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首页 > 英语培训 > 丘吉尔英语作文

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招财KItty.

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丘吉尔就说了这一句话经过如下二战时期的盟国“三巨头”之一、英国前首相丘吉尔是一个非常著名的演说家。他生命中的最后一次演讲是在一所大学的结业典礼上,也许由于丘吉尔太过年迈,演讲的全过程大约持续了20分钟,但全程他只讲了一句话,但这次演讲却成为演讲史上的经典之作,永垂青史。丘吉尔在他生命中的最后一次演讲是在剑桥大学的一次毕业典礼上,整个大会礼堂里坐着上万名学生,他们正在等候着伟人丘吉尔的到来. 在随从的陪同下,丘吉尔先生准时到达,并慢慢地走进了会场,走向讲台. 站在讲台上,丘吉尔脱下他的大衣交给随从,接着摘下帽子,默默地注视所有的听众.一分钟后,丘吉尔缓缓地说了一句话:”Never Give Up!” 说完这句话后,丘吉尔穿上了大衣带上帽子离开了会场.整个会场鸦雀无声,一分钟后,掌声雷动,经久不息。

丘吉尔英语作文

280 评论(12)

我是阿晨

邱吉尔的生平英语作文:

Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill was born in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England in 1874. He served as British Prime Minister twice from 1940 to 1945 and from 1951 to 1955.

He is regarded as one of the most important political leaders in the 20th century. He led the British people to win the Second World War.

He is one of the "three giants of the Yalta Conference". After the war, he issued the iron curtain speech, which officially opened the prelude to the cold war between the United States and the Soviet Union.

His unnecessary war won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1953. He wrote 16 volumes of Memoirs of the Second World War and 24 volumes of English national history.

译文:温斯顿·伦纳德·斯宾塞·丘吉尔1874年生于英格兰牛津郡伍德斯托克。1940年至1945年和1951年至1955年两度出任英国首相,被认为是20世纪最重要的政治领袖之一。

领导英国人民赢得了第二次世界大战,是“雅尔塔会议三巨头”之一,战后发表《铁幕演说》,正式揭开了美苏冷战的序幕。他写的《不需要的战争》获1953年诺贝尔文学奖,著有《第二次世界大战回忆录》16卷、《英语民族史》24卷等。

335 评论(14)

山寨天后

全文就是 “Never give up!”。丘吉尔在牛津大学毕业典礼上曾经做过一次演讲。他亦是诺贝尔文学奖获奖者,是当代著名的演说家,也是伟大的政治家,而他在屏住呼吸等待祝词的听众面前只说了一句话: “Never give up!”即永不放弃。

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宇宙无敌的猫

In the summer of 1940, Britain stood alone on the brink of invasion. At that crucial time, one man, Winston Churchill, defined what it meant to be British. We like to think of ourselves as tolerant and long-suffering people. But Churchill, through his leadership and his example, reminded us that if all we hold dear – our democracy, our freedom – is threatened, we will show courage and determination like no other nation: “I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat. You ask what is our policy? I can say it is to wage war by sea, land and air, with all our might and with all our strength that God can give us; to wage war against a monstrous tyranny, never surpassed in the dark, lamentable catalogue of human crime. You ask what is our aim? I can answer in one word: It is victory, victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be.”3 This was the moment when Britain had to be at its greatest. And in Churchill we found the greatest of Britons.Winston Churchill was born in 1874 into one of Britain’s grandest families. The Churchills had been fighting for king and country for generations. Young Winston always believed he’d do the same. But self-belief was something he maintained despite rather than because of his family. His father Lord Randolph Churchill (1849–1895), and his mother, Jennie (1854–1921), were both cold and distant people. Winston was packed off to Harrow. He wasn’t good-looking or clever; he was sickly, with a lisp and a stammer. He was bound to be bullied – and he was. Far from giving support, Winston’s father predicted his child would “degenerate into a shabby, unhappy and futile existence”.He left school and, after three attempts, got into the military academy at Sandhurst. After Sandhurst he went looking for military action – wherever it was. He paid for himself by doubling up as a war correspondent. He used his dispatches to promote himself as a hero of the Boer War, and returned to England in 1900 renowned and all set to become an MP.He was elected as Tory MP for Oldham in the same year. Then he swapped to the Liberals, then back. He was never really a Party animal. He cared about Britain. His vision was of a place with better living standards for ordinary people, but with a fierce regard for law and order. Though he wasn’t a vicious man, Churchill’s attitude to suffragettes, trade unionists or anyone who challenged the system was brutal. His weapon of first resort was the army.But then he’d always wanted to be a general. This ambition dated back to the days when he spent his school holidays playing with toy soldiers in the corridors of Blenheim Palace, below the tapestries of his heroic ancestors. He must have been delighted when, in 1911, he was made First Lord of the Admiralty – and even more so when the First World War offered him the opportunity to plan a major military offensive at Gallipoli, in 1915. Gallipoli was a disaster, costing Winston his job and nearly his sanity. This was the onset of his first major bout of depression, a curse he called his “black dog”. Thankfully he now had a wife, Clementine, to help him through it. She was 11 years younger than him, beautiful, clever and unswervingly loyal. She kept him together, but he got himself out of it, in true Churchillian fashion. To make amends for his mistake, he took himself off to the trenches of France to fight. He must be one of the few soldiers to have written home from the First World War that he had “found happiness and content such as I have not known for months”. He was a man made for war. By the time Churchill returned to England, he’d already achieved many great things. He’d been a successful journalist, he’d fought for his country and he’d held high office, as he was to do again in the 1920s as Chancellor of the Exchequer. But by 1930, Labour was in power and he was on the backbenches, a nobody and a has-been. He largely sat out the 1930s at his country retreat Chartwell.In September 1938, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain (1869–1940) famously brandished an agreement he’d signed with Adolf Hitler (1889–1945) and declared he’d secured peace in our time. You could almost hear the sighs of relief. But not from Winston. He’d predicted – long before anyone else – what German nationalism was leading to. By the time he was proved right, and war had been declared, King George VI (1895–1952) knew that “there was only one person I could send for to form a Government who had the confidence of the country. And that was Winston”. When the call came, Churchill was 65 years old. It had been a long wait, but destiny had arrived.People talk of 1066, of the Armada, of Trafalgar. But 1940 was the most important year in British history. It was the year of Dunkirk, the Battle of Britain, the Blitz. It was the year when every single Briton, civilian as well as soldier, found themselves at war. The cause appeared hopeless, yet Winston, reviving the V sign for victory from the fields of Agincourt 500 years before, told us we could win.Churchill was an instinctive, daring, often infuriating war leader. He was rude and unpleasant to his staff, who struggled to keep up with his limitless capacity for hard work and hard liquor. But he was also an inspiration. When victory was finally declared in Europe on 8 May 1945, it was quickly followed by a general election.The billboards said “Cheer Churchill, Vote Labour”, and that’s what people did. That was the irony. The very democracy that Churchill was prepared to lay down his life to defend was the same democracy that knew the difference between the needs of peace and the needs of war.When Churchill died in 1965, the new rock-and-roll Britain stood still. If Britain – its eccentricity, its strength of character, its big-heartedness – had to be summed up in one person, it was him. He had gone, but, thanks to him, Britain lived on. And what could be greater than that?

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