最新英语体育新闻_最新英语体育新闻报道

       希望我能够为您提供一些关于最新英语体育新闻的信息和知识。如果您有任何疑问或需要进一步的解释,请随时告诉我。

1.哪里有英语体育新闻?

2.谁能给我一篇英文新闻,最好要体育比赛的

3.急求一篇英语新闻体育的 最好是简单一点的 一分钟左右 然后帮我翻译下呗

4.有哪些好的可以看英语版的nba新闻的手机app推荐?

5.翻译一段关于NBA的体育新闻的英语。

最新英语体育新闻_最新英语体育新闻报道

哪里有英语体育新闻?

       n.com/?cnn=yes CNN体育

       /sports/ 中国日报体育版

谁能给我一篇英文新闻,最好要体育比赛的

       Feature: Yi Jianlian and his NBA career

       Following in Yao Ming's footsteps, Yi Jianlian became the fourth Chinese player to join the NBA. But injury and a lack of experience have hindered Yi, preventing him from showing his full potential.

       Following in Yao Ming's footsteps, Yi Jianlian became the fourth

       Chinese player to join the NBA.

       He is now looking to make use of the the summer vacation to improve his overall skill.

       Yi Jianlian said, "I was relatively busy the past two years. It became an important assignment to preparing for the Beijing Olympics. So, I had little time to pay attention to my personal shortcomings and failed to improve on them."

       This is the second NBA season for Yi Jianlian. After moving from the Milwaukee Bucks to New Jersey Nets, the sophomore did his best to meet expectations. Experiences and regrets are now helping him to become a more mature player.

急求一篇英语新闻体育的 最好是简单一点的 一分钟左右 然后帮我翻译下呗

       76ers Say Farewell to Iverson and Snap 12-Game Losing Streak With 98-83 Win Over Celtics

       Philadelphia 76ers' Andre Iguodala (9) goes up for a dunk as teammate Alan Henderson (44) and Boston Celtics' Gerald Green (5) and Delonte West (13) look on during the third quarter of an NBA basketball game in Boston, Friday, Dec. 22, 2006. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer)

       12-22-2006 11:30 PM

       By JIMMY GOLEN, AP Sports Writer

       BOSTON -- The Philadelphia 76ers said goodbye to Allen Iverson and their 12-game losing streak all on the same night. Andre Iguodala scored a career-high 31 points and had nine assists to help Philadelphia beat the Boston Celtics 98-83 on Friday night, just hours after the trade of their troubled superstar became official.

       "It's a relief," said Samuel Dalembert, who had 14 points and 12 rebounds to help the Sixers to their first victory since beating Chicago on Nov. 24. "It's like carrying a big bag of potatoes, man, for a long time. It was crazy."

       Iguodala topped the career high of 27 points he hit twice in the previous five games as the Sixers adjust to life since Iverson was banished on Dec. 8. Kevin Ollie had 14 points and eight of Philadelphia's 28 assists; the Sixers had just nine turnovers.

       "We know that we don't have just one person that we can get the ball to and say, 'Do it,'" guard Willie Green said. "We've got to use each other."

       Al Jefferson had 20 points and 14 rebounds and Gerald Green had 20 points and nine boards for Boston, which crumpled defensively without star Paul Pierce and guard Wally Szczerbiak. Usually upbeat Celtics coach Doc Rivers blistered his team for thinking selfishly.

       "Not one single player in our locker room today thought how he was going to help us on the defensive end," Rivers said. "They thought about Wally and Paul's shots. ... This team without Wally and Paul has to be a great defensive team. If we're not, we're just going to keep losing."

       The Sixers traded Iverson to Denver on Tuesday for Andre Miller, Joe Smith and a couple of first-round draft picks. The deal became official Friday when Iverson passed his physical between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. EST _ too late for Miller or Smith to be eligible to play the Celtics but just in time for Iverson to make his Nuggets debut in their 9 p.m. EST start.

       Even without their two new players, the Sixers had little trouble with Boston.

       They led by seven points at the half and as many as 11 in the third quarter before the Celtics cut it to four, 75-71, with 10 minutes remaining. But Kyle Korver answered with a 3-pointer as the shot clock expired, and then added another jumper.

       The Celtics never got that close again, and Philadelphia scored the last eight points of the game _ six from Iguodala. The game in hand, the team gathered at center court for a subdued celebration.

