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    1.以“procrastination”(拖延症)为题,写一篇120字以上的英语作文

    Procrastination means delaying huge and important deals on uncertain time because of out of understanding how we must to do it.As we know, to spot and to focus on some problem we had been solved it on 50% already. There are many ways to fix this behavior, and I want to tell about some good ideas which helped me. The most known management theory called «Eating Frogs», the main idea is to do most difficult and unpleasant deals at first, without thinking how - just do it. When you have eaten such frog, (means have done unpleasant deal) you feel powerful sense of satisfaction. This sense is very important motivation, like a real narcotic. After that you will be depend on. Another way to do huge deals is dividing on small and clear for done parts. It called «To eat an Elephant».。

    2.为什么人们会有拖延症 ted演讲稿

    演讲稿的内容是听众最关心、最感兴趣、最想了解的,表达方式也因人而易,十分注意效果。⑵鼓动性。

    演讲的目的是感动听众,说服听众,以情感人,激发共鸣,争取最佳宣传说服效果。⑶有声性。

    演讲稿要能将无声文字通过演讲者声情并茂的演讲变为有声语言。要好说、好听、好懂、好记,写得琅琅上口,讲得悦耳动听,通俗易懂,明白如画,幽默风趣。

    演讲稿的种类

    ⑴从演讲的场合划分,可分为会场演讲稿、广播演讲稿、电视演讲稿、课堂演讲稿、法庭辩论稿等。

    ⑵从演讲内容和性质划分,可分为政治演讲稿、学术演讲稿、社会活动演讲稿等。

    ⑶从表达方式上划分,可分为记叙性演讲稿、议论性演讲稿、抒情性演讲稿等。

    3.拖延症有哪些表现英文文本

    1. Maybe some other time.

    也许下回吧!

    2. Maybe tomorrow.

    明天再说吧!

    3. Maybe later.

    过阵儿吧!

    4. Let's play it by ear.

    到时再说吧!

    5. How about a rain check?

    改天如何?

    6. Let's do it another time.

    再找时间吧。

    7. Let's call it a day.

    今天就干到这儿吧!

    8. We won't let you off so easily next time.

    下回绝不能轻饶了你。

    4.TED《为什么我必须站出来》英文演讲稿

    Geena Rocero:Why I must come out The world makes you something that you?re not,but you know inside what you are,and that question burns in your heart:How will you become that?I may be somewhat unique in this,but I am not alone,not alone at all.So when I became a fashion model,I felt that d finally achieved the dream that d always wanted since I was a young child.My outside self finally matched my inner truth,my inner self.For complicated reasons which ll get to later,when I look at this picture,at that time I felt like,Geena,you?ve done it,you?ve made it,you have arrived.But this past October,I realized that m only just beginning.All of us are put in boxes by our family,by our religion,by our society,our moment in history,even our own bodies.Some people have the courage to break free,not to accept the limitations imposed by the color of their skin or by the beliefs of those that surround them.Those people are always the threat to the status quo,to what is considered acceptable.In my case,for the last nine years,some of my neighbors,some of my friends,colleagues,even my agent,did not know about my history.I think,in mystery,this is called the reveal.Here is mine.I was assigned boy at birth based on the appearance of my genitalia.I remember when I was five years old in Philippines walking around our house,I would always wear this t-shirt on my head.And my mom asked me,钬 How come you always wear that t-shirt on your head?钬 I said,钬 Mom,this is my hair.m a girl.钬 I knew then how to self-identify.Gender has always been considered a fact,immutable,but we now know it?s actually more fluid,complex and mysterious.Because of my success,I never had the courage to share my story,not because I thought what I am is wrong,but because of how the world treats those of us who wish to break free.Every day,I was so grateful because I am a woman.I have a mom and dad and family who accepted me for who I am.Many are not so fortunate.x0cThere?s a long tradition in Asian culture that celebrates the fluid mystery of gender.There is a Buddhist goddess of compassion.There is a Hindu goddess,hijra goddess.So when I was eight years old,I was at a fiesta in the Philippines celebrating these mysteries.I was in front of the stage,and I remember,out comes this beautiful woman right in front of me,and I remember that moment something hit me:That is the kind of women I would like to be.So when I was 15 years old,still dressing as a boy,I met this woman named T.L.She is a transgender beauty pageant manager.That night she asked me,钬 How come you are not joining the beauty pageant?钬 She convinced me that if I joined that she would take care of the registration fee and the garments,and that night,I won best in swimsuit and best in long gown and placed second runner up among 40-plus candidates.That moment changed my life.All of a sudden,I was introduced to the world of beauty pageants.Not a lot of people could say that your first job is a pageant queen for transgender women,but ll take it.So from 15 to 17 years old,I joined the most prestigious pageant to the pageant where it?s at the back of the truck,literally,or sometimes it would be a pavement next to a rice field,and when it rains钬攊t rains a lot in the Philippines钬撄he organizers would have to move it inside someone?s house.I also experiences the goodness of strangers,especially when we would travel in remote provinces in the Philippines.But most importantly,I met some of my best friends in that community.In 2001,my mom,who had moved to San Francisco,called me and told me that my green card petition came through,that I could now move to the United States.I resisted it.I told my mom,钬 Mom,m having fun.m here with my friends.I love traveling,being a beauty pageant queen.钬 But then two weeks later she called me,she said,钬 Did you know that if you move to the United States you could change your name and gender marker?钬 That was all I need to hear.My mom also told me to put two s in the spelling of my name.She also came with x0cme when I had my surgery in Thailand at 19 years old.It?s interesting,in some of the most rural cities in Thailand,they perform some of the most prestigious,safe and sophisticated surgery.At that time in the United States,you needed to have surgery before you could change your name and gender marker.So in 2001,I moved to San Francisco,and I remember looking at my California driver s license with my name Geena and gender maker F.That was a powerful moment.For some people,their I.D.is their license to drive or even to get a drink,but for me,that was my license to 。

