V. to นอน ที่มากกว่าแค่ 'sleep' (เยอะเบอร์นี้ เกียมนอนแบบ Sleeping Beauty แล้วนะ 555555)
-fast asleep
-drop off
-nod off
-sleep like a baby
-sleep like a log
-hit the hay
-hit the sack
-put someone to sleep
-put someone to bed
-tuck someone in (bed)
-have a lie-in
/ส่วนการพาลูกนอนแบบหลับปุ๋ยๆ ยาวๆ (ที่คนเป็นแม่คิดถึงงงงง) เดี๋ยวนี้ไม่มีแล้วนะคะ วิ่งตะลุยอย่างเดียว 🤣❤️
ขอบคุณคาร์ซีทแสนสบายที่ลูกชายหลับปุ๋ยตลอดการเดินทาง Daiichi รุ่น First 7 ค้าบบบ BabyhillsThailand
#EnglishAfterNoonz
同時也有5部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過15萬的網紅pennyccw,也在其Youtube影片中提到,Chris Mullin was making just his second start of the season, but it was the finish for the 36-year-old that was really sweet. Mullin scored nine of h...
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- 關於nod off 在 นุ่น - English AfterNoonz Facebook 的最佳貼文
- 關於nod off 在 อาจารย์อดัม Facebook 的最佳貼文
- 關於nod off 在 鋼鐵媽媽的Andrew與山姆 Iron Mom’s Andrew & Sam Facebook 的精選貼文
- 關於nod off 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最讚貼文
- 關於nod off 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最讚貼文
- 關於nod off 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最佳貼文
- 關於nod off 在 Nod off / Drift off - Learn English online free video lessons 的評價
nod off 在 อาจารย์อดัม Facebook 的最佳貼文
งีบหลับ เผลอหลับ สัปหงก ภาษาอังกฤษว่าอย่างไร ??
A train employee is in trouble for taking an 11-second nap.
พนักงานรถไฟเดือดร้อนเพราะงีบหลับ 11 วินาที
take a nap แปลว่า งีบหลับ
taking an 11-second nap งีบหลับ 11 วินาที
โดย 11-second เป็น adj. ขยายคำว่า nap
second จึง ไม่เติม s
taking a nap for 11 seconds
(เติม s งีบหลับเป็นเวลา 11 วินาที)
He was snoozing on the job.
เขาเผลอหลับขณะทำงาน
snooze (v.) งีบหลับ
อ่าน สนูซ
doze off สัปหงก เผลอหลับ
อ่านว่า โดซอฟ
It's very common to see people nodding off on the train in Japan.
มันธรรมดามากที่จะเฆ็นคนที่ญี่ปุ่นงีบหลับบนรถไฟ
common (adj.) ธรรมดา ซึ่งเกิดขึ้นบ่อย
อ่านว่า เคาะเมิน
nod off เผลอหลับ
อ่านว่า นอดอฟ
nod off 在 鋼鐵媽媽的Andrew與山姆 Iron Mom’s Andrew & Sam Facebook 的精選貼文
9. 👭👬 Friends
Friends are like walls, sometimes you lean on them, sometimes it’s good just knowing they’re there.
If it weren’t for the thick and thin, I would have never have knew who my real friends were.
Despite how late she gets off work, sometimes sacrificing her weekends, she always brought happy food to visit me. She simply asks, are you okay? I would nod my head like always, and then we would shoot the breeze, and end the day with laughter.
When I was still in hiding, swollen with steroid, she sent me a flower through text every morning. She knows that was all I needed to brighten up my day. I spent my birthday in the hospital that year. She drove to the hospital with a bouquet of my favorite flowers and card, left it with Samuel, and drove away.
As straight forward as she is, she declares the days that she’s free, and pumps me whether I am for going out to grab some coffee or she would come to my place. We would chew the fat, and she never hesitates to put in her two cents when it comes to giving me opinions.
Even Samuel’s friends and colleagues, they treat me as dearly. They brought me food, they traveled with me, taking baby steps. They brought their baby to entertain me when I didn’t have Andrew.
There’s that family we’ve crossed paths so many times until we finally became friends. It all started when the friendly dad asked the son to lend a hand to help me push my wheelchair. The young mom of two, prepares everything that she thinks that I would need for my stay in the hospital.
