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    armageddon

    US /ˌɑrməˈɡɛdn/

    ・

    UK /ˌɑ:məˈɡedən/

    C2 高級
    n.名詞世界末日善惡決戰的戰場
    Some people believe in armageddon and predict the end of the world

    影片字幕

    唐納德-特朗普的 "爆炸性 "全球關稅全面生效 | BBC News (Donald Trump's "explosive" global tariffs takes full effect | BBC News)

    19:02唐納德-特朗普的 "爆炸性 "全球關稅全面生效 | BBC News (Donald Trump's "explosive" global tariffs takes full effect | BBC News)
    • Yes really we're seeing now the full force of those tariffs that it's now a week since Donald Trump first announced his plans the full force of those tariffs around the world with individual countries the worst offenders as the White House has described them now feeling the weight of those tariffs and well you've mentioned China that 104% tariff that's as a result of China not pulling back on its tariffs against the United States in terms of products going to the US and really this is what Donald Trump wanted he's described it as explosive he says you have to shake it up a little bit that might be a little bit of an understatement when you gauge the reaction internationally and increasingly Sally the reaction in this country we're seeing people concerned about everyday products like food like clothing some people are beginning to stockpile those goods in their homes while they can before they expect the prices to rise in the next few days and and quite incredible to see the swift movement on Wall Street in in every direction up and down as as traders can't take their eyes off the screen and you know truth social and and other places where Donald Trump is adding more detail yeah and I think uncertainty is the word because we're seeing those wild fluctuations in Wall Street that often just swing on a few words from the White House or indeed rumors that maybe actually turn out to be wrong but still affect the market so I think strong and so significant are the jitters that the people are feeling at the moment that it doesn't take much to make you know quite significant changes in terms of prices and and the sell-off that we've been seeing okay Peter thank you so much indeed let's talk to Shaima Khalil now who joins us from Tokyo Shaima 24% tariffs for Japan an ally of the US a very important trading partner so many goods head to the United States and it's hoped that Japan could be first in the queue for negotiations yes Japan will get priority tariff negotiations according to the US Secretary Treasury Secretary but what that will look like how that will turn out nobody really knows it's still in that uncertain realm as Peter was was speaking there but I think look there's so many stats and numbers that you can throw at the story but I think here in Tokyo the sentiment is still one of being stunned of being shocked as you say Sally Tokyo is a staunch ally in the region a key economic and security ally of the United States and unlike Beijing this is a friendly relationship Tokyo is a friend Beijing is a foe and yet Japan feels that it has to swallow the bitter pill of the reciprocal tariffs and there's almost a sentiment of how could you do this to us that politically you can you can feel it in the air the Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said the whole country has to come together in what he described as a national crisis there is that governmental task force now with thousands of consulting desks and financial institutions fielding calls regarding tariffs but even though the Prime Minister has called for diplomatic composure the fact that Tokyo is still very much in tandem with its relationship and committed to the US economy with a 25% levy on the car industry already in place the danger is real the auto industry represents 20% of Japan's exports that's 17 billion dollars of projected losses if these levies are still in place the tariff diplomacy is in full force there are two major developments in the chaos of the last few days one is that 30-minute phone call between the Prime Minister and Donald Trump on Monday and that tells you that there is an open channel and the second one is the appointment of the economy economic minister you'll say Akazawa as the chief name a tariff negotiator he will be dealing with the US Treasury Secretary look there's so much that Tokyo can bring to the table for five years running Japan has been the US's top top investor there are 54,000 US military personnel here there there's already developing defense agreements between the US and Japan and so the negotiators have a lot to talk about with the United States they will get as you say a front a front seat but it's still a very uphill battle priority boarding as they say when you're getting on a plane Thank You Shima let's go to Jonathan head in Bangkok so Jonathan Thailand is on the worst offenders list as well so what is it facing now the tariffs have come into effect in the last few minutes and I have seen the Thai markets being hit hard by all of this as well as they are across the region Sally I mean the worst affected country or the least terms of the terms of the actual scale of the tariffs in is little Cambodia 49% I mean there is simply no hope that Cambodia can buy as much from the US as it sells that's going to have a devastating effect on its garment