㈠ 人物傳記英語作文
After a chain of (一系列) unexpected defeats to Chinese favoured for the title, Rong carried the heavy hopes to make a breakthrough.
Rong`s rival in the final was top Hungarian paddler Ferenc Sido.
Rong was seen as an underdog for the title as he had just lost to Sido in the team contest. Even the victory flowers were being prepared for Sido.
But much to the surprise of the 8000-member audience, Rong won three straight sets with a big margin 21-12, 21-15, and 21-14 after losing the first set 19-21. Until that very moment, Rong realized the promise he made one year ago, that was to win a world championship for his motherland.
Two years later at the 26th championship for his motherland.
Two years later at the 26th championships in Beijing, Rong led the Chinese men to win the team title.
After becoming the coach(教練) of the Chinese women`s team, Rong led the team to the winners` podium at the 28th championshipsi n 1965.
㈡ 英語作文居里夫人的人物傳記
Marie Curie (1867- 1934) who said, "Madame Curie," Full name: Maria Curie 斯克沃多夫斯 card. French famous Polish scientist, physicist, chemist. November 7, 1867 was born in Warsaw.
In 1903, Pierre and Marie Curie and Henri Becquerel of radioactivity because the study shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1911 for his discovery of the elements polonium and radium Nobel Prize for chemistry once again, become the first won two Nobel Award of people. Marie Curie's accomplishments include creating a theory of radioactivity, radioisotope separation technology invention discovered two new elements polonium and radium. Under her guidance, people first radioisotopes used to treat cancer. Due to the long exposure to radioactive substances, Marie Curie on July 3, 1934 e to the death of malignant leukemia.
瑪麗·居里(1867-1934年)世稱「居里夫人」,全名:瑪麗亞·斯克沃多夫斯卡·居里。 法國著名波蘭裔科學家、物理學家、化學家。1867年11月7日生於華沙。
1903年,居里夫婦和貝克勒爾由於對放射性的研究而共同獲得諾貝爾物理學獎,1911年,因發現元素釙和鐳再次獲得諾貝爾化學獎,成為歷史上第一個兩獲諾貝爾獎的人。居里夫人的成就包括開創了放射性理論、發明分離放射性同位素技術、發現兩種新元素釙和鐳。在她的指導下,人們第一次將放射性同位素用於治療癌症。由於長期接觸放射性物質,居里夫人於1934年7月3日因惡性白血病逝世。
㈢ 一篇英文的人物傳記
Name:guanzhong huang
Sex:male
English:Paul Wong
Birthday:1964-3-31
Nationality:China
Region:harbor set
Height:169
Usually introce:83 year, the Beyond constitute, for attending a music game, the Beyond hasn't model at that time, 84 years the PAUL join, Chen Anne left a brigade, 86 years, Liu2 Zhi4 far joined, but left a brigade in 88 years, and 4 people combined to formally model.The 85 years' Beyond's oneself's property openned the first singing performance 《 for forever 》, 86 year, Beyond oneself more the property created 《again see ideal 》the record, Beyond and record company make a contract, 87 year, 1 《wait for forever 》of EP, along with publish for 88 years of the third record 《old day footprint 》, the Beyond starts head for brilliancy.
Beyond this English sound of a character is nearby at"different of".They are different, but not that a first light of day that the Electronica of guitar brought fragile and dispirited Hong Kong music revolution.Work a singer, guitarist in the music band in the yellow Guan, with sound, compose, write words, plait song.
㈣ 用英語寫一篇人物傳記
Helen Keller was less than two years old when she came down with a fever. It struck dramatically and left her unconscious. The fever went just as suddenly. But she was blinded and, very soon after, deaf. As she grew up, she managed to learn to do tiny errands, but she also realized that she was missing something. "Sometimes," she later wrote, "I stood between two persons who were conversing and touched their lips. I could not understand, and was vexed. I moved my lips and gesticulated frantically without result. This made me so angry at times that I kicked and screamed until I was exhausted." She was a wild child.
That's Helen Keller,a greatest writer in the world.
