Without Them, Machines Fall Apart
2014年01月24日 VOA, Words and Their Stories.Read and understand the article. If you may have any difficult words to pronounce and words you cannot understand, always ask your teacher.
*Teachers will divide the article into 2-3 paragraphs to help you understand and check the pronunciation of the difficult words.
Vocabulary
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- diplomacy /dih-ploh-muh-see/ (n.) the work of maintaining good relations between the governments of different countries
- detailed /dih-teyld, dee-teyld/ (adj.) including many details including a lot information
- unquestionably /uhn-kwes-chuh-nuh-buhl/ (adv.) in a way that is certain and not able to be doubted certainly
- ambassador / am-bas-uh-der, -dawr/ (n.) the highest-ranking person who represents his or her own government while living in another country
- Elizabethan /ih-liz-uh-bee-thuhn, -beth-uhn/ (adj.) relating to Queen Elizabeth I of England or the time when she ruled (1558 to 1603)
Article
Without Them, Machines Fall Apart
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(1)Every machine is held together by its nuts and bolts. Without them, the machine would fall apart. That is also true of an organization. Its nuts and bolts are its basic, necessary elements. They are the parts that make the organization work.
(2) In government, industry, diplomacy — in most anything — those who understand the nuts and bolts are the most important. Success depends more on them than on almost anyone else.
(3) In government, the president or prime minister may plan and shape programs and policies. But, it takes much more work to get them approved and to make them successful.
(4) There is a mass of detailed work to be done — the nuts and bolts. This is often put into the hands of specialists. The top leaders are always well-known, but not those who work with the nuts and bolts.
(5) This is equally true in the day-to-day operation of Congress. The majority leader of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives — together with the chairmen of committees — keep the business of Congress moving.
(6) Behind every Senator and Congressman, however, are assistants. These people do all the detailed work to prepare congressmen to vote wisely on each issue.
(7) In diplomacy, the chief ministers are unquestionably important in negotiations. But there are lesser officials who do the basic work and preparations on the different issues to be negotiated.
(8) A recent book tells of a British prime minister who decided to send an ambassador to Washington to learn if details could be worked out for joint action on an issue. The talks in Washington, the minister said, would be “of nut and bolts.” He meant, of course, the talks would concern all the necessary elements to make joint action successful.
(9) In a military operation, strategy decisions are important. But much more time is spent on the nuts and bolts — generally called logistics — of how to transport and supply an army. It has been said that Napoleon was successful because he knew the field position of every one of his guns. He gave careful attention to the nuts and bolts of his operations.
(10) The extreme importance of nuts and bolts was expressed by the Elizabethan poet, George Herbert. He wrote:
(11) For want of a nail, the shoe is lost.
For want of a shoe, the horse is lost.
For want of a horse, the rider is lost.
(12) Benjamin Franklin carried these lines even further. He wrote:
(13) For want of a rider, the battle was lost.
For want of a battle, the kingdom was lost.
And all for the want of a horseshoe nail.
Discussion
*Let’s talk about the article base on the questions below
- What are nuts and bolts?
- How are nuts and bolts important for machines?
- What do you think was the greatest machine ever invented? Why?
Tags: Business, culture, idioms, Technology, 初級者向け