⑴ 关于鸟的英语作文
lolz
⑵ 小鸟的英语作文
这群小鸟长得可爱极了,一个圆圆的小脑袋瓜,胖胖的身体,长长的尾巴,它们很有趣一会儿这只鸟到这棵树上做客,一会儿这只鸟到这棵树上做客,飞来飞去的,都把树林间的气氛搞起来了,顿时,又热闹了起来,大家欢聚一堂的在一起,好像议论什么事情。
啊!真美啊!美得令人流连忘返。
This group of birds look very cute, a little round head, fat body, long tail, they are very interesting for the bird to the tree house, while the bird to the tree house, flying, all the trees atmosphere made up, suddenly, and lively up, you have a joyous gathering together, as if talking about something.Ah! So beautiful! The spectacular inlge in pleasures without stop.
⑶ 描写小鸟的英语作文,5句话。
⑷ 鸟的英语作文
Protecting birds is part of our jobs of protecting our own living environment. Imagine you live in a place with green trees and colourful flowers. The little birds are flying around and singing happily. It's such a wonderful place to live. On the contrary, if we damaged the nature, chopped all the trees and kill all birds, we will live in a desert where has no living creatures. What a boring live would be! Therefore, we should protect birds as we protect our childern and ourselves future.
2.。
Last weekend we went to the countryside to have a picnic. We bought some cakes with us for lunch. We left quite early before there was too much traffic. After aborn two bours we came to a nice place. It was near a river, with some large trees beside it. So we parked our bicycles under the trees and went for a swim. It was a very hot day and the water was very refreshing. After having a swim, we had lunch in the cool shade under the trees. Then we went for a walk.
We saw some beautiful birds and butterflies. After walking for about an hour we re turned to our bicycles and began to ride home.
We got home very late and terribly exhausted. But we enjoyed it very much, for it was one of our most interesting weekend’s outings.
⑸ 描写小鸟的英语作文
Woodpecker
is
the
famous
forest
beneficial
bird.In
addition
to
the
eradication
of
pests
under
the
bark,
such
as
pine
sawyer
beetle
larvae
and
other
outside.The
chisel
marks
on
wood
can
be
used
as
an
indicator
of
forest
health
logging.They
have
been
known
as
the
Forest
Dr.
啄木鸟是著名的森林益鸟,除消灭树皮下的害虫如天牛幼虫等专以外,其凿木的痕属迹可作为森林卫生采伐的指示剂,因而被称为森林医生。
⑹ 我最喜欢的宠物鸟 英语作文60-80
烧烤中还两种致癌物,分别是杂环胺和多环芳烃。但这些致癌物能够增回加多少致癌风险答至今还缺乏明确的科学数据。不过,既然致癌,当然是吃的越少越好。
实际上,没有人能完全回避苯并芘。燃烧有机物产生的烟都含有苯并芘,烤肉产生的烟自然也在其列。有人做过实验,烤香肠时,如果香肠和火接触,成品中的苯并芘含量为每千克10.7微克;如果把烧烤架升高,让香肠和火相隔5厘米,那么这个值就会降到每千克0.67微克。实验者认为,香肠和火直接接触时,大量的油滴到火里燃烧,产生烟,由此产生的苯并芘会附着到香肠表面;香肠距离火较远时,滴下的油很少,苯并芘也就少多了。如果改装烧烤装置,把香肠放在火的侧面,最后苯并芘含量只有每千克0.1微克,跟它在肉中本来的含量相当。也就是说,这样的烤法几乎不产生苯并芘。
烤肉中另一类致癌物杂环胺的产生机理目前还不太清楚。根据现有的认识,烹饪方式对它的产生影响很大。杂环胺的产生受温度影响很大,温度越高,时间越长,产生得就越多。从这个意义上来说,五分熟的牛排就比七分熟的要健康。
上面主要说了烧烤中的两种致癌物,虽然烧烤含有癌物,但不算特别危险,毕竟比香烟小得多。吃不吃,还是看个人的意愿吧。
⑺ 描写鸟类的英语作文(最好只写一种鸟)不要保护鸟类的。在线等。
洛基英语小作文:
My Pet Bird
I like birds very much,so I keep a bird as a pet at home.He's a sparrow.I put him in a cage.He's very cute.He has two strong grey wings,two little green eyes and a small black beak.He's very active,jumping from this place to another all the time and letting out wonderful voice.But the voice is different in different occasions.He's so lovely that I like it very much.Everday I get up,I go to see him,giving him some rice to eat and some water to drink.On weenkends,I release him from the cage to let him fly freely.He looks very happy and fly away after letting a voice of thanks.But soon he flies back home.
⑻ 关于小鸟的英语作文
你可以去一些作文网站去找 我这有一篇抓鸟的作文,不知行不行:
Our family around the house there are many tall trees. Every day, there are many unknown trees, birds in the "chattering," cried, a variety of voices very nicely, as if birds in open concerts. One afternoon, my neighbor's little brother, little brother in the room playing chess. Suddenly, a beautiful bird came flying, and we quickly closed the door window to catch the birds. Suffered a shock in the room where the birds kept flying, it was finally too tired to fly no more, stopping at the table. I quietly walked over, grabbed it carefully. Little brother immediately sent for a rope, tied the bird's feet, we are afraid of birds fly away,
The other end of the rope still tied a small iron bar. Then we put the bird in the yard, but dragging an iron bar that it does not matter how fly up and hurry toward the sky Zhi Jiao. At this time, my mom and dad came back from the outside, and my father asked: "Liang-liang, are you doing?" I said to the father: "Daddy, Come see us catch a bird." Daddy go came a look, said: "Liang-liang, you did not know even the Flying Swallow啦!" I am curious to ask: "That's why it does not grow with the big swallows the same?" Dad said with a smile: "Swallow the time is so small , and wait for it to grow up, and body feathers and it would slowly become Dad
Dad, Mom the same. "At this time, there are two big swallows the sky fly over, directed at Flying Swal low cried loudly. I think: Yes, it's father, my mother came to see it. So, I unlock it feet of rope, it flew off.
