1. Molly razzed me about my rotten sense of direction.
莫利笑话我糟糕的方向感。
2. Molly had cringed when Ann started picking up the guitar.
安开始弹吉他时,莫莉感到有些难堪。
3. Molly looked at Ann inquisitively. "Where do you want to go?"
莫莉好奇地看着安,“你想去哪里?”
4. She offered Molly tidbits: a chicken drumstick, some cheese.
她给了莫莉一些吃的一根鸡腿下段和一些奶酪。
5. Molly had fought and overcome her fear of flying.
莫莉已经努力克服了对飞行的恐惧。
6. The Professor was beginning to get on Molly's wick.
教授快要把莫莉惹毛了。
7. Molly leapt to her feet, spluttering and howling with rage.
莫利跳了起来,气急败坏地大吼起来。
8. The name Sue Anne never seemed quite right to Molly.
莫莉总觉得休·安妮这个名字不太好听。
9. Molly has let that girl run wild.
莫莉放任那个女孩恣意妄为。
10. You know Molly's pissed at you.
你知道莫莉在生你的气。
A drop in testosterone levels around 50, 000 years ago led the the development of art and tools, researchers believe.
有研究人员认为,5万年前人体睾丸素水平的降低促进了人类艺术和工具领域的发展。
They say the drop, which led to a change in the shape of skulls, coincided with a blossoming in culture.
他们称,睾丸素的下降改变了人类的头骨形状,在此同时 文化 得到了繁荣发展。
The two could be linked, as humans developed a more co-operative outlook as levels dropped.
两者的联系在于睾丸素水平的下降让人类的面孔更利于合作。
考古新发现 娘化推动人类进步.jpg
Modern humans appear in the fossil record about 200, 000 years ago, but it was only about 50, 000 years ago that making art and advanced tools became widespread.
'The modern human behaviors of technological innovation, making art and rapid cultural exchange probably came at the same time that we developed a more cooperative temperament, ' said lead author Robert Cieri, a biology graduate student at the University of Utah who began this work as a senior at Duke University.
The study in the journal Current Anthropology, which is based on measurements of more than 1, 400 ancient and modern skulls, makes the argument that human society advanced when people started being nicer to each other, which entails having a little less testosterone in action.
Heavy brows were out, rounder heads were in, and those changes can be traced directly to testosterone levels acting on the skeleton, according to Duke anthropologist Steven Churchill, who supervised Cieri's work on a senior honors thesis that grew to become this 24-page journal article three years later.
molly [ˈmɔli] n. 娘娘腔的男人,懦夫 The American Heritage Dictionary molly mol·ly AHD:[m¼l¥¶] D.J.[6mKli8] K.K.[6m$li] n. pl. mol lies Any of several tropical and subtropical live-bearing fishes of the genus Poecilia or Mollienesia, commonly kept in aquariums. Origin From New Latin Mollienesia[former genus name] after Comte François Nicolas Mollien (1758-1850), French politician Modern Comprehensive E-C Dictionary molly [ˈmɔli] n. [口]娇嫩的男人[青年、男孩]; 懦夫; [方]=moll