2019年2月26日 星期二

brawn, brawny, hidebound, albatross, artful, ocean


Poster by Joseph Bruno Moran, circa 1930



BREAKING NEWS: Actor George Kennedy, star of films like "Cool Hand Luke” and “The Dirty Dozen” dies age 91, grandson tells CNN.http://cnn.it/24xAzag


George Kennedy, the brawny, Oscar-winning character actor known for such films as "Cool Hand Luke," "Airport" and the "Naked Gun" films, has died.…
CNN.COM|由 TODD LEOPOLD, CNN 上傳

Taiwan fears 'brawn drain'
The News International
But while Taiwan was basking in her glory, Hsieh's father, Hsieh Tze-lung, caused shock when he said his daughter may give up her Taiwanese citizenship to represent China in exchange for an annual $1.63 million sponsorship deal offered by a Chinese ...

Airbus Expects Military Albatross to Finally Take Wing 
Airbus believes its A400M military transport is on the verge of switching to a marketing asset, despite falling four years behind schedule and billions of euros over budget.

 A 1934 article in Newsweek describes him as one of the most imposing figures in banking history. In the November 1994 issue of Worth magazine, in an interview with James Grant, editor of a financial newsletter, Baker is described as the hidebound turn-of-the-century banker who always got his loans repaid and was one of Grant's heroes.

 

Being Tracked by Google Isn't Bad—It's Actually Good
BusinessWeek
By Mathew Ingram on March 05, 2012 An ocean of outrage erupted recently over Google's new privacy policy, which went into effect on Thursday: The European Union is protesting the changes, the Electronic Frontier Foundation is recommending that users ...

A Family's Billions, Artfully Sheltered

By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI
Ronald S. Lauder, an heir to the Estée Lauder fortune, uses an aggressive tax strategy to preserve holdings that Forbes magazine says make him the world's 362nd wealthiest person.



albatross 大海鳥信天翁 比喻讓你做事不順、大負擔等


About 8:30 a.m. on May 2, 1961, the Albatross was gliding through a slight mist in calm seas 180 miles west of Key West on the way to Nassau. Suddenly, a single bolt of lightning flashed across the sky, and a blast of wind smacked the ship.
"It was as if a giant hand took hold of us," Mr. Sheldon said in a 1996 interview with People magazine. "In 15 seconds the Albatross was on its side. In 60 seconds it filled
with water. And then it was gone the ocean was calm."

Nonetheless, pension liabilities are another albatross for Ford's stock.

A regulated business often lead to bureaucracy and a hidebound corporate culture. When the business is set loose to compete on its own, those traits become an albatrossthat must be shaken off for a company to stay on top.
More broadly, they may tap the antiregulatory mood to paint the GOP as captive supporters of unregulated corporate power. "Obviously, that's the bigger political game here--to tie the Enron albatross around the necks of Republicans who believe that government should be less involved in markets," says Jerry Taylor, an environmental expert at the Cato Institute, a free-market think tank in Washington.
The word albatross has appeared in 55 Times articles over the past year, most recently in "Controversy Over Diamonds Made Into Virtue by De Beers," on August 22, 2000.
LONDON, Aug. 21 _ A little over a year ago, De Beers, the mining colossus straddling the world's diamond trade, confronted double jeopardy. Human rights groups were accusing it of buying illicit diamonds from African rebels and rulers who used the proceeds to help pay for their wars. The essential mystique of its product, nurtured over decades of artful image-building and brawny cartel management, seemed threatened by association with these so-called blood diamonds.
At the same time, De Beers, a South African-based multinational corporation, faced a pure business challenge: the company's huge accumulation of raw gems, used to help control the supply and keep world diamond prices high, had become a costly albatross . De Beers's shrinking share of the market was making it harder to support prices by sopping up gems itself.



brawn

Pronunciation: /brɔːn/

Translate brawn | into Italian
Definition of brawn  noun
[mass noun]
  • 1physical strength in contrast to intelligence:commando work required as much brain as brawn
  • 2British meat from a pig’s or calf’s head that is cooked and pressed in a pot with jelly:a slice of brawnpork brawn

Origin:

Middle English: from Old French braon 'fleshy part of the leg', of Germanic origin; related to German Braten 'roast meat'

artful[art・ful]

  • レベル:社会人必須
  • 発音記号[ɑ'ːrtfəl]

[形]こうかつな;巧妙な, 器用な, うまい
an artful pun
巧妙なしゃれ
an artful fellow
こうかつなやつ.
art・ful・ly
[副]巧妙に;じょうずに, 器用に.
art・ful・ness


ocean[o・cean]

