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标题: 看英语到呕吐! [打印本页]

作者: 花儿    时间: 2004-3-20 21:38     标题: 看英语到呕吐!

突击了一个月,然后发觉离春天还是那么远!
明天不是他死就是我亡!
可是……可是……
我站在悬崖边,他一点点向我逼近……
局面将近失控,他对着我在笑
我回他嘿嘿一笑
一个背包把他丢到万丈悬崖
啊~~~~~~~~~~
凄惨的叫声越来越小
世界开始安静了!
此刻,我打开我的媒体播放器
开始听《大悲咒》……
还是念经好听啊!!!!!!!!!!!!!
作者: 秦人    时间: 2004-3-20 22:09

这个倒很像我写的风格嘛,哈哈,
这里也只有我能理解你这种心情啦,加油吧,等结束的时候未必会爱上英文,但会很自然地在谈论英文的时候有一种自信和优越感!哈哈.
付廉康现在教你们吗?好象现在他是学院一把手吧?
真没想到,我前天还去了他家里,哈哈,这世界真小.
作者: 花儿    时间: 2004-3-20 22:14

他现在是副教授吧,他对我不好不坏。
我的意思是推了我一把又拉了我一把。
我想这里也只有你能理解其中的奥妙了。哈。
你去找他干嘛?推销基金啊?
作者: elfin    时间: 2004-3-20 22:16

现在基金日子不好过啊
作者: 花儿    时间: 2004-3-20 22:18

我也不知道他是干嘛的,反正手上大把大把钞票就是了。秦人,是伐?
其实我现在确实喜欢上英语了,即使它不一定喜欢我
作者: oiodeputy    时间: 2004-3-20 22:22

用英語唱大悲咒............
作者: 秦人    时间: 2004-3-20 22:25

我们不做基金,现在也很少做流通股或者期货.主要是收购兼并或者重组.
根据我的了解.付已经是学院的实权人物.只是我没想到他居然是我孙博士老师的男人,呵呵,所以我是去看孙老师,顺便看看他.
我们学这个,就好象在和英文谈恋爱,呵呵,当然不会是一见钟情的那种恋爱,属于日久生情摩擦不断又爱又恨的恋人吧.
作者: 浪云    时间: 2004-3-21 05:11

一直在弄英语过级,诶,简直是要人命,怎么看怎么人都傻了一大截
作者: 自由幻想    时间: 2004-3-21 17:08

If you push the envelop,you will be a processor of english.So go on to put in effort to improve your english,this is a experience from slave to General,Good luck,my dear friend.
作者: claire    时间: 2004-3-21 21:30

你看,楼上这位就是看英语到呕吐后达到全新境界的超级典范
很不幸,我还没有此类经历,因为从来未曾专心看过英文,除了当年考六级前短短2周,远不足以到呕吐的地步
作者: 自由幻想    时间: 2004-3-22 09:59

Originally posted by 秦人 at 2004-3-20 10:25 PM:
我们学这个,就好象在和英文谈恋爱,呵呵,当然不会是一见钟情的那种恋爱,属于日久生情摩擦不断又爱又恨的恋人吧.
不像谈恋爱,谈恋爱还可以分手。我觉得这个倒像指婚。
爱也好,不爱也好,总之你跟定它了,所以无论你愿不愿意都要想办法爱上它。
作者: 秦人    时间: 2004-3-22 11:07

花花世界,你以后会发觉,原来你是可以离婚的.
作者: Tracy    时间: 2004-3-22 15:03

我也满脑子的“嗡嗡嗡”,连做梦也“嗡嗡嗡”,我是吐不出来直到发疯
作者: shanlu    时间: 2004-3-22 17:33

让偶们一起大声薛:“P~~I~~G!!!”
作者: cipher    时间: 2004-3-23 16:58

哈哈,老爱你TM太逗了。
作者: claire    时间: 2004-3-24 11:02

猪猪太有献身精神了
为了提高大家学习英语的热情不惜牺牲自己
作者: oiodeputy    时间: 2004-3-24 11:09

瘋狂豬語
作者: claire    时间: 2004-3-24 13:23

有道理诶
作者: bigtail    时间: 2004-3-25 12:22

I like coffee, u like tea
I like girls and girls like me
Tell ur mother to hold her tongue
She had a boy when she was young
Tell ur father just the same, he's the man who changed her name
作者: 自由幻想    时间: 2004-3-25 17:02     标题: if you are boring english,let's take a look at this article

Taiwan Rocker Chyi Chin

2003-12-9 11:08:27      
A Taiwan- born pop singer and songwriter, Chyi Chin is a household name around 1990's. Now over ten years has passed, the then idol has grown and changed, while the only thing remains the same is in his pursuit of music.  

