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假定你是李华,注意到你校学生很少进行英语文学阅读。请给全校同学用英语写一封倡议书...

假定你是李华,注意到你校学生很少进行英语文学阅读。请给全校同学用英语写一封倡议书,倡导大家多阅读英语文学作品。内容包括:

1、介绍现状;

2、你对英语文学阅读的看法;

3、发出倡议。

注意:

1、词数80左右;

2、可适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。

My fellow students,

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Li Hua

 

My fellow students, Currently, most students in our school read little English literature, not only because they consider it too difficult, but because they don’t think it necessary. In my view, however, English literature is what we can’t afford to miss. It offers us an opportunity to appreciate the beauty of English and have a taste of a different culture. Better yet, it allows us to communicate with those great minds. I hereby appeal to every one of you to read more English literature and you won’t regret it! Li Hua 【解析】 这是一篇应用文。倡导书的写作,根据同学们很少进行英语文学阅读提出的一份倡导书,倡导大家多阅读英语文学作品。 第一步:审题 体裁:应用文 时态:根据提示,时态应为一般现在时和一般将来时。 结构:总分法 总分法指把主题句作为总说,把支持句作为分说,并以这种方式安排所写内容。 要求: 1.介绍现状:read little English literature;增补内容:原因:not only because; consider it too difficult; but because it is unnecessary. 2.你对英语文学阅读的看法 1)不能错失的一门学问。what we can’t afford to miss. 2)给我们机会欣赏英语的美。an opportunity to appreciate the beauty of English. 3) 拥有异域文化的品味。have a taste of a different culture. 4) 允许我们与那些伟大的思想进行交流。allow us to communicate with those great minds. 3.发出倡议I hereby appeal to everyone of you to read more English literature and you won’t regret! 第二步:列提纲 (重点词组及句型) read little English literature; not only because; consider it too difficult; but because; it is unnecessary. What we can’t afford to miss. an opportunity to appreciate the beauty of English. have a taste of a different culture. allow us to communicate with those great minds. I hereby appeal to everyone of you; to read more English literature; you won’t regret! 第三步:连词成句 Currently, most students in our school read little English literature, not only because they consider it too difficult, but because they don’t think it necessary. In my view, however, English literature is what we can’t afford to miss. It offers us an opportunity to appreciate the beauty of English and have a taste of a different culture. Better yet, it allows us to communicate with those great minds. I hereby appeal to every one of you to read more English literature and you won’t regret it! 根据提示及关键词(组)进行遣词造句,注意主谓一致和时态问题。 第四步:连句成篇(衔接词) 1.表文章结构顺序:First of all, Firstly/First, Secondly/Second… And then, Finally, In the end, At last 2.表并列补充关系:What is more, Besides, Moreover, Furthermore, In addition As well as, not only…but (also), including, 3.表转折对比关系:However, On the contrary, but, Although + clause(从句), In spite of + n/ doing, On the one hand…,On the other hand… Some…,while others…,as for, so…that… 4.表因果关系:Because, As, So, Thus, Therefore, As a result, not because…but because… 连句成文,注意使用恰当的连词进行句子之间的衔接与过渡,书写一定要规范清晰, 第五步:润色修改
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阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。

“The coronavirus may never go away”, 1. World Health Organization (WHO) has warned. 2. (speak) at a briefing on Wednesday, WHO emergencies director Dr Mike Ryan warned against trying to predict when the virus would disappear. He added, “controlling the virus is hard, 3.will require a massive effort”. Almost 300,000 people worldwide are reported4. (die) of coronavirus, and more than 4.3 million cases recorded. “It is important to put this on the table: this virus may never go away,” Dr Ryan told the virtual press conference. “HIV has not gone away--5.we have come to terms with the virus.” Dr Ryan then said he doesn't believe “anyone can predict when this disease will disappear”.

