Think for yourself,and don't be limited by what others expect of youèµ°èªå·±çè·¯ 让å«äººè¯´å»å§ï¼ä½ä¸ï¼ All happy families are like one another; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way. ï¼Leo Tolstoyï¼ä¿å½æå¦å®¶æå°æ¯æ³°ï¼ææ幸ç¦ç家åºé½ç¸ä¼¼ï¼èæ¯ä¸ªä¸å¹¸ç家åºåä¸åã All for one, one for all.
人人为æï¼æ为人人ãââ [æ³] Dumas pére大仲马
Other men live to eat, while I eat to live.
å«äººä¸ºé£èçåï¼æ为çåèé£ãââ Socrates èæ ¼æåº
Easy come, easy go.
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亦æ失ã ââ Hazlitt赫æ¯ç¹
Love rules his kingdom without a sword.
ç±ï¼ç»æ²»äºä»ççå½ï¼ä¸ç¨ä¸æå©åãââ Herbert 赫伯ç¹
We soon believe what we desire.
æ们欲æä¸çä¸è¥¿ï¼æ们å¾å¿«å°±ä¿¡ä»¥ä¸ºçãââ Chaucerä¹å
The darkest hour is that before the dawn.
é»æåçæ¶åæ¯æé»æçãââ Fuller å¯å
The longest day has an end.
æé¾è¿çæ¥åä¹æ尽头ãââ Howell è´ºé¦å°
Living without an aim is like sailing without a compass.
çæ´»èæ ç®æ ï¼ç¹å¦èªæµ·ä¹æ æåéãââ J. Ruskin é²æ¯é
A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
æä¸çä¸åªé¸èäºæä¸ç两åªé¸ãââ Heywood å¸ä¼å¾·
One swallow does not make a summer.
ä¸çä¸æå¤ãââ Taverner 泰维纳
A man may lead a horse to the water, but he cannot make it drink.
ä¸ä¸ªäººå¯ä»¥æ马带å°æ²³è¾¹ï¼ä½ä»ä¸è½ä»¤å®é¥®æ°´ã ââ Heywood å¸ä¼å¾·
One cannot eat oneâs cake and have it.
ä¸ä¸ªäººä¸è½æä»çç³é¥¼åæä¹åè¿çå¨æä¸ã ââ Davies æ´ç»´æ¯
Time is money.
æ¶é´å°±æ¯éé±ãââ Benjamin Franklinå¯å
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Time and tide wait for no man.
æ¶é´ä¸ç人ãââ Scott æ¯ç§ç¹
There is no rose without a thorn.
没æç«ç°è±æ¯ä¸é¿åºçãââ Ray é·
Lookers-on see most of the game.
æè§è
æ¸
ãââ Smedley æ¯å¯è±
Beggars cannot be choosers.
è¡ä¹è
ä¸å¾æéæ©ãââ Heywood å¸ä¼å¾·
First catch your hare.
é¦å
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åï¼ç¶åæè½å®°ä¹ãââ Thackeray è¨å
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Victory wonât come to me unless I go to it.
èå©æ¯ä¸ä¼åæèµ°æ¥çï¼æå¿
é¡»èªå·±èµ°åèå©ãââ M. Moore ç©å°
A great man is always willing to be little.
ä¼å¤§ç人ç©æ»æ¯æ¿æå½å°äººç©çãââ R. W. Emerson ç±é»ç
Cowards die many times before their deaths.
æ¦å¤«å¨æªæ»ä¹åï¼å·²èº«åå¤æ¬¡æ»äº¡çææäºã ââ Julius Caesar å¯æ
Anything one man can imagine, other men can make real.
ä½å¡äººè½æ³è±¡å°çäºç©ï¼å¿
å®æ人è½å°å®å®ç°ã ââ Jules Verne å¡å°çº³
Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.
æ©ç¡æ©èµ·ä½¿äººå¥åº·ãå¯è£åèªæãââ Benjamin Franklin å¯å
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Life is just a series of trying to make up your mind.
