有爱,有技术,有你^_^)y
╱人◕‿‿◕人╲订下契约(注册新用户)

合作站点账号登陆

QQ登录

只需一步,快速开始

快捷导航
查看: 3866|回复: 45
收起左侧

[学习记录] 我又回来做BBC听力了【更新04/26】

[复制链接]

签到天数: 3 天

连续签到: 1 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

45

主题

119

好友

4万

积分

第二章

积分
43366
发表于 2012-3-8 01:38:06 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式

╱人◕‿‿◕人╲定下契约

您需要 登录 才可以下载或查看,没有账号?╱人◕‿‿◕人╲订下契约(注册新用户)

x
本帖最后由 白云Amanda 于 2012-4-27 00:19 编辑

挺高听力的方式有很多,比较好的是做听写。
刚开始用VOA练习,接着就可以听写BBC啦

于是大家一起来做BBC听力吧!!为了提高我们的英语听力水平而奋斗


以上说得好听而已,其实也不会很辛苦的,因为LZ不会整天更新。懒惰的本性暴露无遗,请大家都来互相督促~

之前放出的就不重贴了,筒子们可以光明正大的偷懒了。啊哈哈

03/05   2楼=v=
03/10   3楼 从本次开始附上音频下载,筒子们可以下载以后用不同的软件听写,更加方便~
03/14
03/16
04/01   10楼,愚人节来一发,大家happy~
04/10   15楼
04/18   16楼,终于翻页了= =
04/26   17楼,这几天考试,我连东南西北都不分了。

评分

参与人数 4宅魂 +7 宅币 +62 贡献 +7 收起 理由
梓轻 + 1 + 2 →_→手滑
luxaky + 10 →_→手滑
某只很纠结的猫 + 2 + 10 呜~我错了,材料是很好的嘛~~~只是开头那句.
Guinsooh + 4 + 40 + 7 坚持就是胜利= =

查看全部评分

Amanda, herself.
回复

使用道具 举报

签到天数: 3 天

连续签到: 1 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

45

主题

119

好友

4万

积分

第二章

积分
43366
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-8 01:38:31 | 显示全部楼层
http://cs.ting186.com/bbc/12/03/05.mp3

BBC news 2012-03-5---------注:听力文本转载普特

BBC News with Fiona MacDonald

Western leaders have condemned the killing of one of the world's most celebrated war correspondents, the American Marie Colvin, in the Syrian city of Homs. A French photo journalist Remi Ochlik was also killed. They died when a house they were reporting from was shelled by Syrian government forces. From Beirut in neighbouring Lebanon, Jim Muir reports.

The bombardment of Baba Amr resumed in the early morning with rockets and artillery shells smashing into the already devastated quarter where several hundred rebel fighters from the Free Syrian Army are believed to be holding out. Among the many victims were the veteran Sunday Times correspondent Marie Colvin and the French photo journalist Remi Ochlik. They died when shells racked a makeshift press centre. Marie Colvin's trenchant and compassionate reporting and now her death along with Remi Ochlik have focused international attention even more on the plight of thousands of civilians trapped in Baba Amr.

Activists in Syria say many more people died in Homs on Wednesday as a result of government shelling. Among them was the activist Rami al-Sayed, who's been an important provider to the outside world of video footage.

Ethiopian troops backed by forces of the Somali interim government have taken control of the central city of Baidoa from the Islamist militant group al-Shabab. The city fell without a battle when the Islamists withdrew. They say they will instead wage a guerrilla campaign.

The judge in the six-month trial of the former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak has set the date of 2 June to issue his verdict and any sentence. Mr Mubarak has been accused of responsibility for the deaths of hundreds of protesters in last year's uprising. Jon Leyne reports from Cairo.

Outside the court, demonstrators called for the death penalty for Hosni Mubarak. But they were well outnumbered by the riot police. The last day of the trial was a pale shadow of the dramatic opening since last August when the former president was wheeled into court on a stretcher . Since then, remarkably little has emerged to shed light on what happened during the 18 days of revolution last year.

Divers working on the wreck of the cruise ship, the Costa Concordia, have found eight more bodies inside, including the only child listed missing. The ship ran aground last month off the coast of Italy. Alan Johnston reports from Rome.

Rough seas have hampered efforts by rescue workers to bring all the dead ashore and identify them. But the authorities say that among those found were the remains of a woman and a child. This is thought to be the body of a little girl called Dayana Arlotti, who was five years old. She was the only child listed as missing after the disaster. Altogether 25 bodies have now been found on the wreck. Another seven people are still unaccounted for .

