behind facade
Chinese officials had promised a new era of openness in the wake of the earthquake and in the months before the Olympic Games, which begin in August. But the pressure on parents is one sign that officials here are determined to create a
facade of public harmony rather than undertake any real inquiry into accusations that corruption or negligence contributed to the high death toll in the quake.
Protesters disrupt Olympic relay in paris
The Mayor of Paris has cancelled a ceremony to mark the passage of
the Beijing Olympic torch, as officials
draped a Tibetan flag over
the city hall facade. The Olympic torch relay was interrupted at
least twice on its journey through Paris. Security officials
extinguished the flame and moved the torch to a bus on two occasions
following protests by Pro-Tibet demonstrators. The flame had
travelled only 200 meters from its starting point at the Eiffel
tower before it had to be put out and transferred to a bus. On the
second occasion, an athlete in a wheelchair was carrying the flame
out of a Paris traffic tunnel when protesters stopped it. At least
five protestors have been arrested so far.
2009.8
What Happened to the Web Series?
Two
years ago, the Internet was aflutter with the potential of Web video.
That exuberance has since dissipated. How the popular series "The Guild"
stays afloat? Home mailing parties and payments in bagels.
aflutter
(
ə-flŭt'ər)
adj.
- Being in a flutter; fluttering: with flags aflutter.
- Nervous and excited.
aeolian (ee-O-lee-uhn)
adjective: Relating to or caused by the wind.
Etymology
After
Aeolus, god of the winds in Greek mythology. As keeper of the winds, he
gave a bag containing winds to help with Odysseus's sailing.
Usage
"It
would not be surprising if a few features -- even very large ones --
were sculpted by aeolian processes into the pyramidal forms we see." — Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan; The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark; Random House; 1995.
amazon.com/o/asin/0345409469/ws00-20.
facade Show phonetics
noun
1 [C] (
ALSO façade)
the front of a building, especially a large or attractive building:
the gallery's elegant 18th century facade
2 [S] a false appearance that is more pleasant than the reality:
Behind that amiable facade, he's a deeply unpleasant man.
We are fed up with this facade of democracy.
fa・cade, fa・cade
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