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VOA慢速英语词汇表-(以U,V开头的单词)

VOA慢速英语词汇表-(以U,V开头的单词)
VOA慢速英语词汇表-(以U,V开头的单词)

VOA慢速英语词汇表-(以U,V开头的单词)

VOA慢速英语词汇表-(以U,V开头的单词)

U

under-prep.below;belowthesurfaceof;lessthan;ascalledforbyalaw,agreementorsystem("Theriverflowsunderthebridge.""Suchactionisnotpermi ttedunderthelaw.")

understand-v.toknowwhatismeant;tohaveknowledgeof

unite-v.tojointogether

universe-n.allofspace,includingplanetsandstars

university-n.aplaceofeducationthatusuallyincludesseveralcollegesandre searchorganizations

unless-conj.exceptifithappens;onconditionthat("Iwillnotgo,unlesstherainstops.")

until-conj.uptoatime;before

up-ad.to,inoratahigherpositionorvalue

urge-v.toadvisestrongly;tomakeagreatefforttogetsomeonetodosomething urgent-ad.needinganimmediatedecisionoraction

us-pro.theformoftheword"we"usedafterapreposition("Hesaidhewouldwritet ous.")orusedasanobjectofaverb("Theysawusyesterday.")

use-v.toemployforapurpose;toputintoaction

usual-ad.asisnormalorcommon;asismostoftendone,seenorheard

V

valley-n.alongareaoflandbetweenhigherareasofland

value-n.thequalityofbeinguseful,

importantordesired;theamountofmoneythatcouldbereceivedifsomethingisso ld

vegetable-n.aplantgrownforfood

vehicle-n.anythingonorinwhichapersonorthingcantravelorbetransported,especiallyanythingonwheels;acarortruck

version-n.theformofsomethingwithdifferentdetailsthanearlierorlaterfor ms

very-ad.extremely("Hewasverylate.")

veto-v.torejectorrefusetoapprove

vicious-ad.bad;dangerous;showingharmorhate

victim-n.someoneorsomethingthatisinjured,

killedormadetosuffer;someonewhoistricked

victory-n.asuccessinafightorcompetition

village-n.averysmalltown

violate-v.tofailtoobeyorhonor;tobreak(anagreement)

violence-n.theuseofforcetocauseinjury,deathordamage

visit-v.togotoorcometoaplaceforashorttimeforfriendlyorbusinessreasons voice-n.thesoundmadebycreatures,especiallyhumans,forspeaking

volcano-n.ahillormountainaroundaholeintheearth'ssurfacethatcanexplode,sendinghot,meltedrockandashintotheair

vote-v.tochooseacandidateinanelection;n.achoiceordecisionexpressedbyt hevoice,byhandorbywriting

VOA慢速英语阅读

From VOA Learning English, this is the Agriculture(农业的)Report. Climate change has caused a rise in sea levels. This has increased the amount of salt in fresh water used on coastal farms. As a result farmers are increasingly unable to use fields close to the sea. Scientists call this process "salinization(盐渍化)." The term(术语)comes from the word "saline" (生理盐水)-- which means a mixture of salt and water. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization says salinization is reducing the world's irrigated lands by 1 to 2 percent every year. Irrigation is the process of supplying land with fresh water from other areas. As saline water cannot be used for irrigation, a farm in Netherlands has managed to grow healthy and tasty vegetables in soil irrigated with salt water. But a farmer in the Netherlands is now using a mixture of sea and fresh water to grow healthy and tasty vegetables.

常用BBC VOA新闻词汇

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VOA BBC 慢速英语听写

1.Three university students in Santiago,Chile have developed a phant-powerd device to charge their mobile phones.The three engineering students got the idea for the device while sitting in their school’s courtyard.Their invention is a small biological circuit they call E-Kaia.It captures the energy plants produce during photosynthesis.Aphant uses only a small part of the energy produced by that process,The rest goes into the soil.E-Kaia collects that energy.The device plugs into the ground and then into a mobile phone.The E-Kaia solved two problems for the engineering studnts,They needed an idea for a class project.They also needed an outlet to plug in their phones.One of the student inventors,CamilaRupcich,says the device charges the energy released from the plant into low-level power to charge phones.The E-Kaia is able to fully recharge a mobile phone in less than two hours.I’m Jonathan Evans. 2.University of Washington researchers say they used a laser to turn hot water into cool water. Five engineers from the university are the first in the 50-year history of the laser to refrigerate liquids under normal conditions with light beams. The group used a simple approach to the experiment. Lasers are known for producing hot temperatures. The University of Washington says they “essentially ran the laser phenomenon in reverse.” The discovery has a future in the computer and medical fields. Computer interiors could be cooled by lasers. In a medical laboratory, individual cells could be cooled to see how they react. “Few people have thought about how they could use this technology to solve problems because using lasers to refrigerate liquids hasn’t been possible before,” said researcher Peter Pauzauskie.The cool laser concept can also be used in manufacturing, telecommunications or national defense.The group has an interest in hearing from businesses or scientists who may have every day applications for the cool laser. The findings were published this month in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. I’m Marsha James. 3.The United States is marking the 14th anniversary of the September 11th terrorist attacks. U.S. officials and many other Americans attended observances Friday to remember those killed and their loved ones. Nearly 3,000 people died on September 11, 2001 when hijackers used four passenger airplanes to carry out suicide attacks in the United States. In addition to the victims, the 19 hijackers also were killed. Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and his group claimed responsibility for the attacks. U.S. forces killed him in a surprise raid on his hiding place in Pakistan four years ago. Friday morning, President Barack Obama, his wife and White House workers observed a public moment of silence in Washington. They gathered on the White House grounds at 8:46. That was the exact time when a hijacked airplane struck the World Trade Center. In New York, families of the victims gathered for a ringing of bells and reading of the names of those killed in the terrorist attacks. Moments of silence were held at 8:46 and 9:03 in the morning, when a second hijacked plane also hit the World Trade Center. Near Washington, U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter and other officials attended an observance at the Pentagon, the home of the Defense Department. They joined in remembering those killed when a hijacked airplane hit the Pentagon, killing 184 people. Earlier Friday, a large American flag was hung down the side of the Pentagon, where the passenger jet hit. There also was a moment of silence at 10:03 a.m. That was the time when a fourth hijacked plane crashed in western Pennsylvania. All 44 people on the plane were killed. Many Americans believe the hijackers had planned to attack a target in the nation’s

