手机APP下载

您现在的位置: 首页 > 英语单词 > VOA词汇大师 > 正文

词汇大师第117期:911与英语(2)

来源:可可英语 编辑:Jasmine   可可英语APP下载 |  可可官方微信:ikekenet
  下载MP3到电脑  [F8键暂停/播放]   批量下载MP3到手机

今天《词汇大师》讨论了911在语言方面给美国人带来的影响,早在911恐怖事件之前,911就已经是紧急情况的呼救电话了……

AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on Wordmaster — more about terrorism and language.

TAPE: CUT ONE — BUSH

"Now is the time to draw a line in the sand against the evil ones."

RS: President Bush, speaking this past week. Geoff Nunberg is a linguist, author and social commentator. We asked him his thoughts about hearing our leaders refer to terrorists as "evil," a word with a strong moral overtone.

TAPE: CUT TWO — NUNBERG

"'Evil' is not a word that has been much used in the political arena, and when it has been used, for example, when Reagan described the Soviet Union as an 'evil empire' he was jumped on by a lot of people not just on the left, but moderates, and there really hasn't been that reaction to the use of evil in this context, perhaps because people feel there really is something evil about what happened."

AA: He says a word that has drawn more attention among Americans is "homeland," as in President Bush's new Office of Homeland Security.

TAPE: CUT THREE — NUNBERG

"Americans don't usually think of themselves as having a 'homeland' in that sense. It's like 'fatherland' in German or 'patris' in French. English and particularly American English doesn't have a word for that. We need some way to describe this part of America that's located here, and that's a very interesting usage. It has an Old World feel to it and it's not the sort of way we've thought about our country. I don't know if it augers a change in the way we think of America itself or if it's just a convenient or slightly awkward term that Bush grabbed for, but it's certainly interesting."

RS: Geoff Nunberg says that after the September eleventh attacks on the United States, politicians in particular seemed to reach back in time for their language.

TAPE: CUT FOUR — NUNBERG/SKIRBLE

NUNBERG: "People were using the word 'nefarious.' Both Senator Schumer of New York and Governor Davis of California used the word 'dastardly.' Now 'dastardly' is the kind of word that you usually associate with the villain in a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta. It's not a word that people ordinarily use to describe events in everyday life. Bush used the word 'despicable' which has a slightly Victorian cast to it.

"I don't know what the reason for this was, but I suspect that part of it had to do with the idea that that language — words like 'dastardly,' 'despicable,' 'nefarious' — is associated with a Victorian moral order where there was right and wrong. And this way of casting the problem as a battle between good and evil, for example, also had that Victorian resonance. And in that sense the ideology that's implicit in the use of this language does reflect more a kind of Victorian ideology than a twentieth century ideology where things aren't black and white but all painted in shades of gray."

RS: "These are words coming out of the mouths of politicians. What about the people on the street? What are we hearing from them?"

NUNBERG: "Well, we're hearing two kinds of language. We're hearing very angry language, very colloquial angry language. And we're also hearing a kind of interestingly formal language to describe — the word 'enormity' has been used for a long time in English but tends to be used by most people now just to refer to things that are large and not things that are large and terrible, but somehow 'enormity' has re-acquired its old sense of things that are great in their horribleness and their terror. The word 'horrific' was on everyone's lips for the week following the attacks, and that again is a slightly old-fashioned word, I think. So it's as if people also are looking to the language of some earlier moral order, as if the language of ordinary English doesn't quite have the resources to deal with events of this magnitude."

AA: Sometimes, though, he says, it seems like not having the right words is just the right thing.

TAPE: CUT FIVE — NUNBERG

"We use these words like 'unuterrable, indescribable, unspeakable. In a certain sense the most damning thing you can say about events is that they pass the powers of language to describe. It's a way of talking that was very much used in connection with the Holocaust, for example. That words ought to fail us."

RS: Linguist Geoff Nunberg, speaking to us from his home in San Francisco, California. He's the author of a new book about language and culture, called "The Way We Talk Now."

AA: The way to talk to us now is to send an e-mail — our address is word@voanews.com. And that's all for Wordmaster this week. With Rosanne Skirble, I'm Avi Arditti.

重点单词   查看全部解释    
despicable ['despikəbl]

想一想再看

adj. 可鄙的,卑劣的

联想记忆
arena [ə'ri:nə]

想一想再看

n. 竞技场

联想记忆
certain ['sə:tn]

想一想再看

adj. 确定的,必然的,特定的
pron.

 
awkward ['ɔ:kwəd]

想一想再看

adj. 笨拙的,尴尬的,(设计)别扭的

 
address [ə'dres]

想一想再看

n. 住址,致词,讲话,谈吐,(处理问题的)技巧

 
describe [dis'kraib]

想一想再看

vt. 描述,画(尤指几何图形),说成

联想记忆
ideology [.aidi'ɔlədʒi]

想一想再看

n. 观念学,空论,意识形态

联想记忆
terror ['terə]

想一想再看

n. 恐怖,惊骇,令人惧怕或讨厌的人或事物

联想记忆
magnitude ['mægnitju:d]

想一想再看

n. 大小,重要,光度,(地震)级数,(星星)等级

联想记忆
horrific [hɔ'rifik]

想一想再看

adj. 令人毛骨悚然的,可怖的

联想记忆


关键字: 911 词汇大师

发布评论我来说2句

    最新文章

    可可英语官方微信(微信号:ikekenet)

    每天向大家推送短小精悍的英语学习资料.

    添加方式1.扫描上方可可官方微信二维码。
    添加方式2.搜索微信号ikekenet添加即可。