
拳王阿里所有的名言,要英文版的
Last night I had a dream, when we got to Africa we got a hell of a rumble,First, I had to whip Tarzan’s behind, for claiming that he’ the King of the Jungle.For this fight, I’ve wrestled with alligators and tussled a whale,Handcuffed lightning and thrown thunder un jail.You know I’m bad, I’ve murdered a rock, hospitalized a brick,I’m so bad I make medicine sick.So fast I run through a hurricane and don’t get wet.When Foreman sees me, he’ll pay his debt.I’ll drown a pool of water, I’ll kill a dead tree.Wait ‘til you see Muhammad Ali.”下面汉文只有与强劲的对手对阵才会使你变得更强,强敌是你最好的老师”我像蝴蝶一只蝴蝶一样地飞,我像蜜蜂一样地蛰刺”你要是和我一样伟大,你就会理解,谦虚是一件很难做到的事”像蝴蝶一样示美,像蜜蜂一样出手”你不妨站稳了让对方打,等他打累了,他自然会倒下”爬起来比跌倒多一次,就是成功
英语名言警句
Good friends are like bras;snug,supportive and always close to the heart! 好友就像胸罩:温暖舒适,默默的支持着,而且永远贴近我们的心。
Keep the old, meet the new; one is gold, another is silver. 保有老朋友,认识新朋友;一个是黄金,一个是白银。
(意思:一样珍贵) A father is a treasure, a brother is a comfort, but a friend is both. 父亲是财富,兄弟是安慰,朋友兼而有之。
A friend is a second self. 朋友是另一个我。
Without a friend the world is a wilderness. 没有朋友,世界就等於一片荒野。
Friendship multiplies joys and divides griefs. 友谊可以增添欢乐,可以分担忧愁。
Friendship is love with understanding. 友谊是爱加上谅解。
Familiar paths and old friends are the best. 熟路好遵循,老友最可珍。
Books, like friends, should be few and well chosen. 书籍如朋友,应该少而精。
A true friend is one soul in two bodies. 真正的朋友好似两个身子长著一颗心
福尔摩斯经典英语名言(必须原版英文
要经典
)谢谢
百度知道 提问福尔摩斯名言中文和英文对照福尔摩斯名言英文原文世上的事都是前人做过的,没什么新鲜的 英文原文 展开fbahefLV.42018-05-16关注Everything comes in circles - even Professor Moriarty. . . It's all been done before, and will be again...........................................................福尔摩斯说过的名言(中英文对照)~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~我的体质非常特别。
工作的时候一点儿也不觉得累,如果闲着无事反而会使我委顿不堪了。
I have a curious constitution. I never remember feeling tired by work, though idleness exhausts me completely.我好动不好静,一遇无事可做的时候,我就会心绪不宁起来。
My mind rebels at stagnation.我追求精神上的兴奋。
I crave for mental exaltation.不用动脑筋,我就活不下去I cannot live without brainwork. What else is there to live for?即使是最好的女人,也决不能完全信赖她们。
Women are never to be entirely trusted - not the best of them.可是爱情是一种情感的事情,和我认为是最重要的冷静思考是有矛盾的。
我永远不会结婚,以免影响我的判断力。
Love is an emotional thing, and whatever is emotional is opposed to that true cold reason which I place above all things. I should never marry myself, lest I bias my judgment.感情作用会影响清醒的理智。
The emotional qualities are antagonistic to clear reasoning.除去其他的因素,剩下的必是事实了。
Eliminate all other factors, and the one which remains must be the truth.我不是曾经和你说过多少次吗,当你把绝不可能的因素都除出去以后,不管剩下的是什么――不管是多么难以相信的事――那就是实情吗
How often have I said to you that when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?侦探术是――或者应当是一种精确的科学,应当用同样冷静而不是感情用事的方法来研究它。
Detection is, or ought to be, an exact science and should be treated in the same cold and unemotional manner.我向来不作任何例外。
定律没有例外。
I never make exceptions. An exception disproves the rule.温伍德瑞德对这个问题有很好的解释。
他论道虽然每个人都是难解的谜,可是把人类聚合起来,就有定律了。
譬如说,你不能预知一个人的个性,可是能够确知人类的共性。
个性不同,共性却是永恒的,统计家们也是这样的说法。
Winwood Reade is good upon the subject. He remarks that, while the individual man is an insoluble puzzle, in the aggregate he becomes a mathematical certainty. You can, for example, never foretell what any one man will do, but you can say with precision what an average number will be up to. Individuals vary, but percentages remain constant. So says the statistician.我向来不猜想。
猜想是很不好的习惯,它有害于作逻辑的推理。
I never guess. It is a shocking habit -- destructive to the logical faculty. 9 281福尔摩斯有声小说_ 免费在线听!北京智道未来网络科..广告唐诗三百首
找唐诗三百首?就上阿里巴巴关注唐诗三百首的人也在看唐诗三百首采购批发,尽在阿里巴巴!阿里巴巴,汇聚海量商机信息,提供便捷在线交易!杭州易宏广告有限公司广告必背古诗词300首-淘宝海量精品好书,网友力荐的这儿都有!必背古诗词300首-网上买书,上淘宝,品类齐全,折扣多多,这些必读好物现在买更划算!..杭州易宏广告有限公司广告百度APP有事搜一搜 没事看一看立即下载为您推荐福尔摩斯的名言翻译,最好是英文原文。
本来是一个推理过程,但当原先的推理一步一步地被客观事实给证实了以后,那主观就变成客观了,我们就 24 浏览2138求:福尔摩斯名言英文版1。
