第一篇:值得背誦的優(yōu)美句子
背誦
1、請(qǐng)保留一份單純,使你多一份與人的友善,少一些心靈的冷漠麻木;請(qǐng)保留一份單純,使你多一份人生的快樂,少一些精神的衰老疲憊;請(qǐng)保留一份單純,使你多一份奮進(jìn)的力量,少一些故作高深的看破紅塵。
2、成功是你夢(mèng)寐以求的那朵紅玫瑰,挫折正是那遍及周圍的針刺??鞓肥悄阈燎诟奴@得的果實(shí),悲傷正是那成熟前的秕粒。
3、天空收容每一片云彩,不論其美丑,所以天空寬闊無邊。大地?fù)肀恳淮缤恋?,不論其貧富,所以大地廣袤無垠。海洋接納每一條河流,不論其大小,所以海洋廣闊無邊。
4、當(dāng)簡(jiǎn)愛說:“我們是平等的,我不是無感情的機(jī)器”,我懂得了作為女性的自尊;當(dāng)裴多菲說:“若為自由故,兩者皆可拋”,我懂得了作為人的價(jià)值;當(dāng)魯迅說:“不在沉默中爆發(fā),就在沉默中滅亡”,我懂得人應(yīng)具有反抗精神;當(dāng)白朗寧說:“拿走愛,世界將變成一座墳?zāi)埂?,我懂得了為他人奉獻(xiàn)愛心的重要。
5、大廈巍然屹立,是因?yàn)橛袌?jiān)強(qiáng)的支柱,理想和信仰就是人生大廈的支柱;航船破浪前行,是因?yàn)橛兄甘痉较虻牧_盤,理想和信仰就是人生航船的羅盤;列車奔馳千里,是因?yàn)橛幸龑?dǎo)它的鐵軌,理想和信仰就是人生列車上的鐵軌。
6、什么是幸福?幸福是果園里果農(nóng)望著壓滿枝頭果實(shí)的滿臉喜色,幸福是教室里莘莘學(xué)子憧憬未來的動(dòng)人笑臉,幸福是實(shí)驗(yàn)室里科學(xué)家又有新發(fā)現(xiàn)時(shí)的舒展眉頭,幸福是領(lǐng)獎(jiǎng)臺(tái)上運(yùn)動(dòng)員仰望國旗冉冉升起時(shí)的瑩瑩淚光。幸福是奮斗的結(jié)晶,勤勞的豐碑。
7、未經(jīng)歷坎坷泥濘的艱難,哪能知道陽光大道的可貴;未經(jīng)歷風(fēng)雪交加的黑夜,哪能體會(huì)風(fēng)和日麗的可愛;未經(jīng)歷挫折和磨難的考驗(yàn),怎能體會(huì)到勝利和成功的喜悅。挫折,想說恨你不容易……
8、幸福,時(shí)時(shí)刻刻圍繞在你身旁。如果你從母親手中接過飯碗,心存溫馨,那就是幸福;如果你在燈下讀著朋友的來信,品味友情,那就是幸福;如果你獨(dú)坐一隅,靜靜聽歌,凝神遐思,那就是幸福
9、有人說,幸福是星級(jí)賓館里山珍海味間的觥籌交錯(cuò);有人說,幸福是高檔舞臺(tái)廳里動(dòng)人旋律中的翩翩起舞;有人說,幸福是端座奧迪、寶馬車于人流如潮的大街上招搖過市;也有人說,幸福是待在密室里數(shù)著成疊的百元大鈔;然而我要說:擁有這些,不一定就是真的擁有了幸福!