industry like other countries in this region the response from Cambodia from Vietnam as well Vietnam US exports to the United States it's the largest destination account for 23% of its entire GDP and Vietnam has very ambitious growth targets for its current economic plans for Thailand it's a bit less about 18% of exports go to the US but Thailand has a flatlining economy and is desperately looking for all possible ways of getting it going these tariffs have come at the worst possible moment now the official response from all the governments in this region is don't panic don't retaliate as China has done negotiate but negotiations I mean you heard from Japan's at the top of the head of the line other you know Thailand's gonna set its finance minister the Vietnamese deputy prime minister's on his way the Malaysian leader Anwar Ibrahim is heading to Washington too I mean who will they meet and we heard from mr. Trump's trade counselor Peter Navarro in interviews given over the last 24 hours that even though these countries have all offered to reduce their tariffs Vietnam said we'll bring our tariffs down to zero he said that won't matter he said the fundamental problem is the imbalance in trade and because these tariffs have been calculated not on the basis of what tariffs are imposed on the US but on how big the trade deficit is all of Southeast Asia pretty much has a trade surplus with the US because these are relatively low-income high exporting countries that's their model they simply cannot buy as much from the US as they export and so it doesn't look at the if mr. Navarro's influence still holds so whether it's actually going to be possible for that for that trade those trade negotiations to actually be able to be successful and Jonathan you mentioned Cambodia and Vietnam as well in particular and I noticed a lot of their governments are saying we're going to buy more US goods we're looking to see what we can purchase from the US to try and reduce the deficit but actually Vietnam Cambodia in particular really benefited from the tariffs that Trump put in place in his first term in office back in 2016 because all the manufacturing was moving out of China to other parts of Southeast Asia and later in this program I'll be talking to a company boss who's in Arkansas who has all these goods made in Vietnam and still those tariffs are much lower than China aren't they so you're still better off getting things made in Vietnam than China yeah but obviously that it's all a tariffs are you going to be worse off than your competitor and I think that's where look Southeast Asian countries are inherently transactional and they are being pragmatic even though inwardly I think they'll be panicking there are going to be big impacts on their on their people's standards of living I mean Peter Navarro claimed that one third of US of Vietnamese exports the US are actually de facto think products but diverted into Vietnam from China that's not actually true the best studies and it's not a statistics not good on this say estimate the perhaps seven to sixteen percent of exports from Vietnam to the US probably are ones that are result of tariffs in China but it has played played a very big role and it means that there's real turbulence for many for supply chains for manufacturers where are they going to go next you know it's like whack-a-mole one country gets hit with tariffs you try and relocate somewhere else it's the unpredictability of course and the very peculiar nature of these tariffs that the Trump administration's come up with which makes it so hard for governments and manufacturers to decide what their long-term plans should be now okay Jonathan thank you very much well let's bring in Mariko Oi who is in our Asia business hub in Singapore watching financial markets so Mariko how are they looking today well Sally I think it's fair to say that we are back on a rollercoaster ride you and I have been watching the stock market reaction since Thursday last week ever since mr. Trump announced those latest tariffs in what the White House calls on Liberation Day and on Thursday and Friday we saw that sell-off and then on Monday we saw a much bigger sharp sell-off especially in Japan and Hong Kong yesterday we saw a bit of a recovery but then once again we are back in the red so basically investors are not liking everything that they're hearing in terms of that escalating tension between the United States and China as Shimer and Jonathan were talking about it various Asian governments are in negotiation with Washington but so far no one has been successful in winning an exemption or getting a deal and that's why we're seeing this sell-off investors and economists have been warning about these tariffs pushing up prices in the United States and possibly pushing the u.s. and even a global economy into a recession and that fear is getting realistic day by day thank you so much Mariko and thank you also to Jonathan head Shimer Khalil and Peter bows as well as we get reaction to these tariffs which have now been in place for nearly 15 minutes on all these countries 60 countries digesting brand-new tariffs let's now focus on China I'm joined by Han Lin who is China country director of the Asia group welcome to BBC News a hundred and four percent is