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英语作文80

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英语作文80字数作文

篇一:英语写作(80词)2

Continuing Education

1. 当今时代,很多人都会选择继续深造来提升自己的知识水平以跟上时代的发展

2. 作为年轻人,我应该怎么办

With the rapid development of the modern society, especially with the deep influence of recent global financial crisis, more and more people have realized the importance of keeping learning expertise knowledge and skills to enhance their competence for better life and career. Enterprise management, computer and information technology, law, economics, accounting and foreign language may be deemed as most popular subjects of continuing education. “White-collars” walk back to school from office buildings for further improvement. As young people in this modern time, I should keep learning and make myself most updated with the quickly refreshing information and technologies. I should be prepared for the future and serving the society with my own strength.

第二篇:根据下面所给的题目和中文提纲用英语写出一篇不少于80词的短文。

Benefits of Reading 1.阅读有很多好处,如:增长知识,开阔眼界等 2应如何进行阅读

Although the modern people can obtain information from various media, including medias with most developed technologies like internet and digital TV, as well as traditional medias like radio, newspaper and magazine, but reading, should still be one of the most popular information channel, which not only quickly and efficiently provides people with instant information, but also lead people to think deeply. Good reading habits can widen

knowledge scope and open your eyes.While you can be informed with big news and enjoy fantastic analysis through reading newspaper and magazines, you can have more time and space to explore a new world and experience different life by reading a good book. Choose a book with thoughts to be shared and read it at regular time (e.g., bed reading) is referred, which can make you relax after one-day work. If you need more knowledge, taking notes when reading could be a go choice.

第三篇:根据下面所给的题目和中文提纲用英语写出一篇不少于80词的短文。 我的暑假

1. 我的暑假里发生了一些有意义或很有意思的事情。2.我对下一个暑假的计划。

I really enjoyed this summer holiday. As you may know, I went to a orphan center to be a volunteer serving as a company with kids there. I read stories and dressed dolls for girls, watched TV and played ball games with boys. Kids t(转 载于:wWw.zW2.cn 爱作文 网)here were lovely and vivid. I really doubted why their parents dumped them when they were new babies. Live without parents could be a very sad stories. But what we can do, I believe, to better these kid’s life, is to spend more time and show more love to them. Every kid under the sky should be loved, regardless that they are beauty or not, clever or not, and health or not. I hope that what I did in this summer can be helpful to their future. For next summer, I think that I will bring my friends to the center to give more helps.

1

My favourite book

1. 你最喜欢的这本书的名字,你是怎样得到这本书的。 这本书的大体内容。你为什么喜欢这本书。

I own hundreds of books, including books for academic study as well as entertainment. But the most “beloved” one is a book named “Chinese Historic Stories”. My father gave me this book as my birthday gift when I was 14. I am a big fan of Chinese history, which may not be the interest of most kids in the school. I enjoy traditional Chinese story telling by Mr. Shan Tianfang, and some of his stories can also be found in this books. It is important for a Chinese people to well know his own country’s past, which can teach modern people how to use good experience and avoid hazard in the history. “Chinese Historic Stories” contains 150 important historic events summarized in ancient Chinese official historical records. But the stories are vivid and easy to understand. I have read it for more than 20 times and can almost recite most stories. But I think that I need to spend the whole life to learn and exercise the doctrines underlying those stories.

2

篇二:英语作文80‘s

in 1980s, people called us "80's generation". However now we have met

some embarrasse in our life.

For example, the diploma of university means nothing; Just graduated, workless followed; The house for us likes a moon have no way to touch.

As far as I am concered, I was ever an outstanding student in the campus, however, when I began to look for the job, I started to understand the meaning of competition. How to describe it? Let me give you an instance. I joined many recruitments, before it, I prepared for twenty copies of resumes. On the spot, I think the jam I needn't to say, everyone who joined it would have the same feeling. Besides, the resume likes a stone sank to the sea, there always no feedback to you. Because in two days the company recruiter would receive thousands of resumes and almost everyone have the diploma of the university. Supply far exceeds demand. If you have no experience it certainly will neglect by the recruiter.

After we worked for two years, we thought to buy a house. However, the price has rised sharply as we looked a skyscraper, day day update. Finally, we can't afford it and can but rent it. The more than half money we earned have distributed to the landlord. The surplus only can meet our life.

