reciprocally是什么意思,reciprocally中文翻譯,reciprocally發(fā)音、用法及例句
?reciprocally
reciprocally發(fā)音
英:[r?'s?pr?kl?] 美:[r?'s?pr?kl?]
英: 美:
reciprocally中文意思翻譯
adv. 相互地, 互易地
reciprocally詞形變化
副詞: reciprocally | 名詞: reciprocality |
reciprocally同義詞
multiplicative inverse | equal | mutual | reciprocal cross | common | shared | coordinate | give-and-take | communal | joint | correlative
reciprocally反義詞
nonreciprocal
reciprocally常見(jiàn)例句
1 、I was hurt that you didn't reciprocate my feelings.─── 因為你沒(méi)有回應我的感情 我很受傷
2 、Grief and joy reciprocally produce each other───哀樂(lè )相生
3 、Reciprocally, the loosening of political control accelerated the further mobilization and formation of third-wave social movements, Hsiao goes on to explain.───相對地,政治控制力的松綁,加速第三波社會(huì )運動(dòng)的動(dòng)員和成形。
4 、2.Sueding rollers cross reciprocally and move in the axial direction to minimize the lengthwise streaky.───磨輥互相交叉,軸向游動(dòng),可減少縱向條狀疵點(diǎn)。
5 、You don't reciprocate my feelings, very well.─── 你從未回應過(guò)我對你的感情 沒(méi)關(guān)系
6 、The aim that managers implement trustworthy behavior is to affect employees to behave reciprocally.───管理者實(shí)施可信行為的目的就是通過(guò)自身行為對員工產(chǎn)生影響,促使員工作出互惠行為,從而對員工產(chǎn)生激勵作用。
7 、a state of being connected reciprocally.───相互連接在一起的狀態(tài)。
8 、Wavelength and frequency are, of course, related reciprocally.───波長(cháng)和頻率當然是相反的關(guān)系。
9 、And if there's no reciprocity, we stop.─── 如果無(wú)法互惠互利 我們就停止
10 、To act reciprocally or in return.───反作用相對地或還原性作用
11 、Reciprocally, Hong Kong was the Mainland's third largest trading partner in 1999 (just behind Japan and the United States), accounting for 12 per cent of the Mainland's total trade.───反過(guò)來(lái)說(shuō),在一九九九年,香港是內地第三大貿易伙伴(僅次于日本及美國),占內地貿易總額的12%。
12 、The “recognize” and “obey” links on these two ways are reciprocally transformable, and the direction of transformation mainly depends on methods used by teachers to show the contents.───兩條路徑在“認同”和“遵從”的環(huán)節上可以相互轉化,轉化的方向主要取決于教師呈現內容的方法。
13 、Mother, don't forget the law of reciprocity.─── 嬤嬤 不要忘了相互作用法則
14 、Does the western world need China, and, reciprocally, does China need intercourse with the Christian nations?───土爾雇特部經(jīng)過(guò)多次激烈戰斗,大批人員犧性,大量牲畜死亡。
15 、"Soul" and "thinking" prescribe and are equal to each other reciprocally.───“靈魂”與“思”在這個(gè)問(wèn)題上相互規定,彼此等價(jià)。
16 、The article is concluded with a linear description of the reciprocally interpretive relationship between bilingual mental operation and the mental process of translation.───文章最后對兩者的相互闡釋性做了一個(gè)線(xiàn)性描述。
17 、Reciprocally, strategic priorities for science and technology have been little influenced by the development of sustainability thinking.───因而反過(guò)來(lái),可持續性思想的發(fā)展對于科學(xué)和技術(shù)發(fā)展的戰略?xún)?yōu)先權的影響非常小。
18 、Cities and territories reciprocally rose to a state of prosperity and received a powerful impulse in that direction from the Crusades.───城市及其所轄治地交互興起從而形成了富裕國家,并且受到隨著(zhù)(八次)十字軍東侵前進(jìn)方向而來(lái)的強力推動(dòng)。
19 、The comparisons between them show that both lean philosophy and six sigma essentially aim at continuous improvement, and take many reciprocally complementary advantages.───比較結果表明,精益方法與六西格瑪管理本質(zhì)上都是旨在實(shí)現持續改進(jìn)的管理模式,兩種方法也有互補優(yōu)勢。
