Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - A sunny sentence in the winter afternoon

A sunny sentence in the winter afternoon

This sentence goes like this on a sunny afternoon in winter:

1. In the afternoon, I believe the horse walked here by the reins. A vertical avenue extends straight from north to south, with tall phoenix trees on both sides and willow trees in the middle leading the way.

2. The warm and sunny afternoon reminds me of the smoke from my hometown ... When I look up at the sky, I find there is no such quiet picture in front of me.

I walked out of the building and into the street in the center of the city. Before I could see the colorful street scenes, I was deeply immersed in the warm afternoon sunshine.

4, sit down, holding a book, wandering in the world of Lin in April. Time is cool, those distant days, those distant future, dispersed in the weak sunshine in the afternoon.

5. On weekends, the weather is sunny. After lunch, I cleaned up, leaned back on the corner of the sofa and covered it with a thin blanket. I really want to close my eyes and take a nap. Sunny as gold, sprinkled on the earth, sprinkled on me, warm and pleasant.

6. Through the afternoon sunshine, I bathed in the sunshine heart and heard the sound of flowers blooming. Although the flowers are very quiet, I still hear the sound of flowers. That's the flower in the atrium, unparalleled.

7. In the early winter afternoon, the breeze is still there, and the scattered leaves are dancing gently in the wind. The warm sunshine shone into the room and made a cup of strong coffee, and the fragrance filled the whole room. Accompanied by Lei Ting's sad melody, enjoy the comfort and comfort of that moment!

8. In the spring afternoon, the sunshine is warm, with gentle wind, gently blowing the branches that have turned green, and occasionally birds cross the sky, leaving a string of songs.

9. Under the shade of trees, beside flowers, warm sunshine, quiet people and leisurely time. The breeze turned the pages, and there was a fragrance in the air. I don't know whether it comes from flowers and leaves or poetry and tea.