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BBC新闻2007c002 Twenty20板球杯 译文

BBC新闻2007c002 Twenty20板球杯 译文

Twenty20板球杯记者:这周将带来万众期待的Twenty20比赛的真实风味。

当世界Twenty20赛进入高潮期时,我们听到了来自南非的对这次革命能走多远的观点。

南非球员:广告客户将会规定这如何运作,而不是由那些说“不不不,坚持50场另一种形式的球赛才是真材实料,20场是取乐。

”的管理者支配。

我认为它会以相反方向进行。

他们会在一系列的六到七个20场不同形式的比赛中打一到二个50场不同形式的比赛。

记者:也有关于叛逆印度板球联盟的官方对手的新闻。

马利邦板球会告诉我们Twenty20甚至可能改变板球原有的形式。

男士:现在我们看看对这个盛大环境的意义重大的评估。

其中之一当然是传统与场地的保持,场地的周围环境,我们注意到它被称为大型露天体育场,和足球场相似。

记者:接下来是哈萨·博格关于萨庆·滕达尔卡在英国参加的决赛的报导。

在那之前,尽管斯蒂芬·弗雷明是新西兰板球测试赛中历时最长的队长,并且在80场比赛中是一个成功又受人尊敬的领导者,他的位置最后由丹尼尔·弗托利取代。

这符合弗雷明退出单日赛的决定。

他现在只在弗托利的领导下作为板球员参加比赛。

约翰·梅尔在同新西兰板球之声布莱恩·瓦特交谈,向他询问这个新闻是否令人惊异。

布莱恩·瓦特:我猜是有一点惊奇,因为在世界杯后弗雷明决定辞退其作为单日方队长的职务。

但我认为他仍期望成为国际板球锦标赛队伍中的一员并且领导这一方。

当约翰·布莱斯福单独控制选拔和培训时,这个愿望还能被接受。

现在事情有些变化。

以他的角色来看,他在选拔陪审员方面并不强势。

很显然,现在同一陪审员所决定的组织方式是他们需要新面孔,并要用同样的方法选出队长,因此他们认为弗雷明时代明显已经结束了,现在是新队长时代。

约翰·梅尔:如今很多人将斯蒂芬·弗雷明视为世界上最顶尖测试赛队长之一。

那么作为测试赛队长的丹尼尔·弗托利能够有怎样的表现呢?布莱恩·沃特:我认为如果他得到斯蒂芬·弗雷明的支持,也会成为一个很好的队长。

bbc城市旅游新闻稿 中英文对照

bbc城市旅游新闻稿 中英文对照

bbc城市旅游新闻稿中英文对照全文共6篇示例,供读者参考篇1BBC City Travel News Report (English Version)Hey there, kids! Are you ready for an exciting adventure? Today, we're going to explore the wonders of a bustling city through this news report. Get ready to join me on this thrilling journey!Imagine stepping into a world where towering skyscrapers reach for the sky, and the streets are abuzz with people from all walks of life. The city is a vibrant tapestry woven with diverse cultures, mouthwatering cuisines, and endless opportunities for exploration.As we wander through the busy streets, our senses are immediately awakened by the tantalizing aroma of street food wafting through the air. From savory kebabs to sweet churros, the city's culinary delights are sure to tantalize your taste buds.But the city is more than just food; it's a living canvas of art and creativity. We'll visit awe-inspiring museums that transportus through time and expose us to the masterpieces of renowned artists. Who knows, maybe you'll discover a newfound passion for art!Speaking of discoveries, have you ever wondered what it's like to stand atop a skyscraper and gaze down at the city below? Well, get ready for an experience like no other as we ascend to the top of one of the city's iconic towers. The breathtaking panoramic views will leave you mesmerized, and you'll feel like you're on top of the world!As the sun sets, the city transforms into a dazzling spectacle of lights and energy. We'll explore vibrant night markets, where you can haggle for unique souvenirs and indulge in delicious street snacks. The lively atmosphere and friendly vendors will make you feel right at home.But our adventure doesn't stop there! We'll also dive into the city's rich history by visiting ancient landmarks and learning about the fascinating stories that shaped this incredible metropolis. You'll be amazed at how much there is to discover!Throughout our journey, we'll encounter friendly locals who will share their stories and give us a glimpse into their daily lives. You'll quickly realize that the heart of a city lies within its people, each with their own unique experiences and perspectives.So, pack your sense of wonder and get ready for an unforgettable adventure through the bustling streets, iconic landmarks, and vibrant cultures of this incredible city. Who knows what amazing discoveries await us around the next corner?篇2The Best City for Kids – A Kidventure in London!孩子们最爱的城市- 伦敦的冒险之旅!Have you ever dreamed of visiting a city filled with castles, red buses, and fun around every corner? Well, pack your bags because we're going on a kidventure to the one and only London!你有没有梦想过去一个到处都是城堡、红色双层巴士,每个角落都充满乐趣的城市呢?那就快点收拾行囊,我们要去伦敦这个独一无二的城市展开一场孩子们的冒险之旅了!First stop – Buckingham Palace! This is where the Queen lives in a massive castle with 775 rooms. Can you imagine having that many bedrooms? During the summer, you can watch the Changing of the Guard ceremony where the Queen's soldiersmarch in their big fuzzy hats. Just don't make fun of their goofy outfits – they're not dressed like that for fun!第一站- 白金汉宫!这里就是女王居住的大城堡,里面有775间房间。

BBC电台每日新闻-20130220(中英翻译)

BBC电台每日新闻-20130220(中英翻译)

