lo给低头族的诗《look up》l视频英文原文和中文翻译

盼梦熊2022-10-04 11:39:541条回答

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非穿不可的ll 共回答了25个问题 | 采纳率84%
"Look Up"
I have 422 friends, yet I am lonely.
I speak to all of them every day, yet none of them really know me.
The problem I have sits in the spaces between
Looking into their eyes, or at a name on a screen.
I took a step back and opened my eyes,
I looked around and realised,
That this media we call social is anything but
When we open our computers and it's our doors we shut
All this technology we have, it's just an illusion
Community companionship, a sense of inclusion
But when you step away from this device of delusion
You awaken to see a world of confusion.
A world where we're slaves to the technology we mastered
Where information gets sold by some rich greedy bastard
A world of self interest, self image and self promotion
Where we all share our best bits but, leave out the emotion.
We're at our most happy with an experience we share,
But is it the same if no-one is there?
Be there for your friends and they'll be there too,
But no-one will be if a group message will do.
We edit and exaggerate, crave adulation
We pretend not to notice the social isolation
We put our words into order and tint our lives a-glistening
We don't even know if anyone is listening
Being alone isn't a problem let me just emphasize
If you read a book, paint a picture, or do some exercise
You're being productive and present, not reserved and recluse
You're being awake and attentive and putting your time to good use
So when you're in public, and you start to feel alone
Put your hands behind your head, step away from the phone
You don't need to stare at the menu, or at your contact list
Just talk to one another, learn to co-exist.
I can't stand to hear the silence of a busy commuter train
When no one want's to talk for the fear of looking insane.
We're becoming unsocial, it no longer satisfies
To engage with one another, and look into someone's eyes.
We're surrounded by children, who since they were born,
Have watched us living like robots, who now think it's the norm.
It's not very likely you'll make world's greatest dad,
If you can't entertain a child without using an iPad
When I was a child, I'd never be home
Be out with my friends, on our bikes we'd roam
I'd wear holes on my trainers, and graze up my knees
We'd build our own clubhouse, high up in the trees
Now the park's so quiet, it gives me a chill
See no children outside and the swings hanging still.
There's no skipping, no hopscotch, no church and no steeple
We're a generation of idiots, smart phones and dumb people.
So look up from your phone, shut down the display
Take in your surroundings, make the most of today
Just one real connection is all it can take
To show you the difference that being there can make.
Be there in the moment, that she gives you the look
That you remember forever as when love overtook
The time she first held your hand, or first kissed your lips
The time you first disagreed but you still love her to bits
The time you don't have to tell hundreds of what you've just done
Because you want to share this moment with just this one
The time you sell your computer, so you can buy a ring
For the girl of your dreams, who is now the real thing.
The time you want to start a family, and the moment when
You first hold your little girl, and get to fall in love again.
The time she keeps you up at night, and all you want is rest
And the time you wipe away the tears as your baby flees the nest.
The time your baby girl returns, with a boy for you to hold
And the time he calls you granddad and makes you feel real old.
The time you've taken all you've made, just by giving life attention.
And how you're glad you didn't waste it, by looking down at some invention.
The time you hold your wife's hand, sit down beside her bed,
You tell her that you love her and lay a kiss upon her head.
She then whispers to you quietly as her heart gives a final beat
That she's lucky she got stopped by that lost boy in the street.
But none of these times ever happened, you never had any of this.
When you're too busy looking down, you don't see the chances you miss.
So look up from your phone, shut down those displays
We have a final act existence, a set number of days
Don't waste your life getting caught in the net,
As when the end comes nothing's worse than regret.
I'm guilty too of being part of this machine,
This digital world, we are heard but not seen.
Where we type as we talk, and we read as we chat
Where we spend hours together without making eye contact
So don't give into a life where you follow the hype
Give people your love, don't give them your 'like'
Disconnect from the need to be heard and defined
Go out into the world, leave distractions behind.
Look up from your phone. Shut down that display. Stop watching this video. Live life the real way.
中文翻译的话视频里是有的,太多了不容易打字.英文文案我也是自己边听边写废了点力气,望楼主采纳.
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Some experts said often-bend-neck people are more prone to premature aging,and at the same time,with low attention to surrounding conditions while people are playing mobilephones,they will easily to cause an accident.
纯正美国表达.
