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| Do you have problem in your life and not know how to be happy? If 1 , you will find Being Happy Teenager written by the Australian writer Andrew Matthews 2 . In his book, Matthews 3 us how to live a happy life and answer the questions from teenagers. There are 4 subjects such as parents and friends,and the book says we should stop 5 and forgi e宽恕). The 6 tells as useful skills such as how to put what you have learned into pictures of your mi do 7 your memory better. Many teenagers think 8 happi ess comes from a good exam result 9 praise (赞扬) from other people. But you can 10 be happy when there are no such good things. Success comes from a good att~tude~f you 11 problems,you will achieve success in the future. Some school students have 12 such as being too tall or too short. But Matthews tells us that happiness comes from tH k~g about things 13 a positive way.lf you are 14 , people notice you and you can get a better view at the movie;if you are short,your clothesand shoes take less 15 in your bedroom! This is Matthews' most important lesson:youchoose to be happy! | ||||
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Do you speak English? Do you speak e-mail English? Maybe you don’t. E-mail English is a new kind of English that many people use to save time. A lot of e-mail English words come from a computer program called QQ, which means I seek(寻找)you. Ian Lancashire, a Canadian teacher, likes QQ, “People can use QQ to talk with each other using computer. But, you have to be able to type quickly or the other person will be bored. So e-mail English can give some help.”
A message in e-mail English mostly uses two kinds of new words. The first kind is made up of the first letters of the words. These are called acronyms. The second kind is homophones,letter combination(合并), symbols that sound like other words.
Acronyms in an e-mail save space and time. It takes a long time to write by the way. BTW is much faster. Other acronyms are F2F which stands for face to face, CSL for can’t stop laughing and DBEYR for don’t believe everything you read! Some of the acronyms look like strange words, such as SWAK. But this one means sealed(封口) with a kiss.
Homophones often use letters and numbers that sound like words or parts of words. For example, 8 sound like—eat in great, to save time, people write gr8. Another example is CU for see you or sometimes CU l8r (see you later)
The number 2 is used for to or too and the number 4 is used instead of for.
Another part of e-mail is emotive symbols(表情符号) which make faces when you look at them sideways. The most common emotive, is the happy face :). A comma (逗号) is often used to help add other parts of the face and show different expressions.
E-mail English is fun. An e-mail message with lots of e-mail English starts to look like secret code(密码). Your best friend will probably understand it, but your parents and teachers may not. In fact, many teachers don’t like e-mail English. It’s not just because they can’t comprehend what it means. It’s because students start to use e-mail English in their everyday writing. E-mail English is great for writing quickly. But most teachers say that e-mail English should only be used in e-mails to one’s friends.
【小题1】What does the writer talk about in the first paragraph?
| A.How to read new e-mail words. |
| B.How new e-mail words are made. |
| C.Why people use e-mail English. |
| D.Canadian teachers and their e-mails. |
| A.accept | B.understand | C.guess | D.prefer |
| A.Parents will have to learn some e-mail English. |
| B.E-mail English will develop our everyday writing. |
| C.E-mail English can’t be used among schoolmates. |
| D.E-mail English shouldn’t be used in school writing. |
| A.E-mail English on Computer. | B.American E-mail English. |
| C.The Forms of E-mail English. | D.The Changing of English. |
Do you speak English? Do you speak e-mail English? Maybe you don’t. E-mail English is a new kind of English that many people use to save time. A lot of e-mail English words come from a computer program called QQ, which means I seek(寻找)you. Ian Lancashire, a Canadian teacher, likes QQ, “People can use QQ to talk with each other using computer. But, you have to be able to type quickly or the other person will be bored. So e-mail English can give some help.”
A message in e-mail English mostly uses two kinds of new words. The first kind is made up of the first letters of the words. These are called acronyms. The second kind is homophones,letter combination(合并), symbols that sound like other words.
Acronyms in an e-mail save space and time. It takes a long time to write by the way. BTW is much faster. Other acronyms are F2F which stands for face to face, CSL for can’t stop laughing and DBEYR for don’t believe everything you read! Some of the acronyms look like strange words, such as SWAK. But this one means sealed(封口) with a kiss.
Homophones often use letters and numbers that sound like words or parts of words. For example, 8 sound like—eat in great, to save time, people write gr8. Another example is CU for see you or sometimes CU l8r (see you later)
The number 2 is used for to or too and the number 4 is used instead of for.
