时间:2018-12-27 作者:英语课 分类:一起听英语


英语课

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Dan: Hello, I'm Dan…


Alice: And I'm Alice.


Dan: And this is 6 Minute English from the BBC. Today it's all about


computers on 6 Minute English, because we're wishing a happy


birthday to the World Wide Web!


Alice: That's right. Tim Berners-Lee published the first website 20 years ago,


in August 1991.


Dan: We should explain that the World Wide Web is different to the Internet.


A lot of people don't realise that they're different things, but in fact the


Internet was created in 1969 as a US military project, to connect


computers around the world.


Alice: But the World Wide Web was new technology that allowed people to


access information more easily.


Dan: So we know that Tim Berners-Lee published the first website using the


World Wide Web 20 years ago, in August 1991. But today's question for


you Alice is: roughly 1 how many websites are there in the world today, in


August 2011? Is it:


a) 6.5 billion


b) 12.8 billion 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2011


Page 2 of 6


c) 19.7 billion


Alice: I'll go for 12.8 billion.


Dan: OK we'll see if you're right at the end of the programme. First, let's have


a listen to the BBC reporter Richard Westcott. Here he is talking about


the 20th anniversary 2 of the World Wide Web. He uses a great word in


this report Alice – gobbledygook. Can you explain that for us?


Alice: Of course, Gobbledygook. It means language that you can't


understand; something that's nonsense 3. It comes from the sound


turkeys, I suppose, make, when they go 'gobble gobble gobble' –


they're talking gobbledygook.


Dan: Other good phrases that mean the same thing are gibberish and


mumbo jumbo. If you say someone's talking gibberish or talking


mumbo-jumbo, it means they're talking rubbish, and you can't


understand them. So listen out for the word gobbledygook in this report.


Also, how does the reporter describe the web?


Richard Westcott, BBC reporter


Now the World Wide Web is actually different from the Internet. No, I didn't


realise that either. The internet is much older; the web is actually the bit that


turns all the gobbledygook computer language into easy to read pages, all


linked together, that you can access on any computer. It's the worldwide book


that anybody can read or write.


Dan: He describes the web as a 'worldwide book that anybody can read or


write'. Because we were using easy-to-read pages, rather than


gobbledygook computer language, the web meant that, in theory,


anyone could set up a website. 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2011


Page 3 of 6


Alice: Anyone could set up a website. To set something up means to start


something or to build something. So if you set up a website you start


that website.


Dan: So the first website was set up 20 years ago at CERN, the European


Centre for Nuclear Research. But how did websites become so popular?


Professor Wendy Hall is a computer scientist at the University of


Southampton in England. She explains that as Tim Berners-Lee


spread the word about the World Wide Web other scientists set up


their own websites.


Alice: Tim Berners-Lee spread the word about the web. The phrase spread


the word means that you're telling a lot of people about something –


you're literally 4 spreading the word, like you spread butter on bread.


Dan: So let's listen to Professor Hall using the phase 5 spreading the word in


this clip 6. How does she describe the sort of people who started setting 7


up websites?


Professor Wendy Hall, University of Southampton


In the first place there was one website; the one Tim set up at CERN. As he


started spreading the word, others, very early adopters, generally, scientists,


geeks, started setting up websites.


Dan: So it was scientists, early adopters and geeks who started setting up


their own websites.


Alice: Early adopters. That's quite a new phrase. It means someone who


starts using new technology as soon as it becomes available.


Dan: And what about geeks? 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2011


Page 4 of 6


Alice: Geeks. Now, this is an interesting word. It's an American slang 8 word


that used to mean someone who was uncool or unfashionable. If you


called someone a geek it was a bit of an insult 9. But now geek quite


often means someone who is really interested in a particular topic. So


you could be an arts geek, or a history geek, or even an Englishlanguage


geek!


Dan: And these were technology geeks, who started creating their own


websites. They were the early adopters of the World Wide Web. Let's


hear the clip again, and listen carefully for the phrases 'spreading the


word', 'early adopters', 'geeks' and 'setting up.'


Professor Wendy Hall, University of Southampton


In the first place there was one website; the one Tim set up at CERN. As he


started spreading the word, others, very early adopters, generally, scientists,


geeks, started setting up websites.


Dan: OK Alice, at the beginning of the programme I asked you how many


websites are there in the world in August 2011? Is it:


a) 6.5 billion


b) 12.8 billion


c) 19.7 billion


Alice: And I guessed 12.8 billion 


6 Minute English © bbclearningenglish.com 2011


Page 5 of 6


Dan: Well 12.8 billion is a large number but in fact there are a lot more. There


are almost 19.7 billion websites in the world, according to recent figures.


That's three times the size of the earth's population. It's a huge number.


So the World Wide Web was an incredible 10 development, which let


people set up their own websites and really get the most out of the


internet.


