Thursday, 14 May 2026

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用法学习: 1. black mark 污点 informal the fact of people noticing and remembering something that you have done wrong or failed to do. A black mark against someone is something bad that they have done or a bad quality that they have which affects the way people think about them. There was one black mark against him. If I'm late for work again, it will be another black mark against me. Rhys Walkley was not my best appointment. Only after his appointment did I discover he was not a swimming coach, but an official [timekeeper/judge]. Black mark for me for not asking the right questions. However, he was willing to assist the Sportsmaster with team management and proved efficient at that. Here was Walkley, for what can only have been his own personal gratification 私欲, seeking topless photos of a pubescent student, and not just any pubescent student, but Ian

How a sister's love unraveled the tragic death of Olympic hopeful Ian Walker and unmasked the teacher who abused him: Like a cyclone on legs 像一股旋风, the stooped midfielder skittles his way through one, two, three, four, five Galen College opponents, tapping the ball along in front of him, making the waterlogged surface of VFL Park look like a bowling green. Peter McKenna, the Collingwood legend, watches the cyclone on legs crashing through and almost purrs. It leads to a goal for Haileybury College, a Melbourne private school. Walker, a wiry(wiry [ˈwaɪə.ri] 精瘦的 (sinewy 精瘦的, 精壮的, 瘦而结实的 [ˈsɪnjui]) I. (of people and animals) thin but strong, and often able to bend easily: His body is wiry and athletic. He has a runner's wiry frame. He was a wiry man 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighing 145 pounds. The mystery man has a wiry frame, with barely an ounce of fat on him and for some reason had a business tie on. Alec, is six foot two, pale skinned, carved out of granite and built like a Nordic god. II. 钢丝一样的头发. 粗糙而硬的头发. Something such as hair or grass that is wiry is stiff and rough to touch. If hair or fur is wiry, it is stiff and not soft. Her wiry hair was pushed up on top of her head in an untidy bun), lean, slightly hunched ball of energy, trots back to the wing on the member's side of the ground. Later, McKenna's co-commentator Stephen Phillips says Walker is "one of the best players on the ground in my book". "Awww," he says. "That was good, strong, determined play by the Haileybury player Ian Walker." It is the Herald Shield; 210 schools across the state are slugging it out ( slug it out 拼个你死我活 If two people slug it out, they fight or argue violently until one of them wins. Watch out, there's two guys slugging it out in the back of the bar! I slugged it out with some guy last night and earned myself a black eye for my troubles. In such a big family, my siblings and I always have to slug it out for our parents' attention. ) across months of sudden-death games. This year, Haileybury will vanquish ( to defeat an enemy, opponent, or obstacle completely and thoroughly, often in a battle, war, or competition. It is a strong, literary term implying total subjugation or crushing victory, rather than a simple win. Napoleon was vanquished at the battle of Waterloo in 1815. The vanquished army surrendered their weaponsA happy ending is only possible because the hero has first vanquished the dragons. With knowledge and wisdom, evil could be vanquished on this earth. ) Billy Brownless's Assumption College on the way to the final and also win its historic first premiership in Melbourne's fiercely contested 竞争激烈的, 争夺的很激烈的 Associated Public Schools football competition, a tournament steeped in tradition and a breeding ground for future AFL stars. The Haileybury boys are the pride of their school. A few will end up on VFL and AFL playing lists and a couple will have half-decade professional careers. Ian Walker, despite his abundant gifts, will not be one of them. The final is an off 不在状态 night for Haileybury and they lose to Parade College. That night, Walker is not his usual self either. He dives under packs, ducks and weaves out of tackles, but every time he breaks free, his passes hit opponents' chests. For long spells, he languishes on the bench. When you watch Ian in these long-ago moments of his youth, you get glimpses of the reasons why people still think about him, still talk about him, still want to know exactly what happened. It is impossible to miss his warp speed, his hair-raising courage, his willingness to take the game on. But it is equally impossible, once you know how his life panned out, to miss the other story being told by Walker's body language: scattered, jittery, unsettled. That he is playing hurt. He is all bandages and frayed nerves. At this precise moment, Ian's sporting magic is deserting him, to be replaced by something nobody will want to remember. They'd also said Ian's sisters once doted on him so smotheringly, it was like he had three mothers. Rod and Ian had been close friends, both brilliant sportsmen. They were 1970s classmates at Beaumaris Primary in Melbourne's bayside south, now better known, via the damning findings of a government inquiry, as the scene of wholesale ( often disapproving (especially of something bad or too extreme) complete or affecting a lot of things, people, places, etc. involving everyone or everything; complete: What the system needs is wholesale reformwholesale changes. wholesale destruction. ) child sexual abuse by four paedophile teachers. One day, leafing through 翻看 his childhood photo albums, Owen pointed to all his former school friends and footy teammates who were unravelling, addicted or dead. Ian? Dead. Ray got him too," was Rod's pained 痛苦万分的 assessment. In the 60s and 70s, Ray rampantly 肆虐的, 疯狂的, 肆无忌惮的 abused boys at four state schools and in the St Kilda Football Club's little league team, which he coached for 11 years. So, consider what follows less a companion piece 姐妹篇 to the tales of Rod and other famous victims of child sexual abuse, but the story of their ignored cousins of the 1970s and 80s. Of the hundreds more golden-hued ( something having a bright yellow, metallic, or yellowish-orange color that resembles gold. It is frequently used in literary contexts to describe a warm, shimmering appearance—such as in sunsets, light, or hair—and often symbolizes beauty, divinity, and prosperity. If so, or if you look at the star through binoculars, you might see that it has a familiar golden hue. ) men in the making, united in an irony: that the society which lauded them had unknowingly built them a pedestal from which it was difficult to notice their vulnerability and suffering. Like most of those men, Ian was not a public figure. His death occasioned no media coverage. He was what journalism once dismissively referred to as one of "the little people". Guilt struck me. I'd ruined her day. Her own plate, I learned, was full enough. She was dealing with a workplace injury whose legacy, then and now, affects every aspect of her life. And here I was, adding to those difficulties by raking up 勾起, 重提 her grief. I filled her tearful silence with all the positive things I'd heard from Ian's old friends. That he had been an Olympic-calibre 级别的 track athlete, faster than Herb Elliott, with Hollywood good looks that had sponsors chasing him. That he'd turned down an athletic scholarship at a top US college. That he was the brightest spark 最明亮的少年, 最耀眼的少年, 最耀眼的明星 in his year at Haileybury College. That his fearlessness and athleticism on football fields had prompted St Kilda to try to recruit him to its junior development squad, but that he'd declined 拒绝了 this offer too. Karen knew all this already, but she was now reassessing why her brother had rebuffed the Saints 拒绝了. I told her Ian had inspired in his friends a depth of love and devotion that middle-aged men rarely verbalise. There was a tender, profound sense of longing in their anecdotes, about Ian's graceful stride around athletics tracks, his effortless command of a room, his wide-ranging intelligence and cheeky humour, and how his friends, in those highly impressionable and deeply felt early years of getting to know themselves and the world, based a portion of their self-worth on what Ian Walker thought of them. Time and again, people had billed themselves as Ian's "best friend", each more vehement that they'd known him most intimately, each so animated in their explanations of his extraordinariness, I suspected grief and nostalgia were enhancing the story beyond its true proportions. Suicide, they said. Without doubt. On some Melbourne train track 铁路上, 铁轨上 or other. Tragic, but the inevitable conclusion of a human disaster that gradually drove all of Ian's friends away and then lingered iridescently ( iridescently [ˌɪr.ɪˈdes.ənt.li] 五彩缤纷的 (A riot of colors 争奇斗艳, 色彩绚烂, 五光十色的, vibrant: 鲜艳夺目的, 缤纷的) in a manner that displays a spectrum of colours that shimmer and change due to interference and scattering as the observer's position changes. in a way that reflects many bright colours: Below the boat, dozens of squid began flashing iridescently, red-white-red. The beach is grey rather than white, while the water shines iridescently thanks to an oil slick) in their memories. Tallying 一一列出来重新计算 everything, Karen conceded that Ian surely had been sexually abused by Darrell Ray. She was not surprised that another friend of Ian's had recalled, with dread, Ian's involvement in a disturbing re-enactment of Ray's abuse. But I was confused: she knew Ian had been sexually abused, knew it had led to his addictions and death, but knew nothing about Darrell Ray and the abuse epidemic at Beaumaris Primary? Perhaps, Karen now wondered, the abuse at Haileybury had been the final straw. It had blighted Ian's life so completely, she explained, that he'd never recovered. She'd always understood it as the single most decisive factor 最大原因 in her brother's death. To the Walkers, in whose family lore ( lore I. traditional knowledge and stories about a subject:
According to local lore, the water has healing properties. A lot of cultural lore surrounds the apple. II. background information about the fictional (= invented) characters in a book, film, computer game, etc. and the fictional place and situation in which its events happen that is accepted as true by its fans (= people who are very enthusiastic about something and like to write or talk about it): There are alternate takes on the lore of the World of Warcraft. If you are a hardcore Tolkien lore fan, you will find this information surprising