10、遠(yuǎn)去的飛鳥,永恒的牽掛是故林;漂泊的船兒,始終的惦記是港灣;奔波的旅人,無論是匆匆夜歸還是離家遠(yuǎn)去,心中千絲萬縷、時(shí)時(shí)惦念的地方,還是家。
11、幸福是什么?是功成名就、受人敬仰嗎?是恬靜悠閑、無牽無掛嗎?是高朋滿座、兒孫繞膝嗎?我說:幸福是……。
12、人生就像一座山,重要的不是它的高低,而在于靈秀;人生就像一場(chǎng)雨,重要的不是它的大小,而在于及時(shí)。
13、要裝進(jìn)一杯新泉,你就必須倒掉已有的陳水;要獲取一枝玫瑰,你就必須放棄到手的薔薇;要多一份獨(dú)特的體驗(yàn),你就必須多一份心靈的創(chuàng)傷。
14、“指點(diǎn)江山,激揚(yáng)文字”是一種豪邁的瀟灑,“天生我材必有用”是一種自信的瀟灑,“獨(dú)釣寒江雪”是一種高潔的瀟灑,“不破樓蘭終不還”是一種悲壯的瀟灑。
15、風(fēng)從水上走過,留下粼粼波紋;陽光從云中穿過,留下絲絲溫暖;歲月從樹林走過,留下圈圈年輪,朋友,我們從時(shí)代的舞臺(tái)上走過,留下了什么呢?
16、希望大海風(fēng)平浪靜,卻常常有狂風(fēng)和惡浪。希望江河一瀉千里,卻常常有旋渦和急流,希望生活美滿幸福,卻常常有悲傷和憂愁。
17.冬天的河干涸了,我相信,春水還會(huì)來臨,那時(shí)白帆就是我心中的偶像;風(fēng)中的樹葉凋零了,我相信,泥土里的夢(mèng)將在枝頭開花結(jié)果。
18、天使的翅膀碎了,落到人間,成了我們的憂傷;誠信的被囊拋了,散到世上,成了撒旦的魔杖。
19、沒有哪一種胭脂能涂抹時(shí)間,沒有哪一件服裝能掩飾靈魂,沒有哪一套古籍能裝潢空虛。
20、它可能是一座山,讓你感受巍峨,它可能是一片海,讓你體會(huì)壯闊,它可能是一首交響樂,讓你領(lǐng)略激越,它可能是一座石雕,讓你明白雄健。
21、在經(jīng)受了失敗和挫折后,我學(xué)會(huì)了堅(jiān)韌;在遭受到誤解和委屈時(shí),我學(xué)會(huì)了寬容;在經(jīng)歷了失落和離別后,我懂得了珍惜。
22、不是苦惱太多,只是我們不懂生活;不是幸福太少,只是我們不懂把握。
23、責(zé)任感是諸葛孔明“鞠躬盡瘁,死而后已”寫就的《出師表》,責(zé)任感是孔繁森離家別母血灑高原樹立的公仆豐碑,責(zé)任感是貝多芬挑戰(zhàn)人生超越自我譜寫的《命運(yùn)交響曲》。
24、金錢可以買來名貴的手表,但買不來寶貴的時(shí)間;金錢可以買來美味的食品,但買不好的胃口。
25、是一叢秋菊,也要散發(fā)芳香;是一片秋葉,也要裝點(diǎn)大地;是一株古柏,也要撐起藍(lán)天;是一眼古井,也要流出清泉。
26、尊重別人是一種美德,受人尊重是一種幸福。
27、書是良藥,劉向說:“書猶藥也,善讀可以醫(yī)愚”;書是益友,臧克家說:“讀過一本書,像交了一位益友”;書是窗戶,高爾基說:“每一本書,都在我面前打開了一扇窗戶”。
28、成熟是一種素質(zhì),一種源于心靈表于行動(dòng)的素質(zhì);成熟是一種能力,一種自我約束自我管理的能力;成熟是一種態(tài)度,一種對(duì)任何事物都保持冷靜的態(tài)度;成熟是一種心境,一種能看淡一切,萬事淡如水的心境。
29、信念之于人,猶翅膀之于鳥,信念是飛翔的翅膀
