2007年11月28日 星期三

volley, volleyball, port call for PLA



Can't anyone find anything good to say about corporate IT? Its merits have been debated in MIT SMR since Andrew McAfee's 2004 article, "Do You Have Too Much IT?" and even before. We've gathered the best volleys in the argument into a new collection on the proper place of IT in the corporate spectrum.


volley (LOT)
noun [C usually singular]
a lot of similar things that are said or produced, or that happen, quickly one after the other:
I'm afraid my proposal was met with a volley of criticisms.volley (BULLETS)
noun [C]
a large number of bullets (seeming to be) fired at the same time:
Even as the funeral took place, guerrillas hidden nearby fired/let off a fresh volley of machine-gun fire.volley (SPORTS SHOT)
noun [C]
(in sports) a kick or hit in which a player returns a moving ball before it touches the ground:
That was a marvellous backhand volley.


━━ n. 一斉射撃; (弾丸・矢・石の)雨; (質問・悪口の)連発; 【テニス・フットボール】ボレー ((球が地につかない中に打返す[蹴返す]こと)).
━━ vt. 一斉射撃する; (質問などを)連発する; ボレーで打返す[蹴返す].
━━ vi. 一斉に発射される; ボレーをする.
 volley・ball ━━ n. 【球技】バレーボール; そのボール. 排球



volley (BULLETS) Show phonetics
noun [C]a large number of bullets (seeming to be) fired at the same time:
Even as the funeral took place, guerrillas hidden nearby fired/let off a fresh volley of machine-gun fire.

volley (LOT) Show phonetics
noun [C usually singular]a lot of similar things that are said or produced, or that happen, quickly one after the other:
I'm afraid my proposal was met with a volley of criticisms.

volley (SPORTS SHOT) Show phoneticsnoun [C](in sports) a kick or hit in which a player returns a moving ball before it touches the ground:
That was a marvellous backhand volley.
volley Show phoneticsverb [I or T]

━━ n. 一斉射撃; (弾丸・矢・石の)雨; (質問・悪口の)連発; 【テニス・フットボール】ボレー ((球が地につかない中に打返す[蹴返す]こと)).
━━ vt. 一斉射撃する; (質問などを)連発する; ボレーで打返す[蹴返す].
━━ vi. 一斉に発射される; ボレーをする.


volley・ball ━━ n. 【球技】バレーボール; そのボール. 排球

On this date in 1895, William G. Morgan created the game of Mintonette, designed to be somewhat easier than basketball and incorporating some of the facets of basketball,
handball and tennis. A year later, at its first exhibition match in Springfield, MA, someone in the audience remarked on the way the ball was volleyed back and forth and suggested the game be called volleyball. Though volleyball was originally developed as an indoor sport, it gained popularity as a beach sport and in 1996 beach volleyball was added as an official sport to the Olympics.

Quote
"A mere forty years ago, beach volleyball was just beginning. No bureaucrat would have invented it, and that's what freedom is all about." — Newt Gingrich



port call
比較
port of call noun [C]
a place where you stop for a short time, especially on a journey
port of call 寄港地[港]; 旅行の立ち寄り先, 行きつけの場所.


中共解放軍 People's Liberation Army

PLA
The armed forces of the Communist-led People's Republic of China. Created on August 1, 1927, the PLA, led by Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai, used both guerrilla and conventional methods to defeat the Nationalist Chinese forces of Chiang Kai-shek in the Chinese civil war of 1945-1949. The PLA provided the leadership, matefriel, and manpower for the Chinese People's Volunteers (CPV) in the Korean War.

2007年11月27日 星期二

game (WILLING), still, stockist, on the house, customer




 still2


━━ n. 蒸留器[所].


