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Directions:Complete the following passag...

Directions:Complete the following passage by using the sentences given below. Each sentence can be used only once. Note that there are two more sentences than you need.

Fed up with constantly having to recharge or replace batteries in your ever-expanding electronic devices? The solution may be just a few steps away.

“Energy harvesting” promises to power countless consumer devices, often with nothing more than your body's movement or heat.1..But many experts believe the market for the technology could explode due to electronic devices being developed for the Internet of Things.

Among the most basic forms of the technology is body power,2.Automatic watches have employed the concept for decades, for example, by winding themselves when their user moves their arm. Now the concept is being considered for a number of other devices.

In an contest seeking visionary ideas for wearable technologies, Intel awarded$5,000 for a concept to change the temperature difference between a person's body and a special piece of clothing they'd wear into electricity for mobile devices.

3.. Stanford University engineers are testing smart microchips that create electricity from ultrasound to power implantable devices that can analyze a person's nervous system or treat their diseases.

A textile research association in Spain is proposing to obtain electricity from radio waves that flow around everyone to power sensors sewn into clothes, which can monitor a person's heartbeat or other vital signs.

Obtaining stable energy from devices can be complex, however. For one thing, the motlon that generates the electricity has to be constant to be useful. Moreover, the amount of power the devices produce depends on the person using them, according to a Columbia University study, It determined that taller people on average provide about 20percent more power than shorter ones when walking, running or cycling.

4.. While such devices are expected to cost less than battery-powered alternatives when compared over many years ,experts say, people may continue buying ones with batteries merely because those would be cheaper in the short term.

A.Dozens of companies around the world already offer such products

B.Using sound to power devices is another energy-harvesting variation

C.It's also unclear how eagerly consumers might welcome energy-harvesting products,

D.With the Internet of things expected to combine billions of devices, we'll have to use energy harvesting.

E.When certain materials are squeezed or stretched, the movement of their atoms creates an electrical charge.

F.Research fim IDTechEx has estimated that annual global sales of energy-harvesting products could hit $.2.6 billion by 2024.

 

1.A 2.E 3.B 4.C 【解析】 这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了如今“能量收集”承诺为无数的消费设备提供能量,通常只需要你身体的运动或热量。介绍了能够进行能量收集的几种技术,以及随着科技产品的普及,这种新能源科技的市场将会急剧增加。 1. 结合后文But many experts believe the market for the technology could explode due to electronic devices being developed for the Internet of Things.可知但许多专家认为,由于为物联网开发的电子设备,这项技术的市场可能会出现爆炸式增长。由此可知,市场爆满,说明全球已经有公司在提供此类产品了。故A选项“全球已有数十家公司提供此类产品”符合上下文语境,故选A。 2. 根据上文Among the most basic forms of the technology is body power.可知该技术最基本的形式之一是身体动力。以及后文Automatic watches have employed the concept for decades, for example, by winding themselves when their user moves their arm.可知自动手表已经使用了几十年的概念,例如,当用户移动指针时自动上弦。由此可知,本句是在承接上文解释自动手表这种身体动力的原理。故E选项“当某些材料被挤压或拉伸时,原子的运动会产生电荷”符合上下文语境,故选E。 3. 根据后文Stanford University engineers are testing smart microchips that create electricity from ultrasound to power implantable devices that can analyze a person's nervous system or treat their diseases.可知斯坦福大学的工程师们正在测试利用超声波发电的智能微芯片,为可植入设备提供动力,这些设备可以分析人体的神经系统或治疗他们的疾病。由此可知,本段是在说明另一种利用声音为设备提供动力的能量收集方法。复现词sound和段落后ultrasound,属于相同范畴的词。故B选项“利用声音为设备提供动力是另一种能量收集方法”符合上下文语境,故选B。 4. 结合后文While such devices are expected to cost less than battery-powered alternatives when compared over many years ,experts say, people may continue buying ones with batteries merely because those would be cheaper in the short term.可知专家们说,尽管这类设备的价格预计在多年后会低于电池驱动的替代品,但人们可能会继续购买电池驱动的设备,仅仅因为短期内价格会更便宜。由此可知,本段是在推测消费者对能源收集产品的欢迎程度。故C选项“目前还不清楚消费者对能源收集产品的欢迎程度”符合上下文语境,故选C。
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    More than a decade ago, cognitive scientists John Bransford and Daniel Schwartz, both then at Vanderbilt University, found that what distinguished young adults from children was not the ability to retain facts or apply prior knowledge to a new situation but a quality they called “preparation for future learning.” The researchers asked fifth graders and college students to create a recovery plan to protect bald eagles from extinction. Shockingly, the two groups came up with plans of similar quality (although the college students had better spelling skills). From the standpoint of a traditional educator, this outcome indicated that schooling had failed to help students think about ecosystems and extinction, major scientific ideas.