We reported last week that Helen Keller suffered from a strange sickness when she was only 19 months old. It made her completely blind and deaf. For the next five years she had no way of successfully communicating with other people. Then a teacher Anne Sullivan arrived from Boston to help her. Miss Sullivan herself had once been blind. She tried to teach Helen to live like other people. She taught her how to use her hands as a way of speaking. Miss Sullivan took Helen out into the woods to explore nature. They also went to the circus, the theatre., and even to factories. Miss Sullivan explained everything in the language she and Helen used, a language of touch, of fingers and hands. Helen also learned how to ride to horse, to swim, to row a boat, and even to climb trees.
Helen Keller once wrote about these early days.
One beautiful spring morning I was alone in my room, reading. Suddenly a wonderful smell in the air made me get up and put out my hands . The spirit of spring seemed to be passing in my room. "What is it?"I asked. The next minute I knew it was coming from mimosa tree outside. I walked outside to the edge of the garden, toward the tree. There it was, shaking in the warm sunshine. Its long branches, so heavy with flowers, almost touched the ground. I walked through the flowers to the tree itself and then just stood silent. Then I put my foot on the tree and pulled myself up into it. I climbed higher and higher until I reached a little seat. Long ago someone had put it there. I sat for a long time... Nothing in all the world was like this.
Later Helen learned that nature could be cruel as well as beautiful. Strangely enough she discovery this in a different kind of tree.
One day my teacher and I were returning from a long walk. It was a fine morning but it started to get warm and heavy. We stopped to rest two or three times. Our last stop was under a cherry tree, a short way from our house. The shade was nice and the tree was easy to climb. Miss Sullivan climbed with me. It was so coot up in the tree, we decided to have lunch there. I promised to sit still until she went to the house for some food. Suddenly a change came over the tree. I knew the sky was black because all the heat which meant light to me had died out of the air. A strange odor came up to me from the earth . I knew it. It was the odor which always comes before a thunder storm. I felt alone, cut off from friends, high above the firm earth. I was frightened and wanted my teacher. wanted to get down from that tree quickly, but I was no help to myself. There was a moment of' terrible silence. Then a sudden and violent wind began to shake the tree and its leaves kept coming down all around me. I almost fell. I wanted to jump, but was afraid to do so. I tried to make myself small in the tree as the branches rubbed against me. Just us I thought that both the tree and I were going to fall, a hand touched me . It was my teacher. I held her with all my strength, then shook with joy to feel the solid earth under my feet.
Miss Sullivan stayed with Helen for many year. She taught Helen how to read, how to write and how to speak. She helped her to get ready for school and college. More than anything, Helen wanted to do what others did, and do it just as well. In time Helen did go to college and completed her studies with high honors. But it was a hard struggle. Few of the books she needed were written in the Braille language that the blind could read by touching pages. Miss Sullivan and others had to teach her what was in these books by forming words in her hands. The study of geometry and physics was especially difficult. Helen could only learn about squares, triangles and other geometrical forms by making them with wires. She kept feeling the different shapes of these wires until she could see them in her mind.
During her second year college Miss Keller wrote the story of her life and what a college meant to her. This is what she wrote.
My first day at Radcliffe college was of great interest. Some powerful force inside me made me test my mind. I wanted to learn if it was as good as that of others. I learned many things at college. One thing I slowly learned was that knowledge does not just mean power, as some people say. Knowledge leads to happiness because to have it is to know what is true and real. To know what great man of the past had thought, said, and done is to feel the heartbeat of humanity down through the ages.
All of Helen Keller's knowledge reached her mind through her sense of touch and smell, and of course her feelings. To know a flower was to touch it, feel it and smell it. This sense of touch became greatly developed as she got older. She once said that hands speak almost as loudly as words. She said the touch of some hands frightened her. The people seemed so empty of joy that when she touched their cold fingers it is as if she were shaking bands with a storm. She found the hands of others full of sunshine and warmth. Strangely enough Helen Keller learned to love things she could not hear, music for example. She did this through her sense of touch. When waves of air beat against her, she felt them. Sometimes she put her hand to a singer's throat. She often stood for hours with her hands on a piano while it was played. Once she listened to an organ. Its powerful songs made her moved her body in rhythm with the music. She also liked to go to museums. She thought she understood sculptures as well as others. Her fingers told her the true size and the feel of the material.
What did Helen Keller think of herself, what did she think about the tragic lost of her sight and hearing. This is what she wrote as a young girl.
Sometimes a sense of loneliness covers me like a cold mist. I sit alone, and wait at life ' s shut-door. Beyond there is light and music and sweet friendship. But I may not enter. Silence sits heavy upon my soul. Then comes hope with a sweet smile and said
softly " There is joy in forgetting oneself And so I tried to make the light in others' eyes my sun, the music in others' ears my symphony, the smile on others' lips my happiness.