) Haileybury loomed large 挥之不去, the news of Ian's abuse had been particularly crushing. An uncle, Geoff Walker, was among Haileybury's most celebrated athletic prodigies of the 1950s, lending young Ian's feats the air of a dynasty. Haileybury was also central to the self-mythology of Ian's father, Ian Snr; his own parents ran out of money for his matriculation year (matriculate [məˈtrɪkjəˌleɪt] I. to officially become a student at a university. II. to be formally admitted to a university at a special ceremony You must matriculate within two terms of starting your course, otherwise you will be unable to take a University examination. In some countries, if you matriculate, you register formally as 登记注册为 a student at a university, or you satisfy the academic requirements necessary for registration for a course. I had to matriculate if I wanted to do a degree. The head decided I should have another go at matriculation. Elon briefly attended the University of Pretoria before moving to Canada at age 17 to avoid conscription. He matriculated at Queen's University and transferred to the University of Pennsylvania two years later, where he received a bachelor's degree in economics and physics. note: Matriculation ([məˌtrɪkjʊˈleɪʃn]) 入学 is the formal process of entering a university, or of becoming eligible to enter by fulfilling certain academic requirements such as a matriculation examination. In Australia, the term matriculation is seldom used now. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, all states replaced the matriculation examination with either a certificate, such as the Higher School Certificate (HSC) in Victoria and New South Wales, or a university entrance exam ( = admission examination) 大学入学考试, such as the Tertiary Entrance Exam in Western Australia. These have all been renamed (except in New South Wales) as a state-based certificate. Some Catholic university colleges in Australia have reintroduced matriculation ceremonies 入学仪式. New students at the College of St John the Evangelist within the University of Sydney and new students at Campion College Australia sign the college register during a formal ceremony whilst wearing academic dress. In Canada, the term is used by some older universities to refer to orientation ("frosh") events, however, some universities, including the University of King's College, still hold formal Matriculation ceremonies. The ceremony at King's is quite similar to the matriculation ceremonies held in universities such as Oxford or Cambridge. In Hong Kong, the term is used interchangeably with the completion of sixth-form 六年级结业. After sitting for 参加考试 the Certificate of Education examinations, eligible students receive two years of sixth-form education. Upon completion, they sit for the A-level examinations. Most secondary schools offer the sixth-form programme, and there are also a few sixth-form colleges. Students obtaining good grades 考试成绩好的 in the A-level examinations will be admitted to a university. In the British universities of Oxford, Cambridge, the term is used for the ceremony at which new students are entered into the register (in Latin matricula) of the university, at which point they become members of the university. Oxford requires matriculants 入学者 to wear academic dress 学术服 with subfusc during the ceremony. At Cambridge and Durham, policy regarding the wearing of academic dress varies amongst the colleges. Separate matriculation ceremonies are held by some of the colleges in Durham. Also at Durham, not all students are entered into the register, but one person from each college is selected to sign their own name for the whole college. At most universities and colleges in the United States, matriculation refers to mere enrollment or registration as a student at a university or college by a student intending to earn a degree, an event which involves no special ceremony. Some colleges that have a formal matriculation ceremony call it as such, while others call this enrollment ceremony for new students a "convocation". Universities and colleges in the United States commonly have a category of students known as special students, non-matriculated students or non-matriculating students 非正式学生. Generally these are students who are not merely auditing a class, but receive credit which is potentially transferable, pay full tuition, and often receive benefits that other students receive such as access to facilities and health care. These students typically are enrolled as matriculated students at other institutions and are visiting scholars of some type. However, sometimes students attend classes for the purpose of a standalone non-degree education. A commencement ceremony 毕业典礼 is a formal academic event celebrating the completion of studies and the beginning of a new chapter, often featuring speeches and the symbolic walking across a stage. While graduation is the technical conferral of a degree, commencement is the celebratory, often optional, ceremony where students are recognized. It serves as a rite of passage, officially celebrating students' academic accomplishments before they receive their physical diplomas by mail. ). Haileybury was the finishing school(a private, often post-secondary institution designed to teach young women social graces, etiquette, and cultural refinements to prepare them for entry into high society. Traditionally, these schools "finished" a woman's general education with non-academic training in deportment, grooming, and household management, commonly popular in Europe (especially Switzerland) from the late 19th century until the 1960s. A finishing school focuses on teaching young women social graces and upper-class cultural rites as a preparation for entry into society. The name reflects the fact that it follows ordinary school and is intended to complete a young woman's education by providing classes primarily on deportment, etiquette, and other non-academic subjects. The school may offer an intensive course or a one-year program. In the United States, a finishing school is sometimes called a charm school.  ) where Ian would evolve from child prodigy to man of destiny. He'd escaped Darrell Ray; now the rest of his life would begin. He is an experienced "outreach" officer, familiar with the most squalid 最肮脏的, 最不堪的 scenes of drug addict despair. Yet for years afterwards, he will remember the sight, this day, of a young man crumpled on the footpath — not just under the influence of "heroin, pills and cannabis", but with "third-degree burns on his body as a result of being over exposed to sunlight due to his drug addiction". Does he know this young man was once the pride of a swanky private school? It wouldn't matter. He helps Ian Walker to his feet 扶起来, consoles him, takes him to the Alfred Hospital, arranges some counselling. In his kindness, the social worker becomes probably the second or third person Ian trusts enough to explain the state he's in. "Ian was a schizophrenic who was dealing with issues of sexual abuse that had occurred when he was at school," the social worker later writes in a statement to police. "He was also addicted to heroin, amphetamines and prescription pills." If Ian Walker's sporting feats 体育成绩 as a young boy convinced his peers that super stardom was fait accompli, the Walker family tree proves that nothing in life is foreordained. In the hedonistic, bohemian Beaumaris of the 1970s, the Walkers stood out by their wholesomeness. Patriarch Ian Snr, a coal miner's son, was the first in his family with a university education, and dedicated himself to building a small empire of pharmacies. Ian's mother Judith, quirky and warm, provided the family's emotional nourishment. Ian was the cheeky one, spoiled by his older sisters, who both entered caring professions: Michele was a nurse and Karen pursued a career in workplace health and safety. They called him "Ian D."' At nearby Beaumaris Primary School, Ian's intelligence, sporting brilliance and social magnetism ensured a lofty position in the pecking order. It also put a target on his back 成为别人的目标. To what extent and for how long Darrell Ray abused Ian is unclear, but a Saints Little League teammate who witnessed many sights he would prefer to forget forlornly described Ian as "one of Ray's absolute favourites". In 1981, as Ian was rebuffing ( rebuff 婉拒, 拒绝 to refuse to accept a helpful suggestion or offer from someone, often by answering in an unfriendly way: She rebuffed all suggestions that she should resign. the act of refusing to accept a suggestion or offer from someone, often by answering in an unfriendly way: Her desperate request for help was met with a rebuff. The comments drew sharp rebuffs from budget experts in parliament) St Kilda FC, a local newspaper article outlined his rising stocks 蒸蒸日上 in the world of athletics: Sprinter-stayer Ian Walker of Deauville Ct, Beaumaris, is Victoria's most outstanding junior athlete. Walker's 800m times this season surpassed the great Herb Elliott's time (2 min. 3.4 sec.) at the same age. Ian is the most promising middle distance 中长距离 prospect 希望之星 in Victoria. The article hinted at the pressures and expectations buffeting ( buffet (of wind, rain, etc.) to hit something repeatedly and with great force. to hit something or someone repeatedly and, usually, hard: Many fierce storms had buffeted the coast before, but this one was worse than usualThe little boat was buffeted mercilessly by the waves. ) Ian as he was reeling from sexual abuse. Said an almost reproachful 遗憾的, 失望的( Reproachful expressions or remarks show that you are disappointed, upset, or angry because someone has done something wrong. She gave Isabelle a reproachful look. He turned to Alex and his tone was reproachful. Luke's mother stopped smiling and looked reproachfully at him) Aarsman: "Ian is the most promising middle distance prospect in Victoria, and he's still only "playing" at athletics — after all, he's playing football for Haileybury, hardly proper winter preparation for running. We're bringing him along quietly, to peak around 21." Did Haileybury notice Aarsman's broadside? Perhaps. From that moment forward, Karen told me, Haileybury's expectations of Ian only intensified, simultaneous to Ian's louder and louder cries for help. Haileybury was another story. The school, it seemed to Karen, cared only that Ian performed in athletics meets 运动会 and in football games, where despite being an under-age player who kept injuring himself due to his reckless attack on the contest, Ian was a star of Haileybury's history-making first premiership team in the Associated Public Schools (APS) 1st XVIII competition. "Haileybury putting Haileybury's brand as a sporting school ahead of Ian's education did not sit well with the family," Karen recalled. "He'd done something to his wrist and he was wearing a sling, and the principal [Michael Aikman] had burst into 冲进去 the exam room and interrupted Ian, asking if he'd be fit to play football the following Saturday." In taking this stand, Ian had flunked out of high school and was made to take a job at Red Rooster, very far from a Rhodes scholarship. Many of the mates who'd once worshipped him would never see his face again. For weeks afterwards, in painful therapy sessions with two local psychiatrists, Ian edges closer to explaining his misery. In one session, the psychiatrist registers a note of frustration about his "quite bright" patient: "Ian is usually guarded in what he says and how he answers," he writes. But when you read the treatment notes with the benefit of hindsight, the hints are there. By late 1996, Ian was as desperate and as unhappy as he'd ever been. Evicted once more, he went on a drug-fuelled spiral that came to a literally crashing end. Ian fell through a plate glass ( Plate glass, flat glass or sheet glass is a type of glass, initially produced in plane form, commonly used for windows, glass doors, transparent walls, and windscreens. For modern architectural and automotive applications, the flat glass is sometimes bent after production of the plane sheet. Flat glass stands in contrast to container glass (used for bottles, jars, cups) and glass fibre (used for thermal insulation, in fibreglass composites, and for optical communication). ) window, causing life-threatening gashes all over his body. Having staunched ( staunch [stɔːntʃ] verb. = stanch in the USA. I. to stop something happening, or to stop liquid, especially blood, from flowing out: staunch the bleeding 止血. The country's asylum laws were amended to staunch the flow/flood of economic migrants. Mike pressed hard on the wound and staunched the flow of bloodThe government claims this is the only way to staunch the flow of illegal drugs into the country. Efforts to staunch the spill of crude oil from a tanker off the north coast of Scotland are being held up by gale force winds. To staunch a wound, or to staunch the blood from a wound, means to stop the wound from bleeding. Tom tried to staunch the blood with his handkerchief. II. To staunch is also to keep something from continuing: The company abandoned the plan to staunch the departure of more managersadj. strongly loyal to a person, organization, or set of beliefs or opinions: a staunch defender of free speech. He was staunchly opposed to a public confession. She staunchly supports the party's candidates. staunch supporter/defender He is a staunch supporter of free trade. ) the bleeding, doctors noticed other problems: Ian's lung was punctured and he'd suffered a heart attack. They missed the alarming brain damage his drug use had done, but his survival was declared a miracle. "I spoke to the specialist police in child sex abuse and they fobbed me off 打发走, 敷衍," she explained. "They initially said, 'We need a first-hand account 本人陈述', and I said, 'Well, how do you investigate murders?' I spoke to Haileybury, who tried to buy me off by offering to name a sports scholarship in Ian's name. I didn't respond to the email. This is the school that Ian would not want to have anything to do with. "But, of course, they didn't want to talk about that at all. They deflect. They ask what you want. 