全英毕业论文5000字
全英毕业论文5000字
关于英国硕士论文的字数要求
英国的硕士论文的字数要求一般是多少,才能达标。是不是觉得在众多种类的论文面前是不是觉得写作英文论文真的好难,其实论文也是分等级的。不同阶段的.论文的字数也是不同的。
英国硕士论文字数一般来说,1000字以下的是一些小作业,硕士生也会做一些课堂小作业,课件等,essay,assignment一般1000-3000字,本科毕业论文3000-5000字,硕士毕业论文一般5000字到两三万字,dissertation一般万字以上,有的属于博士级别的论文。
关于英国硕士论文的字数,每个学校每个专业都有不同的要求与规划。大多是一个学术要求的范畴。
另外一个问题,写这多字,何时能完成?如何能完成?
譬如有留学生提问:Ed硕士毕业要15000英文,我算了下相当于30000左右的中文, 一年能行吗?
那个我要写的是硕士论文 只从一个角度切入字数会不够吧绩效管理庞大到一些就写出3万字左右吗?
笔者觉得这个问题的答案因人而异。论文的写作字数其实也是因人而异的,因为有的人写作的很好,写了很少的字数老师也给了高分,但是有些人写作了很多的字数却还是低分,其实主要还是看质量,所以在写作英国硕士论文的时候一定要注意写作质量。
跪求英语专业毕业论文~!!!!全英5000字左右
全部有开题报告
242.论劳伦斯《虹》中的异化 (字数:6637.页数:19 )
243.从哲学角度看中西餐具文化的差异 (字数:6052.页数:18 )
244.双关语在广告英语中的语用分析及其运用 (字数:6055.页数:19 )
245.如何引导后进生学习英语 (字数:5138.页数:17 )
246.论《荆棘鸟》中的女性意识 (字数:5773.页数:17 )
247.关联理论框架下的反语研究——《傲慢与偏见》个案分析 (字数:9774.页数:27 )
248.从男性角色解读《简爱》中的女性反抗意识 (字数:6771.页数:19 )
249.《瓦尔登湖》中自然主义的现实意义 (字数:5155.页数:17 )
250.浅析中西鬼文化 (字数:6755.页数:19 )
251.建构主义理论下计算机辅助大学英语视听说——以 英语专业为例 (字数:7471.页数:24 ) 252.论英语和汉语色彩词的文化内涵 (字数:8111.页数:22 )
253.信达雅在旅游宣传资料翻译中的应用 (字数:6771.页数:19 )
254.英汉植物词文化内涵的比较研究 (字数:6440.页数:18 )
255.影视翻译的特点及技巧—阿甘正传个案研究 (字数:6957.页数:21 )
256.美国和中国感恩文化的精髓:合格公民的必备素质 (字数:6097.页数:17 )
257.先进的英语阅读理念与英语快速阅读的关系 (字数:6737.页数:21 )
258.透过广告创意看中西文化差异 (字数:6481.页数:19 )
259.从“死亡”委婉语看中西方文化差异 (字数:6208.页数:18 )
260.以女性主义看《傲慢与偏见》中的女性形象 (字数:6437.页数:18 )
261.教师的课堂情感表现在小学英语教学中的关键性作用 (字数:5729.页数:18 )
262.性别差异在日常英语词汇和句法中的体现 (字数:5414.页数:18 )
263.口译中的文化差异:现象与对策 (字数:6381.页数:19 )
264.浅析中西方喜剧文化---以《武林外传》和《老友记》为例 (字数:6381.页数:19 )
265.关联理论的语境价值与英语专业四级考试听力理解 (字数:6259.页数:19 )
266.比较中西方礼仪差别 (字数:5626.页数:17 )
267.英汉数字词语认知比较研究 (字数:7916.页数:21 )
英文毕业论文要多少字
10页的论文,一般4000多字,最多要求5000字。按现在word软件的文档,一般一页400多字,10页的论文只有4000多字。其它的文字软件,如wps等都是一样的。
写论文,如果你是用手写,在信笺纸上字写得又小又密的话,10页则写不了4000字,字数会少得多的。现在人们一般是用电脑打字了。
英文论文简介:
英语论文的写作,主要用于参加国际学术研讨会,促进中外学术文化交流;在国际学术刊物上发表,在国际上共享科研成果,英语论文也是达到学术交流的目的,另外英语论文还包括英语相关专业人员必要地用英语撰写学术报告或毕业论文等等。
不同的学科或专业领域、不同的刊物对英语论文的内容、格式等有不同的要求,不同领域的研究论文在文体和语言特点上既有许多共性,也不乏各自特点。
跪求英语专业毕业论文~!!!!全英5000字左右 173 595661@ 求高人搭救!!10月31日要交了!