New Stills Quench a Thirst for Local Spirits
Ed Zurga for The New York Times
New Stills Quench a Thirst for Local Spirits

On the heels of the microbrewing boom, microdistilleries are thriving as demand for high-end spirits has soared.


game (WILLING)
adjective
willing to do things that are new, risky or difficult:
It was a difficult challenge, but Roberta was game.
She's game for anything.

game;作形容詞有敢作敢為的、心甘情願的之意。例句︰She is game for any risk.(她敢冒任何風險。)

"I am always game for anything, especially if it’s for charity," she said, according to the Lincolnshire Echo. "And I did enjoy it, though I don’t suppose I will do it again."
「我一向敢作任何事,尤其是為了慈善,」根據林肯郡回聲報的報導。諾拉說︰「而我真的樂在其中,雖然我認為我不會再做一次。」

《中英對照讀新聞》101-year-old Briton poses topless for calendar/101歲英國辣嬤拍上空月曆照
◎ 魏國金

customer 


stock・ist

━━ n. 〔英〕 仕入れ商; 〔英〕 特約店(主).

stockist 
noun [C] UK
a shop that sells a particular type of goods:
a health food stockist

stocktaking
noun [U] UK
the counting of all the goods, materials, etc. kept in a place such as a shop


All the drinks were on the house.




gamely Show phonetics
adverb
"I'll look after the baby, " he said gamely (= bravely).

siphon, syphon, fictitious


Satyam Accused of Creating Ghost Staff
Satyam founder Ramalinga Raju was accused by a prosecutor of using salary payments to 13,000 fictitious employees to siphon millions of dollars.



Definition

fictitious PhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhonetic Hide phonetics
adjective
invented and not true or not existing:
He dismissed recent rumours about his private life as fictitious.
Characters in this film are entirely fictitious.
siphon Show phonetics
noun [C]
1 (ALSO syphon) a tube that is bent in the shape of an `n', with each end in a separate container at two different levels, so that liquid can be pulled up into it from the higher container and go down through it into the lower container

2 a soda siphon

siphon, syphon Show phonetics
verb [T usually + adverb or preposition]
to remove liquid from a container using a siphon


━━ n., v. サイフォン(で吸上げる,を通る); サイフォンびん (siphon bottle); 【動】水管.
siphon off [out] 吸い上げ管で吸い出す; (余剰購買力などを)吸収する; 引き抜く; 横流しする.


n. (名詞 noun)
  1. 吸水管 虹吸管 呼吸管
vt. (及物動詞 transitive verb)
  1. 用虹吸管吸上來
vi. (不及物動詞 intransitive verb)
  1. 通過虹吸管吸
Google Siphons Searchers From Yahoo, Microsoft
PC World - USA
Google increased its share of the US Internet search engine market in October, taking share away from rivals Yahoo and Microsoft, according to market ...



siphon sth off, UK ALSO syphon sth off phrasal verb
to dishonestly take money from an organization or other supply, and use it for a purpose for which it was not intended:
He lost his job when it was discovered that he had been siphoning off money from the company for his own use.


"We don't anticipate a lot of unplanned markdowns," said Scott B. Krugman, a vice president at the National Retail Federation trade group.

Of course, it wouldn't be Christmas without sales to entice shoppers. But barring a meltdown in consumer spending, many retailers believe they will be able to stick to carefully calibrated sales promotions without resorting to panicky price cuts that siphon off profits.




2007年11月23日 星期五

spit, spit and polish, archipelago, Shiretoko, FamilienMentsch,







Сергей Подгорков | "Стрелка" | 1980-е
Sergey Podgorkov | "The Strelka" (Тhe Spit of Vasilyevsky Island) | 1980s
謝爾蓋· podgorkov | "箭" | 1980號
謝爾蓋· podgorkov | "的" (the strelka吐口水--錯---的瓦西里島) | 1980 s






The International Polar Year is actually longer than 12 months, having started in March 2007 and ending in March 2009.