World News from the BBC

A train crash in the Argentine capital Buenos Aires has killed at least 49 people. Hundreds more were injured when the crowded commuter train smashed into the buffers as it came into one of the city's busiest stations. Argentina's transport minister said the train's brakes appeared to have failed.

The Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos has said that the new European bailout deal currently being discussed in parliament is of historic significance. He said success would bind Greece to the euro and shield it from default. Mr Venizelos said that in making the deal, worth more than $170bn, Greece's European partners were making a political commitment to support it for as long as it takes return to the financial markets.

The British Prime Minister David Cameron has given the English football authorities two months to come up with an action plan to combat all forms of discrimination. The news came after Mr Cameron met officials, former players and campaigners to discuss two recent racist incidents involving high-profile players - Luis Suarez of Liverpool and the former England captain John Terry of Chelsea. Former Liverpool club and England international John Barnes went to the meeting and told the BBC what had been discussed.

"Legislation needs to be passed. We have to be much more stringent and having zero tolerance at obvious overt racism at football stadiums -on and off the field. So, yeah, it was more about the stakeholders of Premier League, the PFA, everybody coming together, and then hoping the next coming month for them to be legislature pass to make it not ambiguous in any way whatsoever as to what is allowed and what's not allowed."

Cherie Blair, the wife of the former British prime minister, is suing Rupert Murdoch's News International group for hacking into her mobile phone voice mails. News International has already paid out millions of dollars in damages to dozens of celebrities, politicians and others whose messages it intercepted.

BBC News


评分

参与人数 1宅币 +20 收起 理由
若水的少年 + 20 o(* ̄▽ ̄*)ブ 发糖

查看全部评分

Amanda, herself.
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

签到天数: 3 天

连续签到: 1 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

45

主题

119

好友

4万

积分

第二章

积分
43366
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-11 05:51:28 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 白云Amanda 于 2012-3-11 05:56 编辑

http://cs.ting186.com/bbc/12/03/10.mp3

下载
http://115.com/file/e78wwgnx#
10120310.zip


BBC news 2012-03-10---------注:听力文本转载普特

BBC News with Kathy Clugston

The Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has voted in a referendum on a new constitution which he says is designed to turn Syria into a beacon of democracy. Opposition groups have dismissed the vote as a sham. They said at least 30 people were killed on Sunday, many of them in the continuing onslaught on the central city of Homs. Jim Muir reports.

Voting seemed to go normally in Damascus and some other areas, and polling was even extended till late in the evening. But in some of the more troubled places like parts of Homs, there weren't even any polling stations. The Americans are among those who've derided the referendum, but Secretary of State Hillary Clinton admitted that there's no quick way forward in trying to boost the opposition and oust President Assad. As the conflict grinds on, Homs has again been the focus of much of the violence with the besieged rebel-held quarter of Baba Amr among several to be bombarded.

The central bank of Syria has urged Syrians holding foreign currency in violation of regulations to exchange the money within 30 days. Those who don't do so have been warned they'll face arrest, and the central bank has published a list of alleged violators on its website. The move comes as the Syrian financial system tries to cope with international economic sanctions.

Colombia's largest left-wing rebel group, the Farc, says it will free 10 members of the security forces it holds hostage and abandon kidnappings for ransom . The move comes just months after the Farc killed four hostages they'd held for more than 12 years, which prompted massive protests. Here's Jeremy McDermott.

The Farc pledged to not only release the remaining political hostages they hold, but to halt their long-term policy of kidnap for ransom - one of their principal sources of income. The announcement is a direct response to government calls to the rebels to halt their involvement in kidnapping as a precondition to peace talks. The new Farc commander in chief Rodrigo Londono, better known by his rebel alias of Timochenko who took over leadership in November last year after his predecessor was killed in combat, has made what amounts to a significant concession, hoping to open the doors to dialogue.

A suicide car bombing at a church in the Nigerian city of Jos has sparked reprisals by angry Christian youths. Three people were killed and nearly 40 wounded in the initial attack outside the church during a morning service. Mark Lobel reports.

Eyewitnesses said the car carrying the bombs hit and killed a woman inside the Christian compound as it sped towards the church. The explosives were then detonated , and pieces of the blue Volkswagen tore into the church, killing a parent and their 18-month-old child. Around 50 worshippers who were injured in the blast were taken to hospital. A group of young Christians then carried out apparent reprisal attacks. Reporters at the scene say at least two Muslims were killed and shops were set alight .

The radical Islamist sect Boko Haram said it carried out the killings at the church.

