[Network English Daily English] No. 61

xiaoxiao2021-03-06  115

[Network English Daily English] No. 61

http://www.englishlover.net

Daily short article

Germany cut China to ribbons in an 8-0 thrashing at the Pampeloponnisiako Stadium in the opening Group F match in Patras, Greece on Wednesday. Player of the match Birgit Prinz scored four goals as the reigning World Cup winners demoralised China in the biggest ever victory at a Olympic Women's Football Tournament. China had held the previous record, a 5-1 win over Denmark in 1996. Germany opened the scoring on the 13th minute when Kerstin Stegemann sent over a high cross which Prinz powered in with a header. After 21 minutes, Prinz, the captain of the team, outdid the first goal when she dived at full stretch to head home another Stegemann cross. German goalkeeper Silke Rottenberg was called on to make two important saves, blocking Teng Wei in the 18th min and saving a close-in header from Han Duan in the 38th min. in the 65th minute, a crashing left shot from Pia Wunderlich put the game out of China's reach, but Germany continued to impose their domination on the match. in the last 20 Minutes, Germany Added Five Goals, Scoring Almost At Will.

vocabulary:

Thrash vt. (stick with sticks, whip, etc.)

Reign vi. rule, dominance

Demoralise v. Morary is frustrated

Tournament n. game, tournament

Outdid v.

IMPOSE VT.

Domination n. Control, rule, dominance

Daily language

Comparison Have to and MUST

1) The two words must 'mean, and Have to indicate objective needs, and Must said the subjective views of speakers are both subjective. My Brother Was Very Ill, SO i Had to Call The Doctor in The Middle Of The Night. My brother is very ill, I have to come to the doctor only in the middle of the night. (Objectively need to do this) He Said That They Must Work Hard. He said they must work hard. (Subjective to do this) 2) Have TO has some changes in the number, and Times, while the MUST has only one form. But MUST can be used to represent the necessary or obligations in indirect clamps. He Had to Look After His Sister YesterDay.3) In a negative structure: don't have to indicate "Don't" Mustn't means "forbidden", you don't have Tell Him About it. You don't have to put this Tell him something. You Mustn't Tell Him About It. You must not tell him about this matter. -------------------------------------------------- -----------------

This journal editor:

Jessie

Editorial mailbox

: Jessie

@ 中llover.net

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