The polar regions play a key role in regulating our climate. They are also the most sensitive to change. Just 1,200 km from the North Pole, scientists from all over the world have gathered to monitor what's happening to the climate and how changes affect the life-forms on our planet. Koldewey Station is a polar research base run jointly by Germany's Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research and the French Polar Insitute IPEV, in Ny Alesund, Spitzbergen, the biggest of the islands in the Svalbard archipelago.

(Reporter: Irene Quaile)
Shiretoko, spit


In the land of the rising sun, dawn comes first to a cape of bizarre terrain whose name - Shiretoko -means the end of the earth and, to the south, to a spit of land barely two miles away from islands seized from Japan by the Soviet Union in the closing days of World War II.


Shiretoko是Innu愛奴語,意思是地球的盡頭。


spit (LAND) 
noun [C]
a long, thin, flat beach which goes out into the sea

FamilienMentsch

Jewish Family Magazine Hits German Newsstands

Interview: Stephanie Raison with Sandra Anusiewicz-Baer.

Germany has the fastest growing Jewish community in Europe, most of them living in and around Berlin. Despite the increasing number of Jews returning to Europe, the newsstands are surprisingly void of Jewish magazines. Now a new quarterly publication is hoping to keep German-speaking Jews up-to-date with everything that's happening in their community. It's called FamilienMentsch, which can be loosely translated as "Jewish Family." The first edition has been out since October. Stephanie Raison spoke with one of the Magazine's editors, Sandra Anusiewicz-Baer, and started by asking her how it got started.

德國猶太人雜誌FamilienMentsch, 英文約為 "Jewish Family."
四海猶太人兄弟家庭

Mensch (German plural: Menschen) is a German noun meaning a "human" (Yiddish מענטש; also mentschmentshmensh, or mench, plural: mentschen,
In Yiddish (from which the word has migrated into American English), mensch roughly means "a good person." A "mensch" is a particularly good person, like "a stand-up guy," a person with the qualities one would hope for in a dear friend or trusted colleague. According to author and Yiddish popularist Leo Rosten, 好人益友
[A] mensch is someone to admire and emulate, someone of noble character. The key to being "a real mensch" is nothing less than character, rectitude, dignity, a sense of what is right, responsible, decorous. (Rosten, Leo. 1968. The Joys of Yiddish. New York: Pocket Books. 237)

archipelago

(är'kə-pĕl'ə-gō'pronunciation


n.
pl. -goes or -gos.
  1. A large group of islands: the Philippine archipelago.
  2. A sea, such as the Aegean, containing a large number of scattered islands.
[Italian Arcipelago, the Aegean Sea, alteration (influenced by arci-, chief, archi-) of Medieval Latin Ēgēopelagus : Latin Aegaeus, Ēgēus, Aegean (from Greek Aigaios) + Latin pelagus, sea (from Greek pelagos).]
━━ n. (pl. ~(e)s) 群島; 多島海; (the A-) エーゲ海.
Research in the Svalbard archipelago


Definition of spit

Popularity: Bottom 50% of words
  1. 1:  a slender pointed rod for holding meat over a fire
  2. 2:  a small point of land especially of sand or gravel running into a body of water


spit and polish INFORMAL
careful cleaning and shining:
The car needs some spit and polish. spit and polish つばをつけてみがくこと; 〔話〕 いやに華美な格好をすること; (特に軍隊での過度なまでの)清潔整頓(とん).

Google gives new gene mapping service a bit of spit and polish
Guardian Unlimited - UK
But 23andme is worth special note because it has the might of Google behind it. The search engine giant was an early investor in the startup, ...

2007年11月22日 星期四

beggars belief

When one says it 'beggars belief' it is another way of saying it defies belief. Or, in other words, it doesn't ring true. To use it in a sentence:
That story the driver cooked up and told the state trooper beggars belief.



