㈠ 关于介绍广东的英语作文60词。速度!!!
GD is my hometown which lies in the southeast of China, and it is a charming city with a long history and wonderful culture. Facing the sea, the climate of GD is wet and hot. With the development of our country, GD develops fastly, and more and more people move here to find a jod, as a student, i will do my best to study hard in order to make a contribution to my hometown.
楼主我手打的啊啊 坚决不是复制的 我对英语还是有信回心的。答。
㈡ 广东高考英语作文
额,如果你的完形填空是错一两个,语法填空是错一两个,阅读错4个以内内,还有那个(容ABCDEF)那题是全对的话,而你的作文都是及格分数线时,那就表明是你的作文水平有待提高了。可以多看文章,对积累好的句型等等
㈢ 一篇介绍广东中山的英语作文
翻译
Do you know Zhongshan?
Zhongshan folk art is rich, including Zhongshan folk songs, dragon lion he Feng, Huangpu piaose. Zhongshan is a folk village, a popular folk song, high Tong Zeng, big song, Hakka folk songs, crane, Gu sister song, Yugu, dragon boat, minor children songs, among them with salt and high Tong the most characteristic, this two kinds of folk song has a history of over 300 years.
Special food of Zhongshan is very rich: Tsui Heung Yuen almond cake, Shiqi pigeon, Sha Tin flavor, Nam Long ck congee, hybrid three yellow chicken, Shaxi braised pork, God bay pineapple, Xiaolan chrysanthemum chrysanthemum banquet dishes, fried fish balls and Huangpu preserved meat
㈣ 介绍广东美食的一篇英语作文
DUMPLING
㈤ 急求1篇介绍广东的英语作文
The capital is Guangzhou. The island of Hainan, once part of Guangdong, became a separate province in 1988. The hilly coastline is the longest of any province ;the only real breaks to the interior are at Shantou on the Han River delta and at Guangzhou at the Pearl River delta. Inland transportation is good; before the 1950s water routes predominated, but now railroads and highways have taken over the freighting.
Between 15% and 20% of the province is under cultivation, primarily in the delta areas, which are among the most populous in China. There the climate is subtropical and the rainfall heavy most of the year. Two or three crops are generally harvested. Guangdong is the country's leading procer of sugarcane; rice and silk are other major crops, although the silk instry is no longer as important as it once was. Other commercial crops include hemp, tobacco, tea, tropical and subtropical fruits, and peanuts. Fishing in Guangdong accounts for about 20% of China's catch.
Guangdong has tungsten, iron, manganese, titanium, tin, lead, uranium, and bismuth deposits. Shale oil deposits are found in the south, and there is offshore drilling for oil; the province has several oil refineries. There are also lumber and paper mills, and food-processing, printing, cement, and fertilizer plants. The large handicraft instry, which once thrived on European trade, has dwindled, but the apparel and electronics instries grew significantly in the late 20th cent.
Guangzhou, an “” economic city, is still the heart of the province, with a great range of manufactures. Zhanjiang, another “open” city, has grown significantly e to foreign trade and investment since the late 1970s. Three of the country's first four special economic zones were established in Guangdong, at Shantou, Shenzhen, and Zhuhai. In early 1990s the province accounted for two thirds of China's exports; its portion has slowly decreased as economic development has increased in other provinces.
㈥ 求一篇关于介绍广东的英语作文,速度要快
Guangdong is a province on the southern coast of People's Republic of China. The province is also known by an alternative English name, the Canton Province. It overtook Henan and Sichuan to become the most populous province in China in January 2005, registering 79 million permanent residents and 31 million migrants who lived in the province for at least six months. The provincial capital of Guangzhou and economic hub Shenzhen are among the most populous and important cities in China.
Guangdong faces the South China Sea to the south and has a total of 4,300 km of coastline. Leizhou Peninsula is on the southwestern end of the province. There are a few inactive volcanoes on Leizhou Peninsula. The Pearl River Delta is the convergent point of three upstream rivers: the East River, North River, and West River. The river delta is filled with hundreds of small islands. The province is geographically separated from the north by a few mountain ranges collectively called the Southern Mountain Range (南岭). The highest peak in the province is Shikengkong 1,902 meters above sea level.