    5.谁有TED演讲:邹奇奇的演讲稿(英文版)

    The rest artist says they got some of their best ideas from .the program because kids don't think about the limitation about how hard can be the blow glass to the certain shape ,they just think good ideas.Now when you think of the glass,you might think of colourful chihulu designs,or maybe Italian vases.But kids chance glass sirs to go to meat vision .Now our inherent wisdom does't have to be insider knowleadge Kids already do a lot of learning from adults and we have a lot to share.I think adults should start learning from kids.Now I do most of my speech in front of education crowdWe heard that one too,but pioneer germ fighters totally ruled.I loved to write from the age of four,and when I was six,my mom bought me my own laptop equipt with Mricrosoft Word..Thank you Bill Gates and thank you mom.I wrote over three hundred short stories on that little laptop and I want to get published.Instead of scorning the heresy kid that one want to get published or saying wait until you are older,my parents were really suppotive..Many pubulishers were not quite encouraging.One large children publisher ironically says that they didn't work with children. My wonder that children's publisher not work with children.I don't know you can island enlarge client there..Now one publisher Action Publishing, will really take that leap and trust me and listen what do I want to say and published my first book Flying Fingers.You see here.And from there on,it has gone and speaking a hundreds of schools key nodes for thounds of educators.And finally today,speaking to you,I appreciate you attending today because it showed you truly care,you listen. But those problems with rosy pictures that children are so much better than adults.Kids grow up and become adults just like you.All just like you ? Really?The goal is not to turn kids into your kind of adult,but rather better adult that you will be which maybe a little challenging consider you guys condencials.But the way progress happens,just because new generations and new era grow in development become better than the previous one.It was the reason we were not in the dark age any more.No natter your position and place in life,it isimperative(重要的,必要的) to creat opportunity for children,so we can grow up to blow you away.Adults followed in case of in TED,you need listen and learn from kids and trust us and expect more from us.You must lead an ear today,because we are the leaders of tomorrow. Take care of you,you are oldNo, just kidding.Actuelly,no,really,we are going to be the next generation the one who bring this world forward and in case you don't think this really has meaning for you.Remember that clone is possible,that involves going to childhood again in which kids you want to be heard just like my generation.The world need opportunities for new leaders,new ideas,kids need opportunities to lead a succeed.Are you ready to make the match?Because the world's problems shouldn't be the human families' heirloom.Thank you!。

