(单词翻译:单击)
Who would dominate American culture--the modernists or the traditionalists? Journalists were looking for a showdown, and they found one in a Dayton, Tennessee courtroom in the summer of 1925. There a jury was to decide the fate of John Scopes, a high school biology teacher charged with illegally teaching the theory of evolution. The guilt5 or innocence6 of John Scopes, and even the constitutionality of Tennessee's anti-7evolution statute8, mattered little. The meaning of the trial emerged through its interpretation9 as a conflict of social and intellectual values.
William Jennings Bryan, three-time Democratic candidate for President and a populist, led a Fundamentalist crusade to banish10 Darwin's theory of evolution from American classrooms. Bryan's motivation for mounting the crusade is unclear. It is possible that Bryan, who cared deeply about equality, worried that Darwin's theories were being used by supporters of a growing eugenics movement that was advocating sterilization11 of "inferior stock." More likely, the Great Commoner came to his cause both out a concern that the teaching of evolution would undermine traditional values he had long supported and because he had a compelling desire to remain in the public spotlight12--a spotlight he had occupied since his famous "Cross of Gold" speech at the 1896 Democratic Convention. Bryan, in the words of columnist13 H. L. Mencken, who covered the Scopes Trial, transformed himself into a "sort of Fundamentalist Pope." By 1925, Bryan and his followers14 had succeeded in getting legislation introduced in fifteen states to ban the teaching of evolution. In February, Tennessee enacted15 a bill introduced by John Butler making it unlawful "to teach any theory that denies the story of divine creation as taught by the Bible and to teach instead that man was descended16 from a lower order of animals."
The Scopes Trial had its origins in a conspiracy17 at Fred Robinson's drugstore in Dayton. George Rappalyea, a 31-year-old transplanted New Yorker and local coal company manager, arrived at the drugstore with a copy of a paper containing an American Civil Liberties Union announcement that it was willing to offer its services to anyone challenging the new Tennessee anti-evolution statute. Rappalyea, a modernist Methodist with contempt for the new law, argued to other town leaders that a trial would be a way of putting Dayton on the map. Listening to Rappalyea, the others--including School Superintendent18 Walter White--became convinced that publicity19 generated by a controversial trial might help their town, whose population had fallen from 3,000 in the 1890's to 1,800 in 1925.
The conspirators20 summoned John Scopes, a twenty-four-year old general science teacher and part-time football coach, to the drugstore. As Scopes later described the meeting, Rappalyea said, "John, we've been arguing and I said nobody could teach biology without teaching evolution." Scopes agreed. "That's right," he said, pulling a copy of Hunter's Civic21 Biology--the state-approved textbook--from one of the shelves of the drugstore (the store also sold school textbooks). "You've been teaching 'em this book?" Rappalyea asked. Scopes replied that while filling in for the regular biology teacher during an illness, he had assigned readings on evolution from the book for review purposes. "Then you've been violating the law," Rappalyea concluded. "Would you be willing to stand for a test case?" he asked. Scopes agreed. He later explained his decision: "the best time to scotch22 the snake is when it starts to wiggle." Herbert and Sue Hicks, two local attorneys and friends of Scopes, agreed to prosecute23.
Rappalyea initially24 wanted science fiction writer H. G. Wells to head the defense25 team. "I am sure that in the interest of science Mr. Wells will consent," Rappalyea predicted. Wells had no interest in taking the case, but others did. John Neal, an eccentric law school dean from Knoxville, drove to Dayton and volunteered to represent Scopes. When William Jennings Bryan offered to join the prosecution26 team--despite having not practiced law in over thirty years--, Clarence Darrow, approaching seventy, jumped to join the battle in Dayton. Darrow was not the first choice of the ACLU, who was concerned that Darrow's zealous27 agnosticism might turn the trial into a broadside attack on religion. The ACLU first preferred former presidential candidates John W. Davies and Charles Evans Hughes, but neither was willing to serve alongside Darrow. Instead, it dispatched Arthur Garfield Hays, a prominent free speech advocate, to join the defense team. The final member of the defense team was Dudley Field Malone, an international divorce attorney (and another volunteer who the ACLU might have preferred to stay at home). Completing the prosecution team in Dayton were present and former attorneys general for Eastern Tennessee, A. T. Stewart and Ben B. McKenzie, and Bryan's son, federal prosecutor28 William Jennings Bryan, Jr.
A carnival29 atmosphere pervaded30 Dayton as the opening of the trial approached in July of 1925. Banners decorated the streets. Lemonade stands were set up. Chimpanzees, said to have been brought to town to testify for the prosecution, performed in a side show on Main Street. Anti- Evolution League members sold copies of T. T. Martin's book Hell and the High School. Holy rollers rolled in the surrounding hills and riverbanks.
