结果1 题目 Acronyms are made from the first letter (or letters) of a string of words but are pronounced as if they were words themselves.A.错误B.正确 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 B 首字母缩略词是由短语中单词的第一个字母组成的单词。其特点是发音时被视为一个单词。 反馈 收藏
百度试题 题目Acronyms are words formed from the initial letters of words and pronounced as single words.相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 对 反馈 收藏
If the variousacronymsof the MBTI personality test are too much for you to keep track of, there’s now a simple alternative: “mild-mannered” (淡人,dàn rén) vs. “extra-strong” (浓人,nóng rén). As an easy ...
We use the Internet for many things: business, shopping, writing letters, talking to people, finding information and so on. In recent years a new kind of English has grown on the Internet. There’s no real word for it yet, so we’ll call it e-talk. People don’t like typing too ...
百度试题 题目Acronyms are words of initial letters which are pronounced as common words. A. 错误 B. 正确 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 B.正确 反馈 收藏
Of course, my lexical needs are not anywhere on a newspaper editor’s radar as they stare down a presidential “shithole.” They are thinking of all the angry letters, the cancelled subscriptions, the <shudder> phone calls. So some print sources have tried a middle road, one that communica...
One type is acronyms. These are abbreviated words that are formed from the first letters of each word in a phrase. You can also easily say them out loud like any other word. For instance, 'NASA' and 'POTUS' are common abbreviations in English that don't sound silly when spoken aloud....
We've come a long way since the early days of China's export boom beginning in the 1980s. Looking back at China's export advertising in that era, there were some fairly awkward brand names in use. Some of these were famous brands in China, which either sounded funny when directly trans...
that acronyms and initialisms—words formed by using the first letters of a group of words—constitute jargon as well (e.g., PET for positron emission tomography, or MRI for magnetic resonance imaging). Acronyms can simplify your language and make it more concise; just define acronyms ...
Some acronyms are pronounced as full words (e.g. “NATO” is [nay-toe]), while others, often called initialisms, are pronounced as individual letters (e.g., “BBC” is [bee-bee-see]). Again, they differ from compound words because they don’t include the full words that are being ...