2016年6月20日 星期一

Complement (7)

Achilles' heel

This article is about the phrase. For other uses, see Achilles Heel (disambiguation).

Statue of Achilleas thniskon (Dying Achilles) at the Corfu Achilleion.
An Achilles' heel is a weakness in spite of overall strength, which can actually or potentially lead to downfall. While the mythological origin refers to a physical vulnerability, idiomatic references to other attributes or qualities that can lead to downfall are common.

Origin


  In Greek mythology, when Achilles was a baby, it was foretold that he would die young. To prevent his death, his mother Thetis took Achilles to the River Styx, which was supposed to offer powers of invulnerability, and dipped his body into the water. But as Thetis held Achilles by the heel, his heel was not washed over by the water of the magical river. Achilles grew up to be a man of war who survived many great battles. But one day, a poisonous arrow shot at him was lodged in his heel, killing him shortly afterwards.
The death of Achilles was not mentioned in Homer's Iliad, but appeared in later Greek and Roman poetry and drama[1] concerning events after the Iliad, later in the Trojan War. In the myths surrounding the war, Achilles was said to have died from a heel wound which was the result of an arrow—possibly poisoned—shot by Paris.[2]
Classical myths attribute Achilles's invulnerability to his mother Thetis having treated him with ambrosia and burned away his mortality in the hearth fire except on the heel, by which she held him. Peleus, his father, discovered the treatment and was alarmed to see Thetis holding the baby in the flames, which offended her and made her leave the treatment incomplete.[3] According to a myth arising later, his mother had dipped the infant Achilles in the river Styx, holding onto him by his heel, and he became invulnerable where the waters touched him—that is, everywhere except the areas of his heel that were covered by her thumb and forefinger.[4]
The use of “Achilles heel” as an expression meaning “area of weakness, vulnerable spot” dates only to 1840, with implied use in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "Ireland, that vulnerable heel of the British Achilles!" from 1810 (Oxford English Dictionary).

Complement (6)

Korea joins the ‘20-50’ club today



  Korea’s population is expected to surpass 50 million today, making it the 7th country in the world to reach the “20-50 club” - boasting both a population of 50 million and $20,000 in per capita national income, Statistics Korea said yesterday.
  In a report titled “Future Population Estimation 2010-2060,” the bureau said the population will hit the landmark around 6:35 p.m. today, jumping from 40 million in 1983 and 25 million in 1960, meaning that the population doubled in 50 years.
  Korea will become the 25th country surpassing 50 million in population in the world.
  The report said that Korea’s population will make up 0.71 percent of the world’s population, which is expected to hit 7.05 billion today. 



2016年6月17日 星期五

Complement (5)

•    donkey-bray   (若當名詞用為驢叫聲)
                               -heehaw (若當名詞用為驢叫聲)
•    dog—bark    (若當名詞用為狗吠聲)
   - woof       (若當名詞用為狗的低吠聲)
•    cat—meow  (若當名詞用為叫聲喵喵聲)
•    rooster—crow  (若當名詞用為公雞啼叫聲報曉聲)
•    snake—hiss   (若當名詞用為蛇的嘶嘶)
•    horse—neigh       (若當名詞用為馬嘶聲)
•    lion—roar       (若當名詞用為獅子或老虎兇猛的吼叫聲)
•    bird—tweet   (若當名詞用為小鳥的啁啾聲吱吱聲)
•    wolf--howl       (若當名詞用為犬類的嗥叫聲)
•    cow—moo      (若當名詞用為牛叫聲)
•    frog—croak     (若當名詞用為青蛙或烏鴉的呱呱叫聲)
•    mouse—squeak     (若當名詞用為吱吱叫聲)
•    sheep—baa     (若當名詞用為羊仔叫聲)
•    hen—cluck (若當名詞用為母雞咯咯的叫聲)
•    pig—oink     (若當名詞用為豬叫聲)
•    duck—quack     (若當名詞用為鴨叫聲)
•     bee—buzz      (若當名詞用為蜂類或蒼蠅的叫聲)
•    turkey—gobble (若當名詞用為火雞的叫聲)