'How can we make you go away?'". Theoretically, if Ian's abuser had been sacked, as the school's then-principal Michael Aikman (who died in 2005) told Ian's parents in 1988, a paper trail must have survived. Not so, Karen was told in her communications with Haileybury. Around the time of the Haileybury abuse, I discovered, Ian had entrusted at least one of his school friends with a disclosure. Now a middle-aged man, that friend had shared the information with me. These twin tragedies, just 12 months apart, carried a payload of grief that obliterated 摧毁 the Walker family. Most importantly, he reconciles with his parents, planning a trip to their new home in Queensland. "He was really rapt ( rapt [ræpt] I. ​literary 万分感兴趣的. 兴趣十足的. 全神贯注的. 全情投入的. completely interested and involved in something. I noticed that everyone was watching me with rapt attention. Delegates sat in rapt silence as Mrs Fisher spoke. Phillips had a rapt expression on his face. He had held his audience rapt. ...listening raptly to stories about fascinating peoplethe audience's rapt attention. If someone watches or listens with rapt attention, they are extremely interested or fascinated. I noticed that everyone was watching me with rapt attention. Delegates sat in rapt silence as Mrs Fisher spoke. Phillips had a rapt expression on his face. He had held his audience rapt. ...listening raptly to stories about fascinating people. II. ​Australian​ informal = wrapped. very happy and pleased. ) at the thought of this," one of Ian's case workers later writes. "He felt this meant his family were beginning to trust him again." As August dawns, not even a pending court date for a shoplifting charge brings Ian down as much as it would have in the past, and his housemate is able to reassure him that things will be fine. As I sift through the material generated in the five years Karen and I spent trying to identify the Haileybury abuser, the predominant feeling is of frustration. How could it be, that at a school so proud of its former students and staff and so diligent 细致, 事无巨细 in its documentation 档案 of their achievements, that Ian's abuser didn't leap at us from the pages of Haileybury's annuals? And even accounting for 即便考虑到, 即便算上, 就算是 forgetfulness and inevitably fading memories, how could so many of Ian's friends not remember the name of this "swimming coach", even when presented with team photos and staff lists? Equally, the picture Ian's friend painted of the school's junior campus in those years was an unwholesome one. "I don't want to get Haileybury in trouble," he said. "But I think back in those days and as a young boy, it was a bit of a minefield with these guys around. There were active paedophiles in Haileybury, just pursuing boys quite openly when I look back at it." A lead that seemed important came from a former counsellor of Ian's, who remembered Ian admitting to travelling by train to a park near his abuser's house and sitting on a bench in the hope of catching the man coming or going. But my door-knock sessions at plausible addresses yielded nothing, ditto three trips up a precarious alpine road to find a former counsellor of Ian's, who'd apparently died between attempted visits two and three. There was more success exploring Ian's friend's adamance (adamance [ˈædəməns] = adamancy [ˈæd.ə.mən.si] a state of resoluteness. the quality of being impossible to persuade, or unwilling to change an opinion or decision: A spokesperson denied that the president's adamancy had caused a chill in relations between the two countries. Despite her earlier adamancy that she would see no one, she allowed us in. adamant [ˈæd.ə.mənt] 固执己见, 执拗 impossible to persuade, or unwilling to change an opinion or decision: I've told her she should stay at home and rest but she's adamant that she's coming) that a broader culture of sexual abuse had existed at Haileybury. Back in 2021, whereas the sexual abuse histories of numerous other Melbourne private schools had made constant media headlines, there was no hint of scandal about Haileybury. But a canvas of specialist 专门的, 专职, 专注于 law firms that handle historical 历史上的 sexual abuse cases revealed that numerous legal matters related to Haileybury were gathering steam. Serious allegations hovered over several former Haileybury teachers. But none of them were swimming coaches at the Brighton campus. Another explained that he'd been one of the few married teachers in those days, and that staff at the school's main campus in Keybsorough had referred to Brighton as "Queen's college" on account of its numerous gay and unmarried teachers. Leery ( leery [ˈlɪə.ri] I. 谨慎的, 意识到的, 小心的. not trusting someone or something and usually avoiding him, her, or it if possible. If you are leery of something, you are cautious and suspicious about it and try to avoid it. Executives say they are leery of the proposed system. They were leery about investing in a company controlled by a single individual. II. [disapprovalIf someone looks or smiles at you in a leery way, they look or smile at you in an unpleasant way, usually because they are sexually interested in you. ...a leery grinI've always been a little leery of authority figures. ) of the common homophobic conflation of homosexuality and paedophilia in the 1970s and 80s, I pushed him further: was there a suggestion of boys being targeted and abused? He couldn't think of any obvious candidates, explaining that any number of teachers could have been and were drafted into the duties of swimming coach. His final pertinent (pertinent [ˈpɜː(r)tɪnənt] 有关的, 有关系的, 相关的, 有关联的 relevant to something. Something that is pertinent is relevant to a particular subject. She had asked some pertinent questions. Pertinent information will be forwarded to the appropriate party. ...knowledge and skills pertinent to classroom teaching. 'If we pay players, how far do we go?' Gresson asked pertinently. Where had they learned all this, or, more pertinently, why had they remembered it? I do not see the pertinence of most of this material. He was determined to ask Mrs McMahon a few pertinent questions. pertinent to: information pertinent to the accident investigation. It's probably pertinent to point out that everyone on the show has full access to mental health professionals as well as support from the Warner Bros. Australia and Network 10 teams before, during and after production. ) observation muddied the waters even further: he distinctly recalled the constant, gushing staffroom chatter, from all directions. Ian has a productive session with the outreach worker, the kindly man who'd peeled him off a Fitzroy street three years earlier and has since done everything in his power to turn Ian's life around. With his Paddington bear duffel coat, thick biker beard and gravel voice, Michael Stretton is difficult to size up 看不透 at first glance, but his gnomic ( gnomic [ˈnəʊ.mɪk] used to describe something spoken or written that is short, mysterious, and not easily understood, but often seems wise. A gnomic remark is brief and seems wise but is difficult to understand. ...the somewhat gnomic utterances of John Maynard Keynes in his General TheoryPeter is always coming out with gnomic utterances/ pronouncements. ) wisdom and diffidence 害羞, 腼腆 ( the quality of being shy and not confident of your abilities: The biggest difficulty is overcoming natural British diffidence. There was a diffidence in her soft voice. diffident shy and not confident of your abilities. Someone who is diffident is rather shy and does not enjoy talking about themselves or being noticed by other people. Helen was diffident and reserved. He entered the room with a certain diffidence. 'Would you,' he asked diffidently, 'like to talk to me about it?' a diffident manner. diffident about You shouldn't be so diffident about your achievements - you've done really well! ) hint at his vast first-hand experience of life's darker side. Like Ian, Michael came from a respected family with high expectations. Scattered among the Stretton family tree were judges, high-ranking army officers, lawyers and public intellectuals. Michael's own career has been a patchwork of jobs that don't entirely jibe with personality( jibe = gibe n. 凶狠攻击的话. 恶狠狠的话. 狠话. an aggressive remark directed at a person like a missile and intended to have a telling effect. A facetious or insulting remark; a jeer or taunt; v. To be in accord; agree 一致: Your figures jibe with mine. jibe with something [for something] to agree with something. Your story doesn't jibe with what we heard from the arresting officer. Her tale jibes with yours quite well.) and a few that do, like the years he spent counselling sexual abuse survivors at the Mayamurri healing centre. Its logo is tattooed on his body. He counselled, sadly, with a wealth of lived experience 亲身经历 to draw upon, thanks to the childhood degradations inflicted upon him by 'Uncle Harold' Greenwood, a war veteran who befriended Michael's father when they were members of the same Freemasonry Lodge. "A lot of my earliest memories are of Harold," Michael told me plainly when we sat down to discuss his life. Harold Greenwood's sexual abuse of Michael Stretton started, he figures, before he was old enough to retain memories 记事起, 不记事. In hindsight, Michael understands why their friendship splintered, why Ian was sometimes angry and mean, why it was natural that Michael eventually felt the "very distressing" need to pull back. He was only 19 on his final trip to see Ian at the new Walker family home in Bonbeach. Michael brought marijuana. Ian, already into heavier drugs, had sneered 轻蔑, 嗤之以鼻. Karen is surprised by his candour. "Uncharacteristically (uncharacteristically 不像他的, 和平常不一样的 doing something in a way that is not typical or usual for a person or thing. It describes behavior that deviates from the norm in a way that is not typical of someone: I noticed that this usually social young man was uncharacteristically silent. He looked down at his hands, uncharacteristically shy), he talks about his drug problem, which he rarely acknowledges to me, and about being knocked down by a car, which apparently led to him being admitted here," Karen writes. "I've been sectioned 圈住了, you know … I can't leave even if I wanted to. I must have overdosed on the drugs I was taking … I can't remember coming here". "I don't know what to do to help him either. What can I say?" Indeed, there are no grand plans to be hatched, no fists driven into tabletops, like in the Hollywood version, only the poorly timed appearance of a dishevelled woman in a dressing gown, who interrupts Ian's emotional outpouring and asks for change to use the phone. "Sorry, I don't have any money," says Ian, sympathetic and kind. "Why don't you call reverse charges?" But at first, it was Karen, not me, explaining to Michael that he needn't have subjected himself to decades of blame and self-recrimination. The closeness and rapport they developed almost immediately was a huge relief. Like Michael, Karen had spent a decent portion of his career helping people who suffered from mental health crises. With their combined skills, they could offer one another much-needed emotional ballast( ballast [bæl.