What is the good life for us? Twenty years ago,“属于我,属于你,属于八十年代的新一辈“,fifteen years ago,“太阳是我们的,太阳是我们的,月亮??”,ten years ago,“让我们期待明 天会更好!”,eight years ago,“不经历风雨,则么能见彩虹,没有人能随随便便成功”,and now.“我闭上眼睛就成天黑”。

部分中文译文 + 英语原文全文

中国"自我的一代"

“我们更自我。我们为自己而活,这样很好。我们必须有能力为经济发展做贡献。这是我们这一代帮助国家的方式。”

6个好朋友在周五晚上聚在了一起,海鲜应有尽有,大家谈笑风生。玛丽亚·张戴着大大的耳环,穿着紧身天鹅绒夹克,脸上化着精致的妆容,开始描述人人都在谈论的一个小岛,那个小岛位于泰国东部沿海。她说,那儿的潜水棒极了,有很多中国人,根本就不必担心语言问题。她的朋友维姬·杨正弯腰盯着一台借来的笔记本电脑,把一个吹毛求疵的客户的电子邮件下载到手机里。杨小姐是一家咨询公司的精算师,今晚必须完成一个方案。在她给同

事打电话时,餐桌上的话题已经从滑雪(“我大概摔了上百次”)转移到不同型号的iPod的优缺点(比如,“Shuffle不好”),然后又讨论起信用卡在中国的暴增。

类似这样的话题讨论反映出如今一些20多岁的中国年轻人的现状。

在中国,30岁以下的成年人约3亿,这一群体已成为连接曾经封闭排外的中国,与正在变成全球经济大国的“新新中国”之间的桥梁。中国年轻人是这个国家当前经济腾飞的推动者和主要受益者。据瑞士信贷第一波士顿最近的一项调查,年龄在20~29岁的中国人的收入,在过去3年间上涨了34%,远高于其他年龄段。去调查一下当今中国的城市年轻人,你会发现他们喝星巴克,穿耐克,沉迷于写博客。

对于一个曾去过到处还是蓝制服和人民公社的中国的外国人来说,要改变观念,接受“如今中国是一个青年精英们聚集的国家”的看法着实不易。1981年,我第一次到中国时,和两个旅伴去上海的人民公园。外交部给我们配备的“导游”带领我们从一个“外国朋友”专用入口进去。一群中国人聚集在外面,当我们通过时,有几个人大声抱怨说公园的某些部分只向外国人开放太不公平。我的一个同伴用中文口若悬河地表示赞同。立刻就有一群年轻男女将我们围住,叽叽喳喳地向我们提了一堆既幼稚又热切的问题:美国还有奴隶吗?你在哪里学的中文?所有的美国家庭真的都有3部车吗?你能帮我去美国吗?

那场讨论发生在25年前。我那时遇到的那些天真谨慎的中国人,也许就是文章开头提及的北京海鲜宴会上的那群年轻人的父母。但无论从外表、态度、生活经历、教育,还是对未来的梦想来看,在上海人民公园里的那群年轻人,与杨小姐和她的朋友们都毫无共同之处。

最大的变化在人口方面。由于中国的独生子女政策,这是世界历史上第一代以独生子女为主的群体,这一群体的自我倾向受到了消费主义、互联网和电子游戏的刺激。与此同时,今天的中国年轻人比上一辈人受过更好的教育、更国际化。在“文革”中成长起来的一代人,往往只勉强念完高中,而今天有大约1/4的中国人在20岁左右就进入了大学。

杨小姐身上体现了中国年轻人的那种变化。她是一个目标明确的29岁的精算师,很少笑,但热衷于参加派对。她和她的朋友们经常聚餐或泡吧,几乎不在家里吃饭。

在男朋友、滑雪爱好者王宁(音译)的鼓励下,杨小姐在年初决定开始学习这项运动。她去了北京南部一家价格昂贵的购物中心购买滑雪装备。她选了一块由美国科罗拉多Never Summer公司生产的、闪闪发亮的全新滑雪板,上面装饰着色彩艳丽的蝴蝶图案,加上手套、护目镜和其他随身用具,全套新装备共花去她700美元。当被问到花一大笔钱,为一项她也许永远不会参加的运动置办装备是否值得时,她说:“我认为你在决定开始一项新爱好时,就必须准备充分。”

像杨小姐和她的朋友们一样的中国年轻人代表了时代潮流,他们是大批年轻而拥有雄心壮志的消费开路先锋。放眼中国,像这样的年轻专业人士的谈论话题离不开博客、旅行、工作与生活的平衡。如果他们还买不起700美元的滑雪装备,他们也希望能尽快拥有。

