时间:2018-12-28 作者:英语课 分类:英语听和读


英语课

 Anna: Hello, I'm Anna Jones and this is Entertainment.


Today we’re looking at the language used to describe glittering stones and
silver jewellery made by the well known jewellery company, Tiffany. The
Tiffany brand – a brand is a type of product made by a particular company -
was founded in 1837 by Charles Lewis Tiffany in New York and by the 1840’s
was selling diamond jewellery. Over 150 years later Tiffany is now known all
over the world for its stunning 1 jewellery. And for the first time in its history
an exhibition has opened in central London featuring over 200 pieces of
Tiffany jewellery. Our BBC Learning English colleague, John Escolme, went
along to see the exhibition and was guided around it by its curator Claire
Phillips. Claire tells us which is here favourite exhibit or piece of jewellery
featuring at the exhibition. What is it and when was it made?
Claire Philipps Dur: 11"
One of my absolute favourites is the fire opal collar made for the Paris exposition in 1900.
And at the time it was described as being the finest collection of fire opals in the world.
Anna: Claire says that “one of her absolute favourites” – one of her best-liked things –
is the “fire opal collar.” An opal is a precious stone whose colour changes
when the position of the person looking at it changes – this one is a fire opal –
the colours of fire – reds, yellows, greens and oranges. Claire describes the fire
opal collar in more detail. Listen out for some of the adjectives and other
descriptive terms that she uses:
 
Claire Philipps Dur: 33 "
Entertainment © BBC Learning English
Page 2 of 3
bbclearningenglish.com
These extraordinary glowing orange and green stones with their marvellous play of colour
arranged as a collar that would have been worn around the neck with originally a wonderful
pendant hanging from it.. The geometric patterning based on native American art but really
the river of rich orange and green stones described by Tiffany’s gemologist at the time as
“each one a miniature sunset in the palm of your hand.” .
Anna: Claire uses some lovely language to describe the fire opal collar. She uses the
adjective “glowing” which means that the stones are producing a continuous
light. The stones are arranged as a collar that would have been worn around
the neck and would have had a pendant or object - perhaps a diamond cut
into a special shape - hanging from the opal stones. She says that the collar
is like a “river of rich orange and green stones” – the necklace of precious
stones looks like an orange and green river. It has geometric patterning which
means that the stones are arranged in a particular order or pattern. The
gemologist – the person at Tiffanys who is a precious stones expert – says that
each one of the stones is like a miniature sunset in the palm of your hand. Each
stone is like a tiny image of the sun setting with its mass of rich red and
orange colours. If you hold something in the plam of your hand you hold it in
the inside of your hand from the wrist to the base of your fingers. Here’s Clare
again – try to listen out for the descriptive language she uses.
Claire Philipps Dur: 33 "
These extraordinary glowing orange and green stones with their marvellous play of colour
arranged as a collar that would have been worn around the neck with originally a wonderful
pendant hanging from it. The geometric patterning based on native American art but really
the river of rich orange and green stones described by Tiffany’s gemologist at the time as
“each one a miniature sunset in the palm of your hand.”
Anna: Finally John ask about a picture at the exhibition of Audrey Hepburn, the
famous actress who starred in the 1961 film ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’. What 
Entertainment © BBC Learning English
Page 3 of 3
bbclearningenglish.com
colour is the diamond she is wearing and what other word does she use to
describe its colour?
Claire Philipps Dur: 22 "
So we’ve come now to quite a large picture of Audrey Hepburn – wearing what? Well Audrey
Hepburn wearing a magnificent Tiffany necklace designed by John Schlumbaget in a pattern
of ribbons, diamond ribbons. But at its centre the magnificent Tiffany diamond which is over
128 carats - a beautiful yellow diamond – a beautiful canary yellow stone.
Anna: Well Audrey Hepburn is wearing a beautiful yellow diamond and Claire
describes it as a “canary” yellow diamond - a canary is a small yellow bird -
with a pattern of diamond ribbons.. Clare says that the diamond is over 128
carats – a carat is a unit for measuring the weight of jewels. So Audrey
Hepburn is wearing a beautiful yellow Tiffany diamond.
That's all from this edition of entertainment. Join us again next time. 

1 stunning
adj.极好的;使人晕倒的
  • His plays are distinguished only by their stunning mediocrity.他的戏剧与众不同之处就是平凡得出奇。
  • The finished effect was absolutely stunning.完工后的效果非常美。
学英语单词
abdominal
aethalotus nigriventris
alternate partial polarizer filter
anisancora
antistatic rubber
apparent porosity
Armigeres
autographed
batrachospermum moniliforme roth.
bedotiid
bifluorides
camino
Capdepera
car crates
cardmaker
change-detection images
cheapjacks
cigarito
clearing house
co-inheritance
coefficient of wave diffraction
compactness theorem
connection network
constant voltage motor
croakiest
crystal scintillator
cytolytic factor
Damane
dance notation
depth-diffusion process
device reserve word
Dhopākāti
disclamatory
elastic materials
electrographic image tube
factorization theorem
file lockout
fluorodeoxy cellulose
fulcral plate
future continuous
genus Polyergus
glenohunmeral
Google Voice Search
gotlieb
gravity assists
great cassino
great-than search
groundwood pulp
guideline life
hexanoic acid.
hold something up to mockery
HP-IB
imperfect albumin
interleaved additional channel
iofendylate
karis (karjaa)
khiton
kim basinger
lateral lieaments of elbow
life-sciences
lit par lit intrusion
Little Giant
longitudinal mode delay line
mah jongg
main generator diesel engine
mayyan
Metallosphaera
metochalcone
mogas
multikilohertz
multivariate thermodynamics
municiple
net operating time
Nogueira, Sa.de
nonequivalent-to-element
normal luggage
parsonage
payment-by-results
pedestal pulling method
pressure sensitive hydrophone
prop-cell
Puebla de Zaragoza
reading-out system
recessus costomediastinalis
recombination noise
repeated-stress
Scincella
seiki
shammos
Spielberg, Steven
stealthful
stroboscopic interferometry
syntagmic
take a smoke
tapering off
tschinwinskite
unitard
unsicker
Willy Wonka
wrongs
yonogenin