30、愛心是一片照射在冬日的陽光,它使貧病交迫的人分外感到人間的溫暖;愛心是一泓出現(xiàn)在沙漠的泉水,它使瀕臨絕境的人重新看到生活的希望。
31、包裝是房子富麗堂皇的外殼,包裝是丑婦手上絢麗的太陽傘,包裝是模特在舞臺(tái)上走出的一字貓步。
32、“慈母手中線,游子身上衣”說的是親情;“人生得一知己足,斯世當(dāng)以同懷視之”說的是友情,“曾經(jīng)滄海難為水,除卻巫山不是云”說的是愛情;“茍利國家生死以,豈因禍福避趨之”說的是愛國情。寫作精彩語段集錦
(一)排比、比喻
1、面對(duì)著蒼茫的群山,面對(duì)著無際的原野,面對(duì)著清澈的小溪,面對(duì)著芳郁的野花,面對(duì)著淺淺的草葉,我沉默,我驚嘆,我欣喜,我歡樂,我無言。
2、我還是愛著屬于我的初三的。愛屬于初三給與我的心曠神怡的時(shí)刻:當(dāng)你冥思苦想,而終于恍然大悟的時(shí)候,你會(huì)品嘗成功的喜悅;當(dāng)你忙里偷閑和別人閑聊上幾句家常時(shí),你會(huì)發(fā)現(xiàn)生活的樂趣;當(dāng)你趁著課間十分鐘一瞥窗外那云卷云舒的寬容時(shí),你會(huì)感到心靈的輕松與愜意。所以,我說——初三是一幅流光溢彩的油畫,是一片充滿幻想的云霞,是一個(gè)充滿競(jìng)爭(zhēng)的年華。
3、初三讓我受益匪淺,她讓我明白了珍惜時(shí)間才不會(huì)虛度此生的真諦,她讓我懂得了珍愛人生就要去拼搏去奮斗的道理。如醉如癡,她讓我用激情吮吸著知識(shí)的甘露;豁然開朗,她讓我用真誠去探尋著做人的美好。
4、追求,就是千年不變的至情,百代流傳的綺夢(mèng);是沁人心脾,令人留連的田園風(fēng)光;是一個(gè)人、一個(gè)家、一個(gè)民族、一個(gè)國家奮斗不息的崇高理想。因?yàn)橛辛俗非?,才有了一個(gè)個(gè)古老而又美好的傳說;有了追求,才有了一座座綿延無邊、用血肉筑起的鋼鐵長城;有了追求,才有了一尊尊屹立于天地之間、永不低頭的雕像。
5、美麗是平凡的,平凡得讓你感覺不到她的存在;美麗是平淡的,平淡得只剩下溫馨的記憶;美麗又是平靜的,平靜的只有你費(fèi)盡心思才能激起她的漣漪。
6、有人愛霧,愛它的朦朧,愛它的縹緲;有人愛霜,愛它的潔白,愛它的淡雅;也有人愛露,愛它的晶瑩剔透,愛它的嬌小玲瓏;更有人愛雪,愛它的純潔,愛它的素雅。
當(dāng)暴風(fēng)雨來襲時(shí),林海枝舞葉涌,俯仰起伏,萬千樹干就是萬千根搖曳的琴弦,彈奏出驚心動(dòng)魄的交響樂;云霧涌來,一切淹沒在白茫茫的浪濤之下,變成一片搖擺晃動(dòng)的海底森林;但當(dāng)熱帶雨傾瀉過后,太陽重又照耀,億萬葉片上的水珠,閃爍出億萬晶瑩的星星,眩人眼目。而我,唯獨(dú)鐘情于雨。(開頭)
7、是的,童心無價(jià)。擁有了童心,你便會(huì)擁有天真純潔、無私無邪的品格;擁有了童心,你便會(huì)忘記生活中的瑣屑愁事,快樂的面對(duì)人生;擁有了童心,你便會(huì)懂得如何面對(duì)生活,享受生活。
8、人生好似調(diào)味盤,酸得是惆悵,苦的是鍛煉,辣的是過程,甜的是成功。