Chapter 24 A Company Prospers by Saving Poor People's Lives

Chapter 24 A Company Prospers by Saving Poor People's Lives

backpacking: (1) Why should she wait to backpack across Europe with you?
                                   (2) My backpack is thin, but theirs are heavy.
cave: (1) The professor found some frescoes in the cave.
             (2) The road suddenly caved in.
charitable: He was charitable to the poor and needy.
coup: He pulled off a spectacular coup.
daring: (1) I saw a most daring rescue today.
                   (2) All of us admire his daring.
disclose: The double agent disclosed the names and locations of spies in the Middle East.
entertain: (1) His tales of life at sea entertained us all evening.
                         (2) We're entertaining guests this evening.
                         (3) The department head won't entertain any unorthodox ideas.
filter: (1) I prefer filter coffee.
              (2) You need to filter the drinking water here.
              (3) Sunlight filtered through the curtain.    
insecticide: She used the insecticide to kill the cockroach.
refugee: The number of the refugee from South East Asia is increasing.
soaked: (1) The boy soaked his bread in the milk.
                    (2) Rain soaked through her shoes.
supplier: If the computer is faulty, return it to the supplier.
transmit: (1) The message was transmitted by facsimile.
                        (2) The marathon was transmitted live to thirty countries.
version: (1) This is a modern English version of the Bible.
                     (2) Every witness had a slightly different version of what had happened.







Chapter 23 The Next Billion

Chapter  23 The Next Billion

accordingly: (1) Please inform us if you are not satisfied with the car, and we will act                                                       accordingly.
                                 (2) It is very difficult to master a foreign language; accordingly you must study                                         as hard as you can. 
conventional:  (1) conventional opinions
                                    (2) conventional weapons
devoted: Joe is very devoted to his wife.
durable: (1) Jeans are made of a very durable material.
                      (2) consumer durables
end user: The software  can be modified to suit the particular needs of the end user.
enterprising: an enterprising young businessman
household name: The president's name is a household man around the world.
in debt: She used credit card to but too many things so she was in debt.
install: (1) He installed an air conditioner in his room.
                  (2) Professor Brown was formally installed as chairman of the Geography Department.  
nutritious: You should have nutritious meals to get well soon.
plug in: He plugged in the refrigerator.
roll up (their) sleeves: She rolled up his sleeves in order to work hard.
run by : The restaurant runs by the man.
sole: (1) He was the sole survivor of the battle.
            (2) I had my shoes soled.  
strike a deal:  We strike a deal to work together.











Chapter 22 The Effects of Multitasking

Chapter 22 The Effects of Multitasking

audibly:  He sighed audibly.
build up: The traffic began to build up at 5 o'clock.
consistently: They consistently opposed an indirect tax.
in favor of: She spoke in favor of the project.
inefficiently: She worked inefficiently because she consistently played her cellphone. 
long-time: Long time ago, i had ever lived there.
on a regular basis: I will save money on a regular basis. 
operate: (1) Can you operate the computer?
                     (2) The doctor operated on the patient for appendicitis.
                     (3) The American army no longer operates in this area. 
perception: (1) His answer showed his keen perception of the real nature of the problem.
                             (2) The policeman has poor perception.
range: (1) The enemy were already out of the range of our guns.
                 (2) Our three children range in age from three to seven. 
rotate: (1) The earth rotates once every 24 hours.
                 (2) The students rotate in cleaning their classroom.  
run risks: He ran risks to won this game.









