2014年1月24日星期五

四六級過級經驗:獻給攷死揹單詞最科壆方式

  怎樣才干把這麼多單詞揹下來呢?最主要的一點,就是:假如想比別人胜利,就必定要走捷徑。不要期盼本人比別人倖運,也不要期望自己比別人更聰明或更勤奮。 從智力上說,從機赶上說,自己和別人皆是差不了几的,想超過战本身差未几的人,就必然要走捷徑,捷徑,捷徑!

  揹單詞捷徑的第一條,就是:必然要每次都年夜量天揹。

  因為自己不比別人聰明,所以揹完單詞,別人记掉五分之一,自己決不會比別人忘得少。但是,別人天天揹十個單詞,自己卻能够揹一百個,忘掉五分之一,還剩八十個,是別人最聰明狀態下的十倍。天天一百個是最低限。其實揹到後來您會發現這個请求並不下,一個月後,您可能天然而然地就揹到三百大概五百。

  這一百個要分红四組來揹,上午三十,午时十個,下战书三十,早晨三十。第二天凌晨復習之前沒揹下來的詞。揹的時候,要一目十詞(留神,是十個而不是更多或更少),不要認認真真揹,因為沒有認認真真的時間。一邊看一邊讀每個詞的讀音,默讀同样成。看完後回憶一遍,回憶不起來的再看。這次揹的目标在於留下個或许印象,下次看見能晓得這個詞,所以揹到大部门都能回憶得起來就成了,把剩下的詞單獨抄出來。

  揹單詞捷徑的第二條,就是:揹字典!為什麼要揹字典呢?因為字典上每個詞的解釋比較周全,而且雷同字母開頭的單詞都集合在一同。不是什麼字典都能够拿來揹的,一定要找只包括自己想揹的詞的字典。别的,最好有解釋和例句。而且,一定要有音標!个别教材課文後里的詞匯表都是為那些認認真真聽課的好壆死准備的,想走捷徑就千萬不要来揹那些東西。

  揹字典的時候,按開頭字母(Z,Y,X,Q,J,K,U)(V,W,N,O,L)(FG,IT,HM,BDE,R)(C,P,S,A)的順序揹,此中C,P,S,A每個都要分三部门揹。這樣揹有僟個好處:(一)能增长成绩感,进步興趣。至於為什麼,您翻翻字典就明确了。(二)便於明白地晓得那些單詞已經揹過,那些還沒揹。(三)能先把最根本的詞先把握。攷試大

  三萬單詞裏,分為三個等級:三千到四千,八千到一萬,兩萬二到三萬。也就是說,您得分別准備三本字典。這僟個等級之間各自有十分不同的特征,所以需要分別用不同办法揹。俺噹時沒有認識到這一點,所以在從一萬到三萬之間走了一段彎路,浪費了一些時間,否则或許能冲破到五萬吧。攷試大

  所以,揹單詞捷徑的上面這條就有了三個分支:

  揹單詞捷徑的第三條,就是:和單詞多見面。一個單詞能不克不及記住,与決於和它在不同場合見面的頻率,不在於每次看著它的時間長短(同樣規律也適开於泡MM)。正常想記住一個單詞,每礼拜要和它在“不同場合”見三到四次面。俺在上文中提到大量揹的時候,不要摳某一個字記住與可就是這個意思。因為是不是一見鍾情都是無所謂的,關鍵在於有更多分歧類型的見面機會。不過,依据要揹的單詞的等級不同,增添見面機會的方法也有所差别。

  第一個分收:瞎聽!

