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    一、急求英文采访稿一篇

    Michael: I 'm happy to play with all the players, because they had a great team……. not one, two, three…..(大家注意!这句话是熊的金字招牌~~前后超猛重复~太可爱拉!~) …..good players ,all, all,er (真的无语了~)….all big players ,er, and, I didn't first…. strange secession (这词用的真地道~就是没听懂前后联系,555都是我的错~~估计是想说 go through the secession) …it's er, er,…. temper(ature) 's high, yeah, very fast(搞什么啊到底???)…and good quality,. .high quality …I think it's not one special player….i might be (do?too?。。..我被彻底搞甍了%&^%*^() play with all these players and ,er….yes…they're very ,very …good teams primarily(猛赞!!!!) not one, two…..(金,子,招,牌,显,灵……….) Liverpool, Arsenal, Tottenham(克帅的老东家呀~~)…yes,..all…only…few., short part of ,of….but I'm happy ,happy to play in this big league (棒棒~~)and yeah…

    接下来~~55555真是惭愧啊!!居然听不下来~~到底是英国人~~偶荒废了N年的英音啊啊啊啊…….不过最后关键的一句被我听到了~~估计熊和偶一样~~暗爽一下~

    Reporter:%#&%$^%@%$#%)_*_。。。.singing the song…..something has to say?

    Michael: (重重的一记傻笑!) hehehehe ….. it was a German song , and.. I don't know the title(这德国调重的~~) but… nobody understand it what's good for me (又笑!!傻巴~)..

    (Chelsea field for photo opportunity….. )

    Reporter: ……….^*)^*&%*^$(&_)(+_)(_)*(&^$%#$%@。。.. (又哭….大概就是问对冠军联赛有什么期待~~)

    Michael: first… we look for the season …because that's important….because Italian….during the season.. very famous….i think the national title and(看来熊是一生也忘不了那场伤心赛了55555陪着我的熊熊`) ….ja…after this, we're looking for the champions league(熊做梦都在念叨的词儿),…..we had a great team ,also with six, seven, eight(我数我数数数…..)…..other teams in Europe they can win the champions league.(老这么捧人家~~~)..and .yeah…it's(&^*&_(*+)_()_)((*……(翻译终于终于终于忍不住了…熊也忍不住了.) great challenge for me and ,er…our team to win this……

    二、急

    央视英文栏目主持人、诗人林东威个人简介(英文)1. People often recognize you as an experienced English news reader on TV, do you think your TV image has formed part of your social identity? Yes, of course. Everyone has his social identity, whether he is literally "within" or "without" the society. Even a hermit who lives in seclusion or a bank robber has his social identity.--"Non-social" or "anti-social" is his social identity. There's just no way for us to escape. There are some people whose social identities seem to be more "social" than others because they represent public images, and I am supposed to be one of those. For many people, my social identity is the guy who reads something on TV in a language alien to theirs, and they know me by face, but don't know what I'm saying. I'm just joking. But "identity" is indeed an interesting word, it refers to something that identifies with your true self, something that makes you what you are. In this way, it seems, one should only have one identity, the one and only. But that's apparently not the case with us. We often find several, if not many, identities linked to us that depend upon different situations: when you are with a lot of people, when you are with relatively fewer people, when you are with "that specific person", or, when you are alone, with yourself. So which one is supposed to be true? Or perhaps they are all true? And this means we all live in schizophrenia---or schizo-personalities---in some sense. 2. To what extent has this professional role set your course of life? To a great extent. It may be accidental what you choose to be your profession at first, but once you make the choice, you have blocked the way to other choices, and everything is set to go along the track you take. There might be points in my life---and in anyone else's life---when chances were equal for me to become a TV anchorman, a hermit, or a gang member. I don't mean I've ever considered being a gang member. What I'm trying to say is that a person has all the potential, or hidden energy (benign or malignant), to realize himself, but he has to choose only one way at a time, this or that, and he will live the kind of life that best suits his choice. No viewer's life would be affected if I was not doing this job, but my course of life would certainly not be the same. 3. The TV business has made what you are, and you have also made the TV program what it is. How do you make TV your means of personal fulfillment? TV really gives me a sense of fulfillment, but it's not personal enough. If we're talking about fulfillment as accomplishment or consequences, as a kind of effort to change something, then TV-making is perhaps on the top of the list. No other business has ever had such a great influence on people's way of living and thinking than television. As a TV worker, I'm certainly glad to see that my work is producing such tangible results. But, wait, it's not my work, it's our work. TV production is highly social, it involves collective labor rather than personal creativity. That's why I say it's not personal enough. But there's still some personal side in it: sometimes when I'm on the street or in a restaurant, I would hear people say: "Hey, look! That's the guy who speaks English on TV." At that moment, my little vanity gets satisfied. That's human weakness, and it's fairly personal. 4. If you prefer some other media of expression, what are they? And why? It may be one of those more conventional and private means of expression, like writing. When you write, you don't have to think of anything other than what you want to express. You can be wholly faithful to yourself without offending others, and that's an absolute sense of freedom. You can say writing is the kind of game that allows much space for individual wisdom and creativity, though not so gorgeous and dazzling as the game of television. 5. It seems that you are widely read, what is the book that has influenced your life most and how? It's really hard to name a specific book that has such a magic power. Truly, reading is like magic to me, but no single bible in this world can do that. It's like preparing a magic potion: you need to mix up all kinds of herbs and minerals and maybe animal bloods to get a powerful liquid that changes life. So, before I'm given the power to know, to love and to think wisely, I still got a lot more to mix and drink. 6. Looking back, how will you describe your trajectory of thinking influenced by the Chinese and Anglo Cultures? My pre-college reading was largely based on traditional Chinese literature, combined with limited access to Western classics as Greek mythology and Shakespeare and some other 。

