CNN 10 - September 29, 2025
- 详细资料
- 创建于 2025年9月29日
- 最后更新于 2025年9月29日
- 发布于 2025年9月29日
- 作者:Mike Lee
- 点击数:41
What's up, sunshine? Rise up. I am so happy and grateful to be back with you. Your boy was hurting.
I spent a couple of nights in the hospital. I got bronchitis and nobody has time for that. I'm feeling much better now.
bronchitis [brɑnˋkaɪtɪs] n.【醫】支氣管炎
nobody has time for that「那很麻烦」、「那很讨厌」、「那很扫兴」或「那会打乱我的计划,谁有空应付那个啊?」
Thank you for all the well wishes you sent on social media. You are all the reason why CNN 10 is the best 10 minutes in news.
We start today with a storm that could bring some wicked weather to parts of the Southeast United States this week.
wicked [ˋwikid] adj. 壞的;邪惡的
Tropical Depression 9, formed over the weekend in the Caribbean and as of this taping, is expected to strengthen into Tropical Storm Imelda. The storm could bring heavy rain to parts of the coastal U.S. about a year after Hurricane Helene tore through the same region. Helene left a trail of destruction across Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas.
The biggest impact was felt in the mountains of western North Carolina. Our Isabel Rosales was on the ground in Nashville during the devastation. Now one year later, she returned to see how the community is recovering.
It's not often you get to see the remnants of a storm like this a year later.
Yeah, so this this is one of the houses that you can still walk inside. It's really frozen in time.
Among the damp wood and abandoned belongings, a visceral reminder of what Helene took in minutes.
visceral [ˋvɪsərəl] adj. 发自内心的;发自肺腑的
reminder [rɪˋmaɪndɚ] n. 提醒物,令人回忆的东西
These walls mark the survival of a family, but the loss of a place they once called their little Eden.
Water was pouring in and going higher and higher, and so they feared for their lives that they might drown.
And so he grabbed a flashlight and a putty knife and he started hacking through the ceiling right here.
putty [ˋpʌtɪ] n. 油灰
hack [hæk] v. 劈,砍;亂砍
Recovery is far from over in hard-hit Swannanoa, just outside Asheville, with many families still struggling in mountain country.
A year later, what is the need here in this community?
The need is vast.
You know, we still have people that are in temporary shelter and many people lost their jobs. Businesses were gone. They kind of went through.
Amy Cantrell and Pancho Bermejo tell me there's a full-blown housing crisis, with tens of thousands of people still displaced. Beloved Asheville is among the non-profits racing to close that gap, building 120 homes and counting. Just a few feet from where the Mills family home drifted.
full-blown 充分發展的;成熟的
drift [drɪft] v.(尤指在外力作用下)飘,漂流,漂移
They said it felt like they were inside a boat.
Off its foundation. You know, there's floating inside their house.
Rests their new Eden, built above the water line of Helene.
And we are in a deep connection now in this Appalachian Mountains, and we are stronger than ever.
Appalachian [ˌæpəˈletʃɪən] adj. 阿巴拉契亚山脉的
We got some pretty serious.
From the heart of Biltmore Village in Asheville.
How do we fix this? Joe Scully has been documenting the tireless comeback story of Corner Kitchen. 10 months, more than 300 days through the seasons.
Until this moment. Open after 10 months closed. The hometown restaurant, now a welcome home back.
And then when we actually started to get like people in, it was actually a little scary. Yeah, you got the jitters? A little.
jitter [ˋdʒɪtɚ] n. 紧张不安的状态;(复数)(极度的)紧张不安
This fall, the stakes are higher than ever, as visitors pour into high country to take in the changing foliage.
foliage [ˋfolɪɪdʒ] n.【书】叶,叶子
In Western North Carolina, the next few months could make or break a small business.
It's a possible reality that people will not be able to make it if they don't have the guests and the tourists to come for this next three-month period.
A Chamber of Commerce survey of mostly small businesses found 90 percent of respondents project a revenue loss, and nearly 45 percent report a moderate to significant risk of closure.
The Corner Kitchen, back from the brink and buzzing with sound. And this stark reminder of just how high the floodwaters climbed.
Why are we building a place that's flooded before? It's too precious not to try.
Now to a fantastic feat of engineering in China that's reaching new heights literally. The world's tallest bridge now officially open in the mountainous province of Guizhou, packing some serious stats. The Huajiang Grand Canyon Bridge towers at 2050 feet above the river below.
It's nearly four times higher than the Washington Monument, nine times taller than the clearance of the massive Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco.
clearance [ˋklɪrəns] n. 间距;间隙
At nearly 9,500 feet long, with a main span of more than 4,600 feet, it is the longest steel truss suspension bridge in a mountainous region.
truss [trʌs] n. 桁架,(支撑屋顶、桥梁的)构架
Officials say the bridge will cut travel time across the Huajiang Canyon from more than two hours to just two minutes.
Construction took more than three years and resulted in 21 new patents, some of which have even been incorporated into China's national bridge building standards.
Pop quiz, hot shot. In addition to flying airplanes, Amelia Earhart also worked as a social worker, lawyer, music teacher or dentist.
If you said social worker, you're in first class, baby. In the 1920s, Amelia Earhart took a job at a settlement house in Boston, which aimed to provide education and job training to immigrant families, women and children living in poor neighborhoods.
Amelia Earhart was the first female pilot to fly solo over the Atlantic Ocean.
But in 1937, when she was attempting to become the first woman to fly around the world, her plane suddenly went missing over the Pacific Ocean and the disappearance has remained a mystery ever since.