  • 発音記号[óuʃən]
[名]
1 ((the 〜))大洋, 海洋;海
go swimming in the ocean
海に泳ぎに行く(▼((米))では大洋に限らずseaと同じ意味でよく用いる).
2 ((the O-))…洋
the Atlantic [the Pacific] Ocean
大西[太平]洋(▼Oceanは省略可).
3 広大な広がり;((しばしば〜s))((略式))莫大(ばくだい)な量
an ocean of wheat [confusion]
一面の麦畑[果てしない混乱]
oceans of beer
大量のビール.
4 ((形容詞的))大洋の, 海洋の
an ocean chart
海洋図
an ocean liner
遠洋定期船
an ocean floor
大洋底.
[もとはギリシャ語Ōkeanós(大地の周囲をめぐる大河. のち大洋の神の名前となる)]




hídebòund[híde・bòund]

[形]
1 〈人が〉偏狭な, 頑固な, 偏屈な;ひどく保守的な.
2 〈家畜が〉骨と皮ばかりの.

2019年2月25日 星期一

entrust, distrustful, magazine, chamber. baloney, downed, dyslexia,dread, downgrade


Many Japanese are worried about so-called hot spots, radioactive patches located in otherwise uncontaminated areas. Distrustful of official government information, they have now started collecting data themselves.

Copter Downed by Taliban Fire; Elite U.S. Unit Among Dead
By RAY RIVERA, ALISSA J. RUBIN and THOM SHANKER


Among the dead were elite Navy Seal commandos from the broader unit that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, though none were involved in that raid.

Amid Criticism on Downgrade of U.S., S.&P. Fires Back

By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ and ERIC DASH
A day after Standard & Poor's downgraded the creditworthiness of the United States government, it defended its decision and warned that further downgrades may come.


We require to know what is possible now in England, a ntion conscious of its high achievements, and of great failures, shaken to its foundations, distrustful of the old ways, and dreading fantastic novelties.
The problem was first described as a small plane downed in the Hudson River. The officials distrusted it.
“As you recall, that was what everyone said on 9/11,” said one federal official who was in Virginia at the time. “For the U.K. bombings, on July 7, 2005, the first report was an electrical fire. So we’re very accustomed to hearing, ‘Oh, no, it’s nothing.’ ”

At least a half-dozen construction unions and a handful of public pension funds had entrusted money to Mr. Madoff, according to the list. Some of New York City's most prominent real estate figures, reeling from the property downturn, also appear to be victims of the alleged fraud.