    6.TED英语演讲稿:为什么节食减肥没效果

    简介:在美国,80%的女孩在她们10岁的时候便开始节食。

    神经学家Sandra Aamodt结合自己的亲身经历,讲述大脑是如何控制我们的身体的。节食减肥为何没效果?来听听她的说法吧! Three and a half years ago, I made one of the best decisions of my life. As my New Year's resolution, I gave up dieting, stopped worrying about my weight, and learned to eat mindfully. Now I eat whenever I'm hungry, and I've lost 10 pounds. This was me at age 13, when I started my first diet. I look at that picture now, and I think, you did not need a diet, you needed a fashion consult. (Laughter) But I thought I needed to lose weight, and when I gained it back, of course I blamed myself. And for the next three decades, I was on and off various diets. No matter what I tried, the weight I'd lost always came back. I'm sure many of you know the feeling. As a neuroscientist, I wondered, why is this so hard? Obviously, how much you weigh depends on how much you eat and how much energy you burn. What most people don't realize is that hunger and energy use are controlled by the brain, mostly without your awareness. Your brain does a lot of its work behind the scenes, and that is a good thing, because your conscious mind -- how do we put this politely? -- it's easily distracted. It's good that you don't have to remember to breathe when you get caught up in a movie. You don't forget how to walk because you're thinking about what to have for dinner. Your brain also has its own sense of what you should weigh, no matter what you consciously believe. This is called your set point, but that's a misleading term, because it's actually a range of about 10 or 15 pounds. You can use lifestyle choices to move your weight up and down within that range, but it's much, much harder to stay outside of it. The hypothalamus, the part of the brain that regulates body weight, there are more than a dozen chemical signals in the brain that tell your body to gain weight, more than another dozen that tell your body to lose it, and the system works like a thermostat, responding to signals from the body by adjusting hunger, activity and metabolism, to keep your weight stable as conditions change. That's what a thermostat does, right? It keeps the temperature in your house the same as the weather changes outside. Now you can try to change the temperature in your house by opening a window in the winter, but that's not going to change the setting on the thermostat, which will respond by kicking on the furnace to warm the place back up. Your brain works exactly the same way, responding to weight loss by using powerful tools to push your body back to what it considers normal. If you lose a lot of weight, your brain reacts as if you were starving, and whether you started out fat or thin, your brain's response is exactly the same. We would love to think that your brain could tell whether you need to lose weight or not, but it can't. If you do lose a lot of weight, you become hungry, and your muscles burn less energy. Dr. Rudy Leibel of Columbia University has found that people who have lost 10 percent of their body weight burn 250 to 400 calories less because their metabolism is suppressed. That's a lot of food. This means that a successful dieter must eat this much less forever than someone of the same weight who has always been thin. From an evolutionary perspective, your body's resistance to weight loss makes sense. When food was scarce, our ancestors' survival depended on conserving energy, and regaining the weight when food was available would have protected them against the next shortage. Over the course of human history, starvation has been a much bigger problem than overeating. This may explain a very sad fact: Set points can go up, but they rarely go down. Now, if your mother ever mentioned that life is not fair, this is the kind of thing she was talking about. (Laughter) Successful dieting doesn't lower your set point. Even after you've kept the weight off for as long as seven years, your brain keeps trying to make you gain it back. If that weight loss had been due to a long famine, that would be a sensible response. In our modern world of drive-thru burgers, it's not working out so well for many of us. That difference between our ancestral past and our abundant present is the reason that Dr. Yoni Freedhoff of the University of Ottawa would like to take some of his patients back to a time when food was less available, and it's also the reason that changing the food environment is really going to be the most effective solution to obesity. Sadly, a temporary weight gain can become permanent. If you stay at a high weight for too long, probably a matter 。

    7."克服拖延症"的英文翻译 短点儿

    拖延症

    英语是

    procrastination

    foot-dragging (俚)

    dilly-dallying (俚)

    "克服拖延症"

    可以译为

    overcome procrastination

    stop procrastinating

    stop foor-dragging

    stop dilly-dallying

    你选一个。

    这些翻译不能再短了。

    希望帮到了你,满意敬请采纳,谢谢。

    我是加拿大人。

    ted拖延症英文演讲稿

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