çæ´»åªæ¯ç±ä¸ç³»åä¸å³å¿çåªåæææãââ T. Fuller å¯å
Goals determine what you are going to be.
ç®æ å³å®ä½ å°æ为为ä»ä¹æ ·ç人ãââ Julius Erving欧æ
All human wisdom is summed up in two words ?C wait and hope.
人类ææçæºæ
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åå¸æãââ Alexandre Dumas Pére大仲马ï¼æ³å½ä½å®¶ï¼
It is not enough to be industrious, so are the ants. What are you industrious for?
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å¤å³æ¯ä¸å¤çï¼èèä¹æ¯å¤å³çãè¦çä½ ä¸ºä»ä¹èå¤å³ãââ H. D. Thoreauæ¢ç½
You have to believe in yourself. Thatâs the secret of success.
人å¿
é¡»ç¸ä¿¡èªå·±ï¼è¿æ¯æåçç§è¯ãââ Charles Chaplinåå«æ
Nothing is more precious than independence and freedom.
没æä»ä¹æ¯ç¬ç«èªç±æ´å¯å®è´µçäºãââ [è¶å] Ho Chi Minhè¡å¿æ
I like the dreams of the future better than the history of the past.
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æè¿å»çåå²ï¼èè´åäºæªæ¥ç梦æ³ãââ T. Jefferson æ°å¼éï¼ç¾å½ç¬¬3ä»»æ»ç»ï¼
Money is round. It rolls away.
ååé±å¸ï¼æ»èµ°å®¹æãââ S. Aleichen é¿é·é¦
We are here to add what we can to life, not to get what we can from it.
æ们è¦å°½å¯è½ä¸ºçæ´»å¢å ä¸äºä¸è¥¿ï¼èä¸æ¯ä»ä¸ç´¢åä»ä¹ãââ William Osler 奥æ¯å
Life itself, without the assistance of colleges and universities, is becoming an advanced institution of learning.
没æå¦é¢å大å¦ç帮å©ï¼äººçæ¬èº«ä¹æ£å¨åæä¸æé«çå¦åºã ââ Thomas Alva Edison ç±è¿ªç
Work while you work;
Play while you play;
This is the way;
To be cheerful and gay.
å·¥ä½æ¶å·¥ä½ï¼
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è½»æ¾ä¸æ¬¢ä¹ãââ A. D. Stoddart æ¯éè¾¾ç¹
è±è¯å人åè¨
What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.
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ãââShakespeare
There is but one step from the sublime to the ridiculous.
å´é«ä¸èè°¬ä»
ä¸æ¥ä¹é¥ãââNapoleon
Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken.
å³ä½¿ææçä¸å®¶é½ä¸è´èµåï¼ä»ä»¬å¯è½ä¹éäºãââBertrand Russell
Sometimes the most urgent and vital thing you can possibly do is take a complete rest.
ææ¶åä½ è½åçæç´§æ¥éè¦çäºæ
å°±æ¯å½»åºä¼æ¯ãââAshleigh Brilliant
Little drops of water, little grains of sand, make the mighty ocean and the pleasant land.
æ»´æ»´å°æ°´ç ï¼é¢é¢å°æ²ç²ï¼ä¼å½¢æ浩ççæµ·æ´ä¸å®äººçåå°ãââJulia Carney
Even the weariest river winds somewhere safe to sea.
å³ä½¿æ¯æç²æ«çæ²³æµï¼åç»æ²æï¼ä¹ç»ä¼å®ç¶å
¥æµ·ã ââSwinburne
The history of mankind is the history of ideas.
人类çåå²å°±æ¯ææ³çåå²ã ââLudwig Von Mises
To believe with certainty,we must begin with doubting.
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å¾æçãââStanislaus
Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you get rid of him on the weekends.
