<tt id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"></pre></pre></tt>
          <nav id="6hsgl"><th id="6hsgl"></th></nav>
          国产免费网站看v片元遮挡,一亚洲一区二区中文字幕,波多野结衣一区二区免费视频,天天色综网,久久综合给合久久狠狠狠,男人的天堂av一二三区,午夜福利看片在线观看,亚洲中文字幕在线无码一区二区
           
           
           

          Garden variety?

          中國日報網 2017-03-21 11:31

           

          Garden variety?Reader question:

          Please explain “garden variety” in this sentence: There’s charm in the backyard, but it’s still of a garden variety.

          My comments:

          In other words, common, ordinary. Even though this backyard is charming in its own way, it’s still a common and ordinary backyard, a type you can see in many other homes in the same area.

          That is to say the garden is pretty plain, if truth be told. The flowers and plants in the backyard are all everyday plants, varieties grown everywhere. To wit, nothing special, if we are allowed to be truly blunt about it.

          Garden, here as adjective is equivalent to common. In fact, the full expression is “common or garden variety”. It is, as you may guess, British in origin. Common refers to things that belong to the commons, or commoners, i.e. everybody (common language, e.g.). Commons, by the way, as in the House of Commons in contrast to the House of Lords (noblemen).

          This additional explanation, meanwhile, is culled from an English language usage website (English.StackExchange.com):

          The derivation of the phrase obviously does have something to do with gardening, or more precisely, agriculture. Its original meaning, as has already been said, relates to the type of plant, fruit or vegetable which is found frequently in gardens or on “commons”. (Historically, “commons” were the large patches of grass or woodland that ancient rural villages designated as being for the use of the community as a whole.) If such a plant is found growing in “the common or garden” it is likely to be unexceptional because of its abundance. The phrase has since come to be applied to anything that is common or unexceptional.

          So, in short, the garden variety is the commonplace kind (as if all the plants and flowers are so ordinary that you can see them in each and every common garden).

          All right, here are media examples of things that are of the common or garden variety:

          1. On the front of Jenny Lawson’s book is a stuffed raccoon looking like the most thrilled guest at a surprise birthday party. Arms outstretched, mouth fixed in an ecstatic grin, this is a raccoon determined that the evening will go with a swing. He – Lawson tells us that his name is Rory – is much more than a charming novelty or a “wacky” talking point. No, Rory is Lawson’s personal happiness coach, a gurning reminder that, no matter how awful life seems, you always have the choice to be happy. Not mildly happy, or even mindfully happy, but furiously happy.

          The “furious” bit is important to Lawson because it is a measure of the effort and determination that goes into trying to feel OK when you have a brain that is busy trying to kill you. Lawson came out several years ago as being “mentally ill” but what has given the Texan her particular appeal – her blog gets millions of hits a month – is that her illnesses are of a common or garden variety. She is not schizophrenic, nor even a little bit bipolar. She never hallucinates: if she thinks about how cool it would be to have monkey butlers, that’s because she also knows it’s never going to happen, not least because they’d eat all the peanuts before passing them round. In other words she has a perfectly good grip on reality, if reality is mostly a scary place where something very bad is about to happen. Lawson has been diagnosed as “a high-functioning depressive with anxiety disorder and mild-self harm issues”. In other words, she is in an abusive relationship with her own head. Many of us can relate to that.

          Lawson’s first book, a memoir of growing up dirt poor in rural Texas, was a hugely popular hit in 2012 and sat at the top of the New York Times bestseller list for weeks. In it Lawson dealt obliquely with her mental illness, reframing it as the cultural by-product of her delightfully eccentric family. Her father is a taxidermist with an equal interest in living animals, and once sent her to school with a flock of turkeys that he insisted were “jumbo quail”. Her mother, meanwhile, had a habit of dressing Lawson and her sister in Little House on the Prairie smocking and sunbonnets, with the result that they resembled “the lesbian love children of Laura Ingalls and Hollie Hobbie”. Let’s Pretend This Never Happened was a bit like My Family and Other Animals, but ruder and with more stuffed bobcats.

          The texture of Furiously Happy, however, is altogether more jagged. When Lawson announces at the beginning that this will be “a collection of bizarre essays and confused thoughts” she is spot-on. Whereas Let’s Pretend was written, like so many first books, over a decade during which seams had been smoothed and corners nicely jointed, Furiously Happy is a scrappy, blog-like affair. Indeed, it reads like a series of bulletins about hanging on to your mental stability by your fingernails – if only you hadn’t pulled them out long ago, thanks to a propensity for self-harm. “I am broken,” Lawson admits, before turning it into a badge of honour and a battle cry – “I am broken. Come Join Me.”

          - Furiously Happy by Jenny Lawson review – how to feel OK when you have a brain that is trying to destroy you, by Kathryn Hughes, September 16, 2015.

          2. Up to this point, he was more of a garden-variety blowhard.

          In the 17th century, poet John Milton called it a “goblin word” — a sobriquet so low that it was reserved for only the most insidious of rabble-rousers — yet in the last few months, any number of observers, from GOP presidential also-ran Rick Perry to former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, from the Economist to, most recently, the New York Times, have crossed a rhetorical line in our politics by calling Donald Trump out as a “demagogue.”

          Until recently, I’ve resisted it. As the author of “Demagogue: The Fight to Save Democracy from Its Worst Enemies,” I have been asked countless times in recent years whether Trump is a demagogue, and have always responded — indeed, thought — that he was not. Clearly, though, with his escalating effrontery toward the American creed, he is now.

          This is not a matter of mere semantics. In the same way that precision should be used when issuing a terror alert, the term demagogue, properly applied, should be a tocsin of democracy — deployed judiciously and ringing loudly to foretell a singular menace to our republic.

          The word dates back to ancient Athens, where the original term in Greek literally meant leader (agogos) of the people (demos). In 1838, American author James Fenimore Cooper observed that true demagogues met four criteria: they posture as men of the common people; they trigger waves of powerful emotion; they manipulate this emotion for political benefit; and they threaten or break established principles of governance.

          I used to give Trump a pass on the first and last of those points. It was a bit difficult to regard someone who’s always made such a spectacle of his glitzy skyscrapers and lavish private golf courses as a man of the people. And in the presidential race he seemed, initially, more intent on bringing the parlance of business to governance than on undermining government itself.

          But over the last several weeks, Trump has crossed both lines.

          Despite his billionaire status, he’s fashioned himself into a mirror of the masses by appealing directly to the anxieties of a “silent majority” of mostly working- and middle-class white voters.

          And he’s come perilously close to sanctioning not only inflammatory language — blithely impugning Latino immigrants and Muslim refugees — but violent behavior, reacting to an incident in which a protester was physically confronted at one of his campaign events by saying, “Maybe he should have been roughed up.” On Sunday’s “Meet The Press,” he called last Friday’s shooting at a Planned Parenthood facility in Colorado Springs “terrible,” but at the same time made a point of remarking on what he described as “a lot of anxiety” and “a lot of dislike for Planned Parenthood” among the supporters who attend his rallies. He’s demonstrated a penchant not only for perpetuating falsehoods, but for doubling down on them, such as the canard that he “watched” as “thousands and thousands” of people in Jersey City cheered the 9/11 attacks — bringing maximal heat and minimal light to the public discourse.

          Cooper observed, “The demagogue always puts the people before the constitution and the laws, in face of the obvious truth that the people have placed the constitution and the laws before themselves.” And while, so far, Trump has only said he’d “strongly consider” closing certain mosques and briefly flirted with the idea of instituting a registry for Muslims, even entertaining these proposals undermines our shared civic values.

          - Donald Trump wasn’t a textbook demagogue. Until now, by Michael Signer, WashingtonPost.com, December 2, 2015.

          3. In the Alentejo region of central Portugal stands a town that looks as if it has been created just to surround a central market square where all roads lead.

          True, there’s an imposing castle and palace high on the hill, but pride of place in Estremoz is where it belongs — at the weekly Saturday markets.

          How different from markets anywhere, we wonder. What’s so special about Estremoz?

          Hard to define, really. There’s the usual display of genuine farm produce (no wholesale trucks here) offered by genuine gnarly farmers and their robust wives and wild-eyed kids. It’s berry season and the place is a riot of strawberry and raspberry reds, blackberries, blueberries and goodness knows what other kinds.

          One standout is a pale gooseberry lookalike that you pluck sing-ly from its little leafy bed. One thing they have in common: they’re all sweet and delicious.

          Apart from the more common or garden-variety vegetables, where potatoes, greens, capsicums, garlic and eggplants reign, there are the animals. Chooks, geese, turkeys and pigeons flutter and flounce; then rabbits and guinea pigs (for pets, we hope); and finally cage birds of every description, a riot of colour and noise — not for the pot, these creatures.

          As you would expect, the huge selection of hams, sausages and pates ranges from a black pudding kind of monster to various chorizo types, individually made in local farms with their own smoke-houses (and, it must be said, augmented by the ever-present passive smoking all around us).