    三、急求成功人士访谈录稿 英文的

    Perez, 39, is now creative director of the privately held Zumba Fitness. His success is all the more impressive given the obstacles he's overcome. Raised in Cali, Colombia, by a single mother, Alberto “Beto” Perez was just 14 when his mom was injured by a stray bullet. To help support them, he worked three jobs.佩雷斯39岁,如今是私立尊巴舞健身中心的创意指导。

    他克服了众多障碍而取得的成就特别令人印象深刻。他是单亲妈妈在哥伦比亚带大的,14岁时,妈妈中了流弹受了伤。

    佩雷斯干三份活养家。但他一直想把自己热心专注的舞蹈改变成一样与众不同的东西。

    然而,他没钱上课,缺乏正规训练,但他用天生的未经锤炼的才能取而代之。19岁时,他在全国兰巴达贴身舞比赛中获胜。

    加力城的最优秀的学院给他电话,请他边教健身操边学舞蹈。All the while, he dreamed of turning his passion—dance—into something more, but he couldn't afford lessons. (Perez says he saw the movie Grease when he was seven or eight, “and I knew I wanted to dance.”) What he lacked in formal training, though, he made up for in raw talent. At 19, he won a national lambada contest. One of Cali's best academies called with an offer to study dance while teaching step aerobics.One day, Perez forgot the music for his class. He had one cassette with him—Latin music he'd taped from the radio. “I improvised,” he says, “and that was the beginning of Zumba.”有一天,佩雷斯忘了带课堂音乐,他身边只有一盘录音带,上面是他从收音机里录的音乐。

    “我就即兴起舞,”他说,“尊巴舞出现了“。once the popular instructor got his break in Miami, would-be investors started approaching him about opening a gym. One of Perez's students asked him to meet her son, Alberto Perlman. At 24, Perlman was doing market analysis on startups for an Internet incubator with his childhood friend Alberto Aghion (an operations guy) and watching his career options disappear with the dot-com crash. Perlman (now CEO of Zumba) hit it off with Perez immediately and recruited Aghion as COO and president.这位流行舞蹈教练在迈阿密刚出头,未来的投资人就找上门来开健身房了。

    一个学生要佩雷斯见见儿子埃尔伯德.博尔曼。当时,博尔曼24岁,在做有关互联网新企业的分析。

    他和佩雷斯一拍即合。,With no money or experience, the partners needed to showcase Perez's talents. They spent a night laying down plywood boards on Sunny Isles Beach, then invited Perez's students to take a $20 class that they would film and show to potential investors. But after September 11, 2001, all leads dried up. Eventually, they made an infomercial, which sold about a million DVDs in six months.没有钱也没有经验,合伙人只有展现佩雷斯的才能。

    他们花了一个晚上在太阳岛海滩搭了木台,然后请来佩雷斯的学生出20美金上课,他们把课堂拍成片子给有兴趣的投资人看。但是,2001年9.11 以后,所有资源都干竭了。

