开启辅助访问 购买速递币 快速注册 找回密码 切换风格

科研速递论坛

377

主题

7

好友

0

积分

嘉宾顾问

Rank: 7Rank: 7Rank: 7

科研币
0
速递币
424
娱乐币
6
文献值
0
资源值
0
贡献值
0

应助达人

跳转到指定楼层
楼主
发表于 2013-6-17 14:31:42 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览
... people struggle through wind and rain in London.
The British summer has been such a huge washout in recent years – outstripping its traditional propensity merely to disappoint – that the word "summer" no longer seems an accurate way to describe June, July and August. As the Met Office prepares to host a "roundtable workshop" of meteorologists and climate scientists in an attempt to determine just why summer has become so hopeless, it may now be time to coin a new name for this cold, wet, unobliging season.
"Sprautumn" is a definite possibility, hinting at an interval that seems a mere bridge between two other seasons. We would, of course, need to rename other items normally associated with summer. "Sprautumn pudding" has a certain ring, but what would you put in it? The term "sprautumn fete" would, if nothing else, remind people to bring their wellies.
Another summer replacement candidate is "Indian winter": a surprisingly mild version of winter where it snows only occasionally, on higher ground. And Indian winter pudding sounds rather exotic. Other options include "slog", "cancellation", "wetten", "moulder" and the "British monsoon".
Can you do better? What kind of summer would you call this?
世界很快,你们先请---
您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 快速注册

发布主题 !fastreply! 返回列表 官方QQ群

QQ|Translate Forum into English|QQ群:821993|Archiver|手机版|申请友链| 科研速递论坛

GMT+8, 2024-11-16 04:07 , Processed in 0.054906 second(s), 27 queries .

© 2012-2099 www.expaper.cn

!fastreply! 回顶部 !return_list!