BBC news 2013-02-20BBC News with David AustinThe Prime Minister of Tunisia HamadiJebali has announced his resignation in a live television address. Mr. Jebali had threatened to quit unless he got the support of his Ennahda party to replace the cabinet with a government of unelected technocrats. It comes amid a political crisis following the assassination earlier this month of a left-wing opposition leader ChokriBelaid. Diana Husserl has more.The killing brought tens of thousands onto the streets calling for the government to resign but counter-demonstrators insisted they wanted their elected government to serve its full term. Mr. Jebali says Tunisians are disillusioned by politicians and confidence must be restored. But he added that the failure of his initiative does not mean the Tunisian revolution has failed.A group of seven French nationals had been kidnapped in northern Cameroon near the Nigerian border. The French president said all seven were members of one family including four children. TomiOladipo reports from Nigeria.French embassy sources say the tourists were returning from Waza national park in northeast Cameroon, a popular holiday spot among Westerners when they were captured by men on motorbikes. Speaking to reporters during a visit to Greece, France’s President FrançoisHollande said that tourists were taken by a Nigerian terrorist group. This is the first case of foreigners being kidnapped in this part of Cameroon. The nearest city in neighbouring Nigeria is Maiduguri which is a hotbed of violence led by Islamist extremist groups. The rise of attacks against French nationals in the region has increased since France’s military intervention in Mali against Islamist rebels.The former President of Ivory Coast Laurent Gbagbo has appeared before the International Criminal Court in The Hague. He is the first former head of state to appear of the court. Anna Holigan has the details.The public gallery was packed with press, supporters and human rights groups w ho’d all come to witness this historical event. Laurent Gbagbo faces four charges: murder, rape, persecution and other inhumane acts. The prosecution accuses him of being part of common plan to commit those crimes against rival supporters. In court the defense lawyers argued they shouldn’t even be there. They are challenging the admissibility of the case saying the courts in the Ivory Coast are willing and able to deal with all of the cases connected to the post-election violence.A report by the World Health Organization has said that man-made chemicals used in thousands of everyday products could be helping fuel a sharp increase in the variety of common diseases. A WHO report says little understood synthetic chemicals added to things such as plastics, cosmetics and pesticides are being linked to arise in some cancers as well as asthma, diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease. It says they could also be connected with childhood development disorders such as autism and dyslexia.World News from the BBCKing Abdullah of Saudi Arabia has sworn in the first female members of the Shura council, a body appointed by the monarch to advise on new laws. It’s the first time that women have been allowed to hold any official political office. Thirty women took their seats to the royal palace in Riyadh alongside more than 100 male colleagues. However, the Saudi Shura council chamber itself is been modified to allow for segregation at the sexes during meeting.Interpol has announced that it arrested nearly 200 people in a wide-ranging international operation against illegal logging and the trafficking of timber. The three-month effort spanned 12 Latin American countries and eight million dollars worth of wood were seized. Illegal logging tree are said to be worth up to 100 billion dollars a year.Prosecutors in Romania say they have uncovered a criminal group which made large profits by illegally selling human eggs to infertile Israeli couples. Dean Rodoyaevch reportsA statement said a number of properties in Romania have been searched and arrests have been made. But the authorities gave no details because they said the operation was continuing. The group is alleged to have been recruiting young women mostly from Romania’s impoverished rural areas and paying them up to 1,000 dollars to harvest their eggs. These were then sold for five times the amount to childless women chiefly from Israel who wanted to attempt to conceive through in vitro fertilization. Selling eggs is illegal under Romanian law.Environment ministers from around the world are being fed a lavish five course banquet made entirely from food rejected by British and European supermarkets to raise the issue of waste. Vegetables grown by farmers in Kenya but regarded as unwanted or too ugly for supermarket shelves were be fed to ministers, diplomats and United Nations delegates at an official dinner in Nairobi organized by the UN Environment Programme.BBC News词汇讲解:1. announce vt.宣布;述说例句:I was to announce a bride that night.那晚我要宣布一位新娘.2. replace vt.替换;代替例句:John will replace him as manager.约翰将代替他担任经理。

