- ’68 – Eventually We All Win Слова и перевод песни
- Слова
- Eventually We All Win
- Перевод
- В конце концов мы все выиграем
- Видео
- Другие песни ’68
- eventually
- Тематики
- См. также в других словарях:
- Eventually — перевод, произношение, транскрипция
- наречие ↓
- Мои примеры
- Примеры
- Примеры, ожидающие перевода
- Will We All Eventually Live in an Orwellian Dystopia?
- This Concept Artist Creates Wonderful Dystopian City Images for Games and Movies
- Some background on the book:
- Living in a post-truth world:
- Mass surveillance and social media:
- Big Brother becoming a reality:
- How likely is a truly Orwellian future?
’68 – Eventually We All Win Слова и перевод песни
Дата публикации: 02 июня, 2017
Слова
Eventually We All Win
[Verse 1]
Now understand
There’s a heart of gold
But they will not know
For it’s only once you’re gone that they show
Oh-oh-oh, Oh
Oh-oh-oh, Oh
Oh-oh-oh, Oh-oh-oh, oh, oh, oh
[Chorus]
But hold your breath and dance with me
Yeah! (x3)
Whoo!
[Verse 2]
Make believe
My heart and soul
Are worth their weight in gold
But my lucky break has already sold
Ho, Oh-oh-oh, ho
Oh, Ho
[Chorus]
But hold your breath and dance with me
Yeah! (x3)
Whoo!
[Outro]
And if you hear my name (x2)
If you hear my name
It’ll be too late
Перевод
В конце концов мы все выиграем
[Куплет 1]
Теперь понимаю
Есть золотое сердце
Но они не узнают
Потому что только после того, как ты уйдешь, они показывают
Ой ой ой ой
Ой ой ой ой
Ой ой ой ой ой ой ой ой ой ой
[Хор]
Но задержи дыхание и танцуй со мной
Да! (x3)
Ого!
[Стих 2]
Притворяться
Мое сердце и душа
На вес золота
Но мой счастливый случай уже продан
Хо, о-о-о, хо
О, хо
[Хор]
Но задержи дыхание и танцуй со мной
Да! (x3)
Ого!
[Outro]
И если вы слышите мое имя (x2)
Если ты слышишь мое имя
Будет слишком поздно
Видео
’68 – Eventually We All Win видеоклип.
Другие песни ’68
Другие песни, которые могут быть Вам интересны.
eventually
1 eventually
2 eventually
3 eventually
he will eventually be the gainer by it — в конечном счёте он только выиграет от этого
he will do it eventually — в конце концов он это сделает, он сделает это рано или поздно
4 eventually
5 eventually
в конечном счете, в конце концов;
со временем
6 eventually
7 eventually
8 eventually
9 eventually
10 eventually
11 eventually
в конечном счете
—
[http://www.rfcmd.ru/glossword/1.8/index.php?a=index&d=23]
Тематики
12 eventually
13 eventually
14 eventually
15 eventually
16 eventually
17 eventually
18 eventually
19 Eventually
20 eventually
См. также в других словарях:
Eventually — E*ven tu*al*ly, adv. In an eventual manner; finally; ultimately. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
eventually — index in due course Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
eventually — ultimately, 1670s, from EVENTUAL (Cf. eventual) + LY (Cf. ly) (2) … Etymology dictionary
eventually — [adv] in the course of time after all, at last, at the end of the day*, finally, hereafter, in future, in the end, in the long run*, one day, someday, sometime, sooner or later*, ultimately, when all is said and done*, yet; concepts 552,820 … New thesaurus
eventually — [ē ven′cho͞o əl ē, ē ven′sho͞oəl ē; ē ven′chə lē] adv. finally; ultimately; in the end … English World dictionary
eventually — 01. If you keep on working hard, [eventually] you will succeed. 02. The [eventual] goal of the recent talks between North and South Korea is the reunification of the country. 03. Our flight was delayed by snow, but we [eventually] got away about… … Grammatical examples in English
eventually — [[t]ɪve̱ntʃuəli[/t]] ♦♦ 1) ADV: ADV with cl, ADV before v Eventually means in the end, especially after a lot of delays, problems, or arguments. Eventually, the army caught up with him in Latvia. The flight eventually got away six hours late.… … English dictionary
Eventually — Infobox Album | Name = Eventually Type = Album Artist = Paul Westerberg Released = 1996 Recorded = Genre = Alternative rock Length = Label = Reprise Producer = Lou Giordano, Brendan O Brien Reviews = *Allmusic Guide rating|2|5… … Wikipedia
eventually — e|ven|tu|al|ly [ ı ventʃuəli ] adverb *** at the end of a process or period of time in which many things happen: Dad was eventually diagnosed as suffering from a chronic heart condition. We re hoping, eventually, to create 500 new jobs. Did they… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
eventually — adverb after a long time, especially after a long delay or a lot of problems: He worked so hard that eventually he made himself ill. | She eventually passed her driving test. | “Did you manage to contact Roger?” “Well yes, eventually.” … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
eventually */*/*/ — UK [ɪˈventʃuəlɪ] / US adverb at the end of a process or period of time in which many things happen Dad was eventually diagnosed as suffering from a chronic heart condition. We re hoping, eventually, to create 500 new jobs. Did they ever pay you?… … English dictionary
Eventually — перевод, произношение, транскрипция
наречие ↓
Мои примеры
Примеры
Eventually the truth came out.
