
急求几篇以online game或者 credit card 或者desk culture为话题的英语作文,要自己写的,可追加15分
可以自己翻译、或者去找老外写的,改写下,就好了,或者花钱找老外帮你写,这样出来的质量高些,国人些的没几个符合老外阅读习惯的
关于朋友的名言警句
1、志道者少友,逐利者多俦。
——汉·王符2道危险而不说的人,人。
——歌德3、真正的总是预见对方的需要,而不是宣布自己需要什么。
——莫洛亚4、阴险的友谊虽然允许你得到一些微不足道的小惠,却要剥夺掉你的珍宝——独立思考和对真理纯洁的爱
——别林斯基5、意见和感情的相同,比之接触更能把两个人结合在一起,这样子,两个人尽管隔得很远,却也很近。
——柴可夫斯基6、选择朋友要慢,改换朋友要更慢。
——富兰克林7、真正的朋友不把友谊挂在口头上,他们并不为了友谊而相互要求一点什么,而是彼此为对方做一切办得到的事。
——别林斯基8、有朋友的人像平原一要宽广,没有朋友的人却像窄狭的手掌。
——蒙古族9、有了朋友,生活才显出它全部的价值;一个人活着是为了朋友;保持自己生命的完整,不受时间侵蚀,也是为了朋友。
——罗曼·罗兰10、我们想的是如何养生,如何聚财,如何加固屋顶,如何备齐衣衫;而聪明人考虑的却是怎样选择最宝贵的东西——朋友。
——爱默生11、天下快意之事莫若友,快友之事莫若谈。
——蒲松龄12、是所有人的朋友,对谁也不是朋友。
——波兰13、世界上用得最普遍的名词是朋友,但是最难得到的也是朋友。
——法国14、如果要了解一个人,就看他的朋友。
——蒙古族15、朋友交好,若要情谊持久,就必须彼此谦让体贴。
——乔叟
莱特昂·布兰朵,格言杂志十月下班刊p76恋人Online:回答里提到的诗人的简介与著作
PORTIA A pound of that same merchant's flesh is thine:The court awards it, and the law doth give it.PORTIA And you must cut this flesh from off his breast:The law allows it, and the court awards it.PORTIA Tarry a little; there is something else.This bond doth give thee here no jot of blood;The words expressly are 'a pound of flesh:'Take then thy bond, take thou thy pound of flesh;But, in the cutting it, if thou dost shedOne drop of Christian blood, thy lands and goodsAre, by the laws of Venice, confiscateUnto the state of Venice.PORTIA Soft!The Jew shall have all justice; soft! no haste:He shall have nothing but the penalty.PORTIA Therefore prepare thee to cut off the flesh.Shed thou no blood, nor cut thou less nor moreBut just a pound of flesh: if thou cut'st moreOr less than a just pound, be it but so muchAs makes it light or heavy in the substance,Or the division of the twentieth partOf one poor scruple, nay, if the scale do turnBut in the estimation of a hair,Thou diest and all thy goods are confiscate.
How to learn English?
在高三要有规律的做一些听力.阅读理解.几天背一篇高考优秀作文。
在做阅读理解时选几篇有价值的进行翻译,和句式分析,可常背一些英语习语和名言警句这对将来做选择题和作文都有很大帮助。
要学会积累,要坚持,上课时认真听语法讲解,每一类语法单独讲理解起来还比较简单。
英语高手请进,帮忙翻译
Envy and Arrogance and AvariceAre the three sparks that have all hearts enkindled.(Canto VI, lines 74-75, page 33Lost are we, and are only so far punished,That without hope we live on in desire.(Canto IV, lines 41-42, page 20) Top Ten Quotes1) 'And are you Virgil, you the fountain that freely pours so rich a stream of speech?' I answered him with shame upon my brow. 'O light and honor of all other poets, may my long study and the intense love that made me search your volume serve me now. You are my master and my author, you-the only one from whom my writing drew the noble style for which I have been honored.' [Dante's first words to Virgil upon meeting him in the dark wood before their journey into Hell. Canto I, Inferno]2) And when, with gladness in his face, he placed his hand upon my own, to comfort me, he drew me in among the hidden things. Here sighs and lamentations and loud cries were echoing across the starless air, so that, as soon as I set out, I wept. Strange utterances, horrible pronouncements, accents of anger, words of suffering, and voices shrill and faint, and beating hands-all went to make tumult that will whirl forever through that turbid, timeless air, like sand that eddies when a whirlwind swirls. [Dante, as he enters the Gates of Hell. Canto III, Inferno]3) Their hands were tied behind by serpents; these had thrust their head and tail right through the loins, and then were knotted on the other side. And-there!-a serpent sprang with force at one who stood upon our shore, transfixing him just where the neck and shoulders form a knot. No o or i has ever been transcribed do quickly as that soul caught fire and burned and, as he fell, completely turned to ashes; and when he lay, undone, upon the ground, the dust of him collected by itself and instantly returned to what it was. [Dante's descriptive account of the eternal punishment served by thieves in the Eighth Circle of Hell. Canto XXIV, Inferno]4) The emperor of the despondent kingdom so towered-from midchest-above the ice, that I match better with a giant's height than