World News from the BBC

With days to go before Russia's presidential election, thousands of people have linked hands along one of Moscow's main ring roads in their last major protest against the candidate who's expected to win, Vladimir Putin. Mr Putin, who's now prime minister, is standing again to secure a third term as president.

Australia's governing Labor party is holding a leadership election in a few hours' time to resolve the bitter personal rivalry between the Prime Minister Julia Gillard and her predecessor Kevin Rudd. Several opinion polls suggest that the Australian public prefers Mr Rudd.

Stars and celebrities of the American film industry have gathered in Hollywood for their annual award ceremony, the Oscars. This year, a silent movie filmed in black and white, The Artist, is tipped to do well. It's been nominated in 10 categories. Another strong favourite for a prize is the American actress Meryl Streep. She's hoping to win her third Oscar for her portrayal of the former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady.

One of the world's finest classical trumpet players, Maurice Andre, has died aged 78. Andre inspired many 20th century composers to write works for him, and some musicologists believe he did more than any other player to popularise the trumpet. Vincent Dowd has more.

Born in the Cevennes region of France, Maurice Andre seemed set to become a miner like the rest of his family. But a family friend spotted his talent as a musician, and he won a place at a conservatoire . By his mid-20s, he was a trumpet player of superb technique and great accuracy. But also with that indefinable musicality which kept him in demand for decades with orchestras , Maurice Andre did much to establish the modern view of the once neglected Baroque music of the 17th and 18th centuries.

评分

参与人数 1宅币 +20 收起 理由
若水的少年 + 20 o(* ̄▽ ̄*)ブ 发糖

查看全部评分

Amanda, herself.
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

签到天数: 3 天

连续签到: 1 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

45

主题

119

好友

4万

积分

第二章

积分
43366
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-14 23:28:46 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 白云Amanda 于 2013-7-10 02:19 编辑

http://cs.ting186.com/bbc/12/03/14.mp3

下载↓
http://115.com/lb/5lb79qp7#
20120314.zip
115网盘礼包码:5lb79qp7


BBC news 2012-03-14---------注:听力文本转载普特

BBC News with Iain Purdon

The United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon says the Syrian authorities have committed clear and widespread crimes against the country's civilian population. He was addressing the UN General Assembly in New York. Earlier, the International Committee of the Red Cross said its aid convoy in the devastated city of Homs had been denied access to the devastated Baba Amr district. Mr Ban said there were grisly reports coming out of Syria.

"In Homs, Hama and elsewhere, the brutal fighting has trapped civilians in their homes without food, heat or electricity or medical care, without any chance of evacuating the wounded or burying the dead. People have been reduced to melting snow for drinking water. This atrocious assault is all the more appalling for having been waged by the government itself, systematically attacking its own people."

The blocking of the ICRC mission to Baba Amr comes amid growing accusations of human rights violations by the Syrian authorities, as Jim Muir reports.

The Red Cross convoy with seven lorry loads of emergency supplies and three ambulances had arrived in Homs from Damascus early in the day, but it spent hours waiting at the local Syrian Red Crescent headquarters for the go-ahead to move into Baba Amr as planned, only to find it wasn't allowed to move. The ICRC has suspended the planned operation for the night, but says it intends to continue pressing for access as soon as possible. It's clearly alarmed by reports from activist organisations of revenge killings and summary executions perpetrated after the rebel fighters pulled out .

Meanwhile, accounts have been emerging of life and conditions in Baba Amr under the Syrian shelling. A Spanish journalist, Javier Espinosa, was one of those trapped there. He told the BBC about their dramatic escape trying to pass government lines after nightfall.

"If there is a simple noise, they detect your presence, they start shooting, and this is what happened. There were a group of kids who were terrified, and they were (yes) saying "mummy, mummy, mummy". We tried to (yes) tell them "Please don't, don't." But it was too late, and they start[ed] shooting, so we had to run for our life, everybody (yes) in one direction to hide. I guess some people died because they were wounded. They could not move very quickly because they were very badly wounded."

Two French journalists, Edith Bouvier and William Daniels, who were smuggled out of Homs by Syrian activists, have now returned to France. Edith Bouvier was seriously injured in the same bombardment that killed the American journalist Marie Colvin and the French photographer Remi Ochlik.

The top religious council in Afghanistan has demanded those responsible for burning copies of the Koran on a Nato base should be tried in public and punished. The religious council said apologies would never be enough. The incident has led to several deaths. World News from the BBC

The secretary general of football's world governing body Fifa, Jerome Valcke, has expressed concern about Brazil's preparations for the 2014 World Cup. James Read reports.

