B.不支持
A WORD IN YOUR EAR: KEEP IT SLOW AND SIMPLE In 1986 the manufacturers issued their first guide to Simplified Technical English, which was then adopted by the Air Transport Association of America and has since become an international standard. The standard is specific in its instructions, which aim to ensure that once someone has learnt a word in one form, they will not encounter it in another. So manufacturers are told the word "follow11 should always mean "come after" and not "obey". So you can say "obey the safety instructions" but not "follow the safety instructions". You can see why this might be useful in aircraft maintenance books but it would be unnecessarily restrictive in reporting the credit crisis. But at least one news organization has developed a simplified English service, and it did it some time back. The Voice of America broadcast its first program in what it calls "Special English" in 1959. This has a slightly bigger vocabulary — 1,500 words. It also has style rules: use short sentences that contain only one idea. Use the active voice. Do not use idioms. And above all, speak slowly. Special English broadcasters speak at two- thirds of normal speed. To a native speaker, the effect is soporific. To a non-native speaker, the increase in comprehension must be thrilling. Simplified English may not be for everyone, but with the rise in the number of people around the world working in English, I suspect we will see more of it
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