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Words of Advice at Graduating 畢業贈言

目錄

Words of Advice at Graduating 畢業贈言
第一篇:Words of Advice at graduating 畢業贈言第二篇:a letter of Advice第三篇:a word of Advice第四篇:畢業贈言第五篇:畢業贈言範本更多相關範文

正文

第一篇:Words of Advice at graduating 畢業贈言

graduates and my fellow students,

you all are leaving your alma mater now. i have no gift to present you all except a piece of Advice.

what i would like to advise is that "don't give up your study." most of the courses you have taken are partly for your certificate. you had no choice but to take them. from now on, you may study on your own. i would advise you to work hard at some special field when you are still young and vigorous. your youth will be gone that will never come back to you again. when you are old, and when your energy are getting poorer, you will not be able to as you wish to. even though you have to study in order to make a living, studies will never live up to you. making a living without studying, you will be shifted out in three or five years. at this time when you hope to make it up, you will say it is too late. perhaps you will say, "after graduation and going into the society, we will meet with an urgent problem, that is, to make a living. for this we have no time to study. even though we hope to study, we have no library nor labs, how can we study further?"

i would like to say that all those who wait to have a library will not study further even though they have one and all these who wait to have a lab will not do experiments even though they have one. when you have a firm resolution and determination to solve a problem, you will naturally economize on food and clothing.

as for time, i should say it's not a problem. you may know that every day he could do only an hour work, not much more than that because darwin was ill for all his life. you must have read his achievements. every day you spend an hour in reading 10 useful pages, then you will read more than 3650 pages every year. in 30 years you will have read 110,000 pages.

my fellow students, reading 110,000 pages will make you a scholar. but it will take you an hour to read three kinds of small-sized newspapers and it will take you an hour and a half to play four rounds of mahjian pieces. reading small-sized newspapers or playing mahjian pieces, or working hard to be a scholar? it's up to you all.

henrik ibsen said, "it is your greatest duty to make yourself out."

studying is then as tool as casting. giving up studying will destroy yourself.

i have to say goodbye to you all. your alma mater will open her eyes to see what you will be in 10 years. goodbye!

諸位畢業生同學:

你們現在要離開母校了,我沒有什麼禮物送給你們,只好送你們一句話吧。這句話是:"不要拋棄學問"。以前的功課也許有一大部分是爲了這張文憑,不得已而做的。從今以後,你們可以依自己的心願去研究了。趁着現在年富力強時候,努力做一種專門的學問。少年是一去不返的,等到精力衰退時,要做學問也來不及了。既爲吃飯計,學問絕不會辜負人的。吃飯而不求學問,三年五年之後,你們都要被先進的少年淘汰掉的。到那時再想做點學問來補救,恐怕已晚了。

有人說:"出去做事之後,生活問題急需解決,哪有功夫去讀書?即使要做學問,既沒有圖書館,也沒有實驗室,哪能做學問?"

我要對你們說:凡是要等到有了圖書館纔讀書的,有了圖書館也不肯讀書;凡是要等到有了實驗室才做研究的,有了實驗室也不肯做研究。你有了決心要解決一個問題,自然會節衣縮食去買書,自然會想出法子來購置儀器。

至於時間,更不成問題。達爾文一生多病,不能多做工,每天只能做一小時的工作。你們看他的成績!每天花一小時看十頁有用的書,每年可看三千六百多頁書,三十年讀十一萬頁書。

諸位,十一萬頁的書可以使你成爲一個學者了。可是,每天看三種小報也得費你一小時的功夫;四圈麻將也得費你一個半小時的光陰。看小報呢?打麻將呢?還是努力做一位學者?全靠你自己選擇!

易卜生說:"你的最大責任是把你這塊材料鑄成器。"

學問便是鑄器的工具。拋棄了學問便是毀了你自己。

再會了!你們的母校眼睜睜地要看你們十年之後成什麼器。

第二篇:a letter of Advice

a letter of Advice

jan. 10th, 2014 dear manager,

as a student of the university, i am writing this letter to make some suggestions for improving the service of our university library. on the whole, i think our library functions pretty well. but its service is far from being perfect. first and foremost, i highly recommend an inquiry desk at the front door, which will make it more convenient for students to ask for assistance whenever necessary. then, it would be more time-saving if a librarian can help go through the procedures. last but not least, i feel that it would be beneficial if you can ensure a quiet atmosphere in the reading room, i often found myself disturbed by others’ chatting.