With their flair and skill, Brazil's footballers have delighted fans around the world for decades. But Fifa is less than pleased with the way the country is preparing to host the World Cup in two years' time. Jerome Valcke said not a lot was working and the organisers needed, as he put it, a " kick up the backside ". He added that Brazil appeared to be more concerned with winning the World Cup than running it. The comments will not go down well in Brazil, where Fifa's demands on ticketing, marketing and alcohol sales have provoked widespread opposition.

The authorities in the United States say they've uncovered a huge international smuggling ring stretching from the US to China. Federal officials said arrests were going on in New Jersey, New York, Texas and the Philippines. And more than 26 American and Chinese nationals have been charged with trying to smuggle more than $300m worth of counterfeit goods from China into the United States.

Finally, a musical society devoted to the works of Mozart says an Austrian university researcher has found a previously unknown piano piece by the composer dating from about 1780. Bethany Bell reports from Vienna.

Posthumous discoveries of works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart are not unknown, but they are rare. The Mozarteum Foundation says this piece was discovered by an academic at the University of Innsbruck in a music book dating from around 1780. The Mozarteum says the handwriting is that of a Tyrolean copyist, but the piano work itself is clearly attributed to the young Wolfgang Mozart. Few other details have been released, but the Mozarteum says the work is certainly by Mozart.

BBC News

评分

参与人数 1宅币 +20 收起 理由
若水的少年 + 20 o(* ̄▽ ̄*)ブ 发糖

查看全部评分

Amanda, herself.
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

签到天数: 3 天

连续签到: 1 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

45

主题

119

好友

4万

积分

第二章

积分
43366
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-18 13:12:29 | 显示全部楼层
http://cs.ting186.com/bbc/12/03/16.mp3


BBC news 2012-03-16---------注:听力文本转载普特

BBC News with Gaenor Howells

The Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is heading for a comeback as the country's new president after Sunday's elections. Mr Putin claimed victory in front of tens of thousands of cheering supporters outside the Kremlin.

"Dear friends, first, I want to thank all citizens of Russia who took part in today's election for the president of the Russian Federation. Special thanks of course to those who've gathered here today in Moscow and to all those who support us in every corner of our vast homeland.

Thanks to all who said yes to a great Russia. I once asked you 'Will we win?' We have won. We won in an open and honest fight."

Partial results suggest his share of the vote was about 60%. Counting is still going on. But an opposition activist said there had been fraud on a vast scale despite the presence of thousands of independent observers and web cameras at polling stations. The Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov accused Mr Putin's party of using the might of the state to ensure victory.

"In honest elections, the huge state machine works according to strict observation of the law to ensure a level playing field for all of the candidates. In this case, the whole of our enormous criminal corrupt state machine worked only for one candidate."

More than 200 people are confirmed dead after a series of massive explosions at a military base in the Republic of Congo. Hundreds more have been injured. The blasts were caused by a fire at a munitions depot in the capital of Brazzaville. The head of the local health service said the exact number of dead was impossible to confirm because many people were still trapped in their homes. The explosions were felt several kilometres away in the neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo.

President Obama has warned that the US will not hesitate to use force to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, but he says diplomacy is still the preferred course. Addressing an influential pro-Israel lobby group, he warned against what he called "too much loose talk of war" in the dispute with Tehran.

"I would ask that we all remember the weightiness of these issues, the stakes involved for Israel, for America and for the world. Already, there is too much loose talk of war. Over the last few weeks, such talk has only benefited the Iranian government by driving up the price of oil, which they depend on to fund their nuclear programme."

The president also acknowledged that Israel must always have the right to make its own decisions about its security needs. His comments were welcomed by the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who's meeting Mr Obama in Washington on Monday.

You're listening to the World News from the BBC.

For the third day in a row , the Syrian government has blocked the Red Cross from bringing aid into a stricken district of the city of Homs. Jim Muir reports from neighbouring Lebanon.

A third frustrating day for the International Red Cross and its Syrian Red Crescent partners, obliged once again as night fell to put off their efforts to get into Baba Amr until the morning. A spokesman for the ICRC said the Syrian authorities were refusing access because of the danger of mines and booby traps . But activist groups continue to report arbitrary killings there. The Local Coordination Committees, one of the most active groups, said there had been a systematic pattern of summary executions , in which dozens had been killed since security forces moved in on Thursday.

The Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez says he's had a recurrence of the cancer he was treated for last year. Mr Chavez said a lesion he had removed from his pelvic region earlier this week was malignant. In a televised message recorded in Cuba, where he's being treated, Mr Chavez said the tumour had not spread. The president said he'd undergo radiotherapy . The news comes just seven months before presidential elections.

