Well-placed, well placed (adj.)
●In a good situation to be able to do something.(有良好條件的,有能力的)
Examples:
1.With its well-developed telecommunications infrastructure, Hong Kong should be well-placed to reap the full benefit that electronic commerce would bring.
2.The company is well-placed to compete with its strategy to invest in research and development.
Latent (adj.)
●Present but needing particular conditions to become active, obvious, or completely developed.
(潛在的,隱性的)
Examples:
1.Recent developments in the area have brought latent ethnic tension out into the open.
2.We're trying to bring out the latent artistic talents that many people possess without realizing it.
Hit the nail on the head (idiom)
●To describe exactly what is causing a situation or problem.(一語中的,一針見血)
Examples:
1.With regard to the gentleman's comments, I think he has hit the nail right on the head.
2.Tom hit the nail on the head when he said most people can use a computer without knowing how it works.
Bound up (in/with sth) (idiom)
●Closely connected with or involved in something.
(緊密聯繫,密切相關)
Examples:
1.The survival of whales is intimately bound up with the health of the ocean.
2.Climate change is closely bound up in the whole issue of energy consumption.
Bailout (noun)
●The act of helping a person or organization that is in difficulty, usually by giving or lending money.
(緊急援助,救助)
Examples:
1.Three years of huge losses forced the bank to seek a government bailout.
2.A $ 30 billion bailout by the IMF helped Brazil avert the disaster.