9、花一樣的你,花一樣的我,花一樣的年華,花一樣的世界,花一樣的未來。不要在虛度光陰,不要在碌碌無為。經(jīng)常同自己談話吧,你會(huì)更了解自己,你會(huì)過的更充實(shí),你會(huì)更真心地?zé)釔圻@個(gè)美好的世界。(結(jié)尾)
10、親愛的朋友們,不要抱怨長路漫漫走得不瀟灑浪漫,其實(shí)艱難困苦就是你成功的搖籃,讓長風(fēng)的翅膀攜你過盡千帆,讓心思的呼喚伴你嘗過生命的難關(guān)。只要心中的風(fēng)景不凋零,生命的葉子永遠(yuǎn)不會(huì)枯黃腐爛,永葆一顆接受磨礪的心,人生將會(huì)永遠(yuǎn)是春天。(議論)
(二)引用詩詞、名言
11、爺爺告訴我,奶奶生前最愛梧桐。李清照‘梧桐更兼細(xì)雨’是一種思愁;李煜‘寂寞梧桐深院鎖清秋’是‘剪不斷’的離愁;周邦彥‘桐花半畝,靜鎖一庭愁雨’寄托的也是一腔愁緒。在梧桐樹下,我學(xué)會(huì)了很多詩詞,也漸漸地懂得了詩人們的心情。
12、我愛那?飛流直下三千尺,疑是銀河落九天?的廬山瀑布;我愛那?蕩胸生層云,決眥入歸鳥?的泰山極頂;我愛那?奔流到海不復(fù)歸?的黃河九曲;我愛那?兩岸猿聲啼不住?的長江三峽;我愛那?秦時(shí)明月漢時(shí)關(guān)?的古樸塞北;我愛好那?日江花紅勝火?的秀麗江南
第二篇:值得背誦的名言警句
1.離開人生,哲學(xué)是空洞的;離開哲學(xué),人生是盲目的!——傅佩榮 2.年輕人缺的不是激情,而是理性!3.我的眼里容不的沙子,如果你是我眼里的沙子,那么我會(huì)用我的包容讓你變成黃金!
4.人若把一生的光陰虛度,便是拋下黃金未買一物!——薩迪 5.理想很豐滿,但現(xiàn)實(shí)很骨感!6.我從來不認(rèn)為半小時(shí)是微不足道的!——達(dá)爾文
7.黑就是黑,白就是白,絕對(duì)沒有灰色地帶!——《黑白戰(zhàn)場(chǎng)》 8.不求天長地久,但求曾今擁有!9.在兇猛的鯊魚,也會(huì)變成溫順的海豚!——《旗艦》
10.如果人能夠重新活一次的話,有一半人都可以成為偉人!——《我的爸爸叫邊紅旗》
11.時(shí)光會(huì)使人忘掉很多傷痛!《梁山伯與祝英臺(tái)》
12.月色雖美,卻無言之;素有美酒,誰與共之!《梁山伯與祝英臺(tái)》
13.莫問當(dāng)年,朱顏戴綠翠;只怨誰,錯(cuò)把鴛鴦配!《梁山伯與祝英臺(tái)》
14.懂,需要的是智慧;而面對(duì),需要的是勇氣!
15.為你的春天鋪滿鮮花;
為你的夏天支上蚊帳;
為你的秋天釀出美酒;
為你的冬天續(xù)上棉花!
16.優(yōu)秀是一種習(xí)慣。和優(yōu)秀的人在一起,我們會(huì)在不經(jīng)意間變的更加優(yōu)秀,并最終讓優(yōu)秀成為一種習(xí)慣!
17.要走好明天的路,必須記住昨天走過的路,思索今天正在走著的路!18.當(dāng)我們搬開別人腳下的絆腳石時(shí),也許恰恰是在為自己鋪路!
19.站在你的左邊,是因?yàn)槟菢涌梢噪x你的心更近一些……
20.人之所以能,是相信能!
21.沒有一種不通過蔑視、忍受和奮斗就可以征服的命運(yùn)!
22.成功不是將來才有的,而是從決定去做的那一刻起,持續(xù)累積而成的!23.再長的路,一步步也能走完;
再短的路,不邁開雙腳也無法到達(dá)!24.人性最可憐的就是:我們總是想著天邊的一座奇妙的玫瑰園,而不去欣賞今天就開在我們窗口的玫瑰!
