THE MEDIA EQUATION
Trump Had One Last Story to Sell. The Wall Street Journal Wouldn’t Buy It.
Inside the White House’s secret, last-ditch effort to change the narrative, and the election — and the return of the media gatekeepers.
The clause being used to ditch contracts is typically only respected by courts in London and Hong KongIs a lengthy legal tangle inevitable?
ECONOMIST.COM
Chinese firms are using obscure legal tactics to get out of contracts
To Save Our Economy, Ditch Taiwan
New York Times
Here is one: He should enter into closed-door negotiations with Chinese leaders to write off the $1.14 trillion of American debt currently held by China in exchange for a deal to end American military assistance and arms sales to Taiwan and terminate ...
Dell to Ditch 25,000 BlackBerrys
In a direct shot at BlackBerry, Dell plans to move its 25,000 employees over to its own line of smartphones and then aggressively market a service to help other companies do the same.
Last-Ditch Appeal Stalls Georgia Execution
By KIM SEVERSON and JOHN SCHWARTZ
The execution of Troy Davis, scheduled for 7 p.m., was temporarily on hold while Georgia authorities awaited a review by the United States Supreme Court.
last ditch
(lăst'dĭch')adj.
Done or made as a final recourse, especially to prevent a crisis or disaster: a last-ditch effort to avert the threatened strike.
n.
A long narrow trench or furrow dug in the ground, as for irrigation, drainage, or a boundary line.
v., ditched, ditch·ing, ditch·es. v.tr.
- To dig or make a long narrow trench or furrow in.
- To surround with a long narrow trench or furrow.
- To drive (a vehicle) into a long narrow trench, as one beside a road.
- To derail (a train).
- Slang.
- To get rid of; discard: ditched the old yard furniture.
- To get away from (a person, especially a companion).
- To discontinue use of or association with: ditch the job at the hamburger stand.
- To skip (class or school).
- To crash-land (an aircraft) on water.
- To dig a ditch.
- To crash-land in water. Used of an aircraft or a pilot.
[Middle English dich, from Old English dīc.]
[名]水路, みぞ;どぶ;(おおいのない)掘り割り.
be driven to the last ditch
どたん場に追い込まれる.
die in a ditch
のたれ死ぬ.
die in [at] the last ditch
力をつくして最後まで戦う.
━━[動](他)
1 〈ある場所に〉みぞを掘る, 掘り割りを巡らす.
2 ((主に米))〈列車を〉脱線させる(derail);〈自動車を〉みぞに落とす;〈飛行機を〉不時着水させる.
3 ((俗))〈学校・授業などを〉サボる;…をやっかい払いする(get rid of);…からのがれる;…を見捨てる;〈恋人を〉振る
Let's ditch her parents and go to the movies.
彼女の両親をまいて映画に行こう.
彼女の両親をまいて映画に行こう.
━━(自)
1 みぞを掘る.
2 〈飛行機が〉不時着水する.
[古英語dic(みぞ)の南部方言形dich. △DIKE]potash
n.
- See potassium carbonate.
- See potassium hydroxide.
- Any of several compounds containing potassium, especially soluble compounds such as potassium oxide, potassium chloride, and various potassium sulfates, used chiefly in fertilizers.
[Sing. of obsolete pot ashes, translation of obsolete Dutch potaschen (from the fact that this substance was originally obtained by leaching wood ashes and evaporating the leach in a pot).]
n. - 碳酸鉀, 苛性鉀leach (lēch)
v., leached, leach·ing, leach·es. v.tr.
- To remove soluble or other constituents from by the action of a percolating liquid.
- To empty; drain: "a world leached of pleasure, voided of meaning" (Marilynne Robinson).
To be dissolved or passed out by a percolating liquid.
n.
- The act or process of leaching.
- A porous, perforated, or sievelike vessel that holds material to be leached.
- The substance through which a liquid is leached.
[From Middle English leche, leachate, from Old English *lece, muddy stream, akin to leccan, to moisten.]
leachability leach'a·bil'i·ty n.leachable leach'a·ble adj.
leacher leach'er n.
Uncovered windows have quietly become a fixture of high-end homes across America. How did ditching the curtains become such a common marker of wealth? Michael Waters reported in January: https://theatln.tc/SkTGEd6u
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