2009年4月24日 星期五
Assignment7: Commercial
Hey, come here.
I want you to listen very carefully to what I'm gonna tell you.
We both know, I ordered a Pepsi cola.
And now you've insulted me and my entire family by offering me this, this whatever it is.
Being a civilized person, I'd like to make amends.
Capeesh? (means DO YOU UNDERSTAND?)
Thank You... grazzi(means THANK YOU)
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I saw the commercial called "Godfather Girl" which my teacher show it on the screen in class in the last semester.
The Pepsi commercial describes a girl and her grandfather walk into a restaurant, but the girl's drink isn't the Pepsi she ordered, so in a Godfather voice she expresses how she feels.
At the beginning, the shopper said "cupcake" to the girl.
It means a cute adorable girl or boy. :)
The girl is adorable, especilly she holds her fist with a serious face.
Also, I look up for a dictionary for the meaning of a godfather.
The word has two differnt meanings.
One means a male godparent(教父), and the other means the leader of a criminal group, especially a mafia family.It can also mean your third parent(乾爹).
There are more detailed meanings on this website. http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=godfather
Godfather
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I downloaded some of speeches and videos which I like from YOU TUBE.
I am grateful that I know how to store videos in that way .
Also, those which I downloded can transform videos into MP3 files.
It just takes few minutes to finish it. That is nice.
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By the way,
The blog is not easy to use than other blogs. (= = ")
2009年4月19日 星期日
Assignment6:ESL Podcast 466
Day/Date: 2009/04/16
Title: ESL Podcast 466–Having a Good or Bad Bedside Manner
http://www.eslpod.com/website/show_podcast.php?issue_id=6743057#
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The dialogue is native and doen't feel boring.
Although those explainationas are short, I can't not catch every word briefly.
I can't not bear each word and write down quickly.
Therefore, I have to listen to once ore twice times to finish it.
Hope oneday I can handle it without listening repetitively.
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TEXT:
Cho: I’m not sure I’m cut out to be a doctor.
Joy: I think you’ll be great. I’ve seen you with patients and you have a great bedside manner – not like Gregory.
Cho: Why? What’s wrong with his bedside manner?
Joy: I’ve seen him with patients and he can be really callous. For instance, I was in the room last week when he was telling one of his patients that she was taking a turn for the worse.
Cho: What did he say?
Joy: He just blurted it out. He told her the diagnosis, and he didn’t even try to soften the news when she asked about her prognosis. He did absolutely nothing to try to comfort or reassure her.
Cho: I feel sorry for the patient.
Joy: That’s the point. Gregory didn’t, and it didn’t seem to faze him that the patient was very upset and close to hysterics.
Cho: That’s terrible. I’ll try to remember to be more compassionate with my patients.
Joy: Don’t worry. It’s against your nature to be anything but considerate.
Script by Dr. Lucy Tse
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Definition:
1. Be cut out:
to be creative to do sth…. sth. that is good match for you
2. Patients:
people who are receiving medical care or attention from a doctor or a nurse
If you are sick, you go to see a doctor. You are a patient
3. Beside manner:
the way that a doctor or a nurse talks to a people how they give medical advice or instructions or other information
how doctor treat their patients how they communicate with their patients because that such important part of medicine
4. Callous:
without considering another person’s feeling
5. Take a turn for the worse:
be getting worse it’s opposite of getting better
6. Blurt it out:
say sth. without thinking about it first and about how it will sound to the other person
7. Diagnosis:
the doctors conclusion what the medical problem is
8. Soften:
make it nicer… to make it easier to accept (soften the blow=punch=hit)
9. Prognosis:
is the doctor opinion how your health will change in the future… what the doctor thinks is what is wrong with you
10. Comfort:
to do or say sth. that will make the person feel better, more comfortable
11. Reassure:
make them feel better about sth. …is similar to comfort
12. Feel sorry for:
to understand the person’s difficulties…to empathize with someone
13. Faze someone:
is a phrase that means you are surprised because someone else wasn’t affected by sth.
14. Hysterics:
have an uncontrolled emotion when you can’t stop crying
15. Compassionate:
to be caring, to be kind, to be nice to somebody
16. Against your nature:
you can’t do because isn’t part of your personality, character and who you are
17. Anything but considerate:
to be nice, to be nature, to be aware of other people’s feeling
Title: ESL Podcast 466–Having a Good or Bad Bedside Manner
http://www.eslpod.com/website/show_podcast.php?issue_id=6743057#
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The dialogue is native and doen't feel boring.
Although those explainationas are short, I can't not catch every word briefly.
I can't not bear each word and write down quickly.
Therefore, I have to listen to once ore twice times to finish it.
Hope oneday I can handle it without listening repetitively.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TEXT:
Cho: I’m not sure I’m cut out to be a doctor.
Joy: I think you’ll be great. I’ve seen you with patients and you have a great bedside manner – not like Gregory.
Cho: Why? What’s wrong with his bedside manner?
Joy: I’ve seen him with patients and he can be really callous. For instance, I was in the room last week when he was telling one of his patients that she was taking a turn for the worse.
Cho: What did he say?
Joy: He just blurted it out. He told her the diagnosis, and he didn’t even try to soften the news when she asked about her prognosis. He did absolutely nothing to try to comfort or reassure her.
Cho: I feel sorry for the patient.