Helen Keller was tall and strong. When she spoke, her face looked very alive. It helped to give meaning to her words. She often felt the faces of close friends when she was talking to them to discover their feelings. She and Miss Sullivan both were known for their sense of humor. They enjoyed jokes and laughing at funny things that happened to themselves or others. Helen Keller had to work hard to support herself after she finished college. She spoke to many groups around the country. She wrote several books and she made one movie based on her life. Her main goal was to increase public interest in the difficulties of people with physical problems. The work Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan did has been written and talked about for many years. Their success showed how people can conquer great difficulties. Anne Sullivan died in 1936, blind herself. Before Miss Sullivan died, Helen wrote and said many kind things about her.
It was the genius of my teacher, her sympathy, her love which made my first years of ecation so beautiful. My teacher is so near to me that I do not think of myself as a part from her. All the best of me belongs to her. Everything I am today was awakened by her loving touch .
Helen Keller died on June 1st, 1968. She was 87 year old. Her message of courage and hope remains.
㈤ 求一篇人物傳記,英文的
上google裡面搜索Edward Hopper
維基網路(Wikipedia)里就有介紹
或
"Edward Hopper, the best-known American realist of the inter-war period, once said: 'The man's the work. Something doesn't come out of nothing.' This offers a clue to interpreting the work of an artist who was not only intensely private, but who made solitude and introspection important themes in his painting.
"He was born in the small Hudson River town of Nyack, New York State, on 22 July 1882. His family were solidly middle-class: his father owned a dry goods store where the young Hopper sometimes worked after school. By 1899 he had already decided to become an artist, but his parents persuaded him to begin by studying commercial illustration because this seemed to offer a more secure future. He first attended the New York School of Illustrating (more obscure than its title suggests), then in 1900 transferred to the New York School of Art. Here the leading figure and chief instructor was William Merritt Chase (1849-1916), an elegant imitator of Sargent. He also worked under Robert Henri (1869-1929), one of the fathers of American Realism - a man whom he later described as 'the most influential teacher I had', adding 'men didn't get much from Chase; there were mostly women in the class.' Hopper was a slow developer - he remained at the School of Art for seven years, latterly undertaking some teaching work himself. However, like the majority of the young American artists of the time, he longed to study in France. With his parents' help he finally left for Paris in October 1906. This was an exciting moment in the history of the Modern movement, but Hopper was to claim that its effect on him was minimal:
Whom did I meet? Nobody. I'd heard of Gertrude Stein, but I don't remember having heard of Picasso at all. I used to go to the cafés at night and sit and watch. I went to the theatre a little. Paris had no great or immediate impact on me.
"In addition to spending some months in Paris, he visited London, Amsterdam, Berlin and Brussels. The picture that seems to have impressed him most was Rembrandt's The Night Watch (in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam). Hopper was able to repeat his trip to Europe in 1909 and 1910. On the second occasion he visited Spain as well as France. After this, though he was to remain a restless traveller, he never set foot in Europe again. Yet its influence was to remain with him for a long time: he was well read in French literature, and could quote Verlaine in the original, as his future wife discovered (he was surprised when she finished the quotation for him). He said later: '[America] seemed awfully crude and raw when I got back. It took me ten years to get over Europe.' For some time his painting was full of reminiscences of what he had seen abroad. This tendency culminates in Soir Bleu of 1914, a recollection of the Mi-Caréme carnival in Paris, and one of the largest pictures Hopper ever painted. It failed to attract any attention when he showed it in a mixed exhibition in the following year, and it was this failure which threw him back to working on the American subjects with which his reputation is now associated. In 1913 Hopper made his first sale - a picture exhibited at the Armory Show in New York which brought together American artists and all the leading European modernists. In 1920 he had his first solo exhibition, at the Whitney Studio Club, but on this occasion none of the paintings sold. He was already thirty-seven and beginning to doubt if he would achieve any success as an artist - he was still forced to earn a living as a commercial illustrator. One way round this dilemma was to make prints, for which at that time there was a rising new market. These sold more readily than his paintings, and Hopper then moved to making watercolours, which sold more readily still.
