关于日本的景点介绍英文介绍ppt
1. 求关于“日本”的介绍(英文版)
地方:
浅草寺
富士山
东京铁塔
金额寺
和服:
男女的穿法不一样:
男人内穿是右在外边,容左在里边;
而女人则是左在外边,右在里边。
只有←&→(左右)有区别,↑&↓(上下)男女是没有区别的
食物:
其实日本有名是根据什么地方来回答的
比如说:
札幌是 札幌(さっぽろ)ラーメン 意思:札幌拉面
佐野是 佐野(さの)カレー 意思:佐野咖喱
等等 你自己去Yahoojapan查(你可以用谷歌/雅虎网页翻译)
2. 日本景点介绍(英文)
1. 富士山 Mount Fuji
Mount Fuji (Fujisan) is with 3776 meters Japan's highest mountain. It is not surprising that the nearly perfectly shaped volcano has been worshipped as a sacred mountain and experienced big popularity among artists and common people.
Mount Fuji is a dormant volcano, which most recently erupted in 1708. It stands on the border between Yamanashi and Shizuoka Prefectures and can be seen from Tokyo and Yokohama on clear days.
The easiest way to view Mount Fuji is from the train on a trip along the Tokaido Line between Tokyo and Osaka. If you take the shinkansen from Tokyo in direction of Nagoya, Kyoto and Osaka, the best view of Mount Fuji can be enjoyed from around Shin-Fuji Station on the right hand side of the train, about 40 to 45 minutes after leaving Tokyo.
Note however, that clouds and poor visibility often block the view of Mount Fuji, and you have to consider yourself lucky if you get a clear view of the mountain. Visibility tends to be better ring the colder seasons of the year than in summer, and in the early morning and late evening hours.
If you want to enjoy Mount Fuji at a more leisurely pace and from a nice natural surrounding, you should head to the Fuji Five Lake (Fujigoko) region at the northern foot of the mountain, or to Hakone, a nearby hot spring resort.
Mount Fuji is officially open for climbing ring July and August via several routes...
2.东京:Tokyo
3.大阪 Osaka
4.名古屋;Nagoya
5.神户;Kobe
3. 日本的介绍(英文版)
参考资料资料:选英文
GEOGRAPHY & CLIMATE
REGIONS OF JAPAN
FLORA & FAUNA
ECONOMY
TRADE & INVESTMENT
REGULATORY REFORM
ENERGY & RESOURCE
The Japanese economy is the second largest market economy in the world. In 2002 it recorded a gross domestic proct (GDP) of 532.96 trillion yen. Per capita national income in 2001 was US $24,038, ranking Japan fifth among OECD member nations. Since the collapse of the "bubble economy" in the early 1990s, however, GDP growth has stagnated, and, despite a couple of minor upturns, a sustained recovery has proved elusive. In an effort to revitalize the economy, the Japanese government is currently attempting to implement a wide range of structural and regulatory reforms. Major changes are also taking place in the corporate world as companies strive to increase competitiveness by moving away from traditional employment practices such as lifetime employment and seniority-based wages.
Prime Minister Tanaka Kakuei's Basic Economic and Social Plan (February 1973) forecast continued high growth rates for the period 1973-1977. However, by 1973 domestic macroeconomic policy had resulted in a rapid increase in the money supply, which led to extensive speculation in the real-estate and domestic commodity markets. Japan was already suffering from double-digit inflation when, in October 1973, the outbreak of war in the Middle East led to an oil crisis. Energy costs rose steeply and the yen's exchange rate, which had not reflected its true strength, was shifted to a floating rate. The consequent recession lowered expectations of future growth, resulting in reced private investment. Economic growth slowed from the 10% level to an average of 3.6% ring the period 1974-1979, and 4.4% ring the decade of the 1980s.
Despite the oil crisis and its aftermath, Japan's major export instries maintained competitiveness by cutting costs and increasing efficiency. Instrial energy demands were reced and the automobile instry, in particular, was able to improve VLSI semiconctor instry. By the late 1970s, the computer, semiconctor, and other technology and information-intensive instries had entered a period of rapid growth.
As in the high-growth era, exports continued to play an important role in Japan's economic growth in the 1970s and 1980s. However, the trade friction that accompanied Japan's growing balance of payments surplus brought increasingly strident calls for Japan to further open domestic markets and to focus more on domestic demand as an engine of economic growth.
参考资料:http://web-japan.org/factsheet/index.html
4. 介绍日本的英语ppt
你要给我50分以上,我铁定赴汤蹈火屁颠屁颠地给你发过去!!
而且你也没写邮箱,我就算做好了有怎么传给你?
5. 求用英文做个介绍日本的PPT幻灯片(最好是中英文对照的)
放一张大便的图片在上面就好了,或者介绍日本最有特色的AV事业!
6. 求一份用英文介绍日本的ppt,包括地理位置,人口,文化,一些比较显著的特征事物的,急急!
