❶ grounded for two weeks 是什么意思啊 不胜感激
通常是美国父母用来惩罚小孩子当他们做错事的时候。
不准出门玩,在家也不能玩游戏或者看电视等娱乐活动。只能呆在自己房里。有点像我们的面壁思过。
<<成长的烦恼>> 里面mike经常被罚。呵呵!
非常口语话,绝对是用这个单词。
❷ 《穿Prada的女王》影评
有点长
The Devil & the Gray Lady
All about vogue.
By Mark Goldblatt
ruman Capote, who had a stake in saying so, once famously declared, "All literature is gossip." He was wrong, of course, but it's the kind of declaration that bamboozles literary types by its very implausibility; something so obviously false must be profound, so it gets repeated at cocktail parties and invoked in book reviews (like this one) until it becomes an inside-out cliché, a false truism, a knowing nod towards nothing whatsoever.
Still, an interesting question emerges if you reverse Capote's dictum and ask whether all gossip is literature. It's a question that surrounds the most gossipy novel in recent years, The Devil Wears Prada by Lauren Weisberger, and percolates within the critical jihad the book ignited at the New York Times. The fact that the paper twice reviewed a literary debut by a previously unknown author would be noteworthy in itself; what's unprecedented is the fact that its reviewers twice ripped the book to shreds — arguing not simply that it fails as literature, but that it should never have been published in the first place.
Why all the fuss?
Weisberger, it seems, once worked as a personal assistant to Vogue editor Anna Wintour, and the novel is thinly veiled account of her nightmarish experiences at the magazine. That this should matter to reviewers at the Times is slightly bizarre — even if, unlike me, you care about Anna Wintour, or you think Vogue has made a significant contribution to Western Civilization. It's not as though Weisberger is sailing into morally uncharted waters. Saul Bellow's latest work, Ravelstein, is a thinly veiled account of his friendship with the critic Allan Bloom, and arguably Bellow's greatest work, Humboldt's Gift, is a thinly veiled account of his friendship with the poet Delmore Schwartz. Both of Bellow's books are warts-and-all portraits, and the same can be said, in spades, for Weisberger's portrait of Wintour. The fact that Wintour is still alive, whereas Bloom and Schwartz were deceased when Bellow immortalized them, cuts both ways. Wintour may be psychically injured by the appearance of her fictional counterpart, Miranda Priestly, but at least she has the chance to distance herself from the ogre Weisberger gives us. With a nod to Capote, then, if at least some gossip is literature, why should Weisberger be pilloried for engaging in it?
None of which is to suggest that The Devil Wear Prada is great art. It is, rather, a wildly uneven book, by turns clumsily self-righteous and wickedly funny. The wafer-thin plot recounts the struggles of the narrator, Andrea Sachs, to maintain both her integrity and her sanity after she lands a "dream job" as personal assistant to Miranda Priestly at Runway. The detail that Andrea's real ambition is to write for The New Yorker would be a perfect ironic touch — she must enre the slickness of fashion in order to achieve fashionable slickness — except that the author seems to regard this as a altogether commendable goal. She is reminded to keep her eyes on the prize by her devoted boyfriend, Alex, who (gag me) teaches underprivileged children; also keeping Andrea grounded is her roommate Lily, whose hard drinking and promiscuity derive from the fact that "she loved anyone and anything that didn't love her back, so long as it made her feel alive."
The chapters with Alex and Lily are at times almost unbearable. Fortunately, they are offset by chapters in which Miranda Priestly takes center stage. Miranda is one of the great comic monsters of recent literature; Cruella de Ville is an obvious antecedent, but Miranda more closely resembles a Hermes-scarf wearing Ahab in pursuit of the great white whale of immediate, absolute inlgence. In Miranda's universe, two pre-publication copies of the latest Harry Potter book must be flown by private jet to Paris so that her twin daughters can read them before their friends; it's up to Andrea to make the arrangements on a moment's notice. Tough, but do-able. More finesse is required when Miranda asks Andrea to hunt down the address of "that antique store in the seventies, the one where I saw the vintage dresser." Of course, Andrea wasn't with Miranda when she saw the dresser, so she winds up trekking to every antique store — and, just to be safe, every furniture store — between 70th and 80th Street in Manhattan, grilling clerks to find out whether the famous Miranda Priestly had stopped by recently. Three days later, Andrea admits defeat . . . only to have Miranda inform her, impatiently, that she's just located the store's business card, the one she thought she'd lost. The address is on East 68th Street.
