有關和平或習俗的英語手抄報資料

有關和平或習俗的英語手抄報資料

rush

swallows may have gone, but there is a time of return; willow trees may have died back, but there is a time of regreening; peach blossoms may have fallen, but they will bloom again. now, you the wise, tell me, why should our days leave us, never to return? - if they had been stolen by someone, who could it be? where could he hide them? if they had made the escape themselves, then where could they stay at the moment?

chinese-english

1.a bad beginning

makes a bad ending.

不善始者不善終。

2.a bad thing never dies.

遺臭萬年。

3.a bad workman always blames his tools.

不會撐船怪河彎。

4.a bird in the hand is worth than two in the bush.一鳥在手勝過雙鳥在林。

5.a boaster and a liar are cousins-german.吹

牛與說謊本是同宗。

6.a bully is always a coward.

色厲內荏。

my mother

with b cry of joy ,i was born into the world.tears rolled down my mother's cheeks .she smiled,and kissed me again and again, so tenderly and so lovingly.

through my mother's love ,i grew up quickly.when i began learning to walk ,i fell constantly.whenever i did so ,it was my mother who picked me up and encouraged me to try again.when i had difficulty learning to speak for the first time in my life ,it was also my mother who helped me so patiently.

however this was not enough.more importantly,she also gave me moral guidance.so many fairy tales,which she had read to me ,like ”cinderella,“”alice in the wonderland,“ and ”sleeping beauty,“ made me realize at an early age ,what was right and what was wrong, and how i should and should not behave.

i wish my mother and all the mothers in the whole world happiness and health throughout their entire lives.

$1 meets $20

a one-dollar bill met a twenty-dollar bill and said, ”hey, where have you been? i haven't seen you around here much.“

a onthe twenty answered, ”i've been hanging out at the casinos, went on a cruise and did the rounds of the ship, back to the united states for a while, went to a couple of baseball games, to the mall, that kind of stuff. how about you?“

a onthe one dollar bill said, ”you know, same old stuff - church, church, church.

chang'e flies to the moon

houyi (see further on the story houyi she ri), seeking perpetual youth, obtained the elixir of immortality from queen mother of the west who lived in the kunlun mountains. returning to his palace, he confided the good news to his wife chang'e, a lady graceful of carriage and unparalleled of beauty, very much loved by her husband.

one day, when houyi was out, chang'e secretly swallowed the potion in the hope that she would become immortal. the result was quite unexpected: she felt herself becoming light, so light that she flew up in spite of herself, drifting and floating in the air, until she reached the palace of the moon.

she is regarded by later generations as the goddess of the moon.

this beautiful story has always been liked by the chinese and provides a favourite allusion for poets and writers.