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Sample Answer (6 分段参考):
I believe that everyone’s work is useful to the society. From cleaners to professors, they all provide important services to the world. Now I want to introduce the owner of the diner near my apartment building.
He is in his forties and his son just entered middle school, so you can sometimes catching him helping his son with his homework in the restaurant, when there aren’t many people.
I knew him last year, when he just opened this diner with his wife. In order to attract residence near the neighborhood to visit his restaurant, he offered a really big discount to everyone. For instance, everything cost only half of its original price, so for only 6 yuan, we could get noodles with beef in it. So you can imagine how popular his business was in the first couple of weeks.
His main job is to take orders from the customers and cook the food for them, during which he also needs to provide great services to make people feel welcomed and want to come again.
His work is of great significance to the neighborhood. Without him and his business, we have to walk several blocks to buy breakfast. But now, we can just go downstairs and get a bowl of noodles in 5 minutes. How convenient that is! What’s more, the food is so delicious and the price is rather reasonable. That’s why I’m a regular there. And he is a very useful and nice restaurant owner in our neighborhood
Sample Answer 1 (7 分段参考):
This topic reminds me of my next-door neighbour, David, who's been working as a photojournalist for over five years in a local press.
I got to know him when my family moved to this community roughly a decade ago. We soon got along as both of us are fanatical about taking photos. We used to go on excursions together and capture the wonderful unspoilt scenes with our digital cameras. He's the sort of person who has an insatiable curiosity about everything, I can tell this from those books he read and pictures he shot. You know, he's got a passion for life.
Anyway, after graduating from Uni, he soon joined a local newspaper office and became a photojournalist. Unlike correspondents who report things with words, David tells visual stories with expressive images. The subject matter varies greatly, I mean, he has taken pictures from national events like G20 summit, to everyday issues happening at a local level. So I think his job is of great fun. But he once told me that, being a photojournalist, you need to remain silent as you move in the background. You should observe attentively, but when there's an emergency, you run towards it immediately, camera in hand. That sounds challenging, but truly rewarding.
I think this job is significant to the society. If we had no photojournalists in the world, those true stories wouldn't have a chance to be brought to life with powerful pictures. I would say people like David are still shaping our understanding of major events and trivial daily stuff via their cameras, even though we might not know who they are. In all, they're like unsung heroes to me.