əst] I. 压载. Ballast is any substance that is used in ships or hot-air balloons to make them heavier and more stable. Ballast usually consists of water, sand, or iron. heavy matter such as sand, stone, or water that is used at the bottom of a ship or a hot-air balloon to make it heavier, or the small stones on which railways and roads are made: The weed may have been accidentally imported in soil used as ship ballast. A ship sailing with an empty hold will have filled its ballast tanks at its source port. II. 精神依靠. 精神支柱. 定海神针. 中流砥柱. 顶梁柱. 主心骨. 定盘星 something that helps someone or something to succeed, especially by keeping them or it under control, or making them or it more serious: He needed his platoon mates around him. They were his ballast. The team is struggling because of a shortage of the ballast that senior players provide. wiki: Ballast is dense material used as a weight to provide stability to a vehicle or structure. Ballast, other than cargo, may be placed in a vehicle, often a ship or the gondola of a balloon or airship, to provide stability. A compartment within a boat, ship, submarine, or other floating structure that holds water is called a ballast tank. Water can be moved in and out from the ballast tank to balance the ship. In a vessel that travels on the water, the ballast will be kept below the water level, to counteract the effects of weight above the water level. The ballast may be redistributed in the vessel or disposed of altogether to change its effects on the movement of the vessel. ). Immediately, Karen became calmer and more confident. Despite the enormous emotional damage he'd sustained himself, Michael was sensitive and emotionally perceptive, anticipating and ameliorating ( ameliorate [əˈmiːl.jə.reɪt] 缓解, 缓和, 中和 to make a bad or unpleasant situation better. If someone or something ameliorates a situation, they make it better or easier in some way. Nothing can be done to ameliorate the situation. He expected me to do something to ameliorate his depression. ...a demand for amelioration of conditionsForeign aid is badly needed to ameliorate the effects of the drought.) many of Karen's most difficult moments. In Karen's comments about Michael, I soon recognised the blossoming of a love that ran deep and defied the labels we usually place on romantic couples. But Karen and Michael did become a couple. They began referring to each other as "my partner". It was not a typical love story, but boy was it a relief that they had each other. In the last five years, Karen has blossomed into a relentless and formidable advocate, not just for Ian but many other survivors and victims of sexual abuse. One particular focus has been to dismantle the institutional roadblocks faced by secondary victims in families like hers. Most gamely 大胆的, 有胆识的, 勇敢的, in seeking Ian's criminal history to help us piece together a timeline of his desperate final decade, Karen took the FOI department of Victoria Police to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT). Karen self-represented, significantly increasing a heavy workload that began with a 9,000-word written statement. The case hinged on the fact that Karen was not Ian's "senior next of kin". At length, she explained that in her parents' stead, and by then with her mother's approval (they had spoken, cordially, for the first time in decades) she was seeking important information that would help piece together her brother's life. It was a story she was certain that Ian would want told. It nagged at Karen that 摆脱不掉 Ian might have confronted the Haileybury abuser in such a way that it had prompted interactions with police, and that details of such a confrontation might remain on file. In what she came to view as a pointless administrative cruelty, Karen lost. When her appeal failed too, the police minister and attorney-general were unwilling to intervene. For Karen, such drawn-out fiascos have been far too common. As in Karen's story Missing Person, it is the unadorned 没有修饰的, 赤裸裸的 details of the train driver's four-paragraph statement that haunt. Others spoke of Ian's limitless potential, his devilish grin 坏笑( devilish I. extremely difficult or clever. You can use devilish to emphasize how extreme or difficult something is. ...a devilish puzzle. It is devilishly painful. I'd been devilish luckya devilish problem. devilish cunning. II. morally bad but in an attractive way, slightly bad, but sometimes in an amusing way. a devilish grin. III. A devilish idea or action is cruel or unpleasant. ...the devilish destructiveness of modern weapons), their sorrow at not realising the source of his teenage angst. Ian's younger cousin, Tina, remembered her early childhood obsession with Ian, and how a family member pulled her aside and explained that she was probably not going to be able to marry her cousin. I cannot bring myself to blame Karen that her longstanding mistrust of Haileybury College has, over the last five years, festered into a seething contempt 鄙视. But occasionally, I played devil's advocate and asked: is it possible they genuinely don't know who did this to Ian? This quest for the truth did nothing less than wreak emotional havoc in Karen and Michael's lives. Almost inevitably, the precarious combination of grief and love that brought them together eventually drove them back apart. Perhaps it was inevitable that a love forged in such circumstances would flame out 熄灭, 灰飞烟灭. But it leaves both short on support, and their respective legal matters — Karen's against her former employer, Michael's against the Freemasons — are unresolved. For me, having taken on dozens of similar stories in the meantime, there have been entailments 必然关系 ( the relationship between two statements when for one to be true, the other must also be true. a relationship between propositions such that one must be true if the others are. Cause and effect = causal [ˈkɔː.zəl] relationship. causal relationship, link, etc. a relationship, link, etc. between two things in which one causes the other: Is there a causal relationship between violence on television and violent behaviour? There is no causal relationship between the two. The two are not causally linked. We need to distinguish between correlation 相关性 and causation. 佛教中的因果关系: Karma / the law of cause and effect in Buddhism. ) predictable to anyone with knowledge of historical child sexual abuse and its investigation: depression, anxiety, a good old-fashioned nervous breakdown. I respected their courage and did my best to honour it by probing institutions, seeking out witnesses, collating documents and writing stories. Sometimes it helped. Often it fell on deaf ears. Occasionally it felt like I'd merely raked up 激起悲惨往事 miseries best left in the past. Like all of Ian's other friends, the man had never known the precise circumstances of Ian's death and was tentatively ( tentatively I. in a way that shows you are not certain or confident: "I have come to see Mrs Edgerton," she said 犹犹豫豫的 tentatively. II. in a way that may be changed later: The project, tentatively called Viva, is in the early design stages. The meeting has been tentatively scheduled for next weektentative I. (of a plan or idea) not certain or agreed, or (of a suggestion or action) said or done in a careful but uncertain way because you do not know if you are right, not certain or agreed: The car company and the union reached a tentative agreement. a tentative deal/plan/settlement. The proposals are tentative and subject to bargainingtentative plan I have tentative plans to take a trip to Seattle in July. tentative agreement. tentative deal. tentative step. II. 小心翼翼的, 谨慎的》 said or done in a careful way because you do not know if you are right: While analysts are tentative at the moment, they remain basically optimistic. The company began last year to take tentative steps towards a flotation) eager to hear them. When my summary was over, he was so overcome with sadness and delayed grief, he pushed his chair back and strode away from the cafe and out of sight. Another male member of staff complained to me that Rhys had propositioned (proposition [ˌprɒp.əˈzɪʃ.ən] noun. I. 商业提案. 商业提议. an offer or suggestion, usually in business. a suggestion or statement for consideration: The chairman was advised that it was a risky business propositionHe wrote to me last week regarding a business proposition he thought might interest me. I've put my proposition to the company director for his consideration. an offer or suggestion about a business activity: put/make a proposition to sb I've put my proposition to the company director for his consideration. accept/back/consider a proposition I need more time to consider your proposition. The line, which has advanced high-speed InterCity trains, is considered to be a highly attractive proposition for the private sector. a risky/viable proposition. a business/investment proposition. a commercial/economic proposition. II. an idea or opinion. a statement containing an idea or opinion: The proposition that the real rate of interest will be lower in future because of lower and more stable inflation is a mythThey were debating the proposition that "All people are created equal". III. mathematics, language specialized a statement or problem that must be solved or proved to be true or not true: Pythagoras's theorem is the mathematical proposition that in any right-angled triangle, the square on the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares on the other two sides. IV. politics US specialized in some states of the United States, a new plan that is voted on by the people of a state. in the US, a suggested change to state law that is voted on by people living in that state: proposition to do sth A proposition to increase the sales tax by a quarter cent to fund parks projects passed by 33 votesHe proposed an unsuccessful state proposition 提案. Under Proposition 71, the state will commit $3 billion to studying stem cells over the next 10 years. verb. I. to ask someone who you are not in a relationship with if they would like to have sex with you: I was propositioned by a complete stranger) him. Official views on such matters were much less tolerant in those days and he was required to leave at the end of the year. But Walkley had not even seen out送走 the 1981 school year. I found a newspaper advertisement for his job during the mid-year school holidays, in July, 1981; Aldred confirmed it meant Walkley had departed mid-year, with unusual abruptness.