Buying a Shanghai home is not a new thing for Taiwanese singers -- Richie Jen and Jonathan Lee have done that. And Chyi has another reason to feel at home in the city -- his elder brother owns and operates a hot pot restaurant on Nanjing Road. But home or not, building a studio here is not an easy thing. "I find it quite odd that a big city like Shanghai doesn't have many famous Mandarin singers," says Chyi. "There must be a great many talented singers who simply lack the opportunities or simply a platform, and that's what I want to create for them." Chyi, who has a studio in Beijing, is profoundly aware of the importance of opportunity and mentoring for young singers. After all, his path out of his troubled youth came via such a mentor -- in his case, it was his elder sister, the diva Chyi Yu, who gave him a guitar and helped him establish his musical career.

Although Chyi hasn't yet finalized the guest performers for the New Year concert, he has a clear picture of the type of music locals like. Based on his concerts during the 1990s, he notes that "Shanghai audiences prefer my slow, romantic songs, while Beijing audiences prefer rock 'n roll.'' He is right. Shanghai audiences much prefer his romantic, ballad-style music from the late 1980s and early 1990s to his latest album, "Calling.''

"I like Chyi's melancholy songs, which have a beautiful melody, especially his old songs,'' says Jiang Wen, a 29-year-old local fan. "Actually, I don't know much about his new songs.'' It's hard to say, at this point, whether Chyi's upcoming concert will be as sensational as Emil Chau's was in August.

The veteran Taiwanese singer's concert went until midnight, with fans singing along throughout the entire concert, turning the Shanghai Grand Stage into a big KTV room. But regardless of what happens, Asia's veteran pop legends are beating a path to Shanghai: In addition to Chyi and Chau, Alan Tam and Hacken Lee, Tsai Chin, rock band Beyond and "The Godfather of Chinese Rock,'' Cui Jian, have all performed or will soon perform here. So what's the appeal? Is it the nostalgic songs or the singers that the fans are flocking to see? While fans like Jiang argue that the old songs are more melodic than the hottest R&B and hip-hop hits, the agencies that book these acts have their own, shrewd reasons.

"Fans of the older singers have are now older themselves, and have greater purchasing power than younger fans," says Jin Yun from Shanghai Arts Corp, which promoted Chau's concert. Despite the glittering competition from his peers, Chyi is quite upbeat about his chances at the box office, noting that there are more than 600,000 Taiwanese working in Shanghai. But he's also quick to point out that he doesn't want to push things: "Both Chief Chaw and Jeff Chang (two Taiwanese veteran singers) had concerts on the same night in Beijing this past September," says Chyi with a grimace. "Whether it was a mere coincidence or on purpose, that's really going too far."

(from www. eastday. com)
作者: 自由幻想    时间: 2004-3-25 17:05     标题: Go on reading

Taiwan Rocker Chyi Chin

Taiwan Rocker Chyi Chin  
2003-12-9 11:08:27      
A Taiwan- born pop singer and songwriter, Chyi Chin is a household name around 1990's. Now over ten years has passed, the then idol has grown and changed, while the only thing remains the same is in his pursuit of music.  
Asia's rock legends have been beating a path to play Shanghai. The latest one is 1980s Taiwan rocker Chyi Chin, who is morphing from bad boy to family man for his Shanghai New Year's concert.  
It's lunchtime, and Taiwan-born pop singer and songwriter Chyi Chin is decked out in an apron, cooking pepper crab hot pot. "The herbs I just put in are to enhance the nutrition in this dish," says the 43-year-old earnestly, sounding more like an experienced chef than a rocker. The steam wreathes his face, and if not for the banks of cameras around him, he could have been mistaken for a dedicated househusband.

It's an image Chyi is not averse to pushing. The pepper crab was being cooked up at a press conference promoting his year-end concert, "Returning Home for the New Year's Celebration," which will be held at the Shanghai Grand Stage on December 30. It's a long way from the longhaired, leather-clad rock icon who released his first, instantaneous hit -- "Wolf" -- in 1985.