Thesis Statements
WHAT THIS HANDOUT IS ABOUT
This handout describes what a thesis statement is, how thesis statements work in your writing, and how you can craft or refine one for your draft.
INTRODUCTION
Writing in college often takes the form of persuasion—convincing others that you have an interesting, logical point of view on the subject you are studying. Persuasion is a skill you practice regularly in your daily life. You persuade your roommate to clean up, your parents to let you borrow the car, your friend to vote for your favorite candidate or policy. In college, course assignments often ask you to make a persuasive case in writing. You are asked to convince your reader of your point of view. This form of persuasion, often called academic argument, follows a predictable pattern in writing. After a brief introduction of your topic, you state your point of view on the topic directly and often in one sentence. This sentence is the thesis statement, and it serves as a summary of the argument you’ll make in the rest of your paper.
WHAT IS A THESIS STATEMENT?
A thesis statement:
tells the reader how you will interpret the significance of the subject matter under discussion.
is a road map for the paper; in other words, it tells the reader what to expect from the rest of the paper.
directly answers the question asked of you. A thesis is an interpretation of a question or subject, not the subject itself. The subject, or topic, of an essay might be World War II or Moby Dick; a thesis must then offer a way to understand the war or the novel.
makes a claim that others might dispute.
is usually a single sentence somewhere in your first paragraph that presents your argument to the reader. The rest of the paper, the body of the essay, gathers and organizes evidence that will persuade the reader of the logic of your interpretation.
If your assignment asks you to take a position or develop a claim about a subject, you may need to convey that position or claim in a thesis statement near the beginning of your draft. The assignment may not explicitly state that you need a thesis statement because your instructor may assume you will include one. When in doubt, ask your instructor if the assignment requires a thesis statement. When an assignment asks you to analyze, to interpret, to compare and contrast, to demonstrate cause and effect, or to take a stand on an issue, it is likely that you are being asked to develop a thesis and to support it persuasively. (Check out our handout on understanding assignments for more information.)
HOW DO I GET A THESIS?
A thesis is the result of a lengthy thinking process. Formulating a thesis is not the first thing you do after reading an essay assignment. Before you develop an argument on any topic, you have to collect and organize evidence, look for possible relationships between known facts (such as surprising contrasts or similarities), and think about the significance of these relationships. Once you do this thinking, you will probably have a “working thesis,” a basic or main idea, an argument that you think you can support with evidence but that may need adjustment along the way.
Writers use all kinds of techniques to stimulate their thinking and to help them clarify relationships or comprehend the broader significance of a topic and arrive at a thesis statement. For more ideas on how to get started, see our handout on brainstorming.
HOW DO I KNOW IF MY THESIS IS STRONG?
If there’s time, run it by your instructor or make an appointment at the Writing Center to get some feedback. Even if you do not have time to get advice elsewhere, you can do some thesis evaluation of your own. When reviewing your first draft and its working thesis, ask yourself the following:
Do I answer the question? Re-reading the question prompt after constructing a working thesis can help you fix an argument that misses the focus of the question.
Have I taken a position that others might challenge or oppose?If your thesis simply states facts that no one would, or even could, disagree with, it’s possible that you are simply providing a summary, rather than making an argument.
Is my thesis statement specific enough? Thesis statements that are too vague often do not have a strong argument. If your thesis contains words like “good” or “successful,” see if you could be more specific: why is something “good”; what specifically makes something “successful”?
Does my thesis pass the “So what?” test? If a reader’s first response is, “So what?” then you need to clarify, to forge a relationship, or to connect to a larger issue.
Does my essay support my thesis specifically and without wandering? If your thesis and the body of your essay do not seem to go together, one of them has to change. It’s okay to change your working thesis to reflect things you have figured out in the course of writing your paper. Remember, always reassess and revise your writing as necessary.
Does my thesis pass the “how and why?” test? If a reader’s first response is “how?” or “why?” your thesis may be too open-ended and lack guidance for the reader. See what you can add to give the reader a better take on your position right from the beginning.
