母亲节黑板报的英文资料(精选4篇)
记得有一位名人说过:“我的生命是从睁开眼睛,爱上我母亲的面孔开始的。”是呀,妈妈给予我们生命,给予我们无私的爱。我就拥有一个世界上的妈妈。在妈妈的爱河中成长,我感到无比幸福。
我从小体质差,经常感冒发烧,而且多少是在半夜。每当我一发烧,妈妈就连忙起床,衣服也顾不上披一件,赶紧找来药,哄我吃下。在我沉沉地睡去后,她坐在我身边,一遍又一遍地用酒精擦我的额头和手心。每隔15分钟检查一次体温,直到烧退了才稍稍放心,却又不敢放心地睡下。第二天早晨,当我睁开眼睛时,妈妈熬红的双眼总是透出慈爱,总会心疼地说:“老闺,一会妈妈带你去医院,你很快就会好起来的。”那一刻,我觉得好温暖、好幸福。这九年来,妈妈熬过了多少个不眠的夜晚,也许只有天上的星星知道。
妈妈不但关心我的健康,也关心我的成长。
当我不想做作业时,妈妈告诉我要勤奋努力;当我被选为班干部时,妈妈鼓励我要认真负责;当我沮丧失望时,妈妈安慰我一切都会好的……
谁言寸草心,报得三春晖。妈妈,女儿愿意做您最贴心的小棉袄。您知道吗?去年您在哈市做手术时,我寄住在阿姨家,想您了,我偷偷地在被窝里流眼泪,但总会把笑声传给电话那边的您。妈妈,我会好好学习,努力练习弹钢琴,不辜负您对我的期望。
妈妈,此时您就在台下,请允许女儿向您道一声:“妈妈,您辛苦了!我永远爱您!”同时也祝全天下的妈妈永远幸福安康!
In the U.S. Mothers' Day is a holiday celebrated on second Sunday in May. It is a day when children honor their mothers with cards, gifts, and flowers.
First observance in Philadelphia, Pa. in 1907, it is based on suggestions by Julia Ward Howe in 1872 and by Anna Jarvis in 1907.
Although it wasn't celebrated in the U.S. until 1907, there were days honoring mothers even in the days of ancient Greece. In those days, however, it was Rhea, the Mother of the gods that was given honor.
Later, in the 1600's, in England there was an annual observance called "Mothering Sunday."
It was celebrated during June, on the fourth Sunday. On Mothering Sunday, the servants, who generally lived with their employers, were encouraged to return home and honor their mothers. It was traditional for them to bring a special cake along to celebrate the occasion.
In the U.S., in 1907 Ana Jarvis, from Philadelphia, began a campaign to establish a national Mother's Day.
Jarvis persuaded her mother's church in Grafton, West Virginia to celebrate Mother's Day on the second anniversary of her mother's death, the 2nd Sunday of May. The next year Mother's Day was also celebrated in Philadelphia.
Jarvis and others began a letter-writing campaign to ministers, businessmen, and politicians in their quest to establish a national Mother's Day.
They were successful. President Woodrow Wilson, in 1914, made the official announcement proclaiming Mother's Day a national observance that was to be held each year on the 2nd Sunday of May.
Many other countries of the world celebrate their own Mother's Day at different times throughout the year. Denmark, Finland, Italy, Turkey, Australia, and Belgium celebrate Mother's Day on the second Sunday in May, as in the U.S.
Recently Mothers’ Day becomes very popular in China. Many people express their grateful feelings to their mothers through thoughtful gifts and quality time with family to celebrate Mothers’ Day.
No matter where you are and what you are now, you are a lovely kid who is loved most by your mom. Mother, is a person who gives her selfishless love for nothing. On this day, let’s listen to many children’s words they want to tell their moms.
1.On this day we all sit back and think about how much our mothers do for us.
2.Where would we be without you, mom?
3.I've tried many times to tell you, but I'll say it again: I love you mother.
4.Though it is hard to tell you sometimes, I do love you dearly, mom.
5.I may not often say it, but I do love you.
6.There are little things that I should have said and done to show my gratitude, but it is appreciatedwhat you do.
7.Sometimes I cry and make you sigh, but you know that I love you so.
Despite popular belief, Mother's Day is not just a holiday invented by Hallmark, but rather it is a holiday dating back several millennia.
The earliest known Mother’s Day originated in Ancient Greece honoring Rhea, mother of all deities, in an annual spring festival.
The Romans honored Cybele, the same mother of all deities, and celebrated this festival by calling it the “Hilaria.” Early Christians continued the tradition by celebrating the Virgin Mary, on the fourth Sunday of Lent. In England, the celebration eventually expanded to include all mothers.
Mother’s Day was not an official holiday in the United States until 1914. Modern Americans can thank the perseverance and determination of a woman named Anna Jarvis who, deeply devoted to her own mother, helped to make Mother’s Day an official U.S. holiday.
Jarvis’s mother, Anna Maria Reeves Jarvis, was an activist during the Civil War and lost 8 of her 12 children before they reached adulthood.
When she died in 1905, Anna (daughter) was distraught and vowed to devote her life to honoring her mother. Her devotion led her to strive to appoint an official U.S. holiday to recognize mothers. Though Mother’s Day had been celebrated informally for many years, Jarvis wrote many important figures (including U.S. congressmen and prosperous businessmen), imploring them to back Mother’s Day as an official holiday.
Anna’s efforts finally paid off. In 1910, the governor of West Virginia declared Mother's Day a state holiday on the second Sunday in May.
The following year, every other state followed suit. By 1914, President Woodrow Wilson signed a bill declaring Mother’s Day a Federal Holiday.
At first, celebrations of Mother's Day were relatively private, where children would accompany their mothers to the churches where their baptisms were held.
Gradually though, Mother's Day has flourished into a significant and memorable occasion where many people express their love for their mothers through thoughtful gifts and quality time with family.