在那家海鲜餐厅,餐盘都被清理下去了,新鲜水果和茶水被端上来,大家都变得若有所思。“我们比父母要幸运多了。”张小姐说,她在北京最高级的俱乐部之一当人事经理,“我

的父母亲自己什么也没有。他们为我而活。”王宁自己拥有一家相当成功的广告公司,他对此也很赞同,“我们更自我。我们为自己而活,这样很好。我们必须有能力为经济发展做贡献。那是我们贡献的力量。这是我们这一代帮助国家的方式。”

China’s Me Generation

Six friends out on a friday evening, the seafood plentiful, the conversation flowing. Maria Zhang — big hoop earrings, tight velvet jacket and a good deal of meticulously applied makeup — starts to describe an island that everyone is talking about off the east coast of Thailand. It has great diving, she says, and lots of Chinese there so you don’t have to worry about language. Her friend Vicky Yang is hunched over a borrowed laptop, downloading an e-mail from a pesky client on her cell phone. An actuary at a consulting firm, Vicky needs to close a project tonight. While she phones a colleague, the dinner-table conversation moves on to snowboarding ("I must have fallen a hundred times") to the relative merits of various iPods ("Shuffle is no good") and the sudden oush of credit cards in China. Silence Chen, an account executive with advertising giant Ogilvy & Mather in Beijing, tells the group he recently received six different cards in the mail. "Each one has a credit limit of 10,000," he says, laughing. "So suddenly I’m 60,000 yuan richer!" The talk turns to China’s online shopping business, before that is interrupted by the arrival of razor clams, chili squid and deep-fried grouper.

The one subject that doesn’t come up — and almost never does when this tight-knit group of friends gets together — is politics. That sets them apart from previous generations of Chinese élites, whose lives were defined by the epic events that shaped China’s past half-century: the Cultural Revolution, the opening to the West, the student protests in Tiananmen Square and their subsequent suppression. The conversation at Gang Ji Restaurant suggests today’s twentysomethings are tuning all that out. "There’s nothing we can do about politics," says Chen. "So there’s no point in talking about it or getting involved."

There are roughly 300 million adults in China under age 30, a demographic cohort that serves as a bridge between the closed, xenophobic China of the Mao years and the globalized economic powerhouse that it is becoming. Young Chinese are the drivers and chief beneficiaries of the country’s current boom: according to a recent survey by Credit Suisse First Boston, the incomes of 20- to 29-year-olds grew 34% in the past three years, by far the biggest of any age group. And because of their self-interested, apolitical pragmatism, they could turn out to be the salvation of the ruling Communist Party — so long as it keeps delivering the economic goods. Survey young, urban Chinese today, and you will find them drinking Starbucks, wearing Nikes and blogging obsessively. But you will detect little interest in demanding voting rights, let alone overthrowing the country’s communist rulers. "On their wish list," says Hong Huang, a publisher of several lifestyle magazines, "a Nintendo Wii comes way ahead of democracy."

The rise of China’s Me generation has implications for the foreign policies of other nations. Sinologists in the West have long predicted that economic growth would eventually bring democracy to China. As James Mann points out in his new book, The China Fantasy, the idea that China will evolve into a democracy as its middle class grows continues to underlie the U.S.’s

China policy, providing the central rationale for maintaining close ties with what is, after all, an unapologetically authoritarian regime. But China’s Me generation could shatter such long-held assumptions. As the chief beneficiaries of China’s economic success, young professionals have more and more tied up in preserving the status quo. The last thing they want is a populist politician winning over the country’s hundreds of millions of have-nots on a rural-reform, stick-it-to-the-cities agenda.

All of which means democracy isn’t likely to come to China anytime soon. And that poses challenges for Western policymakers as they try to engage China without condoning the Communist Party’s record of political repression and its failures to improve the lives of the country’s rural poor. China watchers say the Me generation’s reluctance to agitate for reform is driven in part by a reluctance to tarnish China’s moment in the sun. "They are proud of what China has accomplished, and very positive about the government," says P.T. Black, who conducts extensive marketing research for a Shanghai-based company called Jigsaw International. The political passivity of China’s new élite makes sense while the good times roll. The question is what will happen to the Me generation — and to China — when they end.

