A. 初三生活作文的素材
英语主要撑握基础知识及需做些中度题。语音知识需多看多记多练,没什么捷径,最多是些单词记忆法,及提高自己学习效率的有效时间安排。在语法上,要结合知识点多做专项题。在阅读理解上,除每天保证两到三篇的练习外,要增加自己的课外阅读量,目的是培养英语语感;书面表达以一些范文为例进行持续练习。听力最好每天坚持听20-30分钟,另外练习口语也是提高听力的最好办法。最终学好英语一定要多下功夫。
应做到“四勤”与“四多”,具体说来,有以下几点:
一、“四勤”
1.勤背诵。
积极记忆课本中出现的生词及词组,理解其用法,并适当运用一些正、反义词对比,相似词对比等方式加强记忆。这一步虽然枯燥乏味,但少了它,学习英语就像折了翅膀的鹰,空有雄心却寸步难行。
2.勤朗读。
这是学好英语的法宝之一。朗读的内容一般说来只限于课本,并不以背诵为目的,而着重将注意力集中于自己的正确发音、连续语气等等。通过朗读可以熟悉单词及其用法,体会英语的语气、语境,增强语感。每天只需半小时左右,但须持之以恒。
3.勤练习。
虽然“题海”战术不足取,但适当做一些练习,尤其是针对自己不足之处的练习是必不可少的,比如完形填空这种难度较大、考查综合能力的题型,平时就应多做一些。每次做完后,认认真真地重新对照答案细细抠一遍,体会这些正确选项究竟合理在什么地方,出题者的意图又是在考查哪些知识点等等。只有在不断的练习、体会中,英语水平及应试能力才会不断提高。
4.勤总结。
相对于其它学科来说,英语的知识点相当零碎,一定要在平时的收集、整理、总结上下功夫。平时听老师提到或是在参考书上看到的一些零碎的小知识都要及时记录下来,以备以后复习时用。
二、“四多”
1.多看。
近年来英语试题的难度逐渐增大,试题的触角涉及到日常生活的各个领域,因此,尽可能地扩大阅读面,广泛阅读,以求开阔视野,并在潜移默化中提高自己的英文水平。
2.多听。
近年的中考已逐步加入听力试题。其实,多听并不仅仅是为了应试,更重要的一点就是在听的过程中可以逐步增强语感。培养敏锐的语感将有助于增强辨析力和判断力,是英语学习过程中十分重要的一环。
3.多说。
多说可以增强口语能力,加深记忆,使学过的知识清晰地映在脑海里,不容易被忘记。
4.多练。
通过做大量的习题,可以增强实践经验,不至于临阵发慌,手足无措。而且,熟能生巧,做题也能做出规律,做出语感来。
当然,学习一门语言本身也有其自身的规律,所谓“四勤”、“四多”也只不过是一种加强的手段。要学好英语,更重要的是从语言本身出发,深入钻研其中的奥秘,从字、词、句、章各方面逐个加强练习,严守“四勤”、“四多”的原则,轻轻松松取法好成绩。
。
具体实行方案如下:
1 - 最重要是单词,开学之时制定个计划,准备在什么时候把第几课的单词背熟,如果可能尽早把所有单词记得滚瓜烂熟,要是不行至少在每一节上课之前把此课的单词记熟(这是关键,英语成不成功70%就靠它了)。
2 - 每天至少看30分钟的课文,哪一篇都好(前提是单词读熟),最好以娱乐的心态去进行,不要当作苦差,如果坚持不了至少一周看三次,在读的时候慢慢培养速度,当然这是在读的质量有保证的前提下。(中考时阅读就看这日积月累的工夫了)
3 - 买英语系列磁带,每天坚持听一段时间,至少多长自己把握。(注意,一定要从初级开始听,一开始就好高务远听中,高级的话绝对无效)
4 - 每天写一篇英语日记是很有帮助的,但很多人做不到这一点,所以我建议至少每星期写一篇,这对提高英语语感和写作技巧都有极大帮助,如果有机会的可以把日记本交给英语老师修改,看看能得到什么意见。
我认为,如果可以完全或80%地做到以上四点,初中英语之掌握,自然不在话下
B. 英语写作素材 我参加的英语考试需要很大的知识面。需要英语的最好是美国的重大与人物事件。而我现在连人名
Reeve was real-life 'Superman'
Although he will always be remembered for portraying "Superman," the greatest role of actor Christopher Reeve's life was as a champion of sufferers of spinal cord injuries(脊椎损伤患者中的斗士) and an advocate of stem cell research(干细胞研究).