有一个视频叫奇怪的日本,你搜搜看,挺好玩的
7. 急求介绍日本文化的英文ppt
能发给我一份么亲,谢谢。邮箱[email protected]
8. 求一个介绍世界旅游景点的英语PPT
asia 亚洲
the himalayas 喜马拉雅山
great wall, china 中国长城
forbidden city, beijing, china 北京故宫
mount fuji, japan 日本富士山
taj mahal, india 印度泰姬陵
angkor wat, cambodia 柬埔寨吴哥窟
bali, indonesia 印度尼西亚巴厘岛
borobur, indonesia 印度尼西亚波罗浮屠
sentosa, singapore 新加坡圣淘沙
crocodile farm, thailand 泰国北榄鳄鱼湖
pattaya beach, thailand 泰国芭堤雅海滩
babylon, iraq 伊拉克巴比伦遗迹
mosque of st, sophia in istanbul (constantinople), turkey 土耳其圣索非亚教堂
africa 非洲
suez canal, egypt 印度苏伊士运河
aswan high dam, egypt 印度阿斯旺水坝
nairobi national park, kenya 肯尼亚内罗毕国家公园
cape of good hope, south africa 南非好望角
sahara desert 撒哈拉大沙漠
pyramids, egypt 埃及金字塔
the nile, egypt 埃及尼罗河
oceania 大洋洲
great barrier reef 大堡礁
sydney opera house, australia 悉尼歌剧院
ayers rock 艾尔斯巨石
mount cook 库克山
easter island 复活节岛
europe 欧洲
notre dame de paris, france 法国巴黎圣母院
effiel tower, france 法国艾菲尔铁塔
arch of triumph, france 法国凯旋门
elysee palace, france 法国爱丽舍宫
louvre, france 法国卢浮宫
kolner dom, koln, germany 德国科隆大教堂
leaning tower of pisa, italy 意大利比萨斜塔
colosseum in rome, italy 意大利古罗马圆形剧场
venice, italy 意大利威尼斯
parthenon, greece 希腊巴台农神庙
red square in moscow, russia 莫斯科红场
big ben in london, england 英国伦敦大笨钟
buckingham palace, england 白金汉宫
hyde park, england 英国海德公园
london tower bridge, england 伦敦塔桥
westminster abbey, england 威斯敏斯特大教堂
monte carlo, monaco 摩洛哥蒙特卡罗
the mediterranean 地中海
the americas 美洲
niagara falls, new york state, usa 美国尼亚加拉大瀑布
bermuda 百慕大
honolulu, hawaii, usa 美国夏威夷火奴鲁鲁
panama canal 巴拿马大运河
yellowstone national park, usa 美国黄石国家公园
statue of liberty, new york city, usa 美国纽约自由女神像
times square, new york city, usa 美国纽约时代广场
the white house, washington dc., usa 美国华盛顿白宫
world trade center, new york city, usa 美国纽约世界贸易中心
central park, new york city, usa 美国纽约中央公园
yosemite national park, usa 美国尤塞米提国家公园
grand canyon, arizona, usa 美国亚利桑那州大峡谷
hollywood, california, usa 美国加利佛尼亚好莱坞
disneyland, california, usa 加利佛尼亚迪斯尼乐园
las vegas, nevada, usa 美国内华达拉斯威加斯
miami, florida, usa 美国佛罗里达迈阿密
metropolitan museum of art, new york city, usa 纽约大都会艺术博物馆
acapulco, mexico 墨西哥阿卡普尔科
cuzco, mexico 墨西哥库斯科
9. 求日本京都著名景点的英文介绍
Arashiyama(岚山)
Arashiyama (岚山 ?) is a district on the western outskirts of Kyoto, Japan. It also refers to the mountain across the Ōi River, which forms a backdrop to the district.
Notable tourist sites in Arashiyama include
The Iwatayama Monkey Park on the slopes of Mount Arashiyama. Over 170 monkeys live at the park. While the monkeys are wild, they have become accustomed to humans. The park is located on a small mountain not far from the Saga-Arashiyama rail station. Visitors can approach and photograph the monkeys. At the summit is a fenced enclosure, from within which visitors can feed the monkeys.
The romantic "Moon Crossing Bridge" (渡月桥,Togetsukyō), notable for its views of cherry blossoms and autumn colors on the slopes of Mt Arashiyama.
The tombstone of the Heike courtesan Kogo of Sagano.
Tenryū-ji, the main temple of the Rinzai school, one of the two main sects of Zen Buddhism in Japan.
The hamlet of Kiyotaki, a small scenic village at the base of Mt Atago, the home to a notable Shinto shrine.
Matsuo Shrine, half a mile south of the area, which is home to a blessed spring. It is also one of the oldest shrines in the Kyoto area, founded in 700. The alleged restorative properties of the spring bring many local sake and miso companies to the shrine for prayers that their proct will be blessed.
Kameyama koen has a stone commemorating Zhou Enlai's visited to Arashiyama. He was moved by the cherry blossoms and mountain greenery. The four poems Zhou Enlai wrote about his visit are engraved on a stone monument: "Arashiyama in the Rain."
