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校园美景作文英语怎么说大全

发布时间: 2021-11-11 06:30:23

A. 介绍学校风景英语作文180


I often 这一句改成There are a lot of beautiful houses in our campus.There roofs are black.

B. 写一篇关于美丽校园的英语作文

My School
I study in the No. I middle school, where there are three grades and thirty-two classes. It is not big but very beautiful.
In the center of the school there is a new teaching building, which is very clean and beautiful. The lab building and the library are to the east of the new building. There all kinds of book in the library. You can enioy them as many as you like.
South of the new building lies a playground and it's very big. On the playground, you can have sports such as football. basketball. You'd better play basketball as there are four basketball grounds in our school, You can enjoy yourself very much.
There are many trees in our school.Grass is everywhere. In front of the new building there are two gardens in which, there are flowers of all colours.
We are studying hard in our school, Our life is happy and intcrcsting. I love our school very much.
我的学校
我就读于一中。学校有3个年级,32个班,它并不大,但是很漂亮。
校园中央是新建成的干净、美丽的教学大楼。实验楼和图书楼在新楼的东侧。图书馆有各种各样的书,你可以随意阅读。操场在新楼的南边,它很大,你可以在操场上做你喜欢的运动,如足球、篮球。你最好打篮球——因为学校共有四块篮球场地——你一定会玩得十分尽兴。
学校种了许多树木,草坪随处可见。新楼的前面有两个花园;园里的鲜花五颜六色。
我们学习刻苦,生活愉快而有趣。我爱我们的学校。

C. 写一篇小学四年级描写校园景色5句话的英语小作文。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.

D. 请你以“美丽的校园”为题一篇描写古浪二中校园美景的英语作文

美丽校园
我学习在一所美丽的学校里,它一年四季都非常美丽版!
春天,权树木抽出新的枝条,小草也探出了小小的脑袋,桃花像和其他花争着报春一样,开的特别美丽。那小小的紫丁香花也努力的展示它与众不同的紫色,仿佛要比桃花更加鲜艳,让人看了心情非常舒畅!
夏天的天气非常炎热,杨树和松树绿的逼你的眼!坐在像伞一样的大树底下的人们既舒适,又可以凉快。有时下小雨,同学们就在树下嬉戏打闹,别有一番乐趣。
秋天,它是一个穿着金色衣裳的仙女。它用它的衣服抚去了太阳的炎热,将清爽和明亮带给了大地。这个季节校园的花坛中菊花千姿百态,最迷人了!
冬天,当校园被披上厚厚的银装,树木中的松柏比以前更加强壮了,像一位战士,守护着校园。
啊,我爱我美丽的校园!

E. 描写校园景色的英语短文(带翻译

the
kitchen
is
quite
spacious
to
cook这个厨来房做饭源。the
kitchen
is
a
cozy
and
comfortable这个厨房令人感到舒适。the
kitchen
is
unique
and
massive这个厨房独一无二令人印象深刻。the
kitchen
reflects
a
special
fragrant
odor这厨房散发出特殊香味the
kitchen
is
old
but
it's
very
neat
and
clean这个厨房虽然很旧了但是整洁干净

F. 校园环境的英语作文

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.

这是我们的学校.在学校大门口,你可以看到主路.进了大门,你可以看到学校中央高大的教学楼.主路两边是两个花圃.图书馆在左边,办公楼在右边.教学楼后是操场,计算机房挨着它.

Our school is beautiful and I love it.

我们的学校很美,我爱我的学校

G. 关于校园景色的英语短文,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

H. 英语作文主题寻找最美丽的校园风景

不知何时,焦枯的那一片草开始变的苍茫,在阴霾的天空下,麻雀鸷鸟任性的飞翔,西瓜虫自负的爬进爬出,还有校园学生顽强的呼吸,构成了一道独特的风景线.

偶尔滑过的苍鹰,带着些桀骜的叫声,展开雄健的羽翼,一振,便像蓝天更蓝处飞去,便寻不到痕迹,很有些黄鹤一去不复返的感觉.被划破的天空依然澄蓝,还有蓝天下的那一群孩子,澄蓝的心境.

老师是校园中决计不可缺少的风景,无论是穿着时髦的教师,仰或是一贯简朴的教师,还有那一年365天8760小时560640分始终西装笔挺的校长,庄重却又不失一丝严肃。

常常喜欢独自一人在课间跑去天台,那是一种居高临下的感觉,宁静而嘈杂的校园,看着来往不断的同学在楼下追逐吵闹、欢笑歌唱,静静闭一会眼,静静欣赏这道独特的风景,感受校园带来的独特的气息。

偶尔和朋友三三两两漫步于校园之中,感受着迎面而来的一缕缕清风,倾听着操场上传来的欢声和笑语,惬意地享受着这一切。看着男生们在球场上大汗淋漓、忘乎所以地大展身手,让我不禁感受到了生命的气息,以及瞬间爆发的活力,在挥洒青春的瞬间,早已形成了一道另类的风景.

依然欢笑,时常哭泣.日子便是在指间悄悄滑过,不知不觉.那个被风吹过的夏天,那个枯叶满地的秋天,和那个白雪覆盖万物不现的冬季.呆呆凝视着那条不定色的小河,看着阳光顽皮的在水面泛起涟漪,带着些美好的希翼,充斥着我们的视线.

四季青的叶子又一次让我们措手不及,落得那么仓促,让人无法预料,满地的枯红像是给校园染上一层夕阳的辉煌与朝阳的灿烂.走在校园小道上,听鞋子与枯叶摩擦的声音,很有些枯藤老树昏鸦的错觉.

恍惚间猛然发现,我们便是风景,有我们的地方就有风景.无论天空阴霾与否,不管四季如何变迁,只要拥有澄蓝的心境,我们就是校园最美的风景。

I. 英语短文关于描写校园景色的

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

J. 描写校园景色的英语短文

描写校园景色的英语短文
My campus is the most unforgettable place in my whole life, miss my mother similar, I love you great of campus.
My 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.

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