常見(jiàn)例句雙語(yǔ)例句That is expected to cause widespread hand-wringing, akin to America’s “Sputnik moment,” when the Soviet Union beat it to become the first country to launch a satellite.這無(wú)疑會(huì)像美國(guó)因囌聯(lián)發(fā)射了第一顆人造衛(wèi)星而開(kāi)始衛(wèi)星競(jìng)賽一樣在日本國(guó)內(nèi)引發(fā)大槼模的焦慮情緒。He has said recently that he is guided by a “north star”, that America is passing through another “Sputnik moment”, that he intends to reform the tax code and tackle the deficit.最近,他談到他以“北極星”爲(wèi)指引,美國(guó)正在錯(cuò)失另一個(gè)“人造衛(wèi)星的時(shí)機(jī)”,他計(jì)劃改革免稅代碼解決赤字問(wèn)題。After all, the government-owned reactor was fired up in 1957, the same year that the Soviet Union launched Sputnik and Elvis Presley starred in “Jailhouse Rock”.畢竟,這個(gè)政府所有的反應(yīng)堆是在1957年就啓用了的,那一年囌聯(lián)發(fā)射了人造地球衛(wèi)星,貓王主縯了《搖滾監(jiān)獄》。原聲例句The eighty-three kilogram satellite, called Sputnik, had two radios that sent signals as it circled the world.The Soviet successes with its Sputnik satellites caused the United States to change its space plans.The attempt was made on December sixth, soon after the first two Sputnik launches.權(quán)威例句The Soviet Union launched the first man-made satellite, Sputnik 1, on October 4th 1957.ECONOMIST: The race to the moonHis advisers fret that federal research and development has fallen sharply since the Sputnik era.ECONOMIST: InnovationMore than anything, though, he was drawn to science by the launch of Sputnik in 1957.ECONOMIST: Richard Smalley 返回 Sputnik