昨天的答案:
1. D? ?2. D? ?3. D? ?4. S? ?5. D? ?6. S? ?7. D? ?8. D
今天學習CUR和PERI兩個詞根猴凹。
嘗試加入例句的翻譯窒盐,以Google翻譯為基礎(chǔ)修改桑滩。如有誤为黎,歡迎指正臼寄。
CUR, from the Latin verb curare, means basically "care for." Our verb cure comes from this root, as do manicure("care of the hands") and pedicure ("care of the feet.").
curative. Having to do with curing diseases.
例句:As soon as the antibiotic entered his system, he imagined he could begin to feel its curative effects.
一旦抗生素進入他的(身體)系統(tǒng)岖是,他想象他可以開始感受到它的治療效果帮毁。
Medical researchers are finding curative substances in places that surprise them. Folklore has led to some "new" cures of old diseases, and natural substances never before tired have often proved effective. Quinine, which comes from a tree in the Andes, was the original drug for malaria; aspirin's main ingredient came from willow bark; and Taxol, a drug used in treating several cancers, was originally extracted from the bark of a yew(紫衫) tree. The curative properties of these natural drugs are today duplicated in the laboratory.
curator. Someone in charge of something where things are on exhibit, such as collection, a museum, or a zoo.
例句:In recent decades, zoo curators have tried to make the animals' surroundings more and more like their natural homes.
近幾十年來,動物園園長一直試圖讓動物的生存環(huán)境越來越像自然家園豺撑。
In a good-sized art museum, each curator is generally responsible for a single department or collection: European painting, Asian sculpture, American Art, and so on. Curatorial duties include acquiring new artwork, caring for and repairing objects already owned, discovering frauds and counterfeits, lending artworks to other museums, and mounting exhibitions of everything from Greek sculpture to 20th-century clothing.
procure. To get possession of; obtain.?
例句:Investigators were looking into the question of how the governor had procured such a huge loan at such a favorable rate.
調(diào)查人員正在調(diào)查州長如何以如此優(yōu)惠的價格得到如此巨額的貸款烈疚。
While procure has the general meaning of "obtain," it usually implies that some effort is required. It may also suggest getting something through a formal set of procedures. In many business offices, a particular person is responsible for procuring supplies, and government agencies have formal procurement policies. When teenagers use an older friend to procure the wrong kind of supplies for their parties, they often risk getting into trouble.
sinecure. A job or position requiring little work but usually providing some income.
例句:The job of Dean of Students at any college is no sinecure; the hours can be long and the work draining.
任何一所大學的學生院長的工作都不是閑職; 時間可能很長,并且工作令人筋疲力竭聪轿。
Sinecure contains the Latin word sine, "without," and thus means "without care." In some countries, the government in power may be free to award sinecure positions to their valued supporters; in the other countries, this would be regarded as corruption. The positions occupied by British royalty are called sinecures by some people, who claim they enjoy their enormous wealth in return for nothing at all. But their many supporters point to the amount of public-service, charitable, and ceremonial work they perform, not to mention the effort they put into promoting Britain to the world.
PERI, in both Latin and Greek, means "around." A period is often a span of time that keeps coming around regularly, day after day or year after year. With a periscope, you can see around corners. Peristalsis is the process that moves food around the intestines; without it, digestion would grind to a halt.
perimeter. The boundary of distance around a body or figure.
例句:In a medieval siege, an army would surround the perimeter of a city's high walls, denying the population any food from outside as it assaulted the walls with catapults and battering rams.
在中世紀的圍攻中爷肝,一支軍隊會包圍外部高墻,從外面斷絕所有實物,同時用弩炮和猛烈撞擊攻打城墻灯抛。
The perimeter of a prison is ringed with high walls and watchtowers, and the entire perimeter of Australia is bounded by water. In geometry, you may be asked to calculate the perimeter of various geometrical shapes. In basketball, the perimeter is the area beyond the free-throw circle; a "perimeter player" tends to stay outside that circle. Try not to confuse this word with parameter, which usually means a rule or limit that controls what something is or how it can be done.
periodontal. Concerning or affecting the tissues around the teeth.
例句:Years of bad living had filled his teeth with cavities, but it was periodontal disease that finished them off.
多年的惡劣生活使他的牙齒滿是齲洞金赦,但是使牙齒完全脫落的是牙周疾病。
In dentistry, cavities are important but they aren't the whole story; what happens to your gums is every bit as vital to your dental health. When you don't floss regularly to keep plaque from forming on your teeth and gums, the gums will slowly deteriorate. Dentists called periodontists specialize in the treatment of periodontal problems, and when the gums have broken down to the point where they can't hold the teeth in place a periodontist may need to provide dental implants, a costly and unpleasant process. But even a periodontist can't keep your gums healthy; that job is up to you.
peripatetic. (1) Having to do with talking. (2) Moving or traveling from place to place.
例句:She spent her early adult years as a peripatetic musician, traveling from one engagement to another.
她作為巡回演奏的音樂家度過了剛成年的那幾年对嚼,四處旅行夹抗,四處演奏。(這句話真難翻譯... 我這種水平只能翻譯成這樣了... 求大佬指點)
The philosopher Aristotle had his school at the Lyceum gymnasium in Athens. The Lyceum may have resembled the Parthenon in being surrounded by a row of columns, or colonnade, which the Greeks would have called a peripatoi. Aristotle was also said to have paced slowly while teaching, and the Greek word for “pacing" was peripatos. And finally, peripatos meant simply "discussion." Whatever the source of the word, Aristotle and his followers became known as the Peripatetics, and the "pacing" sense led to peripatetic's English meaning of traveling or moving about. Johnny Appleseed is a good example of a peripatetic soul, and peripatetic executives and salespeople today stare into their laptop computers while endlessly flying from city to city.
peripheral. (1) Having to do with the outer edges, especially of the field of vision. (2) Secondary or supplemental.
例句:Like most good fourth-grade teachers, he had excellent peripheral vision, and the kids were convinced that he had eyes in the back of his head.
像大多數(shù)優(yōu)秀的四年級教師一樣纵竖,他有優(yōu)秀的周圍視野漠烧,孩子們相信他的后腦勺有眼睛。
Your peripheral vision is the outer area of your field of vision, where you can still detect movement and shapes. It can be very valuable when, for instance, you're driving into Chicago at rush hour, especially when switching lanes. When people call an issue in a discussion peripheral, they mean that it's not of primary importance, and they're probably suggesting that everyone get back to the main topic. Peripheral is now also a noun: computer peripherals are the added components--printers, webcams, microphones, etc.---that increase a computer's capacities.
Quiz:
Fill in each blank with the correct letter:
a. curative? ?b. sinecure? ?c. procure? ?d. curator? ?e. peripheral? ?f. perimeter? ?g. peripatetic? ?h. periodontal
1. The _______ benefits of antibiotics have saved many lives.
2. _____ vision is part of what most eye doctors test in their patients.
3. What he had hoped to be an undemanding ______ turned out to be the hardest but most rewarding job of his career.
4. Because of deer, she needed to put up a fence along the _______ of the garden.
5. We asked our purchasing manager to ______ new chairs for the office.
6. In his youth he had been amazingly _____, hitchhiking thousands of miles on three continents.
7. The museum's _______ of African art narrates a guided tour of an exhibit.
8. Regular flossing can prevent most _____ disease.