BBC新闻翻译

BBC新闻翻译

Bo Xilai removed by China from Chongqing leader postChina has removed prominent politician Bo Xilai from his post as Chongqing's Communist Party leader, state news agency Xinhua reports.The 62-year-old was a strong contender for promotion to China's top rungs when the party changes its leadership later this year.However, a scandal(n.丑闻,丑名,丑事,丑行,丢脸的事件,舞弊案件,耻辱;流言蜚语;闲话;诽谤)erupted(vi.爆发;喷发;突然发生;出疹vt.爆发)when his former chief of police spent a day at a United States consulate last month.Vice-Premier Zhang Dejiang will replace Mr Bo, said the Xinhua report. Breaking silenceThe move comes just a day after the end of the country's annual parliamentary(议会的,国会的;议会制度的;根据议会的)session(n.开会,会议;(法庭的)开庭;会期,学期;(进行某活动连续的)一段时间), the National People's Congress (NPC), where Mr Bo's absence from a meeting sparked (vi.发出火星,发出闪光;热烈赞同;正常运转vt.发动,触发;激起运动,鼓舞)speculations(n.投机买卖;思考;投机活动;推断)about his future.式地;形式上)linked to this case - and denied(拒绝承认)he was involved - many believed it would tarnish(败坏)him.It seems it has.Mr Bo has for several years been one of China's highest-profile politicians (最引人注目的政治家), running campaigns(运动)in Chongqing to crack down(制裁)on organised crime and re-establish a love for the country's communist past. Those campaigns were popular and many tipped(倾向于)him for promotion when the Chinese Communist Party changes its top leader later this year.His pitch f or a top job now seems to have failed. China's state-run Xinhua said only that Mr Bo has been replaced as party chief in Chongqing. But he has surely been sacked(解雇).This is one of the opening shots in the battle among those who want to be the next leaders of the party.The end for Bo Xilai?"I feel like I put my trust in the wrong person," he added, speaking at a meeting of Chongqing delegates.Mr Wang has also been sacked from his job as deputy mayor of Chongqing, said another Xinhua report following the earlier announcement(通告;布告)on Mr Bo's removal(免职).Mr Wang's visit to the US consulate in the city of Chengdu sparked(触发)rumours(谣言)that he had intended to defect(打算叛逃). State media reported that he was on vacation to recuperate(恢复)from stress.Mr Wang, who led(指挥)the crackdown on organised crime in Chongqing that propelled(推动)both him and his boss into the limelight(聚光灯), was later placed(置于)under police investigation for the incident(事件).'Western-style' politicianPremier Wen Jiabao, answering a question at a news conference on Wednesday at the closing of the NPC session, said ''progress'' had been made in the investigations, but did not reveal(透露)details.He said local authorities must ''seriously'' reflect (反思)and learn from the incident and that Beijing regarded(把….视为)this ''very seriously''.Reactions to the brief announcement of Mr Bo's removal from his post in state media have been swift. The news spread quickly, prompting (推动)thousands of posts on the Sina Weibo microblogging site on Thursday morning."Swift and thorough! (迅速和彻底)The ultra-leftish stronghold(激进左派的据点)has finally come to an end. It's a big fortune for China, a big fortune for the people!" posted a writer for , Wang Ruogu."Bo Xilai might have his personal mistakes, what he has been pushing for might be problematic(有争议的)... but he has truly done a lot of great things for the people,'' said another comment by a former journalist.Bo Xilai is the nearest thing China has to a Western-style politician, correspondents(通讯员)say.Like China's leader-in-waiting Xi Jinping, he is the son of a famous communist hero, but he has gone on to forge(锻造)his own unique public personality. Correspondents say the suave(有礼貌的;老于世故的)and charismatic(有魅力的)Mr Bo seems at home in front of the cameras and appears to enjoy pushing his policies in public.He ran the big coastal city of Dalian and then became commerce minister, before moving to the post in Chongqing, a sprawling city(山城)in western China.。

bbc一分钟英语短新闻加中文翻译

bbc一分钟英语短新闻加中文翻译

bbc一分钟英语短新闻加中文翻译BBC news with David HarperDavid Harper为您播报BBC新闻South Africa has announced a tenfold increase in the number of troops to be deployed in response to widespread violence sparked by the jailing of the former President Jacob Zuma.南非宣布将部署的军队数量增加十倍,这是对前总统雅各布·祖玛被监禁引发的广泛暴力的回应。

隐贺笑Up to 25000 soldiers are to be sent on the streets of KwaZulu-Nataland Gauteng provinces.多达25000名士兵将被派往夸祖鲁-纳塔兰省豪登省的街道。

The leader of South Africa Zulu said 6 days of looting had brought shame on the entire country.南非领导人祖鲁表示,持续6天的抢劫给整个国家带来了耻辱。

The authorities in Ethiopia's Amhara埃塞俄比亚阿姆哈拉当局region said they will go on the offensive against forces from neighboring Tigray,该地区表示,他们将向邻国蒂格雷的军队发起进攻potentially opening up a new phase in8 months of civil war.可能会开启长达8个月的内战的灶含新阶段。

Troops have been rallied to counter the Tigrayans who are advancing on Amhara-held territory.军队已经集结起来对抗向阿姆哈拉占领地区挺进的蒂格雷人。

BBC英语新闻翻译

BBC英语新闻翻译

BBC News with Iain Purdon Iain Purdon为你播报BBC新闻。

The United State special forces in Afghanistan are being given two weeks to leave the strategically important province of Wardak.美国驻阿富汗特别部队将有两周时间来离开具有战略意义的瓦尔达克省,A spokesman for the Afghan President Hamid Karzai said the decision has been taken after alleged abuses by Afghans working with American special forces. Karen Allen reports.阿富汗总统哈米德·卡尔扎伊之所以采取该决定,是因为与美国特殊部队一道共事的阿富汗人被控有凌辱行为。

凯伦·阿伦报道。

President Karzai's spokesman said US special forces would be expelled from the strategically significant province of Wardak within the next two weeks.总统卡尔扎伊的发言人称将在未来两周内将美国特殊部队从战略重省瓦尔达克赶出。

It comes made allegations that Afghan units which the government says are working and paid for by the US teams are linked to allegations of torture and disappearances.政府称那些与美国部队一道工作并由美方支付薪酬的阿富汗部队涉嫌拷打和失踪事件。