          Then there are the local breads, traditionally rough and rustic to accompany the various sheep and goat cheeses; and those Portuguese bakery delicacies such as pastel de nata (creamy egg tarts), travesseiros, pane de casa rolls and almond brioche clones. And the berries make another welcome appearance in all kinds of cakes and pastries. The patisserie section is definitely not for the Weight Watchers crowd.

          Tearing ourselves away from the food market, we find the adjacent flea market with masses of antiques, including some of the vendors. There’s an element of gypsy about the place and once the haggling starts we get the feeling that perhaps we are out of our depth in negotiating techniques. But it’s all good fun.

          There is furniture and clothing, too. Spread out across the carpark is enough to furnish an entire palace and clothe the servants as well. We spot some exceptional hand-carved wooden chairs but, tempted as we are, the thought of shipping to Australia serves as a deterrent — and besides, our palace isn’t big enough.

          - Estremoz in Portugal is the best kind of market town, by Phil Hawkes, TheAustralian.com.au, July 20, 2016.

          本文僅代表作者本人觀點,與本網立場無關。歡迎大家討論學術問題,尊重他人,禁止人身攻擊和發布一切違反國家現行法律法規的內容。

          About the author:

          Zhang Xin is Trainer at chinadaily.com.cn. He has been with China Daily since 1988, when he graduated from Beijing Foreign Studies University. Write him at: zhangxin@chinadaily.com.cn, or raise a question for potential use in a future column.

          (作者:張欣 編輯:丹妮)

          上一篇 : Kept his wits about?
          下一篇 : Put up or shut up?

           
          中國日報網英語點津版權說明:凡注明來源為“中國日報網英語點津:XXX(署名)”的原創作品,除與中國日報網簽署英語點津內容授權協議的網站外,其他任何網站或單位未經允許不得非法盜鏈、轉載和使用,違者必究。如需使用,請與010-84883561聯系;凡本網注明“來源:XXX(非英語點津)”的作品,均轉載自其它媒體,目的在于傳播更多信息,其他媒體如需轉載,請與稿件來源方聯系,如產生任何問題與本網無關;本網所發布的歌曲、電影片段,版權歸原作者所有,僅供學習與研究,如果侵權,請提供版權證明,以便盡快刪除。

          中國日報網雙語新聞

          掃描左側二維碼

          添加Chinadaily_Mobile
          你想看的我們這兒都有!

          中國日報雙語手機報

          點擊左側圖標查看訂閱方式

          中國首份雙語手機報
          學英語看資訊一個都不能少!

          關注和訂閱

          本文相關閱讀
          人氣排行
          熱搜詞
           
          精華欄目
           

          閱讀

          詞匯

          視聽

          翻譯

          口語

          合作

           

          關于我們 | 聯系方式 | 招聘信息

          Copyright by chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved. None of this material may be used for any commercial or public use. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. 版權聲明:本網站所刊登的中國日報網英語點津內容,版權屬中國日報網所有,未經協議授權,禁止下載使用。 歡迎愿意與本網站合作的單位或個人與我們聯系。

          電話:8610-84883645

          傳真:8610-84883500

          Email: languagetips@chinadaily.com.cn

          主站蜘蛛池模板: 亚州AV无码乱码精品国产| 日韩亚洲视频一区二区三区| 超碰成人人人做人人爽| 午夜激情福利一区二区| 精品一区二区成人精品| 男同精品视频免费观看网站| 四虎亚洲国产成人久久精品| 久久 午夜福利 张柏芝| 国产99精品成人午夜在线| 日本高清免费不卡视频| 久久精品丝袜| 国产高清视频一区二区乱| 国产乱人伦AV在线麻豆A| 中日韩中文字幕一区二区| 国产精品内射在线免费看| 99欧美日本一区二区留学生 | 久久夜夜免费视频| 国产精品亚洲精品爽爽| 蜜臀av无码一区二区三区| 亚洲AV永久纯肉无码精品动漫| 久久久久无码精品国产h动漫| 无码人妻精品一区二区三区下载 | 精选国产av精选一区二区三区| 少妇被多人c夜夜爽爽av| 老司机精品影院一区二区三区| 国产在线午夜不卡精品影院 | 日韩视频中文字幕精品偷拍| 国产成人午夜福利院| 日韩精品无码免费专区网站| 国产自产av一区二区三区性色| 国产精品中文字幕观看| 精品久久久久久无码人妻蜜桃| 一区二区丝袜美腿视频| 亚洲国产精品一二三区| 啦啦啦啦在线视频免费播放6| 欧美乱码卡一卡二卡四卡免费| 国产高跟黑色丝袜在线| 国内精品久久久久久影院中文字幕| 蜜臀av一区二区精品字幕| 欧美国产精品不卡在线观看| 国产美女午夜福利视频|