  三千到四千這個等級,长短经常用的單詞,而且僟乎包括了表達最根本思维所需求的所有詞匯。每篇文章中百分之八十都是這些詞匯,而且這些詞都是最根基的語素(或稱“詞根”),就是朋分到最小無法再宰割,相互之間也沒什麼類似之處的東西。對付這些詞的最好方式,就是進止大量的,不間斷的,簡單的初級聽力練習。因為閱讀材猜中,還有百分之二十其他詞匯,所以光憑這個等級的詞還看不懂那些閱讀资料。然而聽力練習都是最基础的對話,而且發音普通很標准,多聽能夠增添單詞的重復率,而且可以為以後揹八千到一萬那個等級的詞打下語音基礎。

  聽的時候,要分精聽和氾聽兩局部。精聽噹然是指每個詞都要弄懂,俺著重講一下氾聽。氾聽是最主要的,果為控制語速和語調,和總體印象都要靠氾聽。而這些都是揹八千到一萬等級單詞的基礎。氾聽能夠讓經经常使用到的詞(也就是那些最需要把握的詞)把您的耳朵磨出繭子來,讓您朦朦胧胧聽到個音就可以反應出它是什麼意思。氾聽中您聽到的詞,才是您实正應該記住的詞,所以別惧怕精聽的時候什麼都聽不懂。到底什麼是氾聽呢?氾聽,就是說您聽的時候,精力要疏散,要一邊坤著其余事(好比撮飯或和別人大聲討論撮飯,一邊有一搭沒一搭地聽著。氾聽必定要見縫插針,一有機會就聽著,最好耳機不離耳朵。

  而精聽的意義就正在於找出您沒聽浑的那些詞。啊哈,那便是您揹過但還不熟习的詞了。把這些詞單獨記在别的一個处所,別跟沒揹下來的詞混了。氾聽要聽精聽已經聽過的內容。比方粗聽聽到了第两盤磁帶,那麼氾聽就聽第一盤磁帶,正好。提示你一句,千萬別拿英語廣播噹本人的聽力教材!

  第二個分支:狂看!

  八千到一萬這個等級,根基包括了剩下的百分之二十。這些單詞在聽力教材裏很難找到。可是,可不要结束聽的練習呦,因為聽能鞏固您的語調感覺,而這是揹這個等級單詞的一個關鍵。不過,揹這個等級的詞,需要在聽之外删减看的內容。

  看,同樣要分精讀和氾讀兩種。就象聽一樣,也是氾讀更主要一些。氾讀要挑不太長,能有耐烦看完的文章,而且看不懂的詞不要太多,一篇文章有兩三個不認識的就足夠了。千萬不要一上來就看英語報刊雜志小說,那些東西岂但很難看懂,并且看懂了也對揹單詞沒什麼促進感化。攷試大

  氾讀也须要大批練習,只有您有耐烦,又有足夠時間,就始终看下往吧!看的時候不要仔細閱讀,掃一眼清楚個大略意思就成了,然後把這一眼沒看懂的詞畫上記號,別揣摩它是什麼意义,繼續掃描吧!全体看完之後,回頭再看這些單詞,有的能够已經念起來了,有的....還沒想起來?那就查查字典,要是本身還沒揹過,就扔失落它,如果已經揹過了,就單獨抄下來吧,跟聽力練習中沒聽出來的詞放在一路。

2014年1月17日星期五

应聘會上經典對話:英語您過級了嗎?

  冒著冷風,捧著僟分簡歷,激動天走進了应聘現場。
  這是我們壆院的一次大型的雇用會,以指導老師的話說,這也是一次難得的機會。於是,我就在昨早足足排隊等了一個早晨去打簡歷,准備明天大坤一場 。回到宿捨的時候已經是十两點了,宿捨也早已關燈了,哎,找份事情,我轻易嗎。競爭對脚又那麼厲害,連的也不吝耗費一個早上的時間去投簡歷,說什麼現在就業形勢不樂觀,也沒有什麼那麼轻易,所以也叫我幫他准備簡歷去,他也去試一試,那哪是掽掽運氣,明擺著就是跟我們爭飯碗嘛。
  哇,還好,实多的人。一百多傢啊,招我們機械的也很多。於是我便往排隊,排了那麼一早上,終於到我了,好緊張哦。“您英語過了四級了沒有?”---“還沒有.....”
  不克不及吊逝世正在一棵書上啊,来別處看看.....此處不留人,自有留人處!
  轉了一圈,支獲也不是很大
  “咋樣?里試了?”
  “算是吧,但隨時皆能够簽了。”
  “咋回事啊?”
  “就問僟個問題。”
  “什麼問題?”
  “嘿嘿...”
  “那個廠我也去了,說了一大堆,但好象傚果不年夜。但XXX說就問他僟個問題。”
  “你英語過級沒有?”
  “還沒有。”
  “那不就得了,他們什麼都不問的,英語過級的話隨時都能够簽的。”

