谁能写一篇介绍美国的英语作文 5
越长越好!最好要有国文翻译!和一些音标!!!谢谢!!!(,~~P)拜托是介绍美国勒!!!中文!中文!!!...
越长越好!最好要有国文翻译!和一些音标!!!谢谢!!!
(,~~P)
拜托是介绍美国勒!!!
中文!中文!!! 展开
(,~~P)
拜托是介绍美国勒!!!
中文!中文!!! 展开
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Why Life Sucks Cause Everything Sucks
Everything is everything in your life, and Life is how everything in your life interacts. So Everything is really everything in your life, including the interactions of life, which are interactions of things within everything. Confused? An example of an interaction of life would be a pot and its handle, each is a thing individually, but the two interact in life, and form a pot and a handle. On a more complicated level, a cave man might interact with a rock, and that interaction could produce a weapon, which could cause another interation, fighting. (fighting being the interaction between the two people, and interaction between the rock and the man, you get the idea) The conclusion reached thus far reveals that most advanced things in life suck, leaving the simple, natural ones natural and true, things like eating and sleeping, do in fact help people and are in fact the only truly enjoyable things there are to do (the simple things that is, like back before modern civilization. The life sucks society argues that all activities humans do in a post hunter-gatherer culture they don’t really enjoy doing, and are deceiving themselves that they like doing it do to societal pressure to conform.
In the cases where modern society brings peace, that peace is good and you like it, but you only like it more than the alternative, war in a modern society. These wars are enormous and involve systematic organized attacks, in a hunter gatherer society there weren’t anything around the size of todays nations or even older tribes that formed for organization and cooperation in a war, so there were at most tiny “battles”. That is much, much less scary then having to worry about dozens of people or hundreds forming together to kill you. You basically could be alone and have a chance to defend yourself against any band of humans, the packs they traveled in would be so small, deterring them from attacking any other band of humans, cause they were all basically the same size. When a war is fought in large numbers the basic humanity and individuality is taken away, a leader can say, lets go to war, he says that cause he can just hide behind his men in case things go wrong. If he was in say a 10 man pack, he wouldn’t say attack unless it was a life and situation where he HAD to attack, cause there wouldn’t be any chance of getting away without horses or cars to escape with. One of the greatest fears of modern society is going to war (the dooms day clock, etc) in prehistoric times you wouldn’t have to worry about that since there weren’t any armies, and the shear brutality of a human to human fight would deter most individualistic competitions. We sometimes think everything sucks, because, sometimes, everything that is happening to you does!
生活为什么吸引起每件事物吸
每件事物是你的生活每件事物,而且生活是你的生活每件事物互相影响的方式。 因此每件事物真的是你生活的每件事物,包括生活的交互作用,这是在每件事物里面事物的交互作用。 困惑的?生活的交互作用的一个例子会是一个壶和它的柄,每个个别地是一件事物, 但是那二在生活方面互相影响, 而且形成一个壶和一个柄。 在一个比较复杂的水平上,一个穴居人可能与一块岩石互动,而且交互作用可以生产一个武器,这可以引起另外的 interation,对抗。(作为在岩石和男人之间的二个人 , 和交互作用之间的交互作用的战斗,你得到主意) 被到达的结论迄今揭露大部分前进生活的事物吸,让简单又天然的一些天然的和真实的, 像吃的和睡着的事物, 确实事实上帮助人和唯一的真实可享受的事物事实上在那里是做 ( 简单的事物是, 相似的向后地在现代的文明之前。生活吸社会争论所有的活动人类在一个职位猎人中做-收集器耕种自己不真的喜欢做, 而且正在欺骗他们喜欢做它对社会的压力做使一致。
在现代的社会带来和平的情形中,和平是好的和你像它, 但是你只喜欢它超过替代选择,一个现代的社会战争。这些战争是巨大的并且包括有系统的组织攻击,在一个猎人收集器社会中在今天国家或为一个战争的组织和合作形成的甚至旧的种族大小的周围有不任何事,因此最多有极小的 " 战争 " 。 那多, 更加更不容易受惊的然后必须一起为几十个人或数百个形成担忧杀你。 你基本上可能是孤独的并且有一个机会防护你自己免于任何人类的乐团, 包裹他们旅行在会是如此小,使他们灰心不再攻击人类的任何其他的乐团, 引起他们全部基本上是相同的大小。当一个战争是的时候打仗大致上数基本的人性和个性被取走,一位领袖能说, 让去战争, 他说那引起他能仅仅藏在情形事物中的他男人后面出毛病。 如果他是在说一 10 为包裹配备人手,除非它是一种生活和他必须攻击的情形,否则他不说攻击, 引起不需要马或汽车就逃离会没有任何机会逃脱由于。 现代社会的最好恐惧之一正在史前的时代内去战争 ( 命运日子时钟,及其他) 你会没有烦恼有关那的事自从~之后没有任何的军队,而且人类的打架人类的修剪残忍会制止大多数的个人主义的竞争。 我们有时认为,每件事物吸,因为,有时, 正在发生在身上的每件事物你做!
Everything is everything in your life, and Life is how everything in your life interacts. So Everything is really everything in your life, including the interactions of life, which are interactions of things within everything. Confused? An example of an interaction of life would be a pot and its handle, each is a thing individually, but the two interact in life, and form a pot and a handle. On a more complicated level, a cave man might interact with a rock, and that interaction could produce a weapon, which could cause another interation, fighting. (fighting being the interaction between the two people, and interaction between the rock and the man, you get the idea) The conclusion reached thus far reveals that most advanced things in life suck, leaving the simple, natural ones natural and true, things like eating and sleeping, do in fact help people and are in fact the only truly enjoyable things there are to do (the simple things that is, like back before modern civilization. The life sucks society argues that all activities humans do in a post hunter-gatherer culture they don’t really enjoy doing, and are deceiving themselves that they like doing it do to societal pressure to conform.
In the cases where modern society brings peace, that peace is good and you like it, but you only like it more than the alternative, war in a modern society. These wars are enormous and involve systematic organized attacks, in a hunter gatherer society there weren’t anything around the size of todays nations or even older tribes that formed for organization and cooperation in a war, so there were at most tiny “battles”. That is much, much less scary then having to worry about dozens of people or hundreds forming together to kill you. You basically could be alone and have a chance to defend yourself against any band of humans, the packs they traveled in would be so small, deterring them from attacking any other band of humans, cause they were all basically the same size. When a war is fought in large numbers the basic humanity and individuality is taken away, a leader can say, lets go to war, he says that cause he can just hide behind his men in case things go wrong. If he was in say a 10 man pack, he wouldn’t say attack unless it was a life and situation where he HAD to attack, cause there wouldn’t be any chance of getting away without horses or cars to escape with. One of the greatest fears of modern society is going to war (the dooms day clock, etc) in prehistoric times you wouldn’t have to worry about that since there weren’t any armies, and the shear brutality of a human to human fight would deter most individualistic competitions. We sometimes think everything sucks, because, sometimes, everything that is happening to you does!
生活为什么吸引起每件事物吸
每件事物是你的生活每件事物,而且生活是你的生活每件事物互相影响的方式。 因此每件事物真的是你生活的每件事物,包括生活的交互作用,这是在每件事物里面事物的交互作用。 困惑的?生活的交互作用的一个例子会是一个壶和它的柄,每个个别地是一件事物, 但是那二在生活方面互相影响, 而且形成一个壶和一个柄。 在一个比较复杂的水平上,一个穴居人可能与一块岩石互动,而且交互作用可以生产一个武器,这可以引起另外的 interation,对抗。(作为在岩石和男人之间的二个人 , 和交互作用之间的交互作用的战斗,你得到主意) 被到达的结论迄今揭露大部分前进生活的事物吸,让简单又天然的一些天然的和真实的, 像吃的和睡着的事物, 确实事实上帮助人和唯一的真实可享受的事物事实上在那里是做 ( 简单的事物是, 相似的向后地在现代的文明之前。生活吸社会争论所有的活动人类在一个职位猎人中做-收集器耕种自己不真的喜欢做, 而且正在欺骗他们喜欢做它对社会的压力做使一致。
在现代的社会带来和平的情形中,和平是好的和你像它, 但是你只喜欢它超过替代选择,一个现代的社会战争。这些战争是巨大的并且包括有系统的组织攻击,在一个猎人收集器社会中在今天国家或为一个战争的组织和合作形成的甚至旧的种族大小的周围有不任何事,因此最多有极小的 " 战争 " 。 那多, 更加更不容易受惊的然后必须一起为几十个人或数百个形成担忧杀你。 你基本上可能是孤独的并且有一个机会防护你自己免于任何人类的乐团, 包裹他们旅行在会是如此小,使他们灰心不再攻击人类的任何其他的乐团, 引起他们全部基本上是相同的大小。当一个战争是的时候打仗大致上数基本的人性和个性被取走,一位领袖能说, 让去战争, 他说那引起他能仅仅藏在情形事物中的他男人后面出毛病。 如果他是在说一 10 为包裹配备人手,除非它是一种生活和他必须攻击的情形,否则他不说攻击, 引起不需要马或汽车就逃离会没有任何机会逃脱由于。 现代社会的最好恐惧之一正在史前的时代内去战争 ( 命运日子时钟,及其他) 你会没有烦恼有关那的事自从~之后没有任何的军队,而且人类的打架人类的修剪残忍会制止大多数的个人主义的竞争。 我们有时认为,每件事物吸,因为,有时, 正在发生在身上的每件事物你做!
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Modern American culture is a juicy burger of mass culture garnished with 15 minutes of fame. It owes as much to marketing savvy, communications technology and mass-production techniques as it does to artists and entertainers. If you can name it, American companies have invented, packaged and disseminated it to as many consumers as cheaply and conveniently as possible.
The elusive concept of 'American-ness' is often defined by cinema and television. The advent of TV in the 1950s shook Hollywood's hegemony to its core, but both forms of media have managed to coexist, even operating synergistically. The global distribution of American movies and TV shows has shaped the world's perception of the country to a high, if not completely accurate, degree.
The American music industry is the world's most powerful and pervasive, though groundswell movements remain the driving force of American pop. African Americans' influence, including blues, jazz and hip-hop, can hardly be exaggerated.
Rap, America's inner-city sound, places an equal emphasis on an ultraheavy beat, sound montage, street cred and macho posturing. Its appeal to middle-class white America will no doubt bemuse sociologists for decades.
The US has churned out a veritable forest of literature. The illustrious lineup begins with Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Emily Dickinson, Henry James and Edith Wharton, and moves into the modern era with William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, Scott Fitzgerald, John Steinbeck, Jack 'Backpack' Kerouac, Arthur Miller, both the Williamses, Saul Bellow, John Updike and Toni Morisson..
After WWII, the focus of the international art world shifted from Paris to New York. Artists leaving war-torn Europe brought the remnants of surrealism to the Big Apple, inspiring a group of young American painters to create the first distinct American painting style, abstract expressionism.
The relentless ascendancy of mass media gave birth to pop art. Slick, surface-oriented and purposely banal paintings like Andy Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans are now American icons.
When we think of US cities, we think of skyscrapers, those architectural testaments to market forces and American optimism. Chicago is a living museum of high-rise development. New York boasts its fair share of stunners too. Despite increasing homogenization, rural America retains its idiosyncrasies, and distinctive vernacular architectural styles persist in New England (clapboard), California (Spanish Mission) and New Mexico (adobe).
American sports developed separately from the rest of the world and, consequently, homegrown games such as baseball, football and basketball dominate the sports scene. Soccer and ice hockey are runners-up to the Big Three. Urban America also invented the great indoors: aerobics and the gym, indoor skiing and rock-climbing - examples of what can go wrong when too much disposable income hits up against too little leisure time.
The elusive concept of 'American-ness' is often defined by cinema and television. The advent of TV in the 1950s shook Hollywood's hegemony to its core, but both forms of media have managed to coexist, even operating synergistically. The global distribution of American movies and TV shows has shaped the world's perception of the country to a high, if not completely accurate, degree.
The American music industry is the world's most powerful and pervasive, though groundswell movements remain the driving force of American pop. African Americans' influence, including blues, jazz and hip-hop, can hardly be exaggerated.
Rap, America's inner-city sound, places an equal emphasis on an ultraheavy beat, sound montage, street cred and macho posturing. Its appeal to middle-class white America will no doubt bemuse sociologists for decades.
The US has churned out a veritable forest of literature. The illustrious lineup begins with Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Emily Dickinson, Henry James and Edith Wharton, and moves into the modern era with William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, Scott Fitzgerald, John Steinbeck, Jack 'Backpack' Kerouac, Arthur Miller, both the Williamses, Saul Bellow, John Updike and Toni Morisson..
After WWII, the focus of the international art world shifted from Paris to New York. Artists leaving war-torn Europe brought the remnants of surrealism to the Big Apple, inspiring a group of young American painters to create the first distinct American painting style, abstract expressionism.
The relentless ascendancy of mass media gave birth to pop art. Slick, surface-oriented and purposely banal paintings like Andy Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans are now American icons.
When we think of US cities, we think of skyscrapers, those architectural testaments to market forces and American optimism. Chicago is a living museum of high-rise development. New York boasts its fair share of stunners too. Despite increasing homogenization, rural America retains its idiosyncrasies, and distinctive vernacular architectural styles persist in New England (clapboard), California (Spanish Mission) and New Mexico (adobe).
American sports developed separately from the rest of the world and, consequently, homegrown games such as baseball, football and basketball dominate the sports scene. Soccer and ice hockey are runners-up to the Big Three. Urban America also invented the great indoors: aerobics and the gym, indoor skiing and rock-climbing - examples of what can go wrong when too much disposable income hits up against too little leisure time.
参考资料: http://www.yeworld.net/index/Culture/TA/EF/158_2002117/158%2036%202002117181010.asp
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The United States of America, also known as the United States, the U.S., the U.S.A., and America, is a country in North America that shares land borders with Canada and Mexico, and a sea border with Russia. Extending from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, the United States is a federal republic, with its capital in Washington, D.C.
The present-day continental United States has been inhabited for at least 15,000 years by indigenous tribes.[1] After European exploration and settlement in the 16th century, the English established their own colonies—and gained control of others that had been begun by other European nations—in the eastern portion of the continent in the 17th and early 18th centuries. On 4 July 1776, at war with Britain over fair governance, thirteen of these colonies declared their independence. In 1783, the war ended in British acceptance of the new nation. Since then, the country has more than quadrupled in size: it now consists of 50 states and one federal district; it also has numerous overseas territories.
At over 3.7 million square miles (over 9.5 million km²), the U.S. is the third or fourth largest country by total area, depending on whether the disputed areas of China are included. It is the world's third most populous nation, with nearly 300 million people.
The United States has maintained a liberal democratic political system since it adopted its Articles of Confederation on 1 March 1781 and the Constitution, the Articles' replacement, on 17 September 1787. American military, economic, cultural, and political influence increased throughout the 20th century; with the collapse of the Soviet Union at the end of the Cold War, the nation emerged as the world's sole remaining superpower.[2] Today, it plays a major role in world affairs.
The earliest known use of the name America is from 1507, when a globe and a large map created by the German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller in Saint-Die-des-Vosges described the combined continents of North and South America. Although the origin of the name is uncertain[3], the most widely held belief is that expressed in an accompanying book, Cosmographiae Introductio, which explains it as a feminized version of the Latin name of Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci (Americus Vespucius); in Latin, the other continents' names were all feminine. Vespucci theorized, correctly, that Christopher Columbus, on reaching islands in the Caribbean Sea in 1492, had come not to India but to a "New World".
The Americas were also known as Columbia, after Columbus, prompting the name District of Columbia for the land set aside as the U.S. capital. Columbia remained a popular name for the United States until the early 20th century, when it fell into relative disuse; but it is still used poetically and appears in various names and titles. A female personification of the country is also called Columbia; she is similar to Britannia.[4][5][6][7] Columbus Day, a holiday in the U.S. and other countries in the Americas commemorating Columbus' October 1492 landing.
The term "united States of America" was first used officially in the Declaration of Independence, adopted on 4 July 1776. On 15 November 1777, the Second Continental Congress adopted the Articles of Confederation, the first of which stated "The Stile of this Confederacy shall be 'The United States of America.'"
The adjectival and demonymic forms for the United States are American, a point of controversy among some.
The present-day continental United States has been inhabited for at least 15,000 years by indigenous tribes.[1] After European exploration and settlement in the 16th century, the English established their own colonies—and gained control of others that had been begun by other European nations—in the eastern portion of the continent in the 17th and early 18th centuries. On 4 July 1776, at war with Britain over fair governance, thirteen of these colonies declared their independence. In 1783, the war ended in British acceptance of the new nation. Since then, the country has more than quadrupled in size: it now consists of 50 states and one federal district; it also has numerous overseas territories.
At over 3.7 million square miles (over 9.5 million km²), the U.S. is the third or fourth largest country by total area, depending on whether the disputed areas of China are included. It is the world's third most populous nation, with nearly 300 million people.
The United States has maintained a liberal democratic political system since it adopted its Articles of Confederation on 1 March 1781 and the Constitution, the Articles' replacement, on 17 September 1787. American military, economic, cultural, and political influence increased throughout the 20th century; with the collapse of the Soviet Union at the end of the Cold War, the nation emerged as the world's sole remaining superpower.[2] Today, it plays a major role in world affairs.
The earliest known use of the name America is from 1507, when a globe and a large map created by the German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller in Saint-Die-des-Vosges described the combined continents of North and South America. Although the origin of the name is uncertain[3], the most widely held belief is that expressed in an accompanying book, Cosmographiae Introductio, which explains it as a feminized version of the Latin name of Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci (Americus Vespucius); in Latin, the other continents' names were all feminine. Vespucci theorized, correctly, that Christopher Columbus, on reaching islands in the Caribbean Sea in 1492, had come not to India but to a "New World".
The Americas were also known as Columbia, after Columbus, prompting the name District of Columbia for the land set aside as the U.S. capital. Columbia remained a popular name for the United States until the early 20th century, when it fell into relative disuse; but it is still used poetically and appears in various names and titles. A female personification of the country is also called Columbia; she is similar to Britannia.[4][5][6][7] Columbus Day, a holiday in the U.S. and other countries in the Americas commemorating Columbus' October 1492 landing.
The term "united States of America" was first used officially in the Declaration of Independence, adopted on 4 July 1776. On 15 November 1777, the Second Continental Congress adopted the Articles of Confederation, the first of which stated "The Stile of this Confederacy shall be 'The United States of America.'"
The adjectival and demonymic forms for the United States are American, a point of controversy among some.
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