Miranda requires up to five breakfasts per morning so that whenever she arrives at the office, a hot meal will be waiting; reheating isn't an option. The other four must be thrown out because her assistants aren't permitted to eat in her presence. Nor are they permitted to hang their coats next to hers. Nor to request clarifications if her demands are indecipherable: "Cassidy wants one of those nylon bags all the little girls are carrying. Order her one in the medium size and a color she'd like."
There's a kind of grotesque heroism in this, an obliviousness to the feelings of others that is larger than life — and thus mesmerizing. When Weisberger's novel succeeds, it succeeds on these terms. No one who reads the book will forget Miranda Priestly.
Towards the end of The Devil Wears Prada, Andrea's novelist friend informs her, "What you don't seem to realize is that the writing world is a small one. Whether you write mysteries or feature stories or newspaper articles, everyone knows everyone." Indeed, it's hard for an outsider to grasp just how incestuous, how inbred, the New York publishing scene is nowadays. The odds of finding a non-conflicted reviewer for a gossipy roman a clef about the scene itself are therefore remote. In theory, this isn't a problem — as long as the reviewer approaches the task in good faith. (In good faith, for example, I should note that Weisberger's former writing teacher is a close friend and co-author of mine; on the other hand, her editor at Doubleday once turned down a book I wrote . . . and keep in mind that I'm really an academic, so I'm kind of bivouacked on the outskirts of the milieu Weisberger describes.) To say that the Times lacked good faith in reviewing The Devil Wears Prada understates the utterly unconscionable, and downright vindictive, way the paper went after the thing.
The onslaught began with a full-page review in its Sunday edition by former Harper's Bazaar editor Kate Betts. Betts herself was once Anna Wintour's protégé, a point Betts mentions in her final paragraph — not as a disclaimer but rather as an excuse to lecture Weisberger on the ethics of having written her novel: "I have to say Weisberger could have learned a few things in the year she sold her soul to the devil of fashion for $32,500. She had a ringside seat at one of the great editorial franchises in a business that exerts an enormous influence over women, but she seems to have understood almost nothing about the isolation and pressure of the job her boss was doing...."
This may or may not be true, but it has nothing whatsoever to do with what's between the covers of Weisberger's book. That, however, is the least of Bett's concerns in a review which alternates between sniping at the author and sucking up to former Vogue cronies. "Nobody would be interested in this book," Betts declares, "if Weisberger were spilling the beans about life under the tyrant of the New Yorker." (Tell that to Brendan Gill whose memoir Here at the New Yorker was a bestseller in 1975.) Betts refers to one of Weisberger's characters as "a pale imitation of the incomparable André Leon Talley" (For the record, I know more than a few people in the fashion instry, and they're all remarkably comparable.) and to another as "a cheap shot at the food writer Jeffrey Steingarten, whom she [Weisberger] should have been studying for lessons in how to write." This is nasty stuff. And it's of a piece with the rest of Betts's review — which displays all the emotional maturity and intellectual balance of Leo Gorcey in the old Bowery Boys films. Betts is not critiquing a work of fiction; she's putting up her kes to defend her home turf.
You'd think Betts's outburst would suffice, from the Times's point of view, would stand as an awkward lapse in editorial judgment but nothing more. You'd be wrong. The newspaper, it turns out, was not through with Weisberger by a long shot. One day later, Janet Maslin weighed in for the daily edition — and matched Betts's spitefulness point by point. Maslin's review begins: "If Cinderella were alive today, she would not be waiting patiently for Prince Charming. She would be writing a tell-all book about her ugly stepsisters and wicked stepmother . . . dishing the dirt, wreaking vengeance and complaining all the way. Cinderella may have been too nice for that, but Lauren Weisberger is not."