Police in Peru say they've captured a man they suspect of leading the remnants of the Shining Path rebel group. They say the man had been reorganising the guerrillas after their previous leader, known as Comrade Artemio, was arrested last month. The Shining Path, a Maoist rebel group, posed a major challenge to the Peruvian state in the 1980s.

The manager of the English Premier League football club Chelsea, Andre Villas-Boas, has been sacked. A statement from the club, owned by the Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, said results and performances hadn't been good enough. Villas-Boas, who's Portuguese, has been under intense pressure with Chelsea on the verge of being knocked out of this season's lucrative European Champions League and looking unlikely to qualify next season. His sacking means Chelsea will be looking for their eighth manager since 2003.

BBC News

评分

参与人数 1宅币 +20 收起 理由
若水的少年 + 20 o(* ̄▽ ̄*)ブ 发糖

查看全部评分

Amanda, herself.
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

该用户从未签到

17

主题

52

好友

6976

积分

序章

积分
6976
发表于 2012-3-18 23:59:46 | 显示全部楼层
啊~刚刚听了下第一个,刚开始的那句是什么呀?吓死我了喵...

点评

你不要这样。。。对着文本听也好嘛。。。大受刺激!  发表于 2012-3-20 08:13
签名被小宅喵吞掉了~~~~(>_<)~~~~
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

签到天数: 3 天

连续签到: 1 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

45

主题

119

好友

4万

积分

第二章

积分
43366
 楼主| 发表于 2012-3-20 08:13:00 | 显示全部楼层
http://cs.ting186.com/bbc/12/03/19.mp3



BBC news 2012-03-19---------注:听力文本转载普特

BBC News with Gaenor Howells

The United Nations humanitarian chief Valerie Amos has been to the devastated district of Baba Amr in the Syrian city of Homs. She spent about 45 minutes there with members of the Syrian Red Crescent assessing the humanitarian needs of residents who survived weeks of shelling by government forces. A Red Cross spokesman, Sean Maguire, told the BBC that they've encountered fewer people than they'd expected.

"The key issue really for us is where is the population and what are their needs now. We get a sense that they fled, they're elsewhere. Last week, the Free Syrian Army were saying there were about 4,000 people left, out of a population that may at one point have been as high as 100,000."

Six British soldiers have been killed by a huge bomb explosion in southern Afghanistan. Their deaths take the number of British service personnel killed in the country to more than 400. Quentin Sommerville reports from the British base at Lashkar Gah in Helmand province.

The men had been known as two-vehicle convoy in what was described as a routine patrol . Not long after leaving their base, they left the main highway, crossing open ground. It's a common tactic. It was twilight when a massive explosion tore through their Warrior troop carrier.

The fire burnt for hours. The wreckage of the vehicle and the remains of the six soldiers have now been returned to base. The burnt-out hull of the Warrior appears to indicate that it was hit by a huge Taliban improvised explosive device, one of the largest seen in the area. One senior officer said this isn't a change in insurgent tactics; it was just rotten luck .

The government of Sudan has rejected allegations of crimes against humanity made by the former head of the United Nations in Sudan.

Mukesh Kapila accused Sudan of ethnic cleansing against the Nuba population in Southern Kordofan, where there's been fighting between the Sudanese military and rebels. However, a Sudanese official, Rabie Abdul-Atti, told the BBC that its air force sorties were targeting the rebels whom he accused of committing human rights abuses.

Forbes magazine says there are now a record 1,226 billionaires on its annual rich list, compared with 140 when it was launched 25 years ago.

The Mexican telecoms magnate Carlos Slim, who's worth an estimated $69bn, tops the list for the third year in a row followed by the software magnate Bill Gates and financier Warren Buffett. No Indian billionaires are in the top 10 this year, and the only Chinese one is the Hong Kong property magnate Li Ka-shing. Steve Forbes explains why.

"Well, what it tells us is there's a lot of churn, there hasn't been a lot of growth in the economy in the last year. The number of billionaires went up 16, but yet some regions go down: China went down a little bit; Russia went down because of weak commodity prices. But the fact the matter is there hasn't been a lot of real vigorous growth in the world, and that's reflected on the list this year."

You're listening to the World News from the BBC.

The man who admits carrying out a massacre in Norway last year has been formally charged with acts of terrorism and premeditated murder. Anders Behring Breivik, a right-wing extremist, is due to go on trial next month. Last July, he killed 69 people in a shooting rampage and eight others in a bomb attack. Norway's state prosecutor Svein Holden says it's unlikely that Breivik would ever be released.

