听英语


英语课

你会选择写一本书,写出你身边的人的秘密吗?如果身边的朋友写关于你的故事,他们会写关于你的什么呢?


Yvonne: Hello, I'm Yvonne Archer 1 and this is 6 Minute English…and thanks to Kate for


joining me today! Hello, Kate.


Kate: Hello Yvonne.


Yvonne: Now, would you ever consider writing a book that spills the beans – reveals all the


secrets about someone you know?


Kate: Oh no, I don't think I could do that. I don't think it's the right thing to do, although


I know a lot of people do.


Yvonne: Well, Nobuko Kan is Japan's first lady – the wife of Japan’s Prime Minister - and


she has written a book. It’s called: "What on earth will change in Japan now you


are Prime Minister?"


Kate: Wow! I wonder what's in that? I'd love to read it.


Yvonne: Me too - but before we find out more, here’s your question, Kate: the title of


Nobuko Kan’s book is twelve words long - but of course, it’s not the longest title


in the world. Is the longest title of a book -


a: 160 words


b: 220 words or


c: 290 words?


 


Kate: I've got no idea I'm afraid, so I'm going to guess: b - 220 words.


 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 2 of 4


Yvonne: We'll find out whether you're right later on. Now, with a title like: “What on earth


will change in Japan now you are Prime Minister?” – I think we can expect


Japan’s first lady to criticise 2 a few things about her husband. Kate, can you explain


for us what the verb ‘to criticise’ means?


Kate: Well, if we criticise something or someone, we make it known that we don’t like


them and don’t approve of them. So, ‘a criticism’ is when we say what we think is


wrong with something or someone, for example, the way they look, their actions


or opinions.


Yvonne: Now, as we listen to part of a report by the BBC’s Roland Buerk in Tokyo, try to


catch three criticisms that Japan’s first lady makes about her husband.


Roland Buerk


In a book about her husband, Naoto Kan, she writes: "I wonder, is it OK that this man is Prime


Minister because I know him so well?" In a long list of his failings, she criticises his delivery of


his first policy speech in parliament, as well as his fashion sense and inability to cook.


Yvonne: Kate, we heard how Japan’s first lady included a long list of her husband’s


‘failings’ in her book – the things he’s not successful in. But what was the first of


his failings – so, the first ‘criticism’ we heard about?


Kate: Well, it was about his very first speech about policy in the Japanese parliament –


about what the government is planning to do. Mrs Kan didn’t like ‘his delivery’ –


so she criticised the way he made his speech.


Yvonne: Oh dear, so his own wife didn’t think the speech went very well. Now, the next


two criticisms were quite personal, I thought. But one could possibly affect his job


as Prime Minister while the other is unlikely to. What do you think, Kate?


Kate: Well yes, criticising the Prime Minister for ‘his fashion sense’ – the type of clothes


he wears, is definitely personal. But image is important for famous people, so


Naoto Kan really needs to dress appropriately for all occasions. 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 3 of 4


Yvonne: Hmmm – and what about the third criticism we heard about?


Kate: Oh yes – well, she criticises him for his ‘inability to cook’. And again, that’s a


personal criticism and it’s more about Naoto Kan as a husband than about him as


Japan’s Prime Minister.


Yvonne: Yes, I agree. He can still be a good Prime Minister, even if the whole world knows


he can’t cook! Well, the Kan’s have been married for forty years, so is this book a


sign of problems in their relationship? And how does the Japanese Prime Minster


feel about his wife’s book? Here’s more from the BBC’s Roland Buerk in Tokyo.


Roland Buerk


The Kans are as famous for her willingness to spar with him in public as for their enduring


marriage. The Prime Minister has called his wife his "opposition 3 in the home". Asked by


reporters about her book, Mr Kan said he was too scared to read it.


Yvonne: So, no need to worry – the Kans have an ‘enduring marriage’ – it’s strong and has


lasted a long time. And Mrs Kan is famous for wanting ‘to spar’ with her husband


in public – she’s likes to have gentle arguments with him in front of everyone. But,


the Prime Minister has a few views of his own.