Unlike the man of steel, he wasn't faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive and he couldn't leap tall buildings in a single bound.
But the courage and determination Reeve displayed in trying to overcome his paralysis from a 1995 horse-riding accident far surpassed any of the feats of the comic book hero(连环画英雄).
"He became a real-life Superman. His heroism, his courage was extraordinary," Colin Blakemore, the chief executive of Britain's Medical Research Council(英国医学研究学会主任) said.
"Like many people who suffer some terrible injury, Christopher Reeve was reinvented(彻底改变) by that experience and brought the kind of energy and enthusiasm that made him successful as a film star to an entirely different issue, with huge effect."
Reeve, 52, died on October 10 of heart failure(心脏功能衰竭) after having treatment for an infected pressure wound(伤口严重感染) without realizing his dream of walking again.
But in the nine years since his accident, he made personal progress to regain some feeling(重新获得了人们的尊敬和欣赏), established the Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation, a non-profit research organization, and used his fame to raise millions of dollars for research into spinal cord injuries.
He also provided hope and inspiration to other patients and lobbied for scientists to be allowed to conct stem cell research in the hopes of eventually curing paralysis and other illnesses such as diabetes and Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease(糖尿病、阿兹海默症和巴金森氏症).
"He has been our champion. If you think of spinal injuries you automatically conjure up(想起、回忆) a picture of Christopher Reeve," said Paul Smith, executive director of the Spinal Injuries Association in England.
It is because of Reeve that spinal cord injuries and stem cell research are so widely discussed, according to Smith. The fact that it happened to Reeve showed it can affect anyone, even Superman.
Reeve did not live long enough to see whether stem cell research could help restore movement to the paralyzed. The research is still in its early days and no one knows what advances it may bring.
Hewitt: I Came, I Saw, I Conquered
Lleyton Hewitt was born in Adelaide, Australia on 24 February, 1981. His mother is a former champion netballer, his father is a league footballer, and his sister is already ranked number one in Australia for her age in tennis. She has achieved already more in tennis than Lleyton had at the same age.
The Hewitt's have a grass court at their home. This was where young Lleyton began his tennis career. When Lleyton showed an unusual ability for a 4-year-old and he was hitting balls consistently over the net, his parents decided it was time to find him a coach.
“Rather than get into bad habits, it was best he learnt how to hit the ball correctly.” says his father. Two years later, they got Peter Smith as his coach.
At the age of five, when most children that age are playing hide and seek or getting into all sorts of trouble, Lleyton and his family would make the trip to Melbourne for the Australian Open. Lleyton would sit for up to 12 hours a day watching players practise.
Lleyton's career as a tennis player was planned by his parents who tried their best to keep him away from football. Lleyton's parents thought it was too risky to play football since he might get hurt. Had Lleyton played football, it is quite possible he may have ended up playing for his favorite team—the Adelaide Crows. As his mother says, “I guess we've guided him into things we felt good for him before he did.”
By the time Lleyton was eight, he was winning “under-10 games” and always won a year ahead of his age. A professional career was looking very promising. Lleyton officially turned pro in 1997.
The flying Frenchman set to smash round the world record
They are calling him the Bob Beamon of sailing. And just like Beamon, who astonished the world with his record-breaking long-jump in 1968, the French sailor Francis Joyon is rewriting the nautical record books in an unprecedented fashion.
Joyon, 47, is now in the final stages of an incredible voyage and on course to smash the existing non-stop solo round-the-world record by 20 days. Once he crosses the finish line off the Channel port of Brest on the morning of February 3, he will have completed one of the greatest feats of single-handed sailing in history.
Just like Beamon, whose leap at the Mexico Olympics in 1968 broke the world record by an almost unbelievable 21in - which stood unbeaten until 1991 - Joyon's expected time of 73 days for the 26,000-mile global course will have far exceeded what most thought possible for a solo sailor.
Joyon set sail in November on an adventure some predicted would end in disaster. The father of four from La Trinité-sur-Mer in Brittany was undertaking the voyage in the 90ft trimaran IDEC, a boat of tremendous power with a huge rotating mast that had been built to be raced by a crew of up to ten.
Many were worried that Joyon would end up exhausted and IDEC would simply flip over as she ran out of control in the Southern Ocean.
Others predicted that Joyon would be unable to handle IDEC's enormous sails or that the boat could lose her mast in the rough conditions that any round-the-world sailor inevitably would face.
