Fortune Telling Collection - Free divination - Tianfu famous school 479 simulates the sixth set of answers to strengthen Chinese.

Tianfu famous school 479 simulates the sixth set of answers to strengthen Chinese.

Cheerful, steady, brave, confident, strong, etc.

First, cheerful [kā i l m: ng]?

1, the place is open and the light is sufficient.

2, (thought, mind, character, etc. ) optimistic, carefree, not gloomy.

The tenth paragraph of Yang Shuo's "Three Thousand Miles of Rivers and Mountains": "This man is about forty years old, tall and cheerful, and he is a man of measurement and courage."

Second, stabilize [wěn zhòng]?

Calm and measured (in words and actions); Not frivolous.

Yang Shuo's "After Snowflakes Drift": "The teenager sat on the edge of the kang, smiling and nodding, looking steady and confident."

Napoleon once said, "A man who can control his emotions is greater than a general who can win an ideal city."

A person living in the world should learn to control his emotions and let them dominate you, not let them dominate you. Behind emotional stability is strength and pattern.

Emotion will make us lose sight of the true face of things. Quit your emotions, and you're halfway there. Whether you can control your emotions well is an important sign to test whether a person is stable or not.

Third, be brave [y ǒ ng g m: n]?

Not afraid of danger and difficulties; Have the guts.

Shen Congwen's autobiography "Where I grew up": "There is no shortage of brave and loyal soldiers suitable for ideals and gentle and hardworking women suitable for families in urban and rural areas."

Fourth, self-confidence [zixingn]?

Believe in yourself. Understanding "self-confidence" from the perspective of psychology is actually a very bad perspective, because "self-confidence" is an objective problem, and psychology can only "explain" the appearance of self-confidence, but can't touch the root of self-confidence.

Verbs (short for verb) should be strong?

1, strong, unshakable or destroyed.

2. Be stronger.

There are two sides to being strong. One is "not afraid of failure, setbacks, blows-whether in personnel, life, technology or study-blows", "not even lonely" (see the second letter), and "dare to face up to reality, face up to mistakes, use rational analysis, understand thoroughly, and not be eroded by memories"; For emotional trauma, we should "regard it as the ashes of the soul" (see the first letter). The second is "don't be carried away by victory" and always maintain "humility to art"