There are6.(current) more than 100 potential vaccines in development, but Dr Ryan noted there are other illnesses, such as measles (麻疹), that still 7.(eliminate) so far despite there being vaccines for them. WHO Director-General stressed8. was still possible to control the virus, with effort. We need to get into the mindset that it is going to take some time9.(come) out of this pandemic(大流行病). “Many countries would like to get out of the different measures,” the WHO boss said. “But our recommendation is still the alert at any country should be10.the highest level possible.”

 

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    I have been through the _______ of poverty and sickness. When people ask me what has kept me going through the troubles that come to all of us, I _______ reply: “I stood yesterday. I can stand today. And I will not permit myself to think about what might happen tomorrow.”

I have known want and struggle and anxiety and despair. I have always had to work beyond the _______ of my strength. As I look back upon my life, I see it as a battlefield strewn with the wrecks of _______ dreams and broken hopes and shattered illusions.

Yet I have no pity for myself; no tears to shed over the past and gone sorrows; no envy for the women who have been _______ all I have gone through. For I have lived. They only _______.

I have drunk the cup of life down to its very dregs(残渣). They have only sipped the bubbles on top of it. I know things they will never know. I see things _______ they are blind.

It is only the women whose eyes have been _______ clear with tears who get the broad vision _______ makes them little sisters to all the world.

I have learned in the great University of Hard Knocks a(an) ________ that no woman who has had an easy life ever acquires. I have learned to live each day ________ it comes and not to borrow trouble by dreading the morrow. It is the ________ menace(威胁)of the future that makes cowards of us. I put that ________ from me because experience has taught me that when the time comes that I so fear, the strength and wisdom to meet it will be given me.

I have learned not to ________ too much of people, and so I can still get happiness out of the friend who isn’t quite true to me or the acquaintance who ________. ________, I have acquired a sense of humour, because there were so many things over which I had either to cry or laugh. And when a woman can joke ________ her troubles instead of having hysterics(歇斯底里), nothing can ever hurt her much again.

I do not ________ the hardships I have known, because through them I have touched life ________ I have lived. And it was worth the ________ I had to pay.

1.A.widths B.depths C.lengths D.dimensions

2.A.sometimes B.nearly C.always D.punctually

3.A.limit B.limitation C.boundary D.power

4.A.injured B.slipped C.living D.dead

5.A.spread B.freed C.spared D.avoided

6.A.breathed B.stood C.existed D.appeared

7.A.to which B.at which C.for which D.in which

8.A.rushed B.washed C.brushed D.cleaned

9.A.what B.who C.which D.that

10.A.idea B.system C.competence D.philosophy

11.A.as B.when C.how D.why

12.A.sharp B.dark C.good D.plain

13.A.hatred B.threat C.dread D.competence

14.A.expect B.remind C.anticipate D.require

15.A.favors B.gossips C.sacrifices D.boasts

16.A.After all B.Besides C.Therefore D.Above all

17.A.beyond B.for C.on D.over

18.A.forget B.reserve C.regret D.addict

19.A.up to date B.at every point C.in every place D.all the round

20.A.price B.value C.bill D.hardships

 

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Charisma

Are leaders born or made? Many leaders throughout history-such as Gandhi, Churchill, Napoleon, and Martin Luther King-seem to have a special quality that made them powerful and persuasive. We can identify that quality as charisma, but can we explain it?

Charisma means a natural ability to attract other people and make them admire you. It is a complex mixture of social and emotional (情感的) skills. 1.Richard Wiseman, a famous psychologist, points out that there are three key qualities of a charismatic person: they feel their own emotions strongly; they inspire strong emotions in other people; and they are unaffected by the influences of other charismatic people.

You needn’ t worry if you don’ t have these qualities.2. Wiseman says that when you come upon someone who is charismatic, you can copy his or her body language and facial expressions without realizing it. This is called mirroring, and it works partly because people’ s behavior influences their emotions. 3. He proves his point by giving the example of smiling back at someone who smiled at you. Your smiling back suggests that you accept the goodwill from the other person and hope to give it back to him.