Thursday, 7 May 2026

veritable; horn of plenty = cornucopia;

用法学习: 1. pulverize [ˈpʌlvərʌɪz] I. 粉碎. 压碎. to press or crush something until it becomes powder or a soft mass. To pulverize something means to do great damage to it or to destroy it completely. ...the economic policies which pulverised the economy during the 1980s. A factory making armaments had been bombed and a residential area not far away had been pulverizedSeashells were pulverized by the ocean's waves. pulverized coal/bones. II. informal to defeat someone easily. If someone pulverizes an opponent in an election or competition, they thoroughly defeat them. He is set to pulverise his two opponents in the race for the presidency. Our team aims to pulverize the competition (= badly defeat them). ...the economic policies which pulverised the economy during the 1980s. A factory making armaments had been bombed and a residential area not far away had been pulverized 化为齑粉. III. If you pulverize something, you make it into a powder by crushing it. Using a pestle and mortar, pulverise the bran to a coarse powder. The fries are made from pellets of pulverised potato. wiki: Pulverize means to crush, grind, or pound a substance into powder or dust. It also, informally, means to completely defeat, smash, or destroy an opponent or object. Examples include grinding spices, industrial processing of materials, crushing rocks, and defeating sports teams, with synonyms including demolish, shatter, smash, and grind. 2. muff I. (historical) HAND-WARMER 套袖, 暖手筒. A piece of fur or cloth, usually with open ends, used for keeping the hands warm. A muff is a piece of fur or thick cloth shaped like a short hollow cylinder. You wear a muff on your hands to keep them warm in cold weather. II. (vulgar slang) The vulva or vagina; pubic hair around itA merkin 假阴毛 is a pubic wig. Merkins were worn by people after shaving their mons pubis, and are used as decorative items or erotic devices by both men and women. III. (synecdochically, vulgar slang) A woman or girl. IV. (glassblowing) A blown cylinder of glass which is afterward flattened out to make a sheet. The feathers sticking out from both sides of the face under the beak of some birds. V. 耳套. Muffs consist of two thick soft pieces of cloth joined by a band, which you wear over your ears to protect them from the cold or from loud noise. VI.  especially in sport, a mistake, a dropped catch, or a badly performed action: His World Series muff lives in infamy. One of the scratch runs was thanks to Rodriguez's muff of an easy bouncer in the sixth. ("Scratch run" can mean a race where all participants start from the same line with no handicap given, a specific type of cycling race with equal-ability riders, or the process of running a script in the Scratch programming language.verb. I. If you muff something 搞砸, you do it badly or you make a mistake while you are doing it, so that it is not successful. to spoil an opportunity or do something badly: I only had two lines in the whole play and I muffed themHe muffed his opening speech. ...a muffed opportunity. II. in sport, to fail to catch a ball or to perform an action badly: Williams muffed the handover, preventing the US team from even finishing the 4x100 relay. Samuel muffed his tackle, and Johnson scored from six yardsfluff/blow/muff one's lines 忘词 to speak one's speech badly or forget one's lines when one is in a play. The actress fluffed her lines badly in the last act. I was in a play once, and I muffed my lines over and over. It's okay to blow your lines in rehearsal. hairy muff = fair enough An alternative to the expression 'fair enough'. Often said as a dismissive response to an explaination of something. Hairy Muff indicates that the person saying it does not really care about whatever it is they have been told. If said quickly enough the person it is said to may not even be aware that you have in fact referred to an ungroomed vaginal area. It is not often used in formal and/or serious conversation although it is somewhat amusing to test the acceptable limits of the phrase. Ben: The reason I haven't been out picking up chicks lately is because I realised that I was ignoring my true sexuality. I wanna be with Carl. I think I'm gay. Ned: Hairy Muffhuffy 怒气冲冲的, 气鼓鼓的 adj. angry and offended. Someone who is huffy is obviously annoyed or offended about something. I, in my turn, became embarrassed and huffy and told her to take the money back. 'I appreciate your concern for my feelings,' Bess said huffily, 'but I'm a big girl now.' You need to be able to take criticism without gettting huffyget huffy with I told her she'd made a mistake and she got huffy with me. Ames is a gender-neutral name primarily of French and Old English origin, meaning "friend" or "amicable". It is derived from the Latin amicus and Old French amis, reflecting a friendly nature. Often used as a surname or given name, it is associated with companionship, particularly in English-speaking regionsTBBT: Penny: Hey, Ames. Amy: Yeah. Hey, Ames, nothing. I was all set to move in with Sheldon, and now I hear I can't 'cause you don' want to live with Leonard. Leonard (off): What? Penny: Sheldon, what did you say? Sheldon: I said the truth. You don't want to live with Leonard, and you know it. Leonard: Since when don't you want to live with me? Penny: Oh, don't get all huffy. You're the one who decided to move in without even asking me if I was ready. Sheldon: Yeah, I think we should talk about that. Penny: And since you love the truth so much, why don't you tell Amy you don't want to live with her instead of blaming it on me? 3. TBBT: Penny: Hey, is there a trick to getting it to switch from tub to shower. Oh. Hi, sorry. Hello! Howard: Enchante Madamoiselle. Howard Wolowitz, Cal-Tech department of Applied Physics. You may be familiar with some of my work, it's currently orbiting Jupiter's largest moon taking high-resolution digital photographs. Penny: Penny. I work at the Cheesecake Factory. Leonard: Come on, I'll show you the trick with the shower. Howard: Bon douche. Penny: I'm sorry? Howard: It's French for good shower. It's a sentiment I can express in six languages(  He thought that architecture was alive, and should express a sentiment 表达一种情绪. He stated that a geographic name should be short, euphonic, pronounced as spelled, and have a meaning or express some sentiment to help fix it in the memory 记得牢, 记得死. Since one of the main duties of the office was to express the sentiments of the university, it was considered a launching point to high office. But it doesn't stop him expressing his sentiments. ). Leonard: Save it for your blog, Howard. 4. crowd (one) I. informal To harass, pressure, or assail one. to pressure or threaten someone. If you crowd someone, you make the person uncomfortable by standing too close: Don't crowd meFrank began to crowd Sam, which was the wrong thing to doThe detectives tried crowding the suspect for a confession, but he wouldn't say a word. My anxiety has been crowding me so much lately that I can barely get anything done. Would you quit crowding me? You know, the more you annoy me, the less likely I am to pick you for the promotion! Friends: Monica: All right, listen up. There is usually only one dress in each size so when they open those doors, fan out 散开. Now, this is what you're looking for! Memorize it 记住了! When you locate the dress, blow on these 吹这个口哨. All right? (She passes out whistles to them.) Three short blasts 吹三下, when you hear it. Come running. Rachel: Okay. Phoebe: Got it. Woman: Here he comes! Hurry! Rachel: Oh they're pushing! They're pushing!! [Time lapse, inside the store, Monica is frantically looking for her dress.] Monica: No. No. Not it. Not it. Not it. (Checks another rack and another woman tries to reach around her.) (To the woman) Don't crowd me! This is it! This is the dress! Oh my God, it's perfect! ((She takes it off of the rack and someone has a hold of it on the other side of the rack and tugs on it.) I'm sorry, this one's taken! (The other woman tugs harder pulling Monica through the rack.) Whoaulling Monica through the rack.) Whoa! II. to gang up on someone. They moved in from all sides, carrying clubs, and began to crowd us. III.  If people crowd you, they stand very closely around you trying to see or speak to you, so that you feel uncomfortable. It had been a tense day with people crowding her all the timecrowd someone/ something out 拥挤, 别挤, 别站太近 I. to not allow a person or thing any space or opportunity to grow or develop. to not allow a person or thing any space or opportunity to grow or develop: Small local businesses have been crowded out by large multinationalsSmall local businesses have been crowded out 挤出去, 挤死 by large multinationals. II. to make it impossible for someone or something to succeed because of great numbers or strength: Invasive foreign plants crowd out native species and harm wildlife. crowd around someone or something 围着, 围起来 When people crowd around someone or something, they gather closely together around them. The hungry refugees crowded around the tractors. Police blocked off the road as hotel staff and guests crowded around. crowd into a place 挤进, 蜂拥而进 If people crowd into a place or are crowded into a place, large numbers of them enter it so that it becomes very full. Hundreds of thousands of people have crowded into the centre of the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius. One group of journalists were crowded into a minibus. 'Bravo, bravo,' chanted party workers crowded in the main hall. 5. equanimity [ˌek.wəˈnɪm.ə.ti] 不慌不忙, 不动如山, 精神稳定, 安静平定, 稳如泰山 a state of psychological stability, composure, and evenness of mind that remains undisturbed by stress, intense emotions, pain, or external circumstances. a calm mental state, especially after a shock or disappointment or in a difficult situation. the state of being calm and in control of your emotions, esp. in a difficult situation: In spite of her financial troubles, she faced the future with equanimitywith equanimity He received the news of his mother's death with remarkable equanimity. Three years after the tragedy she has only just begun to regain her equanimity. Equanimity is a calm state of mind and attitude to life, so that you never lose your temper or become upset. His sense of humour allowed him to face adversaries with equanimity. The defeat was taken with equanimity by the leadership. China has responded to the crisis with remarkable equanimity. It is striking how self-confident Beijing is ahead of this week's Trump-Xi summitwiki: Equanimity is a state of psychological stability and composure which is undisturbed by the experience of or exposure to emotions, pain, or other phenomena that may otherwise cause a loss of mental balance. The virtue and value of equanimity is extolled and advocated by a number of major religions and ancient philosophies. veritable 像真的一样的, 事实上的, 真实的 I. used to describe something as another, more exciting, interesting, or unusual thing, as a way of emphasizing its character. You can use veritable to emphasize the size, amount, or nature of something. ...a veritable feast of pre-match entertainment. ...a veritable army of security guards. My garden had become a veritable jungle by the time I came back from holiday. The normally sober menswear department is set to become a veritable kaleidoscope of colour this season. II. (used to emphasize how great or unusual something is by comparing it to something else): If current projections hold, Montgomery County will experience a veritable explosion in its school-age population (= it will have many more students). III. True; genuine. He is a veritable genius. A fair is a veritable smorgasbord. vocabulary: When something is veritable it is true, or at least feels that way. "The trees and lights turned the campus into a veritable 像真的一样的, 事实上的, 真实的 wonderland" means that the campus seemed to be transformed into a true wonderland (if there is such a thing). Veritable comes from the Latin veritas which means true. But unlike true, it does not describe things like statements. It is often used to enhance the word that follows it. "A veritable cornucopia of food" is a lot of food of different varieties. If someone calls you "a veritable force of nature," they don't mean that you are actually a hurricane; they just mean that you have the unstoppable quality of a big old storm. cornucopia [ˌkɔː.njuˈkəʊ.pi.