And my friends from near and far, texting and emailing me checking up on me every now and then, you are all my sunshine.
Lastly, yet the most the important person among all, an Angel was sent to me during my darkest year, she was my savior, she led me out of the woods. She was a Chinese doctor who came to treat me with Chinese therapy and acupuncture, she was always quiet and never said much, however, she had the power to induce me to sob all my sorrows, my feeling of desperation and fear. No one has ever seen me out of sorts or break down like that except for Samuel. She would let me blubber and then she would soothe me with words of wisdom and things that I don’t even remember now. Maybe her real job is a hypnotist? Whatever she said or did, she pulled me out of the drowning whirlpool. It’s hard to believe that we are even friends now, for she is an Angel, and I am just so human.
I never knew I had so many friends and angels around me until now. I am so grateful to have you all.
Thank you.
♥️
nod off 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最讚貼文
Chris Mullin was making just his second start of the season, but it was the finish for the 36-year-old that was really sweet.
Mullin scored nine of his season-high 21 points in the fourth quarter, including a 3-pointer with 1:52 left that pushed the lead to four points, as the Pacers fought back from a 10-point deficit to defeat the Philadelphia 76ers, 92-90.
Mullin's vintage performance ended the 76ers' hopes of catching the New York Knicks for third place in the Eastern Conference, and left them just one-half game ahead of the fifth-place Charlotte Hornets, who hold the tiebreaker after winning the season series, 3-1. The 76ers (48-33) had won three straight coming into the game.
"We had a great opportunity to get home-court advantage, we controlled our own destiny and we didn't get it done," guard Eric Snow said. "We have to win our game tomorrow (in Chicago) and home. Who knows, Charlotte may give us one. If not, we'll go on the road and win."
With the Pacers (55-26) already having clinched their first Eastern Conference title, their aging starting backcourt, Reggie Miller and Mark Jackson, were given the night off. Mullin and Jalen Rose got the nod in their place. It was Rose's 28th start of the season.
"We have a lot of guys on this team who can play and play well," Indiana forward Austin Croshere said. "With two starters and big point scorers sitting out, the other guys wanted to prove that they can play as well, and we did that tonight."
The only thing Mullin has to prove is that he can still produce the way he did in his best years with Golden State. For six straight seasons, from 1987-88 to 1992-93, Mullin averaged more than 20 points a game. But injuries have slowed him considerably in recent years.
The Sixers led 78-68 after three quarters, but Mullin unleashed three 3-pointers and the Pacers' defense held Philadelphia without a basket for a 10:48 span. The Sixers missed 13 straight shots, and when Mullin hit an open 3-pointer from the left corner, Indiana led 89-85 with 1:52 to play.
Toni Kukoc drilled a 3-pointer over Mullin with 42 seconds to play, but Rose hit two free throws with 27 seconds left, putting the Pacers up 91-88.
Rose fouled Snow and the Sixers guard hit both free throws with 20 seconds left, and Philadelphia's chances seemed to improve when Travis Best hit just one of two with 18 seconds to go, leaving the Pacers ahead 92-90.
Snow drove into the paint and flipped a pass out to Kukoc, alone 12 feet from the basket, but the Croatian missed the jumper and the ball skipped out of bounds as time expired.
"Our defense was real good," Indiana coach Larry Bird said. "Down the stretch, we had trouble scoring for a while but our defense kept us in it. We made some plays."
The Sixers looked like the team with nothing at stake early in the game, but Kukoc energized them with his passing in the second quarter and Allen Iverson provided the spark in the third, when Philadelphia built a 10-point lead.
The Sixers opened the quarter with a 10-2 run, powered by George Lynch's six points, and when Theo Ratlif dunked with 8:49 to go, the Sixers were up, 56-54.
Iverson scored 10 points over the final 5:41 of the third, beginning with his layup that gave Philadelphia a 60-59 edge. Despite the sore elbow that kept him from looking for his outside shot Saturday night, Iverson hit a pair of 3-pointers as the Sixers built a 78-68 lead heading into the final 12 minutes.
The Pacers' big starting lineup helped them go on a 9-0 run to take a 29-15 lead late in the first quarter. Austin Croshere dunked back the rebound of Rik Smits' missed jumper and Smits hit a 12-footer before Mullin made back-to-back steals, nailing an open 3-pointer off the first and going in for a layup that gave the Pacers the 14-point lead with 56 seconds left.
