中学生英语励志演讲稿(精选3篇)
A TV picture starts with a TV camera. Some TV cameras are big and some aresmall. The cameras in TV studios are big. Camera operators roll the big camerasaround on wheels. There are usually several big cameras in a TV studio. Camerasused outside a TV studio are smaller. TV camera crews take the smaller camerasto news and sports events.
Some cameras send out live pictures to your TV set. Some cameras makevideotapes that get played later on a television program.
All TV cameras need electricity to work. A camera operator points thecamera at a scene. The camera picks up light from the scene. It changes thislight into an electric signal called the video signal. A microphone changes thesound of people talking or music playing into an electric signal called theaudio signal.
Hi, everyone! My name is __X. Today my topic is: “I Love English”.
English is now used everywhere in the world, It has become the mostimportant language on internet. Learning English makse me confident and bringsme great pleasure.
When I was eight , my father sent me to an English school. At there, Iplayed games and sang English song with other children. Then I discovered thebeauty of the language, and began my colorful dream in the English world.
Every day, I read English following the tapes. Sometimes, I like watchingEnglish movies for children, such as Finding Nemo, Harry Potter and so on. Thesemovies not only improved my English, but also gave me a lot of fun. OutlookEnglish also help me a lot in my English Studies, I have been watching thisprogram for nearly two years.
I hope I can travel around the world someday. I want to go to America,because America is one of the most developed countries in the world. I also wantto go to England, because English originated in England.
I love English, English has become part of my life. Do you like English, myfriends? If you do, come with me. Let’s enjoy the fun of learning English builtin a day.”
That’s all, thank you!
and so i put my books away, back in their suitcase, and i put them under my bed, and there they stayed for the rest of the summer. and i felt kind of guilty about this. i felt as if the books needed me somehow, and they were calling out to me and i was forsaking them. but i did forsake them and i didn't open that suitcase again until i was back home with my family at the end of the summer.
now, i tell you this story about summer camp. i could have told you 50 others just like it -- all the times that i got the message that somehow my quiet and introverted style of being was not necessarily the right way to go, that i should be trying to pass as more of an extrovert. and i always sensed deep down that this was wrong and that introverts were pretty excellent just as they were. but for years i denied this intuition, and so i became a wall street lawyer, of all things, instead of the writer that i had always longed to be -- partly because i needed to prove to myself that i could be bold and assertive too. and i was always going off to crowded bars when i really would have preferred to just have a nice dinner with friends. and i made these self-negating choices so reflexively, that i wasn't even aware that i was making them.
now this is what many introverts do, and it's our loss for sure, but it is also our colleagues' loss and our communities' loss. and at the risk of sounding grandiose, it is the world's loss. because when it comes to creativity and to leadership, we need introverts doing what they do best. a third to a half of the population are introverts -- a third to a half. so that's one out of every two or three people you know. so even if you're an extrovert yourself, i'm talking about your coworkers and your spouses and your children and the person sitting next to you right now -- all of them subject to this bias that is pretty deep and real in our society. we all internalize it from a very early age without even having a language for what we're doing.