写作例句
1) In other words, whatever inborn differences two people may exhibit in their abilities to commu-nicate with people, those differences are swamped by how well each person knows about the founda-tion of successful communication.
2) If we hesitate to talk to others, if we never trust others, then we can’t have good interpersonal relationship. We become trapped inside a shell of our own making.
3) Listening attentively to children gives a much greater degree of respect, enabling them to commu-nicate better with parents and teachers.
4) Supporters of e-books argue that e-books will allow for convenient storage and environment pro-tection.
5) An invisible border divides those arguing for charging highly for tourism tickets on the behalf of environmental protection and those arguing for charging lowly for tourism tickets for another rea-son of the equal rights to enjoy tourism resources.
6) It is as proper to term traveling a channel to know the world as to call books pathways to know-ledge.
7) These energetic old people are living proof that youth is a state of mind.
8) It is in the hospital that we find the full ex-pression of life’s importance.
9) Of the life goals that can bring people happi-ness — social status, wealth, and so on — health may be the most important of all.
10) We should not forget, however, that many people are still struggling in poverty.
11) We live in a society in which material temp-tation is pervasive.
12) Encouraging college students to do part-time job fits with the idea that they should learn to be independent gradually.
13) Some graduates begin to realize that certifi-cates have far less impact on job-hunting than is generally supposed.
14) It was inevitable that this primacy should have narrowed as the number of college graduates grew more and more.
15) Several product quality scandals this year —
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from fields as diverse as food industry, manufac-turing industry and even real estate industry — have left relevant officials and managers hurriedly peering into their production process in search of potential vulnerabilities.
16) The protection of natural resources is proba-bly a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for maintaining species diversity.
17) During the same period, the developing countries have been asked to absorb much more risk in the exploitation of natural resources.
18) The advocates for environment protection forsake the economy-oriented concept for a new concept that focuses on the harmony with nature.
19) The meaning of the phrase “the harmony with nature” suffers with human society’s every step in economic development.
20) The convenience of Internet, though, may be obscuring an unrecognized reality.
21) Today the messages people are surrounded with are not what they wish to get but trash e-mails and phone messages, and endless commercial.
22) The Internet, which has already remade such everyday pastimes as buying books and sending mail, is reshaping the production process in every field as well.
23) Problem children have been blaming them-selves for their troubles in public. Behind the scenes, they have been taking aim at someone else: the in-considerate parents and teachers.
24) The conventional view that school education should be one of the very highest priorities for promoting personal growth is wrong.
25) Scholars note that current university educa-tion offers students academic knowledge but fails to equip them with adaptive capacity and practical ability, components also critical to their future life.
26) The over-protection that brings tender care for children carries the potential to make them not only over-dependent but also fragile.
27) Depending on whom teachers are instructing, the methods will be different.
28) In personal growth generally, however, col-lege life must be reckoned as the crucial period for identifying one’s life direction.
29) Nonetheless, many parents and teachers still
hesitate to treat children as problem solvers because of doubts about its practicability.
30) Much of the language used to describe learn-ing, such as “study hard”, makes it sound like a dif-ficult task. Nothing could be further from the truth.
31) The mounting cost of living expenses and the increased tuition fees both add to the worries of the college students in poor families.
32) There are good reasons to expect that the culture integration has become an irreversible trend.
33) The significance of cultural heritage is not confined to its role in the expansion of tourism.
34) Giving up after several setbacks is a far dif-ferent thing from struggling to survive and thrive after a series of failures.
35) Or, to put it in another way, expert performers — whether in schools or job market — are nearly always made, not born.
36) Clearly, success encompasses more than so-cial status and wealth.
37) The growing awareness of self-growth is a promising start.
38) Success, in practice, depends far less on what people do than on what attitude people have to their actions.
39) In order to grow, to travel new roads, people need to have a willingness to take risks, to confront the unknown, and to accept the possibility that they may fail at first.
40) Money should serve only as means to happi-ness, and should be prevented from ruling man.
41) Even if the gifted people wish to turn their early promise into practical reality, they still need laborious and persevering work.
42) The journey to success is really very hard on everyone, we know, but hardship is surely no excuse.
43) Among the many shaping factors, I would single out the encouragement of invention.
44) Inventions and innovations almost always come out of laborious trial and error.
45) Innovation is like soccer; even the best play-ers miss the goal and have their shots blocked much more frequently than they score. The point is that
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the players who score most are the ones who take most shots at the goal.
46) Innovators will not accept that there is only one way to do anything.
47) Successful markets require honesty mer-chants and virtuous customers.
48) Being honest is a virtue that many people value highly and expect from both merchants and government officials.
49) History is filled with examples of it.
50) It is an observation made so frequently that it deserves comment.
51) While the leading actor on the stage captures our attention, we are aware of the importance of the supporting players and the scenery of the play itself.
52) The smallest courtesies along the rough roads of life are like the little birds that sing to us all win-ter long.
53) One clings to the notion that wealth derives its value from its contribution to the general good and to the happiness of future generations.
54) We should live each day with gentleness, vi-gor, and keenness of appreciation which are often lost when time stretches before us in the constant panorama of more days and months and years to come.
55) The fountain of knowledge will dry up unless it is continuously replenished by streams of new learning.