4. For example, if you stand up straight and raise your chest, you are more likely to feel confident and inspire others to feel confidence in you. Another expert says that the most charismatic people are usually good listeners. They give others the impression of being focused and modest.

Charisma plays a large part in success because it is linked to self-confidence. 5.  One successful leadership coach points out that you need to come by your skills and techniques naturally, she warns-if the personality you project is not real, you may come across as insincere.

A.This type of physical presence can be used to great effect.

B.Today there is growing evidence that charisma can be learned.

C.Charismatic persons should be active and sensitive to their surroundings.

D.It needs to be recognized that charisma is more than just being positive.

E.It helps to make strong personal connections and communicate effectively with others.

F.But it is worth noting that charisma can’ t be a pretended ability although it can be learned.

G.He adds you’ re unaware of picking up others’ gestures, but you know it makes you feel good.

 

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    Monday dawned warm and rainless. Aurelio Escovar, a dentist without a degree, opened his office at six. When he had a handful of is instruments arranged on the table, he sat down to polish the false teeth. He seemed not to be thinking about what he was doing, but worked steadily.

The sharp voice of his eleven-year-old son interrupted his concentration.

“Papa.”

“What?

“The Mayor wants to know if you'll pull his tooth.”

“ Tell him I'm not here.”

He was polishing a gold tooth. He held it at arm's length, and examined it with his eyes half closed. His son shouted again from the little waiting room.

“He says you are, too, because he can hear you.”

The dentist kept examining the tooth. Only when he had put it on the table with the finished work did he say, “So much the better.” He took several pieces of a bridge out of a cardboard box where he kept the things he still had to do and began to polish the gold.

“Papa.”

“What? He still hadn't changed his expression.

“He says if you don't take out his tooth, he'll shoot you.”

Without hurrying, with an extremely calm movement, he stopped his work and pulled the lower drawer of the table all the way out. There was a revolver (左轮手枪). “OK,” he said. “Tell him to come and shoot me.” He rolled the chair over opposite the door, his hand resting on the edge of the drawer.

The Mayor appeared at the door. He had shaved the left side of his face, but the other side, swollen and in pain, had a five-day-old beard.

The dentist saw many nights of desperation in his dull eyes. He closed the drawer with his fingertips and said softy, “'Sit down.”

“Good morning,” said the Mayor.

“Morning,” said the dentist.

While the instruments were boiling, the Mayor leaned his head on the headrest of the chair and felt better. His breath was icy. When he felt the dentist approach, the Mayor held his breath and opened his mouth.

Aurelio Escovar turned his bead toward the light. After inspecting the infected tooth, he closed the Mayor's jaw with a cautious pressure of his fingers. “It has to be without anesthesia (麻醉),” he said.

“Why?”

“Because you have an abscess (脓肿).”

The Mayor looked him in the eye. “All right,” he said, and tried to smile.

The dentist did not return the smile. He did all the preparation work without looking at the Mayor.

It was a lower wisdom tooth. The dentist spread his feet and grasped the tooth with the hot forceps (钳子). The Mayor seized the arms of the chair with all his strength. The dentist moved only his wrist. Without rancor (怨恨) rather with a bitter tenderness he said, “Now you'll pay for our twenty dead men.”

The Mayor felt the great pain in his jaw, and his eyes filled with tears. But he didn't breathe until he felt the tooth come out. Then he saw it through his tears. It seemed so foreign to his pain that he filed to understand his torture of the five previous nights.

The dentist gave him a clean cloth. “Dry your tears,” he said.

The Mayor did. He was trembling. While the dentist washed his hands, he saw the shabby ceiling and a dusty spider web with spider's eggs and dead insects.

The dentist returned, drying his hands. “Go to bed,” he said, “and gargle (漱口) with salt water.”

The Mayor stood up, said goodbye with a casual military solute, and walked toward the door, stretching his legs.

“Send the bill, he said.

“To you or the town?”

The Mayor didn't look at him. He closed the door.