There were also all the usual dangers - collision with debris in the water, with ice around Antarctica or the possibility that Joyon would collide with a ship while sleeping.
When he set off, the solo record stood at 93 days. Although Joyon was sailing a much faster boat than the previous record-holder, most saw little chance of him getting even close to 80 days.
Joyon had other ideas and over the past 71 days he has enjoyed good fortune with the weather, rarely running out of wind. He has, however, also displayed extraordinary stamina, determination and seamanship in keeping IDEC running close to her full potential.
C. 英语微写作,写作素材:1.我的英语不好。2.我不放弃它,也从没失去勇气。3、在英语老师的鼓励下,我相...
I'm sorry to say that I'm not good at English. However, I would never lost courage in learning it nor give up it . With the encouragement from my beloved English teacher, I believe I can get it through and make progress in learning English. I am working hard at English, and I have confidence in myself.
D. 英语写作素材求助
Reeve was real-life 'Superman'
Although he will always be remembered for portraying "Superman," the greatest role of actor Christopher Reeve's life was as a champion of sufferers of spinal cord injuries(脊椎损伤患者中的斗士) and an advocate of stem cell research(干细胞研究).
Unlike the man of steel, he wasn't faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive and he couldn't leap tall buildings in a single bound.
But the courage and determination Reeve displayed in trying to overcome his paralysis from a 1995 horse-riding accident far surpassed any of the feats of the comic book hero(连环画英雄).
"He became a real-life Superman. His heroism, his courage was extraordinary," Colin Blakemore, the chief executive of Britain's Medical Research Council(英国医学研究学会主任) said.
"Like many people who suffer some terrible injury, Christopher Reeve was reinvented(彻底改变) by that experience and brought the kind of energy and enthusiasm that made him successful as a film star to an entirely different issue, with huge effect."
Reeve, 52, died on October 10 of heart failure(心脏功能衰竭) after having treatment for an infected pressure wound(伤口严重感染) without realizing his dream of walking again.
But in the nine years since his accident, he made personal progress to regain some feeling(重新获得了人们的尊敬和欣赏), established the Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation, a non-profit research organization, and used his fame to raise millions of dollars for research into spinal cord injuries.
He also provided hope and inspiration to other patients and lobbied for scientists to be allowed to conct stem cell research in the hopes of eventually curing paralysis and other illnesses such as diabetes and Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease(糖尿病、阿兹海默症和巴金森氏症).
"He has been our champion. If you think of spinal injuries you automatically conjure up(想起、回忆) a picture of Christopher Reeve," said Paul Smith, executive director of the Spinal Injuries Association in England.
It is because of Reeve that spinal cord injuries and stem cell research are so widely discussed, according to Smith. The fact that it happened to Reeve showed it can affect anyone, even Superman.
Reeve did not live long enough to see whether stem cell research could help restore movement to the paralyzed. The research is still in its early days and no one knows what advances it may bring.
Hewitt: I Came, I Saw, I Conquered
Lleyton Hewitt was born in Adelaide, Australia on 24 February, 1981. His mother is a former champion netballer, his father is a league footballer, and his sister is already ranked number one in Australia for her age in tennis. She has achieved already more in tennis than Lleyton had at the same age.
The Hewitt's have a grass court at their home. This was where young Lleyton began his tennis career. When Lleyton showed an unusual ability for a 4-year-old and he was hitting balls consistently over the net, his parents decided it was time to find him a coach.
“Rather than get into bad habits, it was best he learnt how to hit the ball correctly.” says his father. Two years later, they got Peter Smith as his coach.
At the age of five, when most children that age are playing hide and seek or getting into all sorts of trouble, Lleyton and his family would make the trip to Melbourne for the Australian Open. Lleyton would sit for up to 12 hours a day watching players practise.
Lleyton's career as a tennis player was planned by his parents who tried their best to keep him away from football. Lleyton's parents thought it was too risky to play football since he might get hurt. Had Lleyton played football, it is quite possible he may have ended up playing for his favorite team—the Adelaide Crows. As his mother says, “I guess we've guided him into things we felt good for him before he did.”
By the time Lleyton was eight, he was winning “under-10 games” and always won a year ahead of his age. A professional career was looking very promising. Lleyton officially turned pro in 1997.
The flying Frenchman set to smash round the world record
They are calling him the Bob Beamon of sailing. And just like Beamon, who astonished the world with his record-breaking long-jump in 1968, the French sailor Francis Joyon is rewriting the nautical record books in an unprecedented fashion.
