1.电子游戏的消极影响;
2.电子游戏的积极影响;
3.你对电子游戏的看法。
注意:
1.写作词数应为80左右;
2.请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答.
相似题推荐
1.班会目的;
2.班会过程;
3.班会影响。
注意:
1.字数80词左右;
2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;
3.请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
A Meaningful Event
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________1. 倡议的目的;
2. 过度使用社交媒体的危害;
3. 发出倡议。
注意:
1. 词数100左右;
2. 可适当增加细节, 以使行文连贯;
3. 开头和结尾已给出, 不计入总词数;
4. 参考词汇:社交媒体social media.
Dear all,
I'm Li Hua, chairman of the Students' Union,
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Students' Union
内容包括:1.最喜欢的节日;2.节日简介;3.喜欢的原因。
注意:1.词数100字左右;
2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;
3.开头已给出,不计入总词数。
The Traditional Chinese Festival I Like Best
There are many traditional festivals in China.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________I was never a fast runner and thus I always didn’t like running. Throughout my childhood, whenever we competed in the 50-meter run, the 400-meter, or any other type of race, I would finish in the bottom half. In my late teens, as a member of a baseball team, I was the slowest runner on the team. In the preseason training, I was always the one running by myself at the end.
Therefore, twenty years later, when I entered my first official running race — a 3,000-meter challenge in my city — at age 38, I certainly didn’t expect to win or come close to winning.
I was there because my college friend Jim Hosek was the director of the race, and he asked me to run. The race was aimed at raising money for the unfortunate patients in a hospital and encouraging the patients and their fanilies to be brave, determined, and confident with sportsmanship.
It was a heartwarming program.I wanted to support it, so I showed up, paid the entrance fee, had a number pinned (把……别住) on my back, and moved over to the starting line. There, I waited with about 300 other runners for the race to begin. I was nervous. Would I be the last one to finish a race again? Could I even finish the race? I wondered.
Before long, someone spoke into a microphole, “Anyone weighing over 200 pounds comes down to the scale (秤), please.” Knowing I was over 200 pounds, I walked down to the scale. A man told me to stand on it. “Two hundred and three pounds,” he said. Then he wrote down the race number that was on my back. Out of curiosity, I asked him why he did so,and then I was told there would be an award ceremony (仪式) after the race. One award was for the first finisher in the over 200-pound group, and this special award would be announced at the end of the ceremony.
Not expecting the award, I ran towards the starting line, never realizing there were only two runners weighing over 200 pounds.
Paragraph 1:Soon after, the race started.
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Then came the last award, and to my surprise, my name was announced.
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I stepped off the bus and headed for the pool with my friends, concentrating on what I needed to do to win this swimming competition.
I jumped in the water, amid(在…中) screams of “Oh man, it’s freezing”, and found it wasn’t too bad. I started to warm up, and noticed the sky getting gray. “It’s going to rain,” my friend Ashley said behind me. “Let’s pray for no thunder or lightning,” I replied. “This meet can’t be canceled.” That was when I noticed his uneasiness. “What’s wrong?” I asked.
He looked over at the other team and back at me, saying, “Their 50m freestyle swimmer, Jack, is talking something bad about you. He said you’d be a good swimmer if you didn’t swim like a girl. And he’s not only saying something bad about you, but every one of us.” Ashley gave me a look of encouragement and added, “Tom, you’d better swim as fast as possible and beat him. Show him who’s the boss!”
My event was third. By that time, all my friends had shown up and I was preparing for my 50m freestyle sprint(冲刺). I walked over to the blocks(起跑器) and began to prepare myself.
“You think you actually have a chance?” came an aggressive voice from my side. I turned and recognized the guy who Ashley had pointed at. It was Jack, who added, “Don’t even try.” Luckily, I was not alone. My friends were close by.
“My friend is going to beat you,” Ashley warned. Jack replied, “That’s a good one. We’ll settle this in the water. “
“Swimmers up!” the official called. I stepped onto the starting block and prepared for the race. That was when all my friends started to cheer me on. I focused all my attention and followed the official’s order, “Take your mark.” I bent down into my starting position, the cheering around me growing louder.
Paragraph 1:
When the starting gun fired, I jumped into the water.
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Paragraph 2:
All I heard was cheering.
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On a hot 95-degree evening in September 2016, the Woodlands High School JV White team was threatening to win its first game of the season. The fans and players alike were almost crazy. “I was really pumped,” said Highlanders linebacker Ryan Ferrini, then 16.
With little time left in the fourth quarter and the Katy Tompkins High School Falcons up 29-28, all the Highlanders had to do was go one yard for a touchdown to grab a dramatic come-from-behind victory.
Instead, they gave the game away.
On the previous play, after the Highlanders had driven the ball deep into the Falcons’ territory, quarter back Will Gentry had connected with then-15-year-old receiver Austin Brauweiler at the three-yard line. As Brauweiler turned up field, a Falcons defender delivered a violent hit, knocking them both to the ground at the one-yard line.
“There was huge force, as if a truck had hit me,” said Brauweiler, who suffered a bruised bone from the collision. But it was the Falcons’ player who got the worst of it. He lay motionless on the turf (草皮). Trainers and coaches ran to his side. Five minutes later, he was still down. Game officials told Highlanders coach David Colschen that the teen had lost all feeling on his left side and an ambulance had been called. “I was very upset,” said Brauweiler.
The EMTs (内科急救专家) arrived, and soon after, a call to a medical transport helicopter was made. That’s when the Falcons’ coach walked across the field and told Colschen that his players were too worried to finish the game and would give up the game. Colschen wouldn’t have it.
Paragraph 1:
“It was the right thing to do,” said Colschen.
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Paragraph 2:
The injured player prefers to remain unnamed.
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