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English lesson 2

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发表于 2004-9-25 11:24:40 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
English lesson 2

第二个要懂的是怎样运用 tenses 。因为市面上的 tenses 的书太多了,所以我不用解释各种 tenses 的功用。我要解释的是如何运用这些  tenses 。所以这里请--


“怎样写英文作文”

1。一般上,每个时候写英文作文都是用 past tense .


(a)“久久发生一次的事件”
a.描写火灾的经过
b.野餐
c.旅行
d.描述各种事情
---去电影院看电影,遇到小偷


(b) 故事
--- 故事都是描述过去发生的事情

白雪公主
一个老农夫
老人与海


在用 past tense 的时候,很自然的,要用到 “已经” 这个字,我们就用 past perfect tense (过去已经) ----had done , had gone , had bought 。 要用到“正在”这个字,很自然的,我们会用 past progressive/continuous tense (过去正在〕--- was swimming , was running , was watching 。



也可以用所有 past tense 的 passive(你要用华文字来理解)

past tense 的 passive:
(你要用华文字来理解什么是 past tense 的 passive )(不过 past tense 的范围比较容易,只要有 past这个字的就是属于 past tense)

Simple Past Tense (Passive)
Past continuous/ progressive tense (passive)
Past perfect tense (passive)

______________________________________________________________

2。偶而,会用 present tense .



A.介绍的文章

介绍家里的成员
--- My mother is a housewife .

介绍某某人
--- Ali is a farmer. He is very hardworking. Every day he wakes up very early in the morning.


B. 其他可以用 present tense 的例子
----每个星期的某一天,你去做的东西。

比方说,每个星期六,我去学弹钢琴。每个星期六,我去学弹绘画/ 学笆蕾舞/ 上英文课。 每个星期天,我去上教堂。。。。


C.学院或者大学的作文,一般上都是用 present tense。

比方说,介绍水力发电站。介绍金融体系。介绍管理体系。因为基本上,它是属于介绍的作文,好像 a.(介绍家里的成员〕,和 b.(介绍某某人〕 一样。

除非,我们在文章的某个段落提到“过去”发生的事情。比方说“在过去,这家公司进口了多少货”,那么我们就要用 past tense 。不过也只是在这个小部份用 past tense 而已。整篇,我们都用 present tense 。


同样的,当你用 present tense 的时候 ,你提到“正在”,你用 present progressive/continuous tense (现在正在〕---- is swimming , is running , are watching 。当你提到“已经”,你用present perfect tense (现在已经〕---- has drunk , have added , have gone .



也可以用所有 present tense 的 passive

present tense 的 passive:
(你要用华文字来理解什么是 present tense 的 passive )

Simple Present Tense (Passive)(每天,时常)
Present Continuous /Progressive Tense (Passive) (正在)
Simple Future Tense (Passive) (将来)
Present Perfect Tense (Passive) (已经,一直)

______________________________________________________________

(3) 有时候,你可以自由选择要用 哪一个 tense


题目:“去夜市”

用 present tense
你可以说你每个星期的某一天都去夜市逛。

不过,你要强调 every 这个字 ---- Every Saturday , I go to night market.
还有,用 every 来形容时间的时候,不可以用 the 这个字,所以你不可以写 ‘the night market ’。(正确的句子:I go to church every Sunday. )


用 past tense
你可以说 上个礼拜六我去夜市。
(I went to the night market last Saturday.)
只要不是形容时间的every ,你可以用 the 。


其他可以自由选择要用 哪一个 tense的题目
>>“去图书馆”

有的人说逛百货公司也可以符合这一项啊,因为我每一个星期天我的父母会带我到百货公司,或者每一个月的一天会带我到百货公司。理论上对,可是教育观点上,他不会允许你说每一个星期、每一个月去百货公司,浪费钱、浪费宝贵的光阴。所以你这样写的话,老师可能改你错,我们没有必要跟自己的分数过不去。




---在这种题目上,要有逻辑。你不可以说每一天都遇到小偷,或者每个星期的某一天都会遇到小偷。

你也不可以说每一天都遇到火灾。你也不可以说每一个星期的某一天都去逛百货公司。

所以;遇到小偷,遇到火灾,逛百货公司,都应该用 past tense (过去〕





___________________________________________________________________

“怎样把两个句子连起来”
很多人会想,这个很容易,不就是用 because , when , unless 吗?不是的,高级的用法是 when , who , whom , which , whose , ….

一个作文里面,如果单纯只是单一的句子,会感到很沉闷。所以我们要把它们连起来。

比方说,

who

1.She has an uncle. He is very rich.
= She has an uncle who is very rich.

which

1.This is the book. I bought the book yesterday.  
= This is the book which (or that) I bought yesterday.

whose

1. A child is called an orphan. His parents are dead.
= A child whose parents are dead is called an orphan.





[ 本帖最后由 pp95 于 2007-12-31 20:12 编辑 ]
 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-31 20:13:40 | 显示全部楼层
好了,现在给你看一些范文,看这些范文不是要求你写得像范文一样好。而是让你受到文学的熏陶,让你感受文学的美,让你了解英文也可以写成这样,对写作感到兴趣,开始写作。

这些范文是马来西亚不会华文的华人子弟写的,他们都是中学生,他们没有一个管道给他们比赛作文,因此他们只有投稿到报章上。



‘Growing up is hard to do?’