"Hopper had settled in Greenwich Village, which was to be his base for the rest of his life, and in 1923 he renewed his friendship with a neighbour, Jo Nivison, whom he had known when they were fellow students under Chase and Henri. She was now forty; Hopper was forty-two. In the following year they married. Their long and complex relationship was to be the most important of the artist's life. Fiercely loyal to her husband, Jo felt in many respects oppressed by him. In particular, she felt that he did nothing to encourage her own development as a painter, but on the contrary did everything to frustrate it. 'Ed,' she confided to her diary, 'is the very centre of my universe... If I'm on the point of being very happy, he sees to it that I'm not.' The couple often quarrelled fiercely (an early subject of contention was Jo's devotion to her cat Arthur, whom Hopper regarded as a rival for her attention). Sometimes their rows exploded into physical violence, and on one occasion, just before a trip to Mexico, Jo bit Hopper's hand to the bone. On the other hand, her presence was essential to his work, sometimes literally so, since she now modelled for all the female figures in his paintings, and was adept at enacting the various roles he required.
"From the time of his marriage, Hopper's professional fortunes changed. His second solo show, at the Rehn Gallery in New York in 1924, was a sell-out. The following year, he painted what is now generally acknowledged to be his first fully mature picture, The House by the Railroad. With its deliberate, disciplined spareness, this is typical of what he was to create thereafter. His paintings combine apparently incompatible qualities. Modern in their bleakness and simplicity, they are also full of nostalgia for the puritan virtues of the American past - the kind of quirky nineteenth-century architecture Hopper liked to paint, for instance, could not have been more out of fashion than it was in the mid-192OS, when he first began to look at it seriously. Though his compositions are supposedly realist they also make frequent use of covert symbolism. Hopper's paintings have, in this respect, been rather aptly compared to the realist plays of Ibsen, a writer whom he admired.
"One of the themes of The House by the Railroad is the loneliness of travel, and the Hoppers now began to travel widely within the United States, as well as going on trips to Mexico. Their mobility was made possible by the fact that they were now sufficiently prosperous to buy a car. This became another subject of contention between the artist and his wife, since Hopper, not a good driver himself, resisted Jo's wish to learn to drive too. She did not acquire a driving licence until 1936, and even then her husband was extremely reluctant to allow her control of their automobile.
"By this time Hopper, whose career, once it took off, was surprisingly little affected by the Depression, had become extremely well known. In 1929, he was included in the Museum of Modern Art's second exhibition, Paintings by Nineteen Living Americans, and in 1930 The House by the Railroad entered the museum's permanent collection, as a gift from the millionaire collector Stephen Clark. In the same year, the Whitney Museum bought Hopper's Early Sunday Morning, its most expensive purchase up to that time. In 1933 Hopper was given a retrospective exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. This was followed, in 1950, by a fuller retrospective show at the Whitney.
"Hopper became a pictorial poet who recorded the starkness and vastness of America. Sometimes he expressed aspects of this in traditional guise, as, for example, in his pictures of lighthouses and harsh New England landscapes; sometimes New York was his context, with eloquent cityscapes, often showing deserted streets at night. Some paintings, such as his celebrated image of a gas-station, Gas (1940), even have elements which anticipate Pop Art. Hopper once said: 'To me the most important thing is the sense of going on. You know how beautiful things are when you're travelling.'
"He painted hotels, motels, trains and highways, and also liked to paint the public and semi-public places where people gathered: restaurants, theatres, cinemas and offices. But even in these paintings he stressed the theme of loneliness - his theatres are often semideserted, with a few patrons waiting for the curtain to go up or the performers isolated in the fierce light of the stage. Hopper was a frequent movie-goer, and there is often a cinematic quality in his work. As the years went on, however, he found suitable subjects increasingly difficult to discover, and often felt blocked and unable to paint. His contemporary the painter Charles Burchfield wrote: 'With Hopper the whole fabric of his art seems to be interwoven with his personal character and manner of living.' When the link between the outer world he observed and the inner world of feeling and fantasy broke, Hopper found he was unable to create.
"In particular, the rise of Abstract Expressionism left him marooned artistically, for he disapproved of many aspects of the new art. He died in 1967, isolated if not forgotten, and Jo Hopper died ten months later. His true importance has only been fully realized in the years since his death."