Kate: Yes, he calls his wife his” opposition in the home’ – so Mrs Kan is like a


parliamentary opponent who lives with him. She criticises and questions what her


husband does at home.


Yvonne: Hmm – it sounds like she keeps him on his toes, doesn't it?


Kate: Yes, it does.


Yvonne: But I really liked Prime Minster Kan’s comment on his wife’s book – “"What on


earth will change in Japan now you are Prime Minister?"


Kate: Yes, well when it was published, the Prime Minister said he was too scared - or


afraid to read it. 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2010


Page 4 of 4


Yvonne: So Kate, if someone talked about you in a book, would you be too scared to read it?


Kate: Yes, I think I would actually. I think I wouldn't like to see someone else's opinion


of me. I hope no one will put me in a book.


Yvonne: Hmm – well, we'll have to see. Time will tell. OK, it’s time now for the answer to


today’s question. Kate, how many words did you say are in the longest ever title


for a book?


 


Kate: Well, I took a guess at this one and said 'b' 220 words.


Yvonne: The answer actually was 'c' – 290 words.


Kate: 290 words?! How did that many words fit on the page?


Yvonne: You'd be surprised.


Kate: I have to see that one.


Yvonne: Yes, the book was written in 2007 by an Italian man and it was about PR.


Kate: Public Relations.


Yvonne: That's right. But that's all for today’s 6 Minute English; thanks for joining us.


Goodbye.


Kate: Goodbye. 



1 archer
n.射手,弓箭手
  • The archer strung his bow and aimed an arrow at the target.弓箭手拉紧弓弦将箭瞄准靶子。
  • The archer's shot was a perfect bull's-eye.射手的那一箭正中靶心。
2 criticise
v.批评,评论;非难
  • Right and left have much cause to criticise government.左翼和右翼有很多理由批评政府。
  • It is not your place to criticise or suggest improvements!提出批评或给予改进建议并不是你的责任!
3 opposition
n.反对,敌对
  • The party leader is facing opposition in his own backyard.该党领袖在自己的党內遇到了反对。
  • The police tried to break down the prisoner's opposition.警察设法制住了那个囚犯的反抗。
学英语单词
a road hog
Afro hairdo
antivirus virus
Atharvaveda
backtested
bevar
bloodjournal
box piles
breather pipe
buhr stone mill
buzzer siren
canal trimmer
cell layer
clubbiness
combinator
containment by-pass sequence
dactylornegaly
de-interlacing
device dependent routine
Dhampur
diluents
down-to-time
duplicate licence
economic stagnation
embadometry
energy scheme
Euphorbia kozlovii
evaluation of project
family Leptotyphlopidae
fibular intermuscular ligament
fission fragment track
fruit pastil(le)
genus pseudotaxuss
Goldstein's rays
group marker
home-mortgage
induced test
integral separator
ionization counter
iso-amyranol
jet pipe
judgement in personal
kiahuna
kitambilla
lateral movement knob
leuk(o)-
libolite
lit-par-lit structure
liv'd
Losikha
majestatic
mandrel diameter
medivacing
mercker
moyn
multi-valued displacement
Musily silver alloy
myln
N.Mex.
negative-phase-sequence component ammeter
non-venereal sclerosing lymphangitis
nonbaryonic
Novoshakhtinskiy
odari
oilling car
Ophiopogon latifolius
Pickersgill Is.
poke-pudding
pre funded
Puerto Frey
pythonists
radio echo sounding
reactance bridge method
remind of
road-ho
rtes
saint-jude
sarcosoma
share joys and sorrows with sb
single-bank engine
skriked
slight haze
soy meal
Survey Equipment
synods
systems of macrophages
telovitrain
temperature coefficient of hreakdown voltage
thermocontact
therse
thrust horsepower (th)
thyropharyngei
tursun
two terminal net work
two-strokes
uncow
valve integrator
want and desire
wedge relaxation function
X-ray fluorescence propotional counter
xeromorphic xerophyte
yield of leather