the tariffs now on Chinese goods headed to the United States what's your thoughts on that yeah these tariffs are quite frustrating for the Chinese government not that China has feels unprepared but that the US China trade situation has unraveled so quickly without a clear off-ramp or a channel of communication besides China capitulating which is not likely going to happen but but certainly one thing that's being watched as carefully as this is that I remember late last quarter China had announced that if there was a trade war China would respond firmly it has a more diverse and deeper toolkit to retaliate with and that China has a greater capacity to endear or suffer pain so it looks like this thesis is about to be challenged over the coming weeks and months but certainly one thing we do know which is this if China can export its way to GDP growth it's going to focus more on the domestic economy and when you look at China's sinking stock market there's a lot more pressure to accelerate the fiscal and monetary stimulus that's been announced earlier but but that pivot from being the factory of the world to looking at economic growth fuel by domestic demand is not an easy transition and actually it's something China's been trying to do for a few years now really since the global pandemic so how will it make that shift I mean I'm looking at Goldman Sachs who's now saying the impact on the Chinese economy could be something like four and a half percent this year of a reduction in GDP growth that is a challenge China is trying to deal with because it looks like at least based on the recent purchasing managers index data for March the economy looks like it's stabilizing and that there is still a lot of potential for aggregate demand growth and that things and stimulus such as cutting rates still have yet to happen so there are still potential but that is true China has stuck to its 5% growth target this year that was certainly announced during the recent two sessions and how likely it's going to meet that 5% growth target in a way that people feel safe and comfortable going forward that is still very much an open question okay Han Lin from the Asia Group thank you for giving us your take on the challenges facing China well let's now talk to someone who is glued to the screens a trader who an investor Dan Ives who's the global head of tech research at Wedbush securities Dan how are you doing I mean look I'd tell you 25 years doing this through dot-com bubble burst financial crisis COVID I think this is probably the scariest days that I've seen in my career I must admit Dan I'm going to agree with you on that because I've been working in financial journalism as long as you have I remember the dot-com bubble bursting at the end of the 90s as you say the financial crisis to 2008 COVID this feels more intense and the gyrations are much more severe so why is that because you don't know the rules of the game and ultimately these are things where when you talk about turning around you know once this snowball starts going downhill you can't stop it and I believe as these go into effect the recessions almost guaranteed in the US and I think this is it's an economic Armageddon that's self-inflicted in my opinion it's the worst policy move out of the White House in a hundred years so you are not on board then with the president who says okay I know this is explosive I know this is painful but in the long term America will be the winner we are making America great again America wealthy again is that not what will happen the opposite because I mean someone like myself it's been 25 years in around the supply chain in Asia in China in Taiwan it's a fictional tale that you're gonna make iPhones in the US and the market is not Republican or Democrat it's telling news reality and in news math and that's why stocks are selling off and that's what but this is gonna go down in history unfortunately it's gonna be a dark chapter and I just believe the pressure is gonna continue to mount in DC on Wall Street then negotiations are gonna start because this cannot be at this level it continues to be an absurd situation unfortunately it's consumers that are gonna be paying for it and Dan you've been over the years that I've spoken to you extremely bullish on on Tesla also Apple as well which has been the darling of the market and seen as a solid stock and yet obviously Apple is so exposed to all of this what's your take on those kind of companies that have been massively sold off and in and Tesla in particular and Elon Musk and his role in all of this not that he's involved with tariffs specifically but of course his alignment with President Trump look I think no industry has heard more than these time in US tech it could take US tech sector back a decade at the same point there for the first time in 30 years US has ahead of China well when it comes to tech in my opinion when it comes to AI revolution look I mean longer term our bullish stands for means and we haven't downgraded stock but I'll tell you when it comes to Musk he has to get out of government it's actually not a choice at this point Tesla's become a political symbol it's been a debacle of epic proportions and look clock struck midnight he needs to leave the US government in terms of his role

