单词:public-radio
单词:public-radio 相关文章
Radio New Zealand 新西兰国际电台 News and features from New Zealand State public broadcaster.
SCOTT SIMON, HOST: We check in each month with music maestros in public radio. Here is a sample of what they're currently playing in heavy rotation. BILL DEVILLE: I'm Bill DeVille, one of the deejays at The Current in St. Paul, Minn. And my pick is a
12Buying a Digital Audio (MP3) Player GLOSSARY MP3 player a device that plays digital music in MP3 files* This is a very popular MP3 player, but there are many other players that areless expensive. selection the variety of things to choose from at a
Lesson 11 PART A 1. M: Id like to see the blue jacket in the window. W: What size do you want? Q: Who might be the woman? 2. W: Id like some cookies and a birthday cake. M: Do you want the cake decorated? Q: Where does this conversation take place? 3
EDUCATION REPORT - The Many Sounds of College Radio By Jill Moss / Broadcast: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 16:00:00 UTC This is the VOA Special English Education Report. The band Coheed and Cambria performing at the WBRU studio No two college radio stations sou
秀恩爱,死得快(PDA: Public Display of Affection)你见过哪些秀恩爱的招式呢?吃到过什么味道的猝不及防的狗粮呢?什么程度的PDA令人觉得过分了?在更加开放的美国,秀恩爱的方式和对秀恩爱的
Unit 8 The Media After-Class Reading PASSAGE I What Makes TV Most Entertaining? In America, over 98 percent of all households have a radio, and most automobiles are equipped with one. The average Amer
Billy is humming loudly Jennifer: Shut up...Billy...BILLY! Billy: [Takes off his earphones] What! Jennifer: Wow! What's that? Billy: It's my new radio earphone. Jennifer: It's so small that I didn't notice it. Billy: What were you screaming at me for
05Listening to the Radio GLOSSARY simulcast a live (not recorded) broadcast of an event or performance;something that is shown in two places or in two ways at the same time, such as on the television and the radio* I was watching the basketball game
Todd: OK, Kerri, I'm going to ask you about the news. Do you follow the news everyday? Kerri: Sometimes. Todd: How do you follow the news? Kerri: Well, in Japan mostly the radio or the internet. Todd: Oh, really. OK. What radio station? Kerri: NPR, b
By Dan Robinson Capitol Hill 19 April 2007 U.S. lawmakers are urging the Bush administration to reconsider proposed budgetary reductions that would end most radio broadcasting in the English language by government-funded Voice of America. VOA's Dan R
African Media Tries to Educate Public About Ebola 非洲媒体尝试教育公众埃博拉病毒知识 While the Ebola epidemic continues to claim lives in West Africa, information technology specialists, together with radio and TV reporters, are batt
Todd: OK, Kerri, I'm going to ask you about the news. Do you follow the news everyday? 好,克里,我来问你些关于新闻的事。你每天都听新闻吗? Kerri: Sometimes. 有时听。 Todd: How do you follow the news? 你都用什么听新
SCOTT SIMON, HOST: Time for our monthly check in with music masters who are not BJ Leiderman - who writes our theme music - public radio DJs with what they play in Heavy Rotation. NICK BRUNNER, BYLINE: My name is Nick Brunner. I am the host of Hey Li
MELISSA BLOCK, HOST: Time to take the temperature of music on public radio stations across the country this month. Well, it's hot. Here's what the music mavens have put into Heavy Rotation. JESSE MENENDEZ, BYLINE: My name is Jesse Menendez. I'm a hos
By Mike O'Sullivan Los Angeles 05 July 2007 In this information age, governments are reaching out to people in other parts of the world in an emerging field called public diplomacy. Mike O'Sullivan reports, mid-career officials from government and in
Todd: OK, Kerri, I'm going to ask you about the news. Do you follow the news everyday? Kerri: Sometimes. Todd: How do you follow the news? Kerri: Well, in Japan mostly the radio or the internet. Todd: Oh, really. OK. What radio station? Kerri: NPR, b
Speaking easySpeaking in public is most people s least favorite thing. the reason is that we re all afraid of making fools of ourselves. The more important the speech, the more frightened we become. But stop biting your finger-nails. Public speaking
Todd: OK, Kerri, I'm going to ask you about the news. Do you follow the news every day? Kerri: Sometimes. Todd: How do you follow the news? Kerri: Well, in Japan mostly the radio or the internet. Todd: Oh, really. OK. What radio station? Kerri: NPR,