英语演讲 英语演讲稿【优秀10篇】

2023-04-12 14:12:23

演讲稿的格式由称谓、开场白、主干、结尾等几部分组成。在日新月异的现代社会中,我们使用上演讲稿的情况与日俱增,那要怎么写好演讲稿呢?漂亮的书包范文网小编为您分享了英语演讲稿【优秀10篇】,希望可以抛砖引玉,帮助到朋友们。

英语演讲稿 篇一

ulie was saying her bedtime prayers. "please god," she said, "make naples the capital of italy. make naples the capital of italy."

her mother interrupted and said. "julie, why do you want god to make naples the capital of italy?"

and julie replied, "because that's what i put in my geography exam!"

朱莉叶在做睡前祷告。“上帝,求求你,”她说,“让那不勒斯成为意大利的首都吧。”

妈妈打断她的话说:“朱莉叶,为什么求上帝让那不勒斯成为意大利的首都呢?”

朱莉叶回答道:“因为我在地理考卷上是这样写的。”

英语演讲稿 篇二

Honesty means eakingthe truth and being fair and upright in act. He who lies and cheats is dishonest.: Those who gain fortunes not by hard labour but by other means is dishonest.

Honesty is a good virtue. If you are honest all the time,you’ll be trusted and reected by others. A liar is always looked down upon and regarded as a black sheep by the people around. Once you lie, people will never believe you even if you eak the truth.

However, in the tide of commodity economy today, it seems that more and more people believe in money at the sacrifice of honesty. To them, among such things as health, beauty, m6ney, intelligence, honesty, reputation and talent, honesty is the only thing that can be east away. They don’t understand or pretend not to understand that honesty is the biggest fortune humans own, and that it is the prerequisite for doing everything well. I think these people areto be pitied.

In short, honesty is gold. Honest, your reputation will become great;dishonest, your name will be oiled and your personality degraded. Therefore, we should never make such an excuse as "A little dishonesty is only a trifle thing. We should eradicate immediately the seed of dishonesty once it is sowed in our minds.

英语演讲稿 篇三

A long time ago, there was a huge apple tree. A little boy loved to come and lay around it every day. He climbed to the tree top, ate the apples, took a nap under the shadow… He loved the tree and the tree loved to play with him.

Psychologist tell us that stress is a state of worry caused by the problem of living , such as too much work or study , heavy responsibilities , and quickened pace of life 。

Statistics show that stress comes from every detail in our life 。 Financial problems , poor health , being laid off may be the stress that most adults now suffering 。 As students in the university , we are also under our special stress 。 While study , having to take various tests and submit a project against a deadline may put a great pressure on us 。 And the things make us felt stressed may be our parents's greater expectations on us than we could reach 。 Later , when we are likely to graduate , some other problems will also annoy us 。 I think we will worry a lot about our ability to compete in the job market and how we can best use what we've learned at college in our future job 。

英语演讲稿 篇四

good morning, ladies and gentlemen, first, let me introduce myself. my name is aileen. i work as a new public relations manager for the westwood brewery. i’m going to be discuss the brewery’s corporate image -----in particular whether it needs to be changed. my presentation will last about 15 minutes. i will be using powerpoint for my talk. if you have any questions, i’ll be pleased to answer them at the end of my talk.

as you can see, i am going to examine three points: first, the history, second, the product, and third, the markets.

let’s begin with the company’s history. westwood brewery, based in london, is a traditional company. it was founded in 1778. and it’s still a family firm. we continue to run as a family firm and this is important for the corporate image. as you know the present owner is ben westwood. there was a takeover bid. that wraps up that point.

now, i’d like to discuss the second point, the company’s product. we use traditional production methods to produce an imperial stout. it’s described as dark, immense, rich with a depth of burnt fruitiness, this beer is an ideal nightcap. imperial stout is 50% stronger than any of the other beers in the export premium range. we also have horses. like this. do you remember that them delivering the beer to the local pubs at the last century? yes. we

use it to deliver the stout.

ok. let’s begin with the last point, the markets. we have make a larger which is european, a european type beer and sales have increased a lot over the last year. but, the production has actually dropped a little over the last few years, although profits have actually held up.

so, we need to change the corporate image. in the eyes of the public, a clearly defined company image is the identity of the company. it reflects the quality of their product or service. so, a good company image enhances public recognition and increased popularity will translate into great trading volume and profits.

we need to consider these items when changing our company image. marketing communications, pricing strategy, sales strategy, customer service, publicity and promotions.

so, if we consider that and do it very well, i believe our corporate image will be most perfect.

i’d like to stop here, i hope you have found this useful. and if you have any questions, i’d be happy to answer them now. thank you!

英语演讲稿 篇五

ladies and gentlemen , good afternoon! i’m very glad to stand here and give you a short my topic is “youth”。i hope you inance of courage over timidity of the appetite , for adventure over the love of ease.this often exists in a man of 60 more than a boy of gro men andfromthe infinite, so long as you are young 。

esfromevery detail in our life.financial problems , poor health , being laid off may be the stress that most adults noe other problems will also annoy us.i think we will worry a lot about our ability to compete in the job market and how we can best use what we’ve learned at college in our future job 。

优秀英语演讲稿 篇六

Good morning boys and girls!

It’s a great pleasure for me/It’s nice to to give you a speech here. Nowadays mastering a foreign language is very helpful in our daily life. I feel it a great honor to share my opinions about English learning with you. Firstly, I believe it is useful to remember as many sentence patterns as possible. Secondly, we should try our best to read more English newspapers and magazines after class, which helps to improve our reading abilities. Besides, TV programmes are of great help to us. Last but not least, it’s necessary for us to communicate with foreign friends as much as possible and increase our awareness of foreign cultures, which can also help to improve our English. However, sometimes I find it difficult to pronounce some English words correctly. I would appreciate it if someone could give me some advice. Thanks for your attention

That's all my speech,thank you.

经典英语演讲稿 篇七

When I was about three or four years old, I remember my mum reading a story to me and my two big brothers, and I remember putting up my hands to feel the page of the book, to feel the picture they were discussing.

And my mum said, "Darling, remember that you can't see and you can't feel the picture and you can't feel the print on the page."

And I thought to myself, "But that's what I want to do. I love stories. I want to read." Little did I know that I would be part of a technological revolution that would make that dream come true.

I was born premature by about 10 weeks, which resulted in my blindness, some 64 years ago. The condition is known as retrolental fibroplasia, and it's now very rare in the developed world. Little did I know, lying curled up in my prim baby humidicrib in 1948 that I'd been born at the right place and the right time, that I was in a country where I could participate in the technological revolution.

There are 37 million totally blind people on our planet, but those of us who've shared in the technological changes mainly come from North America, Europe, Japan and other developed parts of the world. Computers have changed the lives of us all in this room and around the world, but I think they've changed the lives of we blind people more than any other group. And so I want to tell you about the interaction between computer-based adaptive technology and the many volunteers who helped me over the years to become the person I am today. It's an interaction between volunteers, passionate inventors and technology, and it's a story that many other blind people could tell. But let me tell you a bit about it today.

When I was five, I went to school and I learned braille. It's an ingenious system of six dots that are punched into paper, and I can feel them with my fingers. In fact, I think they're putting up my grade six report. I don't know where Julian Morrow got that from. (Laughter) I was pretty good in reading, but religion and musical appreciation needed more work. (Laughter)

When you leave the opera house, you'll find there's braille signage in the lifts. Look for it. Have you noticed it? I do. I look for it all the time.

(Laughter)

When I was at school, the books were transcribed by transcribers, voluntary people who punched one dot at a time so I'd have volumes to read, and that had been going on, mainly by women, since the late 19th century in this country, but it was the only way I could read. When I was in high school, I got my first Philips reel-to-reel tape recorder, and tape recorders became my sort of pre-computer medium of learning. I could have family and friends read me material, and I could then read it back as many times as I needed. And it brought me into contact with volunteers and helpers. For example, when I studied at graduate school at Queen's University in Canada, the prisoners at the Collins Bay jail agreed to help me. I gave them a tape recorder, and they read into it. As one of them said to me, "Ron, we ain't going anywhere at the moment."

(Laughter)

But think of it. These men, who hadn't had the educational opportunities I'd had, helped me gain post-graduate qualifications in law by their dedicated help.

Well, I went back and became an academic at Melbourne's Monash University, and for those 25 years, tape recorders were everything to me. In fact, in my office in 1990, I had 18 miles of tape. Students, family and friends all read me material. Mrs. Lois Doery, whom I later came to call my surrogate mum, read me many thousands of hours onto tape. One of the reasons I agreed to give this talk today was that I was hoping that Lois would be here so I could introduce you to her and publicly thank her. But sadly, her health hasn't permitted her to come today. But I thank you here, Lois, from this platform.

(Applause)

I saw my first Apple computer in 1984, and I thought to myself, "This thing's got a glass screen, not much use to me." How very wrong I was. In 1987, in the month our eldest son Gerard was born, I got my first blind computer, and it's actually here. See it up there? And you see it has no, what do you call it, no screen. (Laughter) It's a blind computer. (Laughter) It's a Keynote Gold 84k, and the 84k stands for it had 84 kilobytes of memory. (Laughter) Don't laugh, it cost me 4,000 dollars at the time. (Laughter) I think there's more memory in my watch.

It was invented by Russell Smith, a passionate inventor in New Zealand who was trying to help blind people. Sadly, he died in a light plane crash in 20xx, but his memory lives on in my heart. It meant, for the first time, I could read back what I had typed into it. It had a speech synthesizer. I'd written my first coauthored labor law book on a typewriter in 1979 purely from memory. This now allowed me to read back what I'd written and to enter the computer world, even with its 84k of memory.

In 1974, the great Ray Kurzweil, the American inventor, worked on building a machine that would scan books and read them out in synthetic speech. Optical character recognition units then only operated usually on one font, but by using charge-coupled device flatbed scanners and speech synthesizers, he developed a machine that could read any font. And his machine, which was as big as a washing machine, was launched on the 13th of January, 1976. I saw my first commercially available Kurzweil in March 19xx, and it blew me away, and in September 19xx, the month that my associate professorship at Monash University was announced, the law school got one, and I could use it. For the first time, I could read what I wanted to read by putting a book on the scanner. I didn't have to be nice to people!

(Laughter)

I no longer would be censored. For example, I was too shy then, and I'm actually too shy now, to ask anybody to read me out loud sexually explicit material. (Laughter) But, you know, I could pop a book on in the middle of the night, and -- (Laughter) (Applause)

Now, the Kurzweil reader is simply a program on my laptop. That's what it's shrunk to. And now I can scan the latest novel and not wait to get it into talking book libraries. I can keep up with my friends.

There are many people who have helped me in my life, and many that I haven't met. One is another American inventor Ted Henter. Ted was a motorcycle racer, but in 1978 he had a car accident and lost his sight, which is devastating if you're trying to ride motorbikes. He then turned to being a waterskier and was a champion disabled waterskier. But in 19xx, he teamed up with Bill Joyce to develop a program that would read out what was on the computer screen from the Net or from what was on the computer. It's called JAWS, Job Access With Speech, and it sounds like this.

(JAWS speaking)

Ron McCallum: Isn't that slow?

(Laughter) You see, if I read like that, I'd fall asleep. I slowed it down for you. I'm going to ask that we play it at the speed I read it. Can we play that one?

(JAWS speaking)

(Laughter)

RM: You know, when you're marking student essays, you want to get through them fairly quickly.

(Laughter) (Applause)

This technology that fascinated me in 1987 is now on my iPhone and on yours as well. But, you know, I find reading with machines a very lonely process. I grew up with family, friends, reading to me, and I loved the warmth and the breath and the closeness of people reading. Do you love being read to? And one of my most enduring memories is in 1999, Mary reading to me and the children down near Manly Beach "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone." Isn't that a great book? I still love being close to someone reading to me. But I wouldn't give up the technology, because it's allowed me to lead a great life.

Of course, talking books for the blind predated all this technology. After all, the long-playing record was developed in the early 1930s, and now we put talking books on CDs using the digital access system known as DAISY. But when I'm reading with synthetic voices, I love to come home and read a racy novel with a real voice.

Now there are still barriers in front of we people with disabilities. Many websites we can't read using JAWS and the other technologies. Websites are often very visual, and there are all these sorts of graphs that aren't labeled and buttons that aren't labeled, and that's why the World Wide Web Consortium 3, known as W3C, has developed worldwide standards for the Internet. And we want all Internet users or Internet site owners to make their sites compatible so that we persons without vision can have a level playing field. There are other barriers brought about by our laws. For example, Australia, like about one third of the world's countries, has copyright exceptions which allow books to be brailled or read for we blind persons. But those books can't travel across borders. For example, in Spain, there are a 100,000 accessible books in Spanish. In Argentina, there are 50,000. In no other Latin American country are there more than a couple of thousand. But it's not legal to transport the books from Spain to Latin America. There are hundreds of thousands of accessible books in the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia, etc., but they can't be transported to the 60 countries in our world where English is the first and the second language. And remember I was telling you about Harry Potter. Well, because we can't transport books across borders, there had to be separate versions read in all the different English-speaking countries: Britain, United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand all had to have separate readings of Harry Potter.

And that's why, next month in Morocco, a meeting is taking place between all the countries. It's something that a group of countries and the World Blind Union are advocating, a cross-border treaty so that if books are available under a copyright exception and the other country has a copyright exception, we can transport those books across borders and give life to people, particularly in developing countries, blind people who don't have the books to read. I want that to happen.

(Applause)

My life has been extraordinarily blessed with marriage and children and certainly interesting work to do, whether it be at the University of Sydney Law School, where I served a term as dean, or now as I sit on the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, in Geneva. I've indeed been a very fortunate human being.

I wonder what the future will hold. The technology will advance even further, but I can still remember my mum saying, 60 years ago, "Remember, darling, you'll never be able to read the print with your fingers." I'm so glad that the interaction between braille transcribers, volunteer readers and passionate inventors, has allowed this dream of reading to come true for me and for blind people throughout the world.

I'd like to thank my researcher Hannah Martin, who is my slide clicker, who clicks the slides, and my wife, Professor Mary Crock, who's the light of my life, is coming on to collect me. I want to thank her too.

I think I have to say goodbye now. Bless you. Thank you very much.

(Applause) Yay! (Applause) Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. (Applause)

英语演讲稿 篇八

Everybody Can Help The Environment

we all know famous indian poet once said, "life is given to us, and we earn it by giving it." as the saying goes, nature is given to us, and we earn it by contributing to it. however, most people nowadays just want to ask for more from the nature. in fact, they do very little contribution to the nature. therefore, the environment around us is becoming worse and worse.

do you often use batteries? then do you know it takes 50 times more energy to make them than they produce? and just one simple battery can pollute as much water as a person can drink in his whole life. the facts and figures are amazing. so would you please try to use batteries only when it is necessary? if possible, give the used ones to the recycling companies so that they will be made into new ones and won’t be able to pollute the environment any more. sometimes we become complacent when it comes to recycling, but when you speak in terms of actual facts and figures that everybody can understand, people become much clearer about the problem.

we, as school students, can also join in recycling activities to protect the environment. for example, our class set up a recycling center beside the back door, it is very useful. it is used to collect the waste paper and plastic bottles. in the past, our classmates used to throw all of these into the trashcan. at the very beginning of this collecting……

英语演讲稿 篇九

In this petitive society it is essential to know how to sell yourself in order to get the job you want. That means you must be able to market your best features and present yourself in the best light. After all, you never get a second chance to make a first impression.

There are several things you can do to project a good image in an interview. First of all, look like a winner. Dress conservatively and well, and youll look like youre going to the top. Second, municate clearly. Consider each question carefully and respond with total honesty. Remember to make eye contact and maintain good posture. You need to look attentive but also at ease. Third, have a positive and assertive attitude. Its important to appear confident of your ability and optimistic about your future. Finally, be prepared. Present a professional resume and be ready to explain everything in detail.

By following the advice above, you are bound to make a good impression on potential employers. Then you will be able to choose the best opportunity for you and take that first step towards success.

英语演讲稿 篇十

On my birthday two years ago, many special things happened on me. And i would remember them forever.

That morning, I rode my bike to school happily as usual. On my way to the classroom, I saw some of my classmates. But when they saw me, they rushed away. That made me confused. Because they would talk to me or play jokes on me before. But it was strange today.

When i came into the classroom, i found the atmosphere was quite strange.

Everybody looked at me and laughed loudly. Suddenly they all said in good order,“happy birthday to you!” Then they began to sing “happy birthday to you~~~~~~” that made me moved. I never told anyone about my birthday, how did they know? i believed they must have done a lot of things. At that moment, i found nothing to say but thanks instead!

After school, a thing ing as a surprise happened on me on my way back home. when i was riding suddenly a crowed of people rushed out to stopped my bike.I recogized them at once. They were my senior classmates. They all lained to me,“why dont you tell us about your birthday? dont you fear that we will let you stand treat? this time you owe us.” Then each of them gave a gift and a card with best wishes to me. I was deeply moved again. I suggested having a dinner together. But they all refused because of the time. Then they left me saying we would ask you to pay us another day!

When i got back home,I thought of everything happened today. Suddenly i felt so happy because i had such great friends around me. I thanked them from the bottom of my heart. I would value the precious friendship forever!

I have so many feelings through that special day. The only rose without thorns in the world is friendship. A true friend is someone who reaches for your hand and touches your heart. Truly great friends are hard to find, difficult to leave, and impossible to forget. One friend in a lifetime is much, two are many, three are hardly possible. Stick to make friends, forlife without friends is like life on a desert island. To find one real friend in a lifetime is good fortune, to keep him is a blessing.

Thank you for your attention!

译文

两年前我过生日时,有很多特殊的事情发生在我身上。我会永远记住他们。

那天早晨,我像往常一样骑着我的自行车去学校。在我去的路上教室里,我看到了我的一些同学。但当他们看见我的时候,他们就跑了。这让我感到困惑。因为他们会跟我说,或在我面前开玩笑。但这天很奇怪。

当我走进教室的时候,我发现气氛很奇怪。

每个人都看着我,大声笑。突然他们都说了很好的顺序,“祝你生日快乐!“然后他们开始唱“你~~~~~~”让我生日快乐感动。我从来没有告诉过任何人关于我的生日,他们怎样明白?我相信他们必须是做了很多事情。在那一刻,我发现没有什么能够说,但感谢!

放学后,一件事情发生在我身上的一个惊喜发生在我回家的路上。当我骑着突然人群中冲出来拦住了我的自行车。我在一次重要。他们是我的高中同学。他们都抱怨我,“你为什么不告诉我你的生日吗?难道你不担心我们会让你站在你的立场上?这一次,你欠我们的,“然后他们每个人都给了我一份礼物和一张卡片,以最完美的祝愿送给我。我又被深深地感动了。我推荐一齐吃晚饭。但他们都拒绝了,因为时光。然后,他们离开我说,我们会要求你支付我们的另一天!

当我回到家里,我想到这天发生的一切。突然我感到很高兴,因为我有这样伟大的朋友在我身边。我从心底感谢他们。我会珍惜这珍贵的友谊!

我有那么多的感情透过那特殊的日子。世上唯一没有荆棘的玫瑰就是友谊。一个真正的朋友是一个向你伸手,触动你心灵的人。真正伟大的朋友都很难找到,很难离开,而不可能忘记。一生中的一个朋友是很多的,有三个是不多的,个是不可能的。坚持做朋友,因为没有朋友就像生活在荒岛上。一生中找到一个真正的朋友是福气,要留着他是一种福气。

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