But now, there are some new developments that might bring new insight as to what may have happened. President Donald Trump is ordering his administration to declassify and release all government records related to Earhart's disappearance nearly 90 years ago.
She was declared lost at sea following a 16-day search and her plane was never found. There have been many questions and theories regarding the aviation pioneer's disappearance, but the U.S. government has long suspected that Earhart and her navigator crashed into the Pacific when the plane ran out of fuel.
Just last year, sonar imagery turned up with some hope towards the long lost plane near a remote island halfway between Hawaii and Australia, but it turned out to be a rock formation.
A new expedition to locate the plane is slated to launch in November.
Now to an innovative creationthat could be the answer to combating the rises and costs for things like our residential electricity, natural gas, heating and cooling our homes, and more.
Georgia Tech, or Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, has built the first ever living building in the Southeast U.S. This piece of architecture gets its energy from the sun, water from the sky or ground.
It even has corn and tomatoes growing on top of it. Our Derek Van takes us there.
Imagine the future of American cities where buildings give back to the environment more than it takes.
Tucked within the urban landscape of Atlanta's Georgia Tech campus is proof of how construction can live in harmony with its surroundings.
tuck [tʌk] v. 隐没,隐藏
It's a living building. Shaw Arora is the director of the Kendeda building and is advocating for its unique design to act as a catalyst for change in the building industry.
Over the course of a year, the building produces 100% of its electricity needs plus another 100%. So it's 200% net positive energy and the excess electricity goes to our sister buildings on campus. And you see the sun just came out, more free electricity.
From its zero carbon construction to its rooftop solar array, this building goes far beyond sustainability. It's left no stone unturned. The Kendeda building on Georgia Tech's campus is updating the three R's that you might be familiar with from your childhood.
leave no stone unturned(尤指寻找东西时)竭尽全力,不遗余力
update [ʌpˋdet] v. 更新
Reduce, reuse, recycle to regenerative, resilient, restorative. Features like its rooftop garden combines these three new R's with an aesthetic appeal that anyone can enjoy.
I don't know where else you see corn growing.
You got corn here. We got corn. Beautiful tomatoes.
I mean, come check this out. Amazing. All in this rooftop garden.
The building's water collection system is not connected to the city sewer, providing resilience against Atlanta's aging wastewater infrastructure. You take a shower in the building, wash your hands, it goes here. It's a pollinator garden.
sewer [ˋsuɚ] n. 污水管,下水道
Native Georgia bees having lunch.
Sean says that we're not far off as a society to make these features a reality in every building.
Is the price of electricity going to go up? Yeah.
Is the price of water going to go up? Yeah. Sewage? Yeah.
If you're going to own a building for 100 years, why wouldn't you make the building resilient?
Today's story, getting a Jew out of Jew, the fastest human ever recorded on all fours, Ryusei Yonee.
Look at him go. The 22-year-old from Yonago, Japan, broke the Guinness World Record for fastest 100 meter quadrupedal run by a human with a blistering time of 14.55 seconds. And he did it in his hometown.
quadrupedal [ˋkwɑdrupɛd!] adj. 有四足的
blistering [ˋblɪstərɪŋ] adj. 极快的
Yonee -san trusted his animal instincts, broke the previous record set by American Collin McClure in 2022 by more than a full second.
He said his interest in this unorthodox feat began in middle school after a teacher mentioned that animals run faster that way. So he trained for this for years, studying the movements of dogs, cats, even monkeys to perfect his technique.
unorthodox [ʌnˋɔrθə͵dɑks] adj. 非正统的
Awesome stuff. Also awesome, you. My first shout out of the day goes to Mr. Snow and Friends at Lebanon Middle School in Lebanon, Indiana. Go Tigers.
And from our CNN10 Instagram followers, Mrs. Ryan, St. George Episcopal School in San Antonio, Texas. Thank you for making us part of your day.
Remember to like and subscribe our CNN10 YouTube channel for your shout out requests. Make it a monumental Monday, my peeps. I will see you right back here tomorrow.
peeps [pips] n. 人們; 朋友們
I'm Coy Wire and we are CNN10.
bronchitis [brɑnˋkaɪtɪs] n.【醫】支氣管炎
nobody has time for that「那很麻烦」、「那很讨厌」、「那很扫兴」或「那会打乱我的计划,谁有空应付那个啊?」
wicked [ˋwikid] adj. 壞的;邪惡的
visceral [ˋvɪsərəl] adj. 发自内心的;发自肺腑的
reminder [rɪˋmaɪndɚ] n. 提醒物,令人回忆的东西
putty [ˋpʌtɪ] n. 油灰
hack [hæk] v. 劈,砍;亂砍
full-blown 充分發展的;成熟的
drift [drɪft] v.(尤指在外力作用下)飘,漂流,漂移
Appalachian [ˌæpəˈletʃɪən] adj. 阿巴拉契亚山脉的
jitter [ˋdʒɪtɚ] n. 紧张不安的状态;(复数)(极度的)紧张不安
foliage [ˋfolɪɪdʒ] n.【书】叶,叶子
clearance [ˋklɪrəns] n. 间距;间隙; the distance between two objects
truss [trʌs] n. 桁架,(支撑屋顶、桥梁的)构架
tuck [tʌk] v. 隐没,隐藏
leave no stone unturned(尤指寻找东西时)竭尽全力,不遗余力
update [ʌpˋdet] v. 更新
sewer [ˋsuɚ] n. 污水管,下水道
quadrupedal [kwɑdruˋpɛd!] adj. 有四足的
blistering [ˋblɪstərɪŋ] adj. 极快的
unorthodox [ʌnˋɔrθə͵dɑks] adj. 非正统的
peeps [pips] n. 人們; 朋友們