it is my sincere hope that you will take my Advice into consideration.

yours sincerely,

li ming

作爲我們學校的一名學生,,爲了提高學校圖書館的服務,我特地寫信來提出一些建議。

總體來說,我覺得我們圖書館運作很好,但是,服務方面並不是盡善盡美。首先,我強烈建議在前門安置一個問詢臺,便於學生在有必要時問詢。然後如果有圖書管理員幫我們通過整個流程,我們就會覺得更加節省時間。最後,要是能保證閱覽室裏安靜的氛圍將會對學生有很大的幫助,我經常被被人的聊天聲音打擾。

衷心希望您能考慮我的建議。

第三篇:a word of Advice

a word of Advice…on Advice

joe queenan, the wall street journal

a few weeks ago, a neighbor i like very much came over for coffee. while inspecting the vast record and compact disc collection that takes up a large part of my living room, he suggested that i load all my cds onto a server to clear away the clutter (1) . he also said that i should convert my lps (2) to mp3 files and get wireless speakers installed in every room. i said thanks, those are really great suggestions. but i am never going to do any of this stuff.

my wife is always telling me that yoga (3) will help relieve the pain in my lower back. she is almost

certainly right. yoga would probably be an immense help to my aching lower back. but i am never going to a yoga class.

prompted by these unsolicited (4) comments, i got to thinking about the last time i had taken anyone's Advice about anything. i couldn't remember. it was certainly far in the past. maybe when i was a kid hitchhiking (5) at night and a trucker told me to stop accepting rides. at night. from truckers.

mostly, i could only remember Advice i had ignored: don't give up a great job. don't give up another great job. stop giving up great jobs. and don't write for right-wing (6) publications; you'll be slitting your own throat (7). i did not take any of this Advice. the very nature of Advice makes me avoid it.

alan goldberg, a philadelphia-based psychologist puts it this way: "when somebody says, 'you should do something,' the subtext (8) is: 'you're an idiot for not already doing it.' nobody takes Advice under those conditions."

the u.s. is addicted to Advice. americans honestly believe that someone out there knows how to fix all our problems. maybe oprah. maybe dr. phil (9). maybe barack obama. newspapers, magazines and television are filled with Advice about health, finances, raising children, dieting. why, then, are so many of us miserable, bankrupt, overweight chain-smokers (10)with horrible, illiterate kids?

i polled (11) my friends, asking if they took Advice, solicited Advice, gave Advice. i also asked: when was the last time they'd followed anybody's Advice. no one had the answers at their fingertips (12). most said that they hated being asked for Advice because if the decision to take that job or marry that sociopath went south (13), they would get the blame. as for when they last took Advice, just about everyone said, "i'll have to think about that one." most of them are still thinking.

i am often asked for Advice. i am constantly being approached by people who say, "you seem to know the ropes (14) around here." i do. or: "now, you're a man of the world." i am. as such, i ceaselessly give Advice to those who aren't men of the world, those who don't know the ropes. rarely do they take the Advice offered.

seeking Advice you have no intention of following is a time-honored american tradition. it's a

compulsory exercise before getting to the main event: doing something unbelievably stupid. it's a way of putting a patina (15) of intelligence on a foolish, impulsive decision, making it seem like one iota (16) of thought actually went into the decision to marry a woman named galactica or invade russia.

"you have to think of Advice-seeking in a wider social context," says my daughter bridget, who is getting her ph.d. in neuroscience at georgetown (17). "asking for Advice is a way of engaging with other people,

interacting with other people, while simultaneously putting off a difficult decision. but it's also a way of spreading responsibility so that if things go south you have other people to blame."

good Advice, once taken, is not eternally treasured. sooner or later, if you give a person a piece of breathtakingly good Advice that changes their lives, they will come back to punish you for it. if you tell someone to quit a job, sell a condo (18), write a book, make a movie, or ditch a girlfriend, and the decision turns out to be the right one, the day will come when your friend will not only deny that you ever gave them that Advice but will spread rumors that you actually gave them exactly the opposite Advice because you are an envious, brain-dead schmuck (19). sooner or later, everyone wants to be a self-made man or woman.