20 、Finally, our study suggests that the follow-up research can add the practical viewpoint of the business in to discuss further.On the other hand, we can reciprocally test the theory and the practice.───最后,本研究建議在后續的研究中,可加入業(yè)界的實(shí)務(wù)觀(guān)點(diǎn),加以更進(jìn)一步討論,使得理論與實(shí)務(wù)得以相互驗證。
21 、The system supply many functions such as :NCS,CIE-LAB, XYZ,RGB,CMYK code displaying and converting reciprocally.───色彩系統轉換:CIE-L*a*b*、XYZ、sRGB、NCS系統、Munsell系統; 提供兩色對比,色差值顯示和色差傾向提示報告等功能。
22 、The Global Stability of the Positive Equilibrium for A Class of Reciprocally Interfered Predator-prey System───一類(lèi)相互干擾的捕食-被捕食系統的正平衡點(diǎn)的全局穩定性
23 、Experimental studies have shown that clonal plants can reciprocally translocate resources between interconnected ramets in heterogeneous environments.───摘要生長(cháng)在異質(zhì)生境中的克隆植物分株間能進(jìn)行物質(zhì)傳遞,這種現象被稱(chēng)為克隆整合。
24 、Furthermore, in glutathione depletion, there is a tendency for the humoral (antibody) response to predominate while the cell-mediated response is reciprocally inhibited (5).───(研究5)進(jìn)一步發(fā)現,缺乏谷胱甘肽使得體液(抗體)反應變得占優(yōu)勢而使細胞調制反應相對的被制止。
25 、This article tries to research the method of minglement and acceleration reciprocally between nomadism culture and farming culture through several aspects.───本文試圖從幾個(gè)側面探究游牧文化與農業(yè)文化相互交融、相互促進(jìn)的途徑。
26 、To make agriculture combine with science and education, to make production, learning and research promote reciprocally and to start the new development complexion of agriculture higher VTE in west China───農科教結合產(chǎn)學(xué)研互動(dòng)開(kāi)創(chuàng )西部農業(yè)高職發(fā)展新局面
27 、The best type of affection is reciprocally life-giving;───最好的那種愛(ài)是彼此愉悅的愛(ài);
28 、With good relationship, they cooperate sincerely and reciprocally to accelerate the final success of venture capital industry.───基于此,風(fēng)險投資公司與風(fēng)險企業(yè)的關(guān)系就顯得尤為重要。
29 、Reciprocally, the Mainland is the second largest external investor for Hong Kong.───內地對於香港來(lái)說(shuō),也是第二大外來(lái)投資者。
30 、Grouped, combined or reciprocally incorporated lamps───組合、復合或混合燈光組
31 、be directly [inversely, reciprocally] proportional to───與...成正比例
32 、I mentioned at the beginning that they are reciprocally cause and effect, and that is what I want to clarify, at least broadly.───我在這篇文章的開(kāi)頭,就說(shuō)了,它們互為因果,這是我想澄清的(最少是廣義上的)。
33 、The history of manners and ideas permeates the history of events, and this is true reciprocally.───習俗和思想的歷史是滲透在大事的歷史里的,反過(guò)來(lái)也是如此。
34 、Substance culture and information culture are transforming reciprocally and integrating in the present and future development of library.───物質(zhì)文化與信息文化在圖書(shū)館目前與未來(lái)的發(fā)展中是相互轉變、一體同構的。
35 、He thought his feelings were being reciprocated, but he was wrong.─── 他以為他的情感得到了回報 可是他錯了
36 、The lock core machine is made up of many round laminas and septas which are spaced reciprocally and superposed actively in the within hole sheath of the lamina sheath.───該鎖芯機構由多個(gè)圓形葉片和多個(gè)圓形隔片構成,這些圓形葉片和圓形隔片被相互地間隔和活動(dòng)地疊裝在葉片套的內孔套筒中.
