1. 各种颜色的丝带各自代表什么含义?
2. 灰丝带是什么意思
灰色的丝带
3. 看见有人给狗系灰丝带,什么意思?
因为灰丝带是防治狂犬病的标志,可以查到,那个人还挺时髦的嘛。这是好事,如果你家里有狗的话也可以给它系一个。
4. 各种颜色代表什么意义?
红色:活力、健康、热情、希望。黄色: 温和、光明、快乐。白色:纯洁、神圣、清爽。蓝色:秀丽、清新、宁静。黑色:神秘、静寂。绿色:青春、和平、庄重。
紫色:代表神秘、浪漫、爱情。
扩展资料:1、蓝色充满梦幻的色彩,始终保持清澈、浪漫的感觉,橱柜在这样的空间里,显得纯洁可爱、惹人遐思。蓝色在自然的掩映下,更加清新淡雅,富于装饰味道,特别适合工作紧张的白领,让喧嚣的心灵靠岸宁静的港湾。蓝色与其他颜色搭配,也会起到意想不到的效果。
蓝色与黄色的柜体在充足的光线下,格外清新醒目,二者搭配显出成熟和典雅,彼此相得益彰,和谐中不失灵活。用橘红色点缀蓝色橱柜,使深沉中增加一种明快与活跃。灰蓝为主调的大胆色彩运用,会让人耳目一新,清爽心情油然而生。此外,淡蓝朴素清澈;深蓝前卫摩登。
2、绿色轻松舒爽、赏心悦目的色彩。绿色是永远用不完,永远不会让人感到厌烦的主题,因为它的每一点变化,都对应着自然给人类的印象,所以绿色适合所有喜欢它的人。从淡绿转化为灰绿,然后暗紫,完成室外到室内的过渡,对应了人的视觉对空间的自然反应。
淡绿如田野的地板,黄色如秋叶的柜体,墨绿如松针的台面,构成一幅自然景色,使人心情豁然开朗。淡绿与淡蓝的配合,则使厨房充满盎然生机。生活在淡绿的空间里,梦都是清新的。明快而错落的绿,让人仿佛来到青山翠谷。
3、银灰色
银灰的流行是现代文明都市的产物,效率、健康、积极、热情融入其中。质朴中显出厚重的银灰,同样会让从喧闹世界返回家庭的主人,尽快回复平和的心态。
时尚、有品位的消费者多钟情此种颜色。银灰和现代感强、个性化装饰突出的橱柜,往往是密不可分的,这种色调附着于切割精致的柜体空间,仿佛置身遨游太空的飞行器。
参考资料:百度百科颜色寓意
5. 为什么有人喜欢佩戴灰色领带?这代表什么意思呢?》
人家喜欢呗!灰色代表正直、正经。
6. 黄丝带代表什么?有什么含义?
7. 黄色丝带代表什么?有什么特殊的含义?
歌曲来自一篇小品文,就是中国所谓"小小说",歌曲是根据文章改编的.当时就风靡全美国.
后来日本改变成电影,幸福的黄手帕,由著名演员高仓健主演,又轰动日本.女主角是倍赏千惠子.该电影剧本好象由中国戏剧出版社出版,里面对黄丝带的由来介绍得很详细.
今天要补充:
我竟然在我的藏书里找到这篇文章,题目是《going home》——归来!是香港读者文摘远东公司1975年出版的。
这篇很短的文章居然还有个更短的前言!是说,这个故事是作者几年前听说的,而且,他告诉别人的时候,别人说,记不请什么时候听过,所以作者说,这可能是个民间故事,过几年就会重新传播一次。
我幸运的在网上找到了它!以免要我打字!谢天谢地!
Going home
They were going to Florida –three
boys and three girls –and when they
boarded the bus, they were carrying
sandwiches and wine in paper bags,
dreaming of golden beaches and sea
tides as the gray cold of New York
vanished behind them.
As the bus rumbled south, they began to
notice Vingo. He sat in front of them,
dressed in a plain, ill-fitting suit,
never moving, his dusty face masking his age. He chewed the inside of his lip a
lot, frozen into some personal cocoon of silence.
Deep into the night, and outside
Washington, the bus pulled into a
roadside restaurant, and everybody got off except Vingo. He sat rooted in his seat, and the young people began to wonder about him, trying to imagine his life:
perhaps he was a sea captain, a runaway
from his wife, an old soldier going home. When they went back to the bus, one
of the girls sat beside him and
introduced herself.
“We’re going to Florida,” she said
brightly. “I hear it’s beautiful.”
“It is,” he said quietly, as if
remembering something he had tried to
forget.
“Want some wine?” she said. He smiled
and took ag. He thanked her and
retreated again into his silence. After a while, she went back to the others,
and Vingo nodded in sleep.
In the morning, they awoke another
restaurant, and this time Vingo went in. The girl insisted that he join them. He
seemed very shy, and ordered black
coffee and smoked nervously as the young people chattered about sleeping on
beaches. When they returned to the bus,
the girl sat with Vingo again, and after a while, slowly and painfully, he told his story. He had been in jail in New
York for the past four years, and now he was going home.
“Are you married?”
“I don’t know.”
“You don’t know?” she said.
“Well, when I was in the can I wrote to my wife,” he said. “I told her that I
was going to be away a long time, and
that if she couldn’t stand it, if the
kids kept asking questions, if it hurt too much, well, she could just forget me. I’d understand. Get anew guy, I
said-she’s a wonderful woman, really
something-and forget about me. I told her she didn’t have to write me. And she
didn’t. Not for three and a half years.”
“And you’re going home now, not
knowing?”
“Yeah,” he said shyly. “Well, last
week, when I was sure the parole was
coming through, I wrote her again. There’s a big oak tree just as you come
into town. I told her that if she’d
take me back, she should put a yellow
handkerchief on the tree, and I’d get
off and come home. If she didn’t want
me, forget it--no handkerchief, and
I’d go on through.”
“Wow,” the girl said. “Wow.”
She told the others, and soon all of them were in it, caught up in the approach
of Vingo home town, looking at the
pictures he showed them of his wife and
three children—the woman handsome in a
plain way, the children still unformed
in the cracked, much-handled snapshots.
Now they were 20 miles from the town,
and the young people took over window seats on the right side, waiting for the
approach of the great oak tree. The bus acquired a dark, hushed mood, full of the silence of absence and lost years. Vingo stopped looking, tightening his face
into the ex-con’s mask, as if
fortifying himself against still another disappointment.
Then it was ten miles, and then five. Then, suddenly, all of the young people
were up out of their seats, screaming
and shouting and crying, doing small
dances of exultation. All except Vingo.
Vingo sat there stunned, looking at the
oak tree. It was covered with yellow
handkerchiefs—20 of them, 30—of them,
maybe hundreds, a tree that stood like a banner of welcome billowing in the wind. As the young people shouted, the old
con rose from his seat and made his way
to the front of the bus to go home.
但是这把前面的前言删掉了。
8. 各种颜色都代表什么含义?
色彩心理学