时间:2018-12-28 作者:英语课 分类:美国精神


英语课
Explanation:
  Sometimes when an American wants you to sign your name (or write your name in a way that only you can do it, usually to show that you agree with something), he or  she will say: “Put your John Hancock here.” That phrase relates to the U.S. Declaration 1 of Independence, which was a letter that Americans wrote to let Britain know that they no longer wanted to be ruled (or controlled) by the British government. The Declaration of Independence was signed by 56 men, but John Hancock’s signature was the first and biggest signature on the document. It was so big and bold 2 (or large and showing that he was not afraid of anyone or anything), that today people say “Put your John Hancock here” when they want you to sign something.
  The Declaration of Independence was adopted (or accepted) by the original 13 states on July 4, 1776. Today we celebrate a holiday called Independence Day every Fourth of July, because that is the day when the United States got its independence (or freedom) from Britain.
  But the Declaration of Independence did more than just get independence from Britain. It also said many important things about human rights (or the things that all people should be allowed to do and to have). One of the most well-known phrases in the Declaration is that “all men are created equal.” This was important, because at the time the Declaration was written, not all men were treated equally. That is one of the reasons that Americans wanted their independence from Britain. They thought that they weren’t being treated as well as British people were being treated, so they wanted to create their own government.
  The Declaration of Independence also listed many of the Americans’ complaints (or things that they didn’t like) about the British government, like not letting them make laws where they lived, and making them pay a lot of taxes (or money that was given to the government). The list of complaints became the Americans’ justification 3 (or reason) for creating an independent country.
 
问题:

When was the Declaration of Independence adopted?
Answer:
July 4, 1776


1 declaration
n.宣布,宣告,宣言,声明(书),申报
  • We read the declaration posted on the bulletin board.我们读了贴在布告板上的声明。
  • At the recent convention a declaration was adopted.在最近举行的大会上通过了一项宣言。
2 bold
adj.果敢的,冒险的,无畏的;冒失的,鲁莽的
  • Her words were so bold that people caught their breath.她的话太大胆了,使人们都倒抽了一口气。
  • The room was decorated in bold colours.房间的色调布置得鲜明醒目。
3 justification
n.正当的理由;辩解的理由
  • There's no justification for dividing the company into smaller units. 没有理由把公司划分成小单位。
  • In the young there is a justification for this feeling. 在年轻人中有这种感觉是有理由的。
学英语单词
actinometer paper
aluminum rhodanide
Astraeus
back-filling tamper
Bardenheuer's operation
be brought up
beach pool
begild
broad image
cathodal closure clonus
channel map
character to numeric conversion
Chirita urticifolia
Churchill, Winston
conciliant
contract maintenance
crime doesn't pay
crossing disc block boundary
currockbilly mt.
decomposable channel
Dehn surgery
deterministic and stochastic Petri net
diaphragm cock
dwarf thicket
eastern-blocs
endcourts
epoxidation reaction
exclusive to someone
file buckup
fire-sealing gable
fructosamine
genus Poa
geochronologist
germinal choice
glucotrol
great depression
hair feather
half-bowl
haplophylline
hcc
heading indicator lamp
height of metacentre above keel
helium compound
iron-sulfur cluster
it is raining
jagster
job turnaround time
kuijkens
laric
liquid limit
market lead
McDougall B.
multiphoton process
naturelly
Navier-Stoke's equation
neothelomycin
Obersuhl
one-factor analysis of variance
parasorbic acid
party convention
peak hours
peltmonger
periclimenes soror
pinkeyed
prairia sabbatias
primary effect of gene
procyonids
progressive tax in excess of specific amounts
pumpmanifold
pushes back
re-raise
reactive-power capability
release circuit
Rete carpale dorsale
rock subsidence
sash pivot
screwdoun
shale-oil
Shanghai Marine Equipment Research Institute
shear coefficient
showiest
siliconization
solid state electrochemistry
sonar gear
St-Nectaire
superheavy tank
supplementary set
ticca
torsion of testicular appendage
trademark registration law
turbo-compound engine
turpid
twerkin'
unfeignedness
unit friction power
unmade
urinatory
vacuum refrigeration
venae dorsales clitoridis superficialess
villanova
viscoelastic effect
waive sth aside