太奇“每日一练”:MPAcc英语阅读理解精篇(11.25)
距离2015年管理类联考(MPAcc)考试时间仅剩30天左右。针对MPAcc考研英语,太奇教育结合多年考研辅导经验,独具特色的太奇学 习法让每一位太奇学员受益匪浅。进入MPAcc冲刺阶段备考,太奇MPAcc为大家整理MPAcc 英语阅读“每日一练”,希望MPAcc考生们可以借助试题提高解题速度。
Writers who are conscientious but inexperienced often write with a great deal of self-conscious effort. Worrying constantly, they inch ahead word by word. When they have finally reached the end of the piece, they breathe a sign of relief. They have done their best. They are off the hook.
Before they start to write, experienced writers generally think very hard about their audience and their purpose. They devote time to sketching out the structure of the piece and perhaps to obsessing a bit about their first few sentences. But once over these hurdles, these writers do not fastidiously (挑剔的) choose their words like cherries from a tree. Rather, they let them fall upon the page as if their order were predestined. Such writers know well enough that nothing about this first rush of words has any relationship to destiny. Even though it frequently contains much worth retaining, this spontaneous outpouring represents only one of many possibilities for expressing the same thoughts.
Most writers want and need the luxury of shaking the tree and letting the fruit fall as it will. If we free our inner voice, it speaks to us rapidly and distinctly. By recording the words we hear, we quickly give form and substance to our thoughts. Half-formed ideas drifting through a writer's mind are, of course, nearly impossible to evaluate or revise. And frequently they are lost before we even have the opportunity to try. But an idea that has been made tangible and visible can be clarified and refined at will. And writers must revise. The more knowledgeable and particular the writer, the more complex or sensitive the purpose, the more time the revision may take, and the better the result is likely to be.
Your "gut" reaction to your first draft can provide some insights, but it will only carry you a short distance. To strengthen your phrasing and sentence structure, you again need to know precisely what you are trying to do and how you are going to do it. As with word choice, revising word order with confidence requires some real knowledge of specific rules and techniques. Although this knowledge permeates (渗入) even your first drafts, you appreciate it the most when you revise. It helps you to spot weaknesses immediately and to know exactly what remedies to apply.
1. All of the following are characteristics of conscientious but inexperienced writers EXCEPT ______.
A. inching ahead word by word B. worrying constantly
C. self-consciousness D. being purposeful
2. The author thinks revision is ______.
A. a necessity B. a surplus C. a plus D. a luxury
3. The example of "cherries from a tree" is used to describe ______.
A. the way in which words fall into a writer's works naturally
B. the difficulty of selecting the best word among many
C. the beautiful language a writer can produce
D. the words a writer chooses to fill in his works
4. Which of the following statements does the author imply?
A. The writer's inner voice usually speaks to them in a vague and indistinctive way.
B. The first rush of words in a writer's mind is always the only way to express his thoughts.
C. Half-formed ideas in a writer's mind cannot be revised.
D. The more knowledgeable the writer, the less time the revision may take.