2016.7.8

2016.7.8

news from BBC

Dallas shooting: Gunman 'wanted to kill whites' says police chief

The gunman killed in a stand-off with Dallas police said he was upset about the police shootings of black people and wanted to kill white officers, the city's police chief has said.

  stand-off   

a disagreement or fight in which neither opponent can do anything to win or achieve their aim

  upset   

  1. unhappy and worried because something umpleasant or disappointing has happened
    - upset by/about/at etc
    - she was deeply upset about the way her father treated her
  2. be upset with somebody: if you are upset with someone, you are angry and annoyed with them
    - you're not still upset with me, are you?

1.  Three people are in custody.

   custody 【ˈkʌstədi】 

  1. the legal right or duty to take care of or keep sb/sth; the act of taking care of sth/sb
    - the castle is now in the custody of the state.
    - the divorce court awarded custody to the child's mother.
  2. the state of being in prison, especially while waiting for trial
    - He was remanded in custody, charged with the murder of a policeman.

2.  Mr Brown added: "He said he was not affiliated with any groups, and he did this alone."

   affiliate 【əˈfɪliˌeɪt】 

  1. if a group or organization affiliates to or with another larger one, it forms a close connection with it.
    - The Society is not affiliated with any political party.
    - The church's right to affiliate to Rome.

3.  President Barack Obama, who is attending a Nato summit in Poland, called it a "vicious, calculated and despicable attack on law enforcement".

   caculated 【ˈkælkjəˌletɪd】 

  1. carefully planned for a particular and often improper purose
    - The TV ads were a calculated (= deliberate) attempt to deceive voters.
  2. a calculate risk: is one that accepted after careful thought about the possible good and bad results of a particular action.
    - The army took a caculated risk when it attacked the enemy's capital without using planes.
原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/an9wer/p/5654855.html