37 、the agreement was mutually satisfactory; the goals of the negotiators were not reciprocally exclusive───協(xié)議是互惠的;談判代表的目的并不是相互排斥的
38 、Maybe she had feelings for him that weren't reciprocated.─── 也許她對他產(chǎn)生了感情 卻得不到回應
39 、I diddled her, but she didn't reciprocate.─── 我幫她擼了 但她沒(méi)回報我
40 、“India should not expect to get a lot reciprocally at first,” says Mr Bery.───“印度不應先期望得到許多互惠的好處,”貝里先生表示。
41 、Reciprocally, ICTVdB should link to taxonomic databases (Species2000, GBIF) rather than to hold its own taxonomic trees to reference up-to-date host taxonomy.───同樣的,病毒分類(lèi)學(xué)資料庫也應與其他主要的分類(lèi)資料庫連結,以更新病毒宿主之分類(lèi)現況。
42 、Convex and concave for gripping must be distributed reciprocally in this range.───在此范圍內,用于夾持的凹凸處必須一一對應分布。
43 、The functions of locutionary, illocutionary and perlocutionary acts are reciprocally penetrated from the perspective that the speech activity is regarded as a strategic one.───從將話(huà)語(yǔ)活動(dòng)視為策略性活動(dòng)的角度看,對其具有制約作用,三者之間的功能互相滲透。
44 、Emotion and production are reciprocally producing───情文相生
45 、the agreement was mutually satisfactory; the goals of the negotiators were not reciprocally exclusive.───協(xié)議是互惠的;談判代表的目的并不是相互排斥的。
46 、Kinematic and kinetic data were collected when the subjects ascended stairs reciprocally with their preferred speed.───結果顯示,年老的受測者在上樓梯時(shí)完成一個(gè)步距的時(shí)間較長(cháng),站立期及雙腳站立期較長(cháng);
47 、The locking mechanism is made up of an inner hole sleeve inside which multiple round leaf blades and round spacers are reciprocally spaced and kinetically sheathed in the blade cases.───該鎖芯機構由多個(gè)圓形葉片和多個(gè)圓形隔片相互間隔活動(dòng)疊裝在葉片套的內孔套筒中構成。
48 、correcting composition reciprocally───作文互評
49 、Was it reciprocated? I was her teacher.─── 有得到回應嗎 我可是她的老師
50 、This thesis summarized the study about the actuator diagnosis home and abroad, then methods of actuator fault diagnosis are analyzed and compared reciprocally.───本文在全面綜述了國內外執行器故障診斷相關(guān)研究發(fā)展概況的基礎上,對各種方法進(jìn)行了分析和比較,并總結了各自的特點(diǎn)和存在的問(wèn)題。
51 、Reciprocally,the Mainland is the second largest external investor for Hong Kong.───內地對于香港來(lái)說(shuō),也是第二大外來(lái)投資者。
52 、if I believe the feelings are reciprocated.─── 我認為這種感情是相互的時(shí)候
53 、As the territory can never overwhelm the map, it is true that the map reciprocally overwhelm the territory that the map gives rise to the territory in the process of mimic form construction.───就如領(lǐng)土再也無(wú)法凌駕于地圖之上,應該說(shuō),地圖反過(guò)來(lái)凌駕于領(lǐng)土,就是那仿擬的形式建構過(guò)程,地圖產(chǎn)生了領(lǐng)土。
54 、In different phases of individual"s psychological developing, people have different understanding and experiences about Honesty and Credit according reciprocally impact between people and society.───在社會(huì )成員從幼年到成年的不同心理發(fā)展階段、在個(gè)體同社會(huì )不同境況的互動(dòng)影響下,個(gè)體對誠信有不同的理解和體驗,因而有不同的實(shí)踐表現。
55 、The status of edification would make teachers and students interpret and understand reciprocally, then it could present the essence of educational experience.───師生之間若能保持此二者的狀態(tài),便能夠彰顯出相互詮釋和理解的教育經(jīng)驗之本質(zhì)。
56 、Ecological city is such an urban that is the combination of human, nature and environment, reciprocally accreting and harmoniously developing.───摘要生態(tài)城市是人、自然、環(huán)境融為一體,互惠共生,和諧發(fā)展的城市。
57 、It opens channels from heart to heart so that feelings can flow reciprocally.───它打開(kāi)誠實(shí)的渠道,以便情感能相互地流動(dòng)。
58 、One would be kin and the other one would be reciprocity.─── 一是親屬關(guān)系 二是互惠
