2010年9月8日 星期三

2010/09/08

 Word

1.      except
2.      arrive
3.      depart
4.      arrow
5.      Cupid
6.      bow
7.      shooting
8.      round
9.      jar
10.  fell
11.  astronaut
12.  female
13.  thieves
14.  steal
15.  Automated Teller Machine = ATM
16.  paid
17.  audience
18.  laughs
19.  aunt
20.  truck
21.  author
22.  automobile
23.  strange
24.  autumn
25.  leave

Phrase
1.      all along : all the time, from the beginning (without change)
2.      little by little : gradually, slowly (also: step by step)
3.      to tire out : to make very weary due to difficult conditions or hard effort (also: to wear out)
4.      to call on : to ask for a response from; to visit (also: to drop in on)
5.      never mind : don’t be concerned about it; ignore what was just said

Poetry
1.      A sweet arrow in Cupid’s bow is shooting people with love for all.
2.      Rain, rain, go away! Come again another day!

Life Term
2.      as soon as possible = a.s.a.p. 
3.      ask for it 
4.      You are asking for it.

2010/09/07

Word
1.      although
2.      vampire
3.      ambulance
4.      among
5.      hide
6.      basket
7.      thirsty
8.      turkey
9.      angry
10.  treat
11.  suit
12.  fit
13.  fried
14.  dirty thieves
15.  except
16.  noisiest
17.  appear
18.  bright
19.  April
20.  April fool
21.  apron
22.  army
23.  were
24.  breve
25.  Iron Man
26.  the army
27.  the navy
28.  arm force
29.  mad
30.  chase
31.  vocabulary
32.  usage
33.  instructions
34.  reflects
35.  underlined
36.  particular
37.  context
38.  policy
39.  attacked
40.  officially

Proverb
1. To say is one thing; to do is another.

Phrase
1.      to dress up : to wear formal clothes, to dress very nicely
2.      at last : finally, after a long time
3.      as usual : as is the general case, as is typical
4.      to find out : get information about, to determine
5.      to look at : give one’s attention to; to watch
6.      to look for : to try to find , to search for
7.      all right : acceptable, fine; yes, okay
8.      have ants in one’s pants 
9.      with open arms

Crash Proof

One of the big hits in the business section of book stores these days is Crash Proof.  How to Profit From the Coming Economic Collapse. There are lots more like it. They have titles like The Coming Economic Collapse, Financial Armageddon, The Great Bust Ahead, Game Over, After the Crash, and When Giants Fall.
  Scanning these titles can be terribly depressing. But don’t despair. As long as we have subtitles, we have hope. Whether the future holds collapse, depression, catastrophe, Armageddon, or the most awful planetary mash-up in the history of the whole bloody universe, the subtitle is certain you can profit from it.
  All you have to do is buy the book.
  The strange fact is that most popular business books come in one of two varieties. One is The Coming Boom: How to profit! The other is The Coming Collapse: How to profit! One never sees The Coming Moderation: How to do fairly well!
  Outwardly, manic bulls and depressive bears are completely unalike. But at their core, both species are optimists, even the bears. After all, it takes a certain unflappable cheeriness to see everything from Great Depressions to plague, war, and civilizational collapse as an opportunity to make some coin.
  True pessimists offer only the hope that you and your family may not be beaten and flayed by starving marauders. No oneprofitsor prospersin their subtitles. At best, theyguardorsurvive.

The life of the law not been logic

    The life of the law not been logic; it has been experience. The felt necessities of the time, the prevalent moral and political theories, intuitions of public policy, avowed or unconscious, even the prejudices which judges share with their fellow men, have had a good deal more to do than the syllogism in determining the rules by which men should be governed. The law embodies the story of a nation’s development through many centuries, and it cannot be dealt with as if it contained only the axioms and corollaries of a book of mathematics.