i am not a self-made man. thirty-three years ago, when i was going broke writing lighthearted (20)

satirical fiction, an editor at the kansas quarterly toldme to stop sending my stuff to literary magazines like the kansas quarterly, and to try getting published by the mainstream press. i did. i might have done that anyway, but i still think of that note as the Advice that changed my life. the editor didn't sign his or her name, and i never bothered to find out who he or she was. in other Words, i took a piece of unsolicited and not particularly flattering Advice from a complete and utter stranger, and it totally changed my life, and i never even bothered to thank them.

in my defense, the note was a rejection slip.

helpful vocabulary:

ter: mess, disorder

: records

: form of exercise by stretching the body

licited: unasked for; given freely

hitchhike: to ask for a ride from strangers; in the us, people hitchhike by standing next to the road and holding out their thumb.

t-wing: conservative (in us politics)

slit your own throat: to do something that damages yourself; to make yourself look stupid

ext: the implied meaning

. phil: american psychologist with television talk show

n-smokers: people who smoke constantly

poll: to ask questions and record the answers

one’s fingertips: readily available; easy to access

go south: to go wrong

know the ropes: to be experienced

na: veneer; shiny, beautiful outward appearance

: a small piece

getown: a prestigi(推薦訪問範文網)ous university in washington d.c.

o:from condominium, an apartment unit that is owned, not rented.

uck: loser; someone who is not successful

thearted: fun or funny; not serious

第四篇:畢業贈言

畢業贈言集

1、假如生活是一條河流,願你是一葉執着向前的小舟;假如生活是一葉小舟,願你是個風雨無阻的水手。

2、希望是堅韌的柺杖,忍耐是旅行袋,帶上他們,你可以登上永恆之旅,走遍全世界。

3、不要學花兒只把春天等待,要學燕子把春天銜來。

4、廢鐵之所以能成爲有用的鋼材,是因爲它經得起痛苦的磨練。

5、願你是永遠奔騰的千里馬。

6、你聰穎,你善良,你活潑。有時你也幻想,有時你也默然,在默然中沉思,在幻想中尋覓。小小的你會長大,小小的你會成熟,願你更堅強!願你更自信!

7、你用才智和學識取得今天的收穫,又將以明智和果敢接受明天的挑戰。願你永保一往無前精神。

8、你的天賦好比一朵火花,假如你用勤勉辛勞去助燃,它一定會變成熊熊烈火,放出無比的光和熱來。

9、你有涌泉一樣的智慧和一雙辛勤的手,不管你身在何處,幸運與快樂時刻陪伴着你!

10、以你的自信,以你的開朗,以你的毅力,還有我的祝福,你一定能夠駛向理想的彼岸。

11、你是花季的蓓蕾,你是展翅的雄鷹,明天是你們的世界,一切因你們而光輝

12、高尚的理想是人生的指路明燈。有了它,生活就有了方向;有了它,內心就感到充實。邁開堅定的步伐,走向堅定的目標吧!

13、朝霞般美好的理想,在向你們召喚。你們是一滴一滴的水,全將活躍在祖國的大海里!

14、願雲彩、豔陽一直陪伴你走到海角天涯;鮮花、綠草相隨你鋪展遠大的前程。

15、生活的海洋已鋪開金色的路,浪花正分列兩旁搖動着歡迎的花束。勇敢地去吧,朋友!前進,已吹響出征的海螺;彩霞,正在將鮮花的大旗飛舞??

16、有人說:“人人都可以成爲自己的幸運的建築師。”願你們在前行的道路上,用自己的雙手建造幸運的大廈。

17、啊,願你們在飛逝而去的時間波濤上,乘風破浪,駛向成功的彼岸!

18、願你像那小小的溪流,將那高高的山峯作爲生命的起點,一路跳躍,一路奔騰,勇敢地奔向生活的大海??

19、願我的臨別贈言是一把傘,能爲你遮擋征途上的烈日與風雨。

20、願你們駕駛着信念鑄造的航船,到希望的大海去犁出雪白的浪花。

21、自愛,使你端莊;自尊,使你高雅;自立,使你自由;自強,使你奮發;自信,使你堅定??這一切將使你在成功的道路上遙遙領先。

22、我深深地理解,耗費了多少時間,戰勝了多少困難,你才取得眼前的成績。請你相信,在你追求、拼搏和苦幹的過程中,我將永遠面帶微笑地站在你的身旁。

23、當你孤獨時,風兒就是我的歌聲,願它能使你得到片刻的安慰;當你驕傲時,雨點就是我的警鐘,願它能使你獲得永恆的謙遜。

24、美,是智慧,是靜謐。祝你聰明!願你上進!