EXAMPLES
Suppose you are taking a course on 19th-century America, and the instructor hands out the following essay assignment: Compare and contrast the reasons why the North and South fought the Civil War. You turn on the computer and type out the following:
The North and South fought the Civil War for many reasons, some of which were the same and some different.
This weak thesis restates the question without providing any additional information. You will expand on this new information in the body of the essay, but it is important that the reader know where you are heading. A reader of this weak thesis might think, “What reasons? How are they the same? How are they different?” Ask yourself these same questions and begin to compare Northern and Southern attitudes (perhaps you first think, “The South believed slavery was right, and the North thought slavery was wrong”). Now, push your comparison toward an interpretation—why did one side think slavery was right and the other side think it was wrong? You look again at the evidence, and you decide that you are going to argue that the North believed slavery was immoral while the South believed it upheld the Southern way of life. You write:
While both sides fought the Civil War over the issue of slavery, the North fought for moral reasons while the South fought to preserve its own institutions.
Now you have a working thesis! Included in this working thesis is a reason for the war and some idea of how the two sides disagreed over this reason. As you write the essay, you will probably begin to characterize these differences more precisely, and your working thesis may start to seem too vague. Maybe you decide that both sides fought for moral reasons, and that they just focused on different moral issues. You end up revising the working thesis into a final thesis that really captures the argument in your paper:
While both Northerners and Southerners believed they fought against tyranny and oppression, Northerners focused on the oppression of slaves while Southerners defended their own right to self-government.
Compare this to the original weak thesis. This final thesis presents a way of interpreting evidence that illuminates the significance of the question. Keep in mind that this is one of many possible interpretations of the Civil War—it is not the one and only right answer to the question. There isn’t one right answer; there are only strong and weak thesis statements and strong and weak uses of evidence.
Let’s look at another example. Suppose your literature professor hands out the following assignment in a class on the American novel: Write an analysis of some aspect of Mark Twain’s novel Huckleberry Finn. “This will be easy,” you think. “I loved Huckleberry Finn!” You grab a pad of paper and write:
Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn is a great American novel.
