2011년 5월 3일 화요일

Technical English Studying from Engadget


LG Optimus Black vs. Galaxy S II and Xperia Arc... fight!

It's time for us to welcome yet another contender in the battle for world's slimmest Android phone: theLG Optimus Black. This 9.2mm-thick handset made its debut to
oohs and aahs of admiration at CES earlier in the year, and is now on the very precipice of a global release. Admittedly, it's not quite slender enough to knock the 7.7mm-thick NEC MEDIAS N-04C off its perch as the absolute thinnest, but it is sufficiently slender to give Samsung's Galaxy S II and Sony Ericsson's Xperia Arc a good fright. That pair of smartphones offer thinner proportions on the spec sheet, but when rested on a flat surface they sit ever so slightly higher than the Optimus Black. This is because, unlike its tricky contemporaries, the Optimus Black keeps to the same thickness along its full length (don't laugh), which, technically speaking, makes it the thinnest Android handset on the European market. Check it out in the gallery below or video after the break -- and hold tight, we'll have a full review for you in the coming days!

English Studying from BBC Learning English


-gate

Listen

In this week's The English We Speak programme, we're marking World Press Freedom Day. How did the Watergate scandal of the 1970s affect the English language?
American ex-President Richard Nixon
President Nixon had to resign after Watergate

The script for this programme

William: Hello, I'm William Kremer and this is The English We Speak.
Wang Fei: Hi there. I'm Wang Fei.
William: So, Wang Fei, today is 3 May.
Wang Fei: Yes.
William: Do you know what 3 May is?
Wang Fei: Hmm… a Tuesday?
William: Yes, it's a Tuesday, but it's not just any Tuesday. Today is World Press Freedom Day. This is the day that the United Nations has chosen to highlight the importance of a free press around the world.
Wang Fei: A free press. So, newspapers that are free to write anything they think the public need to know and TV news that can report anything?
William: Yes they can report anything, including things that look bad for the government! Scandals.
Wang Fei: A scandal, so something very bad that damages someone's reputation.
William: Exactly. And one of the most famous scandals from American history is the Watergate scandal of the early 1970s.
Wang Fei: Watergate… that was why President Nixon had to resign wasn't it?
William: Exactly, yes, because he was shown to have lied to the American people and basically obstructed the course of justice. The whole thing started when five men were arrested for breaking into an office block called Watergate. This was where the Democratic Party had their headquarters. Later on, the men were linked to the campaign to re-elect President Nixon, who was in the Republican Party.
Wang Fei: Well, this is very interesting but what has it got to do with The English We Speak, William?
William: Well, because Watergate was such a massive scandal, Wang Fei, the word -gate is now sometimes used as a suffix to suggest that something is a scandal. So, to give you an example from last year, when Gordon Brown was trying to get re-elected as British Prime Minister, he was overheard calling an old lady a "bigot" – a very strong word for somebody who is intolerant and close-minded. Anyway, this was a big scandal and it came to be known in the media as 'bigotgate'.
Wang Fei: Bigotgate. That sounds almost a little bit funny.
William: Yes, you're right. I think using -gate on the end of a word can make it seem a little humorous. This term -gate is used more in the USA, but another recent example from the UK is 'Climategate' – that was when some emails and other documents from a university in England led to people asking questions about the way that scientists researched climate change. Climategate.
Wang Fei: So, can we use –gate in normal English conversation too?
William: Yes, you can – if you want to make a joke. Listen to this:
Man A: Have you seen Mark recently?
Man B: Mark – he hasn't spoken to me since beergate!
Man A: Beergate? What do you mean?
Man B: We had a big argument because I said Mark never bought a round of beer in the pub! He got very upset and went home.
Wang Fei: So in that example, the speaker coined the word beergate to describe an argument about paying for beer!
William: Yeah, which is obviously very silly. But of course, this suffix -gate is used in very serious situations too. And it was thanks to members of the free press, including the Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, that the public came to know about Watergate.
Wang Fei: Yes. Check our website this week for more information and learning English programmes about World Press Freedom Day. Goodbye.
William: Bye!

English Studying from YBM


Richard: Okay. Uh, next up Michaels(plaintiff) vs. Henderson(defendant).(clearing the throat : 헛기침하다) I believe... Ally? Michael Bassett is here. Michael? I, uh, came to apologize for fleeing the scene last night. I was... I guess I came rather undone.


