英語描寫校園景色
1. 寫校園風景的英語演講稿
Respect teachers and schoolmates:
Hello! I am from XX class XXX. Today, my topic is 《beautiful scenery in campus.》
Did you notice that the green leaves, flowers bloom in the old tree, the stout gladne fill, who in his position, without leaving.
That old building, we provide generous, we should not return it?
And your hands, as they benefit!
I finished speaking, thank you
翻譯:
尊敬的老師,親愛的同學們:
你們好!我是來自XX班的XXX。今天,我演講的題目是《校園美麗的風景》
你們可曾注意到,那翠綠的葉子,那盛開的鮮花,那粗壯的老樹,時時刻刻監守在自己的崗位,沒有離開。
那古老的教學樓,為我們慷慨提供一切,我們不應該回報它嗎?
又你的雙手,為它們造福吧!
我的演講完畢,謝謝大家
2. 描寫校園景色的英語短文
描寫校園景色的英語短文
My campus is the most unforgettable place in my whole life, miss my mother similar, I love you great of campus.
campus front door has me the name of mother school on the door with a southern exposure, in the sun flickering give out light.Again go toward in is a center road, the both sides contain many flowers, beauty pole!It is a toilet in the southeast.At southwest Cape of is a dining room.Agreeable center road s going toward is a teaching building ago.The five planets red flag flaunts aweather before the building in the teaching.The empress of the building is a dormitory.This is the layout of my campus.
In this campus has been concerning my teacher.They are very kind.At I have difficult of time, they win difficult courage for me, I thank them very much.
3. 美麗的校園風景英語
造句要完整,我們美麗的校園處處風景很好=Our beautiful compus has great views everywhere.
4. 形容學校景色的英語詞語
beautiful
fantastic奇妙的棒極了fanscinating
fairyland [´fɛərilænd]n.仙境,奇境
湖光山色 landscape of lakes and hills
依山傍水 enclosed/surrounded by the hills on one side and waters on the other
景色如畫 picturesque views
湖石假山 lakeside rocks and rockeries
山清水秀 beautiful mountains and clear waters
誘人景色 inviting views
描寫景色的英語作文:With spring coming ,everything seems to be awake .
Palm trees ,pear trees ,and peach trees are all in blossom .
Grass also turns green .
Geese and cks are swimming freely .
Migratory birds have come back .
Let's enjoy such bright season !
賓至如歸 just be at home; feel at home
天堂之旅 a trip to the paradise; explore the paradise
人跡罕至 The Unbeaten Track
遠離塵囂 a true departure; an escape from the bustling
全新感受 a novel experience
耳目一新 a new perspective
動感之都 a city in move
活力北京 kicking beijing
世界之都 the world city
東方之珠 the oriental pearl
文化之都 the city of culture
醉在貴州 intoxicated in Guizhou
食在廣州 food in Guangzhou
味在成都 delicacies in Cheng
精英之都 the city of elites
大眾之城 the city of commoners
純真世界 a true escape
東方獨秀 like no other place in the orient
超乎想像 beyond your imagination
久負盛名 long estabished
卓越不俗 excellent but not fancy
5. 英語短文關於描寫校園景色的
During their Duke careers, graating seniors Gerald Oliver, Katie Mitchell and Ashley Joyce have helped improve race relations, Greek life, classroom honesty and other important aspects of campus life.
Their work illustrates how many students are choosing to make a positive difference in their own communities, said Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs.
"Students are reclaiming their social life in a much broader way," Moneta said. "It's happening in key pockets around campus."
Several student-led groups have emerged in the aftermath of the Women's Initiative, said Donna Lisker, director of the Women's Center. Active Minds encourages students to think about mental illness. Devil Dating aims to improve the campus dating scene. A women's mentoring group links students with faculty and alumni.
"These initiatives represent all different kinds of students who see some piece of the puzzle that looks familiar to them, and they decide to take this particular piece on," Lisker said. "That's been wonderful to see."
