Uber drama fails to hurt its business, figures suggest (title)——from BBC
必背詞匯
Sexual harassment, an overthrown chief executive, bitter boardroom in-fighting and?a major lawsuit have not affected Uber's business.
1.harassment
Harassment is behaviour which is intended to trouble or annoy someone, for example repeated attacks on them or attempts to cause them problems.
Another survey found that 51 per cent of women had experienced some form of sexual harassment in their working lives.
...racial harassment.
The party has accused the police of harassment.
Synonyms: hassle [informal] , trouble, bother, grief [informal]
性騷擾 sexual harassment
2.overthrown ?彈劾
When a government or leader is overthrown, they are removed from power by force.
That government was overthrown in a military coup three years ago. [be VERB-ed]
...an attempt to overthrow the president. [VERB noun]
Synonyms: defeat, beat, master, overcome ??
Overthrow is also a noun.
3.bitter
1. adjective
In a bitter argument or conflict, people argue very angrily or fight very fiercely.
...the scene of bitter fighting during the Second World War.
...a bitter attack on the Government's failure to support manufacturing.
On the eve of the poll, campaigning was bitter.
Synonyms: grievous, hard, severe, distressing ??
bitterly? adverb [usually ADVERB with verb , oft ADVERB adjective]
Any such thing would be bitterly opposed by most of the world's democracies.
...a bitterly fought football match.
Synonyms: grievously, harshly, cruelly, savagely ? More Synonyms of bitter
Synonyms: greatly, terribly, sorely, awfully [informal] ? More Synonyms of bitter
Synonyms: sourly, sharply, acidly, tartly ? More Synonyms of bitter
bitterness? uncountable noun
The rift within the organization reflects the growing bitterness of the dispute. [+ of]
Synonyms: sourness, acidity, sharpness, tartness ??
Synonyms: intense cold, bite, chill, sting ??
Synonyms: trauma, tragedy, grief, misery ??
2.?adjective
If someone is bitter after a disappointing experience or after being treated unfairly, they continue to feel angry about it.
She is said to be very bitter about the way she was sacked.
His long life was marked by bitter personal and political memories.
Synonyms: resentful, hurt, wounded, angry ?
bitterly? adverb [usually ADVERB with verb , oft ADVERB adjective]
'And he sure didn't help us,' Grant said bitterly.
...the party bureaucrats who bitterly resented their loss of power.
Synonyms: grievously, harshly, cruelly, savagely ?
Synonyms: greatly, terribly, sorely, awfully [informal] ??
Synonyms: sourly, sharply, acidly, tartly ??
Synonyms: resentfully, sourly, sorely, tartly ??
bitterness? uncountable noun
I still feel bitterness and anger towards the person who knocked me down.
Synonyms: sourness, acidity, sharpness, tartness?
Synonyms: intense cold, bite, chill, sting ??
Synonyms: resentment, hurt, anger, hostility
3.?adjective [usually ADJECTIVE noun]
A bitter experience makes you feel very disappointed. You can also use bitter to emphasize feelings of disappointment.
I think the decision was a bitter blow from which he never quite recovered.
A great deal of bitter experience had taught him how to lose gracefully.
The statement was greeted with bitter disappointment by many of the other delegates.
Synonyms: great, awful, unpleasant, sore ??
bitterly? adverb [ADVERB adjective , ADVERB with verb]
I was bitterly disappointed to have lost yet another race so near the finish.
Synonyms: grievously, harshly, cruelly, savagely ??
Synonyms: greatly, terribly, sorely, awfully [informal] ??
Synonyms: sourly, sharply, acidly, tartly ??
4.?adjective
Bitter weather, or a bitter wind, is extremely cold.
Outside, a bitter east wind was accompanied by flurries of snow.
...after spending a night in the bitter cold.
Synonyms: freezing, biting, severe, intense ?
bitterly? adverb [ADVERB adjective]
It's been bitterly cold here in Moscow.
Synonyms: grievously, harshly, cruelly, savagely ??
Synonyms: greatly, terribly, sorely, awfully [informal] ?
Synonyms: sourly, sharply, acidly, tartly ??
Synonyms: intensely, freezing, severely, fiercely ?
5.?adjective
A bitter taste is sharp, not sweet, and often slightly unpleasant.
The leaves taste rather bitter.
...as the wine ages, losing its bitter harshness, and becoming softer and smoother.
Synonyms: sour, biting, sharp, acid ??
6.?variable noun
Bitter is a kind of beer that is light brown in colour.
[British]
...a pint of bitter.
4.lawsuit
countable noun
A lawsuit is a case in a court of law which concerns a dispute between two people or organizations.