BBC新闻2007a004 飓风迪安和探戈舞 译文

BBC新闻2007a004 飓风迪安和探戈舞 译文

飓风迪安和探戈舞拉塞尔·帕德默:欢迎收看《商务简讯》节目。

我是主持人拉塞尔·帕德默。

飓风迪安正威胁着墨西哥的尤卡坦半岛,但目前为止加勒比沿海的大部分地区并没有遭到严重破坏。

这对于保险行业来说确实是件值得庆幸的事情。

纳斯达克证券市场已经放弃了收购伦敦证券交易所的计划。

同时值得一提的是,让我们来听一下来自阿根廷的报导,这是一个把探戈舞当作重要行业的国家。

接下来10分钟后我们将为您带来这些消息的详细报导和其他新闻。

墨西哥的沿海石油产业正日渐萧条,因为墨西哥Pemex国有石油巨头在飓风到达之前关闭400个石油矿井和天然气井。

墨西哥石油日产量将因此降低80%,但美国政府宣称它们正准备动用战略储备资源来弥补石油供给不足。

飓风迪安正向尤卡坦半岛高速行进,成千上万的度假者不得不放弃旅行,当地人已经对此做好了最坏的打算。

飓风迪安风速达到每小时150英里,给牙买加南部带来了倾盆大雨,但这个岛国并没有遭到大范围的风暴破坏。

对于保险行业来说,加勒比海每年的暴雨季节确实是个令人担忧的时节,然而今年保险公司的损失却十分有限。

大卫·哈罗德是麦理伦国际保险索赔集团的一名主管。

大卫·哈罗德:在加勒比地区,保险公司要做的就是为自己买一份灾难保险。

他们说他们会先支付保险总额的三到五百万,然后再分保到美国,伦敦和其他市场,直到他们觉得自己能够承受为止。

拉塞尔·帕德默:你的意思是,保险公司将风险转移到了其他保险公司?大卫·哈罗德:是的。

他们实行再保险,把他们认为自己无法独自承担的风险转给其他保险公司。

拉塞尔·帕德默:飓风迪安目前正在持续前进,威胁着墨西哥沿海地区。

墨西哥石油公司——墨西哥Pemex国有石油巨头已经关闭了沿海地区的经营活动。

石油产业是否会给保险行业带来损失呢?大卫·哈罗德:很有可能。

沿海的钻井在国际市场上都是有保险的。

飓风迪安的移动路径可能经过并袭击墨西哥的坎佩切海湾,但它的实际路径似乎略微偏北。

BBC新闻广播精选中英对照

BBC新闻广播精选中英对照

BBC新闻广播精选5 中英对照The head of Egypt's ruling military council says the state of emergency that's been in place for most of the past 45 years will be partially lifted from Wednesday. Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi was speaking in an address to mark the first anniversary of the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak. He said the state of emergency would still apply to what he called " thugs " without elaborating. From Cairo, our Middle East correspondent Rupert Wingfield-Hayes reports.The vast majority of Egyptians have lived all their lives under a state of emergency. It was first imposed in 1967 following the Six-day War against Israel and then again in 1981 after President Sadat's assassination . Following President Mubarak's overthrow last year, the military junta at first promised to lift it, but then did the opposite: widening its scope, banning strikes, traffic disruption and even the spreading of false information. Now finally it will be lifted. Just as the Islamists - the law was brought into crush - take control of Egypt's parliament.The International Monetary Fund has given a stark assessment of the prospects for the world's economy. The IMF's chief economist Olivier Blanchard said there was a strong risk that the crisis would spread."The world recovery, which was weak in the first place, is in danger of stalling. The epicentre of the danger is Europe, but the rest of the world is increasingly affected. There's an even greater danger, namely that the European crisis intensifies. In this case, the world could be plunged into another recession."He said government cuts coupled with a squeeze on bank credit had suppressed growth.The Iranian government has condemned European Union sanctions imposed in an attempt to stop Tehran's alleged nuclear weapons programme, calling them "illogical and unfair". A spokesman for Iran's foreign ministry said the measures were doomed to fail. The sanctions include a ban on imports of Iranian oil. The EU is Iran's second largest market. Gavin Hewitt reports.The EU has taken what it regards as both tough and unprecedented action. It has imposed an oil embargo on Iran andfrozen the assets of its central bank. The EU buys 600,000 barrels of Iranian oil each day - that's 20% of Iran's output. Underlining the gravity of the situation, David Cameron, Chancellor Merkel and President Sarkozy issued a joint statement. In it, they said "Our message is quite clear. We have no quarrel with the Iranian people, but we will not accept Iran acquiring a nuclear weapon."埃及执政军事委员会称,过去45年经常实施的紧急状态将自周三起部分解除。

BBC新闻100篇-BBC-News-Item-100【声音翻译同步PPT】

BBC新闻100篇-BBC-News-Item-100【声音翻译同步PPT】
BBC新闻100篇-BBC News Item 100
ቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱ
A new study on climate change says catastrophic 4 degree rise in global temperature is increasingly likely to occur within many people's lifetimes.
这可能意味着某些地区的降雨急剧下降,其他地 区的洪水泛滥,世界上大约一半的动植物物种灭 绝。
一项有关气候变化的新研究表明,在许多人的一生中, 全球气温急剧升高的4度越来越有可能发生。
这些研究是由全球领先的监测气候变化的研究机构之 一,英国的哈德利中心(Hadley Center)编写的。
保罗·哈珀(Paul Harper)报告。
This latest prediction from the Hadley Centre brings the prospect of devastating change much closer. He challenges the assumption that severe warming is a threat only for future generations.
A four degree average temperature rise by the 2050s would bring increases of 10 degrees or more in some areas such as the Arctic and Africa.
哈德利中心(Hadley Center)的最新预测使毁灭性变 化的前景更加接近。 他质疑严重的变暖仅对子孙后代 构成威胁这一假设。

BBC新闻(双语) 2020-7-24更新

BBC新闻(双语) 2020-7-24更新

Why the UK blamed Apple for its failed COVID-19 tracing app英政府为何将疫情追踪应用的开发失败归咎于苹果?2020-07-24He said England would have a contact tracing app by mid-May,他曾说英国将在5月中旬推出接触人群追踪应用,instead in mid-June this happened.然而,6月中旬却发生了这种情况。

Our app won't work because Apple won't change their system.因为苹果不改变他们的系统,所以我们的应用程序无法使用。

So we've agreed to join forces with Google and Apple,我们已与谷歌和苹果达成合作to bring the best bits of both systems together.把这两系统中最好的部分结合起来。

The problem was that Apple wouldn't give government access to their systems问题是苹果不允许政府访问他们的系统,unless they agreed to apples rules on data.除非政府同意苹果对于数据的规定。