For anyone who visited the workers’ paradise when it was still the land of Mao suits and communes, trying to reconcile that China to the one that young élites live in today is disorienting. When I first visited China in 1981, I went to the People’s Park in Shanghai with two traveling companions. Our obligatory Foreign Ministry "guide" ushered us through a special gate reserved for "foreign friends." A knot of young Chinese had gathered outside. As we passed, a few made loud comments about the unfairness of having parts of the People’s Park reserved only for foreigners. One of my companions, a Mandarin speaker, agreed volubly in Chinese. Immediately a group of young Chinese men and women surrounded us and peppered us with questions that mixed naiveté and aspiration: Are there still slaves in America? Where did you learn to speak Chinese? Do all American families really have three cars? Can you help me go to America?

That discussion took place 25 years ago, the span usually allotted to a single generation. The naive, wary Chinese I met that day could be the parents of the group gathered for the seafood feast in Beijing. But there is almost nothing about the appearance, attitudes, life experience, education or dreams for the future that those young people in the Shanghai People’s Park share with the likes of Vicky and her friends.

The most obvious change is demographic. Because of China’s one-child policy, instituted in 1978, this is the first generation in the world’s history in which a majority are single children, a group whose solipsistic tendencies have been further encouraged by a growing obsession with consumerism, the Internet and video games. At the same time, today’s young Chinese are better educated and more worldly than their predecessors. Whereas the so-called Lost Generation that grew up in the Cultural Revolution often struggled to finish high school, today around a quarter of Chinese in their 20s have attended college. The country’s opening to the West has allowed many more of its citizens to satisfy their curiosity about the world: some 37 million will travel overseas in 2007. In the next decade, there will be more Chinese tourists traveling the globe than the combined total of those originating in the U.S. and Europe. Rather than fueling restlessness among

the Me generation, however, the ease of travel seems to provide more evidence that the benefits of globalization can be had without radical change.

There’s another reason for the lack of political ferment: it’s exhausting. Like anyone else, members of the Me generation are shaped by their experiences and those of their families. When their parents talk about the Great Leap Forward (a disastrous Mao campaign in the late 1950s that left 20 million to 30 million dead of starvation) and the subsequent chaos of the Cultural Revolution, they mostly tell horror stories that would put anyone off politics forever. That chapter in Chinese history, which officially ended with Mao’s death in 1976, is ancient history to today’s young élites. They have known little but peace and an ever increasing economic boom. "We have so much bigger a desire for everything than [our parents]," says Maria Zhang, 27. "And the more we eat, the more we taste and see, the more we want."

One event that the Me generation does remember is the crackdown on student activists in Tiananmen Square in 1989. But to young Chinese like Maria and Vicky, the Tiananmen protests are less a source of inspiration than an admonishment. Were popular uprisings like Tiananmen allowed to continue, Vicky believes, they would have provoked a counterreaction by conservative forces and led to a return to fortress China: no more iPods, overseas shopping trips or snowboarding weekends. "I think that the students meant well," says Vicky, who was 11 at the time and has only vague memories of what happened. But the crackdown that ended the demonstrations "certainly was needed."

Vicky embodies the shift in the priorities of young Chinese. She’s a purposeful, 29-year-old actuary who rarely smiles but loves nothing better than a party. She and her friends meet so regularly for dinner and at bars that she says she never eats at home anymore. As the pictures on her blog attest, they also throw regular theme parties to mark holidays like Halloween and Christmas, and last year took a holiday to Egypt.

Encouraged by her new boyfriend Wang Ning, a keen snowboarder, Vicky decided earlier this year to take up the sport as well. To prime for it, she went to a mall in south Beijing that specializes in pricey, imported skiing gear. She chose a gleaming new snowboard made by the Colorado company Never Summer, emblazoned with colorful, psychedelic paintings of butterflies. Along with gloves, goggles and other paraphernalia, the new gear set her back about $700. When asked about the wisdom of spending a small fortune on equipment for a sport she may never take to, she says, "I believe you have to be fully prepared and equipped before you decide to start a new hobby." Besides, she adds, "even if I don’t like skiing, think how nice [the gear] will look in the hallway of my apartment. Guests won’t know that I don’t use it." Vicky smiles to signal she’s joking. But she’s dead serious when she explains, over coffee at Starbucks, her lack of interest in politics. "It’s because our life is pretty good. I care about my rights when it comes to the quality of a waitress in a restaurant or a product I buy. When it comes to democracy and all that, well ..." She shrugs expressively and takes a sip of her latte. "That doesn’t play a role in my life."