Gerald Oliver
The National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC) arrived on Duke's campus when Gerald Oliver was a sophomore. By his senior year, he was president of NPHC, the umbrella organization for the nine historically black fraternities and sororities, six of which are represented at Duke.
As the leader of a young organization, Oliver worked to strengthen NPHC's voice, establish its place in the Greek system and smooth out communication between Duke administrators and black Greeks. That entailed going to lots of meetings and speaking up, he said.
"I haven't been involved with big stuff that makes the paper," Oliver said. "I didn't organize a super program; it was more day-to-day things."
Oliver, who is also a member of Campus Council, made time for weekly meetings of the Community Executive Council, where the presidents of the four Greek councils -- NPHC, the Interfraternity Council, the Inter-Greek Council and the Pan-Hellenic Association -- discussed such issues as housing, recruitment, hazing policies and community service.
"The things that IFC and Pan-Hell do affect us, and the things we do affect them," Oliver said. "We made a lot of effort in that group to make sure we were working together since our fates are tied."
Fraternities and sororities have been viewed as self-segregating organizations, but Oliver said that black fraternities and sororities have helped lift up the black community that historically has had a disadvantage in higher ecation.
"It would be inaccurate to say there is no color division," said Oliver, a psychology major who is applying to business schools for the fall. "But just because the organizations serve different purposes doesn't mean they can't interact and understand each other."
The student-run Center for Race Relations has helped open lines of communication by bringing together Oliver's fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha, and the almost all-white Kappa Alpha fraternity to discuss issues they previously hadn't had a venue to address.
"We had a lot of good conversations," Oliver said, "but it doesn't mean much if nobody beyond the leaders buys into that."
The diversity of Duke provides an opportunity for ethnic and cultural exchange that many students might not have had up to that point. When he returns to Duke over the years for homecoming, he would like to see race relations remain a priority and more members involved in the discussions.
"As long as conversations like that continue to happen," he said, "race relations on campus will get better."
Katie Mitchell
The Greek system still needs work, said Katie Mitchell, president of the Duke chapter of Delta Delta Delta sorority. But changes won't be easy to make because the Greek system is a microcosm of the larger world.
"The world is competitive; the world is exclusive; the world has standards that have little to do with who you are," Mitchell said.
Mitchell, and the Tri-Delts, forged ahead anyway.
The alcohol-free casino night the Tri-Delts sponsored in November was open to everyone on campus. The party attracted a cross-section of the student body, raised money for charity and may become a Tri-Delt tradition to help shrug off a reputation of exclusivity.
Once the Women's Initiative report added "effortless perfection" to the campus lexicon, Mitchell gathered the 170 women in her chapter for a discussion about eating disorders.
"Talking about it is the first step," she said. "We need to talk about our experiences and move past them."
Mitchell believes that change can evolve through "small things done with a good heart and good intentions."
"I think my strength and who I am can be a force to change the system," she said.
In her leadership roles, Mitchell has learned that change forced upon others won't succeed.
"The administration can't impose any one culture on the students," she said. "When we see things that need to be changed, we need to come together and ask, 'How do we make this happen?'"
She joined 17 other women to write, edit and perform "All of the Above," a series of anonymous monologues about what it is like to be a woman at Duke. The performance sold out every night.
A public policy major with minors in women's studies and Spanish, Mitchell is off to Tanzania on a Hart Fellowship later this year to research women's legal rights in the East African country.
Ashley Joyce
The letter Ashley Joyce received as vice chair of the Undergraate Judicial Board was every probation officer's dream.
A student returning to Duke from a one-year suspension for cheating wrote to thank board members for imposing the punishment. The time away from Duke, the student said, had given him a new perspective on honesty and integrity that he would carry with him beyond his undergraate years.
"The hope and gratitude in that letter made me feel my work on UJB was worth it," Joyce said.
The spate of high-profile corporate officers "cheating behind the backs of consumers" indicates a dearth of integrity among the country's leaders, Joyce said.