"The defendant has committed very serious crimes of a dimension with no previous experience of in our society in modern times. In his opinion, his actions were justified. And it is likely that he would commit crimes of a similar nature again."

An international group of scientists has established the complete genetic blueprint of the gorilla , one of mankind's closest relatives. The researchers found that 15% of the human genome is closer to that of gorillas than it is to chimpanzees - our closest relative of all. Our science correspondent Pallab Ghosh has more.

Initial studies of the gorilla genome have shown that our species separated from gorillas 10 million years ago, much earlier than some scientists thought. Another discovery is that something in their genes prevents gorillas from suffering from dementia - a finding that researchers could study further to help them find a cure for senility. But the ultimate prize for the research community is to discover just what it is that makes us uniquely human.

Armenia says it will not take part in this year's Eurovision Song Contest, which is being hosted by Azerbaijan. The head of Armenia's Eurovision delegation, Gohar Gasparyan, said it didn't make sense to send people to a country where they'd be met as enemies. In the 1990s, Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a war over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

BBC News

点评

哈哈哈 懂了~亲^ ^  发表于 2012-3-21 21:39
我比較豪邁 哈哈 我家那個比較吝嗇  发表于 2012-3-21 18:22
突然给我发那么多糖,好不习惯~  发表于 2012-3-21 00:23
其实人名我大多都忽略的。。。因为真的很无理啊,各种奇怪的名字!  发表于 2012-3-21 00:23
Nagorno-Karabakh. ... 她舌頭怎麼卷的 好想研究下  发表于 2012-3-20 14:27
沒法聽寫...QAQ..聽懂已經很難  发表于 2012-3-20 14:22

评分

参与人数 1宅币 +20 收起 理由
若水的少年 + 20 o(* ̄▽ ̄*)ブ 发糖

查看全部评分

Amanda, herself.
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

该用户从未签到

17

主题

52

好友

6976

积分

序章

积分
6976
发表于 2012-3-21 12:28:44 | 显示全部楼层
那个...我不是说正文,我是说开头的那个中文...什么什么.com那个...

点评

诶嘿嘿~  发表于 2012-3-21 21:39
签名被小宅喵吞掉了~~~~(>_<)~~~~
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

该用户从未签到

1

主题

20

好友

8192

积分

序章

积分
8192
发表于 2012-3-24 23:07:42 | 显示全部楼层
我来跟楼主表白

点评

頓時喜感了...  发表于 2012-4-2 11:42
想表白?赶紧先去做听力~  发表于 2012-3-24 23:45
签名被小宅喵吞掉了~~~~(>_<)~~~~
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

签到天数: 3 天

连续签到: 1 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

45

主题

119

好友

4万

积分

第二章

积分
43366
 楼主| 发表于 2012-4-2 01:59:49 | 显示全部楼层
http://cs.ting186.com/bbc/12/03/30.mp3


BBC news 2012-04-01---------注:听力文本转载普特

BBC News with Gaenor Howells

The French President Nicolas Sarkozy says the gunman responsible for the murders of a teacher and three children at a school in Toulouse was the same one that killed three soldiers in similar incidents last week. In a nationwide television broadcast, Mr Sarkozy said the same weapon was used each time. French police also believe the same vehicle was used. Chris Bockman, a journalist who's in Toulouse, says similarities between the attacks have been clear from the start.

"This is no surprise after the attack which happened this morning. It bore all the hallmarks of the earlier ones. They are targeting ethnic minorities, using a motorcycle with a helmet, clear day and then fleeing. This city has about 800,000 people. It's the fourth biggest city in France. And you have to imagine this city now is in lockdown mode. Police have been drafted in from all around the country, and they basically have checkpoints up everywhere. I've never seen quite so many police everywhere just checking on everyone, basically to find this one person."

Russia has urged the Syrian government and opposition forces to agree immediately to a daily humanitarian ceasefire in the fighting that's continuing across the country. The statement comes after a meeting in Moscow between the Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and the head of the ICRC, Jakob Kellenberger. From Moscow, Daniel Sandford.

It was the International Committee for the Red Cross that first proposed the idea of a ceasefire in Syria every day for at least two hours. The ICRC president Jakob Kellenberger said this was needed to bring the wounded out of the conflict areas and to help the civilian population.

After meeting Mr Kellenberger in Moscow, the Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov appeared to give whole-hearted support to the initiative. He said that both of them urged the Syrian government and the armed opposition groups to agree immediately to a daily pause in the fighting.

