關(guān)閉

澳際學(xué)費(fèi)在線支付平臺(tái)

雅思口語(yǔ)Part2??荚?huà)題:傳統(tǒng)建筑

2017/07/10 12:52:07 編輯: 瀏覽次數(shù):244 移動(dòng)端

本文為大家收集整理了雅思口語(yǔ)Part2??荚?huà)題:傳統(tǒng)建筑。雅思口語(yǔ)Part2著重考察同學(xué)們的英語(yǔ)交流能力,同學(xué)們?cè)趥淇茧A段可以注意多積累素材,平時(shí)多模仿多練習(xí),這樣在考試中才不至于無(wú)話(huà)可說(shuō)。

Describe a traditional building in your hometown

The building I'd like to talk about is the Capital Library; in Chinese we

call it Shou Du Tu Shu Guan. I first saw this building when I was a child. My mother took me there as a quiet place to study. She said that I could probably study there more easily than in other places. Now, I go there about once a month. It's quieter than the National Library and I like the atmosphere there.

The place is now a library for history books and any books published in China are there, but it also has an interesting history itself. It is located in the same area as the old Guo Zi Jian, or in English you might call it the Imperial College. The building was built in traditional Qing architectural style, because it was last rebuilt during that time. The roof is quite steep. Bi Yong Hall wa_ the place where imperial exams were held, and it has two layered roofs with a curved at each corner, just like the buildings at the Summer Palace. It is red and has quite a few wooden pillars holding it up at all sides.

The reason I like this building is because it seems to store the soul of our country. The Imperial College was actually set up in the Yuan dynasty to educate high-ranking Mongolian families in Chin_e, but then it was used by all the next dynasties. In the 50s, it stopped being an educatioml place and became an all-purpose library. You know, to be able to take the imperial exam was every young man's dream in China for hundreds of years. But few could take it and fewer would pass it. So apart from its grand appearance, it has a kind of untouchable nobility to it.

  • 澳際QQ群:610247479
  • 澳際QQ群:445186879
  • 澳際QQ群:414525537