優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿15篇
好的演講稿可以引導(dǎo)聽眾,使聽眾能更好地理解演講的內(nèi)容。在快速變化和不斷變革的新時(shí)代,用到演講稿的地方越來越多,怎么寫演講稿才能避免踩雷呢?下面是小編收集整理的優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿,僅供參考,歡迎大家閱讀。
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿1
We've all been taught that we should help people. It is the right thing to do and will make us popular with others. It may even win us favors in return. However, we must be realistic. We can't say yes to every request. If we did, we would fail or go crazy for sure. Sometimes we simply don't have the time to help. In this case, we must know how to say no politely. When we need to say no, here is one method we can try. First, we should tell the truth. If we really can't do something, we should just say so. Second, we should remember to refuse requests politely. We must communicate clearly, but must also be sincere and sympathetic. A true friend will understand. Finally, we must not feel guilty about saying no. Sometimes refusing others is the right thing to do. It can save ourselves, and them, a lot of trouble. In short, we cannot please everyone all the time. Refusing favors is a part of life.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿2
The longer I live, the more I realize the impact of attitude on life.
Attitude to me is more important than facts.
It is more important than the past,than education,than money,than circumstances,than failures,than successes,than what the other people think, say,or do.
It is more important than the appearance,the giftedness or skill.
It will make or break a company,a church ,a home.
The remarkable thing is we have a choice every day, regarding the attitude we will embrace for that day.
We cannot change our cannot change the fact that people will act in acertain cannot change the inevitable.
The only thing we can do is play on the one stage we that is our attitudes.
I am convinced that life is ten percent what happens to me ,and ninety percent how I react to so it is with you.
We are in charge of our attitudes.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿3
In the matter of courage we all have our limits. There never was a hero who did not have his bounds. I suppose it may be said of Nelson and all the others whose courage has been advertised that there came times in their lives when their bravery knew it had come to its limit.
I have found mine a good many times. Sometimes this was expected--often it was unexpected. I know a man who is not afraid to sleep with a rattle-snake, but you could not get him to sleep with a safety-razor.
I never had the courage to talk across a long, narrow room. I should be at the end of the room facing all the audience. If I attempt to talk across a room I find myself turning this way and that, and thus at alternate periods I have part of the audience behind me. You ought never to have any part of the audience behind you; you never can tell what they are going to do.
I'll sit down.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿4
my name is richard daphne. i have over 30 years in different sizebusinesses, with many ups and downs. my question is for do you feel has been your biggest challenge, most exciting success? mrs.
as an entrepreneur you try to balance yourown time, energy, focus, especially when you think big. you sometimes have to slow yourself down. so, to not -- to impose thediscipline on yourself to enable you to achieve the growth youwant, especially in the early days, you have limited people. you arejust launching a product or a service. you hopefully feel thatearly momentum. when you are an entrepreneur you have to be a visionary. we also have to be an secured her. successfulentrepreneurs are both. they dream big. they think big. they also are highly pragmatic, able to execute at the task at times there is an imbalance. i think for anyone to besuccessful, they have to reconcile those things. ultimately we were talking about it, in terms of recruitment, you are as good as your people. investing in your teams, your employees, making sureyou have cultivated a group that complements you, that pushesyou , that will enable you to succeed. for me, success that is scaled and done tremendously well is because they have a great team and great people.
thank you for doing this work today. we are a marketing publicengagement firm. we are a serviced a bold veteran small business. we have been based in northern virginia for many years. virginia is the number one state for veteran owned businesses. our right to pursue the american dream is something i hold dear to my heart.i'm curious, i'm sure you have had the opportunity to meet greatentrepreneurs. is there one story that is the most inspirational story?
it is been incredible to hear so many ng the two years prior campaigning, traveling around the country. one of the unique things about this experience, my father was running for president. people would come up to youwherever you were and tell you their stories. with suchtremendous detail, and tell you of their hardest challenges, and share with you things in a way they neither -- never would would never open themselves up to you in the same way theydo during the process of a campaign. now today, being part of this administration. i feel blessed for the candor in which people share their ideas and personal stories. linda and i were together in baltimore just days after the inauguration. we did a roundtable with small business owners, predominantly female, hosted by the national urban league. one of those women who actually i brought her to the white house a few months later is named lisa phillips. she had a small's ness. she told me her storyand i think -- we were all crying. it was so amazing. she started out homeless. she is now engaged. this spring she got her mastersdegree. she has a small but thriving small business and party planning. she is volunteering with homeless youth in baltimore. so this is -- these types of stories forever change you. it is unbelievable to hear the purser variants, the grant, the energy. i know she is going to make an enormous impact not just in her business but her community. we talk about small business, how it is going to grow our economy and benefit american workers, butthe amount of philanthropy being done on the local level by small business is a norm is enormous. i'm sure each of you can share your own stories just about how you are able to give act and you do in such a tremendous way. lisa story was moving to me.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿5
Thank you very much, Margaret, for that very generous introduction.
First, let me say congratulations to our graduates. Welcome back to our alumni. Good afternoon to everyone – colleagues and friends, and family members, loved ones, and our most special guest – our eminent speaker. It’s a pleasure to address you this afternoon and to offer a few reflections as I approach the end of my first year as president.
I realize, however, that I’m literally the last thing standing between you and the speech that you’ve all actually come here to hear. So, while I can’t promise to be mesmerizingly eloquent, I can at least promise to be mercifully brief.
We gather this afternoon buoyed by the aspirations of our graduates – some 7,100 people who have distinguished themselves in nearly every field and every discipline imaginable. We welcome them into the venerable ranks of our alumni, and we send them forth into a world that is very much in need of both their minds and their hearts.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿6
i've had an interesting experience. i'm an entrepreneur, having started my own business, also worked in the context of a family business that was highly entrepreneurial.i've had both, working in a large family business, that grew to be arather large business. i think for me, one of the challenges wasmanaging the competing demands of raising a family and, and running a business, working in a family business. and then politics got layered on top of that. then i got pregnant with my thirdchild in the midst of that. one of the things, there is no right answer. people ask about balance a lot. i don't think you can plan for balance. you can structure your schedule to avoid worktravel, coming home and having an event or you have to be can manage things like that. we are one kid illness away from losing balance. there's no way you can plan for certain things. i have found every time i think a challenge is large and will behard to overcome that has been put in my path, if you grindthrough it, you look back in retrospect and it feels much more manageable than it was in the moment. this perspective, staying in the moment, keeping a laser focus on what your priorities are. i tell people not to architect their life for balance, but aligned with what their priorities are. and fully measure yourself againstpriorities to ensure you are where you needed to be in the long term. give yourself a little slack in the short term. i will say as anadministration, we are focused on thinking about how weempower the american working family and empower people to achieve a balance through policies around making child caremore affordable and accessible, advocating strongly for paid family leave. to support the reality of of the dual income modernworking family. thinking through policies that support the family is informed by what i have seen and what i have witnessed.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿7
During my brief time in office, our world has reminded us daily of the necessity and the urgency of our work.
We’ve witnessed the coarsening of public discourse and the volatility of national and international affairs.
We’ve mourned when gun violence has cut future short, and gatherings of the faithful – Jewish, Muslim, and Christian – have ended in bloodshed.
We’ve continued to confront the existential threat posed by climate change, and we’ve reeled as extreme weather has destroyed homes and claimed lives.
And we’ve grown increasingly aware of the scourge of sexual harassment and sexual assault, and have struggled to consider how institutions, Harvard among them, can prevent and address behavior that threatens individuals and weakens communities.
To be sure, there is much in this world that rightly troubles us. But there’s even more that gives us cause for hope.
And it’s that spirit of hope – the willingness both to see the world as it is, and to consider how we can help make it better – that is in many ways the spirit that defines this university and I believe joins us all together.
Since I took office on July 1, I’ve seen the value of both knowledge and education at work in the world. I’ve seen the good being done by our faculty and our students, by our alumni, and our staff, and our friends. And I’ve seen expressions of compassion, and patience, and kindness, and wisdom that have moved me deeply.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿8
good afternoon. i'm the president and ceo of pda drywall. we are based in raleigh, north carolina. one of the biggest setbacks in the last 12 years has been tax regulations. as we are embarking on tax forms discussions, what are you going to do for small businesses to help change those regulations in favor of small businesses?
many of the same things we have been discussing,comprehensive tax reform. mr. gary co. in the here has beenspearheading this charge at the white house. you can definitely pick his brain about tax reform. it is high on his mind these ring the corporate rate, encouraging business to grow,encouraging businesses based here to stay here, bring theircapital back that has been trapped overseas will have anenormously positive impact within our country and free updollars that can be reinvested. in conjunction with regulatoryreform, we have come out of the gate swinging. it's a major focus. my father's particular sensitivity to this issue is havingbeen a successful person in business himself. he understands thelimitations, whether businesses he was looking to buy or grow, dealing with suppliers and smaller businesses that services companies. he very much understands how the regulatory environment, while important has grown to a place where it is the unintended consequences is stifling entrepreneurial spirit. we are going to bring that back. we have started doing it. tax reform is going to be incredibly important for every american. we are optimistic about those things. and continued progress.
i would like to add, small businesses will say to me any tax reduction will be great. just let me know what it is. what is going to be my percentage. tell me what the rate is going to be so i can plan. without fail, every single one of those businesses tell me they will take that money and reinvest it in their business and hire more people. that will grow our economy. we will see that growth when we see tax rates go down. especially those in thellcs, all that money flows through. you know exactly how that works. we are working on it.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿9
So many people under estimate the power and importance of a smile, that simple little facial expression characterized by an upward curving of the corners ofthe mouth.
A smile has many meanings: pleasure, friendliness, welcome, amusement, and many more; and it is part of a universal body language that doesn’t need any extrainter pretation.
Plus a smile, with all its simplicity and beauty, can be a very important factor in many aspects of our lives:
You fall in love with a new country you visit because its people greet you with a welcoming smile everywhere you go; other countries you just don’t like even though they might have more history, nature, entertainment and what not because their people don’t seem so friendly or accepting.
You feel like buying from a certain store when the vendor welcomes you in with asmile, sometimes even if you wouldn’t initially have bought anything; and in other stores, even though they have exactly what you need or better, you decide to walk away because the vendor doesn’t look welcoming at all.
You want to give a waiter a good tip when he serves you with a smile, even if the food turns out not that good; on the other hand, sometimes you’ll have some of the best food ever, but you won’t feel like giving the waiter a tip, even if you do, because he was grumpy.
More and more examples from our everyday life show how much a simple smile can change everything.
Forever engraved in my mind will be the smiling faces of the people of Thailand, the friendly pizza delivery boy, the welcoming supermarket vendor, the nice cashier at the bank, … etc.
It is these smiles that keep me wanting to go back, and that keep us all wanting to go back; looking at it from another view, if we break it down using business sense, a smile is one of the most effective means to generate sales and develop customer loyalty.
On top of all that, a smile is a very simple and easy thing to do, so it amazes why no one bothers to do it, it not only makes the person in front of you better, but it also makes you feel better as well, and I’m not making this up,it has been psychologically proven.
Personally, I’d like to see more smiling faces in this world; in the airports when I enter a new country, in companies, government agencies, restaurants, hotels, banks,everywhere; and I think it is up to governments to campaign about this, and even make it obligatory in certain important places like airports, hospitals,hotels … etc.
Let’sall simply smile.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿10
i started a company called blueblood. this is for you. i created an online marketplace for professional truck drivers when they are in need of work to match with a motor carrier who needs a driver. we are just rolling out. my concern is the regulations. my concern is for all industries, what can we do with the regulationissued to help us through these phases?
you heard the president when he started off. he has rolled back already so many regulations to make it possible to move forward. he was only less than a dozen days in office when the executive order stated for every new regulation you want tocreate you've got to get rid of 2. i think that is bringing down theregulatory environment. i feel -- i hear the same message when i'mtouring the country. i'm visiting every district office. there's 68 of them. i hold business roundtables. the regulatoryenvironment is clearly one that is crippling a lot of small businesses as well as large businesses. i believe that it is a trillion dollars a year a cost for all businesses to comply with regulations. that is a time of money. a little example, just now i was in portland and seattle, and alaska. then i came back tomilwaukee. when i was at a small brewery, the owner said theregulations that bothers him, let me give you one example. he saidi want to launch a new beer. we had the body in the formula. hesent in the label and it was kicked back. the label was wrong. we resubmitted. it kicked back again. i finally found out it was a,missing in the text on the label of the description of the product. we were delayed six months launching our product. you are a small business person trying to reclaim that six e regulations we don't need.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿11
老師們,同學(xué)們,我親愛的戰(zhàn)友們:
大家好!
今天我們齊聚一堂,我們即將奔赴戰(zhàn)場(chǎng)。此時(shí)此刻,讓我想起了前天看的電視劇康熙王朝,講到施瑯即將出兵攻打中國(guó)臺(tái)灣,出發(fā)前,命所有的士兵大聲吶喊,要喊出氣勢(shì),這還不曾發(fā)炮,就要在氣勢(shì)上壓倒敵人——中國(guó)臺(tái)灣的鄭經(jīng)。那么,大家說,施瑯要的是什么?
好,精氣神。那么,今天,我們要的是什么?對(duì),依然是,精氣神。那你能同我一起吶喊嗎?好,來來來。我們要喊出我們橋中人的氣魄,展現(xiàn)出橋中高三人的精氣神:我們,我們是同一戰(zhàn)壕的勇士;我們,我們是橋中的驕傲!
今天,在這個(gè)莊嚴(yán)而又難忘的時(shí)刻,作為一線教師,面對(duì)全體同學(xué),面對(duì)學(xué)校、年級(jí)的領(lǐng)導(dǎo),我們莊嚴(yán)承諾——我們?nèi)w教師仍將會(huì)一如既往地踏實(shí)工作;我們會(huì)刻苦鉆研,耐心輔導(dǎo),通力合作,隨時(shí)關(guān)注高考動(dòng)態(tài),采集高考最新信息,不漏掉每一個(gè)問題,不放棄你們中的任何一個(gè)人。請(qǐng)你們記住,在這87天里,我們?nèi)w教師將時(shí)刻與你們同在,以最優(yōu)秀的教學(xué)質(zhì)量、最無私的投入、最真摯的情感與你們同舟共濟(jì)!永遠(yuǎn)做你們最堅(jiān)強(qiáng)、最可信賴的后盾!同學(xué)們,你知道嗎?我的喜悅來自哪里?對(duì),你們的改變!當(dāng)你們真正地做到了“靜下心,坐得住,潛心學(xué)習(xí)”的時(shí)候,那是我最快樂的時(shí)候。20xx年2月27日,正月初九,我們開始上課了,我滿懷信心地步入我的課堂,踏上三尺講臺(tái)——在我的內(nèi)心,這就是我的殿堂,我的舞臺(tái)?僧(dāng)我講得興趣正濃時(shí),有些同學(xué)嘻嘻哈哈的表情、左顧右盼的尋找他的目標(biāo)的'時(shí)候,我的心很是糾結(jié),Duang的一下:是我講得不好,亦或是你全然沒有大戰(zhàn)在即的意識(shí)?下課了,我在沉思,自己哪里備課不夠充分,我到底該如何改進(jìn)?我到底該如何真正地吸引你的注意力——哪怕只有20分鐘?自習(xí)課上,當(dāng)我一次又一次地把你從睡夢(mèng)中死死地拽出來的時(shí)候,我又一次陷入沉思中,我知道了,原來真的是你,自己把自己丟棄!是你,放棄了自己!曾經(jīng)的你,踏入橋中時(shí),信誓旦旦,你的豪言壯到底去了哪里?曾經(jīng)的你,穩(wěn)坐桌前,潛心讀書,我到底還能再次看到這種場(chǎng)景嗎?你們說,能不能? (能!)是啊,在這短短的87天里,我們?nèi)詫?duì)你充滿期待,期待你的改變!你的改變,我們銘記于心。
那一天,我看到了這樣一個(gè)場(chǎng)景:高三4班,一個(gè)還曾在上學(xué)期的課堂上,東張西望,“左右逢源”的大男孩,今天,靜靜地坐在課桌旁,認(rèn)認(rèn)真真地讀完型填空,很負(fù)責(zé)任的寫下了一個(gè)又一個(gè)答案;自習(xí)課上,我再也沒有見到他“只看不動(dòng)筆”的情形,相反,他邊思索邊計(jì)算,他就是高三(4)班的吳勝旭;我這還有一個(gè)他,他不喜歡英語,更不喜歡我這個(gè)英語老師,這是我的感覺,前幾天,他居然拿出了英文詞典,逐個(gè)查閱單詞,我笑了,笑得好甜好美,在心底樂開了花!他就是陳興。同學(xué)們!我要告訴你的就是你點(diǎn)點(diǎn)滴滴的改變真的能帶給我們無限的快樂!我堅(jiān)信,在這87天里,我們一定能收獲滿滿的幸福與快樂!
同學(xué)們,在你的身邊,我的眼前,有許許多多橋中人的驕傲:有鍥而不舍,永不放棄的李子闖、盧學(xué)文、劉曉彤、趙胤、李帥、陳俊瑤、蔡夢(mèng)穎、馬藝書;還有抓緊一切時(shí)間,全心投入到學(xué)習(xí)中的劉丹陽、夏朝陽、王天賜、周建、楊世光、賈麗娜、付宇成、孫穎、候崢;他們,他們就是我們的榜樣!我們的榜樣,就在身邊,就在眼前!所以,我要說,只要你想,只要你腳踏實(shí)地地去做,奇跡就會(huì)發(fā)生!我相信,你們87天無悔的付出一定能帶來奇跡!
20xx年3月9日,也就是前天周一的晚自習(xí)值班,離下課還有兩分鐘,我抬頭往下環(huán)顧,一秒、兩秒、三秒……一個(gè)小男孩看了我一眼,又快速地低下了頭;一秒、兩秒、三秒……又有一個(gè)大男孩看了我一眼,也低下了頭。除此之外,無一人抬頭,大家仍埋頭看書寫字。同學(xué)們,你知道我要說什么嗎!我要說,這就是我們想要看到的學(xué)習(xí)氛圍“靜下心,坐得住,潛心學(xué)習(xí)”。
這,就是我們橋中人想要的氛圍;這就是我們橋中人想要的改變!一個(gè)又一個(gè)的改變,一個(gè)又一個(gè)的高三勇士,你們真真的是我們的親學(xué)生,所以我要問:親,你準(zhǔn)備好了嗎?(準(zhǔn)備好了)
你們就是橋中的勇士!
有勇士在,87天,我們風(fēng)雨同舟,一起走過!
有勇士在,87天,我們引吭高歌,燃燒火熱的激情,奮斗不止,拼搏不休!最后,祝愿全體同學(xué)心想事成,金榜題名!祝愿我的戰(zhàn)友健康、快樂、幸福!祝愿我們的橋中更加美好!
謝謝大家!
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿12
I was convinced that the only thing I wanted to do, ever, was to write novels. However, my parents, both of whom came from impoverished backgrounds and neither of whom had been to college, took the view that my overactive imagination was an amusing personal quirk that would never pay a mortgage, or secure a pension. I know that the irony strikes with the force of a cartoon anvil, now.
So they hoped that I would take a vocational degree; I wanted to study English Literature. A compromise was reached that in retrospect satisfied nobody, and I went up to study Modern Languages. Hardly had my parents’ car rounded the corner at the end of the road than I ditched German and scuttled off down the Classics corridor.
I cannot remember telling my parents that I was studying Classics; they might well have found out for the first time on graduation day. Of all the subjects on this planet, I think they would have been hard put to name one less useful than Greek mythology when it came to securing the keys to an executive bathroom.
I would like to make it clear, in parenthesis, that I do not blame my parents for their point of view. There is an expiry date on blaming your parents for steering you in the wrong direction; the moment you are old enough to take the wheel, responsibility lies with you. What is more, I cannot criticise my parents for hoping that I would never experience poverty. They had been poor themselves, and I have since been poor, and I quite agree with them that it is not an ennobling experience. Poverty entails fear, and stress, and sometimes depression; it means a thousand petty humiliations and hardships. Climbing out of poverty by your own efforts, that is indeed something on which to pride yourself, but poverty itself is romanticised only by fools.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿13
One of the legacies of receiving a world-class education is the sobering awareness of the inadequacy of our knowledge. Some years ago, one of the people I admire and respect most architect is Renzo Piano just turned 70 and I asked him what felt like. He said that, as much as he had thought about and prepared for that moment, it still came as a shock. Now I can attest to that feeling of shock but more than anything he said it made him feel that our proper lifespan should be 210 years, 70 to learn, 70 to do, and 70 to teach the next generation.
This lovely description captures an elementary fact of life: a good life has the feeling that we’re learning more and more as we go. And that we could do even better if we just learned a bit more. I hope that you are fortunate enough to carry that spirit of life with you and we must hope together that it continues to define this nation and the world. In the centuries ahead, on behalf of Columbia University, I extend to all our graduates the centennial class of 20xx warmest k you!
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿14
I am for the robust and free exchange of ideas, as essential to the mission of a great university as it is to the health of our democracy.
I am for a world where we welcome the immigrant, the poor, and the forgotten; we did [do] not shut them out or silence them; a world where showing empathy and understanding is considered the true hallmark of success, of a life well-lived.
That is what I am for.
Yale’s mission says, in part, that we are "committed to improving the world today and for future generations." That commitment does not end at graduation.
Soon you will leave Yale and, as Robert Penn Warren, who studied and taught at Yale, wrote, "You will go into the convulsion of the world, out of history and into history."
Indeed, you’ll go into history and make history.
優(yōu)秀經(jīng)典英語演講稿15
Good morning, everybody!
In this world, there is one thing that is very fair to everybody, whether you are a male or female, young or old, rich or poor. Does anybody know what it is called?
is time. The topic I am going to present to you today is called "Treasure Every Minute".
The clock is running. Make the most of today.
To realize the value of ONE YEAR, ask a student who failed a grade.
To realize the value of ONE MONTH, ask a mother who gave birth to a premature baby.
To realize the value of ONE WEEK, ask the editor of a weekly newspaper.
To realize the value of ONE HOUR, ask the lovers who are waiting to meet.
To realize the value of ONE MINUTE, ask a person who missed the train.
To realize the value of ONE SECOND, ask a person who just avoided an accident.
To realize the value of ONE MILLISECOND, ask the person who won a silver medal in the Olympics.
Treasure every moment that you have! And treasure it more because you shared it with someone special, special enough to spend your time with.
And remember that time waits for no one. Yesterday is history. Tomorrow is amystery. Today is a gift. That's why it's called the present!! The clock is running. Make the most of today.
Good luck, everybody!
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