㈥ 關於中國人物傳記(有小標題)的英文作文
Albert Einstein was bron in Germany in 1879.he started instered in Compass whe he was a little boy .he likes doing some small research by himself .he study high maths in high scool.when he finish the collage ,he moved to swiss and published the photoelectric effect speech.he became the most famous sincentist in the world .
At last ,he died in 1955.we lost a greatest scientist in the world.we miss him for ever.
㈦ 求一篇英文人物傳記
glass castle(玻璃城堡) soul surfer(靈魂沖浪) 《A diary of a little girl》 安妮日記 by frank Anne Into the wild(荒專野生存)屬
㈧ 有關名人傳記的英語作文
亞伯拉罕·林肯傳
【內容提示】
請根據下列要點寫一篇有關亞伯拉罕·林肯的傳記文章:
①亞伯拉罕·林肯於1809年出生在肯塔基州的一間小木屋裡。他還很小的時候,全家搬遷到印第安納州的邊遠地帶。母親教他學文化。他受過很少一點正規教育,但他卻成了大西部受過最好的教育者之一。
②青年時期,他家搬到新建的伊利諾斯州。他很小就得自謀生計,但他在業余時間學習法律,很快就成了最有名的律師。
③1860年,林肯被選舉為總統。他是新共和黨的候選人。該黨反對產生新的奴隸州。這種主張遭到南方各州的反對,於是引起了內戰。
④ 1863年1月1日,就在內戰期間,林肯發布了著名的《奴隸解放宣言》。他宣布所有脫離聯邦各州的奴隸從即日起予以解放,結束了奴隸制。
⑤1865年初內戰結束。幾天後,林肯被一個叫做John Wilkes Booth的演員槍擊身亡。他遇刺的時間是1865年4月14日。
下列詞語供參考:
①Emancipation Proclamation《奴隸解放宣言》
②the Thirteenth Amendment 第十三條修正案
③seceding[si'si:diR] states 脫離聯邦的各州
④constitution[k&nsti'tju:M+n]n.憲法
【作文示範】
Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln was born in a log cabin in Kentucky on February 12, 1809. When he was a small boy, his family moved to the frontier of Indiana. Here, his mother tanght him to read and write. Lincoln had very little formal ecation, but he became one of the best-ecated men of the Great West.
When Lincoln was a young man his family moved to the new state of Illinois. Lincohn had to earn a living at an early age, but in his leisure time he studied law. He soon became one of the best-known lawyers in the state capital at Springfield, Illinois. It was here that Lincoln became famous for his debates① with Stephen A. Douglas on the subject of slavery.
In 1860, Lincoln was elected President of the United States. He was the candidate of the new Republican Party. This party opposed②the creation③ of new slave states. Soon after his election, some of the Southern states withdrew④ from the Union and set up the Confederate States of America. This action brought on the terrible Civil War which lasted from 1861 to 1865.
On January 1, 1863, ring the war, Lincoln issued his famous Emancipation Proclamnation. In this document, Lincoln proclaimed⑤ that all the slaves in the seceding states were to be free from that date. In 1865, after the war ended, the Thirteenth Amendment was added to the Constitution of the United States. This amendment put an end to slavery everywhere in the United States.
Early in 1865, the Civil War came to an end with the defeat of the South by the North. Only a few days after the end of the War, Lincoln was shot by an actor named John Wilkes Booth. The President died on April 14,1865. In his death, the world lost one of the greatest men of all time.