59 、Intriguingly, phase transformation and its reverse transformation take place reciprocally in a loading and creeping cycle.───此外,在負載與潛變之循環(huán)時(shí)相變化與逆相變化會(huì )反復地接續發(fā)生。
60 、Moreover, the capability of bearing debt and the flexibility of delaying investment enhance each other reciprocally.───相反,隨著(zhù)技術(shù)不確定性的增加,延緩作用逐漸減弱。
61 、Things are coexistent when in empirical intuition the perceptions of them can follow upon one another reciprocally.───如果在經(jīng)驗性的直觀(guān)中一事物的知覺(jué)能夠與另一事物的知覺(jué)交互繼起,這些事物就是同時(shí)的。
62 、be directly [ inversely,reciprocally ] proportional to───與...成正[反]比例
63 、When he moves he stirs them and reciprocally.───當他活動(dòng)時(shí),引起別人的活動(dòng);別人活動(dòng)時(shí),也引起他的活動(dòng)。
64 、Time and Space are two factors that are complimentary with and reciprocally transformed to each other.In this way, they coexist in the text.───摘要時(shí)間和空間本是**的兩個(gè)相互依存、相互轉化、相互交叉的因素,共存于文本中。
急!!求3000字關(guān)于舉國體制的英文文獻,高分!!
First Book: The History
Chapter 1
The Italians
At the revival of civilisation in Europe, no county was in so
favourable a position as Italy in respect to commerce and industry.
Barbarism had not been able entirely to eradicate the culture and
civilisation of ancient Rome. A genial climate and a fertile soil,
notwithstanding an unskilful system of cultivation, yielded
abundant nourishment for a numerous population. The most necessary
arts and industries remained as little destroyed as the municipal
institutions of ancient Rome. Prosperous coast fisheries served
everywhere as nurseries for seamen, and navigation along Italy's
extensive sea-coasts abundantly compensated her lack of internal
means of transport. Her proximity to Greece, Asia Minor, and Egypt,
and her maritime intercourse with them, secured for Italy special
advantages in the trade with the East which had previously, though
not extensively, been carried on through Russia with the countries
of the North. By means of this commercial intercourse Italy
necessarily acquired those branches of knowledge and those arts and
manufactures which Greece had preserved from the civilisation of
ancient times.
From the period of the emancipation of the Italian cities by
Otho the Great, they gave evidence of what history was testified
alike in earlier and later times, namely, that freedom and industry
are inseparable companions, even although not unfrequently the one
has come into existence before the other. If commerce and industry
are flourishing anywhere, one may be certain that there freedom is
nigh at hand: if anywhere Freedom was unfolded her banner, it is as
certain that sooner or later industry will there establish herself;
for nothing is more natural than that when man has acquired
material or mental wealth he should strive to obtain guarantees for
the transmission of his acquisitions to his successors, or that
when he has acquired freedom, he should devote all his energies to
improve his physical and intellectual condition.
For the first time since the downfall of the free states of
antiquity was the spectacle again presented to the world by the
cities of Italy of free and rich communities. Cities and
territories reciprocally rose to a state of prosperity and received
a powerful impulse in that direction from the Crusades.
As matters actually stood, however, Venice was not merely left
to her own resources, she found herself crippled by the external
attacks of her sister states and of the neighbonring European
powers.