Notable attractions include Danxia Mountain, Yuexiu Hill in Guangzhou, Star Lake and the Seven Star Crags, Dinghu Mountain, and the Zhongshan Sun Wen Memorial Park for Sun Yat-sen in Zhongshan.
㈦ 2017年的广州市中考英语作文题目是什么
Happiness is a state of mind,happiness is not from the object,it is not a thing.Happy is not a chase - you do not need to firmly grasp it,because it's in your heart,you have got it.But this does not mean you do not need to contribute their energies to it.Happy like a party,you sit down to enjoy the fun - but only you want it,you are ready for it until lightly come prepared to allow himself happy bar!Let the good place bar
㈧ 介绍广州的英语作文
可参考下文
Guangzhou is in the south and one of
the largest cities of China.The third longest river,Zhujiang River,runs
through the city.The Weather in Guangzhou is different from that of many
cities in the north.It is warm in winter and quite hot in summer with lot of
rains in spring and summer.There are many interesting places in the city worth
seeing,such as the statue of five goats,Guangzhou tower,Guangdong Museum and
Baiyun Mountain.The best part for tourist in Guangzhou is food.The cake of
Guangzhou is the most famous food in China.The people of Guangzhou are very
friendly and diligent,which you can see if you come to visit Guangzhou.
望采纳谢谢
㈨ 介绍广东的英语作文
The capital is Guangzhou. On coastal islands and adjacent mainland territories are Hong Kong and Macao. The island of Hainan, once part of Guangdong, became a separate province in 1988. The hilly coastline is the longest of any province (constituting more than one fifth of the country's total coastline); the only real breaks to the interior are at Shantou on the Han River delta and at Guangzhou at the Pearl River delta. Inland transportation is good; before the 1950s water routes predominated, but now railroads and highways have taken over the freighting.
Between 15% and 20% of the province is under cultivation, primarily in the delta areas, which are among the most populous in China. There the climate is subtropical and the rainfall heavy most of the year. Two or three crops are generally harvested. Guangdong is the country's leading procer of sugarcane; rice and silk are other major crops, although the silk instry is no longer as important as it once was. Other commercial crops include hemp, tobacco, tea, tropical and subtropical fruits, and peanuts. Fishing in Guangdong accounts for about 20% of China's catch.
Guangdong has tungsten, iron, manganese, titanium, tin, lead, uranium, and bismuth deposits. Shale oil deposits are found in the south, and there is offshore drilling for oil; the province has several oil refineries. There are also lumber and paper mills, and food-processing, printing, cement, and fertilizer plants. The large handicraft instry, which once thrived on European trade, has dwindled, but the apparel and electronics instries grew significantly in the late 20th cent.
Guangzhou, an “” economic city, is still the heart of the province, with a great range of manufactures. Zhanjiang, another “open” city, has grown significantly e to foreign trade and investment since the late 1970s. Three of the country's first four special economic zones were established in Guangdong, at Shantou, Shenzhen, and Zhuhai. In early 1990s the province accounted for two thirds of China's exports; its portion has slowly decreased as economic development has increased in other provinces. The return of Hong Kong to China in the late 1990s, however, has spurred additional growth in areas of Guangdong near the Hong Kong border.
The Cantonese constitute the bulk of Guangdong's population, which is non-Mandarin speaking. The people of the province are known around the world; one half of the overseas Chinese are from Guangdong province.
The region, originally settled by Miao, Li, and Yao tribes, continually attracted migrating groups from the north; some (notably the Hakka) retained their own languages. Guangdong came under Chinese suzerainty ring the unification under the Ch'in dynasty (c.211 B.C.), and was more firmly absorbed ring the Han dynasty. Guangdong was the main scene of China's early foreign contact, chiefly through Guangzhou; there was trade with the west ring the Roman Empire, trade with the Arabs ring the T'ang dynasty, and European trade that originated ring the 16th cent. with the Portuguese. Guangdong has been a center of revolutionary activity; there the Kuomintang was formed (1912) under the leadership of Sun Yat-sen, and there Chiang Kai-shek began his drive (1920s) for the unification of the country.