对下面这段文字提供的信息进行筛选、整合,给“低头族”下定义,不超过40字。(4分)
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世界各地智能手机普及之处,地铁里、公交车上、餐桌上、排队时、会议及课堂间隙……总有很多人低着头玩手机。他们的手指在触摸屏上来回滑动,所有的注意力都集中在手中发亮的方寸屏幕。他们总想通过这种方式,把空闲的时间填满。他们对身边的外部世界漠不关心——这就是所谓的“低头族”。
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The smartphone has been gaining a great popularity, becoming a toxic compulsion. It has invaded our lives and occupied all our interstitial time. It is so commonly seen that the smartphone addicts attend to their phone, ignoring everything. Even meeting with friends, they often pull out the phone in order to take a photo, check a message or even play with a game. Seeming connected with the whole world, they have actually fiddled the conversation and done harm to the relationship.
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某校为治理校园“低头族”现象,倡议同学们课堂上不要使用手机,课后多读好书,请你为这个活动拟一个宣传标语
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课上少用手机,益身心; 课下多读好书,气自华. 绝对临时原创。
用英语来描述低头族的现象和说明其危害,发表自己的看法
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"The furthest distance in the world than we sit together,you are in the bow to play mobile phone."Bow" group growing,the information age and the indifference is spreading.Why to chat with friends,read a book,things are notlike brush mobile phone to stop?"
书面表达phubbing.低头族,phubbers.
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  Phubbers are people who engage in phubbing, "the act of snubbing someone in a social setting by looking at your phone instead of paying attention," as defined by a website aimed at stamping out this anti-social behavior.
  From the Stop Phubbing website:
  "Phubbing is rife throughout the world. Just imagine couples of the future sitting in silence. Relationships based on status updates. The ability to talk or communicate face-to-face completely eradicated. Something must be done and it must be done now. So if like us, you think this phubbing business is getting out of hand, spread the word. Use this site to stop phubbers for good."
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  The site features some "disturbing phubbing stats," and "down with phubbing downloads" such as anti-phubbing posters for restaurants, stop phubbing decals, even stop phubbing wedding place cards.
  There is a gallery of celebrity phubbers, which includes Jay-Z phubbing Beyoncé, Mark Zuckerberg phubbing Priscilla Chan, Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez both phubbing the other, and many more.
  You can even upload photo of your friends who are phubbers to be featured in the "Phubbing hall of shame" or stage a phubbing intervention by filling out a form email and sending it to the phubber in your life.
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  Whether or not you think it's a joke probably depends on whether your circle of friends are phubbers. For those without much interaction with phubbers, this might seem like a silly campaign. But for those who constantly deal with phubbers, this campaign may seem long overdue.
  The epidemic of phubbers has gotten so bad that last year the phone stacking game went viral. "The Phone Stack" game is when out at a restaurant, everyone puts their phone in a stack in the middle of the table. The diners are forbidden to touch their phones, even when it vibrates. Whoever is unable to keep their grubby hands off their phone has to pick up the entire check for the table.
  Are you for or against phubbers? Let us know in the comments.
  ----------------------------
  Phubbers turn social etiquette on its head
  Subway commuters focus on their smartphones on a Metro train, a phenomenon becoming increasingly common these days. (Photo/ Shanghai Daily)
  Wang Dan has always been popular among friends for her lively, talkative personality. So it was with some dismay her friends began to notice a new habit forming. She keeps glued to her iPhone and seems oblivious to those around her.
What could keep her so busy with her phone? Perhaps an e-mail, the latest anecdote about a South Korean pop singer she likes or even her hair stylist suggesting a new look. Whatever the reason, her friends at the table find her obsession with her phone unsociable.
“I do chat or surf through Weibo whenever a gathering I’m at turns boring,” said Wang, a 28-year-old customer relations manager. “However, sometimes what I see on the Internet raises new topics for discussion among friends I’m sitting with.”
Picture this. A group of friends are seated around a large, round table in a restaurant, with dish after dish being placed in front of them. Some get out their smartphones and begin taking pictures of the food. Half a minute later, their heads are all down as they post the photos online. Some use applications to embellish the pictures before uploading. During the meal, half of the diners have their noses back in their phones to receive comments from photo recipients. Conversation at the table is limited and sporadic.
