1.Rico的《Float》 歌词

2.有关the difference between American and British English的作文

3.flog a dead horse是什么意思

4.关于曹操的外文资料

5.告诉我一些欧美流行朋克乐队的名字.....谢谢 要好听的

6.sound和voice的区别是什么?

7.求**神奇动物在哪里中那个小女孩唱的童谣的汉语翻译,英文如下,谢

flogging a head horse_flogging

ps i love you中文翻译《附注:我爱你》,**全部原声如下:

歌曲名:Love You 'Till The End 演唱者:The Pogues

歌曲名:Same Mistake 演唱者:James Blunt?

歌曲名:More Time 演唱者:Needtobreathe

歌曲名:Carousel 演唱者:Laura Izibor

歌曲名:Fortress 演唱者:Hope

歌曲名:Last Train Home 演唱者:Ryan Star

歌曲名:Rewind 演唱者:Paolo Nutini

歌曲名:My Sweet Song 演唱者:Toby Lightman

歌曲名:No Other Love 演唱者:Chuck Prophet

歌曲名:Everything We Had 演唱者:The Academy

歌曲名:In The Beginning 演唱者:The Stills

歌曲名:If I Ever Lee This World Alive 演唱者:Flogging Molly

歌曲名:P.S. I Love You 演唱者:Nellie McKay?

歌曲名:Kisses And Cake 演唱者:John Powell

扩展资料

**剧情简介:

霍莉(希拉里?斯万克 饰)与盖里(杰拉德?巴特勒 饰)深爱彼此,虽然有时候他们会有争吵,可是这些都是他们生活中的情趣。霍莉感觉自己已经找到了最爱,盖里却在他们婚后罹患脑癌并逝世了。自此,霍莉便生活在失去挚爱的痛苦中。

她感觉丈夫并没有就此离开,她还能在家中感受到盖里的气息。她把自己困在家中,两位好友丹尼丝(莉莎?库卓 饰)、莎拉及霍莉的母亲还有母亲酒吧里的酒保丹尼尔都十分担心她。

就在她三十岁生日的那天开始,她便不断收到由盖里给她寄来的信,每封信的最后都加上一句“我爱你”的附注。盖里的信为霍莉的生活注入了力量,她一步步的向前走,但事实上盖里已经死去了,她终究要自己独自生活。

丹尼丝怀孕了,莎拉即将要结婚,她们两个都生活在幸福当中,霍莉突感落寞。她又开始躲避众人,自认识霍莉后丹尼尔一直都陪在霍莉身边,丹尼尔向霍莉表达自己的爱意。

霍莉第一次跑到母亲怀里痛哭,她也知道了盖里的信原来一直由母亲代寄。最后一封信就要拆开,霍莉得到重生。

百度百科-附注:我爱你

Rico的《Float》 歌词

hearted的意思是:1.adj.有…之心的;呈…心情的;2.vt.鼓励;把…放在心中;(heart的过去式和过去分词);3.vi.结心

造句

1.Rather than flogging one idea to death, they should be a light-hearted pop group.

他们不应该就一种想法死命渲染,而应成为一支轻松愉快的流行乐队。

2.A full-hearted commitment to proportional representation.

对比例代表制真心实意地信奉。

有关the difference between American and British English的作文

歌曲名:Float

歌手:Rico

专辑:Sanctuary Medicines

Flogging Molly--Float

lyrics By Larry Cheng

BY Larry Cheng & Kevin Boul

Drank away the rest of the day,

Wonder what my liver'd say,

Drink, that's all you can.

Blackened days with their bigger gales,

Blow in your parlor to discuss the day,

Listen, that's all you can.

Ah but don't, no don't sink the boat,

That you need, you built to keep afloat,

Ah no don't, no don't sink the boat,

That you built...

Sick and tired of what you say

no one listens anyway

sing... that's all you can.

Rambling years of lousy luck,

ya miss the smell of burning turf,

Dream, that's all you can.

Ah but don't, no don't sink the boat,

That you Built, you built to keep afloat,

Ah no don't, no don't sink the boat,

That you built... that you built to keep afloat.

Singled out for who you are,

Takes all types to judge a man,

Feel, that's all you can.

Fill your suits with biggot ears,

Hide behind their their own worst fears,

Live, that's all you can.

It's all you can

It's all you can... do.

No matter where I put my head,

I wake up feeling sound again,

Breathe, that's all you can.

Tomorrow smells of a lester cade,

Reach the bowls but glooming frame,

Be thankful, that's all we can.

Ah but don't, don't sink the boat,

That you built, you built to keep afloat,

Ah no don't, no don't sink the boat,

That you built... you built to keep afloat.