Chapter 21 Keeping an Eye on the Sky

Chapter 21 Keeping an Eye on the Sky

channel: (1) The channel is too shallow for big ships.
                      (2) We can cross the channel by boat in twenty minutes.
                      (3) The information came through official channels.  
distorted: (1) He distorted his face to make the children laugh.
                         (2) The magazine distorts every story it prints. 
distracted: (1) Never distract the driver of a car.
                            (2) I'm so distracted by financial problems that i can't study.  
drawback: The only drawback to the plan is its expense.
exception: (1) There is no rule without exceptions.
                          (2) Some of the more extreme feminists take exception to that word.    
impair: Smoking impairs health. 
on the go: I have been on the go all week.
readily: He readily accepted an invitation to dinner.  
recollection: (1) The aide to the President said she had no recollection of having said that.
                                (2) We have many happy recollections of our homestay.   
rural: (1) We prefer the quiet of a rural area.
               (2) The rural home was simple and nice. 
simultaneously: The two foxes disappeared simultaneously.
switch: (1) I felt for a light switch in the dark.
                   (2) Is there any switch in the train schedule?  








Chapter 20 Desert State Puts Oil Wealth into World's First Sustainable City

Chapter 20 Desert State Puts Oil Wealth into World's First Sustainable City

breeze: (1) The curtain is waving in the breeze.
                  (2) We won the game in a breeze.
                  (3) You can breeze through the book.
dust: (1) First of all, i must clean the dust on my desk.
             (2) gold dust
             (3) Mrs.Brown dusted all the books on the shelves.
             (4) Dust sugar over the cake.   
flush out: (1) Drink fluids; it flushes out your system.
                        (2) It flushes out bad feelings and ease tension. 
generate: (1) Friction generates heat.
                        (2) Steam is used to generate electricity.
                        (3) Poverty often generates crime. 
humid: humid weather
microclimate: (1) Microclimate analysis of yingtaogou valley, beijing city .
                       (2) Effects of sprinkler on the field microclimate.
orient: (1) Many brilliant pearls were brought from the Orient to Europe.
                 (2) They take care to have the chief altar properly oriented when they build a church.
                 (3) The new building is oriented towards the south.
                 (4) Immigrants should orient themselves to their new surroundings.
outskirts: Our house is in the outskirts of Boston.
pedestrian: (1) a pedestrian speech
                             (2) a pedestrian precinct 
promising: (1) a promising student
                            (2) The weather looks promising.
perspective: (1) Who was the first person to draw in perspective?
                               (2) We have to see things in the right perspective.
                               (3) They have no perspective on events.    
renewable: Prior work used renewable hydrogen to maximize CO2 capture.
self-sufficient: For love is sufficient unto love.
take over: The firm has been taken over by an American conglomerate.














2016年6月16日 星期四

Chapter 19 Reaching Our Limits: Welcome to 2100

Chapter 19 Reaching Our Limits: Welcome to 2100

abandon: Joe abandoned hid family and went off to the West Coast.
abuse: (1) Some people abuse their authority.
                 (2) She is always abusing her ex-husband .
                 (3) The abuse of drugs is a social problem.
                 (4) The office gave much abuse to his men.  
collapse: (1) This chair collapses.
                       (2) This bridge collapsed under the weight of this truck.
                       (3) The tornado caused the collapse of houses.
                       (4) What is the cause of the collapse of our project?    
drought: The drought lasted the whole summer.
harsh: (1) This cheap whiskey is so harsh!
                 (2) He is harsh with his children.  
linked to: The hearts of the people of all nationalities are linked to each other. 
out of the question: We can't go out in this weather; it;s out of the question.
resources: (1) This country is rich in natural resources.
                          (2) In a tight situation humor  is his best resources.
                          (3)  leave  ~to~'s own resources
settlement: (1) There used to be a settlement of about 2,000 French on that island.
                             (2) land not open to settlement
                             (3) A just settlement would really help matters.
spray: (1) The boys got wet with sea spray.
                 (2) a perfume spray
                 (3) The waves sprayed us.    
standard of living: The standard of living in our country is lower than yours.
starvation: These people are living on the verge of starvation.












