满分5 > 高中英语试题 >

IMPROVE YOUR WRITING | WRITING INSPIRAT...

 

 

IMPROVE YOUR WRITING | WRITING INSPIRATION | GET PUBLISHED RESOURCES

Founded in 1887, The Writer aims to expand and support the work of professional writers with a straightforward presentation of industry information, writing instruction and professional and personal motivation. If you’re passionate about books, authors, and writing, you’ll find everything you need within our pages 12 times a year.

Our editors are interested in query letters (投稿信) on concrete topics written by emerging and experienced writers. We are looking for clear takeaway for our readers: What can they learn to improve their writing or advance their careers? What specific how-to tips and strategies will accomplish this?

In addition to a fleshed-out outline of your story idea and an estimated word count, queries should include a brief description of your background. For personal essays, we prefer writers to attach or paste the finished piece in their query email. We do not accept material that has been previously published in any form in print or online.

Queries should be sent by e-mail to tweditorial@madavor.com. All queries sent to any other address will be deleted.

Unfortunately, we receive hundreds of letters every week and cannot respond to all of them. If you haven’t heard from us in two weeks, please feel free to move your submission (投稿) to another publication. If you’re unfamiliar with our magazine, we recommend reading a few issues, subscribing, or at least signing up for our newsletter to get a feel for the kind of work we publish.

Article lengths vary widely from 300 to 3,000 words.

We recommend writers ask themselves the following questions before querying. It isn’t necessary to include them in your query, but we find it’s a good way to help us understand how your piece best fits in our pages:

* How specifically will this story idea help our readers become more informed writers?

* Why is this particular idea timely or relevant?

* Why are you the perfect person to write this piece?

We prefer electronic queries. Please do not mail queries.

Payment varies.

Thank you for considering a submission to The Writer magazine, the voice of imagination, creation, and publication since 1887.

 

 

 

1.According to the passage, The Writer magazine __________.

A.provides practical suggestions on a writing career

B.responds to all the query letters from the readers

C.introduces successful writers and their works only

D.prefers handwritten queries to electronic ones

2.When sending a query letter, a contributor must ________.

A.answer the three questions first B.attach a printed version of the story

C.subscribe to the magazine D.include a brief self-introduction

3.What is this passage mainly about?

A.Magazine recommendations. B.Submission guidelines.

C.Published stories. D.Subscription information.

 

1.A 2.D 3.B 【解析】 本题是一篇应用文。向有意投稿的作者介绍一些投稿原则,帮助他们顺利发表文章。 1.细节理解题。根据文章的“The Writer aims to expand and support the work of professional writers with a straightforward presentation of industry information, writing instruction and professional and personal motivation. (《作家》提供简单易懂的产业信息展示、写作指导、激发职业及个人写作积极性,最终拓展及提升专业作家的写作)”,可以看出该杂志是提供与写作方面有关的指导。故选A项。 2.细节理解题。根据原文的“queries should include a brief description of your background(投稿信要包含投稿人简短的背景介绍)”,可以看出投稿人要附赠自己的个人介绍。故选D项。 3.主旨大意题。根据原文“We recommend writers ask themselves the following questions before querying.(在投稿前,我们建议作者应该问以下几个问题)”,以及“it’s a good way to help us understand how your piece best fits in our pages(它能更好帮助我们理解你的写作是否和我们的页面契合)”,可判断该文是指导作者如何更好地写作投稿。故选B项。
复制答案
考点分析:
相关试题推荐

    Aristotle thought the face was a window onto a person’s mind. Cicero agreed. Two thousand years passed, and facial expressions are still commonly thought to be a universally valid way to judge other people’s feelings, irrespective of age, sex and culture. A raised eyebrow suggests confusion. A smile indicates happiness.

Or do they? An analysis of hundreds of research papers that examined the relationship between facial expressions and underlying emotions has uncovered a surprising conclusion: there is no good scientific evidence to suggest that there are such things as recognizable facial expressions for basic emotions which are universal across cultures. Just because a person is not smiling, the researchers found, does not mean that person is unhappy.