It could not have proved a difficult task to a well-organised
league of Italian military powers to defend the independence of
Italy against the aggression of the great monarchies. The attempt
to form such a league was actually made in 1526, but then not until
the moment of actual danger and only for temporary defence. The
lukewarmness and treachery of the leaders and members of this
league were the cause of the subsequent subjugation of Milan and
the fall of the Tuscan Republic. From that period must be dated the
downfall of the industry and commerce of Italy.(4*)
In her earlier as well as in her later history Venice aimed at
being a nation for herself alone. So long as she had to deal only
with petty Italian powers or with decrepid Greece, she had no
difficulty in maintaining a supremacy in manufactures and commerce
through the countries bordering on the Mediterranean and Black
Seas. As soon, however, as united and vigorous nations appeared on
the political stage, it became manifest at once that Venice was
merely a city and her aristocracy only a municipal one. It is true
that she had conquered several islands and even extensive
provinces, but she ruled over them only as conquered territory, and
hence (according to the testimony of all historians) each conquest
increased her weakness instead of her power
At the same period the spirit within the Republic by which she
had grown great gradually died away. The power and prosperity of
Venice -- the work of a patriotic and heroic aristocracy which had
sprung from an energetic and liberty-loving democracy-maintained
itself and increased so long as the freedom of democratic energy
lent it support, and that energy was guided by the patriotism, the
wisdom, and the heroic spirit of the aristocracy. But in proportion
as the aristocracy became a despotic oligarchy, destructive of the
freedom and energies of the people, the roots of power and
prosperity died away, notwithstanding that their branches and
leading stem appeared still to flourish for some time longer.'(5*)
A nation which has fallen into slavery,' says Montesquieu,(6*)
'strives rather to retain what it possesses than to acquire more;
a free nation, on the contrary, strives rather to acquire than to
retain.' To this very true observation he might have added -- and
because anyone strives only to retain without acquiring he must
come to grief, for every nation which makes no forward progress
sinks lower and lower, and must ultimately fall. Far from striving
to extend their commerce and to make new discoveries, the Venetians
never even conceived the idea of deriving benefit from the
discoveries made by other nations. That they could be excluded from
the trade with the East Indies by the discovery of the new
commercial route thither, never occurred to them until they
actually experienced it. What all the rest of the world perceived
they would not believe; and when they began to find out the
injurious results of the altered state of things, they strove to
maintain the old commercial route instead of seeking to participate
in the benefits of the new one; they endeavoured to maintain by
petty intrigues what could only be won by making wise use of the
altered circumstances by the spirit of enterprise and by hardihood.
And when they at length had lost what they had possessed, and the
wealth of the East and West indies was pouted into Cadiz and Lisbon
instead of into their own ports, like simpletons or spendthrifts
they turned their attention to alchemy.(7*)
In the times when the Republic grew and flourished, to be
inscribed in the Golden Book was regarded as a reward for
distinguished exertions in commerce, in industry, or in the civil
or military service of the State. On that condition this honour was
open to foreigners; for example, to the most distinguished of the
silk manufacturers who had immigrated from Florence.(8*) But that
book was closed when men began to regard places of honour and State
salaries as the family inheritance of the patrician class. At a
later period, when men recognised the necessity of giving new life
to the impoverished and enfeebled aristocracy, the book was
reopened. But the chief title to inscription in it was no longer,
as in former times, to have rendered services to the State, but the
possession of wealth and noble birth. At length the honour of being
inscribed in the Golden Book was so little esteemed, that it
remained open for a century with scarcely any additional names.
If we inquire of History what were the causes of the downfall
of this Republic and of its commerce, she replies that they
principally consisted in the folly, neglect, and cowardice of a
worn-out aristocracy, and in the apathy of a people who had sunk
into slavery. The commerce and manufactures of Venice must have
declined, even if the new route round the Cape of Good Hope had
never been discovered.
The cause of it, as of the fall of all the other Italian
republics, is to be found in the absence of national unity, in the
domination of foreign powers, in priestly rule at home, and in the
rise of other greater, more powerful, and more united nationalities
in Europe.
If we carefully consider the commercial policy of Venice, we
see at a glance that that of modern commercial and manufacturing
nations is but a copy of that of Venice, only on an enlarged (i.e.
a national) scale. By navigation laws and customs duties in each
case native vessels and native manufactures were protected against
those of foreigners, and the maxim thus early held good that it was
sound policy to import raw materials from other states and to
export to them manufactured goods.(9*)
It has been recently asserted in defence of the principle of
absolute and unconditional free trade, that her protective policy
was the cause of the downfall of Venice. That assertion comprises
a little truth with a great deal of error if we investigate the
history of Venice with an unprejudiced eye, we find that in her
case, as in that of the great kingdoms at a later period, freedom
of international trade as well as restrictions on it have been
beneficial or prejudicial to the power and prosperity of the State
at different epochs. Unrestricted freedom of trade was beneficial
to the Republic in the first years of her existence; for how
otherwise could she have raised herself from a mere fishing village
to a commercial power? But a protective policy was also beneficial
to her when she had arrived at a certain stage of power and wealth,
for by means of it she attained to manufacturing and commercial
supremacy. Protection first became injurious to her when her
manufacturing and commercial power had reached that supremacy,
because by it all competition with other nations became absolutely
excluded, and thus indolence was encouraged. Therefore, not the
introduction of a protective policy, but perseverance in
maintaining it after the reasons for its introduction had passed
away, was really injurious to Venice.
Hence the argument to which we have adverted has this great
fault, that it takes no account of the rise of great nations under
hereditary monarchy. Venice, although mistress of some provinces
and islands, yet being all the time merely one Italian city, stood
in competition, at the period of her rise to a manufacturing and
commercial power, merely with other Italian cities; and her
prohibitory commercial policy could benefit her so long only as
whole nations with united power did not enter into competition with
her. But as soon as that took place, she could only have maintained
her supremacy by placing herself at the head of a united Italy and
by embracing in her commercial system the whole Italian nation. No
commercial policy was ever clever enough to maintain continuously
the commercial supremacy of a single city over united nations.
From the example of Venice (so far as it may be adduced against
a protective commercial policy at the present time) neither more
nor less can be inferred than this -- that a single city or a small
state cannot establish and maintain such a policy successfully in
competition with great states and kingdoms; also that any power
which by means of a protective policy has attained a position of
manufacturing and commercial supremacy, can (after she has attained
it) revert with advantage to the policy of free trade.
In the argument before adverted to, as in every other when
international freedom of trade is the subject of discussion, we
meet with a misconception which has been the parent of much error,
occasioned by the misuse of the term 'freedom.' Freedom of trade is
spoken of in the same terms as religious freedom and municipal
freedom. Hence the friends and advocates of freedom feel themselves
especially bound to defend freedom in all its forms. And thus the
term 'free trade' has become popular without drawing the necessary
distinction between freedom of internal trade within the State and
freedom of trade between separate nations, notwithstanding that
these two in their nature and operation are as distinct as the
heaven is from the earth. For while restrictions on the internal
trade of a state are compatible in only very few cases with the
liberty of individual citizens, in the case of international trade
the highest degree of individual liberty may consist with a high
degree of protective policy. Indeed, it is even possible that the
greatest freedom of international trade may result in national
servitude, as we hope hereafter to show from the case of Poland. In
respect to this Montesquieu says truly, 'Commerce is never
subjected to greater restrictions than in free nations, and never
subjected to less ones than in those under despotic
government.'(10*)
NOTES:
1. De l'Ecluse, Florence et ses Vicissitudes, pp. 23, 26, 32, 163,
213.
2. Pechio, Histoire de l'Economie Politique en Italie.
3. Amalfi contained at the period of her prosperity 50,000
inhabitants. Flavio Guio, the inventor of the mariner's compass,
was a citizen of Amalfi. It was the sack of Amalfi by the Pisans
(1135 or 1137) that that ancient book was discovered which later on
became so injurious to the freedom and energies of Germany -- the
Pandects.
4. Hence Charles V was the destroyer of commerce and industry in
Italy, as he was also in the Netherlands and in Spain. He was the
introducer of nobility by patent, and of the idea that it was
disgraceful for the nobility to carry on commerce or manufactures
-- an idea which had the most destructive influence on the national
industry. Before his time the contrary idea prevailed; the Medici
continued to be engaged in commerce long after they had become
sovereign rulers.
