1 . Beautiful Britain Photo Competition
What represents the beauty of Britain for you? Is it rolling green hills and hidden valleys of the countryside? Here’s your chance to capture it in a photo! The competition will be judged by professional photographer James Eckersley. The judge’s decision is final and winners will be informed by email or post.
How to Enter Take a high-resolution photo with either a phone or digital camera. Ensure that pictures are original, not previously published and taken specically for this competition. Email your photos to photocomps@readersdigest.co.uk by 5pm, May 12, 2023. Make sure you include your full name, location and contact number. | The Prizes We will select three winners who will be awarded the following prizes: First place £ 400 Amazon voucher (代金券) and a Royal Photographic Society membership. Second place £ 250 Camera World voucher. Third place An Experience or Workshop & Course voucher from Jessops. |
You must own the rights to the photograph you submit for entry. You must be able to supply a high-resolution copy of the photograph suitable for print publication. Competition is open to residents of the UK, aged 18 or over, except Reader’s Digest employees and any associated partners or attached companies. There is no cash alternative and prizes are not transferable. Multiple entries will be accepted. Winners must agree to publication of their winning photograph, along with their name. The winning entries will be published in our July issue, with the top winner gracing the back cover. Contributions become world copyright of Vivat Direct Ltd (t/a Reader’s Digest). Your information will only be used in accordance with our privacy policy. Entry implies acceptance of these rules. For more details, tips and guides, visit readersdigest.co.uk/inspire/photo-competition
1. Which of the following will lead to disqualification?A.Living in the UK. | B.Sending a published photo. |
C.Providing more than one photo. | D.Emailing the entries on May 11, 2023. |
A.Use the photos freely. | B.Change the prize for money. |
C.Buy a camera at a discount. | D.Become one member of a photo club. |
A.In Reader’s Digest. | B.In a travel brochure. |
C.On a textbook cover. | D.On the Amazon website. |
2 . Here is a list of writing competitions.
Wild Nature Poetry Award
Here we have a new contest from Indigo Dreams Publishing. It is for poems of up to 48 lines on the subject of cruel sports, or wildlife in general, or the natural world, or the environment.
Closing: 30th Sept. , 2022
Prizes: £200, £100, £75
Entry Fee: £5. 50% of entry fees will be donated to the League Against Cruel Sports.
W&A Yearbook Short Story Competition
This annual contest from the writers’ handbook Writers’ &Artists’ Yearbook is for stories of up to 2, 000 words aimed at young adults. There is no theme. Take notice that before emailing your entry, you have to register with the website. Your entry will not be valid otherwise.
Closing: 11th Feb. , 2022
Prizes: A place on one of Arvon’s residential writing courses, plus your story published on the website.
Entry Fee: None. Free to enter.
Green Stories Novel Prize
The competition organized by the University of Southampton is held annually. It is about the idea of a more sustainable society. Submit three chapters of your finished novel or work in progress. One of the chapters must be the first. The three together should run to between 4, 000 and 10, 000 words.
Closing: 30th Dec. , 2022
Prizes: £1, 000, £500
Entry Fee:£2
Melita Hume Poetry Prize
This year’s Melita Hume Poetry Prize from Eyewear Publishing is, as usual, for first full-length collections by poets aged 35 or under, residents in the UK or Ireland. To enter, you should submit between 48 and 100 pages.
Closing:3rd Jan. , 2022
Prizes:Publication with a £1, 200 advance.
Entry Fee:£15.
1. What is required to enter for W&A Yearbook Short Story Competition?A.Registration in advance |
B.Previous experience |
C.A fixed theme |
D.Entry fee |
A.It is a yearly activity. |
B.It is about sustainability. |
C.It has a word limit. |
D.It has a closing date. |
A.Wild Nature Poetry Award |
B.W&A Yearbook Short Story Competition |
C.Green Stories Novel Prize |
D.Melita Hume Poetry Prize |
3 . If sports are something that interests you, obviously you would want to be good at them. Succeeding at a sport takes skill, and skill takes patience and determination.
Begin from basics first.
It’s common that young athletes want to jump into the advanced skills quickly. This isn’t an effective way to spend training time. If you’re new to a sport, take as much time as you need to get the basic movements down properly.
Eat a healthy, well-balanced diet.
Everyone should make a point of eating a diet that benefits their body. This is especially true if you want to be great at sports.
Set great goals for yourself.
This does not mean being unrealistic, or saying you’re going to go professional within a year.
Being good at sports means more than physical strength and speed. In order to be truly great, you need to apply positive attitude to the way you treat other players, even if they’re on the other team. If you lose a match, accept the loss and show respect to the other player for their victory.
A.Let yourself have fun. |
B.Show good sportsmanship. |
C.However, there are other things you need to think about. |
D.It will make advanced skills a lot easier to grasp in the long run. |
E.If you stop practicing, chances are that someone more determined will beat you. |
F.Eating junk food will work against whatever efforts you make in the gym. |
G.Instead, you should take a look at what you are, and figure out where you’d like to be. |
Shooting down an ice-covered track, a bobsled(大雪橇)can go faster than 80 miles an hour, and riders can feel force five times stronger than the pull of gravity. A race can be won or lost by one hundredth of a second. How do bobsleds go faster than cars on a highway? The answer is a combination of athletics and science.
At the start of a race, the crew push their sled, building up speed before they jump in for the ride. For months before the race, the crew have built up power in their legs. The push is the crew's only chance to add speed. All other work goes into keeping friction and drag(摩擦力和阻力)from slowing the sled down.
The design of the sled's runners(滑板)reduces their friction with the ice. The friction of a moving runner melts a little ice right under the runner, and the runner rides on that thin layer of water. The runners are rounded on the bottom. Runners that are too flat may not melt enough ice for fast ride. Runners that are too round may become too warm, softening the ice and slowing the sled down. No amount of rounding is perfect for all races because the hardness of the ice depends on the weather on race day.
Bobsleds used to be open. The riders did not sit inside a hull(外壳). As the crew sped down the track,the air would create drag. Today, a sled's hull reduces drag by splitting the air in front of the sled and making it flow smoothly along the slides. As with the runners,strict rules apply to the hull. For example,no team may add any part that would create helpful air currents.
Reducing friction and drag creates another challenge: high speeds. “The faster the sleds car travel on the run, the more thrilling the race,” one research team wrote. “But the track must not be too fast: he crew still need to be able to reach the bottom safely.”
1. What's the text mainly about?A.The shape of the sled. | B.The design of the runners. |
C.The safety rules applying to the sled. | D.The elements relating to the sled's speed |
A.Proper amount of melted ice is needed for a fast ride. |
B.The rounder the runners are, the faster the sled goes. |
C.Thin layer of water would drag the runners backward. |
D.A sled's movement has nothing to do with weather. |
A.It's comfortable to sit in. | B.It leads to beneficial air flow. |
C.It helps to create a safe ride. | D.It's free from strict rules. |
A.Safety is the most important. | B.Keeping high speed is difficult. |
C.Riders' desire to win is understandable. | D.The crew's cooperation is necessary. |