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一坨Lemon

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英语手抄报的内容资料

手抄报是一种可传阅、可观赏、也可张贴的报纸的另一种形式。在学校,手抄报是第二课堂的一种很好的活动形式,具有相当强的可塑性和自由性。手抄报也是一种群众性的宣传工具。它就相当于缩小版的黑板报。

at twenty years of age , the will reigns; at thirty , the wit ; and at forty , the judgment .(benjamin franklin ,american president)

二十岁时起支配作用的是意志,三十岁时是机智,四十岁时是判断。(美国总统 富兰克林 . b.)

do you love life ? then do not squander time ; for that's the stuff5 life is made of .(benjamin franklin , american president )

你热爱生命吗?那么,别浪费时间,因为生命是由时间组成的。(美国总统 富兰克林。 b.)

each moment in history is a fleeting time , precious and unique .(

richard nixon , american president )

历史巨轮飞转,分分秒秒的时间都十分宝贵,也独具意义。(美国总统 尼克松。 r.)

fish and visitors smell three days .( franklin benjamin , american president )

鱼放三天发臭,客住三天讨嫌。 (美国总统 富兰克林。 b.)

不定冠词的用法

1)表示某一类人或某事物中的任何一个,经常用在第一次提到某人或某物时,用不定冠词起介绍作用,表示一个。

I gave him a book yesterday.我昨天给了他一本书。

I am reading an interesting story .我在读一本有趣的故事书。

I have got a ticket.我有一张票。

There is a tree in front of my house.我的屋前有一棵树。

英语小报模板格式

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小报版式 = tabloid format newspaper Tabloid is a newspaper format particularly popular in the United Kingdom. A tabloid format newspaper is roughly 23½ by 14 3/4 inches (597 mm × 375 mm) per spread. This is the smaller of two standard newspaper sizes; the larger newspapers, associated with higher-quality journalism, are called broadsheets. A third major format for newspapers is the Berliner, which is sized between the tabloid and the broadsheet. The phrase tabloid press is used to refer to newspapers focusing on less "serious" content, especially celebrities, sports, sensationalist crime stories and even hoaxes, though in recent years several "mainstream" newspapers have begun printing in the tabloid format (see below and supermarket tabloid). The term red top (as in "News International red tops sweep the board") is also used in Britain for these less serious newspapers, on account of the red nameplates used by most of them. Tabloid is also known as the gutter press by people who wish to express it in a negative manner.Recently, three traditionally broadsheet daily newspapers—The Independent, The Times, and The Scotsman—have switched to tabloid size; due to the negative connotations of the label, they generally refer to themselves as being in 'compact' format.[edit]OverviewThe name seems to derive from Burroughs-Wellcome's 1884 trademark for their process of making "tablet-like" compressed pharmaceuticals. The connotation of compressed tablet was soon applied to other small things and to the "compressed' journalism that condensed stories into a simplified, easily-absorbed format. The label of "tabloid journalism" (1901) preceded the smaller sheet newspapers that contained it (1918).There are two distinct uses of the term today. The more recent usage, actually deriving from the original usage, refers to weekly or semi-weekly alternative papers in tabloid format. Many of these are essentially straightforward newspapers, publishing in tabloid format. What principally distinguishes these from the dailies, in addition to their less-frequent publication, is the fact that they are usually free to the user, relying on ad revenue, as well as the fact that they tend to concentrate more on local entertainment scenes and issues. A modern tabloid can be positioned up market (quality), mid-market( popular) or down market (sensational). Newspaper studies have shown that readers prefer the smaller size - particularly commuters.In its traditional sense, tabloids tend to emphasise sensational stories and are reportedly prone to create their news if they feel that the subjects cannot, or will not, sue for libel. In this respect, much of the content of the tabloid press could be said to fall into the category of junk food news.This style of journalism has been exported to the United States and various other countries. In the People's Republic of China, the popularity of Chinese tabloids have exploded in popularity since the mid-1990s and have tested the limits of press censorship by taking editorial positions critical of the government and for engaging in critical investigative reporting.Since 1999 all major US supermarket tabloids (as distinct from local newspapers in the tabloid format) ; i.e., the Enquirer, Star, Globe, Examiner, ¡Mira!, Sun, and Weekly World News) have been under single ownership, which some readers fear has undermined the tabloids' traditional competitiveness and has significantly altered their editorial policies and news coverage.The daily tabloids in the United States -- which date back to the founding of the New York Daily News in 1919. are slightly less overheated than their British counterparts. Since its initial purchase by Rupert Murdoch in 1976, the New York Post has become the exemplar of the brash British-style tabloid in the US, and its competition with the Daily News has become newspaper legend (though the News usually refrains from matching the Post 's level of sensationalism).Other prominent US tabloids are the Philadelphia Daily News, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Rocky Mountain News in Denver, Newsday on New York's Long Island and The Examiner which is a free newspaper published in San Francisco, Washington, D.C. and Baltimore. (Newsday co-founder Alicia Patterson was the daughter of Joseph Patterson, founder of the New York Daily News.)The biggest largest tabloid (and newspaper in general) in Europe, by circulation, is Germany's Bild-Zeitung, with around 4 million copies (down from above 5 million in the 1980s). Although its paper size is bigger, its style was copied from the British tabloids.Source:

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