填空题
First, any habit which slows down your silent
reading to the speed at which you speak, or read aloud is inefficient. If you
point out each word as you read, or move your head, or form the words with your
lips, you read poorly. Less obvious habits also hold back reading efficiency.
One is "saying" each word silently by moving your tongue or throat or vocal
cords; another is "hearing" each word as you read. These are
habits which should have been outgrown long ago. The beginning reader is
learning low letters can make words, how written words are pronounced, and how
sentences are put together. Your reading purpose is quite different; it is to
understand meaning. It has been estimated that up to 75% of the
words in English arc not really necessary for conveying the meaning. The secret
of silent reading is to seek out those key words and phrases which carry the
thought and so pay less attention to words which exist only for the sake of
grammatical completeness. An efficient reader can grasp the
meaning from a page at least twice as fast as he can read the page aloud.
Unconsciously perhaps, he takes in a whole phrase or thought unit at time. If he
"says" or "hears" words to himself, they are selected ones, said for
emphasis. A. how to be an efficient reader B. when they want to emphasize
them C. slow your reading speed D. understanding meaning E. seek out
key words or phrases F. how to read fast G. to form words of your
own
填空题
This passage is mainly about ______.
填空题
According to paragraph 2, saying each word to yourself as you read will ______.
填空题
Saying or hearing as you read are habits for ______.
填空题
In paragraph 4, the writer advises us to ______.
填空题
When do efficient readers "say" words? ______.