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Writing
According to the reference, write a passage in English with at least 100 words.
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¡¡¡¡ Dear Smith,¡¡¡¡ I'm Wang Ning, a senior school student in Gansu Province. I like learning English, but I'm not quite clear about the differences between British English and American English. Some students say I am speaking American English while others think I'm speaking British English. I really want to know what English I'm speaking and their differences. The problem has been puzzling me for some time. Please help me. An early reply will he highly appreciated.Yours, Wang Ning |
Bobby Moresco grew up in New York's Hell's Kitchen, a tough working-class neighborhood on Manhattan's West Side. But Hell's Kitchen lies right next door to Broadway, and the bright lights attracted Bobby from the time he was a teen. Being stage-struck was hardly what a street kid could admit to his partners. Fearing their ridicule, he told no one, not even his girlfriend, when he started taking acting lessons at age 17. If you were a kid from the neighborhood, you became a cop, construction worker, longshoreman or criminal. Not an actor.
Moresco struggled to make that long walk a few blocks east. He studied acting, turned out for all the cattle calls -- and during the decade of the 1970s made a total of $2,000. "I wasn't a good actor, but I had a driving need to do something different with my life," he says.
He moved to Hollywood, where he drove a cab and worked as a bartender. "My father said, 'Stop this craziness and get a job; you have a wife and daughter.' ¡°But Moresco kept working at his chosen craft.
Then in 1983 his younger brother Thomas was murdered in a mob-linked killing. Moresco moved back to his old neighborhood and started writing as a way to explore the pain and the patrimony of Hell's Kitchen. Half-Deserted Streets, based on his brother's killing, opened at a small Off-Broadway theater in 1988. A Hollywood producer saw it and asked him to work on a screenplay.
His reputation grew, and he got enough assignments to move back to Hollywood. By 2003, he was again out of work and out of cash when he got a call from Paul Haggis, a director who had befriended him. Haggis wanted help writing a film about the country after September 11. The two worked on the writing, but every studio in town turned it down. They kept pitching it. Studio executives, however, thought no one wanted to see a severe, honest vision of race and fear and lives in collision in modern America.
Moresco believed so strongly in the script that he borrowed money, sold his house. He and Haggis kept pushing. At last the writers found an independent film producer who would take a chance, but the upfront money was too little, Moresco delayed his salary.
Crash slipped into the theaters in May 2005, and quietly became both a hit and a critical success. It was nominated for six Academy Awards and won three -- Best Picture, Best Film Editing and Best Writing (Original Screenplay) by Paul Haggis and the kid from Hell's Kitchen.
At age 54, Bobby Moresco became an overnight success. "If you have something you want to do in life, don't think about the problems," he says, "think about other ways to get it done."
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿ Rearrange the following statements in term of time order:
a. His work Half-Deserted Streets drew attention as it opened at a small Off-Broadway theater
b. Unexpectedly Crash became both a hit and a huge success.
c. He moved to Hollywood to be a taxi driver and a waiter.
d. He started learn acting in spite of hardness with the belief of doing something diiferent.
e. His younger brother Thomas was killed in conflict among bullies.
A£®d; c; e; a; b | B£®d; e; c; b; a | C£®c; d; e; a; b | D£®c; e; d; b; a |
A£®He wnted to give his girlfriend a surprise. |
B£®His girlfriend did not allow him to do this. |
C£®He was afraid of being laughed at. |
D£®He had no talent for acting. |
A£®His father did not support his work as a bartender. |
B£®Before he became an overnight success, his life experienced ups and downs. |
C£®His brother¡¯s death inspired his writing Half-Deserted Streets. |
D£®Moresco grew up in New York's Hell's Kitchen which is a few blocks east of Broadway. |
A£®they thought the script would not be popular. |
B£®the script was not well written. |
C£®they had no money to make the film based on the script. |
D£®they thought Moresco was not famous. |
A£®The Road to Success | B£®Try It a Different Way |
C£®A Talented man¡ªMoresco | D£®Moresco¡¯s Perseverance |
A£®initiative and persistent | B£®shy but hardworking |
C£®caring and brave | D£®aggressive and modest |
O. Henry was a pen name used by an American writer of short stories. His real name was William Sydney Porter. He was born in North Carolina in 1862. As a young boy he lived an exciting life. He did not go to school for very long, but he managed to teach himself everything he needed to know. When he was about 20 years old, O. Henry went to Texas, where he tried different jobs. He first worked on a newspaper, and then had a job in a bank, when some money went missing from the bank. O. Henry was believed to have stolen it. Because of that, he was sent to prison. During the three years in prison, he learned to write short stories. After he got out of prison, he went to New York and continued writing. He wrote mostly about New York and the life of the poor there. People liked his stories, because simple as the tales were, they would finish with a sudden change at the end, to the reader¡¯s surprise.
