假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌写的以下作文。文中共有10处语言错误,每句中最多有两处。每处错误仅涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。
增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写出该加的词。
删除:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。
修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。
注意:1. 每处错误及其修改均仅限一词:
2. 只允许修改10处,多者(从第11处起)不计分。
In Britain, April 27th is Take our Daughters to Work Day, special day for girls between 11 and 15, that was brought to Britain from America. In that day, thousands of girls took a day off school. They go to their parents’ work places to look at how they’re doing closely. The Day may be broaden girls’ horizons and help them stay self-confident when they’re face with a choice of work. Many schools support the activities and have made the Day a necessary part of career education. For many years people has thought boys can do better than girls in society. But actual, girls can do well or even better in many kinds of jobs.
Feeling unwell, I returned home at 2 pm. Imagine my ______ when I heard children’s laughter from my daughter’s bedroom. I ran ______ and there was Megan and her friend JoAnn. Seeing me, they ______ laughing, looking at each other ______. I had a hard time getting it out of them, but they finally ______ they came home for ______ and never returned to school.
I said, “You mean you cut school.” JoAnn said, “But we didn’t do it ______. We were talking and forgot to look at the ______.”
“No, you didn’t forget that.” I said when her friend left. Megan ______ her head saying, “We were just _______to see what it would feel like not to return to school.”
For the ______, I didn’t know what to do. I considered ______ her-telling her she couldn’t have JoAnn over for the next month. But ______ I said, “I’m very ______ by all this. You should be in school. Now I’m probably going to get a ______ from your teacher.” Megan said, “Write me an ______ note. Say I was sick and then she won’t call you.” I said, “The note has to come from you and has to be the ______.” Though unhappy, she wrote the note saying she was just “experimenting” and ______ she wouldn’t do it again.
Afterward I felt good to have done the right thing, even though it turned out that the teacher gave her a(n) ______ time over the note. I knew I had helped Megan ______ to what she did and take responsibility.
1.A.excitement B.eagerness C.shock D.expectation
2.A.upstairs B.outdoors C.nearby D.backwards
3.A.started B.stopped C.avoided D.continued
4.A.naturally B.happily C.sadly D.guiltily
5.A.agreed B.argued C.admitted D.advised
6.A.dinner B.coffee C.tea D.lunch
7.A.deliberately B.finally C.absolutely D.willingly
8.A.notice B.clock C.lesson D.bell
9.A.raised B.nodded C.turned D.lowered
10.A.waiting B.gathering C.experimenting D.exploring
11.A.moment B.future C.purpose D.reason
12.A.teasing B.punishing C.calming D.persuading
13.A.still B.rather C.even D.instead
14.A.upset B.amused C.thrilled D.confused
15.A.visit B.task C.call D.greeting
16.A.advice B.absence C.demand D.guidance
17.A.excuse B.relief C.cause D.truth
18.A.promised B.concluded C.claimed D.confirmed
19.A.easy B.pleasant C.hard D.special
20.A.go over B.face up C.get down D.move on
Among the coronavirus’s many effects is a boom (突然风靡的时期) in remote workers, who try to get accustomed to a work-from-home lifestyle. Matt Mullenweg, CEO of a software company, said that “it might offer an opportunity for many companies to finally build a culture that allows long-overdue work flexibility.” 1.
Research shows that remote workers gain in productivity. A study led by the Stanford professor Nicholas Bloom examined remote workers at a Chinese travel agency. 2. But research also shows that they often miss in creativity thinking. Steve Jobs believed that Apple employees’ best work came from accidentally bumping into other people. 3. Mr. Jobs said, “You run into someone, you ask what they’re doing, you say ‘Wow,’ and soon you’re cooking up all sorts of ideas.”
4. That’s a good thing if you’re a boss looking to squeeze extra efficiency out of your employees, but less ideal if you’re someone trying to achieve some work-life balance. Mr. Bock, who was previously Google’s top human resources officer, said that for most people, balancing office work with remote work is good. 5. It’s enough to participate in office culture, with some time reserved for deep, focused work.
A.Remote workers also tend to take fewer sick days.
B.Some people are less productive if they work at home.
C.Creativity comes from random meetings and discussions.
D.So it will be an exciting time for some fans of remote work.
E.Many people find it hard to balance their work and their home lives.
F.It found that they were 13 percent more efficient than the office-based ones.
G.The perfect amount of work-from-home time is one and a half days per week.
Chinese researchers have developed a robot designed to help doctors treat the new coronavirus and other highly infectious diseases. The machine has a long robotic arm attached to a base with wheels. It can perform some of the same medical examination tasks as doctors. For example, the device can perform ultrasounds (超声波扫描检查), collect fluid samples from a person’s mouth and listen to sounds made by a patient’s organs. Cameras record the robot’s activities, which are controlled remotely so doctors can avoid coming in close contact with infected patients. Doctors and other medical workers can operate the machine in another place.
The robot’s main designer Zheng Gangtie, an engineer and professor at China’s Tsinghua University, told Reuters news agency that he got the idea for the device when his medical friend told him that one of the biggest problems in dealing with COVID-19 was that healthcare workers treating patients were getting infected themselves. Zheng said he wanted to do something to help this situation. So the engineer gathered a team and went to work on the robotic device.
Zheng said the devices use the same technology that is used for space equipment, including moon explorers. The new robot is almost completely automated. It can even disinfect itself after performing actions involving patient contact.