My sources tell me there was a real anger in the Department of Health about this. 我得到消息说卫生部对此感到非常愤怒。

But also that after Matt Hancock finished speaking,但在马特·汉考克发言完后,someone from Downing Street called Apple to apologize.政府有关部门给苹果公司打电话致歉。

BBC新闻讲解附字幕

BBC新闻讲解附字幕

BBC新闻讲解附字幕:澳洲遭遇半世纪最严重洪水(2011-01-4)BBC News with Nick KellyA bomb has exploded in a market close to a military barrack s in the Nigerian capital Abuja, killing a number of people. Our correspondent Tomi Oladipo has the latest details.It's in an area which is a market, which has a bar, an open-air bar, where people come to drink. And I've spoken to witnesses who were at the scene, and they say they've seen bodies being carried out. So far, the sources within the ministry are telling me 11 people have been killed in the attack, but I still can't confirm that because the place has been cordon ed off by police and the ambulance services which are there.The man who's refusing to step down as president of Ivory Coast, Laurent Gbagbo, has said the country could face greater violence if he were removed from office. The international communityis demanding that he hand over power to his rival Alassane Ouattara, who's believed to have won the election. Speaking to the Euronews television channel, Mr Gbagbo indicated he might consider resigning if the regional group Ecowas were to intervene militarily to try to remove him."I will see, but it's not on the agenda for the moment. What's on the agenda is to negotiate, so we are negotiating. I ask myself why those who pretend to have beaten me oppose a recount of votes.That's what I want to know. I ask those people to support a recount."The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay says she has warned senior Ivorian officials including Mr Gbagbo that they could be held criminally accountable for human rights violations in Ivory Coast. The UN has accused security forces loyal to Mr Gbagbo of killing and abducting people associated with the opposition. It says officials have been unable toinvestigate allegations of atrocities including at least two mass graves.In Australia, thousands more people are getting ready to evacuate their homes in the northeastern state of Queensland, where some of the worst flooding in half a century has affected more than a million square metres of territory. In the town of Rockhampton, the Mayor Brad Carter described what the emergency services were facing."We are going to have a very tough situation whereby we may have to use only indisaster,processes of forced evacuations, and this is a very difficult issue. As you can appreciate, you can have, for example, some very elderly people that are very reluctant to leave their home, and for their own safety and goodwill, we will have to look at ways and means of relocating them, and we hope that that these are isolated and extreme cases."Rescue workers in southern Egypt say they've recovered the bodies of 11 children who were on board a bus swept away by floods on Wednesday. The bus was carrying 75 children and teachers returning home after dark from a school outing when it was dragged into a sand-filled trench by the water. More than 60 managed to escape with minor injuries, but an ambulance driver who'd helped rescue some of the girls was killed. World News from the BBCOn his last full day in office, the Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has decided not to extradite a former left-wing militant to Italy. Cesare Battisti escaped from an Italian jail nearly 30 years ago while awaiting trial and eventually fled to Brazil. In his absence, he was convicted of four murders. Italy has recalled its ambassador to Brazil in protest at President Lula's decision. The former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko has appeared for further questioning by prosecutors investigating allegations of abuse of power. In a BBC interview, she again accusedPresident Viktor Yanukovych of being behind the charges so as to destroy political opponents. The army in Bolivia has begun selling bread in response to a strike by bakers angry at the government's decision to scrap fuel subsidies. Loaves baked in military ovens are being sold by troops from 12 locations in the city of La Paz and El Alto. The Bolivian government says the aim is to prevent shortages and counter a threat by bakers to raise bread prices. Mass protests against the fuel price hike, suspended for the New Year's weekend, are expected to resume on Monday. And the 19th century Wild West outlaw Billy the Kid has been denied a pardon 130 years after his death. The possibility was first suggested when historical documents appeared to show that Billy the Kid had been promised a pardon in return for testifying in a murder case. Ann Busby reports. Billy the Kid, whose real name was William Bonney, was only 21 when he was shot dead, but his brief life inspired dozens of books and films. It's not clear how many people he killed; some say more than 20. But his undoubted skill with a gun and his personal charm made him more of a folk hero than a notorious criminal. Supporters campaigned for a pardon, but the Governor of New Mexico Bill Richardson has refused one after extensive research. "The romanticism appealed tome," he said, "but the evidence didn't support the idea." BBC News第二部分:参考翻译尼日利亚首都阿布贾一座军营附近的市场内一枚炸弹爆炸,造成多人死亡。

bbc原文带翻译

bbc原文带翻译

bbc原文带翻译BBC News: Australia's bushfires: A visual guide to the deadly crisis。

澳大利亚森林大火,致命危机的视觉指南。

Australia is currently experiencing one of its worst bushfire seasons in history, with fires burning across the country since September 2019. The fires have claimed the lives of at least 25 people, destroyed over 2,000 homes, and killed an estimated one billion animals.自2019年9月以来,澳大利亚全国都在遭受着史上最严重的森林大火季节之一。

这些大火已经夺去了至少25人的生命,摧毁了超过2000座房屋,并造成了约10亿只动物的死亡。

The causes of the fires are complex, but are largely attributed to a combination of drought, high temperatures, and strong winds. Climate change has also been identified as a contributing factor, with Australia experiencing itshottest and driest year on record in 2019.这些大火的原因复杂,但主要归因于干旱、高温和强风的组合。