Time and tide wait for no one. That is one saying which contains more than an ounce of truth.

Have anyone of you ever thought of how limited your teenage life is? Ever sat down to think about what you would do for a living in the future? Or have you thought about your achievements so far?

I bet not many of you have done this. That is the way a teenager lives his or her life, I guess. In fact, teenagers can probably do with just these “basic” necessities: three simple meals a day (or maybe more), a mobile phone, and an ample supply of money – all supplied by “higher authorities” aka(also known as) the parents!

But there is a bitter truth awaiting all of us teenagers. The truth of living. The experience of living a difficult yet more meaningful life; the knowledge that we can only really experience life by living it.

Some of you might think to gain this experience is by listening to the “grandmother” stories of peers who claim to know a lot; some might try to absorb it from newspapers, books and magazines. But nothing works like hands-on experience.

We don’t have a lot of time ---- the teenage years last only seven years. And when it’s gone, it’s gone beyond recall. Will you realise that life is passing you by in time to do something about it?

I came to realise this when all my friends started leaving to pursue whatever they wanted or what their parents wanted. Okay. I still have my members. But deep inside I know that it won’t last much longer as everyone will graduate soon.

You can always make new friends. But will it ever be the same? You probably will feel miserable and regretful at first. I did. But these feelings will soon pass. Crying won’t help a bit. Things have to go on, no matter what. Making new friends helps. There is still a chance for you to find a close friend again. But it is rather hard.

When all the bad feelings subside, it is time to move on. “Break away,” as that advertisement suggests. Leave that naïve and young phase behind and move on to the wiser and mature young adult.

Growing up is inevitable. Even those pesky younger brothers/sisters will eventually grow up. Nothing comes more naturally than moving on to the next phase because when the situation requires it, you will just have to oblige. It is a no-win situation. Though, everything new will fall into place, sooner or later depending on how adaptable a person is.

But it will never be the same again.


_______________________________________________________________


‘Nickname’

I am quite handsome, kind of smart, too... And most of all I think I am a nice person. I was popular in high school and doing not too badly with my current colleagues. Things seemed fine. But with the many supporters I had, I had just as many detractors.

But that is the way it is! Yes, the “shorties”, the “dorks”, the “uncool” are often painted as the victims. But so is everyone else. The pretty ones are “slutty”, the confident ones “bitchy”, the smart ones “dont have a life”, etc. I am sure it is all familiar --- be honest, no one is spared the taunts, ridicule and gossip – unless you have lived a near invisible existence throughout your life.  

It is really unfair to blame others for ones own inability. So you were the strongest, the smartest, the happiest one in school, big deal! Somehow everyone is, too. When you go out, you are made fun and given the nicknames, it is the same! Arent you also the tool which is made fun by others?

I am sure many of us were teased when we were young, becoming the laughing stock of many for simple reasons, some of which seem baseless as you grow older. Whether it was your name, your style of walking or even the shape of your ears.

There is a big difference between mean-spirited ridicule of a person and a sense of humour. Your words can poison or touch lives. People will forget what you say, but they will never forget how your words make them feel.

Jokes are no longer jokes if you are hurting someone to make yourself feel superior or better. Treat others as you want to be treated. Each time you have the urge to make fun of someone, climb into his skin and walk around in it.


_______________________________________________________________
 楼主| 发表于 2007-12-31 20:13:57 | 显示全部楼层
‘Education more than rote-learning and exams’


I write this article not with the intention of pointing an accusatory finger at anyone; I merely wish to state my views on an issue which I feel strongly about.

A week ago, I read a book by a Nobel prize winner in physics, Richard P.Feynman. One entry in his memoirs which I found particularly disturbing was about his experience teaching at the Brazilian Academy of Science.

What Dr Feynman said about the students and the Brazilian education system then was thought-provoking. The students could pass their exams by simply memorising their textbooks and yet not learn anything out of it.

The students were also reluctant to ask questions in class for fear of appearing ignorant. I quote from the book: “It was pitiful! All the work they did, intelligent people, but they got themselves into this funny state of mind, this strange kind of self-propagating ‘education,’ which is meaningless, utterly meaningless.”

As I read the book, a feeling of déjà vu crept over me – Dr Feynman could well be talking about Malaysian students!

It is by now, quite an open secret that the Malaysian system of education places a lot of emphasis on examinations consisting of predictable questions which require nothing more than mindless memorising. The majority of Malaysian students study only their textbooks and are quite myopic to anything else.

I remember going to the school library at the age of 13 and stumbling upon a treasure trove – an entire shelf full of books by literary greats.