      唐納德-特朗普(Donald Trump)首次宣佈他的計劃已經一週了,我們現在看到的是這些關稅在全球範圍內的全面威力,正如白宮所描述的那樣,最嚴重的國家現在已經感受到了這些關稅的重量,你也提到了中國,104%的關稅是中國沒有收回對美國產品徵收關稅的結果。這正是唐納德-特朗普所希望的,他將其描述為爆炸性的,他說你必須稍微動搖一下,這可能有點輕描淡寫,當你衡量國際上的反應,以及國內越來越多的反應時,我們看到人們對日常產品,如食品,如服裝,感到擔憂。在預計未來幾天物價上漲之前,人們開始儘可能地在家中囤積這些商品

    B1 中級

    專家被證明是錯誤的 10 次最佳實踐 (Top 10 Times Experts Were Proven WRONG)

    14:56專家被證明是錯誤的 10 次最佳實踐 (Top 10 Times Experts Were Proven WRONG)
    • why not change to camels for the next 30 days and see what a difference it makes in your smoking enjoyment welcome to watch mojo and today we're counting down our picks for the wrongest experts in the game the model t was the game changer of the car world and the way it was put together changed the game for the manufacturing world too number 10 communication satellites silly sci-fi then came sputnik and telstar tunis augustus mcdonough craven wasn't some cranky luddite he was a navy communications officer turned chief engineer and then commissioner for the fcc the man lived his life with a front row seat to the future of technology he even saw sputnik sparked the space age until two days ago that sound had never been heard on this earth suddenly it has become as much a part of 20th century life as the whir of your vacuum cleaner it's a report from man's farthest frontier the radio signal transmitted by the soviet sputnik yet in 1961 craven confidently dismissed the idea of communication satellites he said quote there is practically no chance that communication space satellites will be used to provide better telephone telegraph television or radio service end quote at the time it sounded reasonable rockets were still experimental and space was mostly the stuff of pulp novels just a few years later telstar bounced the first live tv signal across the atlantic owned by at&t telstar was also the first privately sponsored space launch and produced the first transatlantic television signals it turns out satellites were the future of communication after all number nine high speed rail is impossible now it's global in 1823 science writer dionysius lardner had a grave warning for the world trains going faster than 30 miles per hour would asphyxiate passengers some people thought that you know the steam engines would scare the cows and they'd all drop dead or that the sheep would kind of turn black or that if you traveled at more than 30 hours an hour your lungs would blow up king william the first of prussia reportedly scoffed no one will pay good money to get from berlin to potsdam in one hour when he can ride his horse there in one day for free for some of educated minds relatively high speed rail sounded like reckless science fiction in the end though they discovered that they weren't going to suffocate and the sheer practicality of going from a to b quickly and safely trumped anything else but trains would soon shrink continents and fuel the industrial revolution transportation would never be the same again fast forward and railroads reshaped the planet modern high-speed trains run faster than lardner ever imagined today the only choking involved with trains tends to involve bureaucratic red tape california governor gavin newsom is touted high-speed rail but in a march interview with bill maher he blamed the slow-moving process in part on imminent domain which requires the government to reach compensation agreements with private landowners to buy and repurpose their land for public use number eight television won't last said radio hosts and film producers when tv arrived some folks thought it was just a noisy lamp in the 1940s major radio industry experts dismissed it as a passing novelty in 1946 20th century fox head daryl zanuck is said to have predicted quote people will soon get tired of staring at a plywood box every night spoiler they didn't over the next few decades television spread faster than a cold television unified the world in a way that it never had before for the first time instead of just hearing of what was going on someplace else you could now see live what was going on half a world away tv didn't kill radio or the movies but it sure stole the spotlight television reshaped politics culture and entertainment in ways no one on the airwaves ever saw coming the medium they wrote off as a fad is now something we binge stream and carry in our pockets it isn't long before television takes over as the most popular form of entertainment in america number seven the smartphone a niche toy until it changed everything in 2007 microsoft ceo steve ballmer laughed off apple's new iphone there's no chance he scoffed that the iphone is going to get any significant market share the most expensive phone in the world and it doesn't appeal to business customers because it doesn't have a