2016年3月13日 星期日

104-2 Week 3: 牛津字典2015代表字

Oxford’s 2015 Word of the Year Is This Emoji

Oxford Dictionaries made history on Monday by announcing that their “Word of the Year” would not be one of those old-fashioned, string-of-letters-type words at all. The flag their editors are planting to sum up who we were in 2015 is this pictograph, an acknowledgement of just how popular these pictures have become in our (digital) daily lives:
face-with-tears-of-joy (1)
“Although emoji have been a staple of texting teens for some time, emoji culture exploded into the global mainstream over the past year,” the company’s team wrote in a press release. “Emoji have come to embody a core aspect of living in a digital world that is visually driven, emotionally expressive, and obsessively immediate.”
Oxford University Press—which publishes both the august Oxford English Dictionary and the lower-brow, more-modern Oxford Dictionaries Online—partnered with keyboard-app company SwiftKey to determine which emoji was getting the most play this past year. According to their data, the “Face With Tears of Joy” emoji, also known as LOL Emoji or Laughing Emoji, comprised nearly 20% of all emoji use in the U.S. and the U.K., where Oxford is based. The runner-up in the U.S., with 9% of usage, was this number:
face-throwing-a-kiss
Caspar Grathwohl, the president of Oxford Dictionaries, explained that their choice reflects the walls-down world that we live in. “Emoji are becoming an increasingly rich form of communication, one that transcends linguistic borders,” he said in a statement. And their choice for the word of the year, he added, embodies the “playfulness and intimacy” that characterizes emoji-using culture.
Though this marks a historic moment of recognition for the pictures plastered throughout tweets and texts, Oxford has not added or defined any emoji in their actual databases. Nor, says a spokesperson for the publisher, do they have plans to do so at this point. The word emoji, however, has been in both the OED and Oxford Dictionaries Online since 2013.
Japanese telecommunications planner Shigetaka Kurita is credited with inventing these little images in 1999, taking the emoticons that had been gaining steam on the Internet to an iconic level. Inspired by comics and street signs, the name for the alphanumeric images comes from combining the Japanese words for picture (e-) and character (moji). “It’s easy to write them off as just silly little smiley faces or thumbs-up,” sociolinguist Ben Zimmer told TIME for a story on how emoji fit into humans’ long history of using pictures to communicate. “But there’s an awful lot of people who are very interested in treating them seriously.”
Structure of the lead:
WHO- Not given
WHERE- Not given
WHEN- Nov. 16, 2015
WHAT- “Face With Tears of Joy” emoji,
HOW- A historic moment of recognition for little images that have been gaining popularity since 1999
WHY- People use Emoji to express themselves more than before

Vocabulary:
1.          Emoji: 表情符號
2.          String:字串
3.          Staple:主要的
4.          Mainstream:主流
5.          Embody:具體表達
6.          Aspect:外觀
7.          Linguistic:語言的
8.          Intimacy:親暱
9.          Emoticon:情緒
10.        Iconic:圖像的



104-2 Week 2: 深圳廢土場崩塌

Shenzhen landslide disaster: 11 arrests for negligence
Shenzhen prosecutors, late on Thursday, said a dispatcher and supervisor of the landfill, the chief and deputy manager of a company in charge of it, and seven other people were arrested. They said they have been charged with negligently causing a serious accident. The landslide happened when a hill of construction waste collapsed, leaving 74 people either missing or dead. The formal arrests come three days after the police took what Chinese media called "coercive measures" against 12 people. It is thought the 11 arrested today were among those. Officials have described the 20 December disaster as man-made, raising the possibility of severe punishments for those they consider responsible. One official, whose job involved regulating construction sites, apparently jumped to his death a week after the landslide. It is not clear if he was being investigated for his role in it. Officials have appealed for police and the public to help them find other suspects apparently on the run.
Structure of the lead:
WHO- people have been arrested
WHERE- Shenzhen
WHEN- 1 January 2016
WHAT- not given
HOW- landslide disaster
WHY- Eleven people in China have been arrested for their alleged role in the Shenzhen landslide disaster.

Vocabulary:
Negligence: 玩忽職守
Dispatcher: 調度員
Supervisor: 監督者
Landfill:垃圾填埋場
Arrested:逮捕
Collapsed:倒塌
Coercive: 強制
Punishments:懲罰
Regulating:規定
Landslide:山崩



2016年3月10日 星期四

104-2 Week 1: 台中國家歌劇院


National Taichung Theater is located in Xitun District, Taochung. It is a very characteristic performance area. The theater is designed by Japanese architect Toyo Ito. Using the concept of the primitive caves and holes, Toyo Ito designed the world first and only Sound Cave Curved Wall for National Taichung Theater. There are no vertical and horizontal structures and it’s the world’s first curve surfaced hanging structure architect. Due to the complexity, it is known as the most difficult architect to complete. Five years and NT$ 4.36 billion, the theater finally open in November 23rd, 2014. The theater is organized into a large theater, medium theater and experimental stage, which hold up to more than 3000 guests.

During the urban renewal in Taichung, Taichung city government tried get the Guggenheim Museum to join the museum project in Taichung. Unfortunately due to the budget shortage, the project was canceled. After Architecture Design Competition for the later idea to build a national theater, Toyo Ito’s design was selected. But the difficulty of building this monster in reality caused investments backing out over and over. But after conquering the obstacles, they finally broke the ground in the end of 2009.


After 5 years and NT$ 4.36 billion devoted in, the theater finally completed and the process of building the hardest architect was documented by foreign press. The theater was designated as a national degree performance center and was nominated as one of the World’s New 9 Landmarks. The first opening show “Cat Man” is performed by Ming Hwa Yuan Arts & Cultural Group.


The theater structure high 37.7 meters, 2 underground levels and 6 floors above ground. It is built with steel and concrete with the concepts of the primitive state of human livings, caves and holes. The structure consists of 58 curved surfaces, very difficult to construct. It is referred as the hardest building to be constructed. Interior designed with a large theater (2014 guests), medium theater (800 guests), and experimental stage (200 guests). Not just the main building but the surroundings is designed to correspond with Sound Cave Curved Walls.

The acoustic engineering was carefully designed. In the large theater, guests will see the round curve on the ceiling; this will reflect the sounds perfectly in every angle to every seat. A cat walk is organized on the top for maintenance purposes. The view to the stage will not be blocked in anyway. Everything is designed to what a theater may need in the best way. The exterior shapes like a tea pot during the day with the extraordinary curves. When the night falls, lightings will put the theater under the spot light.

https://www.travelking.com.tw/eng/tourguide/scenery105140.html

Structure of the lead:
WHO: not given
WHEN: November 23rd, 2014
WHAT: Complex Structure
WHERE: National Taichung Theater
HOW: Opening and was nominated as one of the World’s New 9 Landmarks.
WHY: Extraordinary and complex


Vocabulary:
1.          primitive : 原始的
2.          vertical : 垂直的
3.          horizontal : 平行的
4.          complexity : 複雜
5.          shortage : 短缺
6.          obstacles : 障礙
7.          nominated : 提名
8.          Landmarks : 地標
9.          exterior : 外觀
10.      extraordinary : 非凡的