译:
我们家房子周围有许多参天的大树。每天,树上有很多不知名的小鸟在“叽叽喳喳”地叫着,各种各样的声音好听极了,好像在开小鸟音乐会。 一天下午,我和邻居家的小哥哥、小弟弟在房间里下棋。突然,飞进来一只漂亮的小鸟,我们赶紧关上门窗去捉小鸟。受了惊吓的小鸟在房间里不停地飞来飞去,它终于累得飞不动了,停在了桌子上。我悄悄地走过去,小心翼翼地一把抓住它。小哥哥马上找来一根绳子,绑住了小鸟的脚,我们怕小鸟飞走,还在绳子的另一头绑了一根小铁棒。然后,我们把小鸟放在院子里,可是它拖着铁棒怎么也飞不起来,着急地朝着天空直叫。 这时候,爸爸、妈妈从外面回来了,爸爸问:“亮亮,你在干什么?”我对爸爸说:“爸爸,快来看我们抓到了一只小鸟。”爸爸走过来一看说:“亮亮,你连小燕子都不认识啦!”我奇怪地问:“那它为什么不跟大燕子长得一样?”爸爸笑着说:“燕子小的时候是这样的,等它长大了,身上的羽毛就慢慢地变得和它爸爸、妈妈一样了。” 这时,天空中有两只大燕子飞过来,冲着小燕子大声地叫着。我想:一定是它的爸爸、妈妈来找它了。
⑼ 描写小鸟的英语作文3句话
The Singing Life
Looking deeper into bird songs
For half my birding life, I’ been trying to learn bird songs. They’re not so easy as visual images. Not so simply recible to key phrases (yellow in front of the eye, keel-shaped tail, white rump). Often forgettable, at least for a person who has never demonstrated a good ear or musical talent. I’m still fooled sometimes into taking a scarlet tanager for a robin. And every spring I must learn the warblers’ songs all over again. It’s a task I enjoy, an annual initiation that keeps me connected to the earth.
I know birdsongs the way I know French and German. I can often tell which foreign language I’m hearing, and I comprehend merci and nein, but I can’t understand a sentence. And that’s about where I think I am with bird songs. Still, I’m grateful for what I do recognize.
Walking along the brushy trail beside certain a willow thicket on a late summer morning, when most of the birds had stopped singing, I heard a song from deep in the foliage. It was scratchy, rapid: Wouldja switch a witch’s widget witz a switch? Only half a song, really. The full version would have followed up with the answer: Witches switch a scritch’s stitches witz a chew! But even half a song was enough to tell me that the invisible singer was the question-and-answer bird, the Bell’s vireo. (Spectrogram of that bird's song above.)
Born to recognize bird songs
It seems rather wonderful to me that a bird declares its identity with every utterance, and that our human ears and brains are built to sort out such sounds and recognize the singer. Lately I’ve come to realize, though, that I’ve barely begun to study bird sounds, and that it’s possible to learn much more than simply which species is singing.
Donald Kroodsma’s ear-opening book, The Singing Life of Birds, made me realize that I’d been simplistically identifying birds by their songs and letting it go at that, like some life-listers who glance at a bird only long enough to name it and rush on. Kroodsma listens deeply into the lives of birds, gaining new insights from their songs. I want to do that too.
The Raven key
After I read Kroodsma’s book, I got some recording equipment and started going out every day to capture the songs of the morning. Suddenly, every robin, titmouse, and cardinal was new and fascinating. I downloaded Raven Lite (free, from the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology) into my computer. Among other things, Raven translates my recordings into pictures, called spectrograms, which show details in the songs that I didn’t notice in the field. It also lets me slow a recording down to further reveal fine details too brief for the human ear.
What a revelation! Out of my own spectrograms jumped field sparrows, meadowlarks, and yellowthroats. (See thewichity- wichity- wichityof the common yellowthroat at right.)
As I learned the shapes of their songs, I could see at a glance which species sang on each recording, even before I played the selections. I relished seeing subtle details, such as the difference between the question and the answer of the Bell’s vireo.
Hearing with your eyes
Kroodsma says that he hears with his eyes, letting the birds’ spectrograms show him what he would not have discriminated with his ears alone. I too found that my eyes started ecating my ears. Taking Kroodsma’s lead, I used Raven to chart scarlet tanager songs frombirdsong CDs I’d purchased and compared them to spectrograms of my own robin recordings. Once I saw the difference in their timing and noticed the robin’s odd shrieky note spliced in between the musical ones, I started hearing the difference outdoors, too. I don’t think I’ll ever confuse scarlet tanager with robin again.
Kroodsma found that he could tell some birds from others of their species by the variation in their repertoires. That suggests the possibility of getting to know my neighboring birds better than I’ve ever done before. I can hardly wait for next spring. If the five singing male Bell’s vireos I listened to this summer come back, I’d like to see if I can learn to distinguish them as indivials, to see where they first show up in spring, where they nest, and how far they stray from their home territories. Now that’s going to be fun.
— Diane Porter