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楼主: uzi
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纽约

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51#
发表于 2003-6-24 02:08:00 | 只看该作者
说起来~~我也很担心我的Broken English~~[]
[]
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52#
发表于 2003-6-25 23:37:00 | 只看该作者
记得在一本时尚刊物上看到这样的句子:如果去纽约,那么那里的流行色是黑色.在这样一个连电梯上都需要步行的城市里,黑色是既经典又易搭配的.
而去米兰,那里则需要的是淡粉嫩绿...
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53#
发表于 2003-6-25 23:49:00 | 只看该作者
纽约 米兰 伦敦 巴黎

四不是这四大?
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54#
发表于 2003-6-26 05:13:00 | 只看该作者
黑色吗? ~~  我的映象是白色....  干干净净
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55#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-26 06:47:00 | 只看该作者
纽约是五颜六色的,黑色是华尔街的色调。。。。。。。。
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56#
发表于 2003-6-26 08:31:00 | 只看该作者
55555555555555我要去, 我要去

再多贴点招牌吧
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57#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-26 09:38:00 | 只看该作者


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58#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-26 09:41:00 | 只看该作者
以下是引用尘在2003-6-26 8:31:00的发言:
55555555555555我要去, 我要去

再多贴点招牌吧

MM移民美国吧!别在阿根廷上大学了。
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59#
发表于 2003-6-26 10:01:00 | 只看该作者
咦, 怎么变招牌了~~~我是说照片^^'

我也想啊, 还想去NY溜跶, 但是费用那么高~~
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60#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-26 10:32:00 | 只看该作者
没换啊!都是NY。
从ARG去USA很难吗?
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61#
发表于 2003-6-26 12:52:00 | 只看该作者
尘说 照片 招牌  是打字的问题巴~~

NY就是漂亮 尤其是夜景

55  比我呆的地方好多了[]
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62#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-26 15:09:00 | 只看该作者


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63#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-26 15:16:00 | 只看该作者


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64#
发表于 2003-6-26 15:18:00 | 只看该作者
楼上你,上次你说过,NY是大苹果还是什么来着,我都忘了。
这是偶的马甲,拿出来溜达溜达。
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65#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-26 15:20:00 | 只看该作者


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66#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-26 15:23:00 | 只看该作者
以下是引用lilyisland在2003-6-26 15:18:00的发言:
楼上你,上次你说过,NY是大苹果还是什么来着,我都忘了。
这是偶的马甲,拿出来溜达溜达。

big apple
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67#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-26 15:28:00 | 只看该作者
Why Is New York City Called "The Big Apple"?
In the early years of the nineteenth century, refugees from war-torn Europe began arriving in New York in great numbers. Many were remnants of the crumbling French aristocracy, forced to seek refuge abroad from the dread "Monsieur Guillotine." Arriving here without funds or friends, many of these were forced to survive, as one contemporary put it, "by their wits or worse."
One of these, arriving in late 1803 or early 1804, was Mlle. Evelyn Claudine de Saint-Évremond. Daughter of a noted courtier, wit, and littérateur, and herself a favorite of Marie Antoinette, Evelyn was by all accounts remarkably attractive: beautiful, vivacious, and well-educated, and she was soon a society favorite. For reasons never disclosed, however, a planned marriage the following year to John Hamilton, son of the late Alexander Hamilton, was called off at the last minute. Soon after, with support from several highly placed admirers, she established a salon -- in fact, it appears to have been an elegantly furnished bordello -- in a substantial house that still stands at 142 Bond Street, then one of the city's most exclusive residential districts.

Evelyn's establishment quickly won, and for several decades maintained, a formidable reputation as the most entertaining and discreet of the city's many "temples of love," a place not only for lovemaking, but also for elegant dinners, high-stakes gambling, and witty conversation. The girls, many of them fresh arrivals from Paris or London, were noted for their beauty and bearing. More than a few of them, apparently, were actually able to secure wealthy husbands from among the establishment's clientele.