ə] 牛角框, 一大堆的 I. a container in the shape of an animal's horn, full of fruit and flowers, often used as a symbol in art: Each of the figures bears a cornucopia, which is the usual symbol of plenty. The cloisters are decorated with a riotous mixture of human and animal figures, scallop shells, and cornucopias. II. a large amount or supply of something, or something that provides this: The table held a veritable cornucopia of every kind of food or drink you could want. This book is a cornucopia of facts and folklore about tigers. Our supermarkets are veritable cornucopias. ...a cornucopia of fruits. ...a table festooned with a cornucopia of fruit. Some European leaders fear that taking a harder line against Beijing would mean missing out on a cornucopia of Chinese investments. But the massive technology transfers and investments that Beijing has dangled in front of the noses of the outgoing Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán and Spain's Pedro Sánchez have yet to materialise. They likely never will, unless the EU introduces tariffs that incentivise Chinese companies to build in Europe rather than exporting things from Chinahorn of plenty I. a container in the shape of an animal's horn, full of fruit and flowers and often used as a table decoration in American homes on Thanksgiving: For centrepieces, consider placing a horn of plenty on each table, brimming with fruit or flower petals. Overflowing with grapes, pomegranates, and pink roses, this horn of plenty is made from crabapple branches. II. something that provides a large amount or supply of something: The internet is a horn of plenty that has presented new opportunites for similarly minded individuals with unusual interests. These new inventions proved a horn of plenty, making the last decade of the 20th century a golden age for astronomers, astrophysicists, and cosmologists. III. a type of mushroom that you can eat and is shaped like a trumpet (= a brass musical instrument consisting of a metal tube with one narrow end, into which the player blows, and one wide end): The horn of plenty is a dark brown wild mushroom. I picked nearly a kilo of trompettes de la mort - I prefer the French name to the English name "horn of plenty". 6. quality I. how good or bad something is. the degree of excellence of something, often a high degree of it. Quality often refers to how good or bad something is: The fabric was of the highest qualityOur company guarantees the quality of our merchandisea shop advertising top quality electrical goods. poor quality The food was of such poor quality. low quality The cuts could result in a lower quality of service. high quality Their products are of very high quality. good quality The food is good quality and nutritious. good-quality 优质的, 质量好的 I only buy good-quality wine. quality of The quality of the picture 电视画质 on our television isn't very good. improve/decline in quality His line manager believes his work had declined in quality. picture/build/sound quality This type of TV delivers stunning picture quality. II. a high standard: He's not interested in quality. All he cares about is making money. They claim their brand name is a guarantee of quality. The company is committed to qualityquality of life 生活质量 (abbreviation QOL) the level of enjoyment, comfort, and health in someone's life: My quality of life has improved tremendously since I moved to the country. III. computing specialized (abbreviation QOL) used to refer to things that make a computer program, game, etc. easier to use: quality-of-life program There are some quality-of-life programs on Windows that most people don't know about. IV. a good feature of a person's character. a characteristic or feature of someone or something. a characteristic or feature of someone or something: We're looking for someone who loves children and has the qualities 品质, 素质 of a good teacherleadership quality 领导素质. good quality 好素质 He has a lot of good qualities but being organized isn't one of them. I don't think he has the right qualities 当老师的素质 to be a teacher. This cheese has a rather rubbery quality to it (= it is like rubber). She has demonstrated great leadership qualities 素养 in continuing the company's success through a very difficult year. Personal qualities and commitment are more important for the job than educational qualifications. Inspectors normally need a degree, but exceptions are occasionally made for candidates with the right qualities. V. a characteristic or feature of something, that makes it different from other things: What qualities 产品品质 would you expect a German car to have? We will combine the best qualities优点, 好处 of both companies with a focus on our future, not our pastadj. I. of a high standard: This is a quality product. quality newspaper 优质报纸 mainly UK The story received little coverage in the quality newspapers (= more serious newspapers). II. [after verb] informal very good: That gig was quality. 7. 火山爆发: Mount Dukono erupted on May 8, producing an ash plume about 10km high and trapping 20 hikers, including nine Singaporeans, within a restricted zone. More than 100 rescuers, supported by drones, are searching a 700-square-metre zone near the crater despite repeated eruptions and unstable terrain. Ash columns 火山灰柱 have reached up to 3,000 metres, with lava bursts observed overnight, forcing teams to retreat whenever activity spikes. Officials confirmed all hiking routes 徒步途径 to Dukono had been closed since April due to heightened volcanic activity, yet the group entered a prohibited area. Police are questioning guides and a porter, with possible criminal charges under consideration, while the National Disaster Management Agency warned of legal sanctions for breaching exclusion zones. Similar restrictions are in place for other high-alert volcanoes across Indonesia's 'Ring of Fire'. The current incident highlights the dangers of disregarding long-standing safety measures around persistently active volcanoes. 8. crystallize I. If you crystallize an opinion or idea 清晰化, 坚决, 认定, or if it crystallizes, it becomes fixed and definite in someone's mind. If something crystallizes your thoughts or opinions, it makes them clear and fixed: The event helped to crystallize my thoughtsHe has managed to crystallise the feelings of millions of ordinary people. Now my thoughts really began to crystallise. ...encouraging the crystallization of new values. II. If a substance crystallizes 结晶, or something crystallizes it, it turns into crystals. Don't stir or the sugar will crystallise. ...a 19th-century technique that actually crystallizes the tin. ...experiments on the crystallisation of glass. III. to sell an investment at a particular time and make a profit or loss from that investment: By selling the shares now, your gain will be crystallized. Crystallisation means selling an asset in order to realise capital gains or losses. When an investor buys an asset, any increase or decrease in the market price will not automatically translate to profit or loss – this is only realised after the position has been closed. Once the position has been crystallised, investment tax may be applicable to the proceeds, which is why investors might choose to strategically crystallise their positions. However, capital losses can be offset against any profits to reduce the tax paid at the end of the year. Crystallisation itself not an issue, but there is contention surrounding what the investor does after crystallising a position. The problem lies in the act of an investor, trader or a business, closing their position and opening an identical position immediately. In doing so, they are able to balance out the net value of their assets by quickly realising a loss or profit, without losing the position that they believe can still bring more profit. garnish [ˈgɑ:niʃ] 装饰 I. to decorate; trim. a coat that was garnished with a fur collar. II. (Cookery) to add something to (food) in order to improve its appearance or flavour. garnished the potatoes with parsley. a small amount of different food used to decorate a dish or serving of food: Use chopped parsley for a garnisha lemon and herb garnishgarnish something with something to embellish or decorate something, such as food, with something. Garnish the dish with parsley before servingFor the final presentation, I will garnish the dish with a sprig of parsley. The roast was garnished with slices of apple. III. Slang to extort money from. IV. law US specialized to take an amount from someone's wages (= money paid every week to an employee) or bank account in order to pay back money they owe. to take part of the income or property of someone who owes a debt and give it to a court in order to pay the debt: After his house and car were taken, and wages garnished 截留工资, he was forced to move in with his parents. The state does not permit wage garnishment for most civil debts. garnish someone's wages 强行转走工资, 强行抵债 The IRS may end up garnishing your wages for the amount due. Debt collectors can garnish funds from your checking accountnoteA Garnish 装点, 装饰 is an item or substance used as a decoration or embellishment on a prepared food dish or drink. In some cases, it may give added or contrasting flavor, but a typical garnish is selected first to augment the visual impact 增强视觉效果 of the plate, not necessarily to affect the flavor. This is in contrast to a condiment 调味品 which is primarily a flavor added to another food item. Parsley is an excellent example of a traditional garnish; this pungent green herb has small distinctly shaped leaves, firm stems, and is easy to trim into a garnish. Typically, few diners eat parsley garnishes. A garnish makes food or drink items more visually appealing. They may, for example, enhance their color, such as when paprika is sprinkled on a salmon salad. They may give a color contrast, for example when chives are sprinkled on potatoes. They may