Again, what's actually between the covers of The Devil Wears Prada is mere background noise; first and foremost, Maslin is reviewing not the novel itself but the idea of the novel. She refers to it as "a mean-spirited 'Gotcha!' of a book, one that offers little indication that the author could interestingly sustain a gossip-free narrative." With an indignant nod towards Weisberger's recent publicity tour, Maslin speculates that the author "can devote a second career to insisting that [the novel] is not exactly, precisely, entirely one long swat at the editor of Vogue." And again: "The book's way of dropping names, labels and price tags while feigning disregard for these things is another of its unattractive qualities. It's fair to assume that nobody oblivious to names like Prada will be reading this story anyway."
Curiously, Maslin neglects to mention the name Anna Wintour even once in her review. "That was very deliberate on my part," she later explained to the Daily News. "I think that when a tell-all author takes a cheap shot at a well-known person — in a book that would have little reason to attract attention without that cheap shot — then reviewers need not compound the insult (or help promote a mediocre book) by reiterating the identity of the target."
Fair enough, but then why review the book in the first place? Given how many books are published each year, and how few the Times actually reviews, why would the paper twice in two days go out of its way to hammer a first novel by a hitherto unpublished writer? (Another point of disclosure: The Times did not review my first novel last year.) The answer cannot be that The Devil Wears Prada was heavily promoted . . . since even a cursory glance at its own bestseller lists will reveal many mega-hyped books the Times wouldn't touch with a ten-foot highlighter.
Of course, the Times has bigger problems these days — Jayson Blair's tendentious, fabricated reporting and subsequent resignation, Howell Raines's white-man's-burden agonizing and subsequent resignation, and Maureen Dowd's sneaky doctoring of a presidential quote — than the integrity of its book-reviewing process. In another sense, however, the treatment of Weisberger's novel is consistent with, for lack of a better phrase, an absence of alt supervision on 43rd Street.
❸ 这是什么游戏
迷你世界?看着像
❹ 多读点书大脑会变聪明吗
据英国《独立报》网站12月29日报道,一项最新研究结果显示,读完一本扣人心弦的小说之后,人的大脑会发生实际的、可监测的积极生理变化,并且这一变化会持续至少5天。
这项研究由美国埃默里大学的研究人员设计并执行,共有21名大学生参与了此次实验,耗时19天。所有受试者都阅读同样的小说——2003年的恐怖小说《庞贝》。
研究发现,阅读一本好书时,大脑中原本处于静息状态的连接性会变得活跃起来,并且还会在大脑左颞叶皮层产生一种与肌肉记忆类似的神经变化。
Being pulled into the world of a gripping novel can trigger actual, measurable changes in the brain that linger for at least five days after reading, scientists have said。
The new research, carried out at Emory University in the US, found that reading a good book may cause heightened connectivity in the brain and neurological changes that persist in a similar way to muscle memory。
The changes were registered in the left temporal cortex, an area of the brain associated with receptivity for language, as well as the the primary sensory motor region of the brain。
Neurons of this region have been associated with tricking the mind into thinking it is doing something it is not, a phenomenon known as grounded cognition - for example, just thinking about running, can activate the neurons associated with the physical act of running。
“The neural changes that we found associated with physical sensation and movement systems suggest that reading a novel can transport you into the body of the protagonist,” said neuroscientist Professor Gregory Berns, lead author of the study。
“We already knew that good stories can put you in someone else’s shoes in a figurative sense. Now we’re seeing that something may also be happening biologically。”
21 students took part in the study, with all participants reading the same book - Pompeii, a 2003 thriller by Robert Harris, which was chosen for its page turning plot。
“The story follows a protagonist, who is outside the city of Pompeii and notices steam and strange things happening around the volcano,” said Prof Berns. “It depicts true events in a fictional and dramatic way. It was important to us that the book had a strong narrative line。”
Over 19 days the students read a portion of the book in the evening then had fMRI scans the following morning. Once the book was finished, their brains were scanned for five days after。