5. "Quand les nobles, au lien de verser leur sang pour la patrie,
au lieu d'illustrer l'etat par des victoires et de l'agrandir par
des conquetes, n'eurent plus qu'a jouir des honneurs et a se
partager des impots on dut se demander pourquoi il y avait huit ou
neuf cents habitants de Venice qui se disaient proprietaries de
toute la Republique." (Daru, Histoire de Venise, vol. iv. ch.
xviii.)
6. Esprit des Lois, p. 192.
7. A mere charlatan, Marco Brasadino, who professed to have the art
of making gold, was welcomed by the Venetian aristocracy as a
saviour. (Daru, Histoire de Venise, vol. iii. ch. xix.)
8. Venice, as Holland and England subsequently did, made use of
every opportunity of attracting to herself manufacturing industry
and capital from foreign states. Also a considerable number of silk
manufacturers emigrated to Venice from Luces, where already in the
thirteenth century the manufacturer of velvets and brocades was
very flourishing, in consequence of the oppression of the Lucchese
tyrant Castruccio Castracani. (Sandu, Histoire de Venise, vol. i.
pp. 247-256.)
9. Sismondi, Histoire des Republiques Italiennes, Pt. I, p. 285.
10. Esprit des Lois, livre xx. ch. xii.
求翻譯,急!
所有的欲望虛榮心使較一般或少受非議的,莫過(guò)于希望能以談話(huà)藝術(shù)。其他的成就可能被他們的施加沒(méi)有機會(huì ),或想要的,沒(méi)有危險的缺陷經(jīng)常會(huì )說(shuō);但是,沒(méi)有人能活著(zhù),這樣的愛(ài),沒(méi)有每小時(shí)的樂(lè )趣,或者煩惱,從喜歡對他的或疏忽,教師給快樂(lè )是持續的使用。一些更常讓人羨慕,那些有能力強迫注意無(wú)論他們到來(lái)時(shí),被認為是一種的進(jìn)口的承諾,而它的離去是幸福,就像時(shí)表示哀悼的太陽(yáng)從北方氣候,作為一個(gè)缺乏想像力,再現,或激活歡欣。
很明顯,那,以卓越的這有價(jià)值的藝術(shù)一些特有的資格是必要的,因為每個(gè)人的經(jīng)驗會(huì )轉告他的樂(lè )趣,男人都能給在交談中,毋比例規定知識或他們身上的閃光點(diǎn)。許多發(fā)現他們通往表格和表格雙方當事人那些從不把它當作重要最少的其他任何地方;我們有,同時(shí)感到滿(mǎn)意或其他愛(ài)那些我們不能認可,也能被說(shuō)服來(lái)試一試這個(gè)危險的試驗承認他的伴侶,就是我們知道太無(wú)知的謀士,和太奸詐給一位朋友買(mǎi)的。
我質(zhì)疑一些減排的性格是沒(méi)有必要普遍的贊同。一些花時(shí)間的監督下太滿(mǎn)意清楚擺在眼前的優(yōu)勢;因此,在那些存在的優(yōu)勢,在總成了有很少發(fā)現男人可以很好地分為能力或收購。的智慧慢的舌頭活潑譴責沉默、學(xué)者的法律知識,也不允許人想象他必指示他,那些評論家不因此遭受的謬誤,reasoner通過(guò)被人譴責怠速到思想和過(guò)失注意力,一般都是贊揚和恐懼,reverenced和回避。
請您一定要的人很少針對這樣的卓越為壓抑他的聽(tīng)眾在他們自己的意見(jiàn),或者debars他們相互之間做出了希望的娛樂(lè )公司。歡樂(lè )、勒索由突圍想象力,sprightliness注意的,或快經(jīng)?;靥?是什么他們打**,供奉在笑聲,一個(gè)扭曲的臉沒(méi)有心中喜樂(lè )。
可能不太完整,不過(guò)進(jìn)了咯,(*^__^*) 嘻嘻……
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