keyboard which makes it not a very good email machine his reasons no keyboard no business appeal and a whopping 500 price tag some experts thought it was a flashy luxury a toy for apple fans with money to burn every argument aged like milk within a few years smartphones didn't just go mainstream we think what we've done is to is to reinvent the phone and completely change what your expectations are going to be for what you can carry in your pocket alien observers could honestly say the smartphone conquered humanity from american classrooms to remote villages in sub-saharan africa these miniature computers are everywhere for many they've replaced cameras maps alarm clocks landlines even computers and tv it's a pocket sized device more powerful than the computer that put man on the moon intelligent powerful innovative from the inside out this is iphone 16 pro number six nuclear power is pure fantasy until it wasn't in the late 1920s nobel laureate robert millikin dismissed atomic energy as a childish bugaboo you might think that it was always inevitable that we would be able to harness the inside the nucleus of atoms but that was far from the case he told the chemist club in new york that expecting usable energy from the atom was a completely unscientific utopian dream fast forward to 1933 and ernest rutherford who had just split the nucleus laughed at the notion he insisted that anyone expecting power from atoms quote is talking moonshine there was good reason for their pessimism when beck were all first observed radioactivity he thought it was a similar to phosphorescence even albert einstein weighed in stating in 1934 that there is not the slightest indication that nuclear energy will ever be obtainable a decade later america dropped nuclear bombs on hiroshima and nagasaki the age of the atom forced all the naysayers to recant instead they had to shift their criticisms and focus on the potential of a nuclear armageddon first time in human history we now were capable of our own destruction as a species number five surgeons laughed at antiseptic methods then infections killed thousands in the mid 1800s joseph lister suggested something wild maybe surgeons should stop waving pus covered tools around like party favors he thought that sterilization which means getting rid of germs could save lives after reading about germ theory lister began sterilizing instruments and spraying carbolic acid in operating rooms but many of his peers weren't impressed some mocked his ideas people would say there's absolutely no way that a tiny microscopic organism could possibly kill an organism as big as we are others flat out refused to believe invisible germs could kill one critic sneered that lister's methods turned surgery into a quote rainstorm yet hospitals that adopted antiseptics saw mortality drop dramatically today we scrub sterilize glove up and mask in every operating room on earth the guy they laughed at saved more lives than most of them could ever imagine lister had a huge impact on reducing deaths in surgery that's why he's known to this day as the father of modern surgery number four who would want a computer in their home misjudging the pc boom in 1977 ken olsen ran one of the world's top tech companies there's a place for everything the pcs will pay cart part of it terminal is another part of it the workstation is another part of it medium computers and large ones other parts there's a place for all of it then he face planted there was no reason anyone would want a computer in their home he declared back in the 40s ibm's thomas watson reportedly said five computers would be enough for the whole planet spoiler he was off by a few billion there were two experts decades apart who couldn't have been more wrong if they tried you're looking at a small portable computer called the ibm 5100 it's helping a lot of different people do their work more productively by the 90s computers were ubiquitous and the internet was bringing the world together that's when newsweek columnist clifford stole dunked on it the 90s he said were the pinnacle of hardware and software it would never get any more portable or user-friendly today he laughs at his own howler of a bad prediction is there a lesson to be learned yeah probably number three lord kelvin said flight was impossible weeks before the wright brothers flew lord kelvin wasn't just a brilliant scientist and scholar he was the scientist of his time president of the british royal society during his lifetime thompson made an enormous contribution to the study and understanding of thermodynamics electrodynamics hydrodynamics and geophysics a mathematical genius the man literally helped define the absolute temperature scale so when he declared in 1895 that quote