The youngest son of divorced parents, Chyi was so troubled as a youth that he was sent to a correctional institution. Today, he wears a crisp black T-shirt and the long hair, which has been cut, reveals some graying at the temples. So what of the rocker past? Are we to believe that this is a new man?

"You see, everyone does different things at different ages," says Chyi thoughtfully. "I have entered the 'years of no confusion'," he says, referring to an old Chinese saying that infers that those over 40 come to an understanding of the true meaning of life. "I really do see things very differently now. I used to be so emulative, but now I just don't push myself too hard. Sometimes you have to let go of something," he says. One person Chyi had to let go was his girlfriend, the Taiwanese movie star Joey Wang.

The two stars had a high-profile love life and several breakups, with Wang serving as Chyi's muse: His hit songs "Winter Rain," "Memorial Day" and "Don't Let My Tears Go through the Night" were all inspired by the screen beauty. "We had a very good time. I am really sorry that things didn't work out between us," says Chyi. "Now I pine for family love and really want to find the love of the my life." Like many men reaching the mellow age, Chyi claims that he feels a genuine loneliness without his "significant other."

"I used to hang out with members of my band a lot. But gradually they got married, one after another, and it's very difficult to get them to go out these days," Chyi says with a sigh. The man who has recorded 25 albums in 22 years and created songs that have become household names will bring his Mandarin pop classics to local fans. "I know local people are used to spending New Year's Eve with family members," explains Chyi, before saying rather disingenuously. "I am not trying to disturb the reunion. But I really think of Shanghai as my home, so I want to celebrate the New Year 'at home'."  


With that revelation, Chyi segues into his plans to buy a home here. "I like Shanghai very much and plan to buy a house here in two years," he says. "In the meantime, I will open a studio in Shanghai. A suburban warehouse might work, as long as it is quiet enough for working.''
作者: 自由幻想    时间: 2004-3-25 17:16

Wolf's Love -----Taiwan Rocker Chyi Chin  
  
2004-2-7 18:54:55     CRIENGLISH.com  
      
      
  Dubbed "the Wolf", Taiwan rocker Chyi Chin has created an image for himself of long hair, a melancholic voice, uninhibited manners and a constant chase for love.  
   
      
      

Dubbed "the Wolf", Taiwan rocker Chyi Chin has created an image for himself of long hair, a melancholic voice, uninhibited manners and a constant chase for love.

The song we are listening to is Wolf, the very song that won Chyi Chin his nickname and his fame when he was 25. Although he came from Taiwan, mainland audiences preferred calling him "a Wolf from the North", as they believe the unconstrained singing and hair-raising howls belong more to a singer from the vast northern prairie. Chyi Chin himself says the song accurately reflects his feeling and character, which speaks out his loneliness and his wishes towards future.

With a problematic family background, the rebellious youngster got into bad company and was led astray. He weathered three years in a rehabilitation home and changed from job to job before he got his break in showbiz. He was singing in a restaurant when he was discovered and signed by a record label. There came his first solo album See Her again. Let's have a listen to the theme song from that release.

From the photos taken in his early days, it's not difficult to find that Chyi Chin was always holding a guitar. Chyi Chin took up guitar at the age of 17. His first guitar was a gift from his elder sister Chyi Yu during his stay in a rehabilitation home. Without teachers, he taught himself and later tried his hand in a number of singing competitions. He didn't win anything but his belief in himself as a good singer and a guitar player grew stronger. He kept on practicing even during his days of military service. The next song we are going to hear is Glass-Made Heart.

Given his unconventional past and rebellious looks, Chyi Chin fits the image of a rock star perfectly. However, according to the troubador who broke into the entertainment scene when he was twenty, there was no attempt at carving an 'image' for himself during the days of the early 80s. His dress sense is not the result of slick packaging by his record company but reflects the real him he says. Next, let's hear a song named Outside World.

In general, Chyi Chin's songs belong to the genre of pop rock. His early music was heavier rock; he even formed a band of his own called Rainbow. However, his later pieces, like most popular Mandarin songs, are more gentle pop rock than any other genre.

In his 20 years of singing, Chyi has cut more than 20 albums. Even today, the 43-year-old is highly respected on the Chinese pop music scene.
Perhaps it was his deadly combination of rugged looks, unorthodox past and beautiful light vocals that attracted people to him.
The song we listened to is named sacrifice of Flowers.