The neurological changes were found to have continued for all the five days after finishing, proving that the impact was not just an immediate reaction but has a lasting influence。
“Even though the participants were not actually reading the novel while they were in the scanner, they retained this heightened connectivity,” added Prof Berns. “We call that a ‘shadow activity,’ almost like a muscle memory。”
摘自新浪网,谢谢。
❺ 有没有什么生存冒险类游戏推荐的画风好看的
这一类的生存冒险游戏可以玩一些沙盒。最著名的沙盒游戏就是我的世界。可以下载光影特质。这样画风就会变好。
❻ 绝地求生steam上叫什么怎么搜
绝地求生steam使用方法:
1、打开官网找到搜索框
点击进入购买页面进行购买。
《绝地求生》(PUBG) 是一款战术竞技型射击类沙盒游戏。游戏在中国由腾讯游戏独家代理运营。
该游戏中,玩家需要在游戏地图上收集各种资源,并在不断缩小的安全区域内对抗其他玩家,让自己生存到最后。游戏《绝地求生》除获得G-STAR最高奖项总统奖以及其他五项大奖,还打破了7项吉尼斯纪录。
2018年5月4日,绝地求生官方微博发布公告新活动模式《对抗模式:沙漠骑士》。
❼ 急!!一篇英语作文
Function Description
Diversified cuisine features: soup, rice, porridge, steaming, stewing, boiling features a variety of dishes
High-voltage electric rice cooker performance: high-voltage insulation performance pots + + cooking performance as one of the cooking utensils
There is no proper use of the proct, said abnormal test functions: proct failure or incorrect operation, the front of the screen shows the contents of the warning
Seven types of safety devices
1. Automatically emit steam device (solenoid valve)
2. Lid magnetic inction switch (sensor switch)
3. Resial pressure from devices (automatic pressure cone)
4. To prevent the proct abnormal heat control circuit devices
5. To prevent abnormal pressure steam constructed to exclude
6. To prevent it from overheating temperature fuse
7. To cut off abnormal power line (circuit board fuse)
Use / settings
Caution
1. This proct is to avoid direct light, is prohibited near the gas stove, electric appliances, etc.
2. Prohibited in pools, baths and other water sources or use chemical procts
3. Prohibited children alone use or to prevent children from easy to reach
4. Is prohibited or internal water to wash with water
5. Do not use or touch my face near the pressure cone and steam holes
6. Dry wet hands, take再插plug
7. Must be grounded for more than the rated 220V AC 10A dedicated outlet, and other electrical appliances should not share a socket
8. The power cord and plug when damaged, immediately stop using, the Advisory Service Hotline
9. The power cord can not be heavy objects or pressure in the bottom of this proct
10. Do not put inside the pot is not used
11. Do not use the deformation inside the pot or other non-specific pot
12. Clear temperature sensors, electric plate and internal or foreign body around inside the pot use
13. Cooking when no openings
14. Prohibited demolition and GM procts
15. Procts is prohibited Add internal metal or other foreign body (with special attention to children)
16. Dissection needle with ventilation holes in addition to steam cleaning, the gap is strictly prohibited for procts
17. Power lines should not be hard-line bending, tied up, stretching
18. With a dry cloth to remove st plug
19. Prohibited plug cone or automatic discharge pressure steam holes
20. Prohibited cooking, the combination of the handle settings "lifting"
21. M barrels a day to prevent the use of kitchen cabinets or use, please pay attention to the gap in power clamp
22. Do not put cushion or blanket to use
Cleaning methods
Washing / cleaning methods
1. Lid can not be covered with mandatory
2. Cleared rice cookers to timely, or insulation, the rice will smell
3. Cleaning, use a neutral detergent and sponge
Power Specifications
Sales focus
1. As the use of high-pressure cooking so fast, tasty, but also can do Braised ribs, and many other dishes Samgyetang
2. The computer artificial intelligence is easy to operate cooking methods, showing for the state of cuisine, sensors automatically adjust the temperature according to an order made by a variety of dishes
3. Because of the use of the inner pot is the world's only two companies to hold a special coating technology, rice or other dishes will not be
❽ 大家帮忙找一篇文章
网上我看到的所有关于这篇文章的记载无论中英文都是12号和13号的
Cooler, yet the pressure rises
By Krishna Guha in Washington
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
In almost every corner of the world inflation is uncomfortably high, creating a giant headache for policymakers as they grapple with the threat to growth from the turmoil in global credit markets.