[formal]
The dispute culminated last week in a lawsuit against the government. [+ against]
...a lawsuit brought by Barclays Bank.
Synonyms: case, cause, action, trial
It means the most talked-about company in Silicon Valley has been apparently
unscathed by the unprecedented series of scandals that have engulfed the company
in 2017.
5.unscathed ? ?
If you are unscathed after a dangerous experience, you have not been injured or harmed by it.
Tony emerged unscathed apart from a severely bruised finger.
East Los Angeles was left relatively unscathed by the riots. [+ by]
The tobacco industry escaped unscathed from its toughest legal challenge.
Synonyms: unharmed, unhurt, uninjured, whole
6.unprecedented ?前所未有
1. adjective
If something is unprecedented, it has never happened before.
Such a move is rare, but not unprecedented.
In 1987 the Socialists took the unprecedented step of appointing a civilian to command the force.
Synonyms: unparalleled, unheard-of, exceptional, new ??
2.?adjective [usually ADJECTIVE noun]
If you describe something as unprecedented, you are emphasizing that it is very great in quality, amount, or scale.
[emphasis]
Each home boasts an unprecedented level of quality throughout.
The scheme has been hailed as an unprecedented success.
Synonyms: extraordinary, amazing, remarkable, outstanding
7.engulfed? vt. 吞沒;吞食,狼吞虎咽
1. verb
If one thing engulfs another, it completely covers or hides it, often in a sudden and unexpected way.
A seven-year-old boy was found dead after a landslide engulfed a block of flats. [VERB noun]
The flat is engulfed in flames. [be VERB-ed]
Synonyms: immerse, bury, flood (out), plunge?
2.?verb
If a feeling or emotion engulfs you, you are strongly affected by it.
...the pain that engulfed him. [VERB noun]
He looked around his dark, cluttered office and was engulfed by a feeling of emptiness. [VERB noun]
Synonyms: overwhelm, overcome, crush, absorb
Uber posted revenue of $1.75bn in the three months to June, with losses dropping by
9% in the same period, to the still staggering figure of $645m.
8.自六月份以來的三個(gè)月 in the three months to June
9.stagger
1. verb
If you stagger, you walk very unsteadily, for example because you are ill or drunk.
He lost his balance, staggered back against the rail and toppled over. [VERB adverb/preposition]
He was staggering and had to lean on the bar. [VERB]
Synonyms: totter, reel, sway, falter ?
2.?verb ? ?
If you say that someone or something staggers on, you mean that it is only just succeeds in continuing.勉強(qiáng)維持
Truman allowed him to stagger on for nearly another two years. [VERB adverb/preposition]
杜魯門允許他又硬撐了近兩年。
...a government that staggered from crisis to crisis. [VERB adverb/preposition]
Synonyms: lurch, reel, stumble, sway ??
3.?verb
If something staggers you, it surprises you very much.
The whole thing staggers me. [VERB noun]
Synonyms: astound, amaze, stun, surprise ??
staggered? adjective [verb-link ADJECTIVE]
I was simply staggered by the heat of the Argentinian high-summer.
Synonyms: astounded, amazed, stunned, surprised ?
4.?verb
To stagger things such as people's holidays or hours of work means to arrange them so that they do not all happen at the same time.
During the past few years the government has staggered the summer vacation periods for students. [VERB noun]
Investors will gloss over those losses, though, as most other key metrics are moving
in a positive direction.
10.gloss over ?盡力填補(bǔ)
If you gloss over a problem, a mistake, or an embarrassing moment, you try and make it seem unimportant by ignoring it or by dealing with it very quickly.
Some foreign governments appear happy to gloss over continued human rights abuses. [VERB PREPOSITION noun]
Synonyms: conceal, hide, mask, disguise
The figures may be seen as a rare glimmer of positive news for the company, but a
greater test will come over time as the company continues to struggle filling crucial
executive positions after a spate of high-profile departures.
11.metric
1.Well, there are different metrics to measure success in a debate.
評判辯論是否成功有多種不同的標(biāo)準(zhǔn)。
《NPR News 2015年10月合集》
2.their health metrics were, unexpectedly, no better than the rest of the population in the impoverished country.
但出人意料的是,他們的健康狀況并不比這個(gè)貧困國家其他人口要好。
《VOA Standard 2014年10月合集》評價(jià)該例句:好評差評指正
12.a spate of
countable noun [usually singular]
A spate of things, especially unpleasant things, is a large number of them that happen or appear within a short period of time.
...the recent spate of attacks on horses. [+ of]
...the current spate of scandals.
Synonyms: series, sequence, course, chain
13.departure
1. variable noun [oft with poss]
Departure or a departure is the act of going away from somewhere.
