英:[ˈniksn]
美:[ˈnɪksən]
英:[ˈniksn]
美:[ˈnɪksən]
biographical name
Richard Milhous 1913–1994 American politician; vice president of the U.S. (1953–61); 37th president of the U.S. (1969–74)
姓氏,是 Nickson 的拼写变体,字面意思是“(一个名叫)Nick 的男人的儿子”,是 Nicholas 的英语常用形式。 Nixonian 是指1959年美国副总统(后来的总统)理查德·M· Nixon(1913-1994)的方式和手段。 相关词汇: Nixonite; Nixonomics。
1 Mr. Nixon, the headmaster, hushed everything up so it didn't get in the papers or anything.
2 “Can you imagine what people would say if it were known that Hanoi has met all these conditions and then Nixon’s conniving with them kept us from getting it?”
3 As you’ll remember, Nixon was at bay after a slush fund established to pay his election expenses was exposed in the press.
4 Nixon’s valet, Manolo Sanchez, pleaded with him to come back to the car.
5 “But I personally have thought enough about Richard Nixon,” he said, “and I hope never to think about him again.”
6 “Let’s hear it for President Nixon!” the men shouted.
7 He encouraged Nixon to “start bombing the bejesus out of them.”
8 My father’s identification with Nixon only grew stronger as the President’s troubles mounted.
9 “I’m curious,” he said to Nixon, “How long will your inaugural address take?”
10 And just like President Johnson before him, Nixon hated to lose.
11 “I want him exposed, Chuck,” Nixon said of Ellsberg, wagging his finger.
12 In a move many believe was intended to distract attention from the Vietnam War, Nixon announced that scientists would cure cancer within five years, just in time for the United States Bicentennial.
13 “Nixon’s effort to get me was the foundation of Watergate,” Ellsberg reasoned.
14 As the plane began its descent over Boston Harbor, the pilot announced the weather and time, and that President Nixon had declared a national holiday: two American men had landed on the moon.
15 James Goodale cautioned that if they published the Pentagon Papers, Nixon would likely come after them using the Espionage Act.
16 “Then what,” Mr. Nixon asked, reangling his head, “was it to do with?”
17 Without revealing the source of his information, Ellsberg tried to persuade colleagues at Rand of the danger—Richard Nixon was secretly escalating the Vietnam War.
18 “President Nixon is confident in what we are doing,” Speigner told a reporter when he returned from Washington.
19 Richard Nixon ran his staff by stealth.
理查德-尼克松则用秘密手段操纵其幕僚.
20 “Gentlemen,” Nixon said to the gathered men, “we have reached the point where a decision is required: to bomb or not to bomb.”