The concern about inflation would swiftly disappear if the US plunged into a deep receccsion, as investors increasingly fear. But for now, the dilemma is all too real. In October consumer prices rose at an annual rate of 3.5 per cent in the US, 2.1 per cent in the UK and 2.6 per cent in the eurozone – where November showed a jump to 3 per cent. German inflation is at its highest in more than a decade.
Prices are also gaining at an annual rate of 6.5 per cent in China, with rapid increases in other emerging markets too. The culprit everywhere: rising food and energy costs, underpinned by surging demand from those fast-growing developing countries.
China, India and other emerging nations are at a stage in their development where they have an enormous appetite for resources – oil and metals to fuel instrialisation and urbanisation, meat and milk for changing diets – and they are growing at a blistering pace. China's economy is expected to expand by about 10 per cent next year and India's by 8 per cent, in spite of the credit squeeze.
Energy prices have been surging for several years. But the take-off in food prices is more recent, accelerating over the past year with rising milk and dairy prices in Europe, more expensive beef in the US and soaring pork prices in China. Many economists believe the two phenomena are now interacting with each other, as high oil prices prompt farmers to set aside land for the proction of biofuels, recing the amount available for food proction.
An intense debate is under way in central banks across the world as to whether the recent rapid rise in food and energy prices will continue – and what, if anything, they should do about it.
“We are seeing structural change in the historical commodity price relationships and that may imply structural changes in the relationship between headline inflation and core consumer prices,” says Ken Rogoff, a professor at Harvard and former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund. Headline inflation includes food and energy; core measures do not.
If Prof Rogoff is right, central banks may no longer be able to assume that rises in food and energy prices are short-term and that overall inflation will quickly revert to the core rate. Instead, they have to factor in the possibility that food and energy price increases will remain high for years. This would mean that to achieve a given level of overall inflation, authorities would have to show less tolerance for rises in the price of other items.
The US Federal Reserve believes that food and energy price inflation will slow over the next couple of years to no more than the general rate of inflation. This is why most Fed officials continue to talk about core inflation as representing the underlying rate of price increases and do not think it will be necessary to keep inflation for other items much below the target rate.
Yet inside the Fed there is an active debate on the subject. In a recent speech, Richard Fisher, president of the Dallas Fed, warned that rising food and energy prices “might be providing signals of longer-term structural inflationary pressures”.
That view is shared by many officials in other central banks, who think food and energy prices may continue to rise at a faster rate than other prices for years to come. Outside the US, most central banks – including the European Central Bank – emphasise the headline rate of inflation that includes food and energy. They tend to be more sceptical about the notion that moderate core inflation measures give a good indication of future inflation trends.
If the Fed view of the world is correct, these central banks may be taking too pessimistic a stance on future price trends and setting policy too tight. But if the Fed view is wrong, it may itself be setting policy too loose.
Regardless of their differences, all central bankers worry that the longer food and energy prices keep pushing up overall inflation, the greater the chance that the expectation of higher inflation could seep into daily decision-making by indivials and businesses, shifting up the general rate of price increases for all goods and services.
“Central banks have earned enormous respectability and credibility, but they need to keep it,” says Jim O'Neil, chief economist at Goldman Sachs. “In the grand scheme of things, this decade could still turn out to be like the 1970s.”
The danger that high food and energy prices could feed through into general price dynamics is heightened by the less-than-stellar record of the world's central banks in keeping inflation under tight control in the recent past.
Consumer price inflation exceeded its actual or implicit target in many of the world's most important economies in 2006 – including the US (3.3 per cent) the eurozone (2.2 per cent) and the UK (2.3 per cent) – and in many emerging economies, including India. Only Japan, which remains stuck on the brink of mild deflation for largely domestic reasons, is truly free from upward price concerns.