"These are the kinds of decisions Duke is responsible for forming while you're here," she said. "If we can be instrumental in shaping those decisions and how you treat other people, that's huge."
While pursuing her political science degree, Joyce has worked with the Honor Council and served on the Academic Integrity Council. She has also been a member of the Alpha Phi Omega service sorority and helped lead a Girl Scout troop.
She plans to teach English in France for a year before deciding whether to attend law school. Her involvement in the extracurricular organizations is a way of expressing how much her ecation at Duke means to her.
"It's a way of being fulfilled," she said. "I feel involved in the heart of what's going on on campus. I couldn't imagine not doing anything like that while I was here. I'd feel like I was wasting my time."
Joyce praised the new Community Standard, which went into effect in fall 2003 and requires students to sign a pledge that they will uphold the values of the Duke community. Those include not lying, cheating or stealing or accepting those behaviors in others.
Through the Community Standard, Joyce said, students are more inclined to treat others with respect. Still, work remains for students to create an environment of honesty and respect.
"If we're going to make Duke a place where honesty and respect are part of the environment on campus, it needs to be owned by the students," she said. "That's the biggest challenge next year."
Written by Nancy Oates
6. 寫一篇小學四年級描寫校園景色5句話的英語小作文。急!~~
It's our school.There are many teachers and students. You can see some buildings and a lot of trees.We have PE lesson in the piayground,I like PE very much,but I like our school,too.
7. 用英語寫描寫學校周邊景物的作文
This is our school.At the school gate, you can see the main road in front of you.Coming into the gate, you can see the tall teaching building in the middle of the school.On the two sides of the main road are two fiowerbeds.The library is on the left and the office building is on the right.Behind the teaching building is the playground. The computer room is next to it.
這是我們的學校.在學校大門口,你可以看到主路.進了大門,你可以看到學校中央高大的教學樓.主路兩邊是兩個花圃.圖書館在左邊,辦公樓在右邊.教學樓後是操場,計算機房挨著它.
Our school is beautiful and I love it.
我們的學校很美,我愛我的學校
8. 急需關於校園景色的英語演講稿(跪求)!!
美麗的校園(Beautiful campus)
Is located north the Yang villages and small towns broad plum road, is the outward appearance not how improvement our school - Yangcun center elementary school.
Our campus, has the big teaching building, has the differ in thousands of ways flowers and plants trees, but also has the naive lively elementary student... ... Is a beautiful place.
Spring, the trees extract the new branch, is long the light green leaf. In the drill ground grass also secretly found out the head, east on the drill ground kapok tree has opened has filled the fiery red flower, likes fire which one burnt all round. The litchi chinensis, longan Man Shu is a flower, brought in many honeybees, the honeybee has sent out humming sound the sound, was embellishing dramatically with the multi-colored flowers the campus.
Summer, the trees are long the onion onion cage cage, the very dense branches and leaves seal solid the drill ground. The drill ground middle two old Chinese scholartrees like the green fabric big umbrella which two opens. East the drill ground sun plant has opened, looked like split open the smiling face to us. The litchi chinensis, longan Ye Congzhong is hiding the fruit, caused the schoolmates watch daily.
Autumn, the old Chinese scholartree's leaf changed yellow, the banyan fig, the yellow gold leaf, the jasmine orange little did not fear the autumn wind the arrival, was that green, in the drill ground grass also exchanged the new upper and lower garments, the schoolmates has all liked the lawn playing.
Winter, the northwest wind whistling has blown the treetop. But in campus trees are still full of vitality. North the drill ground long forced the cuckoo to leave the beautiful flower, had purple, powdery white, looked by far looks like the colored umbrella.
Our campus throughout the year the scenery is attractive, is a beautiful garden type campus, also is the good place which we grows.