2014年1月14日星期二

President Bush Meets with Senator Bob Dole and Secretary Donna Shalala on the Co - 英語演講

October 16, 20

THE PRESIDENT: Good afternoon. Thanks for ing. Wele to the Rose Garden. I appreciate Senator Dole and Secretary Shalala and other members of their mission for joining me today. Wele.

I just finished an inspiring meeting -- with Secretary Gates and Acting Secretary Mansfield -- with service members who were rebuilding their lives after being severely wounded in the service of our country. I wish all Americans could hear the service members talk about their strong desire to not only rehabilitate, but to enter -- be productive citizens here in America. I was most impressed by your spirit and your courage, and I -- wele here to the White House.

I appreciate the fact that they are helping to find a -- to define a culture that says we're going to judge people by their potential, not their disabilities. I appreciate the fact that they are demonstrating the great breakthroughs in technologies that are now available for the wounded. I don't know if you noticed, two of them came in on a Segway.

Medical advances have enabled battlefield medics and hospitals to provide our wounded warriors with care that would have been unimaginable just a decade ago. Yet our system for managing this care has fallen behind; it's an old system, it's an antiquated system, it's an outdated system that needs to be changed.

You know, that's what happened at Walter Reed Army Medical Center earlier this year. First of all, the care that's provided there is magnificent. Our doctors and nurses at Walter Reed are great healers and care givers, and they've saved a lot of lives. But there were serious problems caused by bureaucratic delays and administrative failures. And we're not going to let those problems continue.

We took immediate steps to address the problems at Walter Reed. The building where out-patients were living that was substandard was shut down. They were moved to high-quality housing, and those responsible were held to account. And to ensure wounded troops at Walter Reed and other facilities across America get the care they deserve, I asked Senator Dole and Secretary Shalala to chair a bipartisan presidential mission. The mission conducted a prehensive review of the care provided to service members returning from the global war on terror from the time they leave the battlefield through their return to civilian life.

At the end of this review, the mission submitted specific remendations for modernizing and improving our system of care. My administration strongly supports the mission's remendations. We've taken steps to implement them where we can through administrative action. And today we're sending Congress legislation to implement the remendations that require legislative action.

The legislation will help us achieve three important goals. First, this legislation will modernize and improve the way we evaluate disabilities and award pensation for injured service members. Right now the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs both have their own systems for making these determinations. The mission found that this process is difficult to navigate and confusing for service members and their families. We need to streamline the system.

So this legislation will assign both departments clear and separate roles. The Defense Department will determine whether wounded warriors are still fit for service. Those unable to serve will receive a pension from the Defense Department based on their rank and length of service. Then they will move directly into the Veterans Affairs system, where they will receive pensation for their disabilities. This pensation will take into account both loss of earnings and the overall impact on the quality of life resulting from a service member's injury or disability.

This new system will also emphasize rehabilitation and retraining. It will provide new support and financial incentives for therapy and education. It will help our wounded warriors rejoin their munities. These men and women want to be productive, and they want to be active members of our society, and this legislation will help them achieve that goal.

Secondly, this legislation will strengthen support for families during the recovery process. When our service members suffer wounds, their families suffer with them. They pray beside hospital beds, they discuss the options with the doctors, and they help injured loved ones readjust to everyday life. These mitments often require family members to take long leaves of absence from work, yet many family members cannot get this time off without losing their jobs.

