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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Todd: OK, Kerri, I'm going to ask you about the news. Do you follow the news everyday?
Kerri: Sometimes.
Todd: How do you follow the news?
Kerri: Well, in Japan mostly the radio or the internet.
Todd: Oh, really. OK. What radio station?
Kerri: NPR, but on the military station.
Todd: OK. And what internet websites do you listen to?
Kerri: Well, usually it is just AP news or whatever.
Todd: OK. How much of the news do you think is true?
Kerri: I don't know. That's a tough question. I think that because there're so many journalists that often what makes into the papers is fairly accurate, but unfortunately some people leak information that is untrue to sway public opinion, so you have to kind of weed through things and consider why that news story is made public.
Todd: Yeah. How do most people in your country get the news?
Kerri: I think most people in the states get the news from TV and from the main broadcasting stations. The evening news sort of thing.
Todd: OK. Thanks Keri.
学习内容:
Learn Vocabulary from the lesson
follow
How do you follow the news?
If you 'follow' news about something you read everything you can to learn the newest information. Notice the following:
Do you follow any sports?
leak
Some people leak information that is untrue.
If you give private information to the public then you are 'leaking information.' This frequently happens with celebrity information and criminal cases. Notice the following:
I told her to keep it a secret, but somehow the story leaked to our friends.
When some very secretive information appeared in the newspaper it was obvious that there was a leak on the police team.
sway
To sway public opinion.
To 'sway someone's opinion' is change his opinion by presenting information that will make him change his mind. Notice the following:
The more she talked, the more my opinion began to sway.
weed
You have to weed through things.
To 'weed' through information means to look through a lot of unimportant5 information to find something interesting or useful. Notice the following:
It was very tiring to weed through all the unnecessary information in the book.
There is a lot of mail on the table. Can you weed through it and take out the important things.
make public
You have to consider why a news story is made public.
If something is presented in the news, newspaper or on the radio it has been made public. Notice the following:
Many celebrities6 have their private lives made public through the media.
He made a public the fact that he was getting a divorce.
点击收听单词发音
1 celebrity | |
n.名人,名流;著名,名声,名望 | |
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2 gossip | |
n.流言蜚语,爱说长道短的人;vi.传播流言 | |
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3 addiction | |
n.上瘾入迷,嗜好 | |
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4 stubborn | |
adj.难以移动,去除的,固执的,顽固的 | |
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5 unimportant | |
adj.不重要的,无意义的 | |
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6 celebrities | |
n.(尤指娱乐界的)名人( celebrity的名词复数 );名流;名声;名誉 | |
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