If it all seems odd, you better get used to it. The digital age is turning social etiquette on its head. Now there’s even a word to describe it — phubbing.
Mostly in jest
According to the website of the international Stop Phubbing campaign, stopphubbing.com, phubbing describes “the act of snubbing someone in a social setting by looking at your phone instead of paying attention.”
The website was set up in July by Alex Haigh, a 23-year-old from Melbourne. It criticizes “phubbers” who are tethered to mobile gadgets even when friends or family are around them. Visitors to the website can download “Stop Phubbing” posters to place in restaurants and can browse through a gallery of celebrity phubbers caught with their noses in their smartphones on public occasions.
But don’t try to be smart and open the site from your mobile phone. It will only lead you to a page that says: “Get off your mobile and view this website on your desktop.”
The website is mostly in jest, but it does raise serious issues about social etiquette in the age of mobile phones and other hand-held devices.
China now has 270 million smartphone users, ranking No. 1 in the world. The figure accounts for only 24 percent of China mobile users, so the smartphone market has huge room for growth.
Popular Chinese social networking platforms, such as WeChat, Weibo and QQ, have developed apps that make mobile equipment all-rounders — from providing news and information to keeping in touch with the latest status of friends and relatives. The smartphone screen connects a user to the world and many users are riveted.
WeChat, a popular mobile service in China, has accumulated more than 300 million users and boasts nearly 70 million overseas. The chatting app has become a major communications tool among smartphone users and has gradually evolved into a platform for up-to-the-minute postings shared with friends.
However, such convenience undermines the warmth and intimacy of face-to-face communication. You may not see someone for several months, but you can know everything about almost every minute of their lives. And they, yours.
Just a waste of time
“We live a lifestyle of ‘passive reading and accepting’ in a multimedia era boosted by information technology,” said Gu Xiaoming, a sociology professor of Fudan University. “We are forced to take in all sorts of news and information, which is sometimes against our own best interests.”
Our personal space is inevitably squeezed when our whereabouts can be so easily tracked. Gu said we need to face up to the situation and observe some basic social rules.
“Checking out information is fine,” he said, “but there is the issue of politeness. It’s a dangerous lifestyle to expose oneself to bumping up information all day long. When a new message comes in, you find it hard not to read just in case you are missing something important. But more often than not, the message turns out to be a waste of time or an advertisement.”
He suggests time out every day, when phones are unplugged or shut off. And some people, albeit a small minority, are doing just that.
Zhu Ying, a junior in college, said she ditched her phone three months ago to benefit both her health and her studies.
“I was seriously addicted to reading novels and playing games on my cell phone, and every day for the past three years, I didn’t go to sleep before 2am.” Zhu said.
When she started to develop feelings of vertigo and began failing exams, Zhu said she realized she needed digital detox.
“The first two weeks were really hard,” she said of her phone abstinence. “But then I managed to get a new daily routine and became more concentrated on my studies.”
However, she reckons she will go back to her phone after graduation because “every professional needs a mobile for business.”
Ma, an executive director at a real estate agency who declined to give his full name, said he turns off his mobile every weekend so that he can spend quality time with his family.
His children, he said, used to get irritated when he was on the phone all the time.
Now, with no phone in his pocket, he takes the kids to parks and museums.
“The purpose of my hard work on weekdays is to earn money to provide a better living for my family,” said Ma, “I cherish each moment I can spent with my wife and kids.”
Turn that thing off
Yang Kairui, a 34-year-old yoga teacher, turned off her mobile when she attended a meditation session in the mountains last month — seven days of fasting and no communication with others.
“It sets my mind free,” she said, explaining that she now turns off her phone every day for three hours of solitude and meditation.
“Excessive use of cell phones disturbs our mental processes. I prefer face-to-face communication unless there is something really urgent.”
Yang said she worries about mobile phone addiction among children.
“Youngsters who are active on digital social platforms often turn out to be introverted in real life,” she said. “They feel at ease when talking to the screen but shy away when facing an individual.”
Disconnecting addicts from their phones can produce withdrawal effects. When Tencent’s WeChat recently broke down for five hours, many users complained they felt dislocated, restless or even severe anxiety.
No one doubts the mobile phone has changed our lives. But are we headed for a world where it’s rather silly to bother getting dressed up and going to a restaurant with friends when you can just set up a video conference app with them and eat in the comfort of home?