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿ In which order did O. Henry do the following things?
a. Lived in New York. b. Worked in a bank. c. Travelled to Texas.
d. Was put in prison. e. Had a newspaper Job. f. Learned to write stories.
A£®e. c. f. b. d. a | B£®c. e. b. d. f. a | C£®e. b. d. c. a. f. | D£®c. b. e. d. a f. |
A£®they had surprise endings | B£®they were easy to understand |
C£®they showed his love for the poor | D£®they were about New York City |
A£®people thought he had stolen money from the newspaper |
B£®he broke the law by not using his own name |
C£®he wanted to write stories about prisoners |
D£®people thought he had taken money that was not his |
A£®He was well-educated. | B£®He was not serious about his work. |
C£®He was devoted to the poor. | D£®He was very good at learning. |
A£®His life inside the prison. | B£®The newspaper articles he wrote. |
C£®The city and people of New York. | D£®His exciting early life as a boy. |
O. Henry was a pen name used by an American writer of short stories. His real name was William Sydney Porter. He was born in North Carolina in 1862. As a young boy he lived an exciting life. He did not go to school for very long, but he managed to teach himself everything he needed to know. When he was about 20 years old, O. Henry went to Texas, where he tried different jobs. He first worked on a newspaper, and then had a job in a bank. When some money went missing from the bank, O. Henry was believed to have stolen it. Because of that, he was sent to prison. During the three years in prison, he learned to write short stories. After he got out of prison, he went to New York and continued writing. He wrote mostly about New York and the life of the poor there. People liked his stories, because simple as the tales were, they would finish with a sudden change at the end, to the reader¡¯s surprise.
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿In which order did O. Henry do the following things?
a. Lived in New York. b. Worked in a bank. c. Travelled to Texas.
d. Was put in prison. e. Had a newspaper Job. f. Learned to write stories.
A£®e. c. f. b. d. a | B£®c. e. b. d. f. a |
C£®e. b. d. c. a. f. | D£®c. b. e. d. a f. |
A£®they had surprise endings | B£®they were short |
C£®they showed his love for the poor | D£®they were about New York City |
A£®people thought he had stolen money from the newspaper |
B£®he broke the law by not using his own name |
C£®he wanted to write stories about prisoners |
D£®people thought he had taken money that was not his |
A£®He was well-educated. | B£®He was not serious about his work. |
C£®He was devoted to the poor. | D£®He was very good at learning. |
A£®His life inside the prison. | B£®The newspaper articles he wrote. |
C£®The city and people of New York. | D£®His exciting early life as a boy. |
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A£®Think while you are reading B£®Select a proper material C£®Five suggestions for achieving better results D£®Read loudly E£®Read on F£®Use a dictionary at a right time |
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿( )
Don¡¯t choose a rather difficult book or a too easy one for yourself to read. A book full of new words will make you feel discouraged quickly. To understand those new words, you have to turn to the dictionary quite often. .A too easy one will only waste your time and cannot do any help. The two extremes may at last make you give up reading. So it¡¯s better for you to find a proper book with no more than five new words on each page.
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ2¡¿( )
If you come across a new word, do not look it up in a dictionary at once.Leave it alone and guess the meaning of it based on the content of the text. This ability is quite necessary in reading. If you know your guess is right later, you will be highly excited at your ¡°success¡±, and your interest in reading is well encouraged. If a word really prevents you from understanding the whole passage, turn to the dictionary by then. I am sure you can remember this word very well, as it has left you such a deep impression for its ¡°troublesome image¡±.
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ3¡¿( )
To comprehend what you are reading, you should think while you are reading, then form your own ideas. Your writing does not need to be quite formal but expressive. This practice can make you communicate with the original English authors. Day by day, your way of thinking in English will turn into a native way, which is quite important for English writing.
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ4¡¿( )
Language has its own beauty, no matter Chinese or English. Don¡¯t merely take English as a ¡°test¡±. Take it as an ¡°entertainment¡± instead and you will enjoy it through learning. Maybe you should find some beautiful literary works such as a prose or a poem to read, if you like. Try to read them as loudly as you can. During this process, not only you can enjoy yourself by the great emotions of the writers, but also your pronunciation and your manner of speaking English will be improved.
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ5¡¿( )
The last but not the least, keep on reading. If you cannot keep it as a habit, you will suffer from paying without gaining.