Tens of thousands of supporters of the Iraqi Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr have held a rally in the southern city of Basra to mark the ninth anniversary of the US-led invasion which overthrew Saddam Hussein. Rami Ruhayem reports from Baghdad.

It's become an annual show of force by one of Iraq's most powerful men. Only the date has changed with this year's March time to mark the beginning of the US invasion instead of the fall of the former regime. The cleric's supporters vented their anger at corruption, unemployment and most of all, poor services. Despite the country's oil wealth, severe power cuts are a daily feature of life in Iraq through chilly winters and scorching summers.

A UN envoy says South Sudan's leaders appear committed to demobilising the estimated 2,000 child soldiers still serving in the army. The UN special representative says there's a determination at the highest level in South Sudan to ensure that the former rebel army meets international standards.

You're listening to the World News from the BBC.

The International Atomic Energy Agency says it's received an invitation to visit North Korea three years after its inspectors were expelled from the country. It comes less than three weeks after North Korea agreed to suspend nuclear and long-range missile tests, and to allow in UN nuclear inspectors in return for food aid from the United States.

Twelve Mexican police officers have been killed in an ambush as they searched for the bodies of 10 people whose heads were found on Sunday. A local official said the officers were attacked in a mountainous area near Teloloapan, the town where the heads were found. Messages threatening the La Familia drug cartel were found with the heads.

A court in Zimbabwe has found six people guilty of inciting public violence following their arrest last year while discussing the overthrow of the former Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak. They were among more than 40 political activists detained last February at a public meeting screening news reports on the uprising in Egypt. The prosecution had originally called for them to be charged with treason.

The British footballer Fabrice Muamba, whose heart stopped beating in the middle of a Premier League match on Saturday, is reported to be showing signs of improvement. His club, Bolton Wanderers, say he's now able to breathe independently. James Pearce reports.

Both the hospital and Bolton Wanderers football club are emphasising that there's a long road to recovery ahead. But today's progress reports on Fabrice Muamba have been so positive that, in many ways, they are remarkable. The player, who suffered a cardiac arrest during Saturday's FA Cup quarter-final and didn't begin breathing again until he reached hospital, is already recognising family and friends, and responding appropriately to their questions. Fabrice Muamba has received messages of support from all over the world. It's looking increasingly likely that the prayers for a miraculous recovery will be answered.

BBC News

点评

我不想听了怎么办。。。累啊!!!啊啊啊啊!!!!!  发表于 2012-4-2 13:02

评分

参与人数 1宅币 +20 贡献 +1 收起 理由
若水的少年 + 20 + 1 →_→手滑 喲 要繼續發哦 我有在聽的.

查看全部评分

Amanda, herself.
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

该用户从未签到

1

主题

20

好友

8192

积分

序章

积分
8192
发表于 2012-4-4 14:24:50 | 显示全部楼层
我去搞VOA先 求学习经验 最近背单词背的没信心了 从报纸上摘的例句看都看不懂 跟楼主表白还被人嘲笑了 你们这帮坏人~

点评

虎摸!!!!單詞還是要結合語句比較容易記住  发表于 2012-4-6 23:59
签名被小宅喵吞掉了~~~~(>_<)~~~~
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

该用户从未签到

49

主题

162

好友

2万

积分

第一章

积分
24407
发表于 2012-4-6 23:59:13 | 显示全部楼层

点评

兄弟我想弃楼了怎么办。。。  发表于 2012-4-7 10:34
签名被小宅喵吞掉了~~~~(>_<)~~~~
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

签到天数: 3 天

连续签到: 1 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

45

主题

119

好友

4万

积分

第二章

积分
43366
 楼主| 发表于 2012-4-7 10:36:01 | 显示全部楼层
玥十三 发表于 2012-4-4 14:24
我去搞VOA先 求学习经验 最近背单词背的没信心了 从报纸上摘的例句看都看不懂  跟楼主表白还被人嘲笑了 ...

谁敢嘲笑你,我帮你打他!o(*^@^*)o 乖~ 我们来做听力~
签名被小宅喵吞掉了~~~~(>_<)~~~~
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

该用户从未签到

49

主题

162

好友

2万

积分

第一章

积分
24407
发表于 2012-4-7 13:25:21 | 显示全部楼层
若水的少年 发表于 2012-4-6 23:59
定期來更一下也不錯

这样么,没事的。下次来个新楼
签名被小宅喵吞掉了~~~~(>_<)~~~~
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

签到天数: 3 天

连续签到: 1 天

[LV.2]偶尔看看I

45

主题

119

好友

4万

积分

第二章

积分
43366
 楼主| 发表于 2012-4-12 09:55:19 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 白云Amanda 于 2012-4-14 05:11 编辑

04/10
http://96.44.158.118/bbc/12/04/10.mp3

BBC News with Fiona MacDonald

The United States has reacted sceptically to Syria's acceptance of the peace plan put forward by the UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan. The Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Damascus would be judged by its actions, not its words.