Richard: 알았어. 자 다음은 Michaels 대 Henderson. 어젯밤에 그곳에서 그냥 도망치듯 나와서 미안하다고 사과하러 왔어요. 난 그저……. 그 일에 대하여 받아들일 준비가 되어 있지 않았던 것 같아요.
* next up: 다음 주제 다음 안건.
* flee: ~에서 도망치다, 떠나다(quit).
* scene: (연극의) 무대 장면 (영화의) 세트 (무대의) 배경, (극의) 장(場)
* undone: 풀어진, 끌러진, 벗겨진, 늦춰진.
* don't make a scene : 구경꺼리 만들지 마라.
* I came rather undone : 그일에 대해 받아들일 준비가 되어 있지 않았다.
Contents by 안병규 어학원 (abkenglish.com)
살아있는 영어, 느낌의 영어, 즐거운 영어

English Studying from YBM


Once there was a lion tamer who said that he was following a proud tradition because his father also had been a lion tamer.

"Did you ever put your head in a lion's mouth?" he was asked by a curious fellow.

"Only once," he replied, "to look for Dad."

사자 조련사였던 아버지의 자랑스러운 가업을 이어받았다고 말하는 사자 조련사가 있었다.

"사자 입 속에 머리를 집어 넣어 본 적이 있나요?"하고 호기심 많은 사람이 물었다.

"딱 한 번 있었죠."라고 조련사가 대답했다. "아버지를 찾으려고 말예요." (유머)


제출한 답 : C | 정답 : C
정답자수 / 전체 응답자수 : 1620명/2877명
정답률 56.31%
[문제]
Which of the following best completes the sentence?
You turn a door _____ to open a door.
a : ball
b : bell
c : knob
d : nozzle
문고리는 door knob 라고 한다.

제출한 답 : B | 정답 : B
정답자수 / 전체 응답자수 : 1132명/2877명
정답률 39.35%
[문제]
Which of the following best completes the sentence?
A light _____ on a ceiling or wall is an electrical device used to light up a room.
a : frame
b : fixture
c : tray
d : place

조명기구는 light fixture 또는 light fitting 라고 한다.

제출한 답 : B | 정답 : D
정답자수 / 전체 응답자수 : 811명/2877명
정답률 28.19%
[문제]
Which of the following best completes the sentence?
If you want to warm a small space, you can use a _____ heater.
a : area
b : port
c : region
d : space

space heater 는 보통 전기를 이용하는 소형 실내 난방기를 의미한다.


  

English Studying from YBM


A: We’re fresh out of dried seaweed. *** 가서 사 올래?***
B: I would if I could, but I can’t so I won’t. How about you go?
A: I’ll buy, you fly. I’ll get the rice started as well. Deal?
B: OK, but we’d better be having something remarkable. I’m hungry.

해설강의 : 태인영, John Valentine
A: 마른 미역이 다 떨어졌네. Would make a run?
B: 할 수 있으면 가 줄 텐데 지금 안 돼서 못 가. 네가 가지 그래?
A: 내가 돈 낼 테니 너가 사 와. 밥도 해 놓을게. 됐지?
B: 좋아. 근데 맛있는 것 먹고 싶다. 배고파.

[Additional Expressions]

* We’re fresh out of – We have no more / We just used up the last of the
* Would you make a run? – Would you go for some more? / Would you go buy some?
* I would if I could – If I were able to, I would / If it were possible, I would have no problem with it
* I can’t so I won’t – It’s not possible, so forget about it. / I’m sorry, but I can’t.
* How about you go? – Why not you? / You can go, can’t you?
* I’ll buy, you fly. – I’ll pay for it if you go get it. / I’ll give you the money if you make the run.
* I’ll get the rice started as well. – I’ll start cooking rice, too. / I can get the rice cooking, too.
* Deal? – OK? / Is that OK with you? / Can you agree to that?
* we’d better be having – I hope you’re making / you really have to cook up
* something remarkable – some amazing food / a really delicious meal
* I’m hungry. – I’m so hungry, I could eat a horse! / I’m starving!

