Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - Welcome to Zhengzhou.

Welcome to Zhengzhou.

Welcome to Zhengzhou: Welcome to Zhengzhou.

Related examples

You are welcome to come to our house at any time.

Welcome to our home at any time.

People warmly welcomed him back to Beijing.

He was warmly welcomed back to Beijing.

They gave him a warm welcome. ?

They gave him a warm welcome.

They gave us a very grand welcome.

They gave us a grand welcome.

She first said a few words of welcome to the guests.

She began with a few words of welcome to the guests.

He rejoiced at being warmly welcomed.

He was glad to be warmly welcomed.

Extended data:

Welcome to:

1, v. (verb)

Welcome means "welcome" and can express welcome to someone or reaction to something. By extension, it can mean "happy or satisfied with something", "willing to accept, hoping to have" and so on.

Welcome is a transitive verb, followed by a noun, pronoun or gerund, and can also be followed by a verb infinitive as a compound object of complement. Can be used for passive structures. When welcome drives a noun as the object, the gerund can add the possessive or objective case of the noun or pronoun to indicate its logical subject.

2. (adjective)

Welcome, as an adjective, means "welcome and pleasure", refers to psychological activities and intangible welcome. It is a continuous state and can be used as an attribute or predicate in a sentence.

Welcome can also be used as the solution of "free possession, free doing", in which only the predicate is used, followed by an infinitive verb or a phrase caused by the preposition to.

3. (noun)

Welcome as a noun means "welcome, welcome", which means cordial or warm greeting, reception or hospitality. It can be used as a countable or uncountable noun.

4. Inside (interjection)

Welcome as an exclamation means "welcome". It is a greeting when greeting people. It is also used in formal occasions, on placards hung on stations, docks, airports and streets, or on the headlines of advertising languages and newspapers. It is often used with adverbs or prepositions to indicate directions.