The researchers decided to go deeper, however. They asked both groups to generate questions about important issues needed to create recovery plans. On this task, they found large differences. College students focused on critical issues of interdependence between eagles and their habitats. Fifth graders tended to focus on features of individual eagles (“How big are they?” and “What do they eat?”). The college students had cultivated the ability to ask questions, the cornerstone (最重 要部分)of critical thinking. They had learned how to learn.

Museums and other institutions of informal learning may be better suited to teach this skill than elementary and secondary schools. At the Exploratorium in San Francisco, we recently studied how learning to ask good questions can affect the quality of people's scientific inquiry. We found that when we taught participants to ask “What if?” and “How can?” questions that nobody present would know the answer to and that would spark explorationthey engaged in better inquiry at the next exhibit-asking more questions, performing more experiments and making better interpretations of their results. Specifically, their questions became more comprehensive at the new exhibit. Rather than merely asking about something they wanted to trythey tended to include both cause and effect in their question. Asking juicy questions appears to be a transferable skill for deepening collaborative inquiry into the science content found in exhibits.

This type of learning is not confined to museums or institutional settings. Informal learning environments tolerate failure better than schools. Perhaps many teachers have too little time to allow students to form and pursue their own questions and too much ground to cover in the curriculum. But people must acquire this skill somewhere, Our society depends on them being able to make critical decisions about their own medical treatment, say, or what we must do about global energy needs and demands. For that, we have an informal learning system that gives no grades, takes all comersand is available even on holidays and weekends.

1.What is traditional educators interpretation of the research outcome mentioned in the first paragraph?

A.Students are not able to apply prior knowledge to new problems.

B.College students are no better than fifth grader in memorizing facts.

C.Education has not paid enough attention to major environmental issues.

D.Education has failed to lead students to think about major scientific ideas.

2.College students are different from children in that_____ ?

A.they have learned to think critically.

B.they are concerned about social issues.

C.they are curious about specific features.

D.they have learned to work independently.

3.What is the benefit of asking questions with no ready answers?

A.It arouses students’ interest in things around them.

B.It cultivates students’ ability to make scientific inquiries.

C.It trains students’ ability to design scientific experiments.

D.It helps students realize not every question has an answer.

4.At the end of the passage the author seems to encourage educators to ____.

A.train students to think about global issues

B.design more interactive classroom activities

C.make full use of informal learning resources

D.include collaborative inquiry in the curriculum

 

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    Families should reduce exposure to synthetic chemicals found in food colorings, preservatives and packaging materials as a growing body of research shows they may harm children’s health, according to a policy statement and technical report from the American Academy of Pediastrics released online.

The statement also suggests improvements to the food additives regulatory system, including updating the scientific foundation of the U.S. Food and Drug Administrations safety assessment retesting all previously approved chemicals.

Leonard Trasande ,the author of the policy statement, to tell us more about these concerns.

Q: What are the growing number of studies showing us?

A: Over the past two decades, an accumulating body of science suggests some food additives can interfere with a child’s hormones, growth and development.

Potentially harmful effects of food additives are of special concern for children because they are more sensitive to chemical exposures because they eat and drink more relative to body weight, than adults do and are still growing and developing. An early injury to their organ systems can have lifelong and permanent consequences.

Q: What additives does the statement highlight?

A: The additives of most concern, based on rising research evidence cited in the report, include:

Bisphenols, such as BPA, used to harden plastic containers and line metal cans, can act like estrogen(雌激素)in the body which may potentially change the timing of puberty, decrease fertility, increase body fat and affect the nervous and immune systems. BPA is now banned in baby bottles.

Phthalates, which make plastic and vinyl tubes used in industrial food production flexible, may affect male genital development increase childhood obesity and contribute to cardiovascular disease. In 2017, the Consumer Product Safety Commission banned the use or some phthalates in child-care products such as teething rings.