25.當(dāng)你成功的時(shí)候,不要瞧不起別人;
當(dāng)你失敗的時(shí)候,不要看不起自己!26.不要高看別人,別人沒有那么強(qiáng);
不要小瞧自己,自己沒有那么弱!27.狼一樣的團(tuán)隊(duì),鷹一樣的個(gè)體!28.給你的人生旅程帶去些許的快樂,為你寶貴的生命點(diǎn)上一盞智慧的明燈,讓你疲憊的心靈可以尋找到休憩的港灣!29.人不能兩次踏進(jìn)同一條河流!——赫拉克里特
30.如果你有激情和夢(mèng)想,那么你會(huì)忘記自身的缺陷!
31.多一項(xiàng)技能、多一份選擇、多一點(diǎn)成功!
32.不是不想愛,不是不去愛,怕只怕愛也是一種傷害!
33.因?yàn)椴恢涝诤跏裁?,所以有著不在乎一切的?jiān)強(qiáng);
因?yàn)榕卤蝗司芙^,所以有著拒絕一切的冷漠!34.父母給我性命,自己打造品牌!35.沒有永恒的朋友,沒有永恒的敵人,只有永恒的利益!——本杰明.迪斯雷利 36.謊言重復(fù)一千遍就是真理!37.當(dāng)你母親脆弱的時(shí)候,你能不能摟一摟她的肩膀,給她一點(diǎn)力量? 38.女人是脆弱的,但母親是堅(jiān)強(qiáng)的!39.生命的意義在于活的充實(shí),而不在于活得長久!
40.生命太短促了,就如同流星劃過天際那短短的一瞬。在這一瞬之間,人卻不得不用盡整個(gè)生命于塵世的山谷中掙扎,并時(shí)刻憂慮會(huì)掉入萬劫不復(fù)的深淵!41.人不能割裂時(shí)間的結(jié)繩而存在,但過去早已化作塵世中的一縷青煙,未來的命運(yùn)線也刻在今日的掌心,而今日正隨著一次次呼吸融入宇宙大氣。我們不能活在昨日的回憶中,也無法活在明日的虛幻中。為什么不在今日的世界里好好活著呢?
42.相信上帝,不如相信自己
全能的上帝,沒有奇跡
仁慈的上帝,從不給予
上帝就是上帝,自己就是自己
如果非要相信上帝
那么我相信,上帝就是我,我就是上帝43.既然目標(biāo)是地平線,留給世界的只能是背影!44.一個(gè)沒有偉大人物出現(xiàn)的民族,是可憐的生物之群;
有了偉大人物而不知崇敬愛戴的民族,則是沒有希望的奴隸之邦!45.在愛與情、緣與分的邊緣,我選擇默默的等待一個(gè)需要我的人!
46.有些鳥是不該關(guān)在籠子里的,它們的羽毛太豐韌。當(dāng)它們飛起來時(shí)候,你會(huì)由衷的為它們高興,覺得把它們關(guān)起來,是一種不可饒恕的罪孽,可是它們飛走以后,留下來的空間,不禁使你心中悵然!——《肖申克的救贖》 47.看來先生真不懂茶,否則,自應(yīng)會(huì)品出高低的。喝茶,是一種心情,如果你的心情好了,那茶的高低還有那么重要嗎?哦,俺也不曾想過。那依先生之見,當(dāng)今武術(shù)流派這么多,難道也沒有高低之分嗎?我想是的,武術(shù)并沒有高低之分,只有習(xí)武的人才有強(qiáng)弱之別!——《霍元甲》
第三篇:最值得背誦的美文
Recommended articles for recitation
1.Companionship of Books
A man may usually be known by the books he reads as well as by the company he keeps;for there is a companionship of books as well as of men;and one should always live in the best company, whether it be of books or of men.A good book may be among the best of friends.It is the same today that it always was, and it will never change.It is the most patient and cheerful of companions.It does not turn its back uponus in times of adversity or distress.It always receives us with the same kindness;amusing and instructing us in youth, and comforting and consoling us in age.Men often discover their affinity to each other by the love they have each for a book.The book is a truer and higher bond of union.Men can think, feel, and sympathize7 with each other through their favorite author.They live in him together, and he, in them.A good book is often the best urn of a life enshrining the best that life could think out;for the world of a man’s life is, for the most part, but the world of his thoughts.Thus the best books are threasuries of good words, the golden thoughts, which, remembered and cherished, become our constant companions and comforters.Books possess an essence of immortality.They are by far the most lasting products of human effort.Temples and statues decay, but books survive.Time is of no account with great thoughts, which are as fresh today as when they first passed through their authors’ minds, ages ago.What was then said and thought still speaks to us as vividlyas ever from the printed page.Books introduce us into the best society;they bring us into the presence of the greatest minds that have ever lived.We hear what they said and did;we see them as if they were really alive;we sympathize with them, enjoy with them, grieve with them;their experience becomes ours, and we feel as if we were in a measure actors with them in the scenes which they describe.—Samuel Smiles
2.Peace
Today we seek a moral basis for peace.It cannot be a real peace if it fails to recognize brotherhood.It cannot be a lasting peace if the fruit of it is oppression or starvation, or cruelty or human life dominated by armed camps.It cannot be a sound peace if small nations must live in fear of powerful neighbors.It cannot be a moral peace if freedom from invasion is sold for tribute.It cannot be an intelligent peace if it denies free passage to that knowledge of those ideals which permit men to find common ground.It cannot be a righteous peace if worship of God is denied.Peace, no less than war, must offer a spirit of comradeship, a spirit of achievement, a spirit of unselfishness, and indomitable will to victory.Peace, no less than war, must offer a spirit of comradeship, a spirit of achievement, a spirit of unselfishness, and indomitable will to victory.Peace can endure only so long as humanity really insists upon it, and is willing to work for it and sacrifice for it.—Franklin D.Roosevelt
