[5] 改错 Part ⅤError Correction(15 minutes) Directions:This part consists of a short passage.In this passage,there are altogether 10 mistakes,one in each numbered line.You may have to change a word,add a word or delete a word.Mark out the mistakes and put the corrections in the blanks provided.If you change a word,cross it out and write the correct word in the corresponding blank.If you add a word,put an insertion mark(∧)in the right place and write the missing word in the blank.If you delete a word,cross it out and put a slash(/)in the blank. Conflict is a necessary element in fiction. Indeed, it is the backbone of a story; it is conflict that gives us the sense of a story going somewhere. The conflict in a story must first be obvious importance 62 to the characters involved. We can illustrate this by reference to experience. All of us face constant conflicts our daily lives-whenever we cross a street, for example, or whenever the alarm goes off and we have to get up for a class. Most of our conflicts are easily resolved-we wait for traffic and then cross the street without fear, or we shut off the alarm, get up, and after two cups of coffee forget our pain. Furthermore, we also experience conflicts that are not 63 easily resolved. All of us, for example, are faced almost daily with conflicts which have some kind of a permanent effect to us-which alter our basic values or our conception 64 of human nature. Should we report the fellow student whom we look cheating on an examination? Should we pad (虚报) 65 our accounts for books and supplies in that letter home- particularly since we know that father cheats a little here and there on his income-tax returns? None of us have 66 witnessed teachers or ministers or high public officials preach one thing and practice other. All of us have found 67 ourselves in that most common of all dilemmas-the choice between holding to a set of moral and ethical convictions and violate them in order to be accepted by our group. 68 These are the kinds of conflicts which we find fiction; and 69 because they are of this nature, we call fictional conflicts crisis situations. We mean by this that as a result of a given conflict, the character or characters involving will never 70 again be quite the same people that they are before the 71 incident occurred.本新闻共 6页,当前在第 5页 1 2 3 4 5 6 |