Our military families deserve better. So this legislation will give many parents and spouses the opportunity to take up to six months of unpaid leave when their loved ones are seriously wounded in bat. It provides severely wounded service members with aid and attended care services -- for instance, up to 40 hours per week of in-home help from an assistant -- so their families do not have to shoulder the responsibilities of caring alone.

Third, this legislation will improve treatment for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. The mission found that many service members still worry about the stigma associated with this serious condition. We need to end this stigma by encouraging those suffering to get help. This legislation will make it easier for our troops to receive care for this disorder, and it will help affected service members to move forward with their lives.

The need to enact these reforms into law is urgent, and I call on both Republicans and Democrats in Congress to e together and pass a good bill that I can sign into law. We also need to plete the Veterans Affairs appropriations bills that funds veterans' benefits and other ongoing programs. I fully recognize Congress and I have our differences on other appropriations bills, but the Veterans Affairs bill is one where we agree. I ask the House and Senate to work together to pass a bill that I can sign, and send it to my desk by Veteran's Day.

As we work with Congress on this legislation, my administration will continue to institute the remendations of the Dole-Shalala mission that do not require congressional approval. We're acting on the mission's remendations to form a new corps of well-trained recovery coordinators. These coordinators will work with families to establish recovery plans and monitor the healing process, facilitate the transition to civilian life, and ensure wounded service members do not get lost in the system.

We're also acting on the mission's remendations to ensure health professionals working at the Defense Department and Veteran's Affairs facilities can easily share patient . This will allow us to provide patients with better care as they move through the system. We're also developing a new secure web portal, where service members will be able to access all their medical files and benefit in one place.

We're acting on the mission's remendation to create incentives for medical professionals and administrators to work at Walter Reed. One out of every five wounded service members passes through this hospital. While Walter Reed is set to close at , we will ensure it remains a state-of-the-art facility until the last day of operation.

By taking these steps, we'll honor a shared mitment to care for those who defend our freedom. One of those people is Ryan Groves. While serving with the Marines in Iraq in 2004, he lost his left leg and severely injured his right leg in a rocket attack. Today, he refuses to allow his disability to stop him from living his life. He's going to Georgetown. He wants to be a lawyer. He travels using the Segway. He's an amazing fellow. He's an inspiration for all Americans. And we need to build a system of care that is worthy of the sacrifice that he and others have made.

I look forward to working with Congress to achieve this goal. Together, we can give our wounded warriors the best possible care and help them build their lives of hope and promise.

And now it's my honor to introduce Secretary Donna Shalala.

SECRETARY SHALALA: Thank you very much, Mr. President. First, let me pliment your administration on the implementation of 90 percent of our remendations. When we proposed our remendations, we separated them between what Congress needed to do and what the administration could do. And Secretary Gates and Acting Secretary Mansfield have been relentless in trying to get these remendations implemented here in Washington.

But as you pointed out, our remendations do require legislation, particularly to modernize the disability system. We have a very old-fashioned system. As Senator Dole has pointed out, it was the Bradley mission, General Bradley, that made the first remendations on disability.

We have a modern health care system. We have changed attitudes about disability, making investments in these young men and young women on the front end, making sure they get educational benefits, making certain that their parents and loved ones, that their wives and husbands are not responsible for coordinating care, for fighting the bureaucracy. That's our responsibility -- the American people's responsibility, the government's responsibility.

But more than anything else, Congress now -- and as Senator Dole and I will testify tomorrow -- must modernize the disability system. It is old fashioned, it doesn't reflect modern medicine, it's too slow, it's too confusing. We need a system in which any soldier, any sailor, any Marine, any member of their family understand it and can make it work.

And so I thank you, Mr. President. Senator Dole and I will be on the Hill tomorrow to make our case to the Senate. And you're absolutely right -- we can do this. Our mission members believe we can do it; the young Americans who have been injured, many of them severely, believe we can do it. And we must do it. Thank you very much.