Ah no don't, no don't sink the boat,

That you built, you built to keep afloat,

A ripe old age,

A ripe old age,

I'm a ripe old age,

That's what I am.

I'm a ripe old age,

A ripe old age,

A ripe old age,

Just doing the best I can

A ripe old age,

A ripe old age,

A ripe old age,

Thats what I am.

A ripe old age,

A ripe old age,

A ripe old age,

Just doing the best I can

Hey

The best I can

Larry Cheng ~~

share with you~~

my blog muzique sky~~

://music.baidu/song/2691057

flog a dead horse是什么意思

It has been said that the Americans and the English are

"two nations separated by a common language".

British English

British English (BrE) is a broad term used to distinguish the forms of the English language used in the United Kingdom from forms used elsewhere. It encompasses all the varieties of English used within the UK, including those found in England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales.

The vast majority of people in Britain speak English. Although the term "British English" is rarely used within Britain itself (just as Americans seldom use the term "American English"), it is used as a means of distinguishing the forms of English prevalent in Britain from those spoken elsewhere in the world.

There are slight regional variations in formal written English in the United Kingdom. Nevertheless, there is a meaningful degree of uniformity in written English within the United Kingdom, and this could be described as "British English". The forms of spoken English, however, vary considerably more than in most other areas of the world where English is spoken, and a uniform concept of "British English" is therefore more difficult to ly to the spoken language.

Accent

The most common form of English used by the British ruling class is that originating from south-east England (the area around the capital, London, and the ancient English university towns of Oxford and Cambridge). This form of the language is known as the "Received Standard", and its accent is called Received Pronunciation (RP). Earlier it was held as better than other accents and referred to as the King's (or Queen's) English, or even "BBC English". Originally this was the form of English used by radio and television. However, there is now much more tolerance of variation than there was in the past; for several decades other accents he been accepted and are frequently heard, although stereotypes about the BBC persist. English spoken with a mild Scottish accent has a reputation for being especially easy to understand. Moreover, only roximately two percent of Britons speak RP.

Even in the south east there are significantly different accents; the local inner east London accent called Cockney is strikingly different from RP and can be difficult for outsiders to understand.

In London itself, the broad local accent is still changing, partly influenced by Caribbean speech. Londoners speak with a mixture of these accents, depending on class, age, upbringing, and so on.

Differences between British English and American English

American English has some spelling differences from English as used elsewhere. Unlike many 20th century language reforms the American spelling changes were not driven by , but by textbook writers and dictionary makers. Spelling tendencies in Britain from the 17th century until the present day (e.g. -ise for -ize, programme for program, kerb for curb (noun), skilful for skillful, chequered for checkered, etc.), in some cases fored by the francophile tastes of 19th century Victorian England, had little effect on American English.

The first American dictionary was written by Noah Webster in 1828. At the time the United States was a relatively new country and Webster's particular contribution was to show that the region spoke a different dialect from Britain, and so he wrote a dictionary with many spellings differing from the standard. Webster also argued for many "simplifications" to the idiomatic spelling of the period. Many, although not all, of his simplifications fell into common usage alongside the original versions with simple spelling modifications.

Some words with simplified spellings in American English include center, color, and maneuver, which are spelled centre, colour, and manoeuvre in other forms of English.

Word choice

In Southern Britain the word whilst is used almost interchangeably with while, To Americans the word whilst, in any context, seems very archaic or pretentious or both. The words amidst (as opposed to amid), and amongst (as opposed to among), are also rarer in AmE.

In the UK, generally the term fall meaning "autumn" is obsolete.

In the UK, the term period for a full stop is now obsolete. For example, Tony Blair said "Terrorism is wrong, full stop." rather than "Terrorism is wrong, period."

Time-telling

Normally, Britons “tell the time” and Americans “tell time”. Fif minutes after the hour is called quarter past in British usage and a quarter after or, less commonly, a quarter past in American usage. Fif minutes before the hour is usually called quarter to in British usage and a quarter of, a quarter to or a quarter till in American usage. In informal British speech the preposition is sometimes omitted, so that 5:30 may be referred to as half five

Idioms

A number of English idioms that he essentially the same meaning show lexical differences between the British and the American version; for instance:

British English American English

sweep under the carpet sweep under the rug

touch wood knock on wood

see the wood for the trees see the forest for the trees

throw a spanner (in the works) throw a (monkey) wrench (in the works)

Tuppence worth two cents' worth

skeleton in the cupboard skeleton in the closet

a home from home a home away from home

a drop in the ocean a drop in the bucket

flogging a dead horse beating a dead horse

hen't a clue he no clue

关于曹操的外文资料

flog a dead horse

[释义] 徒劳无益; 鞭策死马; 白费精力; 作无用功;

网络释义

flog a dead horse

1. 徒劳

2. 徒劳无益

3. 枉费心机

4. 白费力气

双语例句

1. It is useless to flog a dead horse.

老调重弹,浪费时间.

