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    Learning English is just like learning to ride a bicycle. When learning English becomes a kind of habit,everything will become easier.

    Please think about how we learned to ride a bicycle. There are four stages (阶段): At the first stage,the child doesn't know what it is to ride a bicycle, nor can he ride. So look at ourselves,when we learned English at the first time, we were also in this condition.

    And then is the second stage. Although the child cannot ride himself,he grows and understands what it is to ride a bicycle. So,at this time,teachers are our navigation (航海) marks.

    So according to this,we are just like the child starting to learn and now come to the third stage. He can ride a bicycle but has to think every time how to do it.

    At last,the fourth stage comes when the child has practiced consciously (有意识地) riding the bicycle so much that he doesn't have to think. Riding a bicycle becomes a kind of habit. He can talk to people and wave (招手) to others while riding.

    Learning English is just like learning to ride a bicycle. When learning becomes a kind of habit,we'll find we can be successful not only in English but also in other subjects. When learning becomes a kind of habit, I think, no, I believe,one day we'll succeed and the success will belong to us forever.

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同类题5

阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、 B 、C 、D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。

    One month ago, my daughter started kindergarten. As usual, I wished her success. I was telling a lie. What I actually wish for her is 1. I believe in the power of failure.

    Success is 2 in a sense. Success is proving that you can do something that you already know you can do, or doing something correctly the first time, which can 3 be a problematic victory. First-time success is usually a fluke (侥幸). First-time failure, 4, is expected; it is the natural order of things.

    Failure is how we learn. I have been told of an African phrase 5 a good cook as “she who has broken many pots”. If you have spent enough time in the 6 to have broken a lot of pots, probably you know a fair amount about 7. I once had a late dinner with a group of chefs, and they spent time 8 knife wounds and burn scars. They knew how much credibility (可信度) their 9 gave them.

    I earn my 10 by writing a daily newspaper column. Each week I am 11 that one column is going to be the worst column of the week. I don't just set out to write it; I try my best every day. 12, every week, one column is inferior (较差的) to the others, sometimes extremely so.

    I have learned to 13 that column. A successful column usually means that I am treading (踏) on 14 ground, going with tricks that work, or dressing up popular ideas in fancy words. Often in my inferior columns, I am trying to 15 something I've never done before, something that I'm not even sure can be done.

    My daughter is a perfectionist. She will feel her failures, and I will want to 16 her. But I will also, I hope, 17 her of what she learned, and how she can do 18 next time. I probably won't tell her that failure is a good thing, because that's not a(n) 19 you can learn when you're five. I hope I can tell her, though, that it's not the end of the world. Indeed, with luck, it is the 20.