The mottos of those who are determined to serve the country are as follows:
1. Those who are fearless are as strong as those who have a deterrent force. ——Schiller
2. No one has died since ancient times, and his loyalty will be remembered by history. ——Wen Tianxiang's "Crossing the Lingding Ocean"
3. Whether you succeed today depends on your yesterday Your attitude today determines your success tomorrow.
4. A failure only proves that our determination to succeed is still strong enough. ——Bo Wei
5. I would like to meet you when China takes off around the world. ——Zhou Enlai
6. Seeds do not fall on fertile soil but on rubble. A viable seed will never be pessimistic and sigh, because only with resistance can there be tempering.
7. It is only a moment that determines a person's life and entire destiny. ——Goethe
8. A person who does not pay attention to small things will never succeed in a big career. ——Carnegie
9. Some people say: "Learning Mandarin well is tantamount to serving the country with loyalty; learning a foreign language well is tantamount to betraying the country and seeking glory."
10. He has been influenced by Yue Fei's loyalty since he was a child. The story of serving the country inspires me to be like Yue Fei when I grow up.
11. The right path is not necessarily a smooth and straight road. It will inevitably have some twists and turns, rugged obstacles, detours, and even lead people astray.
1. The motto refers to the motto written by the ancients and placed on the right side of the seat. It is a motto that people inspire, warn, remind themselves, and serve as a guide to action. In history, many Chinese and foreign celebrities have their own "mottos." Almost all successful people at home and abroad in ancient and modern times have their own life mottos.
2. Inscriptions with first-level meanings, such as "Liu Zihou's Epitaph" by Han Yu, a great writer in the Tang Dynasty, "Sanhuai Tang Inscription" by Su Shi, a literary master in the Song Dynasty, and "The Lord of Hailing County, Taizhou" by Wang Anshi "Book of Xujun's Epitaph" and so on, all fall into this category.
3. These classic inscriptions not only add charm to ancient Chinese prose with their unique literary form, but also touch countless future generations with their simple language and deep emotions.
4. The second meaning of the inscription is the inscription of "words that spur and encourage oneself" - which is what we usually call "motto". Its genre is either text or couplet, and its text There are advantages and disadvantages, but most of them serve to inspire self-cultivation and promote vigilance.
5. According to the records of "Southern History", Wu Jie, a famous general in the Song Dynasty during the Southern Dynasty, "those who are good at reading history and have past events to learn from, will be recorded and placed on the right side. After a long time, the walls will be full of mottos." It may be an earlier source of the relevant motto seen in official history.