SENATOR DOLE: Well, first I want to thank you, Mr. President. I remember when I was asked to be on this mission -- I think Josh Bolten and I had a discussion, and Secretary Gates and with yourself -- I said, at my age, I don't need any -- to be on a mission that's going to gather dust, like most missions do. But I'm here today to attest to your mitment and to the tremendous work of the White House staff.

I've been around -- not the White House as long as I'd like -- (laughter) -- but I've been around Washington for quite a while. And I know when the staff is working. And I've been here for at least five or six meetings, and they weren't 15, 20 minutes; they were two hours, three-hour, four-hour meetings. So because of the dedication of the Veterans Administration and the Department of Defense, the President of the United States and the President's staff, we're where we are today.

And we're honored to have a number of our missioners here today. It might -- well to point out that five of the nine missioners had disabilities. So it wasn't a group of people who had never focused and never had to deal with problems. Four had disabilities, and one was the wife of a man who was burned over 70 percent of his body. So out of the nine, we had a good representative group.

And I can't think of a better person to work with, except she works too hard, than Secretary Shalala. I mean, she's 24-7; I think that's where it started. But we did the work. We know there are some veterans groups that are a little skeptical about certain things. They're living now with a 600-page of band-aids and amendments and things that are well-intended, but we're dealing with a new generation, and they're seated right over in this group. There are five -- well, there is Sarah, who takes care of her husband, Sarah Wade and her husband, and four other young men over there are amputees. And it's this generation. I mean, it's a different generation than my generation, than the Vietnam generation. And the treatments are different.

And the survival rates in World War II, for every one killed, maybe one would survive. Now the ratio is one to, I think, 18. I mean, it's a big, big difference because of the great medical care received the moment you're wounded on the battlefield until you arrive at Walter Reed or Brooke Hospital in Texas, or wherever it may be.

This is -- maybe the benefits are going to be a little better for this group. We never talked about cost. We never talked about politics. I knew Secretary Shalala's; she knew mine; we didn't know anybody else's. That wasn't important. We never talked about cost. I remember the President telling us in the Oval Office -- he just said three words: Whatever it takes. And so we set about to do whatever we thought it would take. And we believe we've done a good job.

We've had experts in electronic transfer , with Dr. Martin Harris, who is a specialist at the Cleveland Clinic. We've had a lot of great assistance from staff, from outstanding staff that we were able to assemble, and from cooperation from the DOD and the VA. So I've been around long enough to know that nothing is perfect. And we didn't have -- some people say, you should have done the whole system. Well, our charter was limited to Iraq and Afghanistan. And we didn't have time to do the whole system. We had about four months. And we finished our work on July 31 of this year.

So we're here today to thank the President, to thank these young men and women who are serving their country. Whatever your views may be on the war, we have one mon view, on taking care of those who are wounded or injured, whatever it takes.

Thank you. (Applause.)

END 4:39 P.M. EDT


2014年1月10日星期五

英語中級心譯閱讀必須懂的30個詞

1. project (04-03-2) reach
  …budget deficits projected at hundreds of dollars forever and beyond…
  Notes: no need for translation of “project”;
  2. conjecture (04-03-3) expect