Central bankers worry that high rates of factory use and low unemployment around the world after years of rapid growth make it more likely that higher food and energy costs could feed through into broader wage and price pressures.
David Hensley, an economist at JPMorgan, says measures of global capacity utilisation are at or near “their highest levels in more than a decade”, while global interest rates are only approaching their historic average levels in real terms. In other words, in the past when capacity was this tight, central banks felt the need to run a much tighter monetary policy to stop inflation getting out of control.
Monetary policy is based on what is likely to happen to the economy in the future, rather than what is happening today. So the key question is how much effect the credit crisis will have on growth globally and in each of the indivial economic areas.
If growth slows very sharply in any or all of the main economies, unemployment will rise and capacity utilisation will fall, making it less likely that inflation will stay high or move higher. At this juncture, the challenge for policymakers looks different in instrialised countries and emerging markets.
The emerging markets – which have largely escaped the initial impact of the credit squeeze – have to worry primarily about inflation. This could change if the US and other developed markets suffer a very sharp slowdown. But for now, says Stephen King, chief economist at HSBC, “people in the emerging world are entirely concerned about inflation, overheating and monetary excess”.
The biggest problem for these economies is that their monetary and exchange rate policies make it difficult to manage the inflation risk. For the instrialised economies of the US and Europe – exposed to the direct impact of the credit squeeze – the threat is more complex. Policymakers have to judge the extent to which they can risk easing interest rates to offset the impact of the credit squeeze on growth when inflation is still high. This is necessarily a difficult judgment, because no one knows how great the impact of the credit crisis on growth will be.
Investors increasingly fear a recession in the US. In all likelihood, that would put paid to its inflation concerns. But the Fed's base case scenario is still that growth recovers next year and unemployment rises just a little, creating only a modest amount of slack in the economy.
There is a lot of uncertainty about the impact of a feared pull-back in lending in the UK and the eurozone too. So policymakers do not have a good sense of how much spare capacity will open up. Life would be much easier for them if they did not have to worry about high food and energy prices. But they do.
“It is the revenge of the emerging markets,” says one prominent economist. “They are running red hot, keeping the oil price tight. This sustains inflation pressure and makes it much harder for the Fed to cut interest rates.”
The risk of an adverse outcome globally is heightened by the weakness of the dollar and the monetary chains that bind most emerging markets to the US via currency pegs. Since the start of the credit crisis, the dollar has plunged in value against other freely floating currencies, pushing up the price of oil and other commodities denominated in dollars but purchased by buyers all over the world.
The Fed worries that if it cuts interest rates too aggressively, it could weaken the dollar further, pushing up oil and with it US inflation. Most emerging markets, meanwhile, have intervened to ensure that their currencies decline roughly in tandem with the dollar, adding a further stimulus to already fast growth and raising the risk of overheating. By tying their currencies to the dollar, these economies are importing US monetary policy and have only limited ability to offset it.
“US policy is made for domestic conditions,” says Vincent Reinhart, a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and former chief monetary economist at the Fed. “The inflation risk at the global level is that there will be many economies that will have inappropriately easy policies because they have taken the decision to keep their exchange rate vis-à-vis the dollar stable.”
(to be continued)
Cooler, yet the pressure rises
By Krishna Guha in Washington
Thursday, December 13, 2007
The surprise is that there has not yet been more inflation in emerging markets. However, Prof Rogoff warns that if emerging-market policymakers do not tighten monetary policy now, it may be too late to avoid higher general inflation a year or two hence. This could require some emerging markets to ditch their dollar currency pegs.
At the same time, the transmission of easy US monetary policy to fast-growing emerging markets is supercharging demand for food and energy, reinforcing the underlying growth story and keeping prices of these items hot worldwide.
The sharp decline in the US dollar relative to the euro, sterling and the Canadian dollar, meanwhile, is having the opposite effect – recing the risk of inflation in those economies, but at the price of transmitting additional economic weakness.
Set against the global inflation risks is one enormous asset: the apparent stability of inflation expectations worldwide in spite of the higher-than-anticipated rates of actual inflation in recent years. Investors and workers can get it wrong in the short term, as they did when inflation took off in the 1970s. But in the long run, sustained rising inflation is impossible without rising inflation expectations.
