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Neil Armstrong's partner on the Apollo 11 mission, Buzz Aldrin |
媒體英語(yǔ)會(huì)帶大家一起學(xué)習(xí)BBC撰稿人在報(bào)道世界大事時(shí)常用到的單詞和短語(yǔ)。
Background: 尼爾·阿姆斯特郎 (Neil Armstrong) 是 1969 年第一位登上月球的宇航員。當(dāng)時(shí)有無(wú)數(shù)人聽(tīng)到了他從月球上發(fā)回的的廣播講話錄音。其中就包括了下面這句話 It’s one small step for man; one giant leap for mankind. 這句話成為了名言,不過(guò)有些人說(shuō),句子有語(yǔ)法錯(cuò)誤。現(xiàn)在一項(xiàng)新的研究對(duì)此進(jìn)行了重新考證。
Questions: 請(qǐng)?jiān)诼?tīng)下面錄音的時(shí)候試著回答這些問(wèn)題。這是一個(gè)用來(lái)幫助你提高聽(tīng)力技能的練習(xí)。
1. What was Neil Armstrong’s grammatical error?
2. Does Neil Armstrong think that he made an error?
3. According to the new research, did Neil Armstrong really make an error?
4. Did Neil Armstrong’s error ruin his speech from the moon?
Neil Armstrong's Words 尼爾·阿姆斯特朗的話
Neil Armstrong:
"It's one small step for man; one giant leap for mankind."
Or should that have been, "One small step for a man"?
Neil Armstrong has always said that he thought that that's what he said and maybe the vital 'a' got lost in a crackle of static.
Now researchers analysing recently released digitally-enhanced recordings of the entire Apollo 11 mission have confirmed that he did not say the word 'a'.
But a linguistic analysis of the way in which he spoke suggested that he intended to say 'a' and that the first words spoken on the moon were spontaneous and not memorised from a written script.
The researchers also argue that although the expression was not strictly correct its rhythm and symmetry poetically capture the sense and mood of one of humanity's most epic moments.
GLOSSARY 詞匯表 (收聽(tīng)發(fā)音, 請(qǐng)單擊英語(yǔ)單詞)
Answers
1. What was Neil Armstrong’s grammatical error?
Many people think he should have said, "One small step for a man…"
2. Does Neil Armstrong think that he made an error?
No, Neil Armstrong thought he said 'a' and that it got lost in static.
3. According to the new research, did Neil Armstrong really make an error?
Yes, researchers have confirmed that he did not say 'a'.
4. Did Neil Armstrong’s error ruin his speech from the moon?
No. Although it was not strictly correct, what Neil Armstrong said has greater rhythm and symmetry.