       "After 12 consecutive losses we were looking for the champagne when we came into the locker room," coach Maurice Cheeks said.

       In addition to missing Smith and Miller _ and Iverson _ the Sixers were without Chris Webber, who sat out his fourth consecutive game with a sprained right ankle.

       Pierce will miss two to three weeks with a stress reaction _ a soft tissue injury _ in his left foot and will not make the five-game West Coast trip that starts Tuesday in Denver. Pierce has missed just 12 games in his career; the Celtics are 3-9 without him.

       Brian Scalabrine missed the first half with the flu. Szczerbiak has a sprained right ankle but is expected back to play the Nuggets.

       Notes:@ Hall of Famer Tommy Heinsohn, now a Celtics announcer, will skip the team's West Coast road trip because of back problems. ... With Green making his first start this season, this is the sixth lineup the Celtics have used. ... Boston had scored at least 100 against Philly in six straight games.

有哪些好的可以看英语版的nba新闻的手机app推荐?

       The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas père. Highly recommended.

       Apart from 'The Three Musketeers', this is probably Alexandre Dumas' most famous work and one of the greatest novels in Western literature: a novel every literate and educated person should read at least once in their lives.

       In this story, Edmond Dantes is an innocent man who was caught in the intrigues of Napoleon's escape from Elba and his 100 days of power until Waterloo. A sailor entrusted with a sealed letter of highest importance by his dying captain, Dantes delivers it into the hands of the evil prosecutor Villefort who, for reasons unkown to him, immediately sends him without trial or appeal to spend the rest of his days at the Chateau D'Iffe: a dark and isolated island prison presumed to be inescapable. With the help of Abbot Faria, a dying prisoner who knows the secret of a great hidden treasure on the small islet of Monte Cristo, Dantes escapes and prepares to unleash his revenge on those who did him wrong. For years he spends his time meticulously preparing his vengeful scheme against the treacherous friends and characters who left him to rot in prison for years and years. He refines his arts of disguise, alchemy, and manipulation to content himself with the ruin of his enemies.

       Unlike the adventure themes in his works such as 'The Three Musketeers', this story is a deep character study on being the victim of utmost injustice and how cruel revenge is sweet after all: how a wronged man is entitled to become the agent of divine retribution when God and mortal laws have abandoned his cause. The various themes, complex plot, profound character development, and rich prose makes this long work undoubtedly one of the greatest works of literature ever written: Dumas was without question a literary genius.

       This is a great story for people of all ages and should not be ignored by anyone who has a profound love of literature. I think this is Dumas greatest work far surpassing 'Queen Margo' 'The Three Musketeers' or 'The Corsican Brothers.'

       As translator Robin Buss points out in his introduction, many of those who haven't read The Count of Monte Cristo assume it is a children's adventure story, complete with daring prison escape culminating in a simple tale of revenge. There is very little for children in this very adult tale, however. Instead, the rich plot combines intrigue, betrayal, theft, drugs, adultery, presumed infanticide, torture, suicide, poisoning, murder, lesbianism, and unconventional revenge.

       Although the plot is roughly linear beginning with Edmond Dantès' return to Marseille, prenuptial celebration, and false imprisonment and ending with his somewhat qualified triumphant departure from Marseille and France, Dumas uses the technique of interspersing lengthy anecdotes throughout. The story of Cardinal Spada's treasure, the origins of the Roman bandit Luigi Vampa (the least germane to the novel), Bertuccio's tale of his vendetta, and the account of the betrayal and death of Ali Pasha are few of the more significant stories-within-the-novel. While Dumas devotes an entire chapter to bandit Luigi Vampa's background, he cleverly makes only a few references to what will remain the plot's chief mystery-how the youthful, intelligent, and naive sailor Edmond Dantès transforms himself into the worldly, jaded, mysterious Renaissance man and Eastern philosopher, the count of Monte Cristo, presumably sustained by his own advice of "wait" and "hope."

       This novel is not a simple tale of simple revenge. The count does not kill his enemies; he brilliantly uses their vices and weaknesses against them. Caderousse's basic greed is turned against him, while Danglars loses the only thing that has any meaning for him. Fernand is deprived of the one thing that he had that he had never earned-his honour. In the process, he loses the source of his initial transgression, making his fate that much more poignant. The plot against Villefort is so complicated that even Monte Cristo loses control of it, resulting in doubt foreign to his nature and remorse that he will not outlive.

