1. Not all comic books are bad. Some are very good.
并非所有滑稽类的书都有害, 有些是非常好的. ”
2. In our house, there are lots of comic books.
我们家里有许多幽默书.
3. Do you really LET your boys read comic books?
“你真的让你的孩子们读幽默类的书?
4. We like comic books most of all because we never know what will happen next.
我们喜欢幽默书最主要的原因就是我们永远不会知道下面会发生什么事.
5. I never knew they put Shakespeare in comic books.
我从不知道他们把莎士比亚放在戏剧书里.
6. The bookstore has just bought some attractive comic books.
书店新进了一批好看的小人儿书.
7. His newly compiled comic books have been recently published.
这本他编绘的漫画书目前已经出版了.
8. I wonder why children like comic books, Mrs Easton asked.
“我想知道为什么孩子们喜欢滑稽类的书, ”伊斯顿夫人问.
9. The teacher away my comic books to teach me a lesson.
老师为了给我个教训,把我的漫画书拿走了.
10. B : I sometimes read comic books on the weekend.
我有时候在周末看漫画书.
11. Comic books are filled with heroes and villains.
漫画书中有一大堆的英雄人物和坏蛋.
12. David likes comic books.
大卫喜欢看连环画.
13. Frizzy - haired , friendless , neurotic a collector of comic books, Seth broke the mold on modern day protagonists.
卷发、孤僻、神经质、喜欢收集漫画, 赛思打破了现代主角的固有模式.
14. By Princess's accounts, he spent the long days sleeping and catching up on his comic books.
藉著公主的帐户, 他每天花费了长人睡觉和赶上他的漫画.
15. Soon the distributor arrived and I asked him if we could have the comic books.
书商来了,我问他是否能把那些即将被扔掉的小人书送给我们.
Late last spring, a doctoral student worked late into the night. As she doodled, her chemistry thesis took on a life of its own, transforming into a comic book.
Veronica Berns, 28, was working on her Ph. D. in chemistry at the University of Wisconsin -Madison. Berns said she long struggled to explain her work to her parents and friends. The self-described comic book fan said she began drafting her thesis on quasicrystals — a subset of crystals that diverge from the usual structural characteristics of crystals. Berns quickly concluded that she would be best able to describe the oddball compounds with illustrations.
And on many occasions, it was on the back of an envelope or on a napkin that she doodled sketches of the chemical bonds to better show her parents what she was working on in the lab. Jody Berns, Veronica's mother, said their family has a history of doodling and has shared comics for years.
Berns surprised her family with her comic book "Atomic Size Matters" at her graduation last year. The book depicts cartoons of Berns wearing various costumes and uses humor as well as simple comparisons to describe elaborate chemistry.
"We're just really proud that she can take something so complex and put it into a fun visual explanation that everyone can enjoy," Jody Berns said.
“我们很骄傲,她可以把如此复杂的东西变成有趣的图像解析,让每个人都能欣然接受”,乔迪·伯恩斯说。
Veronica Berns' professor Danny Fredrickson said Berns was the first of his students to construct her thesis in an artistic way. He said often it is difficult for scientists to explain what they do with proper context.
"If it's worth doing, we should be able to explain it," Fredrickson said.
“如果值得这么做,我们都应该能够解释,”弗雷德里克森说。
And he said Berns managed to accomplish that.
他说,伯恩斯已经做到了。
Berns said she hopes other scientists will find ways to illustrate what they're doing in the lab. She now lives in Chicago and works as a chemist. Berns also writes a blog in which she uses comics to explain the work of Nobel Prize winning scientists.
Berns started a Kickstarter fundraising campaign to finance printing a small batch of the books. She said she wanted to raise $5,965 to cover the costs of professional printing. The website says she has raised more than $14,000.