
美国励志人物大学演讲稿中英文对照版,有哪些
Madam President Faust, members of the Harvard Corporation and the Board of Overseers, faculty, family, friends, and, most importantly, today's graduates, 尊敬的Faust校长,哈佛集团的各位成员,监管理事会的各位理事,各位老师,各位家长,各位朋友,以及最重要的各位毕业生同学, Thank you for letting me share this wonderful day with you. 感谢你们,让我有机会同你们一起分享这个美妙的日子。
I am not sure I can live up to the high standards of Harvard Commencement speakers. Last year, J.K. Rowling, the billionaire novelist, who started as a classics student, graced this podium. The year before, Bill Gates, the mega-billionaire philanthropist and computer nerd stood here. Today, sadly, you have me. I am not a billionaire, but at least I am a nerd. 我不太肯定,自己够得上哈佛大学毕业典礼演讲人这样的殊荣。
去年登上这个讲台的是,英国亿万身家的小说家J.K. Rowling女士,她最早是一个古典文学的学生。
前年站在这里的是比尔•盖茨先生,他是一个超级富翁、一个慈善家和电脑高手。
今年很遗憾,你们的演讲人是我,虽然我不是很有钱,但是至少我也算一个高手。
I am grateful to receive an honorary degree from Harvard, an honor that means more to me than you might care to imagine. You see, I was the academic black sheep of my family. My older brother has an M.D.\\\/Ph.D. from MIT and Harvard while my younger brother has a law degree from Harvard. When I was awarded a Nobel Prize, I thought my mother would be pleased. Not so. When I called her on the morning of the announcement, she replied, That's nice, but when are you going to visit me next. Now, as the last brother with a degree from Harvard, maybe, at last, she will be satisfied. 我很感激哈佛大学给我荣誉学位,这对我很重要,也许比你们会想到的还要重要。
要知道,在学术上,我是我们家的不肖之子。
我的哥哥在麻省理工学院得到医学博士,在哈佛大学得到哲学博士;我的弟弟在哈佛大学得到一个法律学位。
我本人得到诺贝尔奖的时候,我想我的妈妈会高兴。
但是,我错了。
消息公布的那天早上,我给她打电话,她听了只说:这是好消息,不过我想知道,你下次什么时候来看我
如今在我们兄弟当中,我最终也拿到了哈佛学位,我想这一次,她会感到满意。
Another difficulty with giving a Harvard commencement address is that some of you may disapprove of the fact that I have borrowed material from previous speeches. I ask that you forgive me for two reasons. 在哈佛大学毕业典礼上发表演讲,还有一个难处,那就是你们中有些人可能有意见,不喜欢我重复前人演讲中说过的话。
我要求你们谅解我,因为两个理由。
First, in order to have impact, it is important to deliver the same message more than once. In science, it is important to be the first person to make a discovery, but it is even more important to be the last person to make that discovery. 首先,为了产生影响力,很重要的方法就是重复传递同样的信息。
在科学中,第一个发现者是重要的,但是在得到公认前,最后一个将这个发现重复做出来的人也许更重要。
Second, authors who borrow from others are following in the footsteps of the best. Ralph Waldo Emerson, who graduated from Harvard at the age of 18, noted All my best thoughts were stolen by the ancients. Picasso declared Good artists borrow. Great artists steal. Why should commencement speakers be held to a higher standard? 其次,一个借鉴他人的作者,正走在一条前人开辟的最佳道路上。
哈佛大学毕业生、诗人爱默生曾经写下:古人把我最好的一些思想都偷走了。
画家毕加索宣称优秀的艺术家借鉴,伟大的艺术家偷窃。
那么为什么毕业典礼的演说者,就不适用同样的标准呢
I also want to point out the irony of speaking to graduates of an institution that would have rejected me, had I the chutzpah to apply. I am married to Dean Jean, the former dean of admissions at Stanford. She assures me that she would have rejected me, if given the chance. When I showed her a draft of this speech, she objected strongly to my use of the word rejected. She never rejected applicants; her letters stated that we are unable to offer you admission. I have difficulty understanding the difference. After all, deans of admissions of highly selective schools are in reality, deans of rejection. Clearly, I have a lot to learn about marketing. 我还要指出一点,向哈佛毕业生发表演说,对我来说是有讽刺意味的,因为如果当年我斗胆向哈佛大学递交入学申请,一定会被拒绝。
我的妻子Jean当过斯坦福大学的招生主任,她向我保证,如果当年我申请斯坦福大学,她会拒绝我。
我把这篇演讲的草稿给她过目,她强烈反对我使用拒绝这个词,她从来不拒绝任何申请者。
在拒绝信中,她总是写:我们无法提供你入学机会。
我分不清两者到底有何差别。
在我看来,那些大热门学校的招生主任与其称为准许你入学的主任,还不如称为拒绝你入学的主任。
很显然,我需要好好学学怎么来推销自己。