Data Leak in Britain Affects 25 Million

2007年11月22日


英 國多份主要報章今天繼續追擊報道政府稅務局丟失2500萬個人資料的消息﹔此外,英格蘭國家足球隊出局,無緣進入歐洲杯決賽圈也是重點報道的消息。 《每日電訊報》報道說,丟失個人資料的危機現在算到首相布朗的頭上,因為在布朗出任財相與首相期間,有關方面已經一再告知財政部與其他部門,部門內人員疏 忽行事的陋習,將可能導致保密資料落入不法者手中。 《衛報》報道說,由於政府丟失了2500萬個人資料,這當中包括銀行帳戶號碼與地址,資訊專員敦促大臣們檢討準備推出的身份證計劃收集的個人資料數量,此 前支持身份證計劃的工黨後座議員,也贊成這樣做。



布朗等高層官員需要承擔責任 《泰晤士報》報道說,由於擔心個人資料落入不法分子手中,昨天有數千人更改了銀行帳戶的提款密碼。此外,銀行以及信貸資料服務機構的電話響個不停,這些來 自兒童福利申請人的電話,希望能夠保護到個人的資料。 《獨立報》把政府這起丟失資料的醜聞稱為“數據門”。報章在頭版刊登了政府多個機構也儲存有諸如個人地址、銀行帳戶、繳稅記錄等個人資料,這些機構包括內 政部、全國醫療保險系統、司機及汽車牌照局等。



紐約時報

Data Leak in Britain Affects 25 Million


“It sort of beggars belief how anyone could have access to that data,” Simon Zimmo, the commercial director for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at SecuriData, a data security specialist based in Scotland.

2007年11月16日 星期五

xeroxing to googling


幾年前就有人將google 當"網路搜索"意
之後 Google 竟然說這種用法可能親侵犯他們的商標專利.....

Xer·ox (zîr'ŏks) pronunciation

A trademark used for a photocopying process or machine employing xerography. This trademark often occurs in print in lowercase as a verb and noun: “Letters you send should be xeroxed after you sign them” (Progressive Architecture). “He has four or five sheets of foolscap, xeroxes, I see, of court documents” (Scott Turow).


現在WSJ標題

Activists Start Googling

Activists are using Google Earth to illustrate the environmental damage done by mining the coal needed to supply their electricity providers.

2007年11月13日 星期二

emotionally withdrawn

withdraw

紐約時報

Bad Behavior Is Not Dooming, Studies on Pupils Say
By BENEDICT CAREY
Two new studies could change the way teachers and parents understand children who are disruptive or emotionally withdrawn.

2007年11月10日 星期六

indisposed for homely pursuits

indisposed (NOT WILLING) Show phonetics
adjective [after verb; + to infinitive] FORMAL
not willing:
After their rude attitude in the past, we feel distinctly indisposed to help them now.

indisposition Show phonetics
noun [U + to infinitive] FORMAL
an indisposition to cooperate

━━ a. 気分が悪い, (軽い)病気の; …する気がない ((to do)); 気が向かない ((for)).

Jane Austen

Emma


CHAPTER II

Mr. Weston was a native of Highbury, and born of a respectable family, which for the last two or three generations had been rising into gentility and property. He had received a good education, but, on succeeding early in life to a small independence, had become indisposed for any of the more homely pursuits in which his brothers were engaged, and had satisfied an active, cheerful mind and social temper by entering into the militia of his county, then embodied.



homely (PLAIN) UK Show phonetics
adjective (US homey)
plain or ordinary, but pleasant:
The hotel was homely and comfortable.


homely (UGLY) Show phonetics
adjective US DISAPPROVING
describes a person who is unattractive





indisposed (ILL) Show phonetics
adjective FORMAL
ill, especially in a way that makes you unable to do something:
Sheila Jones is indisposed, so the part of the Countess will be sung tonight by Della Drake.

indisposition Show phonetics
noun [C or U] FORMAL
when someone is indisposed

(from Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary)



Questions Are Raised About Firing of Soprano
By DANIEL J. WAKIN
In the ego-driven arena of opera, “indisposed” is the main euphemism used when a singer is replaced, whatever the real reason.



embody Show phonetics
verb [T] FORMAL
1 to represent a quality or an idea exactly:
She embodied good sportsmanship on the playing field.