English Studying from BBC News


Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden has been killed by US forces in Pakistan, President Barack Obama has said.
Bin Laden was shot dead at a compound near Islamabad, in a ground operation based on US intelligence, the first lead for which emerged last August.
Mr Obama said US forces took possession of the body after "a firefight".
Bin Laden is believed to have ordered the attacks on New York and Washington on 11 September 2001 and a number of others.
He was top of the US' "most wanted" list.
DNA tests later confirmed that Bin Laden was dead, US officials said.
Bin Laden was buried at sea after a Muslim funeral on board an aircraft carrier, Pentagon officials said.
Announcing the success of the operation, Mr Obama said it was "the most significant achievement to date in our nation's effort to defeat al-Qaeda".
The US has put its embassies around the world on alert, warning Americans of the possibility of al-Qaeda reprisal attacks for Bin Laden's killing.
CIA director Leon Panetta said al-Qaeda would "almost certainly" try to avenge the death of Bin Laden.
Crowds gathered outside the White House in Washington DC, chanting "USA, USA" after the news broke.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the operation sent a signal to the Taliban in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.
"You cannot wait us out, you cannot defeat us, but you can make the choice to abandon al-Qaeda and participate in a peaceful political process," she said.
And she said there was "no better rebuke to al-Qaeda and its heinous ideology" than the peaceful uprisings across the Arab world against authoritarian governments.
Compound raided
Bin Laden, 54, approved the 9/11 attacks in which nearly 3,000 people died.
He evaded the forces of the US and its allies for almost a decade, despite a $25m (£15m) bounty on his head.
Mr Obama said he had been briefed last August on a possible lead to Bin Laden's whereabouts. He authorised the operation last week once he determined there was enough intelligence to take action.
"It was far from certain, and it took many months to run this thread to ground," Mr Obama said.

On Sunday, US forces said to be from the elite Navy Seal Team Six undertook the operation in Abbottabad, 100km (62 miles) north-east of Islamabad.
US officials said Bin Laden was shot in the head after resisting.
Mr Obama said "no Americans were harmed".
US media reports said that the body was buried at sea to conform with Islamic practice of a burial within 24 hours and to prevent any grave becoming a shrine.
Giving more details of the raid, one senior US official said a small US team conducted the attack in about 40 minutes.
Three other men - one of Bin Laden's sons and two couriers - were killed in the raid, the official said, adding that one woman was also killed when she was used as "a shield" and two other women were injured.
One helicopter was lost due to "technical failure". The team destroyed it and left in its other aircraft.
One resident, Nasir Khan, told Reuters the helicopters had come under "intense firing" from the ground.
The size and complexity of the structure in Abbottabad "shocked" US officials.
It was surrounded by 4m-6m (12ft-18ft) walls, was eight times larger than other homes in the area and was valued at "a million dollars", though it had no telephone or internet connection.
The US official said that intelligence had been tracking a "trusted courier" of Bin Laden for many years. The courier's identity was discovered four years ago, his area of operation two years ago and then, last August, his residence in Abbottabad was found, triggering the start of the mission.
Another senior US official said that no intelligence had been shared with any country, including Pakistan, ahead of the raid.
"Only a very small group of people inside our own government knew of this operation in advance," the official said.
The Abbottabad residence is just a few hundred metres from the Pakistan Military Academy - the country's equivalent of West Point or Sandhurst.
The BBC's Aleem Maqbool in Abbottabad says it will undoubtedly be a huge embarrassment to Pakistan that Bin Laden was found not only in the country, but also on the doorstep of the military academy.
He says residents in the town were stunned the al-Qaeda leader had been living in their midst.
The senior US official said the "the loss of Bin Laden puts the group on a path of decline that will be difficult to reverse".
Bin Laden's probable successor, Ayman al-Zawahiri, was "far less charismatic and not as well respected within the organisation", according to reports from captured al-Qaeda operatives, the official said.
However, the root causes of radical Islam - the range of issues that enabled al-Qaeda to recruit disaffected young Muslims to its cause - remain, for the most part, unaddressed, Islamic affairs analyst Roger Hardy told the BBC.
"The death of Bin Laden will strike at the morale of the global jihad, but is unlikely to end it," he warned.
'Momentous achievement'
World leaders welcomed the news of Bin Laden's death.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai said Bin Laden had "paid for his actions".
Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani said the killing was a "great victory" but added that he "didn't know the details" of the US operation.
Former US President George W Bush described the news as a "momentous achievement".
"The fight against terror goes on, but tonight America has sent an unmistakable message: No matter how long it takes, justice will be done," Mr Bush said in a statement.
But a spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban threatened revenge attacks against the "American and Pakistani governments and their security forces".
In Gaza, which is governed by militant group Hamas, Prime Minister Ismail Haniya condemned the killing of "a Muslim and Arabic warrior".
BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner says that, to many in the West, Bin Laden became the embodiment of global terrorism, but to others he was a hero, a devout Muslim who fought two world superpowers in the name of jihad.
The son of a wealthy Saudi construction family, Bin Laden grew up in a privileged world. But soon after the Soviets invaded Afghanistan he joined the mujahideen there and fought alongside them with his Arab followers, a group that later formed the nucleus for al-Qaeda.
After declaring war on America in 1998, Bin Laden is widely believed to have been behind the bombings of US embassies in East Africa, the attack on the USS Cole in Yemen in 2000 and the attacks on New York and Washington.
=================================================================
Can some of you seriously say that this monster deserved due process? I'm a New Yorker.I witnessed the atrocities on 9/11with my own eyes. I lost several friends on that day and wept with their families for months/years that followed.Last night gave these people and many others around the world a sense of closure.Before berating them,put yourself in their shoes.In no way is this war on terror over
A result for the USA but it seems a little bit strange that they were able to do it all so quickly, even burying him at sea despite the fact that they were 1000 miles inland and were in helicopters which would have taken about 5 hours to reach the sea. The conspiracy theorists are going to love this.
To all those people questioning the worth of this killing, on the contrary you would have been quick to conclude that the US mission in Afghanistan is incomplete without getting their prime target OBL. Atleast learn to appreciate the hard work of the people involved and the determination of US. It does send a message to would-be terrorists that they cannot hide forever.
Good news of course, but were the deaths of so many innocent Afghan and Pakistani civilians worth it? It was the meddling of foreign powers that created Al Qaeda in the first place. Maybe we can learn a lesson and stop being so imperialistic, but I guess not. Our politicians will carry on working in the interests of the rich and powerful.
I have just contacted someone who lives in same area where the house is. She said they heard a bang of helicopter fall and thought it was earthquake. She has confirmed the house has been empty. It is at a distance from the residential area the house can be viewed all the time and no movement has been seen and suddenly its become Osama's residence, where are his remains in sea according to AMERICA!









