2016年4月3日 星期日

extremism, wonder, hottie, One-hit wonder

On the arm of Brad Pitt, in the movie Salt, and in the dictionary under “hot.” By Dan Tynan Has she lost a step to younger dark-haired hotties like Megan ...





As terrorism threatens cities worldwide, counter-extremism initiatives are vital. Those that work best are often grassroots ventures


Nearly five years ago, the Dutch politician Frits Bolkestein made waves by saying that Jews had no future in the Netherlands, given the rise in Islamist extremism and anti-Semitism. In recent weeks and months, some Jews, including liberal-minded secular ones, have been wondering out loud whether he was right http://econ.st/1ucftd4



IN THE Netherlands, a country where 75% of the pre-war Jewish population perished in the Holocaust, some inter-faith tensions have eased to a remarkable degree. Last...
ECON.ST



這One-hit wonder在某英國的"每周一詞" 曾作娛樂界和運動界方面的溯源:
Meaning
A performer or act, usually a singer or band, who has just one popular success.
Origin
'One-hit wonder' is directed at popular musicians, although it is also sometimes used to describe others who are popularly known for a single sucess (unfairly or otherwise). For example, Joseph Heller - referring of course to his best-known work Catch-22. The term is used in various sports too, notably boxing. The meaning there is slightly different from other fields of endeavour. A boxing 'one-hit wonder' is someone who is not considered especially skillful, but relies on single knockout punches to win matches.
In the popular music sense, the term isn't as easy to define as it might seem. Several artists who had several hits in one country might have had just one elsewhere. For example, Frankie Goes To Hollywood is considered a one-hit wonder in the USA, but not in the UK. Also, some artists might be technically one-hit wonders but aren't usually listed as so as they had hits with other bands or under other names - for example, Derek and the DominoesLimahl/Kajagoogoo.
this term doesn't appear in print until surprisingly late. The earliest I can find is from the Winnipeg Free Press, in July 1977, in a piece about Abba:
"Instead of becoming what everyone expected [after winning the Eurovision Song Contest with Waterloo], a one-hit wonder, they soon had a string of hits behind them."
The use of the phrase there suggests that it was already known. It would certainly be ironic if the first use 'one-hit wonder' was in an article about Abba - one of the most successful groups in pop history.
There were many one-hit wonders in the 1950s and 1960s, although whether they were called that at the time seems in doubt.
The phrase was used long before 1977 in another context. In baseball a one-hit wonder is a pitcher who restricts the opposing team to a single base-hit by virtue of outstanding pitching. This goes back to at least 1914, as here from the New York newspaper The Middletown Daily Times-Press, July 1914 - in a piece entitled One-hit wonder fails to hold locals down:
"The Middies trimmed Newburgh by a score of 6 to 1, although Newburgh were aided and abetted by 'Let-er-go' Gallagher, their one hit pitcher."
Whoever coined the term 'one-hit wonder' in the musical sense might have plucked it out of the air. there's also the possibility that it was an ironic re-use of the earlier phrase - referring to relative failure rather than success. It could also have harked back to an much earlier phrase 'nine days' wonder', which has the same meaning, of something that is a flash in the pan.
In recent years, yet another 'one-hit wonder' has emerged. Anyone who has used Internet search engines will be familiar with searches yielding thousands or millions of hits. A search term that yields just one hit at Google is known as a Googlewhack.
hottie

n. a sexually attractive person. He's a real hottie! I wonder if he's taken.



Definition of wonder in English:

NOUN

1[MASS NOUN] A feeling of amazement and admiration,caused by something beautifulremarkable, orunfamiliar:he observed the intricacy of the ironwork with the wonder of a child
1.1[COUNT NOUN] A thing or a quality of something thatcauses wonder:have you ever explored the wonders of a coralreef?[MASS NOUN]: Athens was a place of wonder andbeauty
2A person or thing regarded as very good, remarkable, or effective:we all eat cakes from Gisella—she’s a wonderderogatory you’re all a bunch of gutless wonders!
2.1[AS MODIFIER] Having remarkable properties orabilities:a wonder drug
3[IN SINGULAR] A surprising event or situation:it is a wonder that losses are not much greater

VERB

[NO OBJECT]Back to top  
1Desire to know something; feel curious:how many times have I written that, I wonder?[WITH CLAUSE]: can’t help wondering how Georgina’s feeling
1.1[WITH CLAUSE] Used to express a polite question orrequest:I wonder whether you have thought more about it?
2Feel doubt:even hereditary peers are inclined to wonder aboutthe legitimacy of the place
3Feel admiration and amazementmarvel:people stood by and wondered at such bravery(as adjective wonderinga wondering look on her face
3.1Feel surprise:if I feel compassion for her, it is not to bewondered at

Origin

Old English wundor (noun), wundrian (verb), ofGermanic origin; related to Dutch wonder and GermanWunder, of unknown ultimate origin.

Phrases


I shouldn't wonder

1
informal I think it likely:more than once, I shouldn’t wonder

no (or little or small) wonder

2
It is not surprising:no wonder the waiters looked tired

nine days' (or seven-day or one-day) wonder

3
Something that attracts great interest for a short whilebut is then forgotten.

wonders will never cease

4
Used, often ironically, as an exclamation of greatsurprise at something pleasing.

work (or do) wonders

5
Have a very beneficial effect on someone or something:a good night’s sleep can work wonders for mind and body

沒有留言: