
关于人生态度的名人名言,要英文的,最好有是谁说的
All for one, one for all. 人人为我,我为人人。
—— [法] Dumas pére大仲马 Other men live to eat, while I eat to live. 别人为食而生存,我为生存而食。
—— Socrates 苏格拉底 Easy come, easy go. 易得者亦易失。
—— Hazlitt赫斯特 Love rules his kingdom without a sword. 爱,统治了他的王国,不用一枝利剑。
—— Herbert 赫伯特 We soon believe what we desire. 我们欲望中的东西,我们很快就信以为真。
—— Chaucer乔叟 The darkest hour is that before the dawn. 黎明前的时分是最黑暗的。
—— Fuller 富勒 The longest day has an end. 最难过的日子也有尽头。
—— Howell 贺韦尔 Living without an aim is like sailing without a compass. 生活而无目标,犹如航海之无指南针。
—— J. Ruskin 鲁斯金 A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. 手中的一只鸟胜于林中的两只鸟。
—— Heywood 希伍德 One swallow does not make a summer. 一燕不成夏。
—— Taverner 泰维纳 A man may lead a horse to the water, but he cannot make it drink. 一个人可以把马带到河边,但他不能令它饮水。
—— Heywood 希伍德 One cannot eat one’s cake and have it. 一个人不能把他的糕饼吃掉之后还留在手上。
—— Davies 戴维斯 Time is money. 时间就是金钱。
—— Benjamin Franklin富兰克林 Time and tide wait for no man. 时间不等人。
—— Scott 斯科特 There is no rose without a thorn. 没有玫瑰花是不长刺的。
—— Ray 雷 Lookers-on see most of the game. 旁观者清。
—— Smedley 斯密莱 Beggars cannot be choosers. 行乞者不得有选择。
—— Heywood 希伍德 First catch your hare. 首先必须捕获兔子,然后才能宰之。
—— Thackeray 萨克雷 Victory won’t come to me unless I go to it. 胜利是不会向我走来的,我必须自己走向胜利。
—— M. Moore 穆尔 A great man is always willing to be little. 伟大的人物总是愿意当小人物的。
—— R. W. Emerson 爱默生 Cowards die many times before their deaths. 懦夫在未死之前,已身历多次死亡的恐怖了。
—— Julius Caesar 凯撒 Anything one man can imagine, other men can make real. 但凡人能想象到的事物,必定有人能将它实现。
—— Jules Verne 凡尔纳 Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise. 早睡早起使人健康、富裕又聪明。
—— Benjamin Franklin 富兰克林 Life is just a series of trying to make up your mind. 生活只是由一系列下决心的努力所构成。
—— T. Fuller 富勒 Goals determine what you are going to be. 目标决定你将成为为什么样的人。
—— Julius Erving欧文 All human wisdom is summed up in two words ?C wait and hope. 人类所有的智慧可以归结为两个词 — 等待和希望。
—— Alexandre Dumas Pére大仲马(法国作家) It is not enough to be industrious, so are the ants. What are you industrious for? 光勤劳是不够的,蚂蚁也是勤劳的。
要看你为什么而勤劳。
—— H. D. Thoreau梭罗 You have to believe in yourself. That’s the secret of success. 人必须相信自己,这是成功的秘诀。
—— Charles Chaplin卓别林 1. Waste not,want not. 俭以防匮。
2. From saving comes having. 富有来自节俭。
3. A penny saved is a penny gained. 省一文是一文。
4. Take care of the pence and the pound will take care of themselves. 金钱积少便成多。
5. Frugality is an estate alone. 节俭本身就是一宗财产。
6. He that regards not a penny,will lavish a pound. 小钱不知节省,大钱将滥花。
7. Small gains bring great wealth. 积小利,成巨富。
8. Many a little makes a mickle. 积少便成多。
9. As the touchstone tries gold,so gold tries man. 试金之石可试金,正如黄金能试人。
10.Courage and resolution are the spirit and soul of virtue. 勇敢和坚决是美德的灵魂。
11.The path to glory is always rugged. 光荣之路常坎坷。
12.Nothing is difficult to the man who will try. 世上无难事,只要人肯试。
13.The fire is the test of gold;adversity of strong man. 烈火试真金,困苦炼壮士。
14.Great hopes make great man. 远大的希望造就伟大的人物。
15.No way is impossible to courage. 勇士面前无险路。
16.A smooth sea never made a skillful mariner. 平静的大海决不能造就出熟练的水手。
17.The good seaman is known in bad weather. 坏天气下才能识得出良好的海员;要识好海员,须凭 坏天气。
18.The best hearts are always the bravest. 行为最勇敢的人心地总是最善良。
19.We must not lie down,and cry,God help us. 求神不如求己。
20.He that falls today may be up again tomorrow. 今天跌倒的人也许明天就会站起。
21.Rome was not built in a day. 罗马并非一日可建成;坚持必成。
22.Success belongs to the persevering. 胜利属于坚忍不拔的人。
23.We must repeat a thousand and one times that perseverance is the only road to success. 我们要多次重申:不屈不挠是取得胜利的唯一道 路。
24.Perseverance is failing nineteen times and succeeding the twentieth. 十九次失败,到第二十次获得成功,这就叫坚持。
25.Step by step the ladder is ascended. 登梯需要逐级登。
26.Adversity leads to prosperity. 困苦通向昌盛。
27.Patience and application will carry us through. 忍耐和专心会使我们度过难关。
28.Fortune often rewards with interest those that have patience to wait for her. 做事只要有耐心,到头总会有好运;耐心候好运,好 运常会来。
29.All things will come round to him who will but wait. 只要肯等待,一切都会按时来。
30.Constant dropping wears the stone. 滴水不绝可穿石。
31.Omelets are not made without breaking of eggs. 鸡蛋不打破,蛋卷做不成;不甘愿吃苦,则预期效果 达不到。
32.The world is a ladder for some to go up and others to go down. 世界好似一把梯,有人上去有人下。
33.There needs a long apprenticeship to understand the mystery of the world's trade. 要知世事奥秘多,须要长期作学徒。
34.Life is sweet. 生活是可爱的;人无不好生(恶死)。
35.Where there is life,there is hope. 生命不息,希望长在。
36.Life is not all beer and skittles. 人生并不全是吃喝玩乐。
37.Much water runs by the mill that the miller knows not of. 眼前发生许多事,有些我们并不知。
38.Fortune knocks once at least at every man's door. 人人都有走运的一天。
39.If you are too fortunate,you will not know yourself; if you are too unfortunate,nobody will know you. 运气太好,见人不睬;运气太坏,无人理会。
40.Every man is the architect of his own fortune. 每一个人都是自身幸福的建筑师。
41.Happy is he who knows his follies in his youth. 记得年轻时所作蠢事的人是幸福的。
42.Misfortunes never (seldom) come alone (single). 祸不单行。
43.Misfortune is a good teacher. 不幸是良好的教师。
44.Misfortunes come at night. 祸常生于不测。
45.Misfortunes tell us what fortune is. 恶运临头后,才知幸运贵。
46.Adversity makes a man wise,not rich. 患难能使人聪明,但不能使人富有。
47.Live and learn. 活到老,学到老。
48.It is never too old to learn. 为学不怕年高。
49.A man becomes learned by asking questions. 要长学问,就得多问;多问则业精。
50.There is no royal road to learning. 学问无坦途。
51.He who is ashamed of asking is ashamed of learning. 畏问之人耻于学。
52.What is learned in the cradle lasts till the grave. 婴孩时期学到的东西,老死不会忘记。
53.Learning makes a good man better and ill man worse. 知识能使好人更好,坏人更坏。
54.Soon learnt,soon forgotten. 学得快,忘得快。
55.Learn young,learn fair. 为学趁年青,既学须学好。
56.A lazy youth,a lousy age. 少时懒惰老来苦。
57.He that knows nothing,doubts nothing. 无知即无疑。
58.A good name keeps its luster in the dark. 良好的名声在黑暗中也能闪闪发光。
59.Fame is a magnifying glass. 名誉是放大镜。
60.A good fame is better than a good face. 美名胜于美貌。
61.Fame like a river is narrowest at its source and broadest afar off. 名誉如河流,发源处最狭,愈远愈宽广。
62.Take honour from me and my life is done. 没有名誉,就没有了生命。
63.Beware of him who regards not his reputation. 要谨防不重名誉的人。
64.It is better to die with honour than to live in infamy. 光荣的死胜于羞辱的生。
65.Adversity successfully overcome is the highest glory. 成功地克服困难是最大的光荣。
66.Reputation is often got without merit and lost without fault. 无功得名是常事,无过失名也是常事。
67.Your father's honour is to you but a second-hand honour. 对于你来说,父亲的荣誉只是间接的荣誉。
68.Never trust another what you should do yourself. 自己该做的事,决不要委托给旁人做。
69.It is an equal failing to trust everybody, and to trust nobody. 信任一切与不信任任何人,同样是弱点。
70.Eat a peck of salt with a man before you trust him. 在你信任一个人之前,先要深入了解他。
71.If you trust before you try, you may repent before you die. 不经考验就依赖,不到瞑目便的悔。
72.Never trust to fine words. 切勿轻信漂亮话。
73.Trust not a great weight to a slender thread. 细线挂重物,终究不可靠。
74.Be just to all,but trust not all. 要对一切人都公正,但不要对一切人都信任。
75.Trust thyself only,and another shall not betray thee. 只要信任你自己,旁人才不出卖你。
76.Self-trust is the essence of heroism. 自信为英雄品质之本。
77.Confidence is a plant of slow growth. 信任是一种生长缓慢的植物。
78.Truth is the daughter of time. 真理是时间的女儿。
79.Truth hath a good face,but ill clothes. 真理面目善良;但衣衫褴褛。
80.Truth and roses have thorns about them. 真理和玫瑰,身旁都有刺。
81.Truth may be blamed,but shall never be shamed. 真理可能会被责难,但绝不会受羞辱。
82.Though malice may darken truth,it cannot put it out. 恶意可以糟塌真理;但无法消灭真理。
83.Truth will prevail. 真理必胜。
84.Truth's best ornament is nakedness. 不加掩饰乃是真理的最好装饰。
85.Facts are stubborn things. 事实是最顽强的东西。
86.Sooner or later,the truth comes to light. 真相迟早会大白。
87.The truths we least like to hear are those which it is most to our advantage to know. 我们最不愿意听到的事实,往往是我们知道了会 大有好处的事实。
88.Falsehood like a nettle stings those who meddle with it. 谎言似荨麻,玩弄会刺手。
89.There is many a fair thing full false. 有许多说得好听的东西充满了谬误。
90.Though a lie be well drest,it is ever overcome. 谎言装扮虽不错,到头总会被揭露。
91.A lie begets a lie till they come to generations. 谎言生谎言,谎言世代传。
92.A false tongue will hardly speak truth. 假舌不会吐真言。
93.False with one can be false with two. 对一个人虚假,也会对两个人虚假。
94.He that will lie will steal. 会说谎的人也就会偷窃。
95.Gossiping and lying go together. 流言常和谎话并行。
96.Equivocation is first cousin to a lie. 含糊其词是谎话的近亲。
97.A great talker is a great liar. 最会夸夸其谈的人也最会说谎。
98.The greatest liars talk most of themselves. 最爱自吹自擂的人是最大的说谎者。
99.Lying rides upon debt's back. 负债的人谎话多。
100. Lying is the first step to the gallows. 说谎是上断头台的第一步。
英语名人名言
A bad beginning makes a bad ending.不善不善终。
A bad thing never dies.遗臭万年。
A bad workman always blames his tools.不会撑河弯。
A bird in the hand is worth than two in the bush.一手胜过双鸟在林。
A boaster and a liar are cousins-german.吹牛与本是同宗。
A bully is always a coward.色厉内荏。
A burden of one's choice is not felt.爱挑的担子不嫌重。
A candle lights others and consumes itself.蜡烛照亮别人,却毁灭了自己。
A cat has 9 lives.猫有九条命。
A cat may look at a king.人人平等。
A close mouth catches no flies.病从口入。
A constant guest is never welcome.常客令人厌。
Actions speak louder than words.事实胜于雄辩。
Adversity leads to prosperity.穷则思变。
Adversity makes a man wise, not rich.逆境出人才。
A fair death honors the whole life.死得其所,流芳百世。
A faithful friend is hard to find.知音难觅。
A fall into a pit, a gain in your wit.吃一堑,长一智。
A fox may grow gray, but never good.江山易改,本性难移。
A friend in need is a friend indeed.患难见真情。
A friend is easier lost than found.得朋友难,失朋友易。
A friend is never known till a man has need.需要之时方知友。
A friend without faults will never be found.没有十全十美的朋友。
'After you' is good manners.“您先请”是礼貌。
A good beginning is half done.良好的开端是成功的一半。
A good beginning makes a good ending.善始者善终。
A good book is a good friend.好书如挚友。
A good book is the best of friends, the same today and forever.一本好书,相伴一生。
谁有英语名人名言,谚语,熟语
Sir Francis Bacon (later Lord Verulam and the Viscount St. Albans) was an English lawyer, statesman, essayist, historian, intellectual reformer, philosopher, and champion of modern science. Early in his career he claimed “all knowledge as his province” and afterwards dedicated himself to a wholesale revaluation and re-structuring of traditional learning. To take the place of the established tradition (a miscellany of Scholasticism, humanism, and natural magic), he proposed an entirely new system based on empirical and inductive principles and the active development of new arts and inventions, a system whose ultimate goal would be the production of practical knowledge for “the use and benefit of men” and the relief of the human condition. At the same time that he was founding and promoting this new project for the advancement of learning, Bacon was also moving up the ladder of state service. His career aspirations had been largely disappointed under Elizabeth I, but with the ascension of James his political fortunes rose. Knighted in 1603, he was then steadily promoted to a series of offices, including Solicitor General (1607), Attorney General (1613), and eventually Lord Chancellor (1618). While serving as Chancellor, he was indicted on charges of bribery and forced to leave public office. He then retired to his estate where he devoted himself full time to his continuing literary, scientific, and philosophical work. He died in 1626, leaving behind a cultural legacy that, for better or worse, includes most of the foundation for the triumph of technology and for the modern world as we currently know it. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table of Contents (Clicking on the links below will take you to those parts of this article) 1. Life and Political Career 2. Thought and Writings a. Literary Works b. The New Atlantis c. Scientific and Philosophical Works d. The Great Instauration e. The Advancement of Learning f. The “Distempers” of Learning g. The Idea of Progress h. The Reclassification of Knowledge i. The New Organon j. The Idols k. Induction 3. Reputation and Cultural Legacy 4. References and Further Reading -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. Life and Political Career Sir Francis Bacon (later Lord Verulam, the Viscount St. Albans, and Lord Chancellor of England) was born in London in 1561 to a prominent and well-connected family. His parents were Sir Nicholas Bacon, the Lord Keeper of the Seal, and Lady Anne Cooke, daughter of Sir Anthony Cooke, a knight and one-time tutor to the royal family. Lady Anne was a learned woman in her own right, having acquired Greek and Latin as well as Italian and French. She was a sister-in-law both to Sir Thomas Hoby, the esteemed English translator of Castiglione, and to Sir William Cecil (later Lord Burghley), Lord Treasurer, chief counselor to Elizabeth I, and from 1572-1598 the most powerful man in England. Bacon was educated at home at the family estate at Gorhambury in Herfordshire. In 1573, at the age of just twelve, he entered Trinity College, Cambridge, where the stodgy Scholastic curriculum triggered his lifelong opposition to Aristotelianism (though not to the works of Aristotle himself). In 1576 Bacon began reading law at Gray’s Inn. Yet only a year later he interrupted his studies in order to take a position in the diplomatic service in France as an assistant to the ambassador. In 1579, while he was still in France, his father died, leaving him (as the second son of a second marriage and the youngest of six heirs) virtually without support. With no position, no land, no income, and no immediate prospects, he returned to England and resumed the study of law. Bacon completed his law degree in 1582, and in 1588 he was named lecturer in legal studies at Gray’s Inn. In the meantime, he was elected to Parliament in 1584 as a member for Melcombe in Dorsetshire. He would remain in Parliament as a representative for various constituencies for the next 36 years. In 1593 his blunt criticism of a new tax levy resulted in an unfortunate setback to his career expectations, the Queen taking personal offense at his opposition. Any hopes he had of becoming Attorney General or Solicitor General during her reign were dashed, though Elizabeth eventually relented to the extent of appointing Bacon her Extraordinary Counsel in 1596. It was around this time that Bacon entered the service of Robert Devereux, the Earl of Essex, a dashing courtier, soldier, plotter of intrigue, and sometime favorite of the Queen. No doubt Bacon viewed Essex as a rising star and a figure who could provide a much-needed boost to his own sagging career. Unfortunately, it was not long before Essex’s own fortunes plummeted following a series of military and political blunders culminating in a disastrous coup attempt. When the coup plot failed, Devereux was arrested, tried, and eventually executed, with Bacon, in his capacity as Queen’s Counsel, playing a vital role in the prosecution of the case.
有关拒绝诱惑的名人名言(要有出处)
1、名节重于泰山,利欲轻于鸿毛。
——明·《于肃愍公集·无题》 2、不为利动,不为威劫。
——《在驻洲国会议员欢迎会上的答谢词》 3、见利不亏其义,见死不更其守。
——《孔子家语·儒行解》 4、大雪压青松,青松挺且直。
要知松高洁,待到雪化时。
——《冬认杂咏·青松》 5、心思要缜密,不可琐屑;操守要严明,不可激烈。
——《格言别录》 6、不以穷变节,不以贱易志。
——汉·桓宛《真诚铁论·地广》 7、骨宜刚,气宜柔;志宜大,胆宜小;心宜虚,言宜实。
——《寒笳集》 8、粉身碎骨浑不怕,要留青白在人间。
——明·《石灰吟》 9、宁为玉碎,不为瓦全。
——《北齐书·元景安传》 10、人生自古谁无死,留取丹心照汗青。
——宋·《过零丁洋》 11、乍向划中耿介死,不求黄金笼下生。
——唐·《设辟邪伎鼓吹雉子班曲辞》
外国的关于节日或习俗的谚语、名人名言,要有中英文对照,麻烦各位大侠了。
usually with false contradictory things are extremely important and valuable. -- Golgi凡是与虚伪相的东西都是极其重且有价值的。
—尔基life can not lie out in the bright flowers. -- Henie生命不可能从谎言中开出灿烂的鲜——海涅false can never grow in power and become real. -- Tagore虚伪永远不能凭借它生长在权利中而变成真实。
——泰戈尔true modesty is the only product of vanity was thinking. -- Bergson真正的谦虚只能是对虚荣心进行了深思以后的产物。
——柏格森
关于人的英文名言
名人名言——人性与道德 法律The proper function of man is to live, but not to exist. 人应该生活,而非单纯生存。
——Jack London Conquer fear of death and you are put into possession of your life. 战胜对死亡的恐惧才能真正享受生命。
——G.Meredith He that is once born, once must die. 有生必有死。
——Herbert There is a time to speak and a time to be silent. 该说话时说话,该沉默时沉默。
——Caxton If you smile when no one else is around, you really mean it. 如果你独自一人时笑了,那是真心的笑。
——Andy Rooney The worst bankrupt is the person who has lost his enthusiasm. 最惨的破产就是丧失自己的热情。
——H.W.Arnold The fox changes his skin but not his habits. 江山易改,本性难移。
——Suetonius People with tact have less to retract. 智者悔少。
——Arnold Glasgow The man who has never made a mistake will never make anything else. 从不犯错的人将一事无成。
——G.B.Shaw A liar will not be believed, even when he speaks the truth. 一个骗子即使在说真话时,旁人也不会相信。
——Aesop What is a man's first duty? the answer is brief: To be himself. 一个人的首要职责是什么
很简单:做自己。
——Henrik Ibsen If people would dare to speak to one another unreservedly, there would be a good deal less sorrow in the world a hundred years hence. 如果人们敢于互相推心置腹地讲出心里话,一百年后世界将会减少许多痛苦。
——Samuel Butler Passion, though a bad regulator, is a powerful spring. 激情虽难以驾驭,却是种强大的动力。
——Emerson Every man desires to live long, but no man would be old. 人人都希望长寿,但没人愿意变老。
——Jonathan Swift The greatest of faults is to be conscious of none. 最严重的错误莫过于不觉得自己有任何错误。
——Thomas Carlyle A beautiful form is better than a beautiful face; a beautiful behavior than a beautiful form. 美丽的外形胜于美丽的脸蛋,美丽的举止胜于美丽的外形。
——Emerson People want to know how much you care before they care how much you know. 人们首先想知道你在乎多少,然后才在乎你知道多少。
——James Hind There are lots of people who mistake their imagination for their memory. 有许多人错将他们的想象当做记忆。
——Josh Billings To err is human, to forgive, divine. 人皆犯错,你能原谅别人,你就是圣人。
——Pope What we all tend to complain about most in other people are those things we don't like about ourselves. 在别人身上我们抱怨最多的东西往往也是我们自身中自己也不喜欢的东西。
——William Wharton The miracle is this-the more we share, the more we have. 神奇的是我们分享的越多,我们拥有的也越多。
——Leonard Nimoy Blessed is he who expects nothing, for he shall never be disappointed. 一无所求的人是幸福的,因为他永远也不会失望。
——Pope There is a limit at which forbearance ceases to be a virtue. 忍耐超过了一定的限度便不再是美德了。
——Edmund Burke He who loses wealth loses much; he who loses a friend loses more; but he who loses courage loses all. 失去财产的人损失很大,失去朋友的人损失更多,而失去勇气的人则失去一切。
——Cervantes The greatest of faults is to be conscious of none. 最严重的错误莫过于不觉得自己有任何错误。
——Thomas Carlyle Optimism is a good characteristic, but if carried to an excess it becomes foolishness. 乐观是种优秀品质,但如过分乐观就是愚蠢了。
——Theodore Roosevelt It's the nature of folly to see the faults of others and forget his own. 愚蠢的人之所以蠢在于他们只看到别人的缺点而对自己的视而不见。
——Cicero Fools admire, but men of sense approve. 傻瓜才仰慕别人,而有见识的人赞赏别人。
——Pope Content makes poor men rich; discontent makes rich men poor. 知足使贫穷的人富有;而贪婪使富足的人贫穷。
——Benjamin Franklin A beautiful form is better than a beautiful face; a beautiful behavior than a beautiful form. 美丽的外形胜于美丽的脸蛋,美丽的举止胜于美丽的外形。
——Emerson Trust men and they will be true to you; treat them greatly and they will show themselves great. 信任别人,别人才会对你忠诚;尊敬别人,别人才显示其可敬之处。
——Emerson It is easy to perform a good action, but not easy to acquire a settled habit of performing such actions. 做一件好事并不难,难的是养成一种做好事的习惯。
——Aristotle