Why is this thesis weak? Think about what the reader would expect from the essay that follows: you will most likely provide a general, appreciative summary of Twain’s novel. The question did not ask you to summarize; it asked you to analyze. Your professor is probably not interested in your opinion of the novel; instead, she wants you to think about why it’s such a great novel—what do Huck’s adventures tell us about life, about America, about coming of age, about race relations, etc.? First, the question asks you to pick an aspect of the novel that you think is important to its structure or meaning—for example, the role of storytelling, the contrasting scenes between the shore and the river, or the relationships between adults and children. Now you write:
In Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain develops a contrast between life on the river and life on the shore.
关于英语学习的5000字的英文论文怎么写呀??
一.关于本专业毕业论文的选题
英语专业本科生毕业论文选题可以在三个大的方向中进行,即英语文学,语言学和翻译学。各个大方向中又可以选择小的方向,具体解释如下:
1.英语文学:选择英语文学的毕业论文选题可以从三个方向进行:国别文学研究、文学批评理论研究和比较文学研究。
在进行国别文学研究选题时,一般选取英国文学或美国文学中的某一经典作家(如海明威),某一经典作品(如《双城记》),某一写作手法(如象征手法的运用)或某一文学思潮(如浪漫主义运动)作深入研究。但在选择作家或作品时最好选择在文学史上作为经典的作家或作品。有个别流行作家或作品极富盛名,容易引起学生的兴趣,如《飘》或《荆棘鸟》,学生有强烈愿望选择它们作为研究对象。在不可避免上述情况时,应该尽可能地挖掘作品内在的深刻含义,不能流于肤浅的分析。
文学批评理论的选题一般不太适合英语专业本科生,因为该理论知识的学习在英语专业研究生阶段,本科生一般不具备文学批评理论的知识结构。这个方向的选题可以有关某一文学批评理论,一文学批评术语的阐释或某两种或以上的文学批评理论的比较。
比较文学研究就是将两个以上的作家或作品进行比较。这两个作品或作家可以是同一国别的(如“雪莱与拜伦的诗歌比较”),也可以是不同国别的(如《牡丹亭》与《罗密欧与朱丽叶》)
2.语言学:选择语言学的毕业论文选题可以在两个大的方向进行:普通语言学和应用语言学。
普通语言学的研究就是对于英语语言的任何一个方面的研究,如对一种词性、或一种时态、或拼写、语调等等方面的研究(如“一般现在时及其交际功能”)。
应用语言学包括教学法的研究和其它一些新兴的应用语言学分支的研究。师范专业或本身从事教师职业的学生选择教学法方向的较多。在这个方向选题,也要避免过大范围的选题,而应对一个具体问题进行研究,最重要的是要结合教学实践或实验。这个方向的好的选题有:“个性与英语教学”,“方言对英语学习的影响”等。
3.翻译学:翻译学的选题一般可以在两个方向上进行:翻译理论以及翻译活动。对翻译理论的研究就是探讨某一种翻译理论等等。相比之下,对翻译活动的研究更多一些,这些选题可以是对一种语言现象的翻译、或一种修辞格的翻译的研究(如“汉语成语的英译”)。应该注意的是,在对翻译活动作研究时,往往需要某种翻译理论支撑,总结规律,并对这一活动作出评价,要避免仅仅时例子的罗列。
二.英语专业毕业论文格式要求
学位论文包括前置、主体、附录等三个部分。
(一)前置
1.英文封面:由论文英文题目、解释、作者、指导老师姓名和职称、时间组成。
2.目录:由论文的中、英文摘要、篇、章、条、款以及参考书目、附录等序号、题名和页码组成,排在英文封面之后另页。
3.中、英文内容摘要:摘要是论文的内容不加注释和评论的简短陈述,宜以最简洁的语言介绍论文的概要、作者的突出论点、新见解或创造性成果以及实验方法、数据或结论,是一篇完整的短文,可以独立使用,中文摘要一般在200字左右
4关键词:关键词是用以表示全文主题内容信息的单词或术语。为便于文献检索,学位论文应注明三至五个具有代表意义中、外文“关键词”,这些关键词就是论文的中心词,以显著的字符另起一行,分别排在中、外文摘要的左下方。各关键词之间用“分号”隔开。外文关键词应与中文关键词相对应。
(二)主体部分
主题部分包括引言(Introduction)、正文(Body)、结论(Conclusion)、参考文献(Bibliography)。主体部分必须由另页右页开始。
1.引言:主要说明研究工作的目的、涉及范围、相关领域的前人研究成果和知识空白、研究设想、研究方法等方面的概述、理论意义和实用价值等。
2.正文:论文的正文是核心部分,占主要篇幅。一般论文选题需要从几个方面来论述或论证。要求论据充分,论点明确。行文必须实事求是,客观真切,准确完备,合乎逻辑,层次分明,简练可读。正文部分要有分级标题,章、条、款、项的序号编码方法,采用阿拉伯数分级系列编号法,论文中的章、条、款、项依次排列,依次从1开始,连续编号,中间用“.”相隔,最末级编号之后不加点。示例:
1.
2.…… 2.1
2.2…… 2.2.1
2.2.2
2.2.3.… 2.2.3.1
3.结论:学位论文的结论是最终的、总体的结论,它是对正文部分的论述的概述,也可以在结论或讨论中提出建议、研究设想、尚待解决的问题等。
4.参考文献:写作学位论文过程中,阅读或运用过某些文献所列出的书目清单,置于正文之后,另页开始。参考文献的著录按原文献语种为原则。
(1)文献目录应另页书写,外文文献排前,中文文献排后。外文文献书名须用斜体。
(2)文献目录一律按作者姓氏汉语拼音或外文字母顺序排列。
(3)每条文献必须顶格写,回行时空两字或五个英语字母。
(4)将各文献的类型代号(即文献英文名的首字母)注明在文献之后:
专著[M] 学位论文[D] 论文集〔C〕 报纸文章〔N〕 期刊文章〔J〕 报告[R]
专利 [P] 专著、论文集的析出文献[A] 其他未说明文件 〔Z〕
电子文献中光盘图书 [M/CD](MONOGRAPH ON CD)
网上期刊〔J/OL〕(serial online)
5.文内所引文献:要求附夹注,应在引文后加括号注明作者姓名(英文只注姓),出版年和引文页码。若为转引文献,则加quoted in 字样。
例:(王佐良,1982:38)
(Newmark,8:26-33)
6.文献中列出的文献应该与正文中标注的文献一一对应。正文中没有出现的,不应出现在参考文献中。
(三)附录部分
附录包括所有与论文有关的补充材料,如图表或照片等。
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