English Studying from BBC Learning English


Susan Boyle: unlikely superstar?

Susan Boyle

May 2009

A few weeks ago Susan Boyle was just a face in the crowd. Now her clip is the most watched in the world! Click below to listen:

Read the story:

Less than a few weeks ago Susan Boyle was a virtual unknown. However, since auditioning for Britain’s Got Talent, a televised talent competition, she has experienced a stratospheric rise to fame. A YouTube video of her audition has been watched by more than 26 million people, making it one of the most watched videos on the internet in recent times. It is undeniable that technology such as YouTube, Facebook and Twitter has helped to spread the word about Susan’s performance.
So just what is it about Susan that the people find so fascinating? Arguably, it is the fact she is such a class act. However, many have suggested that her biggest appeal lies in her unassuming persona.
Susan’s persona and appearance have been somewhat controversial and the initial reaction to her audition has made many people question whether they are guilty of judging a book by its cover. With her plain Jane, middle-aged looks and her no-nonsense approach to life, Susan is perhaps the most unlikely star to be discovered of late.
Commenting on her rise to fame, Max Clifford, a renowned PR guru, said that the massive public interest in her is partly due to people having to challenge their own assumptions andprejudices.
So what’s next for Susan? For the moment, she is preparing for her next appearance on Britain’s Got Talent and she is the odds-on favourite to win.
Looking forward, with talk of record contracts and celebrity duets, it is very likely that we’ll soon be seeing a Susan Boyle album in the charts!

Glossary:

SHOW ALL | HIDE ALL
a virtual unknown
not at all famous
experienced a stratospheric rise to fame
became widely known very quickly
undeniable
true
to spread the word about
to make many people aware of/know about
a class act
here, a performer who has a very good singing voice and a tasteful manner
unassuming persona
a quiet character, or person who shows no desire for attention or admiration
are guilty of judging a book by its cover
make assumption, or form opinions based only on how someone or something looks
plain Jane
ordinary, average, not very attractive or interesting female (a set informal saying)
no-nonsense approach to
being realistic, practical and/or serious about
PR guru
somebody who is respected for their knowledge of a particular subject (here, public relations, or PR) and often asked for advice
prejudices
showing dislike for something or someone for no good reason
odds-on favourite
here, most likely