2 to include as part of something:
Kennett embodied in one man an unusual range of science, music and religion.

embodiment Show phonetics
noun
the embodiment of sth someone or something that represents a quality or an idea exactly:
He was the embodiment of the English gentleman.
She was portrayed in the papers as the embodiment of evil.

(from Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary)

━━ vt. 形体を与える, 有形にする; 具体化する, 具体的に表現する ((in)); 一体にする, 統合する, 包含する.


2007年11月9日 星期五

nothingism, do-nothingism

Noth·ing·ism
現在似乎只在Webster 1913 Dictionary edited by Patrick J. Cassidy 才找得到解釋:


n.Nihility; nothingness. [R.]



Little Dorrit, CHAPTER 10

Containing the whole Science of Government

Circumlocution Office

思想之背後有一" do-nothingism "(" 不了了之")為Thomas Carlyle 所鑄:

Dismiss that hope, your Lordship! Let all real and imaginary Governors of England, at the pass we have arrived at, dismiss forever that fallacious fatal solace to their do-nothingism: of itself, too clearly, the leak will never stop; by human skill and energy it must be stopped, or there is nothing but the sea-bottom for us all!


Ch. 1: The Present Time

[written February 1, 1850.]

2007年11月6日 星期二

桃金娘 自在不相離 In a Myrtle Shade, Texan, Small Collectors

桃金娘 自在不相離 In a Myrtle Shade


Texan, Small Collectors

Small Collectors

Tex・an


━━ a., n. テキサス(德)州の(人).

H. Ross Perot (77): wealthy Texan who ran for president


Angela Merkel Visits George Bush's Texan Ranch

Angela Merkel is in the United States for informal talks with George W. Bush at his ranch in Crawford, Texas. The nuclear stand-off with Iran and peace in the Middle East are on the agenda.


Bush Friends, Loyal and Texan, Remain a Force 
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
The Texans who followed George W. Bush to Washington are a source of comfort for an increasingly isolated leader.

2007年11月2日 星期五

Product placement and displacement

Product placement 在下文的意思是" 電視節目中的置入式行銷 它在歐洲即將合法: 在第二篇的 product displacement意思是(因出問題而) 將產業從市場中回收


Product placement

In the picture

Nov 1st 2007
From The Economist print edition

Lifting restrictions on product placement will boost Europe's TV industry


THE endeavour is worthy of Soviet-era censors. In Paris, 60 full-time officials of France's audiovisual authority, the CSA, scrutinise more than 50,000 hours of television programming a year to detect, among other things, product-placement advertising, which is illegal in France. Broadcasters that insert products into programmes in exchange for money from manufacturers face hefty fines. Transgressions are rare: five years ago the CSA fined a broadcaster €150,000 ($141,000) for promoting Club Med holiday resorts in “Loft Story”, a reality show.

Strict limits on television product-placement are the norm across the European Union. In 2006 Europe's broadcasters earned just $31m from product placement, according to PQ Media, a research firm. In contrast, American broadcasters raked in $1.5 billion. And American television shows, product placements and all, are legal in Europe. The extra advertising cash has given America's television industry a huge competitive edge.


That is about to change. Last month the EU granted final approval to the Audiovisual Media Services Directive, which removes many restrictions on television product-placement. Member states will have two years to adopt the new rules, which they may modify first. But Martin Selmayr, a spokesman for Viviane Reding, the EU's commissioner responsible for media, says the law is “a major boost” for European television. PQ Media estimates that in 2010, the first year the legislation will be in force across the entire EU, television product-placement revenues will reach €130m, growing to €195m in 2011.