make a cocktail more visually appealing, such as when a cocktail umbrella is added to an exotic drink, or when a Mai Tai is topped with any number of tropical fruit pieces. Sushi, the Japanese fish dish, may be garnished with baran, a type of plastic grass or leaf. Sometimes a garnish and a condiment will be used together to finish the presentation of a dish, for example an entrée could be topped with a sauce and then a sprig of parsley would be added as a garnish. A garnishment 强制还款, 强制贷款偿还 is a means of collecting a monetary judgment against a defendant by ordering a third party (the garnishee) to pay money, otherwise owed to the defendant, directly to the plaintiff. In the case of collecting for taxes, the law of a jurisdiction may allow for collection without a judgment or other court order. Wage garnishment, the most common type of garnishment, is the process of deducting money from an employee's monetary compensation (including salary), sometimes as a result of a court order. Wage garnishments continue until the entire debt is paid or arrangements are made to pay off the debt. Garnishments can be taken for any type of debt but common examples of debt that result in garnishments include: child support, defaulted student loans, taxes, unpaid court fines. When served on an employer, garnishments are taken as part of the payroll process. When processing payroll, sometimes there is not enough money in the employee's net pay to satisfy all of the garnishments. For example, in a case with federal tax, local tax, and credit card garnishments, the first garnishment taken would be the federal tax garnishments, then the local tax garnishments, and finally, garnishments for the credit card. Employers receive a notice telling them to withhold a certain amount of their employee's wages for payment and cannot refuse to garnish wages. Wage garnishment can negatively affect credit, reputation, and the ability to receive a loan or open a bank account. 9. index verb. I. 关联. 挂钩. If a quantity or value is indexed to another, a system is arranged so that it increases or decreases whenever the other one increases or decreases. to change a system of numbers according to each other or a fixed standard: Government will not look to index income tax, Chalmers saysbe indexed to 关联. 挂钩 Social Security payments are indexed to (= adjusted to allow for) inflation every year. This benefit is now indexed to wage growth. be indexed in line with Living expenses will be indexed in line with inflation (= to take inflation into consideration)Minimum pensions and wages are to be indexed to inflation. An extra $9 billion in payments is forecast for the disability support pension, Jobseeker and aged pension, which are all indexed and rising in line with inflation. It means the government will have little money to play with, despite tax windfalls and the $22 billion in net savings from NDIS reforms, one of the single largest savings measures this century. II. If you index 索引 a book or a collection of information, you make an alphabetical list of the items in it. Our computer indexes several thousand new records every second. The book contains a lot of information, but it's not very well indexed. This vast archive has been indexed and made accessible to researchers. Painters and sculptors are indexed separately. She's indexed the book by author, by age, and by illustrator. noun. I. If one thing is an index of another, it indicates what the other thing will be like. a system of numbers used for comparing values of things that change according to each other or a fixed standard. The house price index estimates the change in the value of the nation's housing stock. a bond/share/stock indexan index of sth: The fund tracks an index of the UK's top 350 UK shares.  the FTSE 100 Index 指标, 指数. the Dow Jones Index. a wage/price indexWeeds are an index 指数 to the character of the soil. something that shows how strong or common a condition or feeling is: Unemployment levels provide a useful index of the state of the economy. Consumer spending is often a good index of public confidence in the economy. II. 指数值. In mathematics, indices are the little numbers that show how many times you must multiply a number by itself. In the equation 3² = 9, the number 2 is an index. III. An index is a system by which changes in the value of something and the rate at which it changes can be recorded, measured, or interpreted. ...the U.K. retail price index. ...economic indices. IV. An index is an alphabetical list that is printed at the back of a book and tells you on which pages important topics are referred to. There's even a special subject index. card index A card index is a number of cards with information written on them which are arranged in a particular order, usually alphabetical, so that you can find the information you want easily. Vital evidence was lost in a simple card index system which was not properly cross referencedindexed: Finance:"The portfolio is indexed to the S&P 500, ensuring it tracks the top 500 U.S. companies". Data/Computing索引的: "The new database entries were quickly indexed to improve query speed". Publishing: "The book's glossary is well indexed for easy reference". Economics: "The pension is indexed to the cost of living, adjusting annually for inflation". -indexed 关联的, 挂钩的 having a value that is connected to the thing mentioned, so that the value becomes bigger or smaller as the other thing changes: a wage-indexed pension. inflation-indexed securities issued by the U.S. Treasury. index-linked = US indexed 物价挂钩的 An index-linked investment or government payment changes by the same amount as the general level of prices. an index-linked investment or payment changes by the same amount as the general level of prices, or in relation to another fixed standard: an index-linked pension. index-linked bonds/gilts/securitiesan index-linked pension/benefit. 10. illusory [ɪˈluː.sər.i] = illusive [ɪˈluː.sɪv] 幻觉的, 假的, 不是真的 not real and based on illusion. If you describe something as illusory, you mean that although it seems true or possible, it is in fact false or impossible. His freedom is illusory. ...the illusory nature of nationhood. Their hopes of a peaceful solution turned out to be illusory. It is an illusive place where nothing is as it seems. Feeling and emotion are not to be trusted, as they are too subjective, too illusive. The consumer watchdog claimed the supermarket giant misled shoppers, by jacking up the price of an item for a short time, before putting it on a discount. It alleged shoppers were paying the same or more than the product's regular price, which made the discount fake or "illusory".  The supermarket giant defended the case, rejecting the discounts were fake. 11. Surfside residents fear homes could be lost to sea in next storm: "We don't have insurance on our home, which will cover tidal inundation, so we could be left with nothing at retirement. You're just lying there day after day, waiting for your home to fall into the ocean," Ms Ford said. The Fords live on a road that is separated from the ocean by a single sand dune. Although Surfside Beach is on the northern edge of Batemans Bay, it is vulnerable to large south-east swells 涨潮, such as those that gouged sand from the area in April 2025 and March this year. Dr Holland's office said in a statement that he "proactively escalated the concerns of Surfside residents to relevant authorities and is involved in, and is encouraging, ongoing discussions." Emergency works were completed by the Eurobodalla Shire Council in September 2025, which involved pushing sand from the beach bottom to rebuild the dune. Hundreds of plants were planted to help stabilise it. But on March 27 this year, a powerful storm hit the region, scouring ( scour verb. I. 刮干净. 刮擦. to remove dirt from something by rubbing it hard with something rough. to clean something by rubbing it hard with rough cleaning material: We scoured the pots and pans with pads of steel woolYou'll have to scour out those old cooking pots before you use them. scour something out 滴水穿石, 凿出 to make a hole by a movement that is repeated continuously over a long period of time: The fast-moving water had scoured out a channel in the rock. II. to search a place or thing very carefully in order to try to find something: The police are scouring the area for the missing child. I scoured the shops for a blue and white shirt, but I couldn't find one anywhere. III. (of farm animals, especially cows and pigs) to have diarrhoea: Several calves were scouring and one died within days. noun. I. an act of removing dirt from something by rubbing it hard with something rough: A quick scour with salt and an old toothbrush is a simple way to freshen up stained cups. II. a search: We need as many volunteers as possible for a scour of the beach to pick up everything that shouldn't be there. A scour of the recent headlines could be a little concerning for shareholders. III. geology specialized a process in which the continuous movement of water gradually forms a hole in the sediments (= sand, stones, etc.) in a river, etc., or the sediments themselves: Huge scour marks in the bed of the Channel could have been created only by a giant torrent of water. Another $20 million will be spent to replace the scour, or riverbed material, just downriver from the dam. IV. (also scours) diarrhoea in farm animals, especially cows and pigs: Scour in young calves is caused mainly by parasites and viruses. Of the three animals, one had died of scours and several others appeared ill. ) much of the dune and leaving the houses vulnerable once again. "Council will continue to investigate avenues for further beach scraping, giving residents time to undertake coastal protection of their own properties, and regularly seek NSW government commitment to continued dredging and sand renourishment 填砂, 填沙 (Sand nourishment (or beach replenishment) is a soft engineering technique that adds sand from external sources to eroded beaches to widen them, protecting against storm surges, high tides, and coastal erosion. This method acts as a buffer by dissipating wave energy and is often part of larger, ongoing coastal management strategies. ) of the beach close to shore." The Eurobodalla Open Coastal Management Plan (CMP), adopted by the council in 2022, outlined a number of options to manage erosion risk over a 10-year period. An option suggested for Surfside Beach was sand nourishment during channel dredging in the Clyde River. In October 2025, Transport for NSW conducted channel dredging and dumped approximately 30,000 cubic metres of sand 600 metres off Surfside Beach, hoping it would wash ashore. That process is currently being monitored by the University of New South Wales. In the CMP report, the strategy was assessed as being moderately to highly effective, but it noted that "placement of dredge material directly on the beach or marginally offshore (within 100 metres of shoreline) was required to ensure nourishment of the beach is achieved". A spokesperson for TfNSW said at the time that it was not possible to put the material any closer due to the large boat in use. 

