【推薦】英語作文合集5篇
在學(xué)習(xí)、工作、生活中,大家都接觸過作文吧,作文可分為小學(xué)作文、中學(xué)作文、大學(xué)作文(論文)。作文的注意事項(xiàng)有許多,你確定會(huì)寫嗎?以下是小編為大家整理的英語作文5篇,歡迎閱讀,希望大家能夠喜歡。
英語作文 篇1
[內(nèi)容提示]
你們學(xué)校學(xué)生會(huì)辦了一份雜志,取名《英語拾零》(English Sidelights)。假定你是主編,請你寫一則征稿啟事。要點(diǎn)如下:
這是一本適合于中學(xué)生的雜志,旨在提高同學(xué)們的英語口頭和書面表達(dá)能力,每月15日出版一期。歡迎下列形式和內(nèi)容的來稿:
、儆⒄Z故事、短劇、會(huì)話;
、诳破斩涛摹⒖磮D作文;
、塾嘘P(guān)提高口語表達(dá)能力的經(jīng)驗(yàn)和建議;
④有關(guān)英語語法的.學(xué)習(xí)心得、體會(huì);
⑤寫好英語作文的方法和建議;
、迣τ⒄Z教學(xué)方法的建議。
來稿應(yīng)在兩千字以內(nèi),隔行書寫、清楚整潔,頁邊留空白,英文部分必須打櫻如稿件未被采用,兩個(gè)月內(nèi)退回。采用后即付稿酬。
本刊地址:本校學(xué)生會(huì)辦公室《英語拾零》編輯組。下列詞語供參考:
1.contribution n.稿件
2.manuscript n.手稿;原稿
3.contributor n.投稿者
4.Editorial Section 編輯組
[作文示范]
Contributions Wanted
nglish Sidelights is a magazine intended for students in our middle school to improve their oral and spoken expressions in English. It is published on the fifteenth of every month.
Contributions in the following forms and with the following contents are warmly welcome, such as:
a. English stories, short plays and dialogues;
b. Popular science essays, writings through pictures;
c. Experiences and suggestions on how to improve spoken English;
d. Writings about what you have learned from English grammar;
e. Methods and suggestions on how to write well in English;
f. Suggestions on English teaching methods.
Contributions are expected to be within a 20xx-word limit. They should be written clearly on one side of the paper, double-spaced, with a wide margin. Manuscripts in English must be typed.
Manuscripts, if not accepted for publication, will be returned to the writer within two months. Contributors will be paid after their manuscripts are accepted in publication.
Please send your contributions to the Editorial Section in the Office of the Students' Union of this school.
Editorial Section of English
Sidelights in the Office of the
Students' Union
[寫法指要]
稿啟事是報(bào)紙、雜志、期刊征集稿件的一種通告。這種啟事包括的內(nèi)容一般有:1)刊物宗旨和讀者對象;2)征稿范圍,稿件形式和內(nèi)容要求;3)文稿寫作格式等。標(biāo)題里一般要有 wanted 一詞,末尾署名要寫雜志編輯者全稱。
英語作文 篇2
There were three of them. There were four of us, and April lay on the campsite and on the river, a mixture of dawn at a damp extreme and the sun in the leaves at cajole. This was Deer Lodge on the Pine River in Ossipee, New Hampshire, though the lodge was naught but a foundation remnant in the earth. Brother Bentley's father, Oren, had found this place sometime after the First World War, a foreign affair that had seriously done him no good but he found solitude abounding here. Now we were here, post World War II, post Korean War, Vietnam War on the brink. So much learned, so much yet to learn.
Peace then was everywhere about us, in the riot of young leaves, in the spree of bird confusion and chatter, in the struggle of pre-dawn animals for the start of a new day, a Cooper Hawk that had smashed down through trees for a squealing rabbit, yap of a fox at a youngster, a skunk at rooting.
