1. First, write "English" at the top as the title, which can be creatively designed to make it look more exquisite.
2. Write "Hello" at the bottom, draw a big square border on the left, and draw a little girl above the border.
Draw a little boy reading a book on the right, draw some books around him, and then draw a wavy border.
4. Start coloring below. Titles are painted in blue and red, people's clothes are painted in blue, orange and yellow, and letters are painted in orange, green, purple, red and blue.
5. Paint borders with red and green, books with purple, blue and green, and words with yellow, blue and orange.
6. Finally, draw a grid line in the middle and tidy it up, so that a beautiful English handwritten newspaper is completed.
English epigrams and interesting knowledge
A famous motto
Honest and smart.
Honest and smart.
2. Sailing at sea; On land, settle down
Let it be.
Be fair to everyone, but don't trust everyone.
Be fair to everyone, but don't trust everyone.
You can't believe what you see, but you can't believe what you hear.
You can't believe what you see, but you can't believe what you hear.
5. Commit slowly and execute quickly.
Commitment should be slow and implementation should be fast.
6. Listen quickly and speak slowly.
Listen more and talk less.
An empty wallet is better than an empty head.
An empty wallet is better than an empty head.
An open enemy is better than a false friend.
An open gun is easier to hide than an open gun.
A good neighbour is better than a brother in the next village.
A good neighbor is better than a brother in a neighboring village.
Between the cup and the lips, a little food may slip away.
It didn't achieve its goal.
Interesting little knowledge
1, "Is it a car or a CAT I chainsaw" (I saw a car or a cat), which is the only sentence in English that reads it backwards.
2. "This quick brown fox jumps over a lazy dog." (This quick brown fox jumps over a lazy dog), this sentence uses all the letters in the alphabet!
The word "onion" comes from Latin "unio", which means big pearl.
The phrase "rule of thumb" comes from an old English law, that is, you can't hit your wife with something bigger than your thumb.
Sweet water is not "sweet water" or "sugar water", but "fresh water".