 Ancillary VS auxiliary VS accessoryAncillary 从属的, 附属的 often implies something is subordinate, secondary, or merely assisting a main, dominant function (e.g., ancillary services, ancillary staff). Auxiliary 备用的 emphasizes backup/supplemental help. additional help, backup, or acting as a partner to the main system (e.g., auxiliary power). Accessory 附加的, 不是主要的, 次要的 refers to an added, often non-essential, item (e.g., a handbag)ancillary [ænˈsɪl.ər.i] providing support or help. additional, or providing additional support or help: In the last ten years or so we have developed a number of ancillary services, which have grown out of our core business. ancillary staff/workers. ancillary staff/workers. an ancillary role. Campaigning to change government policy is ancillary to the charity's direct relief work. auxiliary [ɔːɡˈzɪl.i.ə.ri] 辅助的 I. giving help or support, especially to a more important person or thing. The ancillary workers in an institution are the people such as cleaners and cooks whose work supports the main work of the institution. ...ancillary staff. ...ancillary services like cleaning. ...ancillaries who look after the children in the playgroundThe hospital has an auxiliary 备不时之需的, 备用的 power supply in case of a power failure. auxiliary staff/nurses. About 4800 unarmed auxiliary police officers work on a volunteer basis with the New York Police Department. a. Auxiliary staff and troops assist other staff and troops. The government's first concern was to augment the army and auxiliary forces. b. Auxiliary equipment is extra equipment that is available for use when necessary. ...an auxiliary motor. ...auxiliary fuel tanks. II. ancillary means additional to something else. Ancillary charges are at least $30 per day. Scientific development meant the growth of numerous professions ancillary to medicine. Ancillaries can force the bill up rather alarminglynoun. I. a person whose job is to give help or support to other workers. an employee, volunteer (= someone who works without pay), or organization whose job is to give extra help or support. An auxiliary is a person who is employed to assist other people in their work. Auxiliaries are often medical workers or members of the armed forces. Nursing auxiliaries provide basic care, but are not qualified nurseshospital auxiliariessemi-skilled auxiliaries. II. a soldier of one country who fights for another country. III. An auxiliary is an organization that is connected with, but less important than, another organization; for example, an organization for the wives of the members of the main organization. The restaurant is operated by the Palo Alto Auxiliary for the benefit of the Lucile Salter Packard Children's Hospital. IV. (also auxiliary verb) a verb that gives grammatical information not given by the main verb of a sentence: In the sentence "she has finished her book", "has" is an auxiliary 助动词. 辅助词. In grammar, an auxiliary or auxiliary verb is a verb which is used with a main verb, for example to form different tenses or to make the verb passive. In English, the basic auxiliary verbs are 'be', 'have', and 'do'. Modal verbs such as 'can' and ' will' are also sometimes called auxiliaries. accessory [kˈses.ər.i] noun. I. something added to a machine or to clothing that has a useful or decorative purpose: fashion accessory 时尚附品 Sunglasses are much more than a fashion accessory. She wore a green wool suit with matching accessories (= shoes, hat, bag, etc.). Accessories for the top-of-the-range car include leather upholstery, electric windows, and a sunroof. something extra that improves or completes the thing it is added to: We sell plants, seeds, fertilizer, and gardening accessories, such as tools and glovesThe store also sells computer accessories, such as cables, batteries, and webcams. These accessories are designed to enhance driver comfort. a range of women's fashion accessories. bathroom/home/kitchen accessories. car/cell phone accessories. II. someone who helps another person to commit a crime but does not take part in it: He was charged with being an accessory 从犯 to murder. accessory after the fact law specialized someone who helps someone after that person has committed a crime, for example by hiding them from the police: She was charged with being an accessory after the fact. accessory before the fact law specialized someone who helps in the preparation of a crime: The person who gave him the gun was an accessory before the fact

毛糙的头发: If you live in a humid climate, summer weather doesn't only bring good things with it — it can bring frizz. Frizzy hair can be frustrating, especially when nothing seems to tame 整得了, 驯服 it. But as annoying as frizzy hair might be, most of us aren't exactly sure what causes it, which means we're in the dark about the best possible way to manage itHair cuticles 表皮( I. the thin skin at the base of the nails on the fingers and toes. Your cuticles are the skin at the base of each of your fingernails. It doubles as an excellent cuticle smoother and also expertly prolongs a manicure. II. biology Cuticle is also the outer layer of a plant, which protects it. note: A cuticle (ˈkjuːtɪkəl]), or cuticula, is any of a variety of tough but flexible, non-mineral outer coverings of an organism, or parts of an organism, that provide protection. Various types of "cuticle" are non-homologous, differing in their origin, structure, function, and chemical composition. ) are made up of little shingles ( shingle I. small, round stones that cover a beach or the ground by the edge of a river: a shingle beach. I love the noise of the waves on the shingle. II. a thin, flat tile made of wood, slate, etc. that is fixed in rows to make a roof or wall covering. a thin, flat piece of wood or other material, many of which are attached in rows to the outside of a roof or a wall. III. 营业招牌 a sign outside a building that says someone is running a business, especially a doctor or lawyer: A shingle hangs from his mail-boxhang (out) a/your shingle to start running a business: Dr James first hung his shingle in Oakland in the mid-1970s. hang (out/up) a shingle to advertise your services or to start a business as a professional: Several independent advisers have hung a shingle on the internet. The two lawyers hung out their shingle in Miami in 1987. IV. shingles a disease caused by the varicella zoster virus, which infects particular nerves and produces a line or lines of painful reddish spots on the body: Later that year he contracted shingles) that protect the hair strand from the elements 环境, 大自然. "When examined under a microscope, a healthy cuticle lays down smooth, like the scales of a fish," explains Steve Waldman. Beneficial moisture from natural oils produced by your scalp 头皮 help keep those shingles down in healthy hair. But he says, "as hair becomes dry and damaged, its appearance resembles a pine cone: open, rough and prickly." When it's open and damaged like this, beneficial moisture can escape the hair shaft while moisture from the air enters the hair shaft, causing it to swell and change shape. In other words, it becomes frizzy. Do some people have naturally frizzy hair? In short: yes. Some people have naturally curly hair, which is drier because the natural oils produced by your scalp can't travel down the hair shaft as well as it can on straight hair. As a result, they have some natural frizz, which is most noticeable when individual hairs don't bond together to create a defined curl. However, everyone's hair can get frizzy even if it's straight. But people with straighter hair tend to notice it most when their hair is damaged, dry, or when it's super hot outside. What causes hair to frizz? In a word: dryness. There are lots of different factors that can dry your hair out and exacerbate 加剧 frizz: Humidity "The dry cuticle becomes rough and open for humidity," explains Monica Davis, professional hairstylist. "As a result, a humid environment makes overdried hair frizzy [because] the outer layer starts soaking the moisture from the air and swells." Washing your hair in really hot water can cause the same effect as humidity. It also, says Davis, stresses your hair and your scalp, which produces beneficial oils. That's why it's best to wash your hair in lukewarm water. Harsh 强效的 hair products: "Chemicals or harsh products overstrip the hair of its natural oils," explains Kim Kimble, hairstylist. "Your natural oils smooth the hair [so] getting rid of those completely can cause your hair to frizz up 起毛." Harsh hair products can include: hair color, perms, products containing sulfates, and products containing alcohols. "Excessive lightening — or bleaching — and coloring hair with formulas that are too strong with high ammonia contents can damage the surface of the hair, making it feel rough to the touch, stealing its shine 失去光泽, and creating frizz," says Waldman. "Hot styling tools always damage your hair," explains Davis. That's why it's best if you don't use them every day. If you do use heat styling, look for conditioners, oils, or sprays that help minimize heat damage before and after styling. When you wash your hair every day, you strip your hair of the natural oils it needs to be healthy. "There's no real need to wash your head more than two to three times per week, depending on your hair type," explains Davis. "Otherwise, you break the natural balance with the shampoo, especially if it's a foamy one." Towel-drying 毛巾擦干 your hair: "Friction created from brushes with nylon bristles 鬃毛 and roughly towel-drying your hair can also ruffle the cuticle, causing annoying frizz," says Waldman. Instead, blot your hair when drying with a towel and use gentler brushes. How to handle frizzy hair: You can combat frizziness by using hydrating products, conditioning masks or serums that protect and smooth your hair, explains Kimble. You should also use mild shampoos or detergents.