My address will follow the classical sonata form of commencement addresses. The first movement, just presented, were light-hearted remarks. This next movement consists of unsolicited advice, which is rarely valued, seldom remembered, never followed. As Oscar Wilde said, The only thing to do with good advice is to pass it on. It is never of any use to oneself. So, here comes the advice. First, every time you celebrate an achievement, be thankful to those who made it possible. Thank your parents and friends who supported you, thank your professors who were inspirational, and especially thank the other professors whose less-than-brilliant lectures forced you to teach yourself. Going forward, the ability to teach yourself is the hallmark of a great liberal arts education and will be the key to your success. To your fellow students who have added immeasurably to your education during those late night discussions, hug them. Also, of course, thank Harvard. Should you forget, there's an alumni association to remind you. Second, in your future life, cultivate a generous spirit. In all negotiations, don't bargain for the last, little advantage. Leave the change on the table. In your collaborations, always remember that credit is not a conserved quantity. In a successful collaboration, everybody gets 90 percent of the credit. 毕业典礼演讲都遵循古典奏鸣曲的结构,我的演讲也不例外。
刚才是第一乐章----轻快的闲谈。
接下来的第二乐章是送上门的忠告。
这样的忠告很少被重视,几乎注定被忘记,永远不会被实践。
但是,就像王尔德说的:对于忠告,你所能做的,就是把它送给别人,因为它对你没有任何用处。
所以,下面就是我的忠告。
第一,取得成就的时候,不要忘记前人。
要感谢你的父母和支持你的朋友,要感谢那些启发过你的教授,尤其要感谢那些上不好课的教授,因为他们迫使你自学。
从长远看,自学能力是优秀的文理教育中必不可少的,将成为你成功的关键。
你还要去拥抱你的同学,感谢他们同你进行过的许多次彻夜长谈,这为你的教育带来了无法衡量的价值。
当然,你还要感谢哈佛大学。
不过即使你忘了这一点,校友会也会来提醒你。
第二,在你们未来的人生中,做一个慷慨大方的人。
在任何谈判中,都把最后一点点利益留给对方。
不要把桌上的钱都拿走。
在合作中,要牢记荣誉不是一个守恒的量。
成功合作的任何一方,都应获得全部荣誉的90%。
Jimmy Stewart, as Elwood P. Dowd in the movie Harvey got it exactly right. He said: Years ago my mother used to say to me, 'In this world, Elwood, you must be ... she always used to call me Elwood ... in this world, Elwood, you must be oh so smart or oh so pleasant.' Well, for years I was smart. ... I recommend pleasant. You may quote me on that. 电影《Harvey》中,Jimmy Stewart扮演的角色Elwood P. Dowd,就完全理解这一点。
他说:多年前,母亲曾经对我说,'Elwood,活在这个世界上,你要么做一个聪明人,要么做一个好人。
'我做聪明人,已经做了好多年了。
......但是,我推荐你们做好人。
你们可以引用我这句话。
My third piece of advice is as follows: As you begin this new stage of your lives, follow your passion. If you don't have a passion, don't be satisfied until you find one. Life is too short to go through it without caring deeply about something. When I was your age, I was incredibly single-minded in my goal to be a physicist. After college, I spent eight years as a graduate student and postdoc at Berkeley, and then nine years at Bell Labs. During that my time, my central focus and professional joy was physics. 我的第三个忠告是,当你开始生活的新阶段时,请跟随你的爱好。
如果你没有爱好,就去找,找不到就不罢休。
生命太短暂,如果想有所成,你必须对某样东西倾注你的深情。
我在你们这个年龄,是超级的一根筋,我的目标就是非成为物理学家不可。
本科毕业后,我在加州大学伯克利分校又待了8年,读完了研究生,做完了博士后,然后去贝尔实验室待了9年。
在这些年中,我关注的中心和职业上的全部乐趣,都来自物理学。
Here is my final piece of advice. Pursuing a personal passion is important, but it should not be your only goal. When you are old and gray, and look back on your life, you will want to be proud of what you have done. The source of that pride won't be the things you have acquired or the recognition you have received. It will be the lives you have touched and the difference you have made. 我还有最后一个忠告,就是说兴趣爱好固然重要,但是你不应该只考虑兴趣爱好。
当你白发苍苍、垂垂老矣、回首人生时,你需要为自己做过的事感到自豪。
你的物质生活和得到的承认,都不会产生自豪。
只有那些你出手相助、被你改变过的人和事,才会让你产生自豪。
After nine years at Bell labs, I decided to leave that warm, cozy ivory tower for what I considered to be the real world, a university. Bell Labs, to quote what was said about Mary Poppins, was practically perfect in every way, but I wanted to leave behind something more than scientific articles. I wanted to teach and give birth to my own set of scientific children. 在贝尔实验室待了9年后,我决定离开这个温暖舒适的象牙塔,走进我眼中的真实世界----大学。
我对贝尔实验室的看法,就像别人形容电影Mary Poppins的话,实际上完美无缺。
但是,我想为世界留下更多的东西,不只是科学论文。
我要去教书,培育我自己在科学上的后代。
Ted Geballe, a friend and distinguished colleague of mine at Stanford, who also went from Berkeley to Bell Labs to Stanford years earlier, described our motives best: 我在斯坦福大学有一个好友兼杰出同事Ted Geballe。
他也是从伯克利分校去了贝尔实验室,几年前又离开贝尔实验室去了斯坦福大学。
他对我们的动机做出了最佳描述: The best part of working at a university is the students. They come in fresh, enthusiastic, open to ideas, unscarred by the battles of life. They don't realize it, but they're the recipients of the best our society can offer. If a mind is ever free to be creative, that's the time. They come in believing textbooks are authoritative, but eventually they figure out that textbooks and professors don't know everything, and then they start to think on their own. Then, I begin learning from them. 在大学工作,最大的优点就是学生。
他们生机勃勃,充满热情,思想自由,还没被生活的重压改变。
虽然他们自己没有意识到,但是他们是这个社会中你能找到的最佳受众。
如果生命中曾经有过思想自由和充满创造力的时期,那么那个时期就是你在读大学。
进校时,学生们对课本上的一字一句毫不怀疑,渐渐地,他们发现课本和教授并不是无所不知的,于是他们开始独立思考。
从那时起,就是我开始向他们学习了。
My students, post doctoral fellows, and the young researchers who worked with me at Bell Labs, Stanford, and Berkeley have been extraordinary. Over 30 former group members are now professors, many at the best research institutions in the world, including Harvard. I have learned much from them. Even now, in rare moments on weekends, the remaining members of my biophysics group meet with me in the ether world of cyberspace. 我教过的学生、带过的博士后、合作过的年轻同事,都非常优秀。
他们中有30多人,现在已经是教授了。
他们所在的研究机构有不少是全世界第一流的,其中就包括哈佛大学。
我从他们身上学到了很多东西。
即使现在,我偶尔还会周末上网,向现在还从事生物物理学研究的学生请教。
I began teaching with the idea of giving back; I received more than I gave. This brings me to the final movement of this speech. It begins with a story about an extraordinary scientific discovery and a new dilemma that it poses. It's a call to arms and about making a difference. 我怀着回报社会的想法,开始了教学生涯。
我的一生中,得到的多于我付出的,所以我要回报社会。
这就引出了这次演讲的最后一个乐章。
首先我要讲一个了不起的科学发现,以及由此带来的新挑战。
它是一个战斗的号令,到了做出改变的时候了。
谁有TED演讲:邹奇奇的演讲稿(英文版)
The rest artist says they got some of their best ideas from .the program because kids don’t think about the limitation about how hard can be the blow glass to the certain shape ,they just think good ideas.Now when you think of the glass,you might think of colourful chihulu designs,or maybe Italian vases.But kids chance glass sirs to go to meat vision .Now our inherent wisdom does’t have to be insider knowleadge Kids already do a lot of learning from adults and we have a lot to share.I think adults should start learning from kids.Now I do most of my speech in front of education crowdWe heard that one too,but pioneer germ fighters totally ruled.I loved to write from the age of four,and when I was six,my mom bought me my own laptop equipt with Mricrosoft Word..Thank you Bill Gates and thank you mom.I wrote over three hundred short stories on that little laptop and I want to get published.Instead of scorning the heresy kid that one want to get published or saying wait until you are older,my parents were really suppotive..Many pubulishers were not quite encouraging.One large children publisher ironically says that they didn’t work with children. My wonder that children’s publisher not work with children.I don’t know you can island enlarge client there..Now one publisher Action Publishing, will really take that leap and trust me and listen what do I want to say and published my first book Flying Fingers.You see here.And from there on,it has gone and speaking a hundreds of schools key nodes for thounds of educators.And finally today,speaking to you,I appreciate you attending today because it showed you truly care,you listen. But those problems with rosy pictures that children are so much better than adults.Kids grow up and become adults just like you.All just like you ? Really?The goal is not to turn kids into your kind of adult,but rather better adult that you will be which maybe a little challenging consider you guys condencials.But the way progress happens,just because new generations and new era grow in development become better than the previous one.It was the reason we were not in the dark age any more.No natter your position and place in life,it isimperative(重要的,必要的) to creat opportunity for children,so we can grow up to blow you away.Adults followed in case of in TED,you need listen and learn from kids and trust us and expect more from us.You must lead an ear today,because we are the leaders of tomorrow. Take care of you,you are oldNo, just kidding.Actuelly,no,really,we are going to be the next generation the one who bring this world forward and in case you don’t think this really has meaning for you.Remember that clone is possible,that involves going to childhood again in which kids you want to be heard just like my generation.The world need opportunities for new leaders,new ideas,kids need opportunities to lead a succeed.Are you ready to make the match?Because the world’s problems shouldn’t be the human families’ heirloom.Thank you!
