单词:nightsoil treatment plant
单词:nightsoil treatment plant 相关文章
Passage 21 Soils There are many different kinds of soils. Different soils have different types of rock and minerals in them than other. Some soils have more water in them than others. Some soils might have more plant and animal material in them, too
By Gary Garriott Broadcast: July 22, 2003 This is Robert Covent with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. Many farmers around the world are 1)composting to improve their soil so they can produc
This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. Even in ancient times, people liked to eat lettuce. Egyptians and Romans served the green, leafy vegetable at the end of dinner. Now, people in some countries start the meal with lettuce as part of
A group in San Francisco is honoring former President G.W. Bush by proposing to name a new wastewater treatment plant after him. We hope that this will catch on nationwide, said activist Bill Maher. Every state should have a wastewater treatment plan
[00:00.00] Unit 6 Plants [00:04.60]A The chlidren are in a science lesson. [00:10.95]Look,listen and say. [00:15.31]1 We want to grow some tomatoes. [00:21.66]What does our plant need? [00:25.50]It needs a small pot of soil. [00:30.22]It needs a lot
Unit 2 [00:03.08]Plant a Plant!My Grade One Tree My name is Anna. [00:11.65]When I was in Grade One,I got a little tree. [00:17.11]Everyone gets a little tree in Grade One. [00:22.07]It's a spruce tree.See?When I brought my tree home,it was very litt
Idiom: More bang for your buck 物超所值 Hit the book: Increase understanding Describe Treatment Write down Medicinal plant Siberia Elderly Keep alive Ancestor
By Mario Ritter Broadcast: August 25, 2003 This is Bill White with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. Plant scientists consider them fruit. Most other people think of them as vegetables. What
By Mario Ritter Broadcast: September 9, 2003 This is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. For many people, growing crops on a small piece of land is not a business. For them, a
By Brian Padden Irbil, Iraq 27 September 2007 Recent outbreaks of cholera in parts of Iraq highlight the need for basic services like clean water.Development projects in much of the country have been delayed because of the deteriorating security situ
Agriculture Report - The Seeds of Weed Control Advice for suppressing the growth of unwelcome plants. Transcript of radio broadcast: 17 March 2008 This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. When is a plant a weed? When its undesirable quali
Pioneering Soil Researcher Wins Top Environment Prize Biologist Diana Wall went to the ends of the earth - the seemingly lifeless Antarctic desert - to study the life in soil. What soil life does for us, it provides us with many benefits that we don'
DON GONYEA, HOST: Port-au-Prince, Haiti is a city of more than 3 million people with no sewer system. International donors have spent millions of dollars on infrastructure meant to help the situation. But a multi-year plan to build sewage treatment p
So, in this suburb, the poo and the pee and the wash water are going to this treatment plant right in the middle of the community. 那么,在这片城郊,各种排泄物们和废水正涌向处于区域中心的处理池。 It looks more like a p
AGRICULTURE REPORT - Compost: an Organic Way to Better Soil and Crops By Gary Garriott Broadcast: Tuesday, July 05, 2005 I'm Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. Many farmers im
Voice 1 Welcome to Spotlight. Im Colin Lowther. Voice 2 And Im Robin Basselin. Spotlight uses a special English method of broadcasting. It is easier for people to understand, no matter where in the world they live Voice 1 Mr. Banani is a farmer in th
Listen to the dialogues and fill in T for True, F for False. 英语对话1 A:Does this plant need a lot of sunlight? B:Yes, it's a dessert plant. 英语对话2 A:Should this plant be watered everyday? B:No. twice a week will be enough. 英语对话3
Science and technology 科学技术 Robot plants Putting down roots 植物机器人 落地生根 A robotic model of what plants get up to under the surface 模仿植物根部工作的机器人模型 PEOPLE often forget, when looking at a garden, mead
Dr. Wangari Muta Maathai was born in 1940 in a village in Kenya. In 2004, she became the first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. The judges valued her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace. She was also a member o