I spent hours each day devouring books by John Keats, Elexander Pope, William Shakespeare, Voltaire and Somerset Maugham with much gusto.

After a while I noticed that none of the borrowers’ cards for these books had been stamped before. The books had been untouched since the 60s. Why were all these fabulous books left to rot unnoticed?

It would not be a valid defence to argue that the students were not proficient enough in English. One might as well, on seeing a ward full of lunatics laughing, say, “It is obvious what made them insane, it is over-laughing.”  

Our students cannot progress in their English language because they do not read enough and they do not read non-academic books because ‘these are not tested in the exams!”

Students have become so achievement-oriented that they fail to see the pleasure of reading a good book as an end in itself. It saddens me to see supposedly brilliant students having no knowledge of the humanities whatsoever.

Having been a student myself, I find the way my classmates study quite startling. They read a page, roll their eyes skywards (which can be hilarious to see if not for the terribly earnest expressions on their faces), and repeat what they have just read.

They go over this procedure until they can parrot the entire page flawlessly. No one doubts the accuracy of the facts given. If there is indeed a factual mistake in the textbook which goes unnoticed, everyone sinks in the same wretched boat.

Once, upon seeing a fellow student studying for a science exam, I offered to read out the questions so she may answer them orally.

I then read out a question on satellites and how they stay in orbit, changing the sentence structure a little and jumbling up the order of the multiple choice answers as I went along.

The bewildered look this young lady gave me said it all. After this little experiment, I concluded that school examinations are not a real gauge of one’s intellect – it is merely a means of measuring how much time is spent on memorising textbooks and how well this useless information is regurgitated during the exams.

However, it would be wrong to stereotype all students as being information-hoarding robots. Once in a while, an exceptionally bright spark turns up to vex the teacher with complicated questions.

This, of course, angers the well-meaning but hassled teaching, who replies: “It is not necessary for you to learn this at your stage” or “This is not relevant to what you have to study for your exams.”

These two typical answers put a damper on the student’s curiosity and can possibly be interpreted as: “Shut up! Don’t ask me questions that I don’t know the answers to.”

If the intelligent student persists in asking questions in class, he or she is most likely to receive jeers of disapproval form his or her peers. The bright student learns quickly that nobody appreciates a maverick.

He or she then tries to fit in with the rest of the bourgeois, where each person is as directionless as the other.

College students gather an accumulation of notes which are rarely read, and when asked if they understood what has been taught in a lecture, all nod their heads fervently, bovine-like.

They keep up this pretence all through their lives, giving themselves a false semblance of security.

In one extreme case a student learnt an entire chapter by heart, thus doing very well in an impromptu test, but when asked the meaning of a technical
al term around which the question revolved, he could not give its definition and had no idea how the scenario in the question given could be applied to everyday life.

Perhaps the students are not to be blamed for their lack of inventiveness. If one dissects and analyses the present education system, one may well find that it leaves much to be desired.

The school syllabus and examination format are militaristically rigid and monotonous. Projects and coursework assigned requires the students to follow strict guidelines, thus leaving no space for original ideas.

Students end up waiting to be spoon-fed with notes because they are less likely to go wrong in doing so than in attempting the project by trial and error.

Upon reading any textbook, you will inevitably discover a lacuna: none of these books show the students how to use that particular subject to find solutions to problems in everyday life.

A fifth-former may ace a mathematics exam with flying colours without really knowing what logarithms are used for.

When I was at school, due to an ill-equipped laboratory, certain experiments could only be carried out by the teacher, while the students watched with waning interest.

When this ordeal was over, we had notes dictated to us. I wonder how this method of science education will directly benefit us in the long run.

Many suggestions have already been forwarded to the relevant authorities to overhaul the present education system but the bulk of these are turned down as being too idealistic and too costly.

So, in the meantime, we must be content to churn out hordes of unimaginative automatons who go on to lead a perfectly prosaic lives.


___________________________________________________________________

‘Too lax on sex’

Not long ago, I overheard in a bus, a very smug-looking girl telling her group of overawed friends how she lost her virginity to her boyfriend on Valentine’s Day. I estimate the girl to be 14 or 15 years old.

The social moral decline is due to Western influences and the lax attitude of some parents. Young people don’t value their own chastity anymore.

I have heard of and met teenagers, as young as 13 years of age, engaging in illicit sex. It seems that many of them engage in sex to gain respect and acceptance amon their friends. There are those too who just want to experiment, to “try” sex.

Moreover, condoms are available at any 7-Eleven store. Thus, young people can now engage in casual sex without the risk of getting pregnant.

To stem this social ill, the Government should implement sex education. Such lessons should be taught by specially-trained teachers. Some school teachers were said to have giggled uncontrollably when discussing sexual intercourse during a science lesson.

The Government ought to stop the rot before it is too late. If not, a generation with warped ideas about moral values and truths would be born. Is this the future generation we want?


[ 本帖最后由 pp95 于 2007-12-31 20:15 编辑 ]
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