One should always look for a possible alternativ 2 浏览299《福尔摩斯》英文版名言有哪些
When you have eliminated the impossibles,whatever 5 浏览140 2019-11-04福尔摩斯的经典语录(英文的)Sometimesthink,thegreatestsorrowthanolder.Sincethe浏览7548 2020-03-15能不能把下面福尔摩斯的名言的英语原文找出来
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谁能提供一篇拳王阿里的英文介绍
Three-time world heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali, known for his lyrical charm and boasts as much as for his powerful fists, has moved far beyond the boxing ring in both influence and purpose. Ali won an Olympic gold medal and later tossed it into a river because he was disgusted by racism in America. As a young man he was recruited by Malcolm X to join the Nation of Islam. He refused to serve in Vietnam--a professional fighter willing to serve time in jail for his pacifist ideals. He has contributed to countless, diverse charities and causes. And his later years have found him interested in world politics as he has battled to keep Parkinson's disease at bay. Muhammad Ali was born Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr., on January 17, 1942, and was raised in a clapboard house at 3302 Grand Avenue in middle-class Louisville, Kentucky. He began boxing at the age of 12. A white Louisville patrolman named Joe Martin, who had an early television show called Tomorrow's Champions, started Ali working out in Louisville's Columbia Gym, but it was a black trainer named Fred Stoner who taught Ali the science of boxing. Stoner taught him to move with the grace of a dancer, and impressed upon him the subtle skills necessary to move beyond good and into the realm of great. After winning an Olympic gold medal at 18, Ali signed the most lucrative contract--a 50-50 split--negotiated by a beginning professional in the history ofboxing, with a 12-member group of millionaires called the Louisville Sponsoring Group. Later, he worked his way into contention for the coveted heavyweight title shot by boasting and creating media interest at a time when, by his own admission, he was only ranked number nine on the list of contenders. Even from the beginning, it was clear that Ali was his own man--quick, strong-willed, original, and witty. In 1961 he told Sports Illustrated's Gilbert Rogin, Boxing is dying because everybody's so quiet.... What boxing needs is more ... Clays. Ali knew that his rhymes and press-grabbing claims would infuse more interest and more money into the sport of boxing, and he was his own best public relations man. In February of 1964 he told readers of Sports Illustrated, If I were like a lot of ... heavyweight boxers ... you wouldn't be reading this story right now. If you wonder what the difference between them and me is, I'll break the news: you never heard of them. I'm not saying they're not good boxers. Most of them ... can fight almost as good as I can. I'm just saying you never heard of them. And the reason for that is because they cannot throw the jive. Cassius Clay is a boxer who can throw the jive better than anybody. The following month Ali--then still Cassius Clay--fought Sonny Liston in a match of classic contenders for the heavyweight championship of the world. The Miami fight almost single-handedly restored intelligence and balance to boxing. Cassius Clay had been chanting the war cry Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee for weeks; he beat Liston in a display of beautiful, controlled boxing. Liston could hit with deadly power, but Ali utilized his skills and courage with forethought and aplomb. He won the fight to become heavyweight champion of the world. At the tender age of 22 Ali knew that he was something above and beyond a great boxer: He had marketing sense, political finesse, and a feeling of noble purpose. Throughout his career and