来自互联网

2. Don't try to flog a dead horse.

鞭打死马,无济于事.

相关词条

to flog a dead horse

flogging a dead horse

re flogging a dead horse

flog a dead horse rehash

告诉我一些欧美流行朋克乐队的名字.....谢谢 要好听的

Cáo Cāo

This article is about the person. For the song, see Cao Cao (song).

Portrait of Cao Cao by unknown artist

Names

Simplified Chinese: 曹操

Traditional Chinese: 曹操

Pinyin: Cáo Cāo

Wade-Giles: Ts'ao Ts'ao

Zi: Mengde (孟德)

Infant name: A-Man (阿瞒)

Temple Name: Wudi (武帝) or Taizu (太祖)

Posthumous name: Wu (武)

Cáo Cāo (曹操; Pinyin: Cáo Cāo; wg Ts'ao Ts'ao) (155 – March 15, 220), whose name is also often transliterated and should be correctly pronounced as Ts'ao Ts'ao, was a regional warlord and the last Chancellor of Eastern Han Dynasty who rose to great power during the last years of the Eastern Han Dynasty in ancient China. As one of the central figures of the Three Kingdoms period, he laid down foundations for what was to become the Kingdom of Wei (also known as Cáo Wèi) and was posthumously titled Emperor Wu of Wei (魏武帝). Although generally characterized as a cruel and suspicious character in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms and other folk cultures, the historic Cao Cao was a brilliant ruler, military strategist and poet.

Life

Early life

Cao Cao was born in the county of Qiao (谯, present day Bozhou, Anhui) in 155. His father Cao Song (曹嵩) was a foster son of Cao Teng (曹腾), who in turn was one of the forite eunuchs of Emperor Huan. Some historical records, including Biography of Cao Man, claim that Cao Song was originally surnamed Xiahou (thus making Cao Cao a cousin of Xiahou Dun and Xiahou Yuan, two of his most prominent generals). In Romance of the Three Kingdoms , it states that Cao Cao's father was originally a Xiahou and was adopted into the Cao family.

Cao Cao was known for his craftiness as a young man. Cao Cao's uncle often complained to Cao Song regarding Cao Cao's childhood indulgence in hunting and music. To counter this, Cao Cao one day feigned a fit before his uncle, who hurriedly informed Cao Song. Cao Song rushed out to see his son, who was by then back to normal. When asked, Cao Cao replied, "I he never had such illness, but I lost the love of my uncle, and therefore he had deceived you." Henceforth, Cao Song ceased to believe the words of his brother regarding Cao Cao, and thus Cao Cao became even more blatant in his wayward pursuits.

At that time, there was a man living in Runan (汝南) named Xu Shao (许劭) who was famed for his ability to identify hidden talents of others. Cao Cao paid him a visit. Under persistent questioning, Xu Shao finally said, "You would be a capable minister in peaceful times and an unscrupulous hero in chaotic ones." Cao Cao took this as a compliment and was very pleased.

At twenty, Cao Cao was recommended to be a district captain of Luoyang. Upon taking up the post, Cao Cao placed rows of multicolored staffs outside his office and ordered his deputies to flog those who violated the law, regardless of their status. An uncle of Jian Shuo, an influential eunuch under Emperor Ling, was once caught walking in the city beyond the curfew hour by Cao Cao and given his fair share of flogging.

When the Yellow Turban Rebellion broke out in 184 Cao Cao was promoted to a captain of the calry (骑都尉) and sent to Yingchuan (颍川) to put down the rebels there. He was successful in his military exploits and was further promoted to Governor of Dong Commandery (东郡).

Alliance against Dong Zhuo

In 189, Emperor Ling died and was succeeded by his eldest son, though it was the empress dowager and the eunuchs who held true power. The two most powerful generals of that time, He Jin and Yuan Shao, plotted to eliminate the clan of influential eunuchs. He Jin summoned Dong Zhuo, governor of Liangzhou (凉州), to lead his army into the capital Luoyang to lay pressure on the empress dowager. Before Dong Zhuo arrived, however, He Jin was assassinated by the eunuchs and Luoyang fell into chaos. After his force ridded the palace ground of opposition, Dong Zhuo deposed the emperor and placed in the throne the puppet Emperor Xian.

Not seeing eye to eye with Dong Zhuo, Cao Cao left Luoyang for Chenliu (陈留, southeast of present day Kaifeng, Henan), where he raised his own troops. The next year, regional warlords combined their forces under Yuan Shao against Dong Zhuo. Cao Cao joined their cause. When Dong Zhuo was eventually killed in 192 by his own foster son, mighty warrior Lü Bu, China fell into civil war. Through short-term and regional-scale wars, Cao Cao continued to expand his power.

In 196, Cao Cao convinced Emperor Xian to move the capital to Xuchang, into the warlord's custody. Henceforth, the last emperor of Han remained mostly a figurehead in the hands of Cao Cao. Cao Cao was then instated as the General-in-Chief (大将军) and Marquis of Wuping (武平侯), though both titles had little practical implication.

In 200, Yuan Shao amassed more than 100,000 troops and marched southwards on Xuchang in the name of rescuing the emperor. Cao Cao gathered 20,000 men in Guandu, a strategic point on the shore of the Yellow River. With his craft, brilliant military maneuvers and the help of a defector from Yuan Shao's camp, Cao Cao won a decisive and seemingly impossible victory.

Yuan Shao fell ill and died shortly after returning from the defeat, leing his legacy to two of his sons – the eldest son, Yuan Tan and the youngest son, Yuan Shang (袁尚). As he had designated the youngest son, Yuan Shang, as his successor, rather than the eldest as tradition dictated, the two brothers consistently feuded against each other, as they fought Cao Cao. Because of their internal divisions, Cao Cao was easily able to defeat them by using their differences to his advantage. Henceforth Cao Cao assumed effective rule over all of northern China. He sent armies further out and extended his control past the Great Wall into northern Korea, and southward to the Han River.

However, Cao Cao's attempt to extend his domination south of the Yangtze River was dashed as his forces were defeated by the first coalition of his archrivals Liu Bei and Sun Quan (who later founded the kingdoms of Shu and Wu respectively) at the Red Cliffs in 208.

Summary of major events

155 Born in Qiao.

180s Led troops against Yellow Turban Rebellion in Yingchuan.

190 Joined the coalition against Dong Zhuo.

196 Received Emperor Xian in Xuchang.

200 Won the Battle of Guandu.

208 Lost the Battle of Red Cliffs.

213 Created the Duke of Wei and given ten commanderies as his dukedom.

216 Conferred the title of the Prince/King of Wei.

220 Died in Luoyang.

Throned posthumously as Emperor Wu.

The three kingdoms

In 213, Cao Cao was titled Duke of Wei (魏公), given the Nine Dignities and given a fief of ten cities under his domain, known as the State of Wei. In 216, Cao Cao was promoted to Prince/King of Wei (魏王). Over the years, Cao Cao, as well as Liu Bei and Sun Quan, continued to consolidate their power in their respective regions. Through many wars, China became divided into three powers – Wei, Shu and Wu, which fought sporadic battles among themselves without the balance tipping significantly in anyone's for.

In 220, Cao Cao passed away in Luoyang at the age of 65, without realizing his ambition to unify China. His will instructed that he be buried in everyday clothes and without burial artifacts, and that his subjects on duty at the frontier to stay in their posts and not attend the funeral as, in his own words, "the country is still unstable".

His eldest surviving son Cao Pi succeeded him. Within a year, Cao Pi forced Emperor Xian to abdicate and proclaimed himself the first emperor of the Kingdom of Wei. Cao Cao was then posthumously titled Emperor Wu.

Major battles

Battle of Yanzhou

In 193, China fell into a state of full-fledged civil war. Meanwhile, remnants of the Yellow Turban rebels still plagued the country. A wandering throng of the rebels from the Jingzhou (青州) numbering a million invaded the Yanzhou (兖州). Bao Xin (鲍信), a subject of Yanzhou governor Liu Dai (刘岱), advised the latter to fortify the city and wait for the enemies to disperse. Liu Dai refused and was subsequently killed in battle.

Bao Xin then offered Cao Cao the governor's seat in exchange for his help. In the initial encounter, Cao Cao suffered minor losses but eventually subdued the rebel force. He also took in more than 300,000 surrendered troops under his own flag. This force, which came to be known as the Qingzhou Army, was to be an important foundation for Cao Cao's subsequent rise to power.

Battle of Guandu

Main article: Battle of Guandu

In the spring of 200, Yuan Shao (袁绍), the most powerful warlord of the north, amassed more than 100,000 troops and marched from Ye on Xuchang. To defend against the invasion, Cao Cao placed 20,000 men at Guandu (官渡), a strategic landing point on the shore of the Yellow River which Yuan Shao's troops had to secure en route Xuchang.

With a few diversionary tactics, Cao Cao managed to disorient Yuan Shao's troops as well as kill two of Yuan Shao's most capable generals, Yan Liang and Wen Chou. The morale of Yuan Shao's troops suffered a further blow when Cao Cao launched a stealth attack on the former's food store, Wu Chao. Many more of Yuan Shao's men surrendered or deserted than were killed during the ensuing battle. When Yuan Shao eventually retreated back to Ye in the winter of 201, he did so with little more than 800 light calry.

The Battle of Guandu shifted the balance of power in northern China. Yuan Shao (袁绍) died shortly after his retreat and his two sons were soon defeated by Cao Cao further in the northern regions of Liaodong (辽东). Since then, Cao Cao's dominance in the entirety of northern China was never seriously challenged. The battle has also been studied by military strategists ever since as a classic example of winning against an enemy with far superior numbers.

Traditional site of the Red Cliffs, north of Wulin

Battle of Red Cliffs

Main article: Battle of Chibi

The Battle of Chibi (literally, "Red Cliffs") was another classic battle where the vastly outnumbered emerged as victor through strategy. In this battle, however, Cao Cao was on the losing end.

In the winter of 208, Liu Bei and Sun Quan – two warlords who later founded the kingdoms of Shu and Wu respectively – formed their first coalition against the southward expansion of Cao Cao. The two sides clashed at the Red Cliffs (northwest of present day Puqi, Hubei). Cao Cao boasted 830,000 men (historians believe the realistic number was around 220,000), while the Liu-Sun coalition at best had 50,000 troops.

However, Cao Cao's men, mostly from the north, were ill-suited to the southern climate and nal warfare, and thus entered the battle with a disadvantage. Furthermore, a plague that broke out undermined the strength of Cao Cao's army. The decision by Zhuge Liang and Zhou Yu, military advisors to Liu and Sun, to use fire also worked effectively against Cao Cao's vessels, which were chained together and thus allowed the fires to quickly spread. A majority of Cao Cao's troops were either burnt to death or drowned. Those who tried to retreat to the near bank were ambushed and annihilated by enemy skirmishers. Cao Cao himself barely escaped the encounter.

Other contributions

Agriculture and education

While waging military campaigns against his enemies, Cao Cao did not forget the basis of society – agriculture and education.

In 194, a locust plague caused a major famine across China. According to the Chronicle of the Three Kingdoms, the people ate each other out of desperation. Without food, many armies were defeated even without fighting. From this experience, Cao Cao saw the importance of an ample food supply in building a strong military. He began a series of agricultural programs in cities such as Xuchang and Chenliu. Refugees were recruited and given wastelands to cultivate. Later, encampments not faced with imminent danger of war were also made to farm. This system was continued and spread to all regions under Cao Cao as his realm expanded. Although Cao Cao's primary intention was to build a powerful army, the agricultural program also improved the living standards of the people, especially war refugees.

By 203, Cao Cao had eliminated most of Yuan Shao's force. This afforded him more attention on the constructional works within his realm. In autumn of that year, Cao Cao passed an order decreeing the promotion of education throughout the counties and cities within his jurisdiction. An official in charge of education matters was assigned to each county with at least 500 households. Youngsters with potential and talents were selected to undergo schooling. This prevented a lapse in the output of intellectuals in those warring years and, in Cao Cao's words, would benefit the people.

Poetry

Cao Cao was also an established poet. Although few of his works remain today, his verses, unpretentious yet profound, contributed to reshaping the poetry style of his time. Together with his sons Cao Pi and Cao Zhi, they are collectively known as the "Three Cao" in poetry. Along with several other poets of the time, their poems formed the backbone of what was to be known as the jian'an style (建安风骨; jian'an is the era name for the period from 196 to 220).

The civil strife towards the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty ge the jian'an poems their characteristic solemn yet heart-stirring tone, which frequently lament over the ephemerality of life. In the history of Chinese literature, the jian'an poems were a transition from the early folksongs into scholarly poetry.

One of Cao Cao's most celebrated poems, written in the late years of his life, is Though the Tortoise Lives Long (龟虽寿).Cao Cao in Romance of the Three Kingdoms

The Romance of the Three Kingdoms, a historical novel by Luo Guanzhong, was a romanticization of the events that occurred during the Three Kingdoms period. While staying true to history most of the time, the Romance of the Three Kingdoms inevitably ge Cao Cao a certain degree of dramatic make-up, in such a tone so as to suggest him as a cruel and suspicious character. On several occasions, Luo Guanzhong even made up fictional or semi-fictional events involving Cao Cao. These include:

Cao Cao in the 84-episode television serial Romance of the Three Kingdoms played by Bao Guo'an

Escape from Dong Zhuo

While in reality Cao Cao did lee Dong Zhuo, the tyrannical warlord who held the last Han emperor hostage in 190 to form his own army, the Romance of the Three Kingdoms went a step further to describe Cao Cao's attempted assassination of the latter:

Since Dong Zhuo deposed the eldest son of the late Emperor Ling and placed in the throne Emperor Xian, his tyrannical behior had angered many court officials. One of the officials, Wang Yun, held a banquet one night. Halfway through the banquet, Wang Yun began to cry at the cruel deeds of Dong Zhuo. His colleagues, feeling the same anguish, joined him.

Cao Cao, however, laughed and said, "All the officials of the court – crying from dusk till dawn and dawn till dusk – could you cry Dong Zhuo to his death?" He then borrowed from Wang Yun the Seven Gem Sword with the promise that he would personally assassinate Dong Zhuo.

The next day, Cao Cao brought the precious sword along to see Dong Zhuo. Hing much trust in Cao Cao, Dong Zhuo received the guest in his bedroom. Lü Bu, Dong Zhuo's foster son, left the room for the stable to select a fast horse for Cao Cao, who complained about his slow ride.

When Dong Zhuo faced away, Cao Cao prepared to unsheath the sword. However, Dong Zhuo saw the movement in the mirror and hastily turned to question Cao Cao's intention. At this time, Lü Bu had also returned. In his desperation, Cao Cao knelt and pretended that he wanted to present the sword to Dong Zhuo. He then rode away with the excuse of trying out the new horse, and headed straight out of the capital before Dong Zhuo, who grew heily suspicious, could capture him.

Portrait of Cao Cao from a Qing Dynasty edition of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, the hunched figure clearly portraying him as a villain

Escape through Huarong Trail

After the fire started burning at the Red Cliffs, Cao Cao gathered all the men he could and escaped towards Jiangling, taking the shortcut through Huarong Trail. On top of the huge defeat and humiliation Cao Cao suffered, Luo Guanzhong decided to add one more pinch of salt to the getaway:

During his perilous escape back to Jiangling, Cao Cao came to a fork in the road. Columns of smoke were seen rising from the narrower path. Cao Cao judged that the smoke was a trick by the enemy to divert him to the main road, where an ambush must he been laid. He then led his men towards the narrow path – the Huarong Trail.

The smoke was indeed a trick by Zhuge Liang, military advisor to Liu Bei. Grasping Cao Cao's psychology exactly, however, Zhuge Liang actually meant to direct him to Huarong Trail, where Guan Yu with 500 troops sat waiting. Upon being cut off, Cao Cao rode forward and pled to Guan Yu to remember kindness of the former days. Seeing the plight of the defeated men and recalling the former fors he received from Cao Cao, Guan Yu then allowed the enemy to pass through without challenge, risking his own life for disobeying military orders.

However, in real history, Cao Cao escaped through a muddy road, with a lot of shrubs around. Shortly after he escaped, Liu Bei's troops then came to the road and set fire to it. Cao Cao therefore teased him as "clever, but a little slow".

Death of Cao Cao and Hua Tuo

In 220, Cao Cao passed away in Luoyang due to an unrecorded illness. Legends had many explanations for the cause of his death, most of which were wrought with superstitions. The Romance of the Three Kingdoms included some of these legends, as well as Luo Guanzhong's own story about the involvement of Hua Tuo, a renowned Chinese physician.

When Cao Cao started complaining about splitting headaches during the last days of his life, his subjects recommended Hua Tuo, a physician whose skills were said to parallel the deities. Upon examination, Hua Tuo diagnosed Cao Cao's illness to be a type of rheumatism within the skull. He suggested giving Cao Cao a dose of hashish and then splitting open his skull with a sharp axe to extract the pus within.

However, due to an earlier incident with another physician who attempted to take Cao Cao's life, Cao Cao grew very suspicious of any physician. Cao Cao believed Hua Tuo intended to kill him. He then threw Hua Tuo into jail, where the renowned physician died a few days later. Without proper treatment, Cao Cao soon died as well.

Cao Cao in opera

While historical records indicate Cao Cao as a brilliant ruler, he was represented as a cunning and deceitful man in Chinese opera, where the character of Cao Cao is given a white facial makeup to reflect his treacherous personality. When writing the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Luo Guanzhong took much of his inspiration from the opera. As a result, such unscrupulous depiction of Cao Cao had become much more popular among the common people than the real Cao Cao himself.

sound和voice的区别是什么?

1907个朋克乐队的排名!

Rank Band

1 Rancid

2 Rise Against

3 NOFX

4 Misfits

5 Against Me!

6 Anti-Flag

7 AFI

8 Alkaline Trio

9 Leftover Crack

10 Flogging Molly

11 Operation Ivy

12 Taking Back Sunday

13 Underoath

14 Casualties

15 Green Day

16 Bad Religion

17 Ramones

18 Thrice

19 Dead Kennedys

20 Atreyu

21 Coheed And Cambria

22 Mars Volta

23 Black Flag

24 Bright Eyes

25 Dropkick Murphys

26 Adicts

27 Unseen

28 Bouncing Souls

29 Tiger Army

30 Minor Threat

31 Choking Victim

32 Matchbook Romance

33 Used

34 Thursday

35 As I Lay Dying

36 Fall Out Boy

37 Descendents

38 Less Than Jake

39 Catch 22

40 Bad Brains

41 Screeching Weasel

42 Hot Water Music

43 Cursive

44 Falcon

45 My Chemical Romance

46 Converge

47 Exploited

48 Armor For Sleep

49 Lower Class Brats

50 Every Time I Die

51 Silverstein

52 A Global Threat

53 Tsunami Bomb

54 Strike Anywhere

55 GBH

56 Norma Jean

57 Nekromantix

58 Propagandhi

59 Queers

60 Bane

61 Alexisonfire

62 Lagwagon

63 Me First And The Gimme Gimmes

64 Sublime

65 Streetlight Manifesto

66 Poison The Well

67 Jawbreaker

68 Blink 182

69 Strung Out

70 Subhumans

71 Social Distortion

72 Clash

73 Ses The Day

74 At The Drive In

75 Big D And The Kids Table

76 Avenged Sevenfold

77 Lars Frederiksen And The Bastards

78 Blood Brothers

79 Planes Mistaken For Stars

80 Nirvana

81 Throwdown

82 Further Seems Forever

83 Eigh Visions

84 Hawthorne Heights

85 Terror

86 Zao

87 Pennywise

88 Hopesfall

89 Methadones

90 Bleeding Through

91 Death Cab For Cutie

92 Refused

93 Get Up Kids

94 Lawrence Arms

95 Evergreen Terrace

96 Yellowcard

Weezer

98 Dillinger Escape Plan

99 With Honor

100 No-Cash

101 Hatebreed

102 Give Up The Ghost

103 Gorilla Biscuits

104 Briefs

105 Transplants

106 New Found Glory

107 Locust

108 Business

109 Mad Caddies

110 Toxic Narcotic

111 Blood For Blood

112 Circle Jerks

113 TSOL

114 None More Black

115 Specials

116 Horrorpops

117 Senses Fail

118 Enemy You

119 Oxymoron

120 Mustard Plug

121 MXPX

122 Against All Authority

123 Sparta

124 No Use For A Name

125 Between The Buried and Me

126 Virus

127 Good Riddance

128 Shai Hulud

129 Nerve Agents

130 Darkest Hour

131 Boy Sets Fire

132 Groovie Ghoulies

133 7 Seconds

134 Atom And His Package

135 Strokes

136 Cock Sparrer

137 Mad Sin

138 Adolescents

139 Comeback Kid

140 Story Of The Year

141 Fear Before The March Of Flames

142 US Bombs

143 Remembering Never

144 Vandals

145 Crass

146 Riverdales

147 Germs

148 Beautiful Mistake

149 Millencolin

150 Spitalfield

151 Goldfinger

152 Briggs

153 INDK

154 Dwarves

155 Morning Glory

156 Midtown

157 Conflict

158 Dashboard Confessional

159 GG Allin

160 Pedro The Lion

161 Unearth

162 Sick Of It All

163 Murder By Death

164 Agnostic Front

165 Modest Mouse

166 Kid Dynamite

167 Voodoo Glow Skulls

168 Death By Stereo

169 Stiff Little Fingers

170 Swingin' Utters

171 Common Rider

172 Even In Blackouts

173 Fear

174 Dillinger Four

175 One Man Army

176 Discharge

177 Appleseed Cast

178 Distillers

179 Dead Poetic

180 Killswitch Engage

181 Weakerthans