1.Why did the dentist say he was not there (Para 6) when the Mayor wanted to have his tooth pulled?

A.Because he was only a dentist without a degree.

B.Because he was unwilling to treat the Mayor.

C.Because he was too busy to attend to the Mayor.

D.Because he was still polishing the Mayor's gold tooth.

2.What does the underlined sentence “He says if you don’t take out his tooth, he’ll shoot you.” imply?

A.The Mayor had a gun in secret. B.The Mayor was scaring the dentist's son.

C.The Mayor used to hate the dentist. D.The Mayor had absolute power in this town.

3.Which of the following statements is actually a lie?

A.There was a real revolver in the lower drawer of the dentist's table.

B.The Mayor didn't shave the right side of his face because of the toothache.

C.A lower wisdom tooth on the right side had given the Mayor a lot of pain for several days.

D.The dentist couldn't but pull the Mayor's tooth without anesthesia because of an abscess.

4.What kind of person is Aurelio Eascover according to the passage?

A.A humorous dentist in a small town. B.A skilled murderer in a dentist's clothing.

C.An ordinary citizen with a strong sense of justice. D.A brave hero in support of the government.

 

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    In the famous musical My Fair Lady, Eliza Doolittle, the poor daughter of a dustman who speaks with a thick Cockney accent, becomes the unwitting (不知晓的) target for a bet between two phonetics scholars. By the end of the musical, Doolittle is able to pronounce all of her words like a member of the British elite, fooling everyone at an embassy ball about her true origins.

It’s hard to imagine a version of My Fair Lady set in the U.S. because, unlike the British, Americans seem either unwilling or unable to honestly acknowledge their own social class. But a new set of scientific studies conducted by Michael Krauss and his colleagues at Yale University show that Americans find it easy to make distinctions about other people’s social class just by listening to them speak.

In one study, the researchers asked 229 people to listen to 27 different speakers who varied in terms of their age, race, gender and social class. The participants heard each speaker say a total of seven different words. Based on just this short audio, participants were able to correctly identify which speakers were college-educated 55 percent of the time-more than what would be expected by chance. A major limitation of this study, however, was that it used college education as a criterion for social class.

Then in another experiment, 302 participants were asked to either listen to or read transcripts (文本) from 90 seconds of recorded speech in which the speakers talked about themselves without explicitly mentioning anything about their social class. Participants were asked to judge what they thought the social classes of the speakers were by using a 10-rung ascending (上升的) ladder of increasing income, education and occupation. They found that participants who heard the audio recordings were more accurate in judging where the speakers fell in terms of their social status.

To show whether these inferences have real-world consequences, Kraus and his colleagues ran another experiment. They recruited 274 participants, all of whom had past hiring experience, to either listen to the audio or read a transcript of the content. The findings showed that participants were able to accurately judge the social class of the candidates and that this effect was stronger for participants who had heard the audio recordings. In addition, participants judged the higher-class candidates as more competent, a better fit for the job and more likely to be hired.

Taken together, this research suggests that despite our discomfort about the topic, Americans are able to easily detect one another’s social class from small snippets of speech. Moreover, we use this information to discriminate against people who seem to be of a lower social class. This research identifies social class as another potential way that employers may discriminate against candidates, perhaps without even realizing it.

1.The author introduces his topic by______.

A.making a comparison

B.justifying an assumption

C.explaining a phenomenon

D.relating the plot of a musical

2.What do the experiments suggest?

A.Participants tend to make objective judgments.

B.The content rather than the speaking style is reliable.

C.One’s social class can be inferred from how they speak.

D.Education and income are the main criteria for social status.

3.According to the passage, judgments about the way people talk_____.

A.disagree with the facts

B.affect hiring decisions

C.favour competent people

D.hardly provide reference

4.What can be learned from the last paragraph?

A.Americans are slow to judge social classes.

B.People in a low social class lose jobs easily.

C.Social-class discrimination is hard to address.

D.Speech can create social-class discrimination.

 

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