3. To Spring
Oh you, sweet Spring, alight from cherub’s wing,And put the ugly winter full to flight;
And rouse the earth to smile, and larks to sing,With skies so bright and hearts of youth so light.Your gentle and genial breaths each blossom blow,While bees in gardens hum the lullabies.The hills and dales are stripp’d of mantles of snow,And streams and rivers freed from irons of ice.May seasons all be Spring—the pride of years,That all the things would e’er in glories gleam!
May men be ever in the prime of years!
But dream, however sweet, is but a dream.If happy when you come and sad when gone,Would that you’d never come or never gone!
By Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
4.Night
Night has fallen over the country.Through the trees rises the red moon, and the stars are scarcely seen.In the vast shadow of night the coolness and the dews descend.I sit at the open window to enjoy them;and hear only the voice of the summer wind.Like black hulks, the shadows of the great trees ride at anchor on the billowy see of grass.I cannot see the red and blue flowers, but I know that they are there.Far away in the meadow gleams the silver Charles①.The tramp of horses’ hoofs sounds from the wooden bridge.Then all is still save the continuous wind of the summer night.Sometimes I know not if it be the wind or the sounds of the neighboring sea.The village clock strikes;and I feel that I am not alone.How different it is in the city!It is late, and the crowd is gone.You step out upon the balcony, and lie in the very bosom of the cool, dewy night as if you folded her garments about you.Beneath lies the public walk with trees, like a fathomless, black gulf, into whose silent darkness the spirit plunges, and floats away some beloved spirit clasped in its embrace.The lamps are still burning up and down the long street.People go by with grotesque shadows, now foreshortened, and now lengthening away into the darkness and vanishing, while a new one springs up behind the walker, and seems to pass him revolving like the sail of a windmill.The iron gates of the park shut with a jangling clang.There are footsteps and loud voices;—a tumult;—a drunken brawl;—an alarm of fire;—then silence again.And now at length the city is asleep, and we can see the night.The belated moon looks over the roofs, and finds no one to welcome her.The moonlight is broken.It lies here and there in the squares, and the opening of the streets—angular like blocks of whit e marble.By Nathanial Hawthorne
①the Charles: 美國馬薩諸塞州的一條河流
5.The Road Not Taken
By Robert Frost
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,And having perhaps the better claim,Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,I doubted if I should ever come back.I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I –
I took the one less traveled by,And that has made all the difference.6.Smile of the Earth
All over my garden I’ve planted nothing but roses, fragrant and---If looked at from afar---ablaze with colour like sunset clouds.I would be very happy if any one of my visiting friends should desire to pick and take some for their homes.I trust that any friend of mine carrying the roses would vanish into the distance feeling that his emotion had been rekindled.A close friend came for a visit the other day.I know her to be a lover of flowers and plants, and for that reason I told her at her departure that she should pick a bunch of roses to decorate her boudoir.I promised that the scent of the roses would be wafted far, far away.That girl friend of mine, tiptoeing into the garden in high spirits, sniffed here and smelt there, but in the end she didn’t pick a single rose.I said there were so many of them that she could pick as many as she’d like to;I told her that I was not a florist and didn’t make a living out of them.While
saying so I raised the scissors for the sacrifice of the flowers, but she vehemently stopped me, crying no, no, no!