life, Ali has always professed to want to help other black Americans--and he has, time and time again. When he returned from Italy, having just won an Olympic gold medal, he was so proud of his trophy that he wore it day and night and showed it to everyone, whether they wanted to see it or not. In the Philadelphia Inquirer Ali's first wife remembered him saying I was young, black Cassius Marcellus Clay, who had won a gold medal for his country. I went to downtown Louisville to a five-and-dime store that had a soda fountain. I sat down at the counter to order a burger and soda pop. The waitress looked at me.... 'Sorry, we don't serve coloreds,' she said. I was furious. I went all the way to Italy to represent my country, won a gold medal, and now I come back to America and can't even get served at a five-and-dime store. I went to a bridge, tore the medal off my neck and threw it into the river. That gold medal didn't mean a thing to me if my black brothers and sisters were treated wrong in a country I was supposed to represent. While in Miami, at the age of 21, Ali was inspired by human rights activist Malcolm X to become a member of the Muslim faith. The following year Malcolm X said of Ali, as was quoted by Houston Horn in Sports Illustrated, [He] will mean more to his people than any athlete before him. He is more than [first black major-league baseball player] Jackie Robinson was, because Robinson is the white man's hero. But Cassius is the black man's hero. Do you know why? Because the white press wanted him to lose [his heavyweight championship bout] ... because he is a Muslim. You notice nobody cares about the religion of other athletes. But their prejudice against Clay blinded them to his ability. Twelve years later, on Face The Nation, Ali said We don't have Black Muslims, that's a press word. We have white brothers, we have brown, red, and yellow, all colors can be Muslims.... I'm looking for peace one day with all people. Cassius Clay, Jr., was given the name Muhammad Ali by Muslim patriarch Elijah Muhammad; it was not just a name, but a title meaning beloved of Allah, deity of the Muslim faith. Ali retained his world heavyweight champion title in June of 1965 by again knocking out Sonny Liston, this time with a stunning right-hand punch to the side of the head. The knock-out blow was thrown with the astounding speed that separated Ali from other heavyweights; it had sufficient force to lift Liston's left foot-- upon which most of his weight was resting--clear off the canvas. As a Muslim and thus, a conscientious objector, Muhammad Ali refused to even consider going to Vietnam in 1966; a tremendous public outcry erupted against him. According to Jack Olsen in Sports Illustrated, The governor of Illinois found Clay 'disgusting,' and the governor of Maine said Clay 'should be held in utter contempt by every patriotic American.' An American Legion post in Miami asked people to 'join in condemnation of this unpatriotic, loudmouthed, bombastic individual.' The Chicago Tribune waged a choleric campaign against holding the next Clay fight in Chicago.... The noise became a din, the drumbeats of a holy war. TV and radio commentators, little old ladies ... bookmakers, and parish priests, armchair strategists at the Pentagon and politicians all over the place joined in a crescendo of get-Cassius clamor. Although Ali had not been charged or arrested for violating the Selective Service Act--much less convicted--the New York State Athletic Commission and World Boxing Association suspended his boxing license and stripped him of his heavyweight title in May of 1967, minutes after he officially announced that he would not submit to induction. Ali said to Sports Illustrated contributor Edwin Shrake, I'm giving up my title, my