    最后他们拍了商业广告片,在六个月中,卖了大约一百万张碟片。What happened next caught them by surprise: People started saying, “I want to be an instructor, like Beto.” Since the first workshop, in 2003, the partners, based in Hollywood, Florida, have created a global community of instructors. For $30 a month, they can join the Zumba Instructor Network, post their class schedules, and access new music and choreography (zumba.com).随后发生的事情让他们大吃一惊:大家都开始说:“我要做教练,像佩雷斯那样。”

    2003年,合伙人以佛州好莱坞市为基地,开设了第一个训练班,此后在全球建立了教练群。每个月付30美金,这些人就可以加入尊巴舞教练网,刊登课程表,得到新音乐和舞蹈方法。

    When asked about revenue, Perlman is tight-lipped: “We don't disclose figures, but it's in the many millions.” The partners say they've barely tapped the possibilities for the business. “We're releasing a Nintendo Wii game in 2010 and adding to our Zumbawear line,” says Perez. “Expect to see our first sneakers soon!”问到营业额,博尔曼守口如瓶:“我们不泄漏具体数字,但有数百万吧。”合伙人说他们刚找到些生意机会:“2010年,我们要发行一个任天堂Wii游戏,还要在尊巴舞服装系列中加产品,”佩雷斯说,“不久你就可以看到我们第一批运动鞋!”。

    四、采访名人的英语对话范文

    If you're a Cubs fan like myself than you (hopefully) accepted the fact that all the Tommy John surgeries in the world (not a reference to how many he could have, but actually did have) would not bring Kerry Wood's arm back to what we all hoped it would be. I don't even say "what it was" because it wasn't healthy long enough for us to see what it was. We collectively had this belief until about 2005 that just one more trip into the operating room would bring back the pitcher we saw in 1998 striking out 20 Astros. But now we've largely given that up. It's just easier and, frankly, more realistic. But the corporate advertising world still seems to be stuck in the "It'll all work out" phase familiar to Cubs fans, survivors huddled in the basement after nuclear wars and people who think J.J. Abrams has a plan for "Lost." Advertisers still see a situation wherein a company or retailer faces the challenge of gaining market share or stemming sales declines and think that celebrities are the answer. Macy's picked Donald Trump and Martha Stewart, meaning they can cash in both their "place" and "show" tickets "The Apprentice" window. Ben McConnell dissects this effort nicely. HP has tapped rocker Gwen Stefani for a new campaign, since she had that big hit "Color Cartridge #22" and so is known as a printing industry guru. And don't get me started on The Gap, which launches celebrity-driven campaigns with the same regularity Sisyphus pushes the boulder of the hill, and with about the same effect. Wouldn't it be better for companies to spend a fraction of what they are on lining up celebrities - celebrities that will endorse their competitors at the drop of a larger check - on seeing how they can build up their existing customers and empower them to spread their own word-of-mouth? They could create online communities where people talk about the brand, share their own stories and meet other like-minded people. And all this could probably done for a fraction of what Trump asked to utter a couple lines and pose for a handful of pictures. People want to connect with each other - it's a natural human instinct. The myth of the celebrity has been almost shattered by tabloids - both print and online - and that has taken much of their endorsement credibility with it.。