Nearly a thousand people, 300 of whom were standing31, jammed the Rhea County Courthouse on July 10, 1925 for the first day of trial. (Judge John T. Raulston, the presiding judge in the Scopes Trial, had proposed moving the trial under a tent that would have seated 20,000 people). Also in attendance were announcers ready to send to listeners the first live radio broadcast from a trial. Judge Raulston, a conservative Christian32 who craved33 publicity, was flanked by two police officers waving huge fans to keep air circulating. The proceedings34 opened, over Darrow's objections, to a prayer.
A jury of twelve men, including ten (mostly middle-aged) farmers and eleven regular church-goers, was quickly selected. The trial adjourned35 for the weekend. On Sunday, William Jennings Bryan delivered the sermon at Dayton's Methodist Church. He used the occasion to attack the defense strategy in the Scopes case. As Bryan spoke36, Judge Raulston and his entire family listened attentively37 from their front pew seats.
On the first business day of trial, the defense moved to quash the indictment38 on both state and federal constitutional grounds. This move was at the heart of the defense strategy. The defense's goal was not to win acquittal for John Scopes, but rather to obtain a declaration by a higher court--preferably the U.S. Supreme39 Court--that laws forbidding the teaching of evolution were unconstitutional. (That goal, however, would not be realized for another 43 years, in the case of Epperson v. Arkansas ). As expected, Judge Raulston denied the defense motion.
Opening statements pictured the trial as a titanic40 struggle between good and evil or truth and ignorance. Bryan claimed that "if evolution wins, Christianity goes." Darrow argued, "Scopes isn't on trial; civilization is on trial." The prosecution, Darrow contended, was "opening the doors for a reign41 of bigotry42 equal to anything in the Middle Ages." To the gasps43 of spectators, Darrow said Bryan was responsible for the "foolish, mischievous44 and wicked act." Darrow said that the anti-evolution law made the Bible "the yardstick45 to measure every man's intellect, to measure every man's intelligence, to measure every man's learning." It was classic Darrow, and the press--mostly sympathetic to the defense--loved it.
The prosecution opened its case by asking the court to take judicial46 notice of the Book of Genesis, as it appears in the King James version. It did. Superintendent White led off the prosecution's list of witnesses with his testimony47 that John Scopes had admitted teaching about evolution from Hunter's Civic Biology. Chief Prosecutor Tom Stewart then asked seven students in Scope's class a series of questions about his teachings. They testified that Scopes told them that man and all other mammals had evolved from one-celled organism. Darrow cross-examined--gently, though with obvious sarcasm--the students, asking freshman48 Howard Morgan: "Well, did he tell you anything else that was wicked?" "No, not that I can remember," Howard answered. After drugstore owner Fred Robinson took the stand to testify as to Scope's statement that "any teacher in the state who was teaching Hunter's Biology was violating the law," the prosecution rested. It was a simple case.
On Thursday, July 16, the defense called its first witness, Dr. Maynard Metcalf, a zoologist49 from the Johns Hopkins University. The prosecution objected, arguing that the testimony was irrelevant50 to Scopes' guilt or innocence under the statue. Before ruling the prosecution's evidence, Judge Raulston decided51 to hear some of Dr. Metcalf's testimony about the theory of evolution. The testimony evoked52 Bryan's only extended speech of the trial. Bryan mocked Metcalf's exposition of the theory of evolution, complaining that the evolutionists had man descending53 "not even from American monkeys, but Old World monkeys." Dudley Malone countered for the defense, arguing in a thundering voice that the prosecution's position was borne of the same ignorance "which made it possible for theologians...to bring Old Galilee to trial." It was a powerful speech. Anti-evolution lawmaker John Butler called it "the finest speech of the century." Members of the press gave Malone a standing ovation54 and most courtroom spectators joined in the sustained applause. The next day, Raulston ruled the defense's expert testimony inadmissible.
Raulston's ruling angered Darrow. He said he could not understand why "every suggestion of the prosecution should meet with an endless waste of time, and a bare suggestion of anything that is perfectly55 competent on our part should be immediately overruled." Raulston asked Darrow, "I hope you do not mean to reflect upon the court?" Darrow's reply: "Well, your honor has the right to hope." Raulston responded, "I have the right to do something else." The insult earned Darrow a contempt finding, which was later dropped when Darrow, to a big hand from spectators, apologized for his remark. Darrow and Raulston shook hands.
After expressing concern that the courtroom floor might collapse56 from the weight of the many spectators, Raulston transferred the proceedings to the lawn outside the courthouse. There, facing the jury, hung a sign--attached to the courthouse wall-- reading, "Read Your Bible." Darrow asked either that the sign be removed or that a second sign of equal size saying "Read Your Evolution" be put up along with it. Raulston ordered the sign removed. Before a crowd that had swelled57 to about 5,000, the defense read into the record, for purpose of appellate review, excerpts58 from the prepared statements of eight scientists and four experts on religion who had been prepared to testify. The statements of the experts were widely reported by the press, helping59 Darrow succeed in his efforts to turn the trial into a national biology lesson.