wealth, maybe my future. Many great men have been tested for their religious beliefs. If I pass this test, I'll come out stronger than ever. Eventually Ali was sentenced to five years in prison, released on appeal, and his conviction overturned three years later. In November of 1970 Ali fought Jerry Quarry in Atlanta. His victory was a symbol of release and freedom to the 5,000 people watching the fight; Ali had personally survived his vilification by much of the American public, but more, he had reclaimed his professional reputation and prominence. Four months later Ali had the world as his audience when he went up against Joe Frazier in New York. There he fell from invincibility; suddenly Frazier reigned as heavyweight champ. Man, I hit him with punches that'd bring down the walls of a city, Frazier said to Mark Kram in Sports Illustrated. Ali responded, It was like death. Closest thing to dyin' that I know of. Ali regained his title as world heavyweight champion in 1974 after defeating George Foreman in a bout staged in Zaire. Ali fought Frazier twice more, once in 1974 and again in 1975. Ali won both matches and secured his title. Taking time to reflect on the tumult of his fifteen-year boxing career, Ali co-wrote his autobiography--characteristically titled The Greatest--My Own Story--in 1975. In 1982 Dr. Dennis Cope, director of the Medical Ambulatory Care Center at the University of California, Los Angeles, began treating Ali for Parkinson's syndrome; Cope and colleague Dr. Stanley Fahn later theorized in the Chicago Tribune that Ali was suffering, more precisely, from Pugilistic Parkinsonism, brought on by repetitive trauma to the head--and that only an autopsy could confirm their suspicions. After losing a 1980 title bout to Larry Holmes, Ali had exhibited sluggishness and was misdiagnosed as having a thyroid condition; he was given a thyroid hormone. When Dr. Cope made the connection between Ali's decreasing motor skills and Parkinson's disease, he prescribed Sinemet (L-dopa). Ali was shortly restored to his previous level of energy and awareness; as long as he took his medication regularly, he was able to keep the disease in check. In 1988 Ali told New York Times Magazine contributor Peter Tauber: I've got Parkinson's syndrome. I'm in no pain.... If I was in perfect health--if I had won my last two fights--if I had no problem, people would be afraid of me. Now they feel sorry for me. They thought I was Superman. Now they can say 'He's human, like us. He has problems.' In 1984 another of Ali's medical confidantes, Dr. Martin D. Ecker, ventured in the Boston Globe that Ali should have quit boxing long before he finally did--for the second and final time--in 1981 after losing to Trevor Berbick. His bout with Berbick was his 61st and final fight. By then Ali had been showing signs of neurological damage for over a year. Ali's former doctor, Dr. Ferdie Pacheco, told the fighter to quit in 1977 when he first saw signs of Ali's reflexes slowing down. Seven years later, Pacheco, a consultant and boxing commentator for NBC-TV, explained to Betsy Lehman in the Boston Globe why he feels Ali didn't quit boxing in 1977: The most virulent infection in the human race is the standing ovation. Once you've seen that, you can't get off the stage. Once you feel that recognition ... the roar of 50,000 people, you just don't want to give it up. When Ali initially surrendered his title in 1979, he was paid $250,000 to quit, but he eventually returned to his sport, perhaps as Pacheco suggested, because the recognition had become habit-forming. Toward the end of Ali's boxing career, and afterward, his ambitions took a decided turn toward statesmanship. In 1980 he cast his lot with the Democratic Party, supporting then-Presidential candidate