美麗的校園
座落在楊村鎮廣梅公路北邊的,外觀不怎麼起色的就是我們的學校——楊村中心小學。
我們的校園,有高大的教學樓,有千姿百態的花草樹木,還有天真活潑的小學生……是個美麗的地方。
春天,樹木抽出新的枝條,長出嫩綠的葉子。操場上的小草也偷偷地探出了腦袋,操場東邊的木棉樹上開滿了火紅的花,像一團團燃燒的火。荔枝,龍眼滿樹都是花,引來了許許多多的蜜蜂,蜜蜂發出的嗡嗡聲,和著五彩繽紛的花朵把校園點綴得有聲有色。
夏天,樹木長得蔥蔥籠籠,密密層層的枝葉把操場封得嚴嚴實實的。操場中間的兩棵老槐樹像兩把撐開的綠絨大傘。操場東邊的太陽花開了,好像對我們綻開了笑臉。荔枝,龍眼葉叢中藏著果子,引得同學們天天去觀賞。
秋天,老槐樹的葉子變黃了,榕樹、黃金葉、九里香一點兒也不怕秋風的到來,還是那麼綠,操場上的小草也換上了新衣裳,同學們都愛到草地上來玩。
冬天,西北風呼呼地刮過樹梢。可是校園里的樹木依然生機勃勃。操場北邊的勒杜鵑長出了美麗的花,有紫的、粉白的,遠遠望去好像一把把花傘。
我們的校園一年四季景色誘人,是一座美麗的花園式校園,也是我們成長的好地方。
9. 關於校園景色的英語短文,急!!!
During their Duke careers, graating seniors Gerald Oliver, Katie Mitchell and Ashley Joyce have helped improve race relations, Greek life, classroom honesty and other important aspects of campus life.
Their work illustrates how many students are choosing to make a positive difference in their own communities, said Larry Moneta, vice president for student affairs.
"Students are reclaiming their social life in a much broader way," Moneta said. "It's happening in key pockets around campus."
Several student-led groups have emerged in the aftermath of the Women's Initiative, said Donna Lisker, director of the Women's Center. Active Minds encourages students to think about mental illness. Devil Dating aims to improve the campus dating scene. A women's mentoring group links students with faculty and alumni.
"These initiatives represent all different kinds of students who see some piece of the puzzle that looks familiar to them, and they decide to take this particular piece on," Lisker said. "That's been wonderful to see."
Gerald Oliver
The National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC) arrived on Duke's campus when Gerald Oliver was a sophomore. By his senior year, he was president of NPHC, the umbrella organization for the nine historically black fraternities and sororities, six of which are represented at Duke.
As the leader of a young organization, Oliver worked to strengthen NPHC's voice, establish its place in the Greek system and smooth out communication between Duke administrators and black Greeks. That entailed going to lots of meetings and speaking up, he said.
"I haven't been involved with big stuff that makes the paper," Oliver said. "I didn't organize a super program; it was more day-to-day things."
Oliver, who is also a member of Campus Council, made time for weekly meetings of the Community Executive Council, where the presidents of the four Greek councils -- NPHC, the Interfraternity Council, the Inter-Greek Council and the Pan-Hellenic Association -- discussed such issues as housing, recruitment, hazing policies and community service.
"The things that IFC and Pan-Hell do affect us, and the things we do affect them," Oliver said. "We made a lot of effort in that group to make sure we were working together since our fates are tied."
Fraternities and sororities have been viewed as self-segregating organizations, but Oliver said that black fraternities and sororities have helped lift up the black community that historically has had a disadvantage in higher ecation.
"It would be inaccurate to say there is no color division," said Oliver, a psychology major who is applying to business schools for the fall. "But just because the organizations serve different purposes doesn't mean they can't interact and understand each other."
The student-run Center for Race Relations has helped open lines of communication by bringing together Oliver's fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha, and the almost all-white Kappa Alpha fraternity to discuss issues they previously hadn't had a venue to address.
"We had a lot of good conversations," Oliver said, "but it doesn't mean much if nobody beyond the leaders buys into that."
