首页-日语 - 地盘 - 记录 - 日志 - 下载 - 查词 - 翻译 - 排行
F8键(暂停/播放)| F9键(重复此句)| 左键或ALT+Z(上一句)| 右键或ALT+X(下一句)
提示:听写播放器因为flash插件问题无法播放,请点击此处解决
听写窗口
译文窗口
注释窗口

您没有登录,系统不能保存您的听写记录和听写错词,点击此处登录

听写提交之后可查看原文
America’s big three car companies employ a quarter of a million people directly.
But it's believed one in ten jobs in the US are tied to the industry.
Part of the last chance alone,
the country’s motor manufacturers has been given a 17.4 billion dollars bailout by George Bush to save them from the scrappy(混乱状态).
"Our economic advisors just believe such collapse would deal with the unacceptably painful
blow to hard-working Americans far beyond the auto industry.
It would worsen the weak job market and the disaster that made the financial crisis.
It could send our suffering economy into a deeper and longer recession.
But the bailout comes with conditions.
The car companies must show they can repay their loans by the end of March next year proving that they are economically viable.
They have to accept limits on salaries and bonuses and have been told that perks such corporate jets must be eliminated.
And the US government will have the right go through their books at any time, challenging their business independence.
Shortly after announcing bailout Mr. Bush was on TV once more,
this time to accept the traditional portraits given to presidents about to leave office.
"I suspected there will be a good sign to cry on, once the work got out about my hanging"
He had made it clear he wouldn't be the one to hang the car industries out dry,
暂无译文
暂无注释
听写注意
1.为防止灌水听写至少要输入超过10个单词方可提交同时听写内容不能粘贴;
2.标点符号不用填写,听写比对会忽略掉标点符号;
3.单词与单词之间要留有空格,同时数字(年月或金额)请用阿拉伯数字。
可友留言
加载中...
我来说2句
抱歉,您需要先登录后才能留言
谁正在听写
得分最高
最新听写
热门听写