【詞語解釋】
①debate [di'beit] n.爭論;辯論
②oppose[+'p+uz]v.反對;反抗
③creation[kri:'eiM+n]n.創造;產生
④withdraw[wiJ'dr&:]v.退出;離開
⑤proclaim[pr+'kleim]v.宣布;公布;宣告
【寫法指要】
1)這是一篇記述他人的傳記(biography)。傳記指的是全面而真實地記載個人生平事跡的文章。傳記的寫作特徵有三:一是事實務求真實,表述可帶主觀性;二是按照歷史年代順序紀事;三是具有一定的格局,一般包括四部分:籍貫與家世、事跡與功業、逝世與後嗣、作者評論。本文對林肯的記述除缺少後嗣外,基本上是按上述三種特徵及四個部分寫的,只是作者評論少些。
2)名人的傳記少不了對歷史事件、地理名稱、文件文書、歷史人物等的描述,這些都要用大寫形式來書寫,對此我們從文中看得十分清楚。
㈨ 英語作文300字帶翻譯人物成功歷程
Let me move the historical figures I love reading, although I was a little girl, I love to see is a historical biography, so I moved there are many historical figures, a patriotic hero, inventor, poet and writer of them...... The deepest impression is uncle Lei Feng, because he is kind, honest and helpful, thrift did give me a deep impression. Uncle Lei Feng is an ordinary Chinese people's Liberation Army soldier, but he used a short life to help many people. He has always insisted on the "limited life, into the unlimited service for the people" as the goal of life. Once, Lei Feng went out to change in Shenyang station, a wicket, found that people around a middle-aged woman carrying a child, the women from Shandong District of Jilin to look at the husband, the ticket and the money lost. Lei Feng used his allowance to buy a train ticket to Jilin into the hands of sister-in-law, sister-in-law was full of tears. A resident of Fushun floods, transport links to the flood command, Lei Feng enred just participated in the fire burned hand pain and his comrades in the Temple Reservoir Dam spent seven days and nights, is recorded in a two. The deeds of Lei Feng. There are many learning... Uncle Lei Feng, we must learn from his study assiously to the spirit of "nails"; learning his thrift good habits; he "serve the people wholeheartedly learning dimension", thanklessness, unknown to the public spirit of selfless dedication. As a primary school student, I want to start from the bit by bit, from the side to start, to give students a friendly smile, more difficult for people to lend a helping hand. Uncle Lei Feng's life, although very short, but issued a golden ray of light, warm the hearts of many people. Lei Feng spirit will always inspire me to move forward, the spirit of Lei Feng is always a model for us to learn.
讓我感動的歷史人物我喜歡看書,別看我是個小姑娘,我最喜歡看的卻是歷史人物傳記,讓我感動的歷史人物有許許多多,他們中有愛國英雄、發明家、詩人、文學家……其中印象最深還是雷鋒叔叔,因為他善良、誠實、樂於助人、勤儉節約的事跡給我留下了很深的印象。雷鋒叔叔是一名普通的中國人民解放軍戰士,但他用短暫的一生幫助了許多人。他始終堅持把「有限的生命,投入到無限的為人民服務中」作為人生的奮斗目標。一次,雷鋒外出在沈陽車站換車時,一出檢票口,發現人們圍著一個背著小孩的中年婦女,原來這位婦女從山東區吉林看丈夫,車票和錢丟了。雷鋒用自己的津貼費買了一張吉林的火車票塞到大嫂手裡,大嫂感動的滿眼淚花。還有一次,駐地撫順發洪水,運輸連接到了抗洪搶險命令,雷鋒忍著剛剛參加救火被燒傷的手的疼痛又和戰友們在上寺水庫打壩連續奮戰了七天七夜,被記了一次二等功。雷鋒的感人事跡還有很多很多.....學習雷鋒叔叔,就要學習他刻苦鑽研的「釘子精神」;學習他勤儉節約的良好的生活習慣;學習他「全心全意維人民服務」,不圖回報,默默無聞無私奉獻精神。做為一名小學生,我要從點點滴滴做起,從身邊做起,給同學一個友善的微笑,多向有困難的人伸出援助之手。雷鋒叔叔的一生雖然很短暫,卻發出了金子般的光芒,溫暖了許多人的心。雷鋒精神永遠激勵著我前進,雷鋒精神永遠是我們學習的榜樣。
㈩ 英文版的名人傳記
Bill Gates(比爾·蓋茨)
Bill Gates was born on Oct, 28 in 1955 and grew up in Seattle with his two sisters. His father was a lawyer and his mother was a teacher. Bill Gates had his elementary school and high school ecation is Seattle. And it was ring that time Bill founded that his interests lying in writing programs and began to write programs at 13.
In 1973, Bill Gates was matriculated by Harvard but he quitted from Harvard three years later. He put all his time and energy into designing programs for Microsoft Cooperation which established in 1975 by Bill and his friend Paul Allen. He was committed to long –term development and improving the functions
Owing to Bill』s talent and efforts, Microsoft developed rapidly and its software won more and more reputations among the publics.
What』s more, Bill is also committed to philanthropy. So far, he has donated more than 24 billion dollars to establish a fund to support medical security and ecation careers in the world.
Bill Gates married Melinda French Gates on Jan, 1st in 1994.They have three children .In the spare time, Bill has passion in reading books and playing golf.