Tracing Business Acumen to Dyslexia



Published: December 6, 2007

It has long been known that dyslexics are drawn to running their own businesses, where they can get around their weaknesses in reading and writing and play on their strengths. But a new study of entrepreneurs in the United States suggests that dyslexia is much more common among small-business owners than even the experts had thought.
The report, compiled by Julie Logan, a professor of entrepreneurship at the Cass Business School in London, found that more than a third of the entrepreneurs she had surveyed — 35 percent — identified themselves as dyslexic. The study also concluded that dyslexics were more likely than nondyslexics to delegate authority, to excel in oral communication and problem solving and were twice as likely to own two or more businesses.
“We found that dyslexics who succeed had overcome an awful lot in their lives by developing compensatory skills,” Professor Logan said in an interview. “If you tell your friends and acquaintances that you plan to start a business, you’ll hear over and over, ‘It won’t work. It can’t be done.’ But dyslexics are extraordinarily creative about maneuvering their way around problems.”
The study was based on a survey of 139 business owners in a wide range of fields across the United States. Professor Logan called the number who said they were dyslexic “staggering,” and said it was significantly higher than the 20 percent of British entrepreneurs who said they were dyslexic in a poll she conducted in 2001.
She attributed the greater share in the United States to earlier and more effective intervention by American schools to help dyslexic students deal with their learning problems. Approximately 10 percent of Americans are believed to have dyslexia, experts say.
One reason that dyslexics are drawn to entrepreneurship, Professor Logan said, is that strategies they have used since childhood to offset their weaknesses in written communication and organizational ability — identifying trustworthy people and handing over major responsibilities to them — can be applied to businesses.
“The willingness to delegate authority gives them a significant advantage over nondyslexic entrepreneurs, who tend to view their business as their baby and like to be in total control,” she said.
William J. Dennis Jr., senior research fellow at the Research Foundation of the National Federation of Independent Business, a trade group in Washington, said the study’s results “fit into the pattern of what we know about small-business owners.”
“Entrepreneurs are hands-on people who push a minimum of paper, do lots of stuff orally instead of reading and writing, and delegate authority, all of which suggests a high verbal facility,” Mr. Dennis said. “Compare that with corporate managers who read, read, read.”
Indeed, according to Professor Logan, only 1 percent of corporate managers in the United States have dyslexia.
Much has been written about the link between dyslexia and entrepreneurial success. Fortune Magazine, for example, ran a cover story five years ago about dyslexic business leaders, including Richard Branson, founder of Virgin Atlantic Airways; Charles R. Schwab, founder of the discount brokerage firm that bears his name; John T. Chambers, chief executive of Cisco; and Paul Orfalea, founder of the Kinko’s copy chain.
Similarly, Rosalie P. Fink, a professor at Lesley College in Cambridge, Mass., wrote a paper in 1998 on 60 highly accomplished people with dyslexia.
But Professor Logan said hers was the first study that she knew of that tried to measure the percentage of entrepreneurs who have dyslexia. Carl Schramm, president of the Kauffman Foundation, which financed the research, agreed. He said the findings were surprising but, he said, there was no previous baseline to measure it against.
Emerson Dickman , president of the International Dyslexia Association in Baltimore and a lawyer in Maywood, N.J., said the study’s findings “just make sense.”
“Individuals who have difficulty reading and writing tend to deploy other strengths,” Mr. Dickman, who has dyslexia, said. “They rely on mentors, and as a result, become very good at reading other people and delegating duties to them. They become adept at using visual strengths to solve problems.”
Mr. Orfalea, 60, who left Kinko’s — now FedEx Kinko’s — seven years ago, and who now dabbles in a hodgepodge of business undertakings, is almost proud of having dyslexia and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
“I get bored easily, and that is a great motivator,” he said. “I think everybody should have dyslexia and A.D.D.
He attributes his success to his difficulty with reading and writing because it forced him to master verbal communication.
“I didn’t have a lot of self-confidence as a kid,” he said. “And that is for the good. If you have a healthy dose of rejection in your life, you are going to have to figure out how to do it your way.”
He said his biggest advantage was his realization that because of his many inadequacies, he had to delegate important tasks to subordinates. “My motto is: Anybody else can do anything better than me,” he said.
Danny Kessler, 26, also has dyslexia and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Mr. Kessler founded Angels with Attitude, which holds seminars for women on self-defense. He is a co-founder of Club E Network (www.clubenetwork.com), which sponsors “networking events,” runs an online chat room for entrepreneurs and produces television shows about them.
Like Mr. Orfalea, he said he had low self-esteem as a child, and now views that as a catapult into the entrepreneurial world. “I told myself I would never be a lawyer or a doctor,” he said. “But I wanted to make a lot of money. And I knew business was the only way I was going to do it.”
In high school, Mr. Kessler said, “I became cool with the teachers. I developed a rapport with them. I was able to convince almost all of them to nudge my grade up just a bit. I adopted a strategy for squeezing through the system.”
As for the importance of entrusting tasks to others, Mr. Kessler says his limitations have endowed him with a “razor sharp” intuition that allows him to ascertain within minutes of meeting people whether he can depend on them and what they would be good at in an organization.
Drew Devitt, 45, who also has dyslexia, said he started Thoughtware Products in college to produce videos for real estate brokers. Today, he runs a successful $9 million company in Aston, Pa., called New Way Air Bearings that makes bearings for precision machine tools.
Asked about mentors, Mr. Devitt ticks off a list, and it is a long one, beginning with his parents, who sold imported bearing materials out of their home.
Indirectly, he confirmed that he gives free rein to his deputies. Asked about the claim on his company’s Web site that it is a “market leader,” he sighed. “That’s not something I would say,” he said. “Actually, it’s baloney. But that’s what our marketing people came up with. You can’t do everything. You have to let people do their job.”



The United Nations has said it is still waiting for the government to approve the start of relief efforts in the wake of the cyclone.
The Burmese regime is normally distrustful of outside influences.
Burma 'must allow aid workers in'

baloney

Line breaks: ba|lo¦ney
Pronunciation: /bəˈləʊni/

NOUN


informal

1[MASS NOUN] Foolish or deceptive talknonsense:I don’t buy it—it’s all a load of baloney
2North American term for bologna.