We had pitched camp in the near darkness, Ed LeBlanc, Brother Bentley, Walter Ruszkowski, myself. A dozen or more years we had been here, and seen no one. Now, into our campsite deep in the forest, so deep that at times we had to rebuild sections of narrow road (more a logger's path) flushed out by earlier rains, deep enough where we thought we'd again have no traffic, came a growling engine, an old solid body van, a Chevy, the kind I had driven for Frankie Pike and the Lobster Pound in Lynn delivering lobsters throughout the Merrimack Valley. It had pre-WW II high fenders, a faded black paint on a body you'd swear had been hammered out of corrugated steel, and an engine that made sounds too angry and too early for the start of day. Two elderly men, we supposed in their seventies, sat the front seat; felt hats at the slouch and decorated with an assortment of tied flies like a miniature bandoleer of ammunition on the band. They could have been conscripts for Emilano Zappata, so loaded their hats and their vests as they climbed out of the truck.
"Mornin', been yet?" one of them said as he pulled his boots up from the folds at his knees, the tops of them as wide as a big mouth bass coming up from the bottom for a frog sitting on a lily pad. His hands were large, the fingers long and I could picture them in a shop barn working a primal plane across the face of a maple board. Custom-made, old elegance, those hands said.
"Barely had coffee," Ed LeBlanc said, the most vocal of the four of us, quickest at friendship, at shaking hands. "We've got a whole pot almost. Have what you want." The pot was pointed out sitting on a hunk of grill across the stones of our fire, flames licking lightly at its sides. The pot appeared as if it had been at war, a number of dents scarred it, the handle had evidently been replaced, and if not adjusted against a small rock it would have fallen over for sure. Once, a half-hour on the road heading north, noting it missing, we'd gone back to get it. When we fished the Pine River, coffee was the glue, the morning glue, the late evening glue, even though we'd often unearth our beer from a natural cooler in early evening. Coffee, camp coffee, has a ritual. It is thick, it is dark, it is potboiled over a squaw-pine fire, it is strong, it is enough to wake the demon in you, stoke last evening's cheese and pepperoni. First man up makes the fire, second man the coffee; but into that pot has to go fresh eggshells to hold the grounds down, give coffee a taste of history, a sense of place. That means at least one egg be cracked open for its shells, usually in the shadows and glimmers of false dawn. I suspect that's where "scrambled eggs" originated, from some camp like ours, settlers rushing west, lumberjacks hungry, hoboes lobbying for breakfast. So, camp coffee has made its way into poems, gatherings, memories, a time and thing not letting go, not being manhandled, not being cast aside.
英語作文 篇3
Nowadays, there exists an increasingly severe phenomenon that teenagers don’t show respect to their parents. As we can read in newspaper or watch in TV, some teenagers quarrel with parents, some talk back and some even resort to violence. As to this problem, I’d like to advance several proposals as follows.
Initially, we should realize that it’s our parents who give us lives. Without parents, we can not live in this world. Therefore, the importance of respecting our parents can not be overemphasized. What’s more, it goes without saying that we have to remember the birth day of our parents, when we can express our gratitude to them. None the less, respecting our parents should be done from every detail. Just as a proverb goes, “piety is above all.” (百善孝為先).
To sum up, respecting parents is our traditional virtue in China. No matter how old we are, it’s a priority to respect our parents.
英語作文 篇4
I have a good winner vacation!
In my winner vacation ,I often did my homework, and helped my mother clean rooms.
I sometimes went shopping with my friends . We had a good time! I also watched TV and played computer games.
During Spring Festival ,I visited my grandparents.
I was very happy ,I think my winner vacation was very interesting!
英語作文 篇5
Importance of Buying a House
There is a heated debate on the importance ofbuying a house with the soaring house prices. Those emphasizing the in^ortance of buyiog ahouse maintain that living in your bwn house makes you feel better and more comfortablecompared to that in a rented one. Besides, no investment is more rewarding than buying ahouse nowadays. Statistics from both home and abroad shows that owning a houseguarantees an increase in assets.
Quite the contrary, many people say, buying a house is not that important. On one hand,a rented apartment can provide the same comfortable or even better life for people. This isespecially true when many people have no money to decorate their houses after the bigpurchase. On the other hand, peopk can spend more money on other more protitableinvestment than involving in real estate, such as buying stocks or other art poliections.
Personally, I think possessing a house is extremely important. At its core, a house is ashelter After buying a house, people will becomc stable. What’s more important is that thctrchildren will also settle and can concentrate on study _ children could get affected as theyadapt themselves with the new places, teachers and creating new friends making them Lagbehind academically.
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