2016年6月大学英语四级听力VOA慢速英语练习题(第二十二套)

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VOA慢速英语词汇表-(以U,V开头的单词)

VOA慢速英语词汇表-(以U,V开头的单词) VOA慢速英语词汇表-(以U,V开头的单词) U under-prep.below;belowthesurfaceof;lessthan;ascalledforbyalaw,agreementorsystem("Theriverflowsunderthebridge.""Suchactionisnotpermi ttedunderthelaw.") understand-v.toknowwhatismeant;tohaveknowledgeof unite-v.tojointogether universe-n.allofspace,includingplanetsandstars university-n.aplaceofeducationthatusuallyincludesseveralcollegesandre searchorganizations unless-conj.exceptifithappens;onconditionthat("Iwillnotgo,unlesstherainstops.")

until-conj.uptoatime;before up-ad.to,inoratahigherpositionorvalue urge-v.toadvisestrongly;tomakeagreatefforttogetsomeonetodosomething urgent-ad.needinganimmediatedecisionoraction us-pro.theformoftheword"we"usedafterapreposition("Hesaidhewouldwritet ous.")orusedasanobjectofaverb("Theysawusyesterday.") use-v.toemployforapurpose;toputintoaction usual-ad.asisnormalorcommon;asismostoftendone,seenorheard V valley-n.alongareaoflandbetweenhigherareasofland value-n.thequalityofbeinguseful, importantordesired;theamountofmoneythatcouldbereceivedifsomethingisso ld

VOA慢速英语阅读稿

No.1 This is the VOA Special English Education Report. A program in the eastern United States invites young people into a prison to try to scare them away from prison. The goal is to teach them to avoid bad choices and bad influences that could put them behind bars for life. Students can take a tour of the prison, in school groups or by themselves. At the end, the young people sit down for a discussion with some of the inmates. The program is called Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy, or PATT. It takes place at the Maryland Correctional Institution-Hagerstown, a medium-security prison for men. Sal Mauriello is a case specialist there. SAL MAURIELLO: "We have a group of eleven inmates who are in the PATT program. They tell the youth what they went through as a child, what their crimes consist of. They try to teach them about peer pressure. They try to teach them about bad choices." The Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy program also includes an essay-writing contest. Tomi Dare is a seventeen-year-old student at Hagerstown Community College. She saw an announcement for the contest on her college website. To enter, students had to write about peer pressure and why they do not do drugs. The prize: five hundred dollars for school. In her essay, Ms. Dare wrote about her own experience growing up as an African-American girl interested in sports. T OMI DARE: "Drugs and alcohol not only slow a person down, it doesn't make you feel like you are a winner. It doesn't make you feel like you are the best. As an athlete, I'm 6-2 [188 centimeters], so I feel that I should be above peer pressure because I'm bigger than everybody that I’m around. "So I was talking about that and I was talking about how I consider myself a queen. And if I’m royalty, I need to not put substances in my body. Drugs and alcohol are not what a queen should be taking." The scholarship is presented by the Prisoners Against Teen Tragedy program. Prison spokesman Mark Vernarelli says most teens who visit come to understand what even one bad decision can mean. MARK VERNARELLI: "A lot of men and women serving life in prison in the state of Maryland didn't pull a trigger or plunge a knife into anybody. They were accessories to a crime. They

