Summary
5 May 2010
A 16-year-old Australian girl is nearly home after sailing around the world. But she may not have sailed far enough to get the record as the youngest person to make the journey.
Reporter:
Nick Bryant
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After more than six months at sea Jessica Watson is in the final stretch of her epic voyage around the globe. She's hoping to reach Sydney Harbour later this month a couple of days shy of her seventeenth birthday.
But although there's no question that she's circumnavigated the globe, sailing experts say she hasn't gone far enough to claim the record of being the youngest person to sail solo non-stop and unassisted around the world.
The influential Sail World website has praised her heroic achievement but is a stickler for the rules of what it calls "true circumnavigation". To have achieved that, it says, the teenager should have sailed much farther north into the Atlantic to a point in line with France, rather than simply crossing the Equator and then returning south.
"We don't want to take away from what the kid's done," said the editor of the website "but it's one thing to be a hero and another to be a record holder. Had she sailed three thousand seven hundred kilometres further she could have made that boast."
Nick Bryant, 大象传媒 News, Sydney
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Vocabulary
- the final stretch of
the last part of
- epic voyage
long and difficult journey
- a couple of days shy of
a few days before
- circumnavigated the globe
sailed completely around the world
- to sail solo non-stop and unassisted
to sail by herself without stopping and without getting any help during the journey
- influential
important and respected
- is a stickler for the rules
believes that rules are very important and must be followed exactly
- the Equator
the imaginary line that goes round the middle of the Earth and marks the boundary between the northern and southern hemispheres
- she could have made that boast
she could have said that she had broken the record