How to write the opening and closing remarks of a poetry reading about youth?

Opening remarks:

Dear teachers and classmates, hello!

B: With the warm sunshine on X-Day, we ushered in this poetry recital.

A: Today, we are gathered here to enjoy the joy brought by poetry and enjoy this wonderful time.

B: Today, we gather here and walk into poetry and painting together.

A: Today, we are gathered here to open your heart and release your passion.

B: Today, we are gathered here, which will become an ocean of poetry and make happiness resound through the sky.

A: Next, students from * * * will bring you * * *.

Conclusion:

A: Students, you can't finish writing poems in spring.

B: You can't sing the melody of spring. ?

Let's follow the footsteps of spring.

Accompanied by the melody of spring.

Extend your hands and end this afternoon's poetry recital with the warmest applause.

Extended data:

Quoted opening remarks:

The opening remarks can also directly quote other people's words to pave the way for your speech and set off the theme.

As a material cited in the introduction, there are generally two basic conditions:

First, the cited materials have strong generality, persuasiveness and appeal.

Secondly, the quoted materials come from authorities, celebrities or people familiar to the audience, and the speaker uses the authority effect or the relatives and friends effect to attract the attention of the audience.

In some cases, the speaker doesn't even need to explain the source of the quoted material.

Hanging opening

Suspense can stimulate the curiosity of the audience and urge them to enter the speaker's theme framework as soon as possible.

Physical suspense is a special form of suspense prelude.

There are two points to pay attention to when using suspense prologue: First, don't turn common-sense questions that everyone knows into suspense; Second, don't deliberately keep the audience's appetite. All these may cause the audience to dislike the speaker.