ç»ä»ä¸æ¡é±¼ï¼ä½ å¯ä»¥åä»ä¸å¤©ï¼æä»éé±¼ï¼ä»å¨æ«å°±ä¸ä¼åæ¥ç¼ ä½ äºãââGary Apple
True science teaches, above all, to doubt and be ignorant.
çæ£çç§å¦é¦å
æ人æçåç¥éèªå·±æ ç¥ã ââMiguel de Unamuno
Truth has no special time of it's own. Its hour is now always.
çç没æèªå·±ç¹å®çæ¶é´æ®µãå®çæ¶é´æ°¸è¿æ¯ç°å¨ãââA.Schweitzer
Growing old is not upsetting; being perceived as old is.
è¶æ¥è¶è并ä¸å¯æï¼å¯æçæ¯è®©äººè§å¾è¶æ¥è¶èãââKenny Rogers
Without libraries what have we? We have no past and no future.
å¦æ没æäºå¾ä¹¦é¦ï¼æ们è¿æä»ä¹å¢ï¼æ们没æäºè¿å»ä¹æ²¡æäºæªæ¥ã ââKay Bradbury
Scientific knowledge aims at being wholly impersonal.
ç§å¦ç¥è¯è¦æ±å®å
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çå½±åã ââBertrand Russell
Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood.
çæ´»ä¸æ²¡æå¯æçä¸è¥¿ï¼åªæåºå»äºè§£çä¸è¥¿ãââMarie Curie
Truth is beautiful. Withoutdoubt; and so are lies.
ççæ¯ç¾çï¼æ¯«æ çé®ï¼è°è¨ä¹æ¯å¦æ¤ã ââEmerson.
Nature never deceives us; it is always us who deceive ourselves.
大èªç¶æ°¸è¿ä¸ä¼æ¬ºéªæ们ï¼æ¬ºéªæ们çå¾å¾æ¯æ们èªå·±ãââRousseau
You can never plan the future by the past.
æ°¸è¿ä¹ä¸è½ä¾ç
§è¿å»æ¥è®¡åå°æ¥ã ââBurke
Time is a versatile performer. It flies, marches on, heals all wounds, runs out and will tell.
æ¶é´æ¯ä¸ªå¤æå¤èºç表æ¼è
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é£ç¿ï¼è½éæ¥åè¿ï¼è½æ²»æå伤ï¼è½æ¶éèå»ï¼ä¹è½æ示çç¸ã ââFranklin P.Jones
The first in time and the first in importance of the influences upon the mind is that of nature.
å¨ææ头èçå½±åä¹ä¸ï¼å¤§èªç¶çå½±åå¯è°æ¯å¨æ¶é´ä¸æå
ï¼å¨ä½ç¨ä¸æ为éè¦çãââEmerson
Deathâ¦is no more than passing from one room into another.
æ»äº¡åªä¸è¿æ¯ä»ä¸ä¸ªæ¿é´è¿å
¥å¦ä¸ä¸ªæ¿é´ãââHelen Keller
Important principles may and must be flexible.
éè¦çååè½å¤ä¹å¿
é¡»æ¯çµæ´»çã ââAbraham Lincoln
That is the essence of science: ask an impertinent question, and you are on the way to the pertinent answer.
ç§å¦çæ¬è´¨æ¯ï¼é®ä¸ä¸ªä¸æ°å½çé®é¢ï¼äºæ¯èµ°ä¸äºéå¾æ°å½çæ¡çè·¯ã ââJacob Bronowski
The danger of the past was that men became slaves. The danger of the future is that men may become robots.
å¨è¿å»äººä»¬é¢ä¸´çå±é©æ¯åæ奴é¶ï¼èå¨å°æ¥å±é©æ¯äººç±»å¯è½åææºå¨äººãââErich Fromm
Nature never deceives us; it is always us who deceive ourselves.
大èªç¶æ°¸è¿ä¸ä¼æ¬ºéªæ们ï¼æ¬ºéªæ们çå¾å¾æ¯æ们èªå·±ãââRousseau
You can never plan the future by the past.