Rose finished with 20 points and nine assists, and Smits had 16 points and 10 rebounds for the Pacers, who admitted they were looking for payback for a 111-101 loss they suffered to the Sixers at Conseco Fieldhouse on March 26.
"We have a great record in what we call `payback' games," Rose said. "It was a great win for our team."
"Chris Mullin gave us a big lift," Bird said. "Rik Smits has been about as good as I've seen him in a long time. We had a total effort from everybody. We played hard and that's good to see, especially when you really don't have much to play for."
Iverson led Philadelphia with 24 points, Lynch scored 16, Tyrone Hill grabbed 14 rebounds and Snow dished out 12 assists.
"I understand that to win a championship, you have to win on somebody else's home court anyway," Iverson said. "I always turn a negative into a positive, and the positive is that we'll have some experience with playing on the road if we do have the fifth seed."
nod off 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最讚貼文
At the memorable 1986 NBA All-Star weekend in Dallas, 5-6 Spud Webb improbably won the slam dunk contest in front of his hometown crowd over favored Atlanta teammate Dominique Wilkins. The third annual old-timer legends game then preceded the first three-point "long distance shootout" competition.
And fittingly to cap off a fine All-Star Saturday before the mid-season classic contest on Sunday, Celtic long-distance marksman Larry Bird won the inaugural three-point shootout in spectacular fashion.
After being chosen for the event, Bird practiced shooting from the five three-point spots for weeks leading up to the contest, egged on by sharpshooting teammates Danny Ainge and Scott Wedman.
Neither of them were invited to be part of the eight-man field, although both could make an argument they were better long-range shooters than some who were in the competition.
Snubbed, both Ainge and Wedman needled Larry that they should have been included instead of him. Yet Bird would lead the NBA in three-pointers made (82) and attempted (194) that championship season, making 42.3 percent of his triple tries.
Dale Ellis of Dallas, Eric "Sleepy' Floyd of Golden State, Craig Hodges of Milwaukee, LA Clipper and former Laker guard Norm Nixon, Chicago's Kyle Macy (a fellow Hoosier), 6-5 Knick Trent Tucker and Bullet Leon Wood joined Bird. Five of the contestants were relatively small guards, while the 6-7 Ellis was a swingman. Bird was clearly the tallest of the group.
Bird immediately tried to establish himself as the frontrunner when he entered the locker room before the shootout.
"Which one of you guys is going to finish second?" he asked. Only Nixon of the seven other competitors had been an All-Star, so much of the field may have been a bit in awe of the setting and the three-time MVP. And Nixon, an excellent mid-range shooter, was actually a puzzling choice for inclusion.
In his entire career, Norm made just 100 treys as he shot 29.4 percent beyond the arc. The 1985-86 season with the Clippers was his best from long distance, but he still shot just 34.7 percent and made a mere 42 trifectas.
Bird correctly figured Hodges, who would later win the shootout from 1990-92, was his stiffest competition. Wood complained that the red, white and blue ABA "money balls" (a nod to the defunct league's role in popularizing the shot) worth two points were slick and hard to grip.
Actually the American Basketball League, a short-lived pro loop in 1962-63 featuring a Cleveland team owned by George Steinbrenner, pioneered the three-point shot. The ABA picked up the gimmick shot when that league opened play in 1967, and added the popular red, white and blue ball under commissioner George Mikan.
Always looking for an edge, Bird played into Wood's paranoia by grabbing an ABA ball and handling it before agreeing with Wood that it was indeed hard to handle and shoot.
As Larry expected, Hodges came out of the gate firing and scored a whopping 25 out of a possible 30 points. His incredible first round showing is still a single-round record for the event 28 years later. The mark of 25 was tied by contest winner Jason Kapono in 2007 and 2008, but has never been exceeded.
Tucker scored 19 points, Ellis 17 and Bird 16 as he squeaked into the second round. Only the top four scores made it to the semifinals, eliminating Floyd, Macy and Wood (who all tied with 13 apiece) and the jump-shooting Nixon (nine).
Bird started to heat up in the semis by scoring 18 points. "Look at how effortlessly he gets the shots up," noted WTBS commentator Rick Barry. A superstar bomber in both the NBA and ABA, Rick had retired in 1980 and probably wished he could have competed in the event.