However, Zheng said he had heard from some doctors that it would be better not to build such robots to be fully automatic. This is because many patients still desire a personal presence to help calm them during treatment.
The team currently has two robots and both have been tested by doctors at hospitals in Beijing. One machine was taken to Wuhan’s Union Hospital, where doctors there got trained to use it. The plan is to use the robot to help treat coronavirus patients, along with assistance from nurses and other hospital workers.
Zheng would like to build more of the robots, but says money from the university has run out. Each robot costs about $72,000 to make. He says he does not plan to commercialize the design, but hopes that a company can begin that process.
1.What do we know about the newly-invented robot?
A.It is used for space exploration.
B.It completely operates on its own.
C.It carries out complicated surgical treatments.
D.It protects doctors from risky contact with patients.
2.Which of the following may accelerate the development of the machine?
A.Assistance of AI. B.Financial support.
C.Community help. D.Professional advice.
3.What can we infer from the last three paragraphs?
A.The device may not be welcomed by all patients.
B.The device has been widely used to treat patients.
C.Zheng has received further funds from companies.
D.Zheng continued the production for official support.
4.What is the best title for the passage?
A.Promising Future for the Robot
B.Novel Device to Cure Coronavirus
C.New Assistant to Fight Coronavirus
D.Helpful Design to Save the Patients
It was a lifesaving task as thrilling as any in the months-long battle against the wildfires that have torn through the Australian bush. But instead of a race to save humans or animals, a specialized team of Australian firefighters was bent on saving invaluable plant life: hidden groves (树林) of the Wollemi pine, a prehistoric tree species.
Wollemi pines peaked in abundance 34 million to 65 million years ago, before a steady decline. Today, only 200 of the trees exist in their natural environment. The trees are so rare that they were thought to die out until 1994. That’s the year when David Noble, an officer with the New South Wales National Parks and Wildlife Service, came across a grove of large trees he didn’t recognize.
Noble brought back a few branches and showed them to other biologists and botanists. A month later, Noble returned to the grove with some scientists. It was then that they realized what they had found: “a prehistoric tree species that has outlived the dinosaurs.” the American Scientist explains. So when Australia’s wildfires started burning toward Wollemi National Park in recent weeks, firefighters from the parks and wildlife service put a carefully planned operation into action.
Large air tankers dropped fire retardant (阻燃剂) around the pines. Firefighters set up an irrigation (灌溉) system around the trees to keep them wet. “If the fire did go through, we wanted it to be a cool burn as opposed to a hot burn to give them the best chance of survival,” Kean said. The fire did sweep through the groves where these trees have somehow survived for millions of years. For a few days, the smoke was so thick that it wasn’t clear whether the plan had worked. At last the smoke eased off. A few trees had been burned by the flames, and two died. But the efforts had paid off. “Finally,” Kean said, “we were able to get in there and see that, thank goodness, the trees were saved.”
1.What do we know about Wollemi pines?
A.Scientists searched for them in the wild.
B.They used to grow in parts of Australia.
C.There were a considerable number of them long ago.
D.Firefighters and biologists cooperated to keep them alive.
2.Which of the following can best replace the underlined word “outlived” in Paragraph 3?
A.been superior to. B.been related to.
C.died earlier than. D.existed longer than.
3.What can be learned from the last paragraph?
A.It was cool to drop retardant over the fire.
B.It wasn’t clear whether the trees were saved.
C.It helped the trees survive to keep them wet.
D.It worked best for the trees to keep a hot burn.
4.What is the passage mainly about?
A.An investigation into Wollemi pines.
B.A hard-won battle against the wildfires.
C.Constructing a firefighting system for the trees.
D.Saving world’s rare pine species from wildfires.
My mother turned 75 this past fall. One night a few months before, I’d asked her what we could give her that she would really like.
“Maybe something big, that all three of us can go in on?” I encouraged, knowing that my brothers and I would cough up whatever it cost while also suspecting that any gift she might think up would be something strange but affordable like a duck-shaped bath soap.
“I know exactly what I want from you kids,” she said, like she’d loaded this gun a month ago. “Really?” Was she thinking of a trip to Hawaii? A latest bathroom decoration? “Absolutely.” She nodded in that way she does when she is dead sure.
She seemed to be waiting for me to ask again, so I did. “Well?” “If there is any problem that you or your brothers have that I can help with, I’d like to know about it.”
Astonishing. What a woman. She lives to serve. Oh, I wish that I could have an ounce of her devotion. “God, Mom..” I said. She put her finger up to indicate that she wasn’t quite finished. “And if there’s any problem that you have that there is nothing I can do to change,” she said, “I’d like to not know about it.”
Astonishing. What a woman. Oh, I wish that I could be that clear-headed and direct.
“You’re amazing.”
“Listen, Kelly,” she said, “I’ve been a mother since 1964, and I’d like to stop worrying and get some sleep.” Oh, Ma. I got you. You’ve carried us long enough. As of your 75th birthday, your status shifts to a mother retired with highest merits. You’ve done fine work. Nobody could have done more. Happy Birthday.
1.What was the talk between the author and her mother mainly about?
A.A birthday gift. B.A trip to Hawaii.
C.The mom’s worries. D.The mom’s merits.
2.Why does the author say “astonishing” again?
A.Mom is content with her life. B.Mom is always helpful to them.
C.Mom is still worried about them. D.Mom is well aware of her needs.
3.Which of the following best describes the author’s mom?
A.Friendly and easy-going. B.Determined and devoted.
C.Intelligent and considerate. D.Humorous and imaginative.