giants match the measure of his arms; now you can gauge the size of all of him if it is in proportion to such limbs. If he was once as handsome as he now is ugly and, despite that, raised his brows against his Maker, one can understand how every sorrow has its source in him! I marveled when I saw that, on his head, he had three faces: one--in front-blood red; and then another two that, just above the midpoint of each shoulder, joined the first. [Dante's first impression of Satan. Canto XXXIV, Inferno]5) I threw myself devoutly at his holy feet, asking him to open out of mercy; but first I beat three times upon my breast. Upon my forehead, he traced seven P's with his sword's point and said: 'When you have entered within, take care to wash away these wounds.' Ashes, or dry earth that has just been quarried, would share one color with his robe, and from beneath that robe he drew two keys; the one was made of gold, the other was of silver; first with the white, then with the yellow key, he plied the gate so as to satisfy me. [The angel guarding the gates of Purgatory prepares Dante for his journey and opens the gates to the mountain of Purgatory. Canto IX, Purgatorio] 6) My son, you've seen the temporary fire and the eternal fire; you have reached the place past which my powers cannot see. I've brought you here through intellect and art; from now on, let your pleasure be your guide; you're past the steep and past the narrow paths. Look at the sun that shines upon your brow; look at the grasses, flowers, and the shrubs born here, spontaneously, of the earth. Among them, you can rest or walk until the coming of the glad and lovely eyes-those eyes that, weeping, sent me to your side. Await no further word or sign from me: your will is free, erect, and whole-to act against that will would be to err: therefore I crown and miter you over yourself. [Virgil's last words to Dante as he gives Dante the power to guide himself. Canto XXVII, Purgatorio]7) 'Turn, Beatrice, o turn your holy eyes upon your faithful one,' their song beseeched, 'who, that he might see you, has come so far. Out of your grace, do us this grace; unveil your lips to him, so that he may discern the second beauty you have kept concealed.' O splendor of eternal living light, who's ever grown so pale beneath Parnassus' shade or has drunk so deeply from its fountain, that he'd not seem to have his mind confounded, trying to render you as you appeared where heaven's harmony was your pale likeness-your face, seen through the air, unveiled completely? [The angels in the Earthly Paradise ask Beatrice to show her face to Dante. Dante's response. Canto XXXI, Purgatorio ]8) O lady, you in whom my hope gains strength, you who, for my salvation, have allowed your footsteps to be left in Hell, in all the things that I have seen, I recognize the grace and benefit that I, depending upon your power and goodness, have received. You drew me out from slavery to freedom by all those paths, by all those means that were within your power. Do, in me, preserve your generosity, so that my soul, which you have healed, when it is set loose from my body, be a soul that you will welcome. [Dante, thanking Beatrice for saving him. Canto XXXI, Paradiso]9) O grace abounding, through which I presumed to set my eyes on the Eternal Light so long that I spent all my sight on it! In its profundity I saw-ingathered and bound by love into one single volume what, in the universe, seems separate, scattered: substances, accidents, and dispositions as if conjoined-in such a way that what I tell is only rudimentary. [Dante, on his vision of God. Canto XXXIII, Paradiso]10) But then my mind was struck by light that flashed and, with this light, received what it had asked. Here force failed my high fantasy; but my desire and will were moved already-like a wheel revolving uniformly-by the Love that moes the sun and the other stars. [Dante's conclusion of The Divine Comedy . Canto XXXIII, Paradiso]摘自以下外文网站中文翻译可通过专门翻译软件。