1.According to the American Academy of Pediatric’s report, people should ___ to cope with the problem of food additives.

A.try to avoid food additives in daily life and revise relevant rules on food additives

B.update the food safety assessment program and check the approved chemicals again

C.improve the food additives regulatory system and retest all approved chemicals

D.reduce the usage of food additives and establish new food protection system

2.Leonardo Trasande holds the view that food additives do more harm to children than adults because study shows ___.

A.children are more sensitive to what they eat and drink than adults

B.children usually eat and drink more unhealthy food than adults

C.children are just too young and weak to protect themselves

D.children’s organs are easier to be damaged and hard to recover

3.How many specific kinds of harmful effect caused by the additives are mentioned in the passage?

A.2 B.7

C.8 D.3

 

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    The bus screamed to a stop in Nazareth, Israel. Five Australian backpackers boarded and struck up a conversation with me. They asked typical travelers’ questions—where was I going and why was I traveling alone? My plan was to travel with a friend of a friend, I explained, but when I called her that morning, she didn’t pick up and I had no other way to reach her. My stomach was in knots, but I decided to head out anyway, thinking I might run into her if I traveled to Tiberius, where we had planned to go together.

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On my third day wandering in Israel with my new friends, I bumped into the woman I was supposed to meet. Though I was happy she was all right, I was grateful she hadn’t picked up the phone.

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A.sick of riding on a bumpy bus B.nervous of meeting strangers

C.upset about the sudden change D.sorry about the impractical plan

2.Which of the following best describes the backpackers the author met?

A.Courageous but disrespectful. B.Jobless and poorly educated.

C.Warmhearted and trustworthy. D.Homeless but lighthearted.

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B.The author gathered the courage to be a fulltime backpack traveler.

C.The woman missed the phone call with the purpose of traveling alone.

D.The author considered it the best decision of her life to travel on her own.

 

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    Space exploration has always been the province of ________The human imagination readily soars where human ingenuity (创造力)struggles to follow. A Voyage to the Moon, often cited as the first science fiction story, was written by Cyrano de Bergerac in 1649. Cyrano was dead and buried for a good three centuries ________the first manned rockets started to fly.

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2.A.after B.before C.until D.while

3.A.year B.quarter C.century D.decade

4.A.inspiring B.public C.dream D.freedom

5.A.attacked B.industrialized C.transformed D.accessed

6.A.in conflict with B.in line with C.in common with D.keeping pace with

7.A.aims B.influence C.concerns D.terms

8.A.ancestor B.successor C.forefather D.advocate

9.A.situations B.securities C.funds D.schedules

10.A.just like B.on condition that C.as if D.so that

11.A.making B.figuring C.sweeping D.mapping

12.A.reach B.range C.control D.knowledge

13.A.productions B.chips C.technologies D.substitutes

14.A.go beyond B.go through C.go after D.go over

15.A.In ignorance of B.capable of C.proud of D.in favor of

 

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Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given wordfor the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.

There seems never1.a civilization without toys, but when and how they developed is unknownThey probably came about just to give children something to do

In the ancient world, as is today, most boys played with some kinds of toys and most girls with2.In societies where social roles are rigidly determined, boys pattern their play after the activities of their fathers and girls 3.(prepare), even in play, to step into the roles and responsibilities of the adult world

4.is remarkable about the history of toys is not so much how they changed over the centuries but 5.they have remained the sameThe changes have been mostly in terms of craftsmanship, mechanics, and technologyIt is the universality of toys with regard to their development in all parts of the word and their persistence to the present 6.is amazingIn Egypt, America, China, Japan and among the Arctic (北极的)people, generally the same kinds of toys appearedVariations depended on local customs and way of life 7. toys imitate their surroundingNearly every civilization had dolls, little weapons, toy soldiers, tiny animals and vehicles

Because toys can be generally regarded as a kind of art form, they have not been subject to technological leaps 8. characterize inventions for adult use. The progress from the wheel to the cart to the automobile is a direct line of ascent (进步)The progress from a rattle (拨浪鼓)used by a baby in 3000BC to 9.used by an infant today, however, is not characterized by inventiveness. Each rattle is the product of the artistic tastes of the times and subject 10.the limitations of available materials.

 

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