Jimmy Carter. In August of that year, while in intense training for the Holmes fight, he found time to work the floor of the Democratic National Convention in New York City. He also functioned as something of a diplomat in February of 1985 when he attempted to secure the release of four kidnapped Americans in Lebanon; unfortunately, he and his three advisers were not successful. During his career in the ring Ali made more than $50 million, two thirds of wwent to managerial expenses and taxes. He said to New York Times Magazine contributor Tauber in 1988, I never talk about boxing. It just served its purpose. I was only about 11 or 12 years old when I said 'I'm gonna get famous so I can help my people.' Indicating his continuing desire to help people, in 1990 Ali visited Our Children's Foundation, Inc., on Manhattan's 125th Street. According to Bill Gallo in the New York Daily News, he addressed the children there, saying, The sun has a purpose. The moon has a purpose. The snow has a purpose. Cows have a purpose. You were born for a purpose. You have to find your purpose. Go to school. Learn to read and write.... What is your purpose, your occupation? Find your purpose.... What do you have to find? Purpose!, they shouted gleefully in unison. True to form, one of Ali's favored inscriptions when signing autographs is Love is the net where hearts are caught like fish. Although Parkinson's syndrome has slowed Ali down, he still remain active--raising money for the Muhammad Ali Foundation and frequently appearing at sports tributes and fund-raisers. Muhammad's wife Lonnie believes Muhammad knows he has this illness for a reason. It's not by chance. Parkinson's disease has made him a more spiritual person. Muhammad believes God gave it to him to bring him to another level, to create another destiny. she stated in People. During the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, 3.5 billion people watched on television as three-time heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali slowly ascended the stadium steps with trembling hands to ignite the Olympic Flame. Everyone was deeply touched, however, No one was more moved than Ali himself. He kept turning it [the torch] in his hands and looking at it. He knows now that people won't slight his message because of his impairment. said his wife Lonnie in People. Muhammad has been blessed to meet with important dignitaries, including with President Clinton, Queen Elizabeth II, Nelson Mandela, and Pope John Paul II. His travels are his main source of income--charging as much as $200,000 for appearances. He usually travels 275 days out of the year. Although he enjoys his missionary work and public appearances, Ali's greatest pleasure is when he is at home in Berrien Springs, Michigan with his family--wife Yolanda and his adopted son Asaad Amin. In Berrien Springs, he lives a modest life in a house at the end of the road on an old farm. He has a pool and a pond and a security gate with an intercom. According to Kim Forburger, Ali's assistant, He's the only man I know where the kids come to the gate and say 'Can Muhammad come out and play?' When asked if he has any regrets, Ali responds, My children, I never got to raise them because I was always boxing and because of divorce, he said in People. When asked whether he is sorry he ever got into the ring, he responded, If I wasn't a boxer, I wouldn't be famous. If I wasn't famous, I wouldn't be able to do what I'm doing now. 