国电北仑三期脱硝工程培训手册(编辑修改稿)内容摘要:

for nearl y twentyfi ve m onths before they were di scovered. Duri ng that tim e the onl y true fri end was her diary. She said ,”I don’t want to set down a series of facts in a diary as most people do ,but I want this diary itsel f to be my friend, and I shal cal my friend Kitty . ”Now read how she fel t after being in the hiding pl ace since Jul y 1942. Thursday 15th June 1944 Dear Ki tty, I wonder if it’s because I haven’t been abl e to be outdoors for so l ong that I’ve grown so crazy about everything to do with nature. I can wel l remember that there was a tim e when a deep bl ue sky, the song of the bi rds, moonli ght and fl owers coul d never have kept me spel bound. That’s changed since I was here. …For exampl e, one evening when it was so warm, I stayed awake on purpose until hal f past el even in order to have a good l ook at the m oon by m ysel f. But as the m oon gave far too much l ight, I didn’t dare open a window. Another time five months ago, I happened to be upstairs at dusk when the window was open. I didn’t go downstairs until the window had to be shut. The dark, rainy evening, the wind, the thundering cl ouds hel d m e entirely in their power。 it was the first time in a year and a hal f that I’d seen the night face to face…. …Sadly…I am onl y abl e to l ook at nature through dirty curtains hanging before very dusty windows. it’s no pl easure l ooking through these any l onger because nature i s one thi ng that real ly m ust be experienced. Your, Ane Fri day, 10 Jul y 1942 When we arri ved at Prinsengracht, we went qui ckl y upstai rs and the hi di ng pl ace. We cl osed the door behi nd us and we were al one. Margot had e faster on her bi cycl e and al ready wai ti ng for us. Al the room s were ful l of boxes. They l ay on the floor and the beds. The li ttl e room was fi l ed wi th bedcl othes. We had to start cl eari ng up at once, i f we wished to sl eep i n fortabl e beds that night. Mumm y and Margot were not abl e to hel p. They were tired and l ay down on their beds. But Daddy and I, the two “hel per” of the famil y, started at once. The whol e day we unpacked the boxes, fil l ed the cupboards and ti di ed, unti l we were extrem el y ti red. We di d sl ep i n cl ean beds that night. We hadn’t had any warm food to eat al day, but we didn’t care. Mummy and Margot were to tired and worried to eat, and Daddy and I were too busy. FRIENDSH IP IN H AWAII Every cul ture has i ts own ways to show fri endshi p. O n the i sl ands of H awaii, friendship is part of the “al oha spirit”. In the l anguage of the H awaiians who first settl ed the islands l ong ago, al oha had a very special meaning. That is “to be with happiness”. Hawai ans beli eve that once som ebody l oves the l and, they are ready to l ove their peopl e or m uni ty. Thi s i s the second most im port si gn of fri endshi p. It i s cal ed l okahi i n H awai ian l anguage, which means “oneness with al peopl e”. To enjoy the l and you shoul d not be sel fish. The l and is for everyone who lives on i t. Today m any di ferent peopl e cal H awai i thei r hom e. Indeed, H awai i s a pl ace where peopl e m ake one bi g m uni ty from many sm al ler m uni ties. Each person gi ves kokua (hel p) to other peopl e so that al fel stronger. It’s believed that the isl ands can be a paradi se when the peopl e l i ve in peace. Peopl e are tol d that thei r actions shoul d be as gentl e as the wi nd that bl ows from the sea. When probl em s happen, people are asked to sol ve them wi th understandi ng. So when peopl e of H awai tal k about ohana (fam il y), they are real y tal ki ng about al those who l ive on the i sl ands. Li vi ng i n peace, H awai ans have devel oped a thi rd sign of fri endshi p. This personal fri endshi p i s shown by gi vi ng l ei s to one another. The li e, a stri ng of fl owers, i s put over a fri end’s neck. Then the friend is given a kiss on cheek. Visitors to the islands are al so given lies. When they hear al oha, visitors begin to feel at home. Al oha al so means “goodbye”, so visitors wil hear it again when they l eave. It can al so mean “our hearts singing together”. Perhaps this is how most visitors wil l rem em ber their new fri endshi p. Uni t 2 TH E RO AD TO MO DERN EN GLISH At the end of the 16th century, about fi ve to seven mil li on peopl e spoke Engl ish. N earl y al l of them l i ved in Engl and. Later i n the next century, peopl e from Engl and m ade voyages to conquer other parts of the worl d and because of that, Engli sh begin to be spoken i n m any other countri es. Today, m ore people speak Engli sh as thei r first, second or a forei gn l anguage than ever before. Nati ve Engl ish speakers can understand each other even i f they don39。 t speak the sam e ki nd of Engli sh. Look at thi s ki nd of exam pl e: Briti sh Betty: Woul d you l i ke to see m y fl at? Am eri can Am y: Yes. I’d l ike to e up to your apartm ent. So why has Engli sh changed over ti m e? Actual y al l anguages change and devel op when cul tures m eet and m unicate wi th each other. At fi rst the Engli sh spoken i n Engl and between about AD 450 and 1150 was very di fferent the Engli sh spoken today. It was based m ore on Germ an than the Engl ish we speak at present. Then gradual ly between about AD800 to 150, Engl i sh becam e l es l i ke germ en because those who rul ed Engl and spoke fi rst Dani sh and l ater French. These new settl ers enri ched the Engl i sh l anguage and especi al l y its vocabul ary. So by the 1600’s Shakespeare was abl e to make use of a wider vocabul ary than ever before. In 1620 some British settl ers moved to Am eri can. Later i n the 18th century som e Briti sh peopl e were taken to Austral i a too. Engli sh began to be spoken i n both countri es. Fi nal ly by the 19th century the l anguage was setl ed. At that tim e two big changes i n Engli sh spel li ng happened: fi rst Sam uel Jo。
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