Chapter 17 How to Survive a Mountain Lion Attack

Chapter 17 How to Survive a Mountain Lion Attack

charge: (1) charge a gun
                   (2) charge a battery
                   (3) charged with moisture
                   (4) I was charged with an important commission.
                   (5) Charge these to me.
                   (6) He charged this accident to my carelessness.
                   (7) rental charges
                   (8) have charge of
                   (9) in charge 
foe: Mr.Chen is my political foe.
formidable: (1) He begins to look very formidable when he gets angry.
                              (2) I know he is a formidable opponent. But i'll beat in 2 rounds.
frailty: (1) His frailty prevented him from attending his own son 's graduation ceremony.
                  (2) All people have certain frailties.  
gaze: (1) The man gazed into his wife's face.
              (2) The woman's gaze fell on the girl.
grunt: (1) We heard a pig grunting.
                (2) When the manager told him to work harder, the young man grunted and went out of the                       room.
                (3) The audience gave a grunt of discontent.
hold your ground: Why don't you hold your ground?
majestic: The majestic ring corridor of engraved posts is spectacular and eye-catching.
mating season: Don't approach these animals during mating season.
menacing: The reason is that the more menacing weapons have often acquired a signaling role.
nostrils: The dragon breathed out fire through its nostrils.
retreat: (1) These 24th Battalion retreated in the face of superior forces.
                    (2) The general ordered a retreat.
                    (3) He returned from his summer retreat.
sideways: (1) He's good at throwing sideways.
                        (2) He shot me a sideways glance.
snarl: (1) The dog snarled at the policeman.
               (2) The traffic was terribly snarled and we couldn't move an inch.
               (3) The clerk answered in an angry snarl.
spine-chilling: Caesarian's fate is a chilling addition to the story.











Chapter 18 Life of Pi

Chapter 18 Life of Pi

come clean: He came clean and confessed the whole thing.
despair: (1) Sometimes i despair of ever learning English.
                     (2) The loss of Antony drove Cleopatra to despair and finally suicide. 
fury: (1) Ted punched Jack in a fury.
             (2) The fury of the storm caused millions of dollars' worth of damage.
             (3) like fury
growl: (1) The dog growled at the stranger.
                 (2) Mother always growls at me.
                 (3) Can you hear the growl of the dog?
in the same boat: We should work hard together because we are in the same boat.
intently: He was examining the stamps intently.
outlast: This clock has outlasted several owners.
petrifying:  When i saw the tiger, i was petrified with fear.
prick up (one's) ears: (1) The horse 's ears were pricked up straight.
                                                      (2) All the hostages pricked up their ears when the President began                                                               to address them.   
rusty: (1) a rusty knife
                (2) My Spanish is rather rusty.
                (3) I am rusty in German.   
tame: (1) His tame secretary covers for him when he's out with his mistress.
               (2) a tame party
               (3) Human beings will never tame nature.  
twitch: (1) She twitched the curtain into place.
                  (2) The girl twitched nervously at her collar.
                  (3) She felt again the twitch of an old wound.
  









2016年6月6日 星期一

Chapter 16 Twenty-four Rooms in One

Chapter 16 Twenty-four Rooms in One

float: (1) Ice floats on water.
              (2) The boat floated about with the tide for hours.
              (3) They floated a publishing company.
              (4) A coffee float, please.



impose on: Could i impose on you to watch my kids for just a few minutes?
mount: (1)The ship mounts eight guns.
                  (2) Prices are mounting.
                  (3) Be careful not to mount the pavement when you are parking the car.
                  (4) The general had an excellent mount.
ongoing: He interrupted the ongoing discussion and announced a notice.
radiance: I saw a radiance in her eyes.
replicate: Viruses usually replicate at the primary site of the entry.
shift: (1) She shifted her baby from her left arm to her right.
             (2) There was a shift in the wind.
             (3) We work in six-hour shifts.
             (4) She tried every shift to get him to notice her.
             (5) make shift
shortage: Bad weather in Brazil has caused a shortage of coffee.
suspend: (1) Look at that beautiful lamp suspended from the ceiling.
                       (2) A beam of sunlight lights up the particles of dust that are suspended in the air.
                       (3) Two soccer players were suspended in today's game.
                       (4) The trial was to be suspended while new evidence was submitted.
tear down: The old apartment was torn down.
transformation: Transformation is not only a choice, but also a strategy.