这篇短点: Muhammad Ali Boxer, born in Louisville, Kentucky, USA. As an amateur boxer (1954–60), winning 100 of 108 matches, he became the 1960 Olympic light-heavyweight champion. Financed by a group of Louisville businessmen, he turned professional, and by 1963 had won his first 19 fights. He won the world heavyweight title in 1964, defeating the purportedly invincible Sonny Liston when he retired at the end of the sixth round. At that time he joined the Black Muslims and adopted the name Muhammad Ali. After defending the championship nine times within two years, in 1967 he refused to be drafted into the army on religious grounds, and was stripped of his title and barred from the ring. His action earned him both respect and anger from different quarters, but he did not box for three-and-a-half years; he took his case to the Supreme Court and had his boxing licence restored in 1970. In 1971 he was beaten by Joe Frazier, but beat him in 1974 in Zaire, and went on to meet George Foreman later that year, knocking him out in eight rounds to regain his title. He was beaten by Leon Spinks in a split decision (Feb 1978), but regained the title the same year - the first man to win the world heavyweight title three times. Famous for his flamboyant manner, his boasting predictions of which round he would defeat his opponent, and his doggerel verse (‘float like a butterfly, sting like a bee’), he was also recognized as one of the all-time great boxers with his quick jab and footwork. His slogan ‘I am the greatest’ became a catch phrase. He compiled a career record of 56 wins, five losses, with 37 knockouts, before retiring in 1981. During the 1960s and 1970s he was arguably the best-known individual in the entire world due not only to his controversial career but also to his travels and deliberate reaching out to the Third World. Ali was President Carter's special envoy to Africa in 1980 (attempting to persuade nations to boycott the Olympics). He has starred in two films, The Greatest (1976) and Freedom Road (1978), and an Oscar-winning documentary film, When We Were Kings, recounting the 1974 Ali v. Foreman fight, appeared in 1996. Ali retired in 1981, and during that decade it was revealed that he was suffering from a form of Parkinson's disease. He was an almost universal choice as the 20th-century's most important sportsman, and at the end of 1999 was voted BBC Sports Personality of the Century. In 2005 he attended the opening of the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, KY, and also that year was honoured with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
我们主要要学习什么名言
用英语怎么说
急需要啊
1、理想是人生的太阳。
—— 德莱赛2、人的活动如果没有理想的鼓舞,就会变得空虚而渺小。
—— 车尔尼雪夫斯基3、命运是一件很不可思议的东西。
虽人各有志,往往在实现理想时会遭遇到许多困难,反而会使自己走向与志趣相反的路,而一举成功。
我想我就是这样。
—— 松下幸之助4、即使在最聪明的人身上,本能也一定先于智慧。
欢对于人来说,本能有时也许是更为理想的向导。
—— 乔·李洛5、母鸡的理想不过是一把糠。
—— 罗马尼亚6、世上最快乐的事,莫过于为理想而奋斗。
—— 苏格拉底7、有理想的人,生活总是火热的。
—— 斯大林8、理想与现实之间,动机与行为之间,总有一道阴影。
—— 爱略特9、真正美丽的东西必须一方面跟自然一致,另一方面跟理想一致。
—— 席勒10、爱情既是友谊的代名词,又是我们为共同的事业而奋斗的可靠保证,爱情是人生的良伴,你和心爱的女子同床共眠是因为共同的理想把两颗心紧紧系在一起。
—— 法拉第11、青春的光辉,理想的钥匙,生命的意义,乃至人类的生存、发展全包含在这两个字之中,奋斗
只有奋斗,才能治愈过去的创伤;只有奋斗,才是我们民族的希望和光明所在。
—— 马克思12、理想的社会状态不是财富均分,而是每个人按其贡献的大小,从社会的总财富中提取它应得的报酬。
—— 亨·乔治13、不参加变革社会的斗争,理想永远是一种幻影。
—— 吴运铎14、理想的书籍是智慧的钥匙。
—— 托尔斯泰15、别虚掷你的一寸光阴吧,别去听无聊的话,别试图补救无望的过失,别在愚昧、平庸和猥琐的事上消磨你的生命,这些东西都是我们这个时代病态的目标和虚假的理想。
生活吧
过属于你的奇妙的生活
点滴都别浪费。
—— 奥斯卡·王尔德16、现实是此岸,理想是彼岸,中间隔着湍急的河流,行动则是架在河上的桥梁。
—— 克雷洛夫17、青年人啊,热爱理想吧,崇敬理想吧。
理想是上帝的语言。
高于一切国家和全人类的,是精神的王国,是灵魂的故乡。
—— 马志尼18、在当前现实的狭隘基础上,有高尚理想,全面的计划;在一步一步行动上,想到远大前途,脚踏实地地稳步前进,才能有所成就。
—— 徐特立19、追求理想是一个人进行自我教育的最初的动力,而没有自我教育就不能想象会有完美的精神生活。
我认为,教会学生自己教育自己,这是一种最高级的技巧和艺 —— 苏霍姆林斯基20、一种理想,就是一种力。
—— 罗曼·罗兰21、我们的理想,不管怎么样,都属于未来。
—— 奇雷特22、你们的理想与热情,是你航行的灵魂的舵和帆。
—— 罗曼·罗兰23、就是在我们母亲的膝上,我们获得了我们的最高尚最真诚和最远大的理想,但是里面很少有任何金钱。
—— 马克·吐温24、社会主义制度的建立给我们开辟了一条到达理想境界的道路,而理想境界的实现还要靠我们的辛勤劳动。
—— 25、如果不献身给一个伟大的理想,生命就是毫无意义的。
—— 何塞·黎萨尔26、一个人一天也不能没有理想,但凭侥幸,怕吃苦,没有真才实学,再好的理想也实现不了。
—— 张华27、在理想的最美好世界中,一切都是为最美好的目的而设。
—— 伏尔泰28、理想并不是一种空虚的东西,也并不玄奇,它既非幻想,更非野心,而是一种追求真美的意识。
—— 莎菲德拉29、伟大的理想惟有经过忘我的斗争和牺牲才能实现。
—— 乔万尼奥里30、看见一个年轻人丧失了美好的希望和理想,看见那块他透过它来观察人们行为和感情的粉红色轻纱在他面前撕掉,那真是伤心啊。
—— 莱蒙托夫



