模仿英语怎么说
If the parents duplicity, words and deeds, the child will imitate their behavior, their teachings are ignored.
In some cultures, even contemporary ones, the imitation of standard models is valued more than work that sets out to be path-breaking.
At that time, I didn't want to entangle myself into the trend, such that it made me feel like imitating modern western art.
Your child will naturally copy you so it is important that you are seen reading and enjoying books newspapers and magazines rather than just absorbed in screens.
Under a step, I waved a hand greatly this time and did our imitation that I watched with binoculars with both hands!
Parts of the excerpts released by Time magazine yesterday read like a jarring parody.
For many, Rome is at best the imitator and the continuator of Greece on a larger scale.
Gates figured that many PC makers would copy IBM's open architecture, and make their own PCs; they'd need to license an operating system, too.
Listening and imitating should always go together.
Please listen to the recorder and imitate the recording.
There was once a man in South America who had a parrot, a pet bird that can imitate human speech.
The risk is of course that innovation may frequently lead to imitation.
He has had to hire extra Elvis impersonators, he said, to bring the contingent to six.
In acquiring books, often in mock-heroic ways, he says he has managed "to renew the Old World."
The look and form of the phone are designed to resemble the playful nature of the xylophone.
Imitations desktops to-date have simply been clunky and slow imitations of the real-thing at best.
At a price point better known for cheap imitations, the SVP series stands out from the competition.
The game series is proclaimed as the one that made the stealth genre popular, which has since resulted in many imitations.
But I don't want a small one at the moment because they're all like supermarket own-brand cola: weedy imitations of the real thing.
Nevertheless, it is one of the paradoxes of the European and Asian cinema that its greatest success was in spawning American imitations.
One thing Margaret and I had in common was: we could do imitations.
One, set forth by Aristotle in the fourth century B.C., sees humans as naturally imitative—as taking pleasure in imitating persons, things, and actions and in seeing such imitations.
A closely related theory sees theater as evolving out of dances that are primarily pantomimic, rhythmical or gymnastic, or from imitations of animal noises and sounds.
But it's said to no longer contain kola nut extract, relying instead on artificial imitations to achieve the flavor.