heavier than air flying machines are impossible people listened the problem of course was that he'd been proven wrong before a decade had passed the 12 second flight proved that sustained controlled powered flight was in fact possible just eight years later the wright brothers lifted off at kitty hawk sadly for lord kelvin's legacy that wasn't his only whiff in 1896 he also dismissed x-rays as a hoax right before they medicine discovered x-rays and changed the world just a short time later our engineers developed the first x-ray tubes specifically designed for medical use as it turns out even the hottest of hot shots can get scorched by technological revolutions number two the stock market has hit a permanent high right before the 1929 crash economist irving fisher was one of the most respected minds in america he was a brilliant yale professor when he spoke policymakers listened intently his name and economic theory still show up in textbooks so when he said that stock prices had reached a permanently high plateau people believed him all across the country not just new york city but in cities in small towns all across america people were in love with the stock market sadly for fisher this prediction came in the fall of 1929 mere days before the utter collapse of the u.s stock market black tuesday wiped out billions in wealth by the end of the crash some stocks had lost over 90 percent of their value fisher himself lost both his own fortune and his credibility he will go down in history as delivering one of the most spectacularly absurd predictions of all time the lessons from the crash of 1929 are that history repeats itself that human folly and greed are much stronger forces in financial affairs than reason and restraint before we unveil our top pick here are a few honorable mentions online shopping will flop time magazine predicted online shopping back in 1966 they said it wouldn't catch on long ago in cyberspace bold predictions were being made by the end of the millennium they said electronic commerce would be worth billions of pounds and we'd all be doing our shopping via computers but that was way back when the internet was young power poses are real even one of the authors of the original power posing study thinks she was probably wrong power poses are postures that we adopt when we feel really confident in power powerful so we expand we take up a lot of space just like other animals do there will never be a bigger plane than the 247 a boeing engineer said in 1933 that the 10-seater 247 would be the largest plane ever the boeing 247 its top speed of 200 miles per hour will be 50 miles per hour faster than any other commercial airliner on earth the machine gun will end all war hero maxim believed his deadly invention would make war impossible not more terrible you are now gazing upon three of the most unusual inventions of the 90s the flicker films the first machine gun and the squared derby we can't learn anything further about astronomy in 1888 astronomer simon newcomb said we'd learned all there was to know of the stars this was owned by simon newcomb an astronomer who later became one of the most prominent scientists in the united states before we continue be sure to subscribe to our channel and ring the to get notified about our latest videos you have the option to be notified for occasional videos or all of them if you're on your phone make sure you go into settings and switch on your notifications number one smoking doesn't cause cancer doctors once said smoking was safe or even healthy for decades the smartest people in the room said cigarettes were fine luckies taste better and good reasons first lucky strike means fine tobacco and then this fine good tasting tobacco is toasted to taste even better cleaner fresher smoother in the 1930s and 40s tobacco companies ran ads claiming doctors actually recommended their brands some even brag that their cigarettes were physician tested and less irritating to the throat medical journals ran cigarette ads health professionals endorsed them one campaign had doctors choosing camels quote by a wide margin more doctors smoke camels than any other cigarette meanwhile lung cancer rates were quickly exploding by the time the truth caught up it was too late for millions today it's hard to imagine anyone not knowing the risks but back then your doctor would have lit one up right there in your hospital room because they know what a pleasure it is to smoke a mild good tasting cigarette they're particular about the brand they choose who do you think was the wrongest genius in history let us know in the comments below we've got great windows mobile devices in the market today we you can get a motorola q phone now for 99 it's a very capable machine

