英语听力文摘 English Digest 671 玫瑰不叫玫瑰
时间:2013-09-18 07:22:09
搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
A Rose By Any Other Name
Just saying the word “rose”
conjures1 up images of romance, secret admirers, Valentines gifts, and bridal
bouquets3. Romantics imagine soft, red
petals4 and long,
graceful5 stems, but practical gardeners know all about painful, pointy thorns. As the saying goes, every rose has its thorn. But, what we call thorns are actually not thorns at all.
Thorns
Thorns, like those found on the
Hawthorn6 tree, are modified branches that project from the stem and branches of a woody plant.
They are very sharp and quite strong because they are made of the same stuff as the stem of the tree or bush. Thorns are deeply
embedded7 in the woody structure of the plant and can’t be broken off easily. Those nasty points on the stem of the rose are not true thorns: they are what scientists call “prickles.”
Prickles
Prickles are smaller than thorns: they are sharp outgrowths of the plant’s outer layers, the skin-like
epidermis8, and the sub-epidermal layer just beneath it. Unlike a thorn, a prickle can be easily broken off the plant because it is really a feature of the outer layers rather than part of the wood, like a thorn.
Both prickles and thorns protect the plant from
predators9, and, maybe, from lovers looking for a free
bouquet2. But perhaps we call the rose prickles “thorns” because saying “every rose has its prickle” doesn’t seem to do justice to the pain of unrequited love.
分享到: