求《白色死亡》英语作文,70词(有急用希望各路大神可以伸出援手,帮帮

如题所述

第1个回答  2022-10-26

求《白色死亡》英语作文,70词(有急用希望各路大神可以伸出援手,帮帮

After all, it had been Aringarosa
who gave Silas life in the
first place... in that *** all rectory
inSpain, educating him, giving him
purpose.

该不该伸出援手 作文

伸出自己的援手
世界上有一种东西叫做雪,从天而降,落地而灭,世界上有一种东西叫爱,从人而起,到人即无,一笔无形的财富就由此而产生。
大千世界无奇不有,不同的时代都存在着精神文明。一对老夫妇在中年时因其中,一位得了疾病,必须马上动手术,但当时的手术费,对于这样一个普通家庭来说是多么困难啊!奇迹就在当时出现了,院长当时站出来说:“先给病人做手术,手术费我承担。”就这样那位病人得救了,对于那对夫妇,他们永远铭记在心里,此后,还将此事告诉了他们的儿子,并决定将当年所欠的费用按如今费用还给院长,就在当时正有一位病者也遇到当年一样的情况,这笔钱也正好派上了用,当手术顺利成功后,十分感激,但当他们听了这个故事之后决定将这笔一直延用下去,去帮助那些急需帮助的人。这则故事告诉我们,在别人需要帮助的时候,我们应该伸出自己的援助之手,帮助别人就是在帮助自己。
但是世界上任何事情都是有两面性的,在公共汽车上就会出现一些不和谐的现象。当一位年迈已高的老人上车时,车上的青年人们有的望着窗外,有的听着音乐,有的看着报纸就是没有人给这位老人让坐,而在汽车转圈的时候,有位年青小伙子坐在座位上说了一句:“老大爷,握好扶手转圈了。”这话听了更让人生气,这种人就是那种不知道该伸出援助之手去帮助他人的人。
在四川地震中有些捐款的就是唐山大地震中的人,因为他们心里明白当年自己处在危难之中,是人们伸出了自己的手去帮助他们的,让他们重建家园,给了他们生的希望,所以在这次大地震中他们尽自己所能去帮助别人,有的甚至把自己家的房子卖了去帮助别人,也表现出了人们是具有爱心的,一方有难,八方支援,只要你奉献了你的爱,也许很薄弱,但你已经尽你所能力。
在世界,也许有一天你也会需要别人的帮助,所以在别处在困境的时候,你应伸出自己的手去帮助别人,也许就因你的举动,让别人看到了希望,你的手为别人创造了一片天空,让别人看到希望,看到未来,看到了胜利的彼岸,也有了前进的动力。
你的光辉,照耀着每一束圣洁的火光,让世界的每一刻都看得见,给别人送去了温暖,送去了希望,同时也给自己带来了快乐,然而你的生命也因此而精彩。
国殇之后,唯有坚强
北纬31度,东经103.4度。汶川。一个全国人都不熟悉的地名闯入了我们的视野。5月12日,原本是极其普通的一天。孩子们正坐在课桌前,商店老板们正在纳客,计程车司机正驾驶著车辆,做工的、种田的、炒股论经的、开会筹划的……一切都是那样地常态。14时28分。一场突如其来的地动山摇,坍塌了四川汶川,也摇动了半个亚洲。这一刻,山崩地陷,江河呜咽。这一刻,即成国殇。面对灾难,世界听到了一个民族的声音:“任何困难都难不倒英雄的中国人民!”面对灾难,激发了我们和整个世界前所未有的爱心,人性之美,倾国倾城。无数人捐款献血、组织赈灾活动,无数的志愿者自发赶到现场帮忙,扶老携幼的捐款,挽起袖管的献血,国旗为平民而降的震撼,蜡烛为逝者而燃的守夜,师生相拥而亡的映象,一个国家的总理在视察灾情时,一副担架正好过来,总理站到路边,让生命先行……人性最为柔软的一面被触动了,在性善性恶的千年辩题中,中国人关乎群体的自信,民族国家不可或缺的向心力在瞬间得到凝聚,整个世界找回了爱的庄严,不其而至的灾难,定格了那么多崇高,凝固了那么多神圣,引爆出那么多感动。面对灾难,离去的安息,因为生命得到了尊重。北川中学的一位只有12岁的被截肢的女孩说过,请你们不要称我的那些死去的同学们――是没有来得及开放的花蕾,就已经凋落了。不,他们不是凋落,他们已经盛放过了。北川中学孩子们还说了一句感动我们的话:翅膀上驮著天堂亲人的希望,你要高高飞翔。面对灾难,活着的更加珍惜,编入教材的《提醒幸福》的作者毕淑敏前天到北川给学生上课,她提醒自己也提醒大家,活着是幸福的,理应珍惜。奥运火炬今天正在奥运圣火在广西壮族自治区首府,素有“绿城”之称的南宁继续接力。传递的不仅奥运火炬,更有的是长明的爱心火炬。据称,2008年5月12日的这次四川汶川里氏8.0级的大地震,喜马拉雅山脉长高了数米,其实长高的不止是山峰,更有我们伟大民族的精神。国殇之后,唯有坚强。

题目:遇到陌生人需要帮助时.你会伸出援手吗? 是高中英语作文! 哪位大神帮帮忙!

It was almost o years ago when I first saw the disfigured man begging for money. He was at an intersection a few miles from my house and I was both horrified and transfixed by his severely burned appearance as I inched closer and saw that he was handing out a piece of paper to anyone who would roll down their window to aept it. I was ready to have a look, but the light changed, horns honked and I drove away.
About a week later, the scene repeated itself. This time I had money in hand but again I had to drive by. About 10 days later, I returned again, prepared to park and make sure I spoke with the man with the melted face. But he was gone.
I returned several times, but never saw him again. I wondered who he was, what had happened to him -- and where he'd gone. Months later I received an email forwarded by a friend from a friend of a friend. Other expats had been more persistent than me, learning the man's story and setting up a loose neork to help him.
In our home countries there are plenty of people less fortunate than ourselves and opportunities to help out, but we often tend to live at a distance, both physical and cerebral, which isn't easily bridged. For example, our town of Maplewood, N.J. borders cities with high poverty rates and lots of problems, but there aren't people living in lean-tos in our backyard. Going overseas, however, we get knocked out of our fort zone, and disparities can be particularly jarring in a developing country because of the rapid and arbitrary nature of growth and the lack of social safety . Here in Beijing, there is huge contrast beeen the expat-dominated housing pounds in our neighborhood, filled with manicured lawns and spacious modern homes, and the surrounding local villages where families live in ragged unheated rooms. The man with the melted face proved to be a bridge beeen them.
It began in September 2006, with Justin Hansen, then a 16-year-old junior at the International School of Beijing. He had seen the man begging on the road near his apartment, seen people roll their windows up and avert their eyes. And he heard kids at school talking about the scary, freaky guy and the threats he posed.
Justin asked the man what happened and heard the tale of Wang Ming Zhi, a 43-year-old peasant farmer who had e to Beijing four years earlier to better himself and his family. He had been working in construction, making beeen 30 and 70 yuan (beeen $4 and $10) a day. His wife and three kids had been about 700 miles away, back in rural Henan province, continuing to farm wheat, corn, peanuts and sesame. In a good year the family made about $1 a day, and Mr. Wang had wanted more for them. 'I want my children to make a job with their minds instead of their hands,' he explains.
Mr. Wang had been in a basement room when a spark from a welder's torch fell and ignited the fumes of the waterproofing material he was applying, alighting his clothes and leaving him a molten mess. A fellow worker pulled him from the basement and an hour later an ambulance took him to the hospital. As a day laborer, he had no health or disability insurance. His employer put up money to have him admitted -- Chinese hospitals generally demand an advance -- but this was the end of their goodwill.
It was days before Chinese New Year and he should have been back home visiting his family. They were fearing the worst by the time he called after six days in the hospital. A doctor had removed a breathing tube and was holding a phone to his face. Mrs. Wang got on a bus to Beijing. After 43 days, the money supplied by his employer was depleted and he was to be released. The family's pleading won him one more day of hospital care.
Mr. Wang traveled back and forth beeen Henan and Beijing ice, in pain, finally staying here in hopes of getting more treatment and avoiding the humiliation he feels in his hometown, where he is mocked for having sought a better life. His fingers were fused together and he was unable to close his mouth even enough to avoid drooling. He dragged himself out to that intersection near my house, in the heart of Beijing's expat munity, in the shadow of villa pounds and rising hotels, malls and convention centers.
This is where I saw him and, far more importantly, where Justin and later Craig Belnap saw him. The American Mr. Belnap asked him what he needed and was told: 'Burn cream and clothes.' He returned with a bag of clothes, and offered Mr. Wang a ride home, where he discovered a shabby single room with a bed made of plywood a stacked bricks and holes in the wall covered with newspaper and magazine pages.
He listened to Mr. Wang's story as his wife wiped away the incessant drool from his chin. 'The room was so full of love and affection,' says Mr. Belnap. 'I gave him my phone number and promised to help.'
The Wangs put Mr. Belnap in touch with Justin and his mother, Chi Gao, a Taiwanese-born American citizen who had already begun to help, and they formed a loose confederation of expats assisting Mr. Wang. Mr. Hansen wrote an article about him in his school newspaper -- the first of five. He gave Mr. Wang copies, which he handed out to prospective donors. That eased people's fears, but only if they would roll down their windows. Many stepped on the gas and averted their own gaze and their children's.
Meanwhile, Mr. Belnap was reaching out to friends and starting to collect money. Given news that Mr. Wang's 14-year-old daughter had dropped out of school to work long days in a garment factory because the family could no longer pay her tuition, he raised enough money to get her back to the classroom. They now have enough money to pay her tuition of almost $1,000 per year through high school. Some donors have expressed interest in funding college education.
On Sept. 26, 2006, the U.S. Embassy issued a security alert about Mr. Wang, citing an 'aggressive panhandler,' and asking citizens to report his presence to the authorities. Apparently, this stemmed from uninvestigated reports. Around that time, local police gave him 1,000 yuan ($140) and told him to stay off the streets. This was a highly unusual action. Mr. Wang says that a local police chief felt sympathy and asked a large construction pany (not the one that had employed Mr. Wang) to make the donation.
Meanwhile, Mr. Hansen's mother had gotten her personal lawyer, a local Chinese, to file a pro bono lawsuit -- a *** all but growing field in China -- against Mr. Wang's employer. They eventually won a 60,000-yuan settlement, which got Mr. Wang out of debt and allowed him to have the first of several still-needed surgeries, separating his fingers some, and aligning his jaw so that he can chew better and drool less. His appearance is much improved -- which would be a surprise to anyone seeing him now for the first time. Sleep remains difficult, with continual pain from his tough, dry skin.
His o sons, ages 17 and 19, are now in Beijing working in a nearby grocery store. Mr. Wang is no longer as destitute but he is still barely able to work, because of both prospective employers' attitude toward his appearance and the harsh effect of sun on his skin. There is not a lot of sensitivity to disabled issues in China.
Mr. Belnap has relocated to Switzerland but remains in touch with Mr. Wang and other expats assisting him, all of whom have different motivations but the same goal.
'I am a Christian and the Bible repeatedly instructs us to love your neighbor as yourself but I have never had neighbors in need of so much help,' says Lisa Rassi, an American who is providing part-time employment to Mrs. Wang, in hopes that she can one day be hired full time with experience working in a foreigner's home.
Like Mr. Belnap, Mrs. Rassi was touched by the way she was weled into the Wangs' humble home and their gratefulness for any help offered.
'I have never known what it is like to live in hunger or face the elements in a home without the forts of heat or air conditioning,' she says. 'I never want to fet what I have seen. I have also always tried to teach my children not to look away or be judgmental of those in need and this is was an opportunity for me to practice just that.'
'I could also do the same thing back home in Peoria (Illinois) and I hope I will, but such an intense need never crossed my path before,' she said. 'Also, if we assist the less fortunate there, we are so separated from it. Here the assistance is very personal and tangible and you can make a huge difference with so little.'
Mrs. Rassi says she feels honored to have been able to help, a sentiment echoed by Mr. Belnap from his new home in Geneva.
'It sounds like a cliché, but I got more out of this than he did,' he says. 'Mr. Wang is a very kind man with a very nice family who is simply of victim of gaps in the China system. And yet, he plugs along.'
Mr. Wang still has plenty of needs. When I visited him, he was out of burn cream and said his skin was particularly itchy. I'll be using my payment from this column to do my little part. I'm meeting Mrs. Rassi at a Traditional Chinese Medicine pharmacy soon to buy tubes of burn cream. It feels like the least I can do.

想出去旅游不想写论文,哪位大神可以伸出援手帮帮我啊

百花论文网 那里大神多啊 想找什么样的都有

以心存善念伸出援手为题的作文

授人以鱼不如授人以渔,以下是写作方法:
作文技巧
一、第一眼看整体
主要看字型是否工整,卷面是否清洁,不涂不抹;字数不多不少(少则"残废",多则"臃肿")。
布局是否合理(头大尾长身子小、段少字多密麻麻)头尾短小精悍。开头结尾段字数均应控制在百字以内,否则,头大尾长身子小,比例失调,影响美观。段落稍微多一点。600-800字分4-6段为宜。
选好文体。一般说来,如果写记叙文,运用小标题、日记体、分镜头式等片断组合法写成的文章清爽直观、疏密有致、思路清晰、层次分明,能给人整体美感的效果,易引起阅卷者的兴趣。
二、第二眼看审题
角度的切入是否得当、立意是否准确鲜明。让阅卷人比较容易地明白你的观点:
1、 精心打造标题。
《人生自古谁无死,留取诚信照汗青》、《患者吴诚信的就诊报告》、《问君哪得暖如许,为有爱心活力来》、《理想海阔凭鱼跃,选择天高任鸟飞》等。其中"诚信"、"爱心"、"选择"就是切题的字眼。
2.巧妙运用题记。
3.用心写好首尾。因为开头和结尾也是老师寻找文章观点的"战略要地",所以,如果写议论文,最好开头用言简意丰的语言开门见山地摆出观点,结尾以韵味无穷的语言呼应观点。另外,还可在文中反复紧扣文眼。
三、第三眼看选材
主要看材料是否切题、丰富、新颖——若选材不能说明观点,则属牵强附会;若材料单调,则说理空洞无力;若材料平庸,则落入俗套。

LG-T310手机主题在哪儿下载?希望各位大哥伸出援手帮帮小妹,谢谢!

这个 不支援主题的e

如何用“伸出援手”造句?

1、对于遇到困难的人,我们应该伸出援手,不该幸灾乐祸。

2、谁愿意在你走投无路时伸出援手,那人就是你真正的朋友。

3、每当我们独立无援时,首先向你伸出援手的往往就是你的父母。

4、周老板很清楚刘小姐家的状况,不但没及时伸出援手,反而趁火打劫,落井下石。

5、妹妹乐于助人,总向需要帮助的人伸出援手,因此她尝到了快乐的滋味;姐姐大公无私,总向别人给予些什么,因此她尝到了幸福的滋味。

6、朋友有难,他不但伸出援手,反而落井下石,真是可耻。

7、我现在已四面楚歌,还是请你念在旧情伸出援手吧!

8、难民营里的孩子个个营养不足,骨瘦如柴,亟待各界伸出援手。

9、每当我们独立无援时,首先向你伸出援手的往往就是我们的父母。

10、朋友有难,他不但伸出援手,反而落井下石,真是可耻。

11、他不计前嫌,愿意伸出援手,对你已经仁至义尽,你还如此贬损他,真是有失厚道。

12、同顶一样蓝天,脚踏一样土地,同吸一样空气,我们伸出援手,救助难兄难弟,献出一份爱心,让他们得到温馨,世界难民日,让我们团结一致,资助难民朋友们走上新生活。

13、请伸出援手,支援香港红十字会于海地提供紧急赈济、重建及备灾援助。

14、这个袋子是为由绿色和平组织发起的“伸出援手”活动而设计的。这一活动的目的旨在保护动物。

15、慈济志工得知后伸出援手,不但帮他负担全额医药费,还专车接送她到成都市的医院治疗。

一道数学题,希望各路大神帮帮忙~

如果学过导数则对fx求导f'(x)=x^2>=0 x属于(-∞,+∞)
如果没学过就根据定义 任意 x1,x2属于(-∞,+∞)且x1>x2
有f(x1)-f(x2)=(x1-x2)*(x1^2+x1*x2+x2^2)>0可得

求治愈系歌曲,望各位动漫达人伸出援手……

水果篮子的主题曲:mp3.baidu./m?tn=baidump3&ct=134217728&lm=-1&word=%CB%AE%B9%FB%C0%BA%D7%D3
小鸠插曲~花泽香菜: あした来る日:mp3.baidu./m?tn=baidump3&ct=134217728&lm=-1&word=%A4%A2%A4%B7%A4%BF%C0%B4%A4%EB%C8%D5%BB%A8%D4%F3%CF%E3%B2%CB
CLANNAD的团子大家族~:mp3.baidu./m?f=3&tn=baidump3&ct=134217728&lf=&rn=&word=clannad+%CD%C5%D7%D3%B4%F3%BC%D2%D7%E5&lm=-1&oq=Clannad+&rsp=1
翼年代记的 梦之翼~:mp3.baidu./m?f=ms&tn=baidump3&ct=134217728&lf=&rn=&word=%D2%ED%C4%EA%B4%FA%BC%C7+%C3%CE%D6%AE%D2%ED&lm=-1
夏目友人帐~高铃的爱してる ~:mp3.baidu./m?f=ms&tn=baidump3&ct=134217728&lf=&rn=&word=%B8%DF%C1%E5&lm=-1
最终幻想10的素敌だね~:mp3.baidu./m?f=ms&tn=baidump3&ct=134217728&lf=&rn=&word=%CB%D8%B5%D0&lm=-1
信蜂的op和ed都很治愈的说~:mp3.baidu./m?tn=baidump3&ct=134217728&lm=-1&word=%D0%C5%B7%E4
希望LZ喜欢~

英语作文 各位大神帮帮忙 ! 急 !

The World of Books

As the saying goes, "A room without books is like a body without a
soul." Since the ancient times, books have always been important to
humans. It helps us learn more about the world in many different ways.
Without books, we will not know what happened on the Earth thousands of
years ago. Thanks to books, we have a clear history of things that have
happened in our country, as well as in other countries in the world. By
studying history, we learn from the mistakes our ancestors have made,
and make sure the mistakes are never made again.
There are many other ways books can help us. Reading books is always useful. Be sure to
read books every day, and make it a habit.
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