В конце концов, правда вышла наружу.
The pain eventually passed off
В конце концов, боль прошла.
Eventually, she got a job and moved to London.
В конце концов, она получила работу и переехала в Лондон.
He eventually died of drink.
В конце концов он умер от пьянства.
Eventually, I did get better and returned to work.
В конце концов, мне и впрямь стало лучше, и я вернулся к работе.
She eventually fell into an uneasy sleep.
В конце концов она заснула беспокойным сном.
Eventually I gave in and accepted the job on their terms.
В конце концов, я сдался и согласился работать на их условиях.
It eventually became clear that he had lied.
Со временем стало понятно, что он лгал.
You’ll get used to it. eventually.
Вы привыкнете к этому. в конце концов.
Eventually the truth emerged.
В конце концов правда выплыла наружу.
He eventually found solace in religion.
В конце концов, он нашёл утешение в религии.
The cancer eventually invaded the brain.
В конце концов, рак поразил мозг.
Eventually, Mary got a job as a waitress.
В конце концов, Мэри устроилась официанткой.
The river had eventually grooved itself deeply through.
В конце концов река проложила себе глубокое русло.
Eventually the lights turned green.
Наконец светофор переключился на зелёный.
The disease eventually deforms the bones.
Эта болезнь со временем деформирует кости.
Eventually my watch turned up in a coat pocket.
В конце концов мои часы нашлись в кармане пальто.
The moisture will eventually fall to earth in the form of rain or snow.
В конце концов эта влага выпадет на землю в виде дождя или снега.
The two rivers eventually conjoin.
В конце концов эти две речки сливаются в одну.
He eventually gained ascendancy over / in the group.
В конце концов он завоевал влияние в группе.
Eventually Stella persuaded her to accept an offer of marriage.
В конце концов Стелла уговорила её принять предложение о замужестве.
After trying his fortune in France and Germany, he eventually settled in Holland.
Попытав счастья во Франции и Германии, он осел в Голландии.
Her dogged efforts eventually paid off.
Её настойчивые усилия в конце концов принесли свои плоды.
Lack of time may eventually force a compromise.
Нехватка времени может в конечном счете привести к вынужденному компромиссу.
We got the lawn mower working again eventually.
В конце концов нам удалось вновь запустить газонокосилку.
The hijackers eventually surrendered (themselves) to the police.
В конце концов, угонщики сдались полиции.
He told the prankish lad that someone would eventually get hurt if he kept it up.
Он сказал проказнику, что если тот будет продолжать в том же духе, то кому-то в конце концов не поздоровится.
Condensation will eventually cause the fabric of the building to rot away.
Конденсация влаги неизбежно вызовет гниение остова дома.
Charles’ diplomacy eventually bore fruit.
В конечном итоге, дипломатия Чарльза принесла свои плоды.
The bears are eventually released into the wild.
В конце концов медведей выпускают в дикую природу.
Примеры, ожидающие перевода
The fungi eventually deliquesced
Italy’s championship hopes eventually bit the dust.
The chemical eventually leaches away from the soil.
Для того чтобы добавить вариант перевода, кликните по иконке ☰ , напротив примера.
Will We All Eventually Live in an Orwellian Dystopia?
George Orwell wrote 1984 almost 70 years ago, but the themes it depicts are becoming more and more relevant every day.