...the President's departure for Helsinki. [+ for]
They hoped this would lead to the departure of all foreign forces from the country. [+ of]
The airline has more than 90 scheduled departures from here every day. [+ from]
Synonyms: leaving, going, retirement, withdrawal ?
2.?variable noun [with poss]
The departure of a person from a job, or a member from an organization, is their act of leaving it or being forced to leave it.
[formal]
This would inevitably involve his departure from the post of Prime Minister. [+ from]
Reihill's departure from the company is thought to follow disagreements with John Reihill Sr, who now controls the company.
Synonyms: retirement, going, withdrawal, resignation ?
3.?countable noun
If someone does something different or unusual, you can refer to their action as a departure.
Taylor announced another departure from practice in that England will train at Wembley. [+ from]
Now she's written a novel which is not a mystery and is a considerable departure from her previous work.
Synonyms: shift, change, difference, variation
14.high-profile
A high-profile person or a high-profile event attracts a lot of attention or publicity.
...one of football's high profile chairmen.
...the high-profile reception being given to Mr Arafat.
Synonyms: famous, prominent, eminent, celebrated
15.recruitment (招募)
The recruitment of workers, soldiers, or members is the act or process of selecting them for an organization or army and persuading them to join.
...the examination system for the recruitment of civil servants. [+ of]
...a crisis in teacher recruitment.
16.turmoil? 混亂;動蕩;騷亂;恐慌
Turmoil is a state of confusion, disorder, uncertainty, or great anxiety.
...the political turmoil of 1989. [+ of]
Her marriage was in turmoil.
Your mind is in such a turmoil you do not know what you are saying.
Synonyms: confusion, trouble, violence, row
In Uber's boardroom, in-fighting has taken a dramatic recent turn, with major
investor Benchmark Capital suing ousted chief executive Travis Kalanick.
17.in-fighting ?內(nèi)部斗爭
Infighting is quarrelling and competition between members of the same group or organization.
...in-fighting between right-wingers and moderates in the party. [+ between]
18.ousted
verb
If someone is ousted from a position of power, job, or place, they are forced to leave it.
[journalism]
The leaders have been ousted from power by nationalists. [be VERB-ed]
Last week they tried to oust him in a parliamentary vote of no confidence. [VERB noun]
...the ousted government. [VERB-ed]
Synonyms: expel, turn out, dismiss, exclude
19.sue ——suing
vt. & vi. (為要求賠償損失而)起訴, 控告, 和…打官司
Benchmark accuses Mr Kalanick of fraudulently filling Uber's board with loyal
associates, paving the way for his return as chief executive. In retaliation, other
board members called for Benchmark to booted out.
20.fraudulently
A fraudulent activity is deliberately deceitful, dishonest, or untrue.
...fraudulent claims about being a nurse.
Synonyms: deceitful, false, crooked [informal] , untrue
21. In retaliation
verb ?報(bào)復(fù)
If you retaliate when someone harms or annoys you, you do something which harms or annoys them in return.
I was sorely tempted to retaliate. [VERB]
Christie retaliated by sending his friend a long letter detailing Carl's utter incompetence. [VERB + by]
The militia responded by saying it would retaliate against any attacks. [VERB + against]
They may retaliate with sanctions on other products if the bans are disregarded. [VERB + with]
[Also + for]
Synonyms: pay someone back, hit back, strike back, reciprocate
22.booted out
phrasal verb
If someone boots you out of a job, organization, or place, you are forced to leave it.
[informal]
Schools are booting out record numbers of unruly pupils. [VERB PREPOSITION noun]
[Also VERB noun PREPOSITION]
Synonyms: dismiss, sack [informal] , expel, throw out
Analysis by The Information showed that in places with "high concentrations of
technology employees", who were more likely to be following Uber's woes, use of
Lyft instead of Uber had increased considerably.
23.woes ?wo?s
n. 悲哀,悲痛;災(zāi)難
1. uncountable noun
Woe is very great sadness.
[literary]
He listened to my tale of woe.
All around women wailed their woe or screamed abuse.
Synonyms: misery, suffering, trouble, pain ? More Synonyms of woe
2.?plural noun [usually with poss]
You can refer to someone's problems as their woes.
[written]
He did not tell his relatives and friends about his woes.
Synonyms: problem, trouble, trial, burden
24.considerably
Considerable means great in amount or degree.
[formal]
To be without Pearce would be a considerable blow.
Doing it properly makes considerable demands on our time.
Vets' fees can be considerable, even for routine visits.
considerably? adverb [ADVERB with verb]
Children vary considerably in the rate at which they learn these lessons.