The diversity of Duke provides an opportunity for ethnic and cultural exchange that many students might not have had up to that point. When he returns to Duke over the years for homecoming, he would like to see race relations remain a priority and more members involved in the discussions.
"As long as conversations like that continue to happen," he said, "race relations on campus will get better."
Katie Mitchell
The Greek system still needs work, said Katie Mitchell, president of the Duke chapter of Delta Delta Delta sorority. But changes won't be easy to make because the Greek system is a microcosm of the larger world.
"The world is competitive; the world is exclusive; the world has standards that have little to do with who you are," Mitchell said.
Mitchell, and the Tri-Delts, forged ahead anyway.
The alcohol-free casino night the Tri-Delts sponsored in November was open to everyone on campus. The party attracted a cross-section of the student body, raised money for charity and may become a Tri-Delt tradition to help shrug off a reputation of exclusivity.
Once the Women's Initiative report added "effortless perfection" to the campus lexicon, Mitchell gathered the 170 women in her chapter for a discussion about eating disorders.
"Talking about it is the first step," she said. "We need to talk about our experiences and move past them."
Mitchell believes that change can evolve through "small things done with a good heart and good intentions."
"I think my strength and who I am can be a force to change the system," she said.
In her leadership roles, Mitchell has learned that change forced upon others won't succeed.
"The administration can't impose any one culture on the students," she said. "When we see things that need to be changed, we need to come together and ask, 'How do we make this happen?'"
She joined 17 other women to write, edit and perform "All of the Above," a series of anonymous monologues about what it is like to be a woman at Duke. The performance sold out every night.
A public policy major with minors in women's studies and Spanish, Mitchell is off to Tanzania on a Hart Fellowship later this year to research women's legal rights in the East African country.
Ashley Joyce
The letter Ashley Joyce received as vice chair of the Undergraate Judicial Board was every probation officer's dream.
A student returning to Duke from a one-year suspension for cheating wrote to thank board members for imposing the punishment. The time away from Duke, the student said, had given him a new perspective on honesty and integrity that he would carry with him beyond his undergraate years.
"The hope and gratitude in that letter made me feel my work on UJB was worth it," Joyce said.
The spate of high-profile corporate officers "cheating behind the backs of consumers" indicates a dearth of integrity among the country's leaders, Joyce said.
"These are the kinds of decisions Duke is responsible for forming while you're here," she said. "If we can be instrumental in shaping those decisions and how you treat other people, that's huge."
While pursuing her political science degree, Joyce has worked with the Honor Council and served on the Academic Integrity Council. She has also been a member of the Alpha Phi Omega service sorority and helped lead a Girl Scout troop.
She plans to teach English in France for a year before deciding whether to attend law school. Her involvement in the extracurricular organizations is a way of expressing how much her ecation at Duke means to her.
"It's a way of being fulfilled," she said. "I feel involved in the heart of what's going on on campus. I couldn't imagine not doing anything like that while I was here. I'd feel like I was wasting my time."
Joyce praised the new Community Standard, which went into effect in fall 2003 and requires students to sign a pledge that they will uphold the values of the Duke community. Those include not lying, cheating or stealing or accepting those behaviors in others.
Through the Community Standard, Joyce said, students are more inclined to treat others with respect. Still, work remains for students to create an environment of honesty and respect.
"If we're going to make Duke a place where honesty and respect are part of the environment on campus, it needs to be owned by the students," she said. "That's the biggest challenge next year."
Written by Nancy Oates
10. 描寫校園景色的英語短文(帶翻譯)
the
kitchen
is
quite
spacious
to
cook這個廚房做飯。the
kitchen
is
a
cozy
and
comfortable這個廚房令人感到舒適。the
kitchen
is
unique
and
massive這個廚房獨一無二令人印象深刻。the
kitchen
reflects
a
special
fragrant
odor這廚房散發出特殊香味the
kitchen
is
old
but
it's
very
neat
and
clean這個廚房雖然很舊了但是整潔干凈