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我熱愛英語的作文

發布時間:2021-03-02 06:11:39

㈠ 求一篇關於「我愛英語」的英語作文

我自己寫的哦。

Learning English is a very interesting thing, after what can be useful!
I have always liked English. I remember the first time I finished learning English to go home, I do not have a serious review of English, the second to be the teacher's criticism. After returning home I am very frustrated, very sorry, I seriously summed up the reasons for the failure. Since then, I never committed the same mistake! Because through this experience, I learned the importance of learning English.
From that experience later, my ideal is when a good translation! I remember something more has been 6 years! Now, I work very hard to learn English! A day when nothing is always read text on the back and words. I would like for those who do not want the children to learn English, said: "Learning English is a very interesting thing, after what can be useful! Maybe you still do not understand what I mean, but you grow up will certainly be able to understand, felt that I had to say makes sense!

㈡ 《我熱愛英語》英語作文不少於80字

As everyone knows,English is very important today.It has been used everywhere in the world.It has become the most common language on Internet and for international trade. If we can speak English well,we will have more chance to succeed.Because more and more people have taken notice of it,the number of the people who go to learn English has increased at a high speed.
正如每個人所知抄,英語在今天襲十分重要。它已經被應用到世界的各個角落。它已經成為商業上最為通用的一門語言並廣泛的用於國際貿易。如果我們能說好英語,我們就有更多的機會成功。因為越來越多的人注意到這一點,學英語的人數正在已很高的速度增長。

㈢ 用英語來寫《我愛英語》這篇作文二百字左右

JOHN McWHORTER
Published: January 20, 2012

There has always been disagreement on these American shores as to just what the 「best」 English is. The status of Parisian French or Tuscan Italian has long been unassailable. Yet in the early 1940s, fusty Chicagoans were writing to The Chicago Tribune declaring Midwestern speech America』s 「purest,」 while New York radio announcers were speaking in plummy Londonesque, complete with rolled r』s. Down in Charleston, S.C., the elite』s sense of the best English involved peculiar archaisms like 「cam」 for 「calm」 and 「gyardin」 for 「garden.」