Those numbers may be conservative. Embedding ads within programmes is becoming increasingly attractive as commercial-skipping technologies such as TiVo become more popular. And the real value of product placement to broadcasters is higher than cash tallies suggest. Barter deals, in which companies provide programme-makers with free props, such as cars to blow up, are legal in many European countries. As restrictions are lifted, advertisers are expected to switch towards cash deals, which generally secure better placements. (The value hierarchy, in ascending order, is this: a product is visible; an actor touches it; an actor consumes and comments on it; the product helps a lead actor perform a heroic feat.)

A “clutter” limit will also help European programme-makers. Growth will slow in America as more programmes there hit a product-placement ceiling and start to annoy viewers, says Michael Belch, a product-placement expert at San Diego State University. (Last year “American Idol”, a talent-contest show, sported 4,086 placements.) Europe, by contrast, is virgin territory. That makes the product placements that do occur, often through loopholes or by stealth, especially valuable.

Agencies crafty enough to skirt the regulations make very good money, says Anders Granath, the boss of Propaganda GEM, a placement company based in Geneva. Tricks include “colour-coding” sets and actors' outfits in the hues of company logos, and tweaking dialogue to include words, phrases and themes that evoke well-known advertising campaigns. Propaganda GEM also performs stealth placements via props emblazoned with typefaces used in corporate logos.

Another way around restrictions involves promoting a product category (and not a specific brand) dominated by one company. This method has a drawback, known as “spillover”, because it lifts sales for competitors, too. But its popularity suggests that there is pent-up demand for direct product-placement.

Product placement in films is, for the most part, legal throughout Europe. But television offers three advantages. First, films often flop. A television programme's viewership, by contrast, fluctuates much less, so advertisers know what they are paying for. Second, the suggestive power of placements is especially effective at prompting urge-satisfying behaviour such as munching on snacks or swigging beer conveniently located in the kitchen.

The third benefit is that television programmes generally make it to screens much faster than films do, so advertisers can better synchronise placements with campaigns in other media. This can involve weaving storylines around brands via last-minute plot changes—and soap operas lend themselves to that more than films do. “It's very easy to support products,” says Gayatri Gill, head screenwriter for “Kasturi”, a popular Indian soap opera which is shot in Mumbai. This helps to explain the galloping growth of product placement in countries with vibrant soap-opera industries, such as Brazil and Mexico, the two largest product-placement markets after America.

Consumer groups lobbied hard to stop a relaxation of the EU's rules. Children's shows and news broadcasts remain off limits, and placements of alcohol and cigarettes are still banned. But there is little chance the EU or its member states will backtrack. Product placement, officials say, will help Europe produce better programmes and protect local languages.

Besides, governments themselves may soon enter the game. Propaganda GEM is in talks with several European government agencies about using television to promote not products, but behaviour. Officials are recognising, says Mr Granath, that paying programme-makers to change the storylines of dramas, sitcoms and soap operas might be more effective than traditional government campaigns to encourage environmentally friendly living, safer sex or staying in school. If product placement sounds scary, policy placement sounds downright sinister.





displacement 置換,位移,排氣量,排水量

n. - 移置, 取代, 轉移

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 転置, 変位, 排除, 解職, 排除量, 排気量

Meaning #6: to move something from its natural environment
 Synonym:
deracination

Meaning #7: act of removing from office or employment

carrier displacement 載體置換[] 

位移error; zero displacement 零位移誤差

product displacement 產品置換(回收 recalls)

2007年11月1日 星期四

sick joke

sick joke An anecdote intended to be humorous but actually in very bad taste, as in His stories turn out to be sick jokes about people who are handicapped in some way. [Colloquial; mid-1900s]


The noun sick joke has one meaning:

Meaning #1: a joke in bad taste





所謂"sick joke"是表示"品味差的笑話" 不是病態:

《獨立報》的標題是
醫生、醫生你如何證明調高薪金10%是恰當的,一年前你才得到22%的工資增長?這是不是一個病態的玩笑(sick joke)