ted演讲有没有演讲稿会文英文
Ted there are no speeches in the speech.ted演讲有没有演讲稿会文
求 ted 怎样从错误中学习 中英文演讲稿
Theworldischangingwithreallyremarkablespeed.Ifyoulookatthechartatthetophere,you'llseethatin2025,theseGoldmanSachsprojectionssuggestthattheChineseeconomywillbealmostthesamesizeastheAmericaneconomy.Andifyoulookatthechartfor2050,it'sprojectedthattheChineseeconomywillbetwicethesizeoftheAmericaneconomy,andtheIndianeconomywillbealmostthesamesizeastheAmericaneconomy.AndweshouldbearinmindherethattheseprojectionsweredrawnupbeforetheWesternfinancialcrisis.世界正在以的速度飞快得改变着。
如果你看着这上方的图表,你会看到在2025年,高盛投资公司的这些预测表明中国经济规模会和美国经济几乎相当。
如果看2050年的图表,预测表明中国经济规模将会是美国经济的两倍,印度的经济规模将会和美国的经济几乎持平。
在这里,我们应该记住这些预测是在西方经济危机之前做出的。
Acoupleofweeksago,IwaslookingatthelatestprojectionbyBNPParibasforwhenChinawillhavealargereconomythantheUnitedStates.GoldmanSachsprojected2027.Thepost-crisisprojectionis2020.That'sjustadecadeaway.Chinaisgoingtochangetheworldintwofundamentalrespects.Firstofall,it'sahugedevelopi
TED《为什么我必须站出来》英文演讲稿
Geena Rocero:Why I must come out The world makes you something that you?re not,but you know inside what you are,and that question burns in your heart:How will you become that?I may be somewhat unique in this,but I am not alone,not alone at all.So when I became a fashion model,I felt that d finally achieved the dream that d always wanted since I was a young child.My outside self finally matched my inner truth,my inner self.For complicated reasons which ll get to later,when I look at this picture,at that time I felt like,Geena,you?ve done it,you?ve made it,you have arrived.But this past October,I realized that m only just beginning.All of us are put in boxes by our family,by our religion,by our society,our moment in history,even our own bodies.Some people have the courage to break free,not to accept the limitations imposed by the color of their skin or by the beliefs of those that surround them.Those people are always the threat to the status quo,to what is considered acceptable.In my case,for the last nine years,some of my neighbors,some of my friends,colleagues,even my agent,did not know about my history.I think,in mystery,this is called the reveal.Here is mine.I was assigned boy at birth based on the appearance of my genitalia.I remember when I was five years old in Philippines walking around our house,I would always wear this t-shirt on my head.And my mom asked me,钬 How come you always wear that t-shirt on your head?钬 I said,钬 Mom,this is my hair.m a girl.钬 I knew then how to self-identify.Gender has always been considered a fact,immutable,but we now know it?s actually more fluid,complex and mysterious.Because of my success,I never had the courage to share my story,not because I thought what I am is wrong,but because of how the world treats those of us who wish to break free.Every day,I was so grateful because I am a woman.I have a mom and dad and family who accepted me for who I am.Many are not so fortunate.\\\\x0cThere?s a long tradition in Asian culture that celebrates the fluid mystery of gender.There is a Buddhist goddess of compassion.There is a Hindu goddess,hijra goddess.So when I was eight years old,I was at a fiesta in the Philippines celebrating these mysteries.I was in front of the stage,and I remember,out comes this beautiful woman right in front of me,and I remember that moment something hit me:That is the kind of women I would like to be.So when I was 15 years old,still dressing as a boy,I met this woman named T.L.She is a transgender beauty pageant manager.That night she asked me,钬 How come you are not joining the beauty pageant?钬 She convinced me that if I joined that she would take care of the registration fee and the garments,and that night,I won best in swimsuit and best in long gown and placed second runner up among 40-plus candidates.That moment changed my life.All of a sudden,I was introduced to the world of beauty pageants.Not a lot of people could say that your first job is a pageant queen for transgender women,but ll take it.So from 15 to 17 years old,I joined the most prestigious pageant to the pageant where it?s at the back of the truck,literally,or sometimes it would be a pavement next to a rice field,and when it rains钬攊t rains a lot in the Philippines钬撄he organizers would have to move it inside someone?s house.I also experiences the goodness of strangers,especially when we would travel in remote provinces in the Philippines.But most importantly,I met some of my best friends in that community.In 2001,my mom,who had moved to San Francisco,called me and told me that my green card petition came through,that I could now move to the United States.I resisted it.I told my mom,钬 Mom,m having fun.m here with my friends.I love traveling,being a beauty pageant queen.钬 But then two weeks later she called me,she said,钬 Did you know that if you move to the United States you could change your name and gender marker?钬 That was all I need to hear.My mom also told me to put two s in the spelling of my name.She also came with \\\\x0cme when I had my surgery in Thailand at 19 years old.It?s interesting,in some of the most rural cities in Thailand,they perform some of the most prestigious,safe and sophisticated surgery.At that time in the United States,you needed to have surgery before you could change your name and gender marker.So in 2001,I moved to San Francisco,and I remember looking at my California driver s license with my name Geena and gender maker F.That was a powerful moment.For some people,their I.D.is their license to drive or even to get a drink,but for me,that was my license to live,to feel dignified.All of a sudden,my fears were minimized.I felt that I could conquer my dream and move to New York and be a model.Many are not so fortunate.I think of this woman named Ayla Nettless.She?s from New York,she?s a young woman who was courageously living her truth,but hatred ended her life.For most of my community,this is the reality in which we live.Our suicide rate is nine times higher than that of the general population.Every November 20,we have a global vigil for Transgender Day of Remembrance.I m here at this stage because it?s a long history of people who fought and stood up for injustice.This is Marsha P.Johnson and Sylvia Rivera.Today,this very moment,is my real come out.I could no longer live my truth for and by myself.I want to do my best to help others live their truth without shame and terror.I am here,exposed,so that one day there will never be a need for a November 20 vigil.My deepest truth allowed me to accept who I am.Will you?Thank you very much.(Applause) Thank you.Thank you.Thank you.(Applause) Kathryn Schulz:Geena,one quick question for you.m wondering what you would say,especially to parents,but in a more broad way,to friends,to family,to anyone \\\\x0cwho finds themselves encountering a child or a person who is struggling with and uncomfortable with a gender that?s being assigned them,what might you say to the family members of that person to help them become good and caring and kind family members to them?Geena Rocero:Sure.Well,first,really,m so blessed.The support system,with my mom especially,and my family,that in itself is just so powerful.I remember every time I would coach young trans women,I would mentor them,and sometimes when they would call me and tell me that their parents can?t accept it,I would pick up that phone call and tell my mom,钬 Mom,can you call this woman?钬 And sometimes it works,sometimes it doesn?t,so钬 But it?s just,gender identity is in the core of our being,right?I mean,we?re all assigned gender at birth,so what m trying to do is to have this conversation that sometimes that gender assignment doesn?t match,and there should be a space that would allow people to self-identify,and that?s a conversation that we should have with parents,with colleagues.The transgender movement,it?s at the very beginning,to compare to how the gay movement started.There?s still a lot of work that needs to be done.There should be an understanding.There should be a pace of curiosity and asking questions,and I hope all of you guys will be my allies.
求 哪里可以找到TED的英文版演讲稿。
最好是官方的 全的 可以对照找得到的
额,全的很少吧,要不你去TED的网站上看看我一般用的方法是:想要哪篇,直接把那场演讲的英文名字输入搜索,一般都会搜出原文,下载或复制下来就可以了。
没必要搜集那么全的。
现在TED视频是都有字幕的,也可以边听边看字幕哈
如何找TED演讲稿
右侧有一个Interactive Transcript,就是互动式文稿,你点一下第一句,把旁边的条拉到最后按住shift键点一下最后一句就可以选中全文,按ctrl+C就可以复制,再随便找个地方CTRL+V粘贴下来就好。



