#村长听写# May 1 2026 [第5300次]
听写是提高英文综合水平最快的方法!原视频、音频、文本和翻译,请到【近乎免费的听写群】下载 (置顶微博有介绍),和大家一起坚持更容易成功。
请大家只通过听,写出文本。较长的视频建议只听写一分钟左右,其他的部分泛听。坚持最重要哦!
听写方法:随意暂停,查字典、上网搜,写出文本即可。然后对照我的文本,学习生词和短语。
上期答案:
20260430
In 1954, Winston Cigarettes launched an ad so controversial broadcasters refused to say it on the air. But the uproar had nothing to do with the dangerous product being advertised— people were appalled by the ad's grammar. Specifically, using "like" as a conjunction instead of "as." Grammatical incidents like this have caused outrage in various regions and languages for centuries. But while we know people take grammar seriously, what's less clear is, why? Where do these seemingly random rules come from? And which, if any, actually matter? The answers to these questions vary from rule to rule, so let's look at three particularly famous English examples. First up, the idea that you should never end a sentence with a preposition. Prepositions are small, common words like with, on, for, or to, that often come before nouns. So, for example, a grammar stickler would consider "where does this rule come from?" Incorrect, 完整文本和翻译在听写群内分享 http://t.cn/AXJbpwcB
发布于 日本