气候变化也被认为是一个促成因素,因为澳大利亚在2019年经历了有记录以来最热和最干燥的一年。

The fires have had a devastating impact on Australia's wildlife, with many species facing extinction as a resultof habitat loss and the destruction of their food sources. The koala population has been particularly hard hit, withan estimated 30% of their habitat destroyed in the fires.这些大火对澳大利亚的野生动物产生了毁灭性的影响,许多物种因失去栖息地和食物来源而面临灭绝。

bbc新闻翻译原文

bbc新闻翻译原文

bbc新闻翻译原文(2010-12-04) BBC新闻讲解附字幕:金融市场仍然担忧欧洲债务问题BBC News with David LeggeA report by the Pentagon has concluded that the ban on openly gay people serving in the American armed forces could be lifted without harming military readiness. The US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said that most soldiers surveyed supported this view. From Washington, Paul Adams.Robert Gates said that a strong majority of service personnel favoured repealing the law. If implemented carefully, he said, the consequences should be minimal. The key to success would be training, education and strong leadership. Mr Gates urged Congress to repeal the 1993 law by the end of the year. The defence secretary did acknowledge that in certain all-male combat units, notably among special forces and the Marine Corps, there are serious reservations about repeal, but he said there was a real danger that the courts, which have already attempted to intervene, would try again to overturn the law. This, he said, would be the most hazardous way to do it.In the latest batch of documents released by Wikileaks, the US, Britain and Russia have all expressed strong concern that Islamist militants could steal enough nuclear material from Pakistan's facilities to build a crude nuclear device. Our security correspondent Frank Gardner has more details.A US diplomatic cable said last year the UK has deep concerns about the safety and security of Pakistan's nuclear weapons. That followed a meeting between US diplomats and Mariot Leslie, then the director of Defence and Strategic Threatsat the Foreign Office. Another US cable sent back to Washington last year by the US ambassador in Islamabad confided "our major concern is not having an Islamic militant steal an entire weapon but rather the chance someone working in government of Pakistan facilities could gradually smuggle enough material out to eventually make a weapon."Leaked American diplomatic messages indicate that Britain promised to protect US interests during an inquiry set up last year to investigate the causes of the war in Iraq.A document released on the Wikileaks website says the assurances were given during a meeting between British defence officials and a visiting American delegation. The British said that measures had been put in place to protect US interests.There are continued signs of concern in the financial markets over European debt, despite the bailout package agreed for Ireland last week. There are worries that Spain and Portugal may need outside help to repay their debts. Here is Andrew Walker.It's very clear that the financial rescue agreed on Sunday for Ireland has not resolved the worries in the markets about government debt in the euro area. Portugal and then Spain are seen as the next countries that might struggle to repay their debts and needfinancial help. The further fall in the euro reflects that concern, and so did the fact that the interest rates on their debts have risen again. The rates for Italy and Belgium are substantially lower, but they've also risen as their finances begin to receive more attention in the markets.World News from the BBCThe electoral commission in Ivory Coast has delayed announcing results from Sunday's presidential election, as eachside in the run-off continues to accuse the other of cheating. A BBC correspondent in the commercial capital Abidjan says the situation is becoming increasingly tense, and there is a heavy security presence on the streets. Supporters of the opposition candidate Alassane Ouattara have accused President Laurent Gbagbo of trying to confiscate power. Mr Gbagbo says he reserves the right to annul results from Mr Ouattara's stronghold in the north of the country due to alleged fraud.The opposition in Egypt has reacted angrily to the outcome of Sunday's parliamentary election. The official results have yet to be announced, and some seats will be decided in a run-off this weekend. But state media said President Mubarak's ruling party had won a landslide victory. The main Egyptian opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood, said the vote was illegal. From Cairo, Jon Leyne.The outrage has come from across the opposition. The Muslim Brotherhood complained that the election was rigged. They said they were still undecided whether or not to boycott the run-off election on Sunday, which would be their only chance of winning any seats. But the protests have been equally strong from the secular opposition parties. The main one, al-Wafd, are widely believed to have a close relationship with the government and were expected to replace the Brotherhood as the main opposition. But after reportedly winning just a handful of seats, the party said that the election witnessed the massacre of democracy and freedom in Egypt.The coach of Real Madrid Jose Mourinho has been banned for two games by the European football authority Uefa for improper conduct. During a Champions League match earlier this month, he appeared to instruct two of his players to getthemselves deliberately sent off. This meant they would serve a ban in the group stage of the competition and wouldn't carry a yellow card into the knock-out rounds.BBC NewsBBC新闻讲解附字幕:国际足联官员被爆收受贿赂(2010-12-03)BBC News with David LeggeThe US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has described the disclosure by the website Wikileaks of hundreds of thousands of classified US diplomatic messages as an attack not just on the United States but on the international community. Mrs Clinton said she regretted the leaks."I will not comment on or confirm what are alleged to be stolen State Department cables, but I can say that the United States deeply regrets the disclosure of any information that was intended to be confidential, including private discussions between counterparts or our diplomats' personal assessments and observations."Mrs Clinton said she was confident that partnerships which the Obama administration had worked hard to build would withstand this challenge. She said the US was taking aggressive steps against those who, in her words, stole the information.Amongst the revelations from the leaked documents so far are reports that Saudi Arabia urged the US to destroy Iran's nuclear facilities and new details of American concern over corruption in Afghanistan. The messages also expose US diplomats' stark assessments of many world leaders. One of the latest revelations is about a member of the British royal family, Prince Andrew. In a dispatch, the US ambassador to Kyrgyzstan reported that the prince had criticised British anti-corruption officials and journalists during a lunch in the capital Bishkek.President Obama has proposed a two-year pay freeze for civilian federal workers as part of efforts to cut spending and reduce the country's massive deficit. Mr Obama said government employees must share in the broad sacrifice as required."And today, I'm proposing a two-year pay freeze for all civilian federal workers. This would save $2bn over the rest of this fiscal year and $28bn in cumulative savings over the next five years. I want to be clear this freeze does not apply to the men and women of our armed forces, who along with their families continue to bear enormous burdens with our nation at war."Correspondents say the savings from the pay freeze amount to a fraction of the overall deficit.Three senior Fifa officials who will vote on the 2018 and 2022 bids for the football World Cup are alleged to have taken bribes in exchange for awarding lucrative marketing contracts. BBC Television's current affairs programme Panorama reveals that Ricardo Teixeira of Brazil, Nicolas Leoz of Paraguay and Cameroon's Issa Hayatou, who all sit on Fifa's executive committee, received payment from a Swiss sports marketing firm in the 1990s. The BBC says Panorama's revelations, just days ahead of the 2018 decision being made, are in the public interest. Fifa declined the programme's requests for an interview.World News from the BBCEgypt's main opposition movement, the Muslim Brotherhood, appears to have lost most of their seats in Sunday's parliamentary election. The group had 88 members in the last parliament, but a spokesman said only a few had progressed to the second round next week. Official results are due on Tuesday, but early indications suggest President Mubarak's ruling party has won a landslide victory. Human rights groups have supportedthe opposition's claims that the vote was marred by irregularities.A court in the United States has sentenced a Somali man to30 years in prison for piracy off the coast of Somalia. Jama Idle Ibrahim was captured earlier this year after taking part in an attack on a US naval flotilla, which the pirates had apparently mistaken for merchant ships.Police in southern Italy have arrested a local odd-job man accused of shooting dead at least five people over several years for failing to pay him on time for work. Duncan Kennedy reports.For more than 10 years, people living in the small village of Cassibile feared a killer in their midst. They named him the Monster of Cassibile. In fact, prosecutors say Giuseppe Raeli was a local odd-job man. Between 1997 and 2009, it's believed he shot at least five people and wounded four others, although police believe he may be responsible for more deaths.Prosecutors say he used a shotgun on his victims, who range from a 29-year-old woman to a man of 74. They say he was ready to murder for unpaid bills as low as $260.A new round of talks on climate change, sponsored by the United Nations, has begun in Cancun in Mexico, the first such negotiations since the Copenhagen climate summit a year ago. Delegates to the 12-day conference hope to make progress on protecting forests and on providing help for poorer nations struggling to cope with the impact of climate change.BBC News。

