As Neil Armstrong became the first man to walk on the moon, a global audience of 500 million people were watching and listening. "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind," they heard him say as he dropped from the ladder of his spacecraft to make the first human footprint on the lunar su rface. It was the perfect quote for such a 36 occasion. But from the moment he said it, people have argued a bout whether the NASA astronaut got his lines wrong. In the tense six hours and forty minutes between landing on the moon and stepping out of the capsule, Armstrong wrote what he knew would become some of the most 37 words in history. He has always insisted that he wrote "one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind," which would have been a more meaningful and 38 correct sentence. Without the missing "a," the intended meaning of the sentence is lost. In effect, the line means, "That is one small step for mankind (i.e., humanity), one giant leap for mankind." But did he really say the sentence incorrectly? Until now Armstrong himself had never been sure if he actually said what he wrote. In his biography First Man he told the author James Hansen, "I must ad mit that it doesn't sound like the word 'a' is there. On the other hand, certainly the 'a' was intended, because that's the only way it makes sense." But now, after almost four decades, the space explorer has been 39 . Using high-tech sound analysis techniques, Peter Shann Ford, an Australian computer expert, has discovered that the "a" was spoken by Armstrong, but he said it so quickly that it was 40 on the recording that was broadcast to the world.
Aspontaneous
Btechnical
Cmomentous正確答案
Drecording
答案與詳解