      為什麼不在接下來的 30 天裡換成駱駝,看看它能給你的吸菸樂趣帶來什麼不同呢? 歡迎收看 Mojo,今天我們將評選出遊戲中最錯誤的專家,T 型車改變了汽車世界的遊戲規則,它的組裝方式也改變了製造世界的遊戲規則。然後是人造衛星和突尼西亞電信星 奧古斯都-麥克唐納-克雷文並不是什麼暴躁的魯德主義者 他曾是一名海軍通信軍官,後來轉任總工程師和聯邦通信委員會委員他甚至親眼目睹了人造衛星引發的太空時代 直到兩天前 那聲音還從未在地球上出現過 突然間,它就像吸塵器的嗚嗚聲一樣 成為了 20 世紀生活的一部分然而,19

    B1 中級

    中国的下一个金融危机:影子银行 (Chinas Next Financial Crisis: Shadow Banking)

    09:26中国的下一个金融危机:影子银行 (Chinas Next Financial Crisis: Shadow Banking)
    • “We have armageddon.

      這是世界末日

    • In the fixed income markets we have armageddon.”

      固定收益證卷的 現況跟本就是世界末日

    B1 中級

    什麼是世界末日鐘? (The Doomsday Clock, explained)

    05:12什麼是世界末日鐘? (The Doomsday Clock, explained)
    • Midnight in this case meaning nuclear armageddon and the end of humanity.

      末日鐘的午夜零時象徵著核戰爆發和人類的末日

    B1 中級

    電影預告片背後的傳奇旁白配音員 (The Legendary Voice Behind Movie Trailers)

    03:12電影預告片背後的傳奇旁白配音員 (The Legendary Voice Behind Movie Trailers)
    • "Blair Witch Project," "Armageddon,"

      《厄夜叢林》、《世界末日》

    A2 初級

    沃倫-巴菲特准備迎接類似 1929 年的大崩盤 (Warren Buffett Preparing For A Crash Like 1929)

    12:59沃倫-巴菲特准備迎接類似 1929 年的大崩盤 (Warren Buffett Preparing For A Crash Like 1929)
    • What exactly is happening here, is he expecting like a financial Armageddon, is the stock market is going to collapse.

      到底發生了什麼,他是否在期待一場金融大決戰,股市是否會崩潰。

    B1 中級

    這個故事會讓你深受鼓舞......► 這個一個關於X戰警學校的故事 - Jim Kwik 吉姆・快克(中英字幕) (這個故事會讓你深受鼓舞... ► 這個一個關於X戰警學校的故事 - Jim Kwik 吉姆・快克(中英字幕))

    06:01這個故事會讓你深受鼓舞......► 這個一個關於X戰警學校的故事 - Jim Kwik 吉姆・快克(中英字幕) (這個故事會讓你深受鼓舞... ► 這個一個關於X戰警學校的故事 -  Jim Kwik 吉姆・快克(中英字幕))
    • It takes place in the future and there's Armageddon.

      故事發生在未來,世界末日即將來臨。

    A2 初級

    讓世界靜止的 75 個精彩瞬間 (Top 75 Moments That Made The World STAND STILL)

    23:07讓世界靜止的 75 個精彩瞬間 (Top 75 Moments That Made The World STAND STILL)
    • The world run its hands in terror of nuclear Armageddon as the superpower squared up over a single exposed lie.

      當超級大國為一個被揭穿的謊言針鋒相對時,全世界都惶恐不安,生怕發生核大決戰。

    • Thanks to a programming shortcut, it seemed possible that the world was on the brink of Armageddon.

      多虧了一個編程捷徑,世界末日似乎才有了可能。

    B2 中高級

    水下導航(為什麼我們不能只使用指南針) (Underwater Navigation (Why we DON'T just use a Compass!))

    08:59水下導航(為什麼我們不能只使用指南針) (Underwater Navigation (Why we DON'T just use a Compass!))
    • Croix and it's between two very popular sites, the shallow wrecks of Butler Bay and Armageddon.

      它位於兩個非常受歡迎的地點之間,即巴特勒灣(Butler Bay)和世界末日(Armageddon)的淺海沉船點。

    • We've now reached the turning point in our dive, which is at the edge of Armageddon in 65 feet or 20 meters of water, and it's time to turn back.

      我們現在已經到達了下潛的轉捩點,也就是在 65 英尺或 20 米水深的末日邊緣,是時候回頭了。

    B2 中高級

    Scott Sterling又來被球吻了 排球篇 (Best Volleyball Blocks Ever with Scott Sterling)

    03:30Scott Sterling又來被球吻了 排球篇 (Best Volleyball Blocks Ever with Scott Sterling)
    • WHEN ARMAGEDDON COMES,

      當ARMAGEDDON來了。

    B2 中高級