When discussing Chyi Chin's 20 year odd career, it is difficult to ignore the effect and consequences of relationship with actress Joey Wang. The two stars had a high-profile love life and several breakups, with Joey serving as Chyi Chin's muse through it all: His hit songs "Around the Time of Winter" "Don't Let My Tears Go through the Night" were all inspired by the screen beauty.

Chyi Chin once confessed in an interview that the pair had a very good time together but he felt really sorry that things didn't work out between them. Like many men reaching their midlife years, Chyi Chin says he's lonely without his lover. The next songs Love Declaration and Cliff perhaps shine a light on the wolf's inner world.

There is another person who has deeply influenced Chyi Chin's life and creation, that's his sister Chyi Yu. Chyi Yu is an acclaimed pop singer who's been a big name in Taiwan since early 1980s. It was her song Olive that brought this Taiwanese singer and her charming voice to the attention of mainlanders.

Chyi Chin's love of music was ignited by the guitar Chyi Yu gave him but Chyi's sister is also a credible partner on Chyi Chin's journey of music. Here we bring you a cooperated work of the two stars. Windflower.
His turbulent life has left Chyi Chin unbowed and his pursuit of good music goes on. He's been hit by criticisms that his music lacks the spirit of old works like the hard rocking album Wolf and the more emotional Boundary album. But Chyi Chin says music needs experiment and exploration and can't stay static. For that his new songs require new concepts and new skills.

Now a lonely and aging "wolf", Chyi Chin is only a shadow of the wreckless youth who exploded onto the music scene over 20 years ago. But his life's experience have given him a deeper and better understanding of music and love. His latest album "Calling" is just out so let's have a listen to its theme song.

Now without his long hair, Chyi Chin, already stepping into his age of confusion, according to a famous Chinese saying, is more mature. But whatever the changes in personality, his music is as touching as ever.

With the songs Let Past Gone With the Wind and Moon Represent, we come to the end of this edition of China Beat. We hope you enjoyed it and like always, we'd love to hear your comments and suggestions. You can email us at chinabeat@crifm.com, or have an online listen at www.crienglish.com. I'm your host Shen Ting, see you next week.
作者: 自由幻想    时间: 2004-3-25 17:27

China Beat  
  
  

   2004-1-31 20:04:13     CRIENGLISH.com  
      
      
  It is no exaggeration to say that almost all Chinese people are familiar with this melody. Entitled The Olive Tree, the song has been composed to compliment a poem by the well-known late writer from Taiwan San Mao. It also brings us the singer featured in today's program Chyi Yu.  
   
      
      


Check it out in this song, Is There Such a Parlance?

The next piece I'll play for you is a song written by Luo Dayou, a musician from Taiwan who is revered by music lovers as the "Music Godfather." Called Boat Song, it is also the theme music of the 1990 film Return Home after Getting Fame or Money. The movie closes with the hero departing in a small ship, leaving his lover on the shore. The warm yet deeply sad tune fades in to add a powerful sensation of loss to the closing scenes. The melody seems to float on the tranquil sea, giving the audience the impression that the years pass just like water and love leaves you like a boat, slowly and painfully moving out of reach.

To Chyi Yu, music represents a way of life as well as a method of self-interpretation. She immerses herself deeply in a world of pure music that reflects her thoughts like a clear crystal without impurities. She dresses in Bohemian style and lives a Bohemian way. Once in an interview, she said she was not interested in money or fame and embraced a liberal life.

Music, to her, is an interesting abstraction of life. She thinks a composer or singer must be highly sensitive to everything going on in and around them—everything, from a friend's words to a glimpse of something caught while standing at a street corner is, in her mind, a source of information.

Chyi Yu seems to be an alternative in today's entertainment scene, as she always keeps a low profile and avoids stretching her fame as other musicians do. However, Chyi Yu has found a fine balance between the artistic and business aspects of her music. She seems to have little fear of loosing fans and continues to change and develop her musical interests. She wanders from pop to classical, with her ethereal voice and western folk style providing a solid, recognizable base. To her fans, Chyi Yu perfectly represents the music she has created, and her songs are just like echoes emerging from deep within their hearts.

Have a listen to this song, called Bird and Fish.

Bird and Fish, with music a lyrics by Chyi Yu, is on her 1997 album Camel, Bird and Fish. In the song, she compares a couple to the bird and fish who can't do anything to change their feelings or the differences between them. The male vocals in the song are performed by Chyi Chin, Chyi Yu's younger brother.

