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16/6 Fri. Intensive Reading Clas

16/6 Fri. Intensive Reading Clas

作者: 家懿 | 来源:发表于2017-06-16 17:09 被阅读0次

    Words

    incarceration n. the state of being imprisoned; imprisonment, captivity; -> incarcerate v. to keep sb. in a prison or other places

    methamphetamine n. / meθæm’fetəmi: n/ a stimulant to the nervous system and as an appetite suppressant 脱氧麻黄碱(中枢兴奋药)

    serve v. to spend (a period) in prison

    offender n. a person who commits an illegal act; a person or thing that does something wrong or causes problem

    mugger n. a person who attacks and robs another in apublic place [compare with -> burglar]

    preschool n. a nursery school (children between 3-5 years old); BrE kindergarten [compare with AmE kindergarten (children between 5-6 years old)]

    incomprehensible a. not able to be understood; -> incomprehensibleness n.

    outlier n. an extreme deviation from the mean

    await v. [with obj.] wait for

    tagging n. attaching an electronic tag [like what happened to Peter in The Good Wife!]

    convict / 'kɒnvɪkt/ n. a person found guilty of acriminal offence and serving a sentence of imprisonment

    sociopath n. a person with a personality disorder manifesting itself in extreme antisocial attitudes and behaviour

    recidivism n. -> recidivist n. a convicted criminal who reoffends,esp. repeatedly

    rounding (?? the expressing of a number with only  aconvenient degree of exactness)

    deterrent n. a thing that discourages or intended to discourage sb. from doing something

    Phrases

    …be no one’s idea of: nobody would assume … to be

    drug treatment: the treatment of drug addiction

    draw a pension: draw v. to receive

    keep sb. in check: to keep sb. under control

    rough neighbourhoods: a rough area/city/school is unpleasant and dangerous because there is a lot of violence or crime there

    hard cases: (inf.) a tough or intractable (hard to control or deal with) person

    fall on deaf ears: (of a statement or request) be ignored

    Background information

    federal mandatory minimum rules: Mandatory minimum sentencing laws require binding prison terms of aparticular length for people convicted of certain federal and state crimes. ... Most mandatory minimum sentences apply to drug offenses,but Congress has enacted them for other crimes, including certain gun, pornography, and economic offences.

    e.g. see: http://famm.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Chart-All-Fed-MMs-NW.pdf

    “three strikes” rules: The three-strikes law significantly increases the prison sentences of persons convicted of a felony who have been previously convicted of two or more violent crimes or serious felonies, and limits the ability of these offenders to receive a punishment other than a life sentence. [ -> “three strikes out”!]

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