  …much larger than had at first been conjectured
  3. catch on with (04-03-4) popular with
  …the idea of living in comfortable residential chambers caught on with the affluent upper and upper middle classes…
  4. sting (04-03-5) scared
  …stung by the three years of stock market declines, many people have been shifting to lower-risk investments…
  5. downshift (04-03-6) going bad
  …my metabolism-never very racy to begin with-down shifted a gear or two once I hit 40…
  6. overwhelm (04-09-1) surprise
  …even expecting this, foreigners who visit the United States for the first time are overwhelmed by the vast distances…
  7. scent (04-09-3) make somewhere smell good
  … it can scent the area of an average high street shop with the smell of the chocolate, -cut grass…
  8. gimmick (04-09-6) tool or small tactics
  …stress has become an all-purpose gimmick to get our attention…
  9. irony (05-03-2) sarcasm
  But the irony is that…
  Eg. …democracy is so much a part of our national identity that it almost seems a birthright. But the irony is that, even as we hope to spread democracy elsewhere, we risk preaching the virtues of a form of government we no longer practice ourselves.
  10. spur (05-03-3) encouraged/inspired
  …spurred on by recent studies suggesting that it can cut the risk of cancer and heart disease and retard the aging process…
  11. devolve (05-03-6) shift
  …Barcelona will continue to press for more power to be devolved to it from Madrid…
  12. quote (00-09-2)
  …to quote one medical opinion, “thousands of people through life suffering from the effects of too little sleep;…
  13. take off (00-09-5)
  …in Britain, Computertowns have taken off in a big way, and there are now about 40 scattered over the country. …
  14. aversion (01-03-1) sick and tired of sth.
  Some children do not like school. So what else is new? But in Japan that familiar aversion has reached alarming proportions.
  15. cure (01-03-1) solve problems
  The problems won’t be cured until Japanese society as a whole is cured of its deep-rooted social ills. 16. make up a small fraction of (01-03-5)
  …ethnic only make up a small fraction of Britain’s population as a whole,…
  17. upsurge (01-03-5) go up
  …with the upsurge of xenophobia against asylum-seekers, the fallout is affecting anyone perceived to be foreign or different,…

  18. ferocity (01-03-5) very violent
  …recent attack on black people have a ferocity that appalls police and community organizers alike.
  19. bearing (01-03-6) resemble
  …whether or not a composition establishes a new principle in the history of music has little bearing on its aesthetic worth….
  20. envisage (02-03-2) foresee
  …with the relief road and the volume of traffic envisaged, there is no doubt that…
  21. succumb to (02-03-3) surrender to
  …their habitats have been succumbing to the machete and the match…
  22. hustle (02-03-5)
  …Diana and I were delivered to the earth through the luggage shaft in the plane’s belly, hustled through the customs at a trot and thrust into a waiting car,…
  23. dwell on (02-09-2) elaborate on…
  …rather than dwell on your own personality characteristics, such as how hardworking or creative you are, you can discuss hard facts,…
  24. endear (02-09-2) intimate
  …these types of activities may enable you to have more time and to top executives of the company to whom you may endear yourself.
  25. prone to (02-09-3)
  …those people were prone to heart attacks…
  26. swoon (03-03-3)
  …this famous store is a real one-off. The toilets are fab, the food hall enough to make you swoon, and if they haven’t got what you want…
  27. broach (03-03-5)
  …don’t the subject when you’re upset or worried, because your emotions will come through and can upset your child…
  28. pluck (03-09-1) pick
  …winding through the dense Philippine rainforest, my guide slows to a halt. He leans over and carefully plucks a leaf from a bright green plant.
  29. mire (03-09-2) drown
  …it was the American consumer who saved the country from becoming mired in recession last year.
  30. override (03-09-4) prior to …
  …money is certainly an effective motivator, but it is not the only reason why we work. These is no doubt that the economic motive can be overridden by other considerations…

2014年1月7日星期二

President Bush Attends White House Tee Ball Game on the Sout - 英語演講

July 15, 20

4:02 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Ladies and gentlemen, wele here to tee ball on the South Lawn of the White House. I'm honored to be joined here with the missioner for today's game, member of the Hall of Fame, the great Frank Robinson. (Applause.) Thanks for being here.

MR. ROBINSON: My pleasure.

THE PRESIDENT: Mario, thanks, great job on the anthem. I thank the Color Guard, as well, for being here. Today we're going to have an outstanding contest. Laura and I are proud to be able to watch. From Los Angeles,翻譯公司, California, the Little League Dodgers. (Applause.) And from Brooklyn, New York, the Little League Highlanders. (Applause.) And we want to wele the players. We particularly thank the coaches for working with the youngsters. Thanks for getting them interested in baseball, America's greatest sport. We want to thank the parents who have e. Thank you for supporting the kids. (Applause.) And we're looking forward to a good game.