Chyi Yu's parents got divorced when she was very young. She has two brothers. The younger one was a problem teenager. When he was 17 years old, Chyi Yu sent him a guitar as a birthday gift, and thus changed his whole life. The boy's name was Chyi Chin, who later became a huge pop star. In the song Actually They're the Same, the sister and the brother, dubbed as "Wolf and Angel Team", sing together: "You're flying in the sky/I'm wandering on the earth/It seems that you and me are in two different places, but actually they're the same." The whole song describes a life full of uncertainty with simple, yet philosophical words.

Chyi Chin once said without his sister he wouldn't be where he is today. Every time he thinks about the past, he feels very fortunate that he's had such a wonderful sister. In next week's China Beat, Chyi Yu's younger brother, Chyi Chin, will come into our spotlight. So don't forget to join us again.

I'll leave you today with an English song by Chyi Yu, called Who Finds This, I Love You. The song, which is considered to be the crystallization of love between Chyi Yu and Li Taiming, has moved many people.

If you have any comments or suggestions, why not drop us an email at chinabeat@crifm.com, or logon our website at www.crienglish.com. You can also contact me by snail mail at English Service, China Radio International, Beijing, China. The postal code is 100040. I'm your host, Shen Ting. So long for now.
作者: 自由幻想    时间: 2004-3-25 17:31     标题: Chyi Chin's night as fans lap up his hits

CHINESE POP

Taiwanese rocker delivers a night to thrill with stars onstage and off

CHYI CHIN LIVE IN CONCERT '99
Singapore Indoor Stadium
Last Friday
By SUZANNE SNG
-from Straits Times

IN HIS first concert here in four years, Taiwanese rock balladeer Chyi Chin gathered his family and friends around him for support.

During last Friday night's concert at the Singapore Indoor Stadium, the special guest star was his sister, Chyi Yu, who took along her little daughter to cheer on her brother.

And in the audience was a heavyweight of the Taiwanese music industry, Su Rei, who was dragged on stage halfway through the show to sing her classic hit, Shi Fo (Is It).

There was even a surprise guest singer -- Singapore-based singer-songwriter Eric Moo in a rare concert appearance.

However, much to the disappointment of the audience, Chyi's wife-to-be, Joey Wong, was not present.

But the real star of the night was still the singer and his powerful voice.

The three-hour concert began with a bang, as he launched into two rock songs, Yi Wu Shuo You (Nothing At All) and Ya Kou (Mute).

Flanked by two flamboyant electronic guitarists, he was clearly in his element in the rock genre.

And the responsive audience, made up of both young and old, lapped it up, waving their luminous sticks wildly, stamping their feet and just stopping short of standing up to cheer.

There were even wolf calls, in the spirit of Chyi's first hit song, Lang (Wolf).

After the rousing start, he slowed the tempo with covers of two well-known songs

He made an attempt -- his first -- to imitate Dave Wang Chieh in his '80s hit, Yi Chang You Xi Yi Chang Meng (It's A Game, It's A Dream), as many had commented that his voice was very similar to Wang's, especially their melancholic style of singing.

He also joked about going to karaoke lounges and belting out love songs, as anyone who had been in love would have done, before giving his own take on pop diva Faye Wong's Wo Yuan Yi (I'm Willing), giving the ethereal song an edgier feel.

But giving Chyi's vocals a run for his money was his sister's soaring voice, as she sang English and Mandarin numbers with ease. It was evident that good genes in the vocal department ran in the family when they blended their voices for a duet, Meng Tian (Dream Fields).

The low point of the night was when Chyi started on a set of songs in the native minnan dialect of Taiwan, which sounds like Hokkien.

After six obscure songs in the dialect, members of the audience were heard shouting: "Enough."

Clearly, they had not had enough of Chyi's hits -- such as Wu Qing De Yu Wu Qing De Ni (Heartless Rain, Heartless You) and Ai Qing Xuan Yan (Love Vows) -- and he willingly obliged.

The concert drew to an end with a crowd-pleasing cover of Teresa Teng's Yue Liang Dai Biao Wo De Xin (The Moon Represents My Heart), sung in Chyi's trademark ballad style with a mellow rock twist.
作者: 自由幻想    时间: 2004-3-25 17:47

现在开始开工翻译,本周日交作业。在周日以前谁也不准把翻译好的文章先贴出来,违者罚款。周日把各自的译文一起贴出来。
本活动自愿参加。




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