When New Yorkers insisted on anglicizing her name to "Eve," Evelyn apparently found the biblical reference highly amusing, and for her part would refer to the temptresses in her employ as "my irresistable apples." The young men-about-town soon got into the habit of referring to their amorous adventures as "having a taste of Eve's Apples." This knowing phrase established the speaker as one of the "in" crowd, and at the same time made it clear he had no need to visit one of the coarser establishments that crowded nearby Mercer Street, for instance. The enigmatic reference in Philip Hone's famous diary to "Ida, sweet as apple cider" (October 4, 1838) has been described as an oblique reference to a visit to what had by then become a notorious but cherished civic institution.

The rest, as they say, is etymological history.

The sexual connotation of the word "apple" was well known in New York and throughout the country until around World War I. The Gentleman's Directory of New York City, a privately published (1870) guide to the town's "houses of assignation," confidently asserted that "in freshness, sweetness, beauty, and firmness to the touch, New York's apples are superior to any in the New World or indeed the Old." Meanwhile, various "apple" catch-phrases -- "the Apple Tree," "the Real Apple," etc. -- were used as synonyms for New York City itself, which boasted (if that is the term) more houses of ill repute per capita than any other major U.S. municipality.

William Jennings Bryan, though hardly the first to denounce New York as a sink of iniquity, appears to have been the first to use the "apple" epithet in public discourse, branding the city, in a widely reprinted 1892 campaign speech, as "the foulest Rotten Apple on the Tree of decadent Federalism." The double-entendre -- i.e., as a reference to both political and sexual corruption -- would have been well understood by voters of the time.

The term "Big Apple" or "The Apple" had already passed into general use as a sobriquet for New York City by 1907, when one guidebook included the comment, "Some may think the Apple is losing some of its sap." Interestingly, the phrase had also become pretty well "sanitized" in the process, thanks to a vigorous campaign mounted just after the turn of the century by the Apple Marketing Board, a trade group based in upstate Cortland, New York. Alarmed by sharply declining sales, the Association launched what some believe to be the earliest example of what would now be called a "product positioning campaign."

By devising and energetically promoting such slogans as "An apple a day keeps the Doctor away" and "as American as apple pie!" the A.M.B. was able to successfully "rehabilitate" the apple as a popular comestible, free of unsavory associations. It is believed that the group also distributed apples to the poor for sale on the city's streets during the Great Depression (1930-38). No convincing documentary evidence has been produced to support this, however.

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68#
发表于 2003-6-27 03:51:00 | 只看该作者
以下是引用uzi在2003-6-26 10:32:00的发言:

从ARG去USA很难吗?

~~没试过, 不过记得人家以前去加拿大的旅游签证挺容易的...
大概不会很难, 只是不想去NY流落街头[]
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69#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-27 12:57:00 | 只看该作者
以下是引用尘在2003-6-27 3:51:00的发言:
[quote]以下是引用uzi在2003-6-26 10:32:00的发言:

  从ARG去USA很难吗?

~~没试过, 不过记得人家以前去加拿大的旅游签证挺容易的...
大概不会很难, 只是不想去NY流落街头[]
[/quote]
MM是学音乐和艺术的吗? 要为通向百老汇的道路努力哦![][]
BTW:现在阿根廷移民去北美和欧洲的人应该很多吧?
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70#
 楼主| 发表于 2003-6-28 01:23:00 | 只看该作者


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71#
发表于 2003-6-28 01:39:00 | 只看该作者
看过sex&the city之后觉得这城市很不错,好想去玩哦
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72#
发表于 2003-6-29 01:09:00 | 只看该作者
^^'
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73#
发表于 2003-6-29 06:07:00 | 只看该作者
我也想到New York走走 =)
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74#
发表于 2003-6-29 06:24:00 | 只看该作者
有机会大家一起啊.....

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75#
发表于 2003-6-29 16:19:00 | 只看该作者
畢業后 先努力個2,3年, 賺夠本就和大家去紐約!!
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