182 Rufio

183 F-Minus

184 Desaparecidos

185 Guttermouth

186 Pretty Girls Make Gres

187 Pietasters

188 Street Dogs

189 Postal Service

190 Black Dahlia Murder

191 A Static Lullaby

192 Reel Big Fish

193 Jimmy Eat World

194 Billy Talent

195 Brand New

196 Dead Milkmen

1 Hope Conspiracy

198 Ataris

199 Ducky Boys

200 Pulley

201 American Distress

202 Motion City Soundtrack

203 Thought Riot

204 Autopilot Off

205 Buzzcocks

206 Epoxies

207 Finch

208 Say Anything

209 Cheap Sex

210 Toasters

211 Orchid

212 Youth Of Today

213 It Dies Today

214 Angry Samoans

215 Bayside

216 UK Subs

217 From First To Last

218 Blitz

219 Teen Idols

220 Piebald

221 Emery

222 Juliana Theory

223 Reggie And The Full Effect

224 Living End

225 Northstar

226 Jets To Brazil

227 Blondie

228 Daughters

229 From Autumn To Ashes

230 Varukers

231 A Wilhelm Scream

232 Hy Campers

233 H2O

234 Break The Silence

235 Ten Yard Fight

236 Reagan Youth

237 Wings Of Azrael

238 Hey Mercedes

239 MDC

240 Circle Takes The Square

241 Fugazi

242 Sugarcult

243 Isis

244 Vindictives

245 International Noise Conspiracy

246 Dead To Fall

247 On Broken Wings

248 Movielife

249 And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead

250 Suicidal Tendencies

251 Sigur Ros

252 Curl Up And Die

253 Real McKenzies

254 Kill Your Idols

255 Beloved

256 Audio Karate

257 Name Taken

258 Slackers

259 Pixies

260 Demented Are Go

261 88 Fingers Louie

262 Squirtgun

263 Dickies

264 Copeland

265 Ted Leo And The Pharmacists

266 MeWithoutYou

267 Defiance

268 Anti Nowhere League

269 Botch

270 Soviettes

271 Bigwig

272 Pogues

273 Killing Tree

274 Lars Frederiksen & The Bastards

275 Link 80

276 Husker Du

277 CKY

278 All

279 Damned

280 Bikini Kill

281 Templars

282 Rehasher

283 Code

284 Anti-Heros

285 Belvedere

286 Minus The Bear

287 River City Rebels

288 Maxeen

289 Slick Shoes

290 Hot Cross

291 Explosion

292 Lifetime

293 Youth Brigade

294 Manges

295 Brandtson

296 Partisans

2 Boys Night Out

298 Horse The Band

299 Sex Pistols

300 Champion

301 Letter Kills

302 Chain Of Strength

303 Forgotten

304 Darlington

305 Suicide Machines

306 Son Of Sam

307 Mr. T Experience

308 This Bike Is A Pipe Bomb

309 Hot Rod Circuit

310 Face To Face

311 Pig Destroyer

312 Nausea

313 Total Chaos

314 Five Iron Frenzy

315 Good Life

316 Minutemen

317 Q an

求**神奇动物在哪里中那个小女孩唱的童谣的汉语翻译,英文如下,谢

一、词义广泛性不一样

1)sound

英 [sa?nd]? 美 [sa?nd]?

1、v. 听(诊);测量,测…深

2、n. 声音,语音;噪音;海峡

3、adj. 健全的,健康的;合理的

4、adv. 彻底地,充分地

2)voice

英 [v?s]? 美 [v?s]?

1、n. 声音;嗓音;发言权;愿望

2、v. 表达;吐露

二、变形词不一样

1)sound

第三人称单数: sounds 复数: sounds 现在分词: sounding 过去式: sounded 过去分词: sounded 比较级: sounder 最高级: soundest

2)voice

第三人称单数: voices 复数: voices 现在分词: voicing 过去式: voiced 过去分词: voiced

三、词义辨析不一样

1)sound n. 声音

〔辨析〕普通用词,泛指耳朵能听到的任何声响。

〔例证〕What made these sounds?

这些声音是怎么回事?

2)voice n. 嗓音

〔辨析〕主要指人的说话声和歌唱声。

〔例证〕His voice quivered with rage.

他气得声音发抖。

有必要说一下

witch女巫 和 which谁、哪一个 是同音的,一语双关

我妈咪 你的妈咪 要去捉女巫

我妈咪 你的妈咪 扫帚上飞行

我妈咪 你的妈咪 女巫从不哭

我妈咪 你的妈咪 女巫就要死

女巫(谁是)第一号 河水淹死她

女巫(谁是)第二号 绳索勒死她

女巫(谁是)第三号 烈火烧死她

女巫(谁是)第四号 鞭子抽打她