Origin

1920ssense 1 said to be a corruption of bologna.

distrust 
noun [U]
when you do not trust someone or something:
The two groups have existed in a state of mutual distrust for centuries.
She has a (deep) distrust of journalists.

distrust 
verb [T]
In spite of its election success, the government is still deeply distrusted on key health and education issues.

distrustful
adjective


entrust
verb [T + adverb or preposition]
to give someone a thing or a duty for which they are responsible:
He didn't look like the sort of man you should entrust your luggage to.
Two senior officials have been entrusted with organizing the auction.

distrustful,[形]((通例叙述))信用しない, なかなか信じない, (…への)不信の念を抱いている, (…に)疑念がある((of ...)).

dys·lex·i·a
(dĭs-lĕk'sē-ə) pronunciation
n.
A learning disorder marked by impairment of the ability to recognize and comprehend written words.
[New Latin : DYS– + Greek lexis, speech (from legein, to speak).]
━━ n. 【医】失読症.
Definition
Dyslexia is a learning disability characterized by problems in reading, spelling, writing, speaking, or listening. In many cases, dyslexia appears to be inherited.


dread
v., dread·ed, dread·ing, dreads.
v.tr.
  1. To be in terror of.
  2. To anticipate with alarm, distaste, or reluctance: dreaded the long drive home.
  3. Archaic. To hold in awe or reverence.
v.intr.
To be very afraid.

n.
  1. Profound fear; terror.
  2. Fearful or distasteful anticipation. See synonyms at fear.
  3. An object of fear, awe, or reverence.
  4. Archaic. Awe; reverence.
adj.
  1. Causing terror or fear: a dread disease.
  2. Inspiring awe: the dread presence of the headmaster.
[Middle English dreden, short for adreden, from Old English adrǣdan, from ondrǣdan, to advise against, fear : ond-, and-, against; see un-2 + rǣdan, to advise.]

2019年2月23日 星期六

ecstasy, ecstatic, rapture, bliss


Maxfield Parrish (1870-1966) "Ecstasy", for the large 1930 Edison Mazda calendar

Learn about The Haçienda, Ram Records, the Amen Break and the ecstasy wars.


Some poets suffer into truth; others get there by a less tortured path. Horace, the Roman poet of the late first century B.C., was one of the latter. He knew neither the agony of passionate love, like his predecessor Catullus, nor the ecstasy of revelation, like Lucretius. He never strove for a magnum opus, as did his close friend Virgil, preferring short, exquisitely crafted works in a variety of genres. 




This is Ecstasy: This profound love, this sudden mind rush that has you absolutely floored. You "open" your eyes and look around, surrounded by friends you ...
ecstasy :神魂超拔;出神狀態;身外境界:指人與天主非比尋常的結合,為宗教神秘經驗之一;因熱愛天主,人的感官功能暫時停止,心神游於物外之狀態;又稱 rapture 


bliss

n.
  1. Extreme happiness; ecstasy.
  2. The ecstasy of salvation; spiritual joy.
phrasal verb:
bliss out Slang.
  1. To go into a state of ecstasy.
[Middle English blisse, from Old English bliss, from blīths, from blīthe, joyful. See blithe.]
blissful bliss'ful adj.
blissfully bliss'ful·ly adv.
blissfulness bliss'ful·ness n.


[名][U]
1 無上の喜び, 至福
in married [wedded] bliss
幸福に結婚して.
2 《神学》天上の喜び;天国, 楽園.
━━[動]((次の句で))
bliss out
((俗))(自)(他)幸福[恍惚(こうこつ)]感に浸る[浸らせる].
[古英語blīths(blīthe幸福な+-s名詞語尾). △BLITHE

ecstatic

adj.
  1. Marked by or expressing ecstasy.
  2. Being in a state of ecstasy; joyful or enraptured.
[French extatique, from Greek ekstatikos, from ekstasis, distraction. See ecstasy.]
ecstatically ec·stat'i·cal·ly adv.

business. business as usual, do the business, have no business, in the business of, like nobody's business, mind one's own business

如果泛民停留在司法覆核財委會決定,然後收工(Business as usual)如常開會,同建制派談笑風生,咁以後就唔使玩嘞,被人侮辱兼踩到上心口,在政治上唔還招,就等如投降,大家等住睇政改同廿三條在建制派結合泛民內鬼下強力動員通過。



如果泛民停留在司法覆核財委會決定,然後收工如常開會(Business as usual),同建制派談笑風生,咁以後就唔使玩嘞,被人侮辱兼踩到上心口,在政治上唔還招,就等如投降,大家等住睇政改同廿三條在建制派結合泛民內鬼下強力動員通過。




business as usual

An ongoing and unchanging state of affairs despite difficulties or disturbances:apart from being under new management, it’s business as usual in the department

do the business

BritishINFORMAL
Do what is required or achieve the desired result:Rogers has got to do the business, score a hat trick or something
VULGAR SLANG Have sexual intercourse.

have no business

Have no right to do something:he had no business tampering with social services

in business

Operating, especially in commerce:they will have to import from overseas to remain in business
INFORMAL Able to begin operations:if you’ll contact the right people, I should think we’re in business

in the business of

Engaged in or prepared to engage in:I am not in the business of making accusations

like nobody's business

INFORMAL , chiefly British To an extraordinarily high degree or standard:these weeds spread like nobody’s business

mind one's own business

Refrain from meddling in other people’s affairs.

send someone about their business

DATED Tell someone to go away.