Dan: Well Alice, we're almost at the end of the show, so could you just give


us a reminder 11 of some of the vocabulary we've heard today.


Alice: Of course, we had:


Gobbledygook


Gibberish


Mumbo-jumbo


To set something up


To spread the word


Early adopters


Geeks


Dan: Thanks Alice


Alice: See you next time!


Both: Bye! 



1 roughly
adv.概略地,粗糙地,粗鲁地
  • If you treat your coat so roughly,it will be worn out soon.你如果这么糟蹋你的外套,它很快就不能穿了。
  • The island is roughly circular in shape.这个岛屿大致是圆形的。
2 anniversary
n.周年(纪念日)
  • They celebrate their wedding anniversary annually.他们每年庆祝一番结婚纪念日。
  • Today is my parents'30th wedding anniversary.今天是我父母结婚30周年纪念日。
3 nonsense
n.胡说,废话
  • Go along with you! What you say is all nonsense!去你的!你说的全是废话!
  • "Don't talk nonsense",she said sharply.“别胡扯”,她严厉地说。
4 literally
adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实
  • He translated the passage literally.他逐字逐句地翻译这段文字。
  • Sometimes she would not sit down till she was literally faint.有时候,她不走到真正要昏厥了,决不肯坐下来。
5 phase
n.相位,时期,局面,阶段;vt.逐步执行,实行,按计划进行
  • The first phase of the project has been completed.第一期工程已经告一段落。
  • It was a very important phase of history.它是一个非常重要的历史阶段。
6 clip
n.夹子,别针,弹夹,片断;vt.夹住,修剪
  • May I clip out the report on my performance?我能把报道我的文章剪下来吗?
  • She fastened the papers together with a paper clip.她用曲别针把文件别在一起。
7 setting
n.背景
  • The play has its setting in Vienna.该剧以维也纳为背景。
  • Where and when a story takes place is called the setting.故事发生的地点和时间称为故事背景。
8 slang
n.俚语,行话;vt.使用俚语,辱骂;vi.辱骂
  • The phrase is labelled as slang in the dictionary.这个短语在这本字典里被注为俚语。
  • Slang often goes in and out of fashion quickly.俚语往往很快风行起来又很快不再风行了。
9 insult
vt.侮辱,凌辱;n.侮辱的言词或行为
  • You will insult her if you don't go to her party. 你要是不去参加她举办的聚会,就对她太无礼了。
  • I can't sit down with that insult.我不能忍受那种侮辱。
10 incredible
adj.难以置信的,不可信的,极好的,大量的
  • Some planets run at incredible speed.某些星球以难以置信的速度运行着。
  • Her answer showed the most incredible stupidity.她的回答显示出不可思议的愚蠢。
11 reminder
n.提醒物,纪念品;暗示,提示
  • I have had another reminder from the library.我又收到图书馆的催还单。
  • It always took a final reminder to get her to pay her share of the rent.总是得发给她一份最后催缴通知,她才付应该交的房租。
学英语单词
American gallinule
amine cured epoxy resin
annisimov
apodized
basic Q factor
beginning
Berlin blockade and airlift
bilinear model
break one's word
broken bracket
cercospora sojina
chalcopyrrhotite
co-covenantor
compositionfactors
Corydalis yanhusuo
Dalbergia obtusifolia
debole
dillions
Dinefwr
dioses
dynamically user microprogrammable machine
electromechanical analogy
enamel pan
exceptio quod metus causa
expansion roof tanks
eyecharts
fire control car
flipflop direct-coupled
FutureBasic
glide rocket
going price
heating mode
homelytra
HPSIS (high pressure safety injection system)
Huayabamba, R.
informatory double
invisibles
isofenchyl alcohol
judg(e)ment
key lime
Kimilili
kittywampus
lacunae of tongue
linearity potentiometer
linearly variable resistance
lymphangiectomy
macquarium
macrocephal
Melsomin
metallic reducing agent
Miaoli City
new zealand cottons
Nez Perce County
nonprepositional
nosophytes
one-range winding
opposite pole
oscillating coil
pat answer
penicilloates
Platinum strip bolometer
principal direction of curvature
Profintern
provings
pseudo-plane
puget soud pine
randel
reinstallable
reverse takeover
revived structure
rfc (radio frequency choke)
roll velocity
Rubia dolichophylla
satisfaction of a claim
seaplane parking area
search turn
severe etch virus
sexy lingerie
sign magnitude code
solenoid operated system
somatoscop
spreading process
straight peen hammer
substantivate
switching-engine
target folder
tax-deferred
tetraandrine
theory of dimensions
throttle grip
Tibet mockorange
tinctorial property
tomato pulp
transfer check
tretic conidium
twonks
uphole geophone
V.I.P.
varnished cambric
widerange oscillator
witii
yellow-bellied