"Given Assad's history of over-promising and under-delivering, that commitment must now be matched by immediate actions. We will judge Assad's sincerity and seriousness by what he does, not by what he says."

Mrs Clinton said Syria must immediately silence its guns, allow humanitarian aid in and start preparing for a democratic transition . Meanwhile, the United Nations has increased its estimate for the number of people killed in the past year of unrest in Syria to more than 9,000.

As Pope Benedict continues his visit to Cuba, a senior minister has dismissed any prospect of political reforms in the socialist country. Marino Murillo, who's in charge of economic affairs, said that government reforms were intended to update its economic model to make Cuban socialism sustainable.

French judges are reported to have requested an international arrest warrant for the son of the president of Equatorial Guinea over allegations that he's misappropriated his country's funds to support a lavish lifestyle in France. Christian Fraser is in Paris.

Teodoro Obiang is accustomed t o the good life. He's often photographed enjoying an extravagant lifestyle complete with million-dollar homes and luxurious yachts. The billboards in his home, capital of Malabo, show him at work and in touch with the people, but diplomats are familiar with a very different playboy lifestyle. French judges who've been handling this case since 2010 allege the properties he bought here in France were purchased with public money stolen from Equatorial Guinea. As part of the investigation, French police raided a building in a wealthy area of Paris. The building, valued at 150m, housed expensive paintings and fine wines. It was a hairdresser's and a nightclub which suggested it was not being used as a diplomatic residence.

There's been a second day of clashes in the oil-rich border region between Sudan and South Sudan. The Sudanese authorities accuse the South of carrying out attacks on their side of the border, but say they don't want to return to war. But as James Copnall reports from Khartoum, the South Sudanese military insist they are coming under attack.

South Sudan's military spokesman says his troops were attacked - first from the air, then on the ground - for the second straight day. Colonel Philip Aguer says the clashes are continuing between Teshwin and Heglig. This probably put South Sudan's soldiers inside what is internationally recognised as Sudanese territory though South Sudan claims it too. On Monday, South Sudan's President Salva Kiir said his troops had fought off an attack and pursued the Sudanese armed forces up to Heglig. Sudan's military spokesman denied there had been any air raids.

World News from the BBC

An American man has been given a new face, teeth, tongue and jaw(jaws口误) in what his surgeons say is the most extensive facial transplant ever performed. The man, Richard Lee Norris, has been a recluse since he was disfigured in a gun accident 15 years ago. Doctors say he's now recovering well after the 36-hour operation last week and is already able to brush his teeth and shave.

The Somali police say they've arrested a British passport holder. The man, Clive Dennis, is reported to have arrived at Mogadishu airport from Nairobi and told the police he wanted to travel to the southern port of Kismayo to help Islamists. The port is held by militants of al-Shabab.

An independent report into riots in several English cities last year has blamed poor parenting, rampant materialism and a lack of confidence in the police. The panel also highlights a lack of support and opportunities for young people. Our British affairs correspondent Rob Broomby reports.

Burning buildings, shops being looted by violent gangs and police on horseback trying to restore order - this was the scene last summer as riots swept through several English cities. Five people were killed; businesses were left devastated, and the public were left angry and wanting to know why. The Riots Communities and Victims Panel set up by the government has blamed a lack of opportunities for young people, poor parenting, a lack of shared values and the inability of the justice system to prevent re-offending as just some of the reasons for the riots. But it also stressed materialism and a concern about brand goods in poor neighbourhoods which fuelled the smash and grab frenzy .

Brazil says it's taking tougher action against websites which promote the country as a destination for sex tourism. The government says it's identified nearly 2,000 Internet sites which contain sex-oriented material, but also display official symbols, such as tourism logos. It said most of the offending images had been removed.

评分

参与人数 1宅币 +10 收起 理由
若水的少年 + 10 o(* ̄▽ ̄*)ブ 发糖

查看全部评分

Amanda, herself.
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

本版积分规则

小黑屋|手机版|技术宅(基宅) ( 粤ICP备18082987号-1 | 浙公网安备 33010902001746号 )

GMT+8, 2024-5-2 00:57 , Processed in 0.345627 second(s), 18 queries , Redis On.

Copyright © 2018 技术宅社区

Powered by Discuz! X3.5

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表