On the seventh day of trial, Raulston asked the defense if it had any more evidence. What followed was what the New York Times described as "the most amazing court scene on Anglo-Saxon history." Hays asked that William Jennings Bryan be called to the stand as an expert on the Bible. Bryan assented60, stipulating61 only that he should have a chance to interrogate62 the defense lawyers. Bryan, dismissing the concerns of his prosecution colleagues, took a seat on the witness stand, and began fanning himself.
Darrow began his interrogation of Bryan with a quiet question: "You have given considerable study to the Bible, haven't you, Mr. Bryan?" Bryan replied, "Yes, I have. I have studied the Bible for about fifty years." Thus began a series of questions designed to undermine a literalist interpretation of the Bible. Bryan was asked about a whale swallowing Jonah, Joshua making the sun stand still, Noah and the great flood, the temptation of Adam in the garden of Eden, and the creation according to Genesis. After initially contending that "everything in the Bible should be accepted as it is given there," Bryan finally conceded that the words of the Bible should not always be taken literally63. In response to Darrow's relentless64 questions as to whether the six days of creation, as described in Genesis, were twenty-four hour days, Bryan said "My impression is that they were periods."
Bryan, who began his testimony calmly, stumbled badly under Darrow's persistent65 prodding66. At one point the exasperated67 Bryan said, "I do not think about things I don't think about." Darrow asked, "Do you think about the things you do think about?" Bryan responded, to the derisive68 laughter of spectators, "Well, sometimes." Both old warriors70 grew testy71 as the examination continued. Bryan accused Darrow of attempting to "slur72 at the Bible." He said that he would continue to answer Darrow's impertinent questions because "I want the world to know that this man, who does not believe in God, is trying to use a court in Tennessee--." Darrow interrupted his witness by saying, "I object to your statement" and to "your fool ideas that no intelligent Christian on earth believes." After that outburst, Raulston ordered the court adjourned. The next day, Raulston ruled that Bryan could not return to the stand and that his testimony the previous day should be stricken from evidence.
The confrontation73 between Bryan and Darrow was reported by the press as a defeat for Bryan. According to one historian, "As a man and as a legend, Bryan was destroyed by his testimony that day." His performance was described as that of "a pitiable, punch drunk warrior69." Darrow, however, has also not escaped criticism. Alan Dershowitz, for example, contended that the celebrated74 defense attorney "comes off as something of an anti-religious cynic."
The trial was nearly over. Darrow asked the jury to return a verdict of guilty in order that the case might be appealed to the Tennessee Supreme Court. Under Tennessee law, Bryan was thereby75 denied the opportunity to deliver a closing speech he had labored76 over for weeks. The jury complied with Darrow's request, and Judge Raulston fined him $100.
Six days after the trial, William Jennings Bryan was still in Dayton. After eating an enormous dinner, he lay down to take a nap and died in his sleep. Clarence Darrow was hiking in the Smoky Mountains when word of Bryan's death reached him. When reporters suggested to him that Bryan died of a broken heart, Darrow said "Broken heart nothing; he died of a busted77 belly78." In a louder voice he added, "His death is a great loss to the American people."
A year later, the Tennessee Supreme Court reversed the decision of the Dayton court on a technicality--not the constitutional grounds as Darrow had hoped. According to the court, the fine should have been set by the jury, not Raulston. Rather than send the case back for further action, however, the Tennessee Supreme Court dismissed the case. The court commented, "Nothing is to be gained by prolonging the life of this bizarre case."
