标签:温柔 相关文章
单词词意 shelln.壳,贝壳;炮弹 sheltern.掩蔽处;掩蔽,保护 v.掩蔽,躲避,庇护 shepherdn.牧民,牧羊人 shieldn.防护物,护罩;盾,盾状物 v.保护,防护 shiftv.替换,转移n.转换
A gently Caress Michael and I hardly noticed when the waitress came and placed the plates on our table.We were seated in a small deli tucked away2) from the bustle3) of Third Street,in New York City. Our exchange was lively,if not profound.
《恰似你的温柔》英文版 That song for you before I go Hope you would still remember me We just want you keep your rights Your right cold tell what are you cry Thats what for you before I go Goodbye your song that I cant sing Get some heads
迈克尔.杰克逊:P.Y.T(pretty young thing) Verse 1 Where Did You Come From Lady 从哪来,小姐? And Ooh Wont You Take Me There 你不想带我去那里吗? Right Away, Wont You? Baby 就现在,不想吗?亲爱的? Tendoroni Youve Got To Be
When I was just a little girl, I asked my mother,
Tender Is the Night - Book One by F. Scott Fitzgerald BOOK I Chapter 1 ON the pleasant shore of the French Riviera, about half way between Marseilles and the Italian border, stands a large, proud, rose-colored hotel. Deferential palms cool its flushe
Tender Is the Night - Book One by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 10 The trouble began at the time Earl Brady's car passed the Divers' car stopped on the roadAbe's account melted impersonally into the thronged nightViolet McKisco was telling Mrs. Abrams
Tender Is the Night - Book One by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 7 In a pause Rosemary looked away and up the table where Nicole sat between Tommy Barban and Abe North, her chow's hair foaming and frothing in the candlelight. Rosemary listened, caught s
Tender Is the Night - Book One by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 4 The matter was solved for her. The McKiscos were not yet there and she had scarcely spread her peignoir when two menthe man with the jockey cap and the tall blonde man, given to sawing w
Tender Is the Night - Book Two by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 2 It was a damp April day, with long diagonal clouds over the Albishorn and water inert in the low places. Zurich is not unlike an American city. Missing something ever since his arrival t
Tender Is the Night - Book Two by F. Scott Fitzgerald BOOK II Chapter 1 In the spring of 1917, when Doctor Richard Diver first arrived in Zurich, he was twenty-six years old, a fine age for a man, indeed the very acme of bachelorhood. Even in war-tim
Tender Is the Night - Book Two by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 6 It was May when he next found her. The luncheon in Zurich was a council of caution; obviously the logic of his life tended away from the girl; yet when a stranger stared at her from a ne
Tender Is the Night - Book Two by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 3 About a year and a half before, Doctor Dohmler had some vague correspondence with an American gentleman living in Lausanne, a Mr. Devereux Warren, of the Warren family of Chicago. A meet
Tender Is the Night - Book Two by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 20 When Dick got out of the elevator he followed a tortuous corridor and turned at length toward a distant voice outside a lighted door. Rosemary was in black pajamas; a luncheon table was
1.alter v. 改变,改动,变更 2.burst vi.n. 突然发生,爆裂 3.dispose vi. 除掉;处置;解决;处理(of) 4.blast n. 爆炸;气流 vi. 炸,炸掉 5.consume v. 消耗,耗尽 6.split v. 劈开
January 23, 1935My darling Clemmie,In your letter from Madras you wrote some words very dear to me, about my having enriched your life. I cannot tell you what pleasure this gave me, because I always feel so overwhelmingly in your debt, if there can b
Tender Is the Night - Book Three by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 10 At two o'clock that night the phone woke Nicole and she heard Dick answer it from what they called the restless bed, in the next room. Oui, oui mais qui est-ce-que je parle? Oui His v
Tender Is the Night - Book Three by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 6 Next morning Dick came early into Nicole's room. I waited till I heard you up. Needless to say I feel badly about the eveningbut how about no postmortems? I'm agreed, she answered cool
Tender Is the Night - Book Three by F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 3 One morning a week later, stopping at the desk for his mail, Dick became aware of some extra commotion outside: Patient Von Cohn Morris was going away. His parents, Australians, were p
She always leaned to watch for us . Anxious if we were late , In winter by the window , In summer by the gate ; And though we mocked her tenderly , Who had such foonich care , The long way home would seem more safe , Because she waited there . Her th