October 7, 2007 by homing8179
“The operation infuriated the residents, who rallied together the following day and attacked the checkpoint and the police station”, the centre said.
infuriate(v.)
Cambridge:to make someone extremely angry
e.g. The nuclear operation in North Korea infuriated USA, urging to stop manufacturing nuclear weapons from the natural uranium.
[synonym: annoy, irradiate]
Tags: infuriate, verbs
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October 4, 2007 by homing8179
“Void at the heart of computer games”
Void (n.)
Cambridge: a large hole or empty space
e.g. from cambridge: Before Einstein, space was regarded as a formless void
e.g. As my parents haven’t planted anything in our garden, the garden become a void.
Tags: verbs, void
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October 3, 2007 by homing8179
”…helping to ease underlying tensions in the pan-democractic camp…”From”Democrats practise what they preach”
Preach (v.)
Cambridge:to try to persuade other people to believe in a particular belief or follow a particular way of life
e.g. The Greenpace preachs the recycling of mooncake boxes during the Mid-Autumn Festival.
Underlying (adj.)
Cambridge: real but not immediately obvious
e.g.There are many underlying reasons to keep the trend of child abuse growing.
Interesting term:”bread-and-butter”
From SCMP: “Bread-and-butter issues will form only the periphery of the battleground.”
Cambridge: the basic things that directly relate to most people
e.g. The explosure of higher infectious dieases is a bread-and-butter issue that concerns the people around the world.
Tags: adjectives, bread-and-butter, preach, underlying, verbs
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October 2, 2007 by homing8179
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September 28, 2007 by homing8179
Healines:”Doctors warn of looming ketamine health crisis”
loom(v.)
Cambridge: the event seems likely to happen soon and causes worry
Cambridge example:
e.g.Here, too, the threat of unemployment has been looming on the horizon.
e.g.The threat of closure looms over the workforce.
My example: The consultation of Green Paper looms to have new determination.
Tags: verbs, loom, looming
Posted in Headlines | 3 Comments »
September 27, 2007 by homing8179
Headlines:”Grieving fathers recall attacks that tore their families asunder”
Grieving(adj.)
Guess: feeling poor/upset
Cambridge: feeling very sad because someone has died
e.g. It is grieving that the innocent lives were taken away in Tsunami.
Asunder (adv.)
Guess: a member of a party/unit
Cambridge: into forcefully separated pieces; apart
Cambridge example:Their lives were torn asunder by the tragedy
e.g. Our friendship will not tear asunder forever.
Q:Is it necessary to add the word “tear” before the asunder?Do we have any word choice to replace “tear”?
Tags: adjectives, adverbs, asunder, grieving
Posted in Headlines | 1 Comment »
September 24, 2007 by homing8179
“Insistence on one’s ideals is obviously legitimate and praiseworthy.”Joseph Cheung.
The sentence is from “Miracles can happen:hold on to the 2012 ideal”.From the tropic, the writer supports to 2012 universal suffrage.
Insistence on (ph.)
Guess: believe your point of view permanently
Cambridge Dictionary: when you demand something and refuse to accept opposition, or when you say firmly that something is true
e.g.Insistence on better working conditions by the union has resulted in fewer employee absences.
legitimate(adj.)
Cambridge Dictionary:reasonable and acceptable
e.g.He claimed that the restaurant bill was a legitimate business expense.
Tags: adjectives, insistence on, Joseph Cheung, legitimate
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September 21, 2007 by homing8179
Newsline: Child Abuse
Review:
Child Abuse in Hong Kong is very common. Yearly, we have huge numbers of cases that are related to child abuse. What is the main cause of the child abuse? How do we solve them?
The major reason is the problem of resource allocation. There are insufficient amount of the social facilities inside most of the estates. Some of the estates is far away form the facilities so that parents need to take a long journey before the children are sent to day care centre. Therefore, due to the inconvenience of taking the children back and forth, many parents choose to lock the children at home instead of sending them to the centre. This problem stimulates the trend of child abuse.
Second problem is that parents have no full budget so that they feel stress to maintain the finance steadily. This leads the financial hardship of the family. Needy parents take turn to take care of children while they seek for jobs to earn money. This financial problem will hence impact the daily activities of the children and enhances the possibility of child abuse.
What parents should do is to seek for any day care centres or social facilities when necessary. Resources are around the society and any public sectors are welcome any parents using the service. If the parents find difficulties in sending to day care centre, they may invite their relatives or neighbours to look after the children. Also, the poor family can ask for any funds when they are trouble in financial management. Society sympathizes with them and provides considerable amount of resources when they ask for help.
On the other hand, the government should treat child abuse seriously since the media and the public are now getting concerns of the growing trends of child abuse. Government should monitor the use of resources to ensure that in every estate, there is enough supply of social services. Also, according to the speech of Priscilla, there are only 1300-1400 social workers or stuff in Hong Kong. Government should attempt to introduce more manpower to the public sectors. It can enhance the efficiency in handling problems and the quality of the service.
If the government and parents confront the problem together and face it actively and positively, any cases about child abuse will no longer happen in the future.
Tags: Child Abuse, Newsline
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September 21, 2007 by homing8179
” But back in 1992, Deng Xiaoping(鄧小平) redefined socialism:’ The essence of socialism is to emancipate productivity and to develop it, to eradicate exploitation and polarisation, and to ulitimately reach a state of getting wealthy together.’ “from “A party congress for all the people.”
emancipate(v.)
Cambridge Dictionary: not limited socially or politically
e.g.The private property rights emancipate in market economy
eradicate (v.)
Cambridge Dictionary:to get rid of completely or destroy something bad
e.g. To eradicate the income-gap between the rich and the poor, government should establish a panel to investigate the main causes of the problem.
Tags: Deng Xiaoping, emancipate, eradicate, socialism, verbs
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September 19, 2007 by homing8179
The phrase is that:
“No wonder political scientists and pundits have lamented the failure of major political parties to identify candidates from within their own ranks”from “Te by-election: it’s a party affair”
We seldom use this phrase “no wonder”.
“No wonder” has similar meaning to “it is not surprising that”
e.g. No wonder the students are exam-oriented because the exam emphasizes greatly within the existence of syllabus.
pundit (n)
possible guess: expert
Cambridge Dictionary: a person who knows a lot about a particular subject and is therefore often asked to give an opinion about it
e.g.Economic pundits will interpret the social phenomenons and explain with evidences.
lamented (v)
Cambridge Dictionary: to express sadness and regret about
e.g.I lamented the decision for choosing Biology.
***Note:Practice is important.You can post any comments any time in order to get familiar with the use of vocabularies!***
Tags: lamented, no wonder, nouns, pundit, verbs
Posted in Phrase collection | 2 Comments »