At 6-9, Bird had an advantage over the shorter field. He barely got off the ground as he launched his perfectly-arched trifectas and thus burned less energy. In addition, his quick release, fast recovery time and quick hands helped him get off all 25 shots in a minute every time, usually with seconds to spare.
nod off 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最佳貼文
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Only Allen Iverson could deliver a Hall of Fame speech that name-checked '90s rappers, referenced "Chappelle's Show" and thanked just about every person he met along his basketball journey. Only Shaquille O'Neal could follow that act with what amounted to a half-hour comedy routine that needled former coaches and teammates and included a soap-opera shout-out.
The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame's Class of 2016 lived up to its lofty billing with an epic three-hour induction ceremony Friday night at Springfield's Symphony Hall, with Iverson and O'Neal stealing the show.
Iverson delivered a captivating 31-minute speech in which he overcame initial jitters during a memorable address that featured multiple standing ovations. Fans with No. 3 Iverson jerseys in the balcony cheered throughout.
Dressed in a black suit with a black shirt and tie, Iverson paused repeatedly to collect himself at the start of his speech while thanking his three presenters -- Larry Brown, Julius Erving and John Thompson -- as well as members of his family.
Fighting tears throughout, Iverson thanked former Georgetown coach Thompson "for saving my life."
"[After] the incident happened in high school and all that was taken away ... no other schools would recruit me anymore," Iverson recalled, referencing a racial brawl at a bowling alley that landed him in jail. His conviction in the case was later overturned. "My mom went to Georgetown and begged [Thompson] to give me a chance. And he did."
He said he later left Georgetown only as "an OK basketball player."
"But once I started to listen to Larry Brown and take constructive criticism, I learned how much of a great, great coach that he really is. ... That's when I became an MVP," Iverson said.
In maybe the most memorable moment of his address, Iverson recalled his first time playing against his idol, Michael Jordan.
"Man, I wanted to be like Mike," Iverson said. "I remember the first time I played against him. I walked out on the court and I looked at him. And, for the first time in my life, a human being didn't really look real to me. You know what I mean? I don't know if you all watch the 'Chappelle Show,' but he talked about a certain incident where somebody's seeing Rick James. Like I literally seen his aura. It looked like he was glowing.
"I'm sitting there, and I'm saying, 'Man, that's Michael.' And I'm looking at him. I can't stop looking at him. I'm looking at his shoes, and I'm like, man, he's got on the Jordans! It was my Mike. It was my idol, my hero."
After the Jordan story, Iverson seemed to settle in. Nervously rocking at the start of his speech, he confidently thanked a Rolodex of coaches, owners, teammates and rappers.
"I want to thank Biggie Smalls, Redman, Jadakiss, Tupac and Michael Jackson for being my theme music throughout my career," Iverson said.
Twenty-two minutes into his speech, Iverson said, "The Philly fans," and that elicited a monster reaction from the balcony, which immediately engaged in an "MVP" chant.
Added Iverson: "My relationship with the fans in Philadelphia is like no other. I thank you all for the support over the years. ... You never jumped off the bandwagon, continued to support me like true fans are supposed to."
Iverson also paid tribute to "the ones that stuck by me throughout my journey." He cited "all the barbershop talk that my family had and all the arguments my friends had with people in the barbershop and hair salon.
"Now you can say: 'Well, look, my man is solidified.'"
Iverson closed his speech with a nod to the "guys who are not my friends anymore."
"I'm glad that you blew your cover for me to recognize that you [weren't] any good to my family or me. And I appreciate y'all for that. So if I make any more new friends, I know the signs," he said.
Not to be outdone, O'Neal took the stage for a punchline-filled speech as the final inductee of the night.
O'Neal referenced Luke and Laura from "General Hospital" and joked about his commercial endeavors, including how he sat in a "Buick I knew I couldn't fit in." Drawing laughter, O'Neal added, "Hey, they paid me $3 million. What did you want me to say, no?"
His speech had serious moments, like when he thanked his parents, Phil Harrison and Lucille O'Neal, for giving him the discipline and drive that drove his NBA dream.
"If I know my father, he's up there arguing with Wilt [Chamberlain] that his son is the best big man in the game," O'Neal said.
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