
描写北极风光的好句子
一只北极熊孤单的呆在冰上发呆,实在无聊就开始拔自己的毛玩,一根……两根……三根……最后拔的一根不剩,然后他就冷死了。
请以“成功与风险”、“人生一张‘嘴’”、“北极熊,我对你说”为题,写一篇文章
人生一张嘴吃喝乃生存的必须,“嘴”好吃,原是本能,并无过错,但不加控制,就成了“嘴”的一大弱点。
一个把自己的人生定位在吃吃喝喝上的人,其人生价值是很难上得了档次的。
“吃人的嘴短,拿人的手短”,嘴巴乱吃乱喝,自然要以为人谋私替人消灾护短来做交换。
“嘴”更重要的功能在交流。
许多关于“嘴”的造词,都与嘴巴的说话功能密切相关。
不善于说话,叫“嘴笨”;说话使人爱听,叫“嘴乖”;说话使人听着舒服,叫“嘴甜”;说话谨慎小心,不乱讲,更不随便说出泄露秘密的话,叫“嘴稳”、“嘴严”、“嘴紧”;有话藏不住,马上要说出来,叫“嘴快”;说话啰唆,叫“嘴碎”;说话刻薄,叫“嘴损”;自知理亏而口头上不肯认错或服输,叫“嘴硬”;说话直爽,叫“嘴直”。
嘴笨的人一般没心机;嘴乖嘴甜的人,心不一定甜;嘴稳、嘴严的人,城府较深;嘴直、嘴快的人,一般心直。
嘴巴要交流,首先得劳动嘴唇。
嘴唇,又叫嘴皮子,多含贬意。
说一个人好耍嘴皮子,大抵隐含着这个人比较虚伪的意思。
老话说,“嘴是两张皮,好坏都由你”,把说话看成是上嘴唇和下嘴唇的简单开合,自然是不需要负什么责任的。
于是,捕风捉影的谣言,别有用心的流言,以讹传讹的蜚语,就源源不断地从两唇之间奔涌而出了。
对这种不负责任的话,最好的选择自然是“走自己的路,让别人去说吧。
” 也有的人,擅长在嘴唇上抹上蜜糖,说出来的话香香甜甜,让人听来舒服惬意,却在不知不觉之中上了他的当中了他的圈套,最后由他牵着鼻子走。
老话里有许多这样的告诫:“嘴上说得蜜蜜甜,心头藏把锯锯镰”、“口里叫哥哥,心里摸家伙”、“嘴里吐出糖来,腰里摸出刀来”、“嘴里尧舜禹汤,做事男盗女娼”、“嘴上说人话,心里怀鬼胎”,可到头来还是有不少人经不住别人的谄媚逢迎,一头栽进别人的语言陷阱里。
嘴巴的交流过程中,最辛苦的得数舌头。
说话有摇唇鼓舌一说,既然称为“鼓”,可见舌头的活动频率和活动幅度似乎都要比嘴皮子大。
“嘴是扁的,舌头是软的”。
许许多多的舌头得了“软”的优势,可以把假话说得像真话,可以把谬误说得像真理,可以把谄媚说得像由衷的敬佩。
舌头是“软”的,所以有的人的舌头特别没有操守,永远朝着权势和地位倒伏,今天谁给了他甜头,他的舌头就为谁而鼓动;明天谁要给他实惠,他的舌头就为谁摇荡。
这样的舌头,往往能够博取显赫的功名富贵,往往能够赢得王侯将相的高位,这样的“三寸不烂之舌”,多少人趋之若鹜
口中之舌,本身充满矛盾。
舌头是扁的,说出来的话却可以极为圆滑。
舌头没有骨头,却比牙齿还锋利。
“舌头底下压死人”、“舌刀不用铁,杀人不见血”说的就是舌头的力量。
舌头能表达爱情歌颂友谊能传达真理和正义,也能颠倒黑白混淆是非无中生有造谣中伤,关键要看这舌头长在什么人的嘴里。
嘴原本是用来交流的,因此,嘴巴说话的自由度是一个社会文明程度的标志。
专制时代,统治者历来要防民之嘴,不允许天下的嘴巴自由表达。
在这样的社会里,“舌是厉害本,口是祸福门”,嘴在交流的过程中往往成为惹祸的根。
专制社会里有“关门家中坐祸从天上来”一说,其实祸端不是从天上来的,而是从自己的嘴里来的。
嘴巴还有个让人诟病的地方是口是心非言行不一。
人的嘴和手是两回事,叫得响的不一定做得好。
许多人是“说起来精通,做起来稀松”,是言语的巨人行动的矮子。
其实世界上的事是“说一千道一万,两横一竖就靠‘干’”,嘴巴说得漂亮,终究不等于事实本身。
至于那些嘴善心不善、嘴里抹蜜糖心里藏刀枪的虚伪之徒,从根本上来说,不是嘴巴出了问题,而是灵魂需要矫正。
请生动地描写一下这只北极熊的外貌,谢谢。
像个傻冒一样
用英语描写北极熊80个单词左右
Polar Bears and Conservation Page 1 of 3 Click image to enlarge. Polar Bear Status Report Polar bears are a potentially threatened (not endangered) species living in the circumpolar north. They are animals which know no boundaries. They pad across the ice from Russia to Alaska, from Canada to Greenland and onto Norway's Svalbard archipelago. No adequate census exists on which to base a worldwide population estimate, but biologists use a working figure of perhaps 22,000 to 25,000 bears with about sixty percent of those living in Canada. In most sections of the Arctic where estimates are available, polar bear populations are thought to be stable at present. Counts have been decreasing in Baffin Bay and the Davis Strait, where about 3,600 bears are thought to live, but are increasing in the Beaufort Sea, where there are around 3,000 bears. In the 1960s and 1970s, polar bears were under such severe survival pressure that a landmark international accord was reached, despite the tensions and suspicions of the Cold War. The International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears was signed in Oslo, November 15, 1973 by the five nations with polar bear populations (Canada, Denmark which governed Greenland at that time, Norway, the U.S., and the former U.S.S.R.). The polar bear nations agreed to prohibit random, unregulated sport hunting of polar bears and to outlaw hunting the bears from aircraft and icebreakers as had been common practice. The agreement also obliges each nation to protect polar bear denning areas and migration patterns and to conduct research relating to the conservation and management of polar bears. Finally, the nations must share their polar bear research findings with each other. Member scientists of the Polar Bear Specialist Group meet every three to four years under the auspices of the IUCN World Conservation Union to coordinate their research on polar bears throughout the Arctic. With the agreement in force, polar bear populations slowly recovered. The Oslo agreement is one of the first and most successful international conservation measures enacted in the 21st century.