People like Vicky and her friends represent the leading edge, the trailblazers for a huge mass of young, eagerly aspirant consumers. All over China, young professionals like these banter about

篇三:英语作文80句子

1. 随着经济的繁荣 with the booming of the economy

2. 随着人民生活水平的显著提高 with the remarkable improvement of people's living standard

3. 先进的科学技术 advanced science and technology

4. 为我们日常生活增添了情趣 add much spice / flavor to our daily life

5. 人们普遍认为 It is commonly believed that…

6. 我同意前者(后者)观点 I give my vote to the former / latter opinion.

7. 引起了广泛的公众关注 Sth. has aroused wide public concern. / Sth has drawn great public attention.

8. 不可否认 It is undeniable that…

9. 热烈的讨论/ 争论 a heated discussion / debate

10. 有争议性的问题 a controversial issue

11. 就我而言/ 就个人而言 As far as I am concerned, / Personally,

12. 有充分的理由支持 be supported by sound reasons

13. 双方的论点 argument on both sides

14. 发挥日益重要作用 play an increasingly important role in…

15. 对…必不可少 be indispensable to …

16. 正如谚语所说 As the proverb goes:

17. 对…产生有利/不利的影响 exert positive / negative effects on…

18. 利远远大于弊 The advantages far outweigh the disadvantages.

19. 导致,引起 lead to / give rise to / contribute to / result in

20. 复杂的社会现象 a complicated social phenomenon

21. 责任感 / 成就感 sense of responsibility / achievement

22. 竞争与合作精神 sense of competition and cooperation

23. 开阔眼界 widen one's horizon / broaden one's vision

24. 学习知识和技能 acquire knowledge and skills

25. 经济/心理负担 financial burden / psychological burden

26. 考虑到诸多因素 take many factors into consideration

27. 从另一个角度 from another perspective

28. 做出共同努力 make joint efforts

29. 对…有益 be beneficial to / be conducive to…

30. 为社会做贡献 make contributions to the society

31. 打下坚实的基础 lay a solid foundation for…

32. 综合素质 comprehensive quality

33. 致力于/ 投身于 be committed / devoted to…

34. 应当承认 Admittedly,

35. 不可推卸的义务 unshakable duty

36. 满足需求 satisfy / meet the needs of...

37. 可靠的信息源 a reliable source of information

38. 宝贵的自然资源 valuable natural resources

39. 因特网 the Internet (一定要由冠词,字母I 大写)

40. 方便快捷 convenient and efficient41. 在人类生活的方方面面 in all aspects of human life

42. 环保的材料 environmentally friendly materials

43. 社会进步的体现 a symbol of society progress

44. 大大方便了人们的生活 Sth has greatly facilitated people's lives.

45. 对这一问题持有不同态度 hold different attitudes towards this issue

46. 在一定程度上 to some extent

47. 理论和实践相结合 integrate theory with practice

48. …必然趋势 an irresistible trend of…

49. 日益激烈的社会竞争 the increasingly keen social competition

50. 眼前利益 immediate interest/ short-term interest

51. 长远利益 long-tem interest

52. …有其自身的优缺点 … has its own merits and demerits / pros and cons

53. 对…有害 do harm to / be harmful to / be detrimental to

54. 交流思想/ 情感/ 信息 exchange ideas / emotions / information

55. 跟上…的最新发展 keep pace with / keep abreast with the latest development of…

56. …的健康发展 the healthy development of…

57. 重视 attach great importance to…

58. 社会地位 social status

59. 把时间和精力放在…上 focus one's time and energy on…

60. 扩大知识面 expand one's scope of knowledge61. 身心两方面 both physically and mentally

62. 有直接/间接关系 be directly / indirectly related to…

63. 导致很多问题 give rise to / lead to / spell various problems

64. 可以替代think的词 believe, claim, maintain, argue, insist, hold the opinion / belief / view that

65. 缓解压力/ 减轻负担 relieve stress / burden

66. 优先考虑/发展… give (top) priority to sth.

67. 与…比较 compared with…/ in comparison with

68. 可降解的/可分解的材料 degradable / decomposable material

69. 代替 replace / substitute / take the place of

70. 提供就业机会 offer job opportunities

71. 反映了社会进步的 mirror the social progress/advance

72. 增进相互了解 enhance / promote mutual understanding

73. 充分利用 make full use of / take advantage of

74. 承受更大的工作压力 suffer from heavier work pressure

75. 保障社会稳定和繁荣 guarantee the stability and prosperity of our society

76. 更多地强调 put more emphasis on…

77. 适应社会发展 adapt oneself to the social development

78. 实现梦想 realize one's dream

79. 主要理由列举如下 The main / leading reasons are listed as follows:

80. 我们还有很长的路要走 We still have a long way to go.

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