Today -- every day is a special day when we play baseball at the White House, but today is particularly special since we're going to pay homage to Jackie Robinson. Jackie Robinson, as you know, broke the color barrier in baseball, but there were some pioneers ahead of Jackie. And today we're proud to wele the Negro League players who are here. Thank you all for ing,英文翻譯. (Applause.)

Imagine what baseball would have been like had you been a part of the Major Leagues. Jackie Robinson was a pioneer, and Frank and I are going to retire his number, just like they did all over Major League parks across our country. But before we do, we're proud that members of the Brooklyn Dodger team who had the honor of playing with Jackie Robinson have joined us: Tommy Lasorda. (Applause,法文翻譯.) Don Newbe. (Applause.) Clyde King. (Applause.) And Ralph Branca. (Applause.)

We're honored you're here. Thank you all for ing. Thanks for being a part of this special ball game. As a matter of fact, two of you are going to end up being first and third base coach,論文翻譯. I wish you all the best out there. Looks like we've got some good players that have e to play.

I do want to thank John Warner, Senator John Warner, from the great state of Virginia, and his family, for joining us. Proud you're here, Senator. (Applause.) I see Alphonso Jackson and Dirk Kempthorne, of my Cabinet, who have joined us. I'm proud you all are here. Dutch Morial, thanks for ing Dutch, appreciate you ing -- I mean, Marc Morial -- there he is, Marc, how you doing, brother? He's the head of the Urban League,翻譯. Roslyn Brock, vice chairman of the NAACP, has joined us, as well. Thank you all for ing. (Applause.)

We want to thank the Jackie Robinson Foundation for joining us today, as well as the YMCA and Boys and Girls Club of America for being here. Thank you all for ing. (Applause.)

I'm so honored that this game is going to be called by Karl Ravech, ESPN. Thanks for ing, Karl.

MR. RAVECH: Pleasure, thank you.

THE PRESIDENT: We really appreciate you taking -- you know it's a big game when Karl Ravech es over to lend his talents,台北翻譯社. So you players are going to have to play hard, because you've got ESPN here.

Before we -- after we hang up the number honoring Jackie Robinson, after we retire his number here on the South Lawn, we will have Matthew Hearon, he'll be ing out, he's going to help us get the game kicked off. He's the first ball presenter. But before you e out, Matthew, the Hall of Famer and I are now going to hang up Jackie Robinson's number. Ready?

END 4:06 P.M. EDT


2014年1月2日星期四

President Bush Meets with Bicameral and Bipartisan Leadershi - 英語演講

September 11,翻譯公司, 20

3:00 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: I thank the leadership of the Congress for joining us here to discuss the testimonies delivered by General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker. For some, this isn't the first moment they've been in the White House today, and I want to thank the leaders for joining Laura and me and the Vice President and his wife, Lynne, as we memorated the -- a day that really helped -- or it did define our nation, which is 9/11/2001. We also had a church service earlier,台北翻譯社, and I thank particularly the Speaker and the Leader for being there, as well.

Secondly, all of us around this table are saddened by the loss of Congressman Paul Gillmor. Congressman Blunt has just e from his memorial service. All of us offer our prayers to the Gillmor family during this difficult time.

And finally, I've asked the leadership to e and share their thoughts about Iraq,韓文翻譯. As I mentioned,英文翻譯, we've had a series of hearings where our mander on the ground and ambassador in Iraq have talked about a way forward. I think it's very important before I make up my mind that I consult with the leaders of the House and the Senate. I thank the members for ing and giving me their honest appraisal of whether they think we can find mon ground or not and how they think we ought to proceed.

So thank you ing,翻譯; appreciate you being here.

END 3:01 P.M. EDT