The world can seem pretty crazy of late. Fiction and lies blend together while countries split themselves fighting over mere opinions. Wars both near and far seem to have impacts that are immediate and ineffable. An air of existential dread hangs over every governmental action and frankly, it is just WAY too stressful.
This Concept Artist Creates Wonderful Dystopian City Images for Games and Movies
But if you’re looking to get all of that off your mind this holiday season by shutting the world off and curling up with a good book, may I NOT suggest George Orwell’s 1984.
Reading this claustrophobic fable of totalitarianism now, 70 years after its publication, is still a shock. First comes the jolt of recognition to what the author describes: Doublethink, Newspeak, the Thought Police, the Ministry of Love that deals in pain, the Ministry of Peace that wages war, the novel-writing machines that make pornography to distract the masses—It all seems so eerily familiar despite its ridiculousness. Then the anxious apprehension starts to creep in. One starts to wonder where we have gotten to on the roadmap to a hell Orwell described.
Is 1984 prophetic? Possibly. But is it stirring, moving, creative, and helpful? Undeniably, yes. It’s amazing how a book published before the advent of computers and written out of the battered landscape of total war, in a nation hungry, tired, and grey can feel more relevant than ever before. But it ultimately begs the question; are we really on our way to an Orwellian dystopia of mass totalitarianism and control?
As always, the answer to such a question is not really a simple prospect.
Some background on the book:
For those who might need the refresher, “1984” is a sci-fi, dystopian novel written by George Orwell in the summer of 1949 and set in—obviously—the year 1984. The book weaves the tale of a future Britain, now named ‘Oceania’, which has become a totalitarian, surveillance state.
Winston Smith, the protagonist, works as a censor in the Ministry of Truth, the government division tasked with the constant updating of history to suit present circumstances and shifting alliances. He and his fellow workers are controlled and monitored in this as a mass collective by the all-seeing and all-knowing presence of Big Brother.
Big Brother is the charismatic, wise leader who enjoys an intense cult of personality and yet… may not actually exist. Whether or not that’s the case though is not important. Thought Police will round up and persecute any person who betrays Big Brother by expressing individualism or independent thinking.
At first, Winston seems like the perfect rank and file employee of the system, but secretly he hates the Party and dreams of rebellion against Big Brother. He’s finally able to manifest this rebellion by entering into a forbidden relationship with a fellow employee, but Big Brother sees all and he is quickly found out.
The Party then tortures and brainwashes Winston until, by the end of the book, he is nothing more than a cog in the system, incapable of doing anything but blindly loving and trusting Big Brother.
Did I forget to say spoiler alert?
Living in a post-truth world:
Reading 1984 today, the thing that most jumps out as a fantasy become real is this idea of distorting reality to suit a particular narrative. We would have called this sort of thing propaganda, and then maybe “truthiness”, but now it’s probably best known as “alternative facts.”
In 1984, the protagonist writes, «Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two are four.» When he is later tortured by the state authorities, this declaration is used against him to force him into «doublethink,» the required capacity to prioritize the truth recognized by power over the truth recognized by his own senses.
So too, in the real world, when state leaders and spokespersons can invent crimes and massacres, denounce the media for departing even slightly from the official party line, and entirely dismiss scientific findings, citizens have to decide whether they will likewise engage in doublethink— if they will learn the “newspeak” and concede that two plus two is whatever they’re told it is.
Mass surveillance and social media:
As much as we might get distracted by the resurgence of totalitarian leaders and the distortion of facts around the world, the main thing that 1984 parallels in the modern day is the idea of the surveillance state. Many critics thought 1984 would fade away as a period piece, filled with technology and hubris that simply wasn’t believable.
But instead of fading away, Orwell’s masterpiece has become more relevant than ever as our world becomes more technologically connected and more dependent on “big data.”
Nowadays, governments regularly kill people in nations with which they are not officially at war by using remote-controlled aircraft. And now metadata collection — the gathering of trillions of bits of information that the intelligence community analyzes in order to recognize previously unseen patterns — allows governments to quietly compile dossiers on the behavior of millions of individuals.
In 1984, surveillance took the form of television screens that watch you, and the constant fear that the people around you might take one wrong word as a sign of dissent. The reality of individual surveillance today though is something much more insidious, and something that even Orwell never imagined.