[名]
  1. 1U(営利目的の)仕事解説的語義
    商売,職業,〔the ~〕…業(界);事業[企業]活動,業務,実務,営業
    • do online business
    • オンラインビジネスを手掛ける
    • go into business
    • 事業を始める,実業界に入る
    • go out of business
    • 廃業する
    • put [drive] ... out of business
    • …を廃業に追い込む
    • Business is business.
    • 商売は商売;情け容赦は禁物
    • What business is he in?” “His business is law.”
    • 「彼の職業は何ですか」「法律家です」
  2. 1aU商取引解説的語義
    取引;商況,景気,取引高;ひいき,引き立て
    • business deal
    • 商取引
    • add online sales to one's business
    • オンライン販売を始める
    • increase business
    • 取引高を増やす
    • How's business?
    • 仕事[景気]はどうだい
    • Business is brisk [slowdull].
    • 景気がよい[悪い];繁盛している[いない]
  3. 1bC商売の組織(解説的語義会社,企業,法人,商社;商店,店,店舗;事業所,のれん
    • business partner
    • 共同経営者
    • family business
    • 一族経営の企業
    • small businesses
    • 小規模の会社
    • start [set up] a business
    • 会社を設立する
    • run [operate] a business
    • 会社を経営する
    • take over a business
    • 会社を買収する[引き継ぐ]
    • open [close] a business
    • 開店[閉店,廃業]する
    • go to one's business
    • 会社に行く
    • sell one's business
    • 店の権利[のれん]を売る
  4. 2U(一般に)するべき仕事(解説的語義用事,用件,務め,本分,責任;案件;議事(日程)
    • do one's business
    • 用事をする;((略式・遠回しに))用を足す(◆ペットにも用いる)
    • know one's (ownbusiness
    • 自分の本分を心得ている
    • come [get downto business
    • 本題に入る;本気で仕事にかかる
  5. 2aU〔しばしば否定文で〕個人の事柄(解説的語義個人的なこと,個人の領分;(…する)権利≪doing,((英))to do
  6. 2b〔a [the] ~〕((略式))(一般に)…な事柄解説的語義
    問題,出来事(◆形容詞を添えて個人的な判断を示す),(特に)面倒なこと,やっかいな問題,一件;先に言ったこと[もの]
    • a sticky business
    • やっかいな問題
    • ... and all that business
    • ((略式))…とそのたぐいのこと
    • What a business (it is)!
    • 何てやっかいな(ことだ)
  7. 2c〔the ~〕((英略式))とても楽しめる[人気のある]人[もの]
  8. 3U《演劇》しぐさ,所作(◇会話以外の演技)(stage business)

businessの慣用句・イディオム

  1. be in business
    • 商売をしている;すっかり用意できている
  1. business as usual
    • 1 (惰性的な)日常生活;安易な[いい加減な]態度
    • 2 ((掲示))平常どおり営業
  1. do A's business=do the business for A
    • A(人)をやっつける,殺す
  1. get the business
    • ((略式))ひどい目にあう
  1. give A the business
    • ((略式))
    • 1 A(人)を困らせる
    • 2 A(人)を叱責しっせきする
  1. go about one's business
    • 1 自分の仕事をする
    • 2 〔命令形で〕立ち去る
  1. have no business
    • (…する)権利がない,筋合いではない≪to dodoing
      • You have no business telephoning [((英))to telephoneme.
      • 私に電話をする筋合いはないはずだ
  1. It's the business.
    • ((英俗))すばらしい
  1. like nobody's business
    • ((略式))異常に,すばらしく
  1. make it one's business to do
    • …するようにする,必ず…する
  1. mean business
    • ((略式))本気[真剣]である
  1. mind one's own business
    • ((略式))自分のことに専念する(⇒2a
      • was (justminding my own business.
      • ただ自分のすべきことをしていたまでだ
  1. not in the business of A
    • Aをするつもりはない
  1. send A about A's business
    • A(人)を解雇する;叱しかりとばす
  1. talk business
    • まじめな話をする

語源
[原義は「忙しい状態」]

Origin

Old English bisignis ‘anxiety’ (see busy, -ness); the sense ‘state of being busy’ was used from Middle English down to the 18th century, but is now differentiated as busyness. The use ‘appointed task’ dates from late Middle English, and from it all the other current senses have developed.