Today's relatively stable inflation expectations matter enormously. Because people do not expect high inflation in the future, they ought not to factor it into wage and price negotiations – thus greatly recing the risk of a sustained step-up in the underlying inflation rate.
Reliable measures of inflation expectations exist only in the instrialised world. In the US, long-term expectations as implied by bond market prices moved briefly higher following the half-point interest rate cut in September – a reminder that stable expectations cannot be taken for granted.
Yet on a longer-term horizon, inflation expectations in the US, the eurozone, the UK and Japan look to be quite settled, in spite of the run-up in energy and food prices. Wage growth is moderate everywhere, in spite of tight labour markets. Occasionally inflation expectations blip up, as they did in the UK this year, but they soon settle down.
Goldman's Mr O'Neil says some credit has to go to the central banks. “The fact that they are worrying about inflation is partly why there isn't any.”
It is much harder to measure inflation expectations in emerging markets. However, there is little evidence of wage-price spirals in the developing world. Simon Johnson, chief economist at the IMF, says: “We do not think there has been a big movement up in expected inflation globally.”
This is all the more remarkable because food accounts for a much larger share of total spending in poorer countries than in rich ones, making it harder for workers to absorb price increases without demanding higher wages to compensate. The core rate of inflation, excluding food and energy, is moderate in most parts of the world and strikingly low in some of the fastest-growing economies, including Saudi Arabia and even China, where core inflation was just 1.1 per cent in October.
If inflation expectations remain locked at moderate rates, and food and energy prices stop rising at above-average rates, overall inflation could subside quite quickly in many places. Indeed, the big debate within central banks today – deeper than, though related to the argument about headline versus core inflation – is the extent to which they can exploit the apparent stability of inflation expectations to cut rates aggressively, at least for a while, in response to any threats to growth.
In the short term at least, the outlook appears ugly for the main instrialised economies. The US and Europe are likely to see a combination of slowing growth with still-high inflation – a whiff of 1970s-style “stagflation”.
US consumer price inflation, for instance, could reach 4 per cent, with economic growth of only about 1 per cent in the current quarter, particularly if the oil price stays buoyant. If inflation expectations were to slip out of control in this environment, the consequences could be grave.
However, providing inflation expectations remain well-grounded, the picture is likely to look rather different over a one- to two-year time horizon. The world may see low growth or high inflation – but probably not sustained stagflation in any large economy.
That could still happen, if the US and other instrialised economies become too weak to rebound but not weak enough to cool the booming emerging markets and commodity prices. But this is an unstable equilibrium that will probably not be sustained far into next year.
One scenario is that the US and Europe weaken sharply, in which case – with Japan less than robust to begin with – the emerging markets would start to slow, letting the steam out of commodity prices. The very recent retreat in oil prices may be a signal that the balance is tipping in this direction globally.
Alternatively, the core instrialised economies could bounce back from the second quarter of 2008 onwards with the help of interest rate cuts, in which case central bankers around the world will have to refocus quite quickly on price pressures.
Says a senior US policymaker: “We should soon know whether we need to be worrying about growth or inflation.”