SPEAKING AMERICAN
A History of English in the United States
By Richard W. Bailey
207 pp. Oxford University Press. $27.95.
In 「Speaking American,」 a history of American English, Richard W. Bailey argues that geography is largely behind our fluid evaluations of what constitutes 「proper」 English. Early Americans were often moving westward, and the East Coast, unlike European cities, birthed no dominant urban standard. The story of American English is one of eternal rises and falls in reputation, and Bailey, the author of several books on English, traces our assorted ways of speaking across the country, concentrating on a different area for each 50-year period, starting in Chesapeake Bay and ending in Los Angeles.
We are struck by the oddness of speech in earlier America. A Bostonian visiting Philadelphia in 1818 noted that his burgherly hostess casually pronounced 「dictionary」 as 「disconary」 and 「again」 as 「agin.」 William Cullen Bryant of Massachusetts, visiting New York City around 1820, wrote not about the 「New Yawkese」 we would expect, but about locutions, now vanished, like 「sich」 for 「such」 and 「guv」 for 「gave.」 Even some aspects of older writing might throw us. Perusing The Chicago Tribune of the 1930s, we would surely marvel at spellings like 「crum,」 「heven」 and 「iland,」 which the paper included in its house style in the ultimately futile hope of streamlining English』s spelling system.
A challenge for a book like Bailey』s, however, is the sparseness of evidence on earlier forms of American English. The human voice was unrecorded before the late 19th century, and until the late 20th recordings of casual speech, especially of ordinary people, were rare. Meanwhile, written evidence of local, as opposed to standard, language has tended to be cursory and of shaky accuracy.
For example, the story of New York speech, despite the rich documentation of the city over all, is frustratingly dim. On the one hand, an 1853 observer identified New York』s English as 「purer」 than that found in most other places. Yet at the same time chronicles of street life were describing a jolly vernacular that has given us words like 「bus,」 「tramp」 and 「whiff.」 Perhaps that 1853 observer was referring only to the speech of the better-­off. But then just 16 years later, a novel describes a lad of prosperous upbringing as having a 「strong New York accent,」 while a book of 1856 warning against 「grammatical embarrassment」 identifies 「voiolent」 and 「afeard」 as pronunciations even upwardly mobile New Yorkers were given to. So what was that about 「pure」?
Possibly as a way of compensating for the vagaries and skimpiness of the available evidence, Bailey devotes much of his story to the languages English has shared America with. It is indeed surprising how tolerant early Americans were of linguistic diversity. In 1903 one University of Chicago scholar wrote proudly that his city was host to 125,000 speakers of Polish, 100,000 of Swedish, 90,000 of Czech, 50,000 of Norwegian, 35,000 of Dutch, and 20,000 of Danish.
What earlier Americans considered more dangerous to the social fabric than diversity were perceived abuses within English itself. Prosecutable hate speech in 17th-century Massachusetts included calling people 「dogs,」 「rogues」 and even 「queens」 (though the last referred to prostitution); magistrates took serious umbrage at being labeled 「poopes」 (「dolts」). Only later did xenophobic attitudes toward other languages come to prevail, sometimes with startling result. In the early years of the 20th century, California laws against fellatio and cunnilingus were vacated on the grounds that since the words were absent from dictionaries, they were not English and thus violations of the requirement that statutes be written in English.
Ultimately, however, issues like this take up too much space in a book supposedly about the development of English itself. Much of the chapter on Philadelphia is about the city』s use of German in the 18th century. It』s interesting to learn that Benjamin Franklin was as irritated about the prevalence of German as many today are about that of Spanish, but the chapter is concerned less with language than straight history — and the history of a language that, after all, isn』t English. In the Chicago chapter, Bailey mentions the dialect literature of Finley Peter Dunne and George Ade but gives us barely a look at what was in it, despite the fact that these were invaluable glimpses of otherwise rarely recorded speech.
Especially unsatisfying is how little we learn about the development of Southern English and its synergistic relationship with black English. Bailey gives a hint of the lay of the land in an impolite but indicative remark about Southern child rearing, made by a British traveler in 1746: 「They suffer them too much to prowl amongst the young Negroes, which insensibly causes them to imbibe their Manners and broken Speech.」 In fact, Southern English and the old plantation economy overlap almost perfectly: white and black Southerners taught one another how to talk. There is now a literature on the subject, barely described in the book.
On black English, Bailey is also too uncritical of a 1962 survey that documented black Chicagoans as talking like their white neighbors except for scattered vowel differences (as in 「pin」 for 「pen」). People speak differently for interviewers than they do among themselves, and modern linguists have techniques for eliciting people』s casual language that did not exist in 1962. Surely the rich and distinct — and by no means 「broken」 — English of today』s black people in Chicago did not arise only in the 1970s.
Elsewhere, Bailey ventures peculiar conclusions that may be traceable to his having died last year, before he had the chance to polish his text. (The book』s editors say they have elected to leave untouched some cases of 「potential ambiguity.」) If, as Bailey notes, only a handful of New Orleans』s expressions reach beyond Arkansas, then exactly how was it that New Orleans was nationally influential as the place 「where the great cleansing of American English took place」?
And was 17th-century America really 「unlike almost any other community in the world」 because it was 「a cluster of various ways of speaking」? This judgment would seem to neglect the dozens of colonized regions worldwide at the time, when legions of new languages and dialects had already developed and were continuing to evolve. Of the many ways America has been unique, the sheer existence of roiling linguistic diversity has not been one of them.
The history of American English has been presented in more detailed and precise fashion elsewhere — by J. L. Dillard, and even, for the 19th century, by Bailey himself, in his under­read ­「Nineteenth-Century English.」 Still, his handy tour is useful in imprinting a lesson sadly obscure to too many: as Bailey puts it, 「Those who seek stability in English seldom find it; those who wish for uniformity become laughingstocks.」

John McWhorter』s latest book is 「What Language Is (and What It Isn』t and What It Could Be).」

㈣ 英語作文關於我愛英語

We start to learn English when we enter the primary school. I think English is great. First of all, learning English we can watch the English movies without subtitles, what』s more, we can understand the lyrics of English songs. Second,we can use English to communicate with foreigners, make more friends. We can have a lot of benefits through learning English. Thus I love English.