Today it is social media that collects every gesture, purchase, and comment we make online, and feeds an omniscient presence in our lives that can predict our every preference. Modelled on consumer choices, where the user is the commodity that is being marketed, we are no longer fully in control of the individual realities that we inhabit.
And the seizure of these realities through the harvesting of our preferences for things like political campaigns is now even distorting democracy.
Another uncomfortable parallel to be found in 1984 is with how enemies to a regime can be created arbitrarily by whipping up popular feeling through propaganda. It is hard to refute that today, even the most well-meaning movement will travel faster through a populace if outrage is at it’s core, but in his description of the ‘Two Minutes Hate’ Orwell also foresaw the way in which online mobs work today.
In the book, people are made to regularly watch violent films, about which the protagonist says, “it was impossible to avoid joining in…A hideous ecstasy of fear and vindictiveness, a desire to kill, to torture, to smash faces in with a sledgehammer, seemed to flow through the whole group of people like an electric current”.
Now political, religious and commercial organizations all trade in this currency of whipping up feelings. Orwell uncannily identified the willing collusion in hate that such movements can elicit: the only question is if we might observe it in ourselves too…
Big Brother becoming a reality:
If metadata and social media are the future of the surveillance state, then we need look no farther than China to see it’s present.
If you can imagine putting the government in control of the fleeting measures of importance and self value social media tends to provide us, you will start to have some idea of the “Social Credit” system that’s being rolled out in China. It’s a hybrid of credit ratings, behavioral analysis, and state blacklists announced in 2015 as a way of assigning every Chinese citizen a score based on their “sincerity”, and to reward high achievers.
Of course, there is an obvious dark side to this system. People whose scores are low—many of whom just happen to be critics of the government and corruption—find themselves unable to travel, without easy access to medical checkups, or even unable to enroll their children in certain schools.
And because an authoritarian state lurks behind the system, the chance of appealing successfully against a score is very low. And new reports of Chinese firms’ plans to integrate facial recognition of all 1.3 billion of its citizens into its existing system of billions of networked surveillance cameras makes the correlations with Big Brother harder and harder to ignore.
It’s easy for anyone living outside China to regard Social Credit as an anomaly peculiar to that country alone, and not something that could ever affect the rest of us. But we own the same smartphones and generate the same data as Chinese citizens. We’re already being scored in many ways, both above and below the radar. And those “scores» are already starting to have real-world consequences.
It would seem that the key to avoid slipping into a Chinese style system- or worse- is to stop all of this data being pooled together and analyzed. Of course, this comes with a significant cost. In the modern world, convenience is often gained at the expense of privacy. And doesn’t the utopian dream of futuristic smart cities- which are designed to help governments govern and citizens thrive- rely on just that type of efficiency?
How likely is a truly Orwellian future?
At the end of the day, this is the question that we need to face. Are we headed to an Orwellian world of misinformation, torture, and totemic hatred? Most experts will tell you: “Probably not.” Only to quickly add, “as long as we stay vigilant.”
It’s a somewhat unsatisfying answer, but it’s the truth. Technology and the sharing of our data have become ingrained into our society, and in many ways our lives are much better for it. But the temptation for strong-men and oppressive governments to use that data, and the manipulation of our basest instincts to solidify their own power will always exist as well.
That is why we as a global community should take the recently renewed popularity of dystopian novels like 1984, Yevgeny Zamyatin’s “We”, Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World”, and Margaret Atwood’s “The Handmaid’s Tale” as a very good thing. It tells us that people are recognizing the threat at hand, and awareness of any problem is the first step in addressing it.
The true terror in 1984 is ultimately the annihilation of the self and the destruction of the capacity to recognize the real world. Orwell’s work is not being subtle, or trying to look down on common people for falling prey to this: he understands how hard it is to get things right. However, his story pins down the unsettling horror of a world where people are stripped of their essential freedoms as they have fewer and fewer words to use to defend them, and whose thinking is distorted by blind ideologies.
All over the world, where tyrannies rule, 1984 is banned. But of course, it is still pirated, digitally downloaded, and printed into false covers. And sales have surged too in countries that have always been known as stable democracies.
It is not only that we live in a world transformed by Orwell’s insights in that they have shaped how we see oppression, but also that 1984 has become a practical handbook for handling difficult times.
Ultimately, it helps us to remember that knowledge is a kind of strength and we are all being tested.