作业帮 > 英语 > 作业

求问路,看病英文小短文

来源:学生作业帮 编辑:作业帮 分类:英语作业 时间:2024/05/24 07:37:35
求问路,看病英文小短文
帮我写2篇分别关于看病与问路的小短文!
one:Many State medical licensing boards have put physician information on the Internet. Below are links to many of those sites, some having only Medical Doctor (M.D.) data, and some of which also have information about Osteopaths (D.O.) Chiropractors (D.C.), Dentists (DDM), Nurses (R.N. & LPN) and other healthcare professionals. Please note: Some of these sites have a lot of useful information that is easy to find, and some have very little and they make you dig for what they do have. Please do not ask us to look up specific doctors for you. We would like to help, but the volume of requests is too high. These links are offered only as a suggested starting point for you to do your own online research.

twoAsking the way - gauging spiritual atmosphere of an era
Contemporary Review, March, 1998 by Horatio Morpurgo
An inscription found on late imperial gravestones in Rome runs as follows: 'I didn't exist, then I existed, then I died. I don't care.' The epitaph was apparently so popular that it came to be recognisable from its initials alone - some gravestones are engraved only with these.
But can we know how it was understood at the time? Did it express unrelieved gloom or Stoic resignation, or was it something more mischievous, or did it vary? How do we gain access to the spiritual atmosphere of any period, even our own? 'God is dead' is easily said, but whether it was Darwin or Nietzsche or Watson and Crick who killed Him, the meaning of this 'death' is still not clear, at least to the many millions who continue to believe.
Most Popular Articles
in News
Naked boys vs. naked ...
Black Women White ...
Weddings of the year
Tisha Campbell-Martin ...
9 questions to ask ...
Most Popular Publications
in News
Advocate, The
Ebony
Jet
Independent, The (London)
Chicago Sun-Times
The first appeal in such questions, if they trouble us at all, is to our own experience. That experience will usually be more complicated and more difficult to articulate than any of those off-the-peg answers-to-everything available now from good bookshops everywhere. Let me tell a story about what I mean.
I once studied theology in Edinburgh for a year and took a part-time job as the verger of an Anglican church near the university. The vicar, tall, round-faced, in his fifties, was extremely dedicated to his pastoral vocation and ministered, as a result, to a large and varied congregation. On weekdays there were morning and evening prayers, which I sometimes attended.
Advertisement