25、聰明的人,今天做明天的事;懶惰的人,今天做昨天的事;糊塗的人,把昨天的事也推給明天。願你做一個聰明的孩子!願你做一個時間的主人!

26、明天,這是個美麗燦爛、輝映着五光十色的迷人的字眼。願你的明天無限美麗、無限燦爛、無限迷人!

27、天道酬勤。人世間沒有不經過勤勞而成爲天才的。願你日夜勤奮,早日成才!

28、春天是碧綠的天地,秋天是黃金的世界。願你用青春的綠色去釀造未來富有的金秋!

29、衷心地祝賀你,用智慧、才情、膽略和毅力,開闢出一塊屬於你自己的土地。

30、你長着一對翅膀。堅韌地飛吧,不要爲風雨所折服;誠摯地飛吧,不要爲香甜的蜜汁所陶醉。朝着明確的目標,飛向美好的人生。

31、生活是一本精深的書,別人的註釋代替不了自己的理解,願你有所發現,有所創造。[2]

編輯本段贈言舉例

有許多文具店會賣各種各樣的同學錄,一般都會有一頁讓即將分別的同學填寫相關資料,後一頁則讓學生們盡情發揮想象力、寫作能力爲爲同學寫出一個最好能使其終生難忘的,想要對這個同學說的話,是突出個性的一個平臺。 給同學:

1.不管未來有多遙遠,成長的路上有你有我;不管相逢在什麼時候,我們是永遠的朋友。

2.不管未來有多久,請珍惜相聚的每一刻;不管過了多少個,我們是永遠的朋友。

3.與你同行,回想起我們曾擁有過的共同理想;與你分手,憧憬着我們重逢時的狂歡。

4.同學啊,讓往日夕暮中那些甜蜜的低語,都埋在心底,化作美麗的記憶吧!

5.光陰似箭,一轉眼,6年的同窗生涯已成爲過去。但教室裏,還回響着我們朗朗的讀書聲;操場上,還留着我們奔跑矯健的身影。這裏的草坪、小溪、竹亭,是我們永遠依戀的百草園。

6.畢業了,多麼想留住那些溫暖的日子,但又多麼渴望着能早日投進生活的洪流。那以往的同窗生活,是一串甜美的糖葫蘆;那迷人的甜與酸,將永遠回味不完。

7.我的朋友們,我們要暫時分別了;“珍重”的話,我也不再說了。在這欲去未去的夜色裏,努力鑄造幾顆小晨星;雖然沒有多大光明,但也能使那早行的人高興。

8.如果我能,我願將心底的一切都揉進今日的分別。但是我不能啊!那麼,就讓我們以沉默分手吧!要知道,這是一座火山的沉默,它勝過一切話別!

9.擁有一顆年輕快樂的心,給別人一個燦爛的微笑,給自己一個真誠的自我,給學業畫個完美的句號,給事業點個漂亮的開場。讓我們揚起風帆,共赴風雨。不要忘了我,朋友!

10.用智慧描繪生命的畫板,用勤奮書寫人生的坎坷,用汗水浸潤青春的旅途。你的明天不一定會燦爛輝煌,卻一定充實無悔!

11.友誼是一首無字的歌,在你淡淡的季節裏開一樹美麗的花,在深深淺淺的腳印裏,爲你不退的步伐奏一曲動人的華爾茲。年年歲歲,歲歲年年。

第五篇:畢業贈言範本

應屆畢業生向大家提供畢業贈言的範本參考

白雲飄蕩藍天,那是浪漫的聲音;鳥兒嘰喳枝間,那是自由的聲音;兒童嬉戲身邊,那是快樂的聲音。祝你身邊永駐美好的聲音。

借藍天爲紙,春風爲筆,願望爲墨,畫出真誠祝福:描上雲彩,添上彩霞,奉上陽光,送給你,祝你生活如詩如畫,理想前程似錦!

陽光燦爛走千里,披星戴月不停息;平時沒事多笑笑,永葆青春有朝氣;多和知己聚一聚,喝個小酒唱支歌,祝你吉祥又如意!

思念不需要藉口,回憶在心頭遊走,懷舊不需要理由,感動在心頭漫遊,言辭也許陳舊,情意不曾偏離。願友情伴你天長地久!

工作順心順意,生活吉祥如意,身體格外珍惜,愛情郎情妾意,朋友經常聯繫,問候不要忘記,願你工作順利、愛情甜蜜、生活愜意!

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