This may raise questions about the efforts of information-technology companies to develop artificial-intelligence algorithms (算法) which can recognize facial expressions and work out a person’s underlying emotional state. Microsoft, for example, claims its “Emotion API” is able to detect what people are feeling by examining video footage of them. Another of the study’s authors, however, expressed scepticism. Aleix Martinez, a computer engineer at Ohio State University, said that companies attempting to obtain emotions from images of faces have failed to understand the importance of context.

For a start, facial expression is but one of a number of non-verbal wayssuch as body posture, that people use to communicate with each other. Machine recognition of emotion needs to take account of these as well. But context can reach further than that. Dr Martinez mentioned an experiment in which participants were shown a close-up picture of a man’s face, which was bright red with his mouth open in a scream. Based on this alone, most participants said the man was extremely angry. Then the whole picture was shown. It was a football player with his arms outstretched, celebrating a goal. His angry-looking face was, in fact, a show of pure joy.

Given that people cannot guess each other’s emotional states most of the time, Dr Martinez sees no reason computers would be able to. “There are companies right now claiming to be able to do that and apply this to places I find really scary and dangerous, for example, in hiring people,” he says. “Some companies require you to present a video resume, which is analyzed by a machine-learning system. And depending on your facial expressions, they hire you or not, which I find really shocking.”

1.We can learn from the second paragraph that __________.

A.facial expressions are universal across cultures

B.it is hard to recognize some facial expressions

C.emotions and facial expressions may not be related

D.common facial expressions convey similar meanings

2.In the passage, the word “scepticism” (paragraph 3) is closest in meaning to “__________”.

A.similar interest B.fierce anger C.strong support D.great doubt

3.The experiment mentioned by Dr Martinez may prove that ___________.

A.facial expression is an important way to communicate

B.machine recognition of emotion is not reliable at all

C.facial expression is not the only way to detect feelings

D.people may misread facial expressions for lack of context

4.What does this passage mainly tell us?

A.Facial expressions are among the most universal forms of body language.

B.Computers can detect people’s mind by analyzing their facial expressions.

C.Facial expressions may not be the reliable reflection of a person’s emotions.

D.Companies can depend on machine recognition of emotion to hire people.

 

查看答案

    The true purpose of a business, Peter Drucker said, is to create and keep customers. “Customer value” has several definitions. I use the ______ to mean the total lifetime value of a company’s customer base. Companies can increase this value by ______ more customers, earning more business from existing ones, keeping them longer, making their experience simpler through digital improvements and so on. ______ leaders have long understood the importance of concentrating on customer value rather than pursuing short-term profits or quarterly earnings, and they’ve become enduring customer loyalty leaders in the process. It’s worth noting that a number of loyalty-leading companies are able to ______ shareholder pressure, or avoid it altogether, because they are founder-led, customer-owned, or not publicly traded.

Companies can ______ customer value in a variety of ways: To increase ______, enterprise software companies sometimes charge corporate customers change fees that can raise the total cost of ownership to as much as three times the original price. To reduce operating costs, restaurant chains sometimes ______ frozen and precooked ingredients in place of fresh and made-to-order food. The resulting profits may look good on the income statement. Such strategies may even lead to short-term earnings growth. But they also ______ potential customers and encourage disloyalty.

Given the importance of customer value, leaders should track it as much as they track other key assets (资产), such as buildings, machinery, and marketable securities. They also should reveal it in their quarterly and annual earnings releases so that investors can make ______ judgments about company performance and how it compares with that of industry peers. But most companies ________believe that measuring customer value is too difficult or costly. They continue to rely on a centuries-old accounting tradition that emphasizes physical and financial assets, and neither income statements nor balance sheets offer much ______ into the value of a company’s customers.

As investors wake up to the importance of customer value, however, many growth-stage companies now direct investors’ attention to ______ in growing the value of their customer base. Some public companies increasingly report various types of customer value metrics (指标). One of the UK’s top energy suppliers E.ON, ______, reports year-over-year customer counts in its financial report. “As a customer-focused company,” E.ON noted, “we see customer value as crucial to our success.”

This is a start, but because there are no customer-value reporting standards or requirements, investors still have a(n) ______ picture. The minority of companies that do provide customer value information decide for themselves what to disclose. ______, firms may calculate customer metrics differently or change them to tell a desired story, or simply stop reporting them if they fail to go with the company’s preferred narrative.

1.A.item B.version C.term D.definition

2.A.persuading B.consulting C.acquiring D.inspecting

3.A.Considerate B.Visionary C.Determined D.Powerful

4.A.resist B.relieve C.intensify D.maintain

5.A.raise B.adopt C.calculate D.destroy

6.A.income B.experience C.productivity D.demand

7.A.separate B.substitute C.forbid D.combine

8.A.appeal to B.rely on C.put down D.scare off

9.A.informed B.subjective C.definitive D.independent

10.A.fully B.hardly C.readily D.wrongly

11.A.suspicion B.extension C.literacy D.visibility

12.A.sacrifice B.success C.prejudice D.expense

13.A.as a result B.for example C.on the contrary D.in general

14.A.incomplete B.depressing C.convincing D.vivid

15.A.Instead B.Further C.Otherwise D.Therefore

 

查看答案

Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.

Discovering a Lost Brother

Kieron Graham always knew he had an elder brother named Vincent. His adoption papers, 1. (sign) when he was three months old, listed a brother named Vincent but no last name. Though Kieron spent years thinking about Vincent, he could never track him down.

That changed in December 2017, when Kieron’s adoptive parents gave him an DNA test as a Christmas gift. When his results came back, he was surprised 2. (find) he had a lot of DNA matches for relatives who had also taken the test. Most were distant connections, but one match was so strong that it 3. (label) “close family.” His name was Vincent Ghant. Kieron looked for him on Facebook and soon made a possible connection.

When they connected, it was 4. they had known each other their whole lives. As they talked, the brothers realized they lived about 20 minutes from each other. 5.(surprisingly), they attended the same university and majored and minored in the same subjects.

Vincent was nine when Kieron was born and remembers caring for his baby brother. But times were tough, and Shawn, who worked 15-plus hours a day as a nurse, decided that 6.(place) Kieron for adoption would give him the best chance to succeed.

“She was very emotional about that time, to the point 7. it was hard for her to put into words anything about what happened,” Vincent says.

Now the brothers had the chance to make up for lost time. They decided to meet at a local tea shop that week. One of Vincent’s concerns was that Kieron 8. hate his birth family for placing him for adoption. He was relieved Kieron didn’t, and 9. he’d grown up in a loving family. After that first meeting, the brothers played football together and celebrated Christmas with their families. “We’ll keep growing our relationship 10. it’s time to leave this planet,” says Vincent. That shouldn’t be hard. As Kieron says, “We’ve got years and years to catch up on.”

 

查看答案

Questions are based on the following passage.

1.A.In the gym. B.At a bookstore. C.At the library. D.In the classroom.

2.

A.Wait for a month. B.Keep the receipt.

C.Mark on the book. D.Accept a discount.

3.

A.The man doesn’t need the book now. B.He’s afraid he might damage the book.

C.The book costs too much for him. D.He prefers the edition with footnotes.

4.

A.Bargain with the woman. B.Go to another bookstore.

C.Wrap his book. D.Surf the Internet.

 

查看答案

Questions are based on the following passage.

1.

A.Goods are scarce and hard to get for ordinary consumers.

B.People aim for social distinction through what they own.

C.Manufacturers make more money by mass production.

D.Growth of consumerism is restricted by artificial products.

2.

A.To cut down on labour costs by reducing working hours.

B.To make customers feel they own something rare.

C.To increase their coffee price without losing customers.

D.To focus more on quality and customer satisfaction.

3.

A.Consumer awareness. B.Social distinction.

C.Artificial scarcity. D.Mass production.

 

查看答案
试题属性

Copyright @ 2008-2019 满分5 学习网 ManFen5.COM. All Rights Reserved.