The Scopes trial by no means ended the debate over the teaching of evolution, but it did represent a significant setback79 for the anti-evolution forces. Of the fifteen states with anti- evolution legislation pending in 1925, only two states (Arkansas and Mississippi) enacted laws restricting teaching of Darwin's theory
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chaos
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n.混乱,无秩序 | |
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2
experimentation
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n.实验,试验,实验法 | |
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alcoholic
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adj.(含)酒精的,由酒精引起的;n.酗酒者 | |
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prohibition
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n.禁止;禁令,禁律 | |
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guilt
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n.犯罪;内疚;过失,罪责 | |
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innocence
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n.无罪;天真;无害 | |
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anti-
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pref.[前缀]表示反抗,排斥 | |
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statute
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n.成文法,法令,法规;章程,规则,条例 | |
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interpretation
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n.解释,说明,描述;艺术处理 | |
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banish
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vt.放逐,驱逐;消除,排除 | |
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sterilization
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n.杀菌,绝育;灭菌 | |
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spotlight
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n.公众注意的中心,聚光灯,探照灯,视听,注意,醒目 | |
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columnist
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n.专栏作家 | |
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followers
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追随者( follower的名词复数 ); 用户; 契据的附面; 从动件 | |
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enacted
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制定(法律),通过(法案)( enact的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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descended
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a.为...后裔的,出身于...的 | |
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conspiracy
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n.阴谋,密谋,共谋 | |
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superintendent
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n.监督人,主管,总监;(英国)警务长 | |
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publicity
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n.众所周知,闻名;宣传,广告 | |
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conspirators
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n.共谋者,阴谋家( conspirator的名词复数 ) | |
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civic
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adj.城市的,都市的,市民的,公民的 | |
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scotch
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n.伤口,刻痕;苏格兰威士忌酒;v.粉碎,消灭,阻止;adj.苏格兰(人)的 | |
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prosecute
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vt.告发;进行;vi.告发,起诉,作检察官 | |
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initially
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adv.最初,开始 | |
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defense
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n.防御,保卫;[pl.]防务工事;辩护,答辩 | |
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prosecution
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n.起诉,告发,检举,执行,经营 | |
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zealous
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adj.狂热的,热心的 | |
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prosecutor
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n.起诉人;检察官,公诉人 | |
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carnival
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n.嘉年华会,狂欢,狂欢节,巡回表演 | |
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pervaded
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v.遍及,弥漫( pervade的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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standing
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n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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Christian
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adj.基督教徒的;n.基督教徒 | |
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craved
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渴望,热望( crave的过去式 ); 恳求,请求 | |
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proceedings
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n.进程,过程,议程;诉讼(程序);公报 | |
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adjourned
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(使)休会, (使)休庭( adjourn的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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spoke
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n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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attentively
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adv.聚精会神地;周到地;谛;凝神 | |
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indictment
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n.起诉;诉状 | |
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supreme
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adj.极度的,最重要的;至高的,最高的 | |
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titanic
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adj.巨人的,庞大的,强大的 | |
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reign
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n.统治时期,统治,支配,盛行;v.占优势 | |
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bigotry
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n.偏见,偏执,持偏见的行为[态度]等 | |
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gasps
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v.喘气( gasp的第三人称单数 );喘息;倒抽气;很想要 | |
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mischievous
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adj.调皮的,恶作剧的,有害的,伤人的 | |
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yardstick
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n.计算标准,尺度;评价标准 | |
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judicial
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adj.司法的,法庭的,审判的,明断的,公正的 | |
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testimony
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n.证词;见证,证明 | |
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freshman
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n.大学一年级学生(可兼指男女) | |
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zoologist
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n.动物学家 | |
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irrelevant
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adj.不恰当的,无关系的,不相干的 | |
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decided
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adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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evoked
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[医]诱发的 | |
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descending
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n. 下行 adj. 下降的 | |
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ovation
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n.欢呼,热烈欢迎,热烈鼓掌 | |
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perfectly
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adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地 | |
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collapse
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vi.累倒;昏倒;倒塌;塌陷 | |
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swelled
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增强( swell的过去式和过去分词 ); 肿胀; (使)凸出; 充满(激情) | |
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excerpts
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n.摘录,摘要( excerpt的名词复数 );节选(音乐,电影)片段 | |
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helping
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n.食物的一份&adj.帮助人的,辅助的 | |
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assented
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同意,赞成( assent的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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stipulating
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v.(尤指在协议或建议中)规定,约定,讲明(条件等)( stipulate的现在分词 );规定,明确要求 | |
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interrogate
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vt.讯问,审问,盘问 | |
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literally
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adv.照字面意义,逐字地;确实 | |
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relentless
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adj.残酷的,不留情的,无怜悯心的 | |
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persistent
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adj.坚持不懈的,执意的;持续的 | |
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prodding
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v.刺,戳( prod的现在分词 );刺激;促使;(用手指或尖物)戳 | |
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exasperated
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adj.恼怒的 | |
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derisive
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adj.嘲弄的 | |
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warrior
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n.勇士,武士,斗士 | |
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warriors
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武士,勇士,战士( warrior的名词复数 ) | |
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testy
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adj.易怒的;暴躁的 | |
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slur
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v.含糊地说;诋毁;连唱;n.诋毁;含糊的发音 | |
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confrontation
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n.对抗,对峙,冲突 | |
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celebrated
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adj.有名的,声誉卓著的 | |
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thereby
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adv.因此,从而 | |
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labored
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adj.吃力的,谨慎的v.努力争取(for)( labor的过去式和过去分词 );苦干;详细分析;(指引擎)缓慢而困难地运转 | |
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busted
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adj. 破产了的,失败了的,被降级的,被逮捕的,被抓到的 动词bust的过去式和过去分词 | |
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belly
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n.肚子,腹部;(像肚子一样)鼓起的部分,膛 | |
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setback
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n.退步,挫折,挫败 | |
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