㈤ 我愛英語的英語作文 50詞

I like English

I like English because it is an awesome language. A pretty simple list of alphabets that consists of twenty-six characters, putting into good use to form millions of words.

我喜歡英語,因為它是一個非常驚人的語言。一列簡簡單單的英文字母,包括著26個字母,完善地發揮形成千千萬萬個字。

English is widely known in the world, and is recognised as the international language for communication. It would be so useful for me if I goes on a trip to other countries. Moreover, if i have to work with overseas partnership companies in the future, English is definitely the common language for business and trades.

在這世界上英文很廣知,而且被視為世界互通的語言。當我出國旅行時,它一定會派上很大的用場。再加上,將來工作時要是得和國外公司合夥,英文一定是最普遍的商業語言。

English is not only useful, but also beautiful and sounds great! I admire people who speaks good english, they speak it so fast and fluently that it sounded like a wonderful rhythm of music. Therefore, I really wish to be like them one day. I believe i can, as i do have great passion and interest in English!

英語不僅是有用,它還是那麼的漂亮並且很好聽。我欣賞會說流利英語的人,他們說得又快又順暢,聽起來像美妙的音樂旋律般。所以,我真的希望將來能像他們一樣。我相信我可以做到,因為我對英文具有很大的興趣與熱忱!

㈥ 一篇關於《我愛學英語》的作文

曾幾何時,我厭惡過英語。
於是,我反反復復地問母親:「我是中國人,為什麼要學英語專?」母親頜首思慮後說:屬「因為我們比他們弱。」
於是,我抱著奮斗來到了英語的世界。
我無可自拔地愛上了它。
它的每個字母是那般的圓潤有致,它的句子是多麼直爽。不似中文的婉約。一是一,二是二,沒有二等於一加一,多麼簡潔。它令我瘋狂!
四線格上魚然躍入的是優雅的字體,一組組片語,一個個單詞,拼成了完美而又令人瞭然的話語。
我愛學英語。
盡管我在路上摔倒數次,盡管我似擠牙膏般背單詞,盡管我記不住語法結構。但我仍愛它。就像我愛中國那般的深厚。
它給予了我渴望,渴望獲知一切,它給予了我勤奮,勤奮學習它。
它給我的深觸高於一切。
只因,我愛學英語。

㈦ 英語作文 我愛英語(中英文都要)

I love to learn English from i was very young. English today is probably the third largest language by number of native speakers, after Mandarin Chinese and Spanish.therefore english is becoming an important communication skill in the modern multi culture society. for the reason that i am dreaming to have a world trip in the future. english can be used in many countries which helps me to make friends and to get to know more about those countries in the trip. so i like to learn english and it's considered to be very useful in my life.

㈧ 我愛英語 英語作文

Just before exposure to English, I am very excited. Almost every night to sleep, always thinking to read english. Now, I have been learning English for six years, I found that I love you more and more English, and found that life can not be separated from it. I made up my mind to learn English well, you must. Every day I went to ask the teacher, ask the students. Before long, my English has improved. I am in the process of learning English, gained a lot of happiness. Therefore, I love english!

中文意思:在剛剛接觸到英語的時候,我非常興奮。幾乎每個晚上都睡不好覺,老是想著要讀英語。現在,我學習英語有六年時間了,我發現我越來越愛英語,發現生活中都離不開它。我下決心,一定要把英語學好。我每天去請教老師,去問同學。沒過多久,我的英語成績就有了提高。我在學習英語的過程中,收獲到了很多快樂。所以,我愛英語!

絕對原創

㈨ 英語作文我愛英語

I Love English
We start to learn English when we enter the primary school. I think English is great. First of all, learning English we can watch the English movies without subtitles, what』s more, we can understand the lyrics of English songs. Second,we can use English to communicate with foreigners, make more friends. We can have a lot of benefits through learning English. Thus I love English.

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