To cut such beautiful roses would hurt one, she said.With her hands clutching at my sleeves, she told me that by no means should they be cut.Roses are the smiling face of the earth, and who could be so iron-hearted as to destroy a smile so exhilarating?
My mind was thoroughly boggled: the ugly earth, the humble earth, the plain earth---it is only because of the roses that it reveals an amazing and bright smile, and it is for the sake of that smile that it wins the care and pity of men.Of late a friend of mine invited me to appreciate a Tang Dynasty vase that he was fortunate enough to have bought at an auction.The vase, with its slim neck, plump body, and fine little flowers on a blue and white background, has a noble shape and a rich colouring, elegant, refined, proud, poised, and supercilious, an extreme embodiment of the prosperity of the Tang Dynasty.I was filled with wonder to think that while everyone present was taking great care not to cause the slightest damage to the Tang treasure, it was to me nothing but an object made of clay.It had only become a piece of classic art after being baked in a china kiln.Both the exquisiteness of the boccaro teapots made in south China, and the shockingly beautiful sculptures by Clay Sculptor Zhang of Tianjin---aren’t they all smiles of the earth? They are such exquisite treasures that---even if they look ugly, humble, plain, or whatever---they no doubt deserve respect and veneration.Now I understand that no-one, however ordinary, should be condemned to anonymity, and that anyone who adds a dash of colour to life deserves our respect.7.Home
What makes a home? Love and sympathy and confidence.It is a place where kindly affections exist among all the members of the family.The parents take good care of their children, and the children are interested in the activities of their parents.Thus all of them are bound together by affection, and they find their home to be the cheeriest place in the world.A home without love is no more a home than a body without a soul is a man.Every civilized person is a social being.No one should live alone.A man may lead a successful and prosperous life, but prosperity alone can by no means insure happiness.Many great personages in the world history had deep affections for their homes.Your home may be poor and humble, but your duty lies there.You should try to make it cheerful and comfortable.The greater the difficulties, the richer will be your reward.A home is more than a family dwelling.It is a school in which people are trained for citizenship.A man will not render good service to his country if he can do nothing good for his home;for in proportion as he loves his home, will he love his country.The home is the birthplace of true
patriotism.It is the secret of social welfare and national greatness.It is the basis and origin of civilization.8. Choice of Companions
A good companion is better than a fortune, for a fortune cannot purchase those elements of character which make companionship a blessing.The best companion is one who is wiser and better than ourselves, for we are inspired by his wisdom and virtue to nobler deeds.“Keep good company, and you shall be one of the number,” said George Herbert.“A man is know by the company he keeps.” Character makes character in the associations of life faster than anything else.This fact makes the choice of companions in early life more important even than that of teachers and guardians.Companionship is education, good or bad;it develops manhood or womanhood, high or low;it lifts the soul upward or drags it downward;it ministers to virtue or vice.Sow virtue, and the harvest will be virtue.Sow vice, and the harvest will be vice.Good companions help us to sow virtue;evil companions help us to sow vice.—William Makepeace Thayer
9. Electricity
