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词汇大师第26期:与计算机有关的那些个词汇

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INTRO: This week our Wordmasters Avi Arditti and Rosanne Skirble get a crash course on the growing links between computer words and everyday speech.

Cd: "Make a Circuit with Me"/Polecats

AA: Computers are everywhere these days — and so is computer lingo. Some words are adapted from everyday speech.

RS: But this language circuit flows both ways. Everyday speech is also beginning to buzz with words from the computer world — for instance, "multitasking."

AA: For an explanation, we turn to our expert on slang, David Burke in Los Angeles.

TAPE: CUT ONE — BURKE

"'Multitasking' simply means for a computer to be able to operate several programs at the same time, which was a real innovation in the computer world. But people are starting to use that more and more in everyday speech. They'll say something like, if you can do the laundry, Make phone calls and take care of business at the same time, you're multitasking."

SFX — computer sounds

RS: But what if your computer is sick.

AA: Rosanne, it feels awfully warm. . .

RS: Oh no — maybe it has a virus!

TAPE: CUT TWO — BURKE

"I can remember when that first came out, I was thinking, how can a computer catch a virus. Well, a virus of course is now some program that is snuck into your computer by the internet. Often times when you go to a web site, automatically information is put into your computer from that web site and this little virus can attack your computer and actually change programs and ruin your computer.

AA: While the word "virus" has gone high-tech, David Burke says some people use computer jargon to describe a system problem of a different nature.

TAPE: CUT THREE — BURKE

"You'e heard the expressions to 'download' and to 'upload'. Well, teen-agers are now using the term upload. For example, they'll say something like, 'I ate so much I feel like I'm going to upload. '

RS: Meaning to throw up! but when a computer uploads, that means it sends a file to another computer. Downloading is the reverse; it means to bring a file into your computer.

AA: Computer language is even influencing what people call the punctuation mark at the end of a sentence. David Burke says people increasingly say "dot" instead of "period." After all, you don't say period-com, you say dot-com in giving the address for a commercial web site.

TAPE: CUT FOUR — BURKE

"Now the term dot is also being used in secretarial schools. Instead of saying period when you read back a paragraph, you'll say dot. I first heard it in the computer world."

RS: As we said, it goes both ways. Take the word "surfing." David Burke traces its evolution, starting with the traditional meaning.

TAPE: CUT FIVE — BURKE/ARDITTI/SKIRBLE

BURKE: "To surf, well of course that's just surfing on a wave. Before computers I would hear the expression 'to channel surf. ' Now you know what that means.

AA: "To graze across the TV channels."

RS: "To take your remote clicker and go across all the channels."

BURKE: "Right, you're channel surfing. Well, now we have 'surfing the web,' which is kind of an interesting visual because you picture a big spider web and someone surfing across it. But surfing the web is incredibly popular, that's a kind of term that really everybody knows, not just a computer geek — ah, another slang term."

AA: 'We should point out, the web being the World Wide Web, the www part of the internet that carries pictures and sound and files."

BURKE: "And the reason they call it the Web is because if one part of the web breaks down, your e-mail can always get through because it's rerouted to another part of the web."

AA: You can use your modem to visit David Burke on the internet, at www.slangman.com. You can find more information about the terms he used today, and also learn about the language books that David writes. Again, the address is slangman.com.

RS: And our address if you'd like to send us e-mail is word@VOA. Gov, or write us at VOA Wordmaster, Washington DC 20547 USA.

AA: With Rosanne Skirble, I'm Avi Arditti.

词汇点津:

今天的词汇大师是洛杉矶的俚语学家David Burke,他向我们介绍了计算机用语和日常词汇的紧密联系。

我们都知道,计算机用语来自生活词汇,比如:

virus (电脑)病毒

surf 冲浪,surf the website 浏览网页

但是,要知道这种影响是双向的。也有不少计算机专有名词不断的向日常用语迁移,比如:

multitasking 多程序同时运行,多重任务同时处理

upload 上传= throw up 呕吐

I ate so much that I feel like I'm going to upload. 我吃的太多了,感觉要吐出来了。

甚至连标点符号(punctuation mark)也受到了计算机用语的影响,如:

人们现在用dot来代替period(句号),这样通俗易懂,更加方便。

重点单词   查看全部解释    
traditional [trə'diʃənəl]

想一想再看

adj. 传统的

 
remote [ri'məut]

想一想再看

adj. 偏僻的,遥远的,远程的,(感情等)距离很大

联想记忆
evolution [.i:və'lu:ʃən]

想一想再看

n. 进化,发展,演变

联想记忆
surf [sə:f]

想一想再看

n. 海浪拍岸,冲浪
vi. 冲浪,浏览

 
jargon ['dʒɑ:gən]

想一想再看

n. 行话
vi. 说行话

联想记忆
virus ['vaiərəs]

想一想再看

n. 病毒,病原体

 
commercial [kə'mə:ʃəl]

想一想再看

adj. 商业的
n. 商业广告

联想记忆
popular ['pɔpjulə]

想一想再看

adj. 流行的,大众的,通俗的,受欢迎的

联想记忆
punctuation [.pʌŋktju'eiʃən]

想一想再看

n. 强调,标点

 
ruin [ruin]

想一想再看

v. 毁灭,毁坏,破产
n. 毁灭,崩溃,废墟

 


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