第1个
开头:演说题目:the world's english mania 演说者:jay walker let's talk about manias. let's start with beatlemania.(recording of crowd roaring)hysterical teenagers, crying, screaming, pandemonium.(recording of crowd roaring)sports mania: deafening crowds, all for one idea — get the ball in the net. (recording) goal! okay, religious mania: there's rapture, there's weeping, there's visions. manias can be good. manias can be alarming. or manias can be deadly.(recording of crowd cheering)
第2个
开头:演说题目:how pig parts make the world turn 演说者:christien meindertsma hello. i would like to start my talk with actually two questions, and the first one is: how many people here actually eat pig meat? please raise your hand -- oh, that's a lot. and how many people have actually seen a live pig producing this meat? in the last year?
第3个
开头:在死亡面前,生活如何有意义 演说者:lucy kalanithi a few days after my husband paul was diagnosed with stage iv lung cancer,we were lying in our bed at home,and paul said,it’s going to be ok.and i remember answering back,yes.we just don’t know what ok means yet.
第4个
开头:the museum of four in the mornin 演讲者:rives | 中英对照演讲稿 | the most romantic thing to ever happen tome online started out the way most things do: without me, and notonline. on december 10, 1896, the man on the medal, alfred nobel,died. one hundred years later, exactly, actually, december 10,1996, this charming lady, wislawa szymborska, won the nobel prize forliterature. she's a polish poet.
第5个
开头:演说题目:指纹透露的信息,超乎你的想象! 演说者:simona francese do you ever stop and think, during a romantic dinner, 'i've just left my fingerprints all over my wine glass.'
第6个
开头:演说题目: a life lesson from a volunteer firefighter 演说者:mark bezos back in new york, i am the head of development for a non-profit called robin hood. when i'm not fighting poverty, i'm fighting fires as the assistant captain of a volunteer fire company. now in our town, where the volunteers supplement a highly skilled career staff, you have to get to the fire scene pretty early to get in on any action.
第7个
开头:演说题目:the 4 stories we tell ourselves about death 演说者:stephen cave i have a question: who here remembers when they first realized they were going to die?
第8个
开头:演说题目:长期休业后如何重回职业轨道? 演说者:carol f cohen people returning to work after a career break: i call them relaunchers. these are people who have taken career breaks for elder care, for childcare reasons, pursuing a personal interest or a personal health issue. closely related are career transitioners of all kinds: veterans, military spouses, retirees coming out of retirement or repatriating expats. returning to work after a career break is hard because of a disconnect between the employers and the relaunchers. employers can view hiring people with a gap on their resume as a high-risk proposition, and individuals on career break can have doubts about their abilities to relaunch their careers, especially if they've been out for a long time. this disconnect is a problem that i'm trying to help solve.
第9个
开头:演说题目:我们不该放弃对成功的想象! 演讲者:alain de botton 中英文翻译: for me they normally happen, these career crises, often, actually, on a sunday evening, just as the sun is starting to set,
第10个
开头:embrace your inner girl 演讲者:eve ensler | 中文演讲稿 | 早上好!很高兴今天来到印度。过去的十一年,我带着《阴道独白》和v-day运动,走遍了全球,我最近也在认真的反思这段经历的意义。我遇到了来自全球各地的妇女和女孩,她们都在进行着一场反对妇女暴力的抗争。
第11个
开头:i'd like to talk today about the two biggest social trends in the coming century, and perhaps in the next 10,000 years. but i want to start with my work on romantic love, because that's my most recent work. what i and my colleagues did was put 32 people, who were madly in love, into a functional mri brain scanner. 17 who were madly in love and their love was accepted; and 15 who were madly in love and they had just been dumped. and so i want to tell you about that first, and then go on into where i think love is going.
第12个
开头:演说题目:童年创伤怎样影响一生的健康! 演说者:nadine burke harris in the mid-'90s, the cdc and kaiser permanente discovered an exposure that dramatically increased the risk for seven out of 10 of the leading causes of death in the united states. in high doses, it affects brain development, the immune system, hormonal systems, and even the way our dna is read and transcribed. folks who are exposed in very high doses have triple the lifetime risk of heart disease and lung cancer and a 20-year difference in life expectancy. and yet, doctors today are not trained in routine screening or treatment. now, the exposure i'm talking about is not a pesticide or a packaging chemical. it’s childhood trauma.
第13个
开头:演说者:toby shapshak let me start by asking you a question, just with a show of hands: who has an iphone? who has an android phone? who has a blackberry? who will admit in public to having a blackberry?
第14个
开头:原来这才是拥有爱情的最好时间 i published this article in the new york times modern love column in january of this year. 'to fall in love with anyone, do this.' and the article is about a psychological study designed to create romantic love in the laboratory, and my own experience trying the study myself one night last summer.
第15个
开头:the brain-changing benefits of exercise 演讲者:wendy suzuki 温迪铃木 中英对照演讲稿 what if i told you there was something thatyou can do right now that would have an immediate, positive benefit for yourbrain including your mood and your focus? and what if i told you that samething could actually last a long time and protect your brain from differentconditions like depression, alzheimer's disease or dementia. would you do it?yes!
第16个
开头:演说题目:know your worth, and then ask for it 演说者:tim harford late in january 1975, a 17-year-old german girl called vera brandes walked out onto the stage of the cologne opera house. the auditorium was empty. it was lit only by the dim, green glow of the emergency exit sign. this was the most exciting day of vera's life.
第17个
开头:ted演讲:长生不老的细胞科学 where does the end begin?well, for me, it all began with this little fellow.this adorable organism --well, i think it’s adorable --is called tetrahymena and it’s a single-celled creature.it’s also been known as pond scum.so that’s right, my career started with pond scum.
第18个
开头:ted演讲:我们死后,微信该怎么办? 1.by the end of this year, there'll be nearly a billion people on this planet that actively use social networking sites.
第19个
开头:richard st.john在ted英语演讲:成功的八个秘诀(中英双语) this is really a two-hour presentation i give to high school students, cut down to three minutes. and it all started one day on a plane, on my way to ted, seven years ago. and in the seat next to me was a high school student, a teenager, and she came from a really poor family.
第20个
开头:ted英语演讲:不要太严肃,生活需要有趣的人 good afternoon. my name is uldus. i am a photo-based artist from russia. i started my way around six years ago with ironic self-portraits to lay open so many stereotypes about nationalities, genders, and social issues — ['i am russian. i sell drugs, guns, porno with kids!'] ['vodka = water. i love vodka!'] (laughter) — using photography as my tool to send a message. ['marry me, i need a visa.']