       This long but generally fast-paced is set primarily in Marseille, Rome, and Paris. It begins with Dantès' arrival in Marseille aboard the commercial vessel Pharaon and ends with his departure from Marseille aboard his private yacht, accompanied by the young, beautiful Greek princess Haydée. What gives The Count of Monte Cristo its life, however, are the times in which it is set-the Revolution, the Napoleonic era, the First and Second Restoration, and the Revolution of 1830. Life-and-death politics motivates many of the characters and keeps the plot moving. Dumas also uses real people in minor roles, such as Countess G- (Byron's mistress) and the Roman hotelier Signor Pastrini, which adds to the novel's sense of historical veracity.

       The most troubling aspect of The Count of Monte Cristo is Edmond Dantès himself. His claim to represent a higher justice seems to justify actions and inactions that are as morally reprehensible as those that sent him to prison, for example, his account of how he acquired Ali and his loyalty. Had he not discovered young Morrel's love for Valentine Villefort, she too might have become an innocent victim. As it is, there are at least two other innocents who die, although one clearly would not have been an innocent for long based on his behaviour in the novel. One wonders of Dantès' two father figures, his own flower-loving father and fellow prisoner Abbé Faria, would have approved of the count.

       The translation appears to be good, with a few slips into contemporary English idioms that sound out of place. In his introduction, Buss states that the later Danglars and Fernand have become unrecognizable and that Fernand in particular has been transformed "from the brave and honest Spaniard with a sharp sense of honour . . . to the Parisian aristocrat whose life seems to have been dedicated to a series of betrayals." There is never anything honest or honourable about Fernand; his very betrayal of Edmond is merely the first we know of in his lifelong pattern.

       What seems extreme and somewhat unrealistic about Fernand is his transformation from an uneducated Catalan fisherman into a "Parisian aristocrat," hobnog with statesmen, the wealthy, and the noteworthy of society. This, however, is the result of the milieu that the novel inhabits. During these post-Revolution, post-Napoleonic years, Fernand could rise socially through his military and political accomplishments just as Danglars does through his financial acumen. Danglars is careful to note that the difference between them is that Fernand insists upon his title, while Danglars is openly indifferent to and dismissive of his; his viewpoint is the more aristocratic.

       Countess G- is quick to point out that there is no old family name of Monte Cristo and that the count, like many other contemporaries, has purchased his title. It serves mainly to obscure his identity, nationality, and background and to add to the aura of mystery his persona and Eastern knowledge create. What is most telling is that his entrée into Parisian society is based primarily on his great wealth, not his name. Dumas reinforces this point with Andrea Cavalcanti, another mystery man of unknown name and reputed fortune.

       I have read The Man in the Iron Mask and The Three Musketeers series, both of which surprised me with their dark aspects (the character and fate of Lady de Winter, for example) and which little resembled the adventure stories distilled from them for children and for film. When I overheard a college student who was reading The Count of Monte Cristo on the bus tell a friend that she couldn't put it down, I was inspired to read it. I couldn't put it down, either, with its nearly seamless plot, dark protagonist, human villains, turbulent historical setting, and larger-than-life sense of mystery. At 1,078 pages, it's imposing, but don't cheat yourself by settling for an abridged version. You'll want to pick up every nuance.

       O(∩_∩)O哈哈~

翻译一段关于NBA的体育新闻的英语。

       那必须是掌上NBA ,是一款专门为球迷朋友们量身打造的手机NBA赛事直播软件;随时随地观看NBA比赛,让你不再错过每一场精彩的球赛,看NBA赛事就是这么简单,而且还有很多专业的球员在线解说和分析,让你更加懂篮球,非常适合球迷用户。

       和科比一样的表现

       阿里纳斯得分超过

       在与胡人队的比赛中

       全句意思是:

       在像科比一样的表现中(可能是指类似83分那样的疯狂表演),阿里纳斯得分超过了布赖恩特15分,并且成为历史上在与胡人队比赛时第二个得分超过60分的人。

       好了,今天我们就此结束对“最新英语体育新闻”的讲解。希望您已经对这个主题有了更深入的认识和理解。如果您有任何问题或需要进一步的信息,请随时告诉我,我将竭诚为您服务。