æ°¸è¿ä¹ä¸è½ä¾ç
§è¿å»æ¥è®¡åå°æ¥ã ââBurke
Time is a versatile performer. It flies, marches on, heals all wounds, runs out and will tell.
æ¶é´æ¯ä¸ªå¤æå¤èºç表æ¼è
ãå®è½å±ç¿
é£ç¿ï¼è½éæ¥åè¿ï¼è½æ²»æå伤ï¼è½æ¶éèå»ï¼ä¹è½æ示çç¸ã ââFranklin P.Jones
The first in time and the first in importance of the influences upon the mind is that of nature.
å¨ææ头èçå½±åä¹ä¸ï¼å¤§èªç¶çå½±åå¯è°æ¯å¨æ¶é´ä¸æå
ï¼å¨ä½ç¨ä¸æ为éè¦çãââEmerson
Deathâ¦is no more than passing from one room into another.
æ»äº¡åªä¸è¿æ¯ä»ä¸ä¸ªæ¿é´è¿å
¥å¦ä¸ä¸ªæ¿é´ãââHelen Keller
Important principles may and must be flexible.
éè¦çååè½å¤ä¹å¿
é¡»æ¯çµæ´»çã ââAbraham Lincoln
That is the essence of science: ask an impertinent question, and you are on the way to the pertinent answer.
ç§å¦çæ¬è´¨æ¯ï¼é®ä¸ä¸ªä¸æ°å½çé®é¢ï¼äºæ¯èµ°ä¸äºéå¾æ°å½çæ¡çè·¯ã ââJacob Bronowski
The danger of the past was that men became slaves. The danger of the future is that men may become robots.
å¨è¿å»äººä»¬é¢ä¸´çå±é©æ¯åæ奴é¶ï¼èå¨å°æ¥å±é©æ¯äººç±»å¯è½åææºå¨äººãââErich Fromm
Knowledge is a treasure, but practice is the key to it.
ç¥è¯æ¯ä¸å®åºï¼èå®è·µå°±æ¯å¼å¯å®åºå¤§é¨çé¥åãââFuller
The Golden Rule is that there are no golden rules.
çæ£çéç§çå¾å°±æ¯ä¸ä¸å¹¶æ éç§çå¾ãââG.B.Shaw
The lover of nature is he whose inward and outward senses are still truly adjusted to each other; who has retained the spirit of infancy even into the era of manhood.
çç±å¤§èªç¶ç人å
å¤æè§åè°ä¸è´ï¼å³ä½¿è¿å
¥æå¹´åä¾ç¶ä¿æçç«¥å¿ã ââEmerson
Ten men banded together in love can do what ten thousand separately would fail in.
以ç±å¿èå¨ä¸èµ·çå个人è½å¤å®æä¸ä¸ä¸ªåæ£ç人åä¸å°çäºæ
ãââThomas Carlyle
Imagination is not to be divorced from the facts.
æ³è±¡ä¸åºè±ç¦»ç°å®ãââA.N. Whitehead
There are two sides to every story ... at least.
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äºé½å¯ä»¥ä»ä¸¤ä¸ªæ¹é¢çï¼è³å°ä¸¤ä¸ªæ¹é¢ãââAnn Landers
Today is not yesterday. We ourselves change. How then can our works and thoughts, if they are always to be fittest, continue always the same?
ä»å¤©ä¸åäºæ¨å¤©ãæ们èªå·±ä¹å¨æ¹åãé£ä¹ï¼æ们çèä½åææ³ï¼å¦ææ³æ°¸è¿ä¸è¿æ¶ï¼æä¹è½å§ç»ä¸æ¹åå¢ï¼ ââThomas Carlyle
A lazy youth, a lousy age.å°å£®ä¸åªåï¼è大å¾ä¼¤æ²ã
Love alone can release the power of the atom so it will work for man and not against him.
åªæç±æè½ä½¿ååçåéé ç¦äººç±»ï¼èéå±å®³äººç±»ãââW. A. Peterson
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