回答
Hold fast to dreams 紧紧抓住梦想For if dreams die 梦想若是消亡Life is a broken-winged bird 生命就象鸟儿折了翅膀That can never fly 再也不能飞翔Hold fast to dreams 紧紧抓住梦想,For when dreams go 梦想若是消丧Life is a barren field 生命就象贫瘠的荒野,Frozen only with snow 雪覆冰封,万物不再生长。
提问
都运用了什么修辞手法
回答
你好 请问你咨询的是这收诗歌吗?
提问
是
回答
运用了排比和比喻的修辞手法,不过英文的诗歌不参照中午的修辞方法。
提问
那都作用了英文的哪些修辞手法啊
回答
英语修辞主要指那些没有相对固定格式的修辞性写作技巧,它与语法、语言结构和词汇的关系密切。主要有以下几种修辞手法:1、明喻:是以两种具有相同特征的事物和现象进行对比,表明本体和喻体之间的相似关系。2、隐喻:这种比喻不通过比喻词进行,而是直接将用事物当作乙事物来描写。3、提喻:举隅法,主要特点是局部代表全体,或以全体喻指部分,或以抽象代具体,或以具体代抽象。4、拟人:把人类的特点、特性加于外界事物之上。5、夸张:是运用丰
富的形容词来描述具体的事物。
这首小诗除了夸张的修辞手法,其他的修辞手法都有用到!
提问
都分别体现在哪些句子里
都分别体现在哪些句子里
回答
生命就象鸟儿折了翅膀 明喻
雪覆冰封,万物不再生长。隐喻
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If by Life You Were Deceived假如生活欺骗了你 ——Alexander Puskin If by life you were deceived,Don't be dismal, don't be wild!In the day of grief, be mildMerry days will come, 假如生活欺骗了你不要悲伤,不要心急忧郁的日子里需要镇静相信吧 快乐的日子即将来临Heart is living in tomorrow;Present is dejected here;In a moment, passes sorrow;That which passes will be 心儿永远向往着未来现在却常是忧郁一切都是瞬息一切都将过去而那过去了的就会成为亲切的回忆 Never Forget 永远不要忘记Your presence is a gift to the You're unique and one of a Your life can be what you want it to be Take it one day at a Focus on your blessings, not your And you'll make it through what comes Have belief in your Persist, have courage, be 你的存在是献给世界地一份厚礼你是唯一的,是独一无二的你想要的生活能成为现实日子要一天天的过多关注好事,而不是烦恼不论有什么困难,你都能克服相信你的能力要有毅力、有勇气,要身心坚强Nothing wastes more energy than The longer a problem is carried,the heavier it Don't take things too Live a life of serenity, not a life of Don't put limits on Your dreams are waiting to be Don't waste time making Reach for your peak, your goal! 焦虑最浪费精力问题拖的越久就变得越沉重不要事事都太计较过平静的生活,不要活在悔恨之中 不要自我设限你的梦想等着你去实现不要浪费时间找种种借口攀登你的颠峰,追求你的目标
There is another sky by Emily DickinsonThere is another sky,Ever serene and fair,And there is another sunshine,Though it be darkness there;Never mind faded forests, Austin,Never mind silent fields -Here is a little forest,Whose leaf is ever green;Here is a brighter garden,Where not a frost has been;In its unfading flowersI hear the bright bee hum:Prithee, my brother,Into my garden come! This poem is meaningful yet simplistic and easy to Literally, Emily Dickinson wrote about a peaceful garden, where there were always warm sunshine, beautiful flowers and evergreen trees; a garden full of She offered Austin, her elder brother to come into her garden to enjoy the happiness together in the end of the However, in my opinion, Emily Dickinson did not merely write about a beautiful garden in this The peaceful garden here represents a beautiful life that all people are yearning for, totally different from their life with sadness and The poem hence portrays Emily's faith and optimism in the beauty of Writing for her brother, Austin, an attorney, Emily might want to show him that although there is always misery and unhappiness in the world, there is beauty as Through her words, Emily wanted to turn her brother away from the hectic life he was leading, to escape into a surreal forest of She offered him insight by sharing her optimism, hoping that he would find hope and peace in the future, even in the rough times of his The garden in this poem is the symbol of As Emily Dickinson was a religious and spiritual poet, she might be referring to the Garden of Eden, the garden of And in the Garden of Eden, unlike in our world, everything is supposed to be She, as a believer, knew that very 这个长一点:Walking the Skyby Shari AndrewsOberon Press, 2005Reviewed by Joanna M WestonMemory and links with the past are Andrews’ main She reflects on the past through the lens of the present and uses the past to illuminate the She has a keen appreciation of the minutae of daily life and its relevance to the human Andrews’ prose poems in ‘The Hour’ tell a straightforward story of an old man’s death and funeral woven round his daughter’s memories of her family and The language is clear, adding to the working life depicted in the Upstairs, her father lay slack-jawed and The mid-afternoon light fell across the The quilts moved gently up and down on his His hair lay in thin white strands against his His skin was pale as the porcelain teacups hanging from their (A field she buried her face in, 32)The dying man is clearly drawn but the last image brings the reader back to the kitchen where the daughter There is a sense of the man having been in the kitchen, having used the porcelain cups, and of having withdrawn from Later in the sequence, Andrews depicts the daughter:As she dries the cups, she admires their gilded edges, the part they will play later in the day, her lips sipping on bands of light to hold back the delicate verge of (Morning has spread itself 35)The daughter’s anticipation of the funeral, mixed with grief, is poignantly shown in the simple act of drying the The more complex free verse poems occasionally reveal difficulties with grammar and particularly with commas, which Andrews uses eccentrically and occasionally in ways which cause Short of getting into a discussion of Lynne Truss’ ‘Eats, Shoots & Leaves’, the meaning of a phrase can be greatly clarified by the use of the humble comma, as ‘Her skirt, petals close// around her newborn ’ (12) Do the petals close or is the skirt being likened to petals? Most likely the latter, but a comma would clarify the Or ‘My arms and legs, lullabies slice the water’ (11) It must be presumed that the lullabies arenot knives to cut water, but rather the arms and legs resemble Again, a comma would eliminate the There are, unfortunately, several other poems where a missing comma muddies the While Andrews’ imagery can be strong, as ‘The sky with the sun blazing in it was like his lungs filled with ’ (40) even without commas there are times when the grammar is confused and meaning I stride the spinefrom river bank to river bank, a stoneengraving the walls of a (The old train bridge 16)Either the stone or the poet appears to be carving the cave-walls, but the reference is If only the rhythm of this seacould calm the distant shores,limbs on the same bodythat refuse to (Limbs on the same body, 25)The limbs and shores appear to be one and the same, yet ‘limbs’ appears to refer to ‘this sea’ A period after ‘shores’ would help, followed by a re-writing of the last two Andrews’ prose poems have real merit, a depth of insight and reflection that illuminates memory and the human