    五、英语采访对话范文

    Steven: Speaking of the subject of today, what changes have you seen happening in digital learning in China?Dr. Seymour Papert: I think there are some very very good experimental projects, for example, I mentioned that Pro.He from BNU--Beijing Normal University. They are doing some very interesting experimental project where they have, in some schools, I think, there're about 50 schools where they have a lot of computers and they are really letting the students spend a lot of time with their computers. So I was impressed with that. I didn't expect to see such…Steven: dramatic changes? Dr. Seymour Papert: They're relatively large-scaled, 50 schools, (although) it is not 50,000 schools. It is not just one classroom, that's study it is quite a substantial size. That is just one example. My impression is that they are all quite a few people doing very interesting research projects, in order to do with digital education.Steven: Are you encouraging students to spend more time online by using computers, I mean, surfing.Dr. Seymour Papert: They don't need to be encouraged. They're all doing that.Steven: Yeah, they are doing that on their own, but the problem is that some of parents have the concern. If children spend much more time surfing online, they might lose their literacy, they cannot write. That might be the problem.Dr. Seymour Papert: Well, first of all, that is not necessarily true. You can't generalize. It is true that you could waste your time surfing. But you could also do serious work surfing. So it depends on what they are doing. Steven: And the age of the students. Dr. Seymour Papert: I don't think it depends on the ages. Like the experiment I mentioned that Pro. He is doing, that these are first and second grade students. They are just learning to write, why are they learning to write? Because they find interesting things to read on net. By surfing, of course they learn to read and as they learn to read, they also learn to write. That's an example. Surfing helps them encourage writing. They write better, they learn more than the other students. It's true that you can see the opposite also. Steven: Yeah. Because I used to practice Chinese calligraphy, but now I can hardly pick it up because I use too much computer. Dr. Seymour Papert: Well, but if you became really interested in playing the piano you would spend time playing. That's the same thing. You think it is because of the computer or because you are already interested in something else.Steven: And because there is too much fun online. Dr. Seymour Papert: Well you find fun on the line, but if you were a musician, you would find fun with musical instruments, so or if you were a poet, you would find fun writing a poet. I don't know if the computer is more fun. It's more fun for the people who like that. But for the people like other things, that's (not like that).Steven: Let's say computer is just tool by which we can, we can do our homework, download music and things like that.Dr. Seymour Papert: Well, of course you can just use it as a tool, but some people are interested in how it works, and want to change it, and it's not doesn't have to be just a tool. Steven: So what do you use the computers for in your class?Dr. Seymour Papert: In my class? Well, that's an interesting question. Of course, everybody uses the computer, if you would find some articles about somebody. Some of my classes are about using the computer. So they will do other things, maybe create some new things, software, or some use of computers. Because that's what way they are studying. Steven: So the students use the computer after class, right?Dr. Seymour Papert: You mean while the class's going on? Or maybe for taking notes. Yes.。

    六、一份采访稿(英语的

    可以假装扮林书豪: Q:How long have you been in NBA? A: From 2010: 5 years 2. Q:Do you speak Chinese? A: Yes. I do speak Chinese. 3. Q: Do you like Taiwan? A: Yes. My parents are originally from Taiwan. They moved to America. 这样的话我估计大家就能猜到是林书豪了,然后你可以再编点别的问题,希望能帮到你,谢谢! 。

    七、谁能帮我用英语翻译一下这篇采访稿

    希望能帮到你哦Christmas in the deepest impression on how the flies? (Time? Place? And Who?2, planned for this year how it? (Time? Place? Who?)Time: Christmas EveLocation: not to good, Shenzhen, there are many Western restaurants will be held in the day a lot of thematic activities, you can go to look at.Who: with friends, colleagues had opened PARTY, right, and I will give my colleagues to send a gift. In addition, they have to shoot a group of Christmas filled with photographs.3, the most thought about what kind of Christmas? (The ideal Christmas be like? Time? Place? Who?)Time: Christmas EveLocation: Western (preferably the home of Santa Claus Finland)Since it is ideal, of course, it can freely say. I would like to look at the home of Santa Claus in Rovaniemi, Finland, the West feel real festive feel. Imagine this: buy a Christmas tree hung with the family gifts, roast turkey, outside, snow, but the room was nice and warm in the oven, which is how harmonious feeling ah. While the West similar to Christmas and Chinese New Year, but after all the customs and habits, including eating a lot of aspects are not the same, so wanted to feel a real sense of the Western Christmas.4, I feel the biggest Christmas What is the meaning?I think the biggest significance of the feelings of a happy festive atmosphere. In particular, Christmas and Chinese New Year's Day only Ge Jitian time, so this can also be counted as a New Year's Day before preheating it, or should we say a continuation of Christmas Day. In short, is to find a reason to look happy, crazy look on the right.5, if Christmas can only do one thing would you do? Gathering with friends. Do just one thing must be very boring, but it is also counted as an open-PARTY things. However, this matter would have to do a lot of rich content, such as: eating, drinking, playing music.6, if there are provisions of Christmas can only eat a food, your choice? Why? To eat turkey. After all, this is a Christmas tradition of the West, ah, like the Chinese New Year, when the North must be the same as eating dumplings. But to be honest, as a Chinese, I was a bit unaffordable western turkey taste. By the way, only said that to eat, did not say are not allowed to drink. Then I must be accompanied by red wine.。

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