BBC News 中英对照

BBC News 中英对照

Week 12BBC News with Jonathan Izard. 乔纳森·伊泽德为你播报BBC新闻。

Australia’s Prime Minister Tony Abbott has refused to deny reports that border officials paid people-smugglers to take boats full of asylum-seekers back to Indonesia. 有报道称澳大利亚边境官员向人贩子付款,使其将满载难民的船只返回印尼,对此澳大利亚总理托尼·阿博特拒绝否认。

An Indonesian police chief reportedly said that Austrialian officials paid 30,000 dollars to people-smugglers to abort their journey. John Donnison reports. 据悉印尼一名警察局长称澳大利亚官员向人贩子支付了3万美元,使其放弃其旅程。

约翰·唐尼森报道。

"When asked about the claim, Tony Abbott would neither confirm or deny, but said creative strategies were being used to stop asylum-seekers'boats. “在被问及该传闻时,托尼·阿博特既不承认也不否认,他只是说已经采取创意策略来阻止难民船。

He said Australia has been suceessful at stopping boats by hawk or by crawk, adding that he was proud of the county’s border protection authorities. 他说澳大利亚通过各种手段阻止移民船,且一直很成功,他说他对本国的边境保护当局感到骄傲。

BBC每周新闻翻译

BBC每周新闻翻译

WEEK ONEExclude Hungary from EU, says Luxembourg's Asselborn来自卢森堡的Asselborn发言将让欧盟踢除匈牙利。

13 September 2016Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn has called for Hungary to be suspended or even expelled from the European Union because of its 卢森堡的外交大使Jean Asselborn呼吁,因为匈牙利过分地侵犯欧盟的核心价值观,所以应该将它滞留甚至是踢出欧盟。

WEEK TWO1.Minnesota stabbing: Eight injured, suspect shot dead明尼苏达州发生刺杀事件:八人受伤,疑犯已被击毙。

18 September 2016 BBC NewsAt least eight people have been wounded in a stabbing attack at a shopping mall in the US state of Minnesota, with the suspected attacker being shot dead by police, officials say.据官方报道:在美国明尼苏达州的一个购物商场发生发生的刺杀攻击中,至少有8人受伤,嫌疑犯已被警察击毙。

2.How a small yet mighty bit of paper can still get you a job19 September 2016 BBC News一张张小小的名片是如何给你提供工作机会的While some may say the humble business card is an outdated concept,it’s more than just an exchange of details.按有些人所说的仅仅一张名片是过于简陋的,这是一种过时的观念,因为名片不只是细节信息的交换。