Joy: That’s the point. Gregory didn’t, and it didn’t seem to faze him that the patient was very upset and close to hysterics.
Cho: That’s terrible. I’ll try to remember to be more compassionate with my patients.
Joy: Don’t worry. It’s against your nature to be anything but considerate.
Script by Dr. Lucy Tse
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Definition:
1. Be cut out:
to be creative to do sth…. sth. that is good match for you
2. Patients:
people who are receiving medical care or attention from a doctor or a nurse
If you are sick, you go to see a doctor. You are a patient
3. Beside manner:
the way that a doctor or a nurse talks to a people how they give medical advice or instructions or other information
how doctor treat their patients how they communicate with their patients because that such important part of medicine
4. Callous:
without considering another person’s feeling
5. Take a turn for the worse:
be getting worse it’s opposite of getting better
6. Blurt it out:
say sth. without thinking about it first and about how it will sound to the other person
7. Diagnosis:
the doctors conclusion what the medical problem is
8. Soften:
make it nicer… to make it easier to accept (soften the blow=punch=hit)
9. Prognosis:
is the doctor opinion how your health will change in the future… what the doctor thinks is what is wrong with you
10. Comfort:
to do or say sth. that will make the person feel better, more comfortable
11. Reassure:
make them feel better about sth. …is similar to comfort
12. Feel sorry for:
to understand the person’s difficulties…to empathize with someone
13. Faze someone:
is a phrase that means you are surprised because someone else wasn’t affected by sth.
14. Hysterics:
have an uncontrolled emotion when you can’t stop crying
15. Compassionate:
to be caring, to be kind, to be nice to somebody
16. Against your nature:
you can’t do because isn’t part of your personality, character and who you are
17. Anything but considerate:
to be nice, to be nature, to be aware of other people’s feeling
2009年4月8日 星期三
On the go
On the last Friday, one of my roommates and I went to National Taiwan Museum, Taiwan storyland, and Lunshan Temple. We visited there for assignments. Although it was for homework, it was worth visiting and sightseeing. National Taiwan Museum was now exhibiting “The Life of Centennial Taiwan” and “The Photos Exhibition of the sea” underground, "Woolly Mammoth" on the first floor, and “Czeth Gems” on the second floor and so on. We spent an amount of time on old life in Taiwan. It represented a number of ancient things such as the old household equipments, clothes, traditional discs and tapes, and telephones, etc from young’s rooms to elder’s rooms. It reminded me of childhood. Something special like Vespa motorcycles which my dad used to have one, heavy and black-white TV, Da-Tong dolls and fans, 50 dollars bills is memorable.
The next was we went Taiwan storyland. Although the admission charge was a little bit expensive, the inside was interesting and full of the times of my childhood as well. I memorized when I was a child, I could see the old chatting and singing karaoke under the big tree in the park, with kids playing balls, jump ropes and hide-and-seek. I used to play hopscotch with my sister and brother in the yard. I‘d seem a poster was drawn by hand. A garbage can was made from wood. An ice shaving was made by machine which needs to turn the wheel around on the right so that the small ice can be produced. A vender shouting loud for ice or sausages was strolling on the road everywhere with the bell ringing. I still remembered now there was a vender, driving around my village once a week, selling stinky tofu and he had been selling it since I was a child. The storyland was just like a small village. There you can find things different from our present circumstances opposite to where upper story building was a modern apartment store. Finally, in the evening at 6:00, we went to Lunshan Temple. It was my first time to pick a straw for a piece of advice. After staying here for a while, we went to school.
2009年4月4日 星期六
Assignment5: Five expressions from Randall's
I choose two audio clips "Vocation Plans" and "Weekly Activities" from the level of medium at Randall's ESL Cyber Listening Lab.
There are five expressions I learn from these two listening articles.
1.to be in hot water: to be in a difficult situation or in trouble that might lead to punishment
e.g.
The politician is in hot water because of the he lack of lack of cultural sensitivity to that group.
2.crash: quick, complete, short or intensive, often difficult
e.g.
She took crash course in Spanish before she left for Mexico, but I'm not sure if it helped.
3.catch up: reach a point where one should be
e.g.
I need to catch up on my sleep. I've been very tired recently.
4.geometry: math of lines, points, and shapes
e.g.
My daughter is taking geometry in junior high school now.
5.vault: a room or space, often made of steel, for safekeeping valuables like money or important documents
e.g.
The millionaire kept all his valuable coins, paintings, and jewelry in a secret vault in his house.
In addtion, I also Listen to a "Traffic Ticket" conversation.
Here is some of Key vocabularies.
- glove compartment (noun): a small space, usually on the dashboard of the car, used for storage)
- e.g. People usually keep the car's registration and other small items in the glove compartment.
- odometer (noun): a meter that measures speed and distance traveled
- e.g. Check your odometer. I think you're speeding.
- impound (verb): to take or seize by legal authority
- e.g.The police impounded the man's car because it was involved in a crime.
- infractions (noun): minor crimes or violations against the law
- e.g.Because the man had been involved in numerous infractions with the law, his license was suspended for an entire year .
Why is a glove compartment called?
A glove compartment or glovebox is a compartment built into the dashboard, located over the front-seat passenger's footwell in an automobile, often used for miscellaneous storage. The name derives from the original purpose of the compartment: to store gloves.
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