Clearly, Obama must love this phrase
Editor:Sharon Lee本科
Source:中国日报
Updated: 2009-10-19 17:09:34
Obama is giving a speech.(Agencies)
For all his flourish, President Barack Obama sure falls back ona few familiar phrases.
Make no mistake. Change isn't easy. It won't happen overnight. There will be setbacks and false starts.
Those who routinely listen to the president have come to expect some of those expressions to pop up in almost every speech.
Yet in the portfolioof presidential phrases, none is more pervasive than Obama's four-word favorite: Let me be clear.
It is his emphatic windupfor, well, everything.
"Let me be clear," he said in describing his surprise at winning the Nobel Peace Prize(speech). "I do not view it as a recognition of my own accomplishments, but rather as an affirmation of American leadership on behalf of aspirations held by people in all nations."
"Let me be clear," he said in one of his dozens of pitches for a health insurance overhaul. "If you like your doctor or health care provider, you can keep them."
Presidents talk so much in public that it is not surprising to find rhetorical patterns. Although Obama is known for aflairwith the written and spoken word, his hardest mission is often to make complicated matters relevant to the
【免费咨询报名电话:010-6801 7975】
咨询报名MSN:xueliedu@hotmail.com
试一试网上报名
咨询报名QQ:
1505847972 | 1256358232 | 1363884583 | 1902839745 | 800072298 | 754854002 |
中专升大专 | 中专升本科 | 高升专 | 高升本 | 专升本 | 自考 |