Their dinner parties had become considerably less formal.
Synonyms: greatly, very much, seriously?
But overall, these figures represent Uber's staying power. The service has cemented
itself globally as an indispensable part of many people's everyday lives and, despite it
all, shows no sign of being in trouble.
25.cement
verb
Something that cements a relationship or agreement makes it stronger.
Nothing cements a friendship between countries so much as trade. [VERB noun]
noun 水泥
本篇多次出現(xiàn)的近義詞
被迫離職、離開
1. be forced to leave
2.be overthrown / (position) be overthrown
3.be ousted from
4.boots sb out of his position,place .etc / be boosted out
Echo補(bǔ)充材料
gloss over
If you gloss over a problem, a mistake, or an embarrassing moment, you try to make
it seem unimportant by ignoring it or by dealing with it very quickly. 無視; 草草了事;掩蓋;掩飾
He wants to gloss over his mistakes. 他想粉飾他的缺點(diǎn)。
In retaliation ( 為了報(bào)復(fù))
look for:? 尋找
拓展:
look after:to take care of someone by helping them, giving them what they need, or keeping them?safe 照顧,照料
look ahead:to think about and plan for what might happen in the future
向前看,計(jì)劃未來,考慮將來
look around:to try to find something 尋找
e.g. Jason’s going to start looking around for a new job.賈森正打算開始找新工作。
force sb to do sth:
Government troops have forced the rebels to surrender. 政府軍已迫使叛亂分子投降。
force yourself to do sth:
I had to force myself to get up this morning. 今天早晨我不得不逼迫自己起床。
force sb/sth into (doing) sth:
Bad health forced him into taking early retirement. 健康不佳迫使他提前退休。)
in charge (of sth):?
He asked to speak to the person in charge. 他要求和負(fù)責(zé)人說話。
pave the way for: 為...鋪平道路
e.g. He says the experiment will pave the way for a real Mars expedition later this century. )
boot out:
a.? 用腳踢出;把 … 逐出:
The trouble-makers were booted out. 那些搗亂分子被趕了出去。
b. 把 把 … 解雇,把 … 開除:
The boss booted her out for coming late. 老板因她遲到把她解雇了。
The service has cemented?itself globally as an indispensable part of many people's everyday lives and, despite it?all, shows no sign of being in trouble( ( 陷入麻煩)
Silicon Valley ( ?硅谷)
Silicon Valley is a nickname for the southern portion of the San Francisco Bay Area, in the northern?part of the U.S. state of California. The "valley" in its name refers to the Santa Clara Valley in Santa?Clara County, which includes the city of San Jose and surrounding cities and towns, where the?region has been traditionally centered.
The word "silicon" originally referred to the large number of silicon chip innovators and
manufacturers in the region, but the area is now the home to many of the world's largest high-tech
corporations, including the headquarters of 39 businesses in the Fortune 1000, and thousands of
startup companies. Silicon Valley also accounts for one-third of all of the venture capital
investment (風(fēng)險(xiǎn)投機(jī)資金)in the United States, which has helped it to become a leading hub and startup?ecosystem for high-tech innovation and scientific development.
Homework for Day2
The former CEO of Uber, Travis Kalanick, was?forced to leave the company. A spate of scandals has hit Uber recently. The?company is being engulfed by a feeling of depression. A lot of executives have?been overthrown. However, high-profile departures and a succession of scandals?have remained the company unscathed. The figures were staggering the?analysts around the world. Meanwhile, Uber's services have cemented.
homework for Day 3?
1. Sexual harassment, an overthrown chief executive, bitter boardroom in-fighting and a major
lawsuit have not affected Uber's business. Quite the opposite.
性騷擾,首席執(zhí)行官的被迫離職,董事會激烈的內(nèi)部斗爭,再加上官司上身,一連串的麻煩事件卻沒能影響優(yōu)步的企業(yè)運(yùn)營。實(shí)際運(yùn)營情況竟大大相反。
2. It means the most talked-about company in Silicon Valley has been apparently unscathed by the?unprecedented series of scandals that have engulfed the company in 2017.
2017年一連串史無前例的公司丑聞卻讓硅谷這家讓人津津樂道的企業(yè)毫發(fā)無損。
3. The figures may be seen as a rare glimmer of positive news for the company, but a greater test
will come over time as the company continues to struggle filling crucial executive positions after a
spate of high-profile departures.
盡管當(dāng)下這個(gè)數(shù)據(jù)可以說是公司內(nèi)現(xiàn)在唯一僅存的一點(diǎn)好消息, 但在離職高潮爆發(fā)后,后繼無人的首席執(zhí)行官位仍是公司需要面對的問題。