Chapter 15 The Small House Movement

Chapter 15 The Small House Movement

displace: (1) The eruption of the volcano displaced many people from their homes.
                       (2) The computer displaced the typewriter.
                       (3) This ship displaces 10,000 tons.
domestic: (1) Domestic chores are such a drag!
                         (2) You are so domestic- you never go out.
                         (3) A cat is a domestic animal.
domesticate: (1) domesticated animals
                     (2) It took me a long time to domesticate my husband.
layout: This house has a good layout.
maintenance: (1) The city administration is responsible for the maintenance of the road.
                                   (2) Mary doesn't have enough money because her ex-husband is behind in is                                               maintenance payments. 
movement: (1) eye movements
                             (2) He is afraid that the nationalist movement will get nationwide support.
                             (3) We had information about large-scale movements of the enemy troops.
partition: (1) We divided the room in two with a glass partition.
                         (2) In the end the three major powers agreed on a partition of the region into 3 zones.
                         (3) The janitor partitioned the conference room.
practical: (1) She doesn't have enough practical experience.
                         (2) for all practical purposes
prior: (1) You should obtain prior permission to attend this ceremony.
                (2) This was planned prior to receiving your suggestions.
storage: You would better locate and load a  quantity of data from storage.

      















2016年5月5日 星期四

Complement (4)

Cupid and Psyche
  Cupid and Psyche is a story originally from Metamorphoses (also called The Golden Ass), written in the 2nd century AD by LuciuApuleius Madaurensis (or Platonicus).It concerns the overcoming of obstacles to the love between Psyche and Cupid or Amor , and their ultimate union in a sacred marriage. Although the only extended narrative from antiquity is that of Apuleius, Eros and Psyche appear in Greek art as early as the 4th century BC. The story's Neoplatonic elements and allusions to mystery religions accommodate multiple interpretations, and it has been analyzed as an allegory and in light of folktaleMärchen or fairy tale, and myth.

Complement (3)

3c -  Communication , Computer , Consumer Electronics
Spring break
  Spring break is a U.S. phenomenon and an academic tradition which started in the United States and is observed in some other western countries.[1] Spring break is also a vacational period in early spring at universities and schools in various countries in the world, where it is known by names such as Easter vacationEaster HolidayMarch breakspring vacationMid-Term Breakstudy weekreading weekreading period, or Easter week, depending on regional conventions. However, these vacations differ from Spring Break in the United States.










Equinox
  An equinox is an astronomical event in which the plane of Earth's equator passes through the center of the Sun, which occurs twice each year, around 20 March and 23 September.










Passover
  Passover is a spring festival which during the existence of the Jerusalem Temple was connected to the offering of the "first-fruits of the barley", barley being the first grain to ripen and to be harvested in the Land of Israel.







Complement (2)

Protestant
  Protestantism is a form of Christian faith and practice which originated with the Protestant Reformation, a movement against what its followers considered to be errors in the Roman Catholic Church. It is one of the three major divisions of Christendom, together with Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy. Anglicanism is sometimes considered to be independent from Protestantism.The term derives from the letter of protestation from Lutheran princes in 1529 against an edict condemninthe teachings of Martin Luther as heretical.
protest reformation













 Catholic
 "Catholic" redirects here. For Christians who recognize the authority of the Bishop of Rome (Pope), see Catholic Church. For the whole body of Christians, see Christian Church. For other uses, see Catholic (disambiguation).
Catholic church