❾ 怎么使用电饭煲作文英语加中文翻译
devices 1. Automatically emit steam device (solenoid valve) 2. Lid magnetic inction switch (sensor switch) 3. Resial pressure from devices (automatic pressure cone) 4. To prevent the proct abnormal heat control circuit devices 5. To prevent abnormal pressure steam constructed to exclude 6. To prevent it from overheating temperature fuse 7. To cut off abnormal power line (circuit board fuse) Use / settings Caution 1. This proct is to avoid direct light, is prohibited near the gas stove, electric appliances, etc. 2. Prohibited in pools, baths and other water sources or use chemical procts 3. Prohibited children alone use or to prevent children from easy to reach 4. Is prohibited or internal water to wash with water 5. Do not use or touch my face near the pressure cone and steam holes 6. Dry wet hands, takeplug 7. Must be grounded for more than the rated 220V AC 10A dedicated outlet, and other electrical appliances should not share a socket 8. The power cord and plug when damaged, immediately stop using, the Advisory Service Hotline 9. The power cord can not be heavy objects or pressure in the bottom of this proct 10. Do not put inside the pot is not used 11. Do not use the deformation inside the pot or other non-specific pot 12. Clear temperature sensors, electric plate and internal or foreign body around inside the pot use 13. Cooking when no openings 14. Prohibited demolition and GM procts 15. Procts is prohibited Add internal metal or other foreign body (with special attention to children) 16. Dissection needle with ventilation holes in addition to steam cleaning, the gap is strictly prohibited for procts 17. Power lines should not be hard-line bending, tied up, stretching 18. With a dry cloth to remove st plug 19. Prohibited plug cone or automatic discharge pressure steam holes 20. Prohibited cooking, the combination of the handle settings "lifting" 21. M barrels a day to prevent the use of kitchen cabinets or use, please pay attention to the gap in power clamp 22. Do not put cushion or blanket to use Cleaning methods Washing / cleaning methods 1. Lid can not be covered with mandatory 2. Cleared rice cookers to timely, or insulation, the rice will smell 3. Cleaning, use a neutral detergent and sponge Power Specifications Sales focus 1. As the use of high-pressure cooking so fast, tasty, but also can do Braised ribs, and many other dishes Samgyetang 2. The computer artificial intelligence is easy to operate cooking methods, showing for the state of cuisine, sensors automatically adjust the temperature according to an order made by a variety of dishes 3. Because of the use of the inner pot is the world's only two companies to hold a special coating technology, rice or other dishes will not be
中文翻译:
功能描述多种菜肴特点:汤,米饭,粥,蒸,炖,煮各种特色菜高压电饭锅性能:高压绝缘性能罐+烹饪表演为一体的炊具没有正确使用产品,说异常检测功能:产品故障或不正确的操作,屏幕前面显示的七种类型的安全警告的内容
❿ 中翻英,需要电子专业方面的英语知识。牛人帮帮忙,翻得好再加分
人工翻译,请采纳
At first I had internship in Shanghai Branch of China Petrochemical, therefore, had a preliminary understanding of power plant, that is the process from thermal energy convertig into kinetic energy through turbine, and from kinetic energy into electric energy though generator. And then I had internship in Sanhuan Spring Co., Ltd. in Shanghai, so that I knew the situation of this technology instry, especially I got a deep understanding of the significance and importance of automation. After that I had internship in the Shanghai Tianlong Low-Carbon Technology Co., Ltd. engaged in a clerk, mainly to send and receive messages and organize the information. Since then I worked in XX company up to now, as a lamps test engineer, I am responsible for the export test and report writting of the lamp procts.
电路理论:电路的基本概念、元件的特性方程 。
模拟电子技术:常用半导体器件的基本工作原理、特性和主要参数。
数字电子技术:逻辑门电路的功能及电气特性。
电力电子技术:常用的电力电子器件的工作机理、电气特性和主要参数
Circuit Theory: The basic concepts circuit and the characteristic equations for components. Analog Electronics: The basic principles, characteristics and main parameters of common semiconctor devices.
Digital Electronic Technology: The functions and electrical characteristics of logic gate circuit.
Power Electronics Technology: The working mechanism, electrical characteristics and main parameters of common power electronic devices.
根据国标(GB7000)对灯具进行型式试验(TYPE TEST),包括结构、导线、电气强度、接地保护、防触电保护等等方面。并且制作出口报告。
在进行接地电阻试验时,试验结果不合格。经过思考,原因可能是包裹在外壳上的油漆所致。挂掉油漆后再试验,结果变为合格。
Carried out lamp's type test according to the national standard (GB7000) , including structural, wire, electrical strength, ground protection, protection against electric shock, and so on. I addition wrote export reports.
When I concted ground resistance test, I found the test results failed. I thought the reason may be e to the paint coated on the housing. After scraping the paint the test results became qualified.
有限公司就直接说corporation或company即可。
(A)Amperes 和(V) Volts 口语要加复数s