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VOA慢速英语听力练习(学案) Most US Front-Line Workers Are Women, Minorities Step 1 Words in This Story front line(s) –n.the most important and active position in a job or field of activity essential–adj.extremely important and necessary pandemic–n.an occurrence in which a disease spreads very quickly and affects a large number of people over a wide area or throughout the world invisible–adj.impossible to see delivery–n.the act of taking something to a person or place tendon–n.a tough piece of tissue in your body that connects a muscle to a bone customer(s) –n.someone who buys goods or services from a business insurance–n.an agreement in which a person makes regular payments to a company and the company promises to pay money if the person is injured or dies, or to pay money equal to the value of something (such as a house or car) if it is damaged, lost, or stolen quarantine(d) –v.to keep (a person or animal) away from others to prevent a disease from spreading anxiety–n.fear or nervousness about what might happen pistol(s) –n.a small gun made to be aimed and fired with one hand Step 2 Listen and fill in the missing words. It is becoming clear that the coronavirus crisis has had a major effect on the people working on the front

VOA,BBC新闻词汇表

accredited journalist n.特派记者advertisement n.广告 advance n.预发消息;预写消息 affair n.桃色新闻;绯闻 anecdote n.趣闻轶事 assignment n.采写任务 attribution n.消息出处;消息来源 back alley news n.小道消息 backgrounding n.新闻背景 Bad news travels quickly. 坏事传千里 banner n.通栏标题 beat n.采写范围 blank vt.“开天窗” body n.新闻正文 boil vt.压缩(篇幅) box n.花边新闻 brief n.简讯 bulletin n.新闻简报 byline n.署名文章 caption n.图片说明 caricature n.漫画 carry vt.刊登 cartoon n.漫画 censor vt.审查(新闻稿件),新闻审查 chart n.(每周流行音乐等)排行榜 clipping n.剪报 column n.专栏,栏目 columnist n.专栏作家 continued story 连载故事,连载小说contributing editor 特约编辑 contribution n.(投给报刊的)稿件,投稿contributor n.投稿人 copy desk n.新闻编辑部 copy editor n.文字编辑 correction n.更正(启事) correspondence column 读者来信专栏correspondent n.驻外记者,常驻外埠记者 cover vt.采访,采写 cover girl n.封面女郎 covert coverage 隐性采访,秘密采访 crop vt.剪辑(图片) crusade n.宣传攻势 cut n.插图 vt.删减(字数) cut line n.插图说明 daily n.日报 dateline n.新闻电头 deadline n.截稿时间 dig vt.深入采访,追踪(新闻线索),“挖”(新闻) digest n.文摘

voa 慢速英语

By VOA 22 July, 2015 From VOA Learning English, this is the Education Report. International students and workers must take a standardized test of English to move into higher levels of education and employment. There are three popular tests that universities or employers can use. They are the Test of English as a Foreign Language, TOEFL, the Test of English for International Communication, TOEIC, and the International English Language Testing System, IELTS. In most cases, the choice is clear. A student applying to a school learns which test the program requires. However, some programs or universities will accept scores from any of the international tests of English. Then, a student may choose which test to take. The TOEIC tests workplace communication The Educational Testing Service, ETS, in Princeton, New Jersey, develops and administers both the TOEFL and the TOEIC. It says the TOEIC measures the everyday English skills of people working in an international environment. A TOEFL preparation class The TOEIC test started in the 1970s. The Japanese Ministry of International Trade and Industry asked ETS to develop a test for corporations to use. They wanted to know if non-native English speakers could carry out business in English. The TOEIC is based on English used in the workplace. But the test does not require knowledge of special business words. The questions come from real situations like attending a company meeting. Organizations sometimes use the TOEIC to measure progress in English training programs. They also use it to consider people for placement at the right level in language programs. ETS says that 14,000 organizations in 150 countries use the TOEIC. The TOEFL tests English used in the classroom There are several versions of the TOEFL. Students take the Internet-based TOEFL, or TOEFL IBT, on a computer. Many U.S. universities require the TOEFL IBT for international student admissions. Another TOEFL is the paper-based TOEFL, or TOEFL ITP. It is part of ETS's institutional testing program. TOEFL ITP is used within institutions for the purpose of placement or to evaluate progress of students. It is not accepted for entrance to universities.

voa.慢速英语 Wor第一篇d 文档

By Dana Demange 2011-10-4 STEVE EMBER: I'm Steve Ember. BARBARA KLEIN: And I'm Barbara Klein with EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English. At the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C. you might see two cowboy boots. They are painted with a design of clouds and stars. They look like boots that you could wear on your feet. But they are really made out of carefully formed clay material. The artist William Wilhelmi made these ceramic pieces. How did he make these colorful boots? Today, we answer that question as we explore the world of clay art. (MUSIC) Smithsonian American Art Museum William Wilhelmi made "Cowboy Boots" in 1980. STEVE EMBER: Clay is one of the most universal materials known to humans. Throughout history and around the world, people have developed the art of forming clay to make ceramic objects, or pottery. Clay is m ade of water and earth. It is formed into different shapes. The n high levels of heat harden it to produce many kinds of ceramics. Different kinds of clay contain different minerals such as silicon or iron dioxide. The kinds of minerals in clay affect how soft or hard it is to work with. The mineral content of clay also affects the temperature level at which it hardens.

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