Another part of e-mail is emotive symbols(表情符号) which make faces when you look at them sideways. The most common emotive, is the happy face :). A comma (逗号) is often used to help add other parts of the face and show different expressions.
E-mail English is fun. An e-mail message with lots of e-mail English starts to look like secret code(密码). Your best friend will probably understand it, but your parents and teachers may not. In fact, many teachers don’t like e-mail English. It’s not just because they can’t comprehend what it means. It’s because students start to use e-mail English in their everyday writing. E-mail English is great for writing quickly. But most teachers say that e-mail English should only be used in e-mails to one’s friends.
1.What does the writer talk about in the first paragraph?
A. How to read new e-mail words.
B. How new e-mail words are made.
C. Why people use e-mail English.
D. Canadian teachers and their e-mails.
2.The underlined word “comprehend” in the last paragraph means “_______”.
A. accept B. understand C. guess D. prefer
3.What do teachers insist according to the passage?
A. Parents will have to learn some e-mail English.
B. E-mail English will develop our everyday writing.
C. E-mail English can’t be used among schoolmates.
D. E-mail English shouldn’t be used in school writing.
4.What’s the title for this passage?
A. E-mail English on Computer. B. American E-mail English.
C. The Forms of E-mail English. D. The Changing of English.
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A message in e-mail English mostly uses two kinds of new words. The first kind is made up of the first letters of the words. These are called acronyms. The second kind is homophones,letter combination(合并), symbols that sound like other words.
Acronyms in an e-mail save space and time. It takes a long time to write by the way. BTW is much faster. Other acronyms are F2F which stands for face to face, CSL for can’t stop laughing and DBEYR for don’t believe everything you read! Some of the acronyms look like strange words, such as SWAK. But this one means sealed(封口) with a kiss.
Homophones often use letters and numbers that sound like words or parts of words. For example, 8 sound like—eat in great, to save time, people write gr8. Another example is CU for see you or sometimes CU l8r (see you later)
The number 2 is used for to or too and the number 4 is used instead of for.
Another part of e-mail is emotive symbols(表情符号) which make faces when you look at them sideways. The most common emotive, is the happy face :). A comma (逗号) is often used to help add other parts of the face and show different expressions.
E-mail English is fun. An e-mail message with lots of e-mail English starts to look like secret code(密码). Your best friend will probably understand it, but your parents and teachers may not. In fact, many teachers don’t like e-mail English. It’s not just because they can’t comprehend what it means. It’s because students start to use e-mail English in their everyday writing. E-mail English is great for writing quickly. But most teachers say that e-mail English should only be used in e-mails to one’s friends.
小题1:What does the writer talk about in the first paragraph?
| A.How to read new e-mail words. |
| B.How new e-mail words are made. |
| C.Why people use e-mail English. |
| D.Canadian teachers and their e-mails. |
| A.accept | B.understand | C.guess | D.prefer |
| A.Parents will have to learn some e-mail English. |
| B.E-mail English will develop our everyday writing. |
| C.E-mail English can’t be used among schoolmates. |
| D.E-mail English shouldn’t be used in school writing. |
| A.E-mail English on Computer. | B.American E-mail English. |
| C.The Forms of E-mail English. | D.The Changing of English. |
I don’t remember much about we learned in her class, but my mother once told me that we write a lot. And I would bring back what I wrote and she could see there were so many mistakes. no red corrections. And always a star. Sometimes even a Good! It worried my mother, so one day she went to Mrs White and asked her why she corrected my mistakes.
And my mother says Mrs White said “The children are just to get excited about using words, about forming sentences. I don’t want to lose the interests with red ink(墨水). and grammar can wait. The wonder of won’t... ”.Maybe she didn’t say it exactly like that at that moment. And what my mother gave me was the main idea of what she could remember.
I now and think Mrs White must have been a rather teacher. She encouraged joy, wonder and excitement — even if our expression of it was . Because she believed a bud(花蕾)once nipped(掐断) never opens.
I used to misspell “beautiful” a lot. Never could quite remember that the e went the a. It annoyed my teacher in high school very much. If I was going to use the word so often, she considered the I could do was spell it right. Finally the e’s and a’s were in their right places. Am glad I didn’t wait on them though. Pretty is to spell but it doesn’t hold as much as you mean sometimes.
And Mrs White I had no worries about writing what I meant. Because Life isn’t Pretty. It’s Baeutiful.
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