That’s Dr Catherine Loveday. So what’s a fallacy, Alice?
上述是凯瑟琳·洛芙迪博士教授的观点。那什么是谬误呢?
6 Minute English 六分钟英语
Well, let’s listen to Dr Catherine Loveday talking about how we often underestimate how long things will take us.
我们来听凯瑟琳·洛芙迪博士讲述我们如何低估做某件事需要的时间。
迷人历史
In 1458, Henry VI called for a Loveday, a ceremonial ceasefire, between the Lancasters and the Yorks.
1458 年,亨利六世呼吁 Loveday,即兰开斯特和约克之间的停火仪式。
6 Minute English 六分钟英语
But now let's listen to neuropsychologist Dr Catherine Loveday talking about why being bilingual may protect your brain from damage if you have a stroke.
现在让我们听听神经心理学家凯瑟琳·洛芙迪博士为我们介绍为什么使用双语的人中风时大脑会得到保护?
BBC随身英语(官网版)
This is something Dr. Loveday describes as building up our cognitive reserve – that's building up extra abilities to help protect the brain against declining memory or thinking.
While at that age we do have short-term memories, according to Catherine Loveday, an expert in autobiographical memory at the University of Westminster, the memories that infants make are not long-lasting.
Loveday is a given name, thought to derive from the Old English Leofdaeg or alternatively Lief Tag. Leofdaeg is composed of the words leof meaning dear/beloved or precious and daeg meaning day. Lief Tag literally translates to Love Day, and is thought to have existed in eastern Britain from around the 7th century.