Nijō Castle(二条城)
Nijō Castle (二条城 ,Nijō-jō?) is a flatland castle located in Kyoto, Japan. The castle consists of two concentric rings of fortifications, the Ninomaru Palace, the ruins of the Honmaru Palace, various support buildings and several gardens. The surface area of the castle is 275,000 square meters, of which 8000 square meters is occupied by buildings.
History
Present plan of Nijō Castle (click for detailed view)In 1601, Tokugawa Ieyasu, the founder of the Tokugawa Shogunate, ordered all the feudal lords in Western Japan to contribute to the construction of Nijō Castle, which was completed ring the reign of Tokugawa Iemitsu in 1626. Parts of Fushimi Castle, such as the main tower and the Kara Gate, were moved here in 1625-26.[1] It was built as the Kyoto residence of the Tokugawa Shoguns. The Tokugawa Shogunate used Edo as the capital city, but Kyoto continued to be the home of the Imperial Court. Kyoto Imperial Palace is located north-east of Nijo Castle.
The central keep, or donjon, was struck by lightning and burned to the ground in 1791.
In 1788, the Inner Palace was destroyed by a city-wide fire. The site remained empty until it was replaced by a prince's residence transferred from the Kyoto Imperial Palace in 1893.
In 1867, the Ninomaru Palace was the stage for the declaration by Tokugawa Yoshinobu, returning the authority to the Imperial Court. Next year the Imperial Cabinet was installed in the castle. The palace became imperial property and was declared a detached palace. During this time, the Tokugawa hollyhock crest was removed wherever possible and replaced with the imperial chrysanthemum.
In 1939, the palace was donated to the city of Kyoto and opened to the public the following year.
Ryōan-ji(龙安寺)
Ryōan-ji (Shinjitai: 竜安寺, Kyūjitai: 龙安寺 ?, The Temple of the Peaceful Dragon) is a Zen temple located in northwest Kyoto, Japan. Belonging to the Myoshin-ji school of the Rinzai branch of Zen Buddhism, the temple is one of the Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The site of the temple was originally a Fujiwara family estate. It eventually came into the hands of the Hosokawa clan branch of the Fujiwaras. Hosokawa Katsumoto inherited the residence, and lived here before the Ōnin War. Katsumoto willed the war-ravaged property to be converted into a Zen sect temple complex after his death. Later Hosokawa emperors are grouped together in what are today known as the "Seven Imperial Tombs" at Ryoan-ji. The burial places of these emperors -- Uda, Kazan, Ichijō, Go-Suzaku, Go-Reizei, Go-Sanjō, and Horikawa -- would have been comparatively humble in the period after their deaths. These tombs reached their present state as a result of the 19th century restoration of imperial sepulchers (misasagi) which were ordered by Emperor Meiji.[1]
Ryōan-ji's tsuku (蹲踞 ?), which is a small basin provided at Japanese Buddhist temples for visitors to purify themselves by the ritual washing of hands and rinsing of the mouth.An object of interest near the rear of the monks quarters is the carved stone receptacle into which water for ritual purification continuously flows. This is the Ryōan-ji tsuku (蹲踞 ?), which translates literally as "crouch;" and the lower elevation of the basin requires the user to bend a little bit to reach the water, which suggests supplication and reverence.[2] The kanji written on the surface of the stone are without significance when read alone. If each is read in combination with 口 (kuchi), which the central bowl is meant to represent, then the characters become 吾, 唯, 足, 知. This is read as "ware tada taru (wo) shiru" and translates literally as "I only know plenty" (吾 = ware = I, 唯 = tada = only, 足 = taru = plenty, 知 = shiru = know). The meaning of the phrase carved into the top of the tsuku is simply that "what one has is all one needs" and is meant to reinforce the basic anti-materialistic teachings of Buddhism.
The absence of a dipper is intended to imply that the water is for the soul only and that it is necessary to bend the knee in humility in order to receive its blessing.
Kiyomizu-dera(清水寺)
Kiyomizu-dera (清水寺 ?), full name Otowa-san Kiyomizu-dera (音羽山清水寺 ?) is an independent Buddhist temple in eastern Kyoto. The temple is part of the Historic Monuments of Ancient Kyoto (Kyoto, Uji and Otsu Cities) UNESCO World Heritage site.[1] Not one nail is used in the whole temple. The temple should not be confused with Kiyomizu-dera in Yasugi, Shimane, which is part of the 33-temple route of the Chūgoku 33 Kannon Pilgrimage through western Japan.[2]
其实这些都是维基网络找来的,本来想给链接的,网络说我有广告,只贴了部分,其他的可用google 维基网络英文版找,包括景点介绍,历史什么的很全的。
10. 关于介绍日本的英语PPT
帮你找到一个
http://www.japaneselifestyle.com.au/travel/traveltojapan.html
你可以看到他有很多小分类,地理,历史都有了。