英语学习资料:BBC新闻讲解附字幕:法国首次日增新冠确诊病例超过3万例

英语学习资料:BBC新闻讲解附字幕:法国首次日增新冠确诊病例超过3万例

英语学习资料:BBC新闻讲解附字幕:法国首次日增新冠确诊病例超过3万例您的浏览器不支持 video 标签.请下载该文件后播放: audio/mp3BBC news with David Harper.Leading Republican Senators in the US say they intend to grill a Chief Executive of Twitter Jack Dorsey after he blocked a news report criticial of the Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden. Mr. Dorsey said he expected that the decision should be better explained.Joe Biden's presidential campaign says he has made several plane journeys with the person who has since tested positive for coronavirus. He was not in close contact, and there is no need for him to quarantine. But his running mate Kamala Harris is halting campaigning after two people on one of her flights tested positive for Covid-19.The World Health Organization has reported to found that the drug Remdesivir makes no substanial difference to the health of the patient suffering form Covid-19. It was one of the drugs used recently to treat President Trump.France has seen a steep rise in coronvavirus infections, registering more than 30,000 cases a day for the first time. The country is bringing in tougher restrictions, including a curfew in nine cities. The Catalonian region of Spain, Ireland and Poland all introduced new restrictions shortly as the number of infections in Europe continues to rise.Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has sacked a close ally in the senate. He was reportedly caught with money hidden in his underpants. Local media said the police had been investigatinginvolvement of the senator Chico Rodrigues in the misuse of pandemic response funds.European Union leaders have experessed concern over the lack of progress in negotiations with Britain on the post-Brexit trade deal and future partnership agreement. Britain's chief negotiator said expecting all movements to e from Britain was an unusual way to approach negotiations.At least 21 people, most of them security personnel, have been killed in two separate militant attacks in Pakistan's Baluchistan and Khyber-Pakhtunkwha provinces. An alliance of separatist rebels said they carried out the attack.重点解析1.France has seen a steep rise in coronvavirus infections, registering more than 30,000 cases a day for the first time.for the first time 第一次Streams had run dry for the first time in memory.记忆中,小溪第一次干涸了2.European Union leaders have experessed concern over the lack of progress in negotiations with Britain on the post-Brexit trade deal and future partnership agreement.concern over 对……关心,忧虑The move follows growing public concern over the spread of the disease针对公众对该疾病的不断蔓延日益担忧,从而出台了这一举措。

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BBC News with Jonathan Izard.The United States says the Congolese war crime suspect Bosco Ntaganda has handed himself in at the US embassy in Rwanda and asked to be transferred to the International Criminal Court, the ICC, in The Hague. Our East Africa correspondent Gabriel Gatehouse reports.Bosco Ntaganda walked into the US embassy in Kigali on Monday morning unsolicited according to an official statement from Washington. Neither the United States nor Rwanda is a signatory to the ICC, but a spokeswoman for the state department said the US supported the work of the court and would aim to facilitate his transferal to The Hague. The charges against Gen Ntaganda, who’s nicknamed The Terminator, include rape, murder and the recruitment of child soldiers. They relate not to the current rebellion in the eastern Congo, but to an earlier conflict in the same region.A legal case has begun in New York that challenges the way the city’s po lice conduct a policy of detaining and sometimes searching those they consider suspicious. Critics say the operations known as “stop and frisk” disproportionately target black and Hispanic men. But the policy’s supporters say it’s contributed to a sharp drop in violent crime. Here’s our North America correspondent Jonny Dymond.More than half a million people were stopped on the streets of New York City last year by police. The policy is legal. But now opponents want the way that it’s put into action exam ined and reformed. More than half of those stopped are black, only a quarter of the city’s residents are. A lawyer for the organisation that started the case, the Center for Constitutional Rights, described the stops as a frightening and degrading experience that were arbitrary, unnecessary and unconstitutional.The jailed Kurdish separatist leader Abdullah Ocalan says he’s to make a historic statement on Thursday, raising hopes that he might call a ceasefire after decades of conflict with the Turkish government. James Reynolds sent this report from Istanbul.A delegation of Kurdish MPs was allowed to go and see Abdullah Ocalan in prison. The politicians took back with them to Istanbul a statement from the PKK’s leader. Abdullah Ocalan said that he would make a call, or announcement, during traditional Kurdish New Year celebrations on Thursday. This call will feature satisfactory information on the political and military aspects of the solution, he wrote. Most here take this to mean that Mr Ocalan will call a ceasefire and may also announce the withdrawal of armed PKK fighters from Turkey to their main base across the border in northern Iraq.Finance ministers from the eurozone have asked Cyprus to protect small investors from a proposed levy on savings. Plans for a one-off tax of nearly seven per cent on savings up to 100,000 euros have outraged Cypriots. Banks in Cyprus are to remain closed until Thursday as efforts to revise an international bailout package continue. A parliamentary vote on the package has been repeatedly postponed. It’s now expected on Tuesday.World News from the BBC.The British Prime Minister David Cameron has presented the plan to regulate the press in the wake of a series of scandals over phone hacking by journalists. Mr Cameron told parliament that the plan agreed overnight by Britain’s main political parties would set up a watchdog that could impose heavy fines on newspapers and force them to publish corrections. The leader of the opposition Labour party Ed Miliband said the agreement satisfied the demands of protection for victims and freedom of the press."I don’t want to live in a country where sections of the press can abuse their power to wreak havoc on the lives of innocent people. And equally I want to live in a country that upholds the right of a fearless, angry, controversial press that holds the powerful to account, including in this House. Today’s agreement protects the victims and upholds a free press.”The Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has made a direct appeal to Pope Francis to intervene on the dispute between her country and Britain over the Falkland Islands. At an audience with the Pope at the Vatican, the Argentine leader said she wanted him to get involved. She accused Britain of militarising the islands. It’s not known how the Pope, who is from Argentina, responded to the appeal. Argentina claims sovereignty over the islands.The Supreme Court in Colombia has revoked a presidential decree which allowed abortions in cases of rape, malformation or risk to the mother’s health. The judge said the decree issued in 2006 was illegal because it meddled in areas for which no law had ever been passed. But a separate constitutional court ruling holds that clinics cannot refuse abortions in such cases.The Bangladesh Cricket Board has banned an international umpire Nadir Shah from the sport for 10 years after finding him guilty of corruption. The board launched an inquiry after a report by an Indian television station alleged that Mr Shah and others were willing to help fix matches in return for bribes. Nadir Shah denies the charges and says he will appeal.BBC News.Jonathan Izard为您报道BBC新闻。

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