The modern age is an age of electricity.People are so used to electric lights, radio, televisions, and telephones that it is hard to imagine what life would be like without them.When there is a power failure, people grope about in flickering candlelight, cars hesitate in the streets because there are no traffic lights to guide them, and food spoils in silent refrigerators.Yet, people began to understand how electricity works only a little more than two centuries ago.Nature has apparently been experimenting in this field for million of years.Scientists are discovering more and more that the living world may hold many interesting secrets of electricity that could benefit humanity.All living cell send out tiny pulses of electricity.As the heart beats, it sends out pulses of record;they form an electrocardiogram, which a doctor can study to determine how well the heart is working.The brain, too, sends out brain waves of electricity, which can be recorded in an electroencephalogram.The electric currents generated by most living cells are extremely small – often so small that sensitive instruments are needed to record them.But in some animals, certain muscle cells have become so specialized as electrical generators that they do not work as muscle cells at all.When large numbers of these cell are linked together, the effects can be astonishing.The electric eel is an amazing storage battery.It can seed a jolt of as much as eight hundred volts of electricity through the water in which it live.(An electric house current is only one hundred twenty volts.)As many as four-fifths of all the cells in the electric eel’s body are specialized for generating electricity, and the strength of the shock it can deliver corresponds roughly to length of its body.10.Scientific Theories
In science, a theory is a reasonable explanation of observed events that are related.A theory often involves an imaginary model that helps scientists picture the way an observed event could be produced.A good example of this is found in the kinetic molecular theory, in which gases are pictured as being made up of many small particles that are in constant motion.A useful theory, in addition to explaining past observations, helps to predict events that have not as yet been observed.After a theory has been publicized, scientists design experiments to test the theory.If observations confirm the scientist’s predictions, the theory is supported.If observations do not confirm the predictions, the scientists must search further.There may be a fault in the experiment, or the theory may have to be revised or rejected.Science involves imagination and creative thinking as well as collecting information and performing experiments.Facts by themselves are not science.As the mathematician Jules Henri Poincare said, ―Science is built with facts just as a house is built with bricks, but a collection of facts cannot be called science any more than a pile of bricks can be called a house.‖
Most scientists start an investigation by finding out what other scientists have learned about a particular problem.After known facts have been gathered, the scientist comes to the part of the investigation that requires considerable imagination.Possible solutions to the problem are formulated.These possible solutions are called hypotheses.
第四篇:簡(jiǎn)潔地道的英語口語句子,值得背誦之四
1.We’re all for it!
我們都贊成!
2.Just because.沒有別的原因。
3.It isn't the way I hoped it would be.這不是我所盼望的。
4.I won't buy you story.我不信你那一套。
5.The picture flattered her.她比較上照。
6.You don't know what you are talking about.你在胡說八道。
7.That's all I want to hear.我已經(jīng)聽夠了。
8.I wish I could bring you to see my point.你要我怎么說你才能明白呢。
9.If you think he is a good man, think again.如果你認(rèn)為他是好人,那你就大錯(cuò)特錯(cuò)了。
10.Traditionally, Italian presidents have been seen and not heard.這個(gè)總統(tǒng)有名無權(quán)。
11.Don't take it to heart.別往心里去
12.We'd better be off.我們?cè)撟吡?/p>
13.If there's anything you'd like to know, don't hesitate to ask.如果想要了解什么,盡管問吧。
14.If I can do anything for you, please don't hesitate to let me know.如果我能為你做些什么,盡管說好了。
15.I'm glad to be of help to you.我很高興能對(duì)你有所幫助.16.God works.上帝的安排。
17.Don't flatter me.過獎(jiǎng)了。
18.Does it serve your purpose?對(duì)你有用嗎?
19.Do you understand what I’m getting at? 你明白我想說什么了嘛?
20.I have seen worse
我見過更糟的。
第五篇:高中英語寫作優(yōu)美句子背誦(林素芬)
高中英語必備句子集選
1.As the old saying goes, each contribution –no matter how small-can help make a difference.