Joyon, 47, is now in the final stages of an incredible voyage and on course to smash the existing non-stop solo round-the-world record by 20 days. Once he crosses the finish line off the Channel port of Brest on the morning of February 3, he will have completed one of the greatest feats of single-handed sailing in history.
Just like Beamon, whose leap at the Mexico Olympics in 1968 broke the world record by an almost unbelievable 21in - which stood unbeaten until 1991 - Joyon's expected time of 73 days for the 26,000-mile global course will have far exceeded what most thought possible for a solo sailor.
Joyon set sail in November on an adventure some predicted would end in disaster. The father of four from La Trinité-sur-Mer in Brittany was undertaking the voyage in the 90ft trimaran IDEC, a boat of tremendous power with a huge rotating mast that had been built to be raced by a crew of up to ten.
Many were worried that Joyon would end up exhausted and IDEC would simply flip over as she ran out of control in the Southern Ocean.
Others predicted that Joyon would be unable to handle IDEC's enormous sails or that the boat could lose her mast in the rough conditions that any round-the-world sailor inevitably would face.
There were also all the usual dangers - collision with debris in the water, with ice around Antarctica or the possibility that Joyon would collide with a ship while sleeping.
When he set off, the solo record stood at 93 days. Although Joyon was sailing a much faster boat than the previous record-holder, most saw little chance of him getting even close to 80 days.
Joyon had other ideas and over the past 71 days he has enjoyed good fortune with the weather, rarely running out of wind. He has, however, also displayed extraordinary stamina, determination and seamanship in keeping IDEC running close to her full potential.
这三个应该都可以用
E. SAT作文 求3个主题素材!!!!!要英文的!!!!!!!
写作我建议你用易改,可以网络下,下个免费的,可以帮助你改作文。
F. 初中生记叙文写作素材
你要几个,我那儿有四十多个,先给你两个吧。
1、 相信
两位情同手足的好朋友。有一次,他们在阳光下各持一把剑练习着。这时,其中一个人开玩笑说:“我要把你一刀砍成两半!”另一个很有信心且毫不在意地说:“好呀!试试看。”结果,血溅一地。阳光下,一对好友,瞬间成为仇敌。原来的好朋友,在友谊的阳光下,一个深信对方不会下手,另一个则确信他会避开……可最后,他们都错了。相信他人,可是该信什么呢?怀疑一切,同样是可怕的。
2、 祷告的手
大约1940年,丢勒和奈斯丁是一对好朋友,都是在奋斗中的画家。由于贫穷,他们必须半工半读才能够继续学业。可因为工作占去他们许多时间,两人的画艺进步很慢。困惑了良久,两个人想出一个办法,决定,一个人工作来支持彼此的生活费,另一个人则全心学习艺术。丢勒赢了,得以继续学习。而奈斯丁则辛勤工作,供应两个人的生活所需。几年后,丢勒成功了,他按照两人当初的约定找到奈斯丁,履行支持奈斯丁学习的协议。可他发现,为了支持自己而辛勤工作,奈斯丁那双原本优美敏感的双手的手指已经僵硬扭曲,遭到终生的损坏,不能灵敏地操作画笔了。丢勒心痛如绞。这天,丢勒去拜访奈斯丁,发现奈斯丁正合着双手,跪在地上,安静而诚挚地为他的成功祷告。艺术家双眼潮湿,将朋友那双祷告的手画了下来。这幅画成为举世闻名的《祷告的手》。其实,在我们每一个人的背后,其实都有着一双,或者更多双这样的手,值得我们铭记。比如:慈母渐渐霜白的头发,父亲渐渐佝偻的躯干,爱人日渐增皱纹的面颊。
G. 英语写作寻找素材—the Arts
第一篇应该开头先亮明自己的看法,是或不是?
接着再与一些例子,比如“放纵”或“约束”的例子。其中加入自己的一些意见。
然后可以再进行一下自己意见的表达
最后总结
Oh ,sorry.
H. 关于考研英语写作的素材来源,市面上满天飞,究竟哪些最靠谱
英语作文网上一复搜一大堆,制有的很有利用价值,有的乱大街。作文占了总分的30%,分量之重,不言而喻!正确选择资料,一定要明白资料在精不在多。这部分也是考研英语唯一可以速成的部分,特别对于英语基础较为薄弱的来说,要对好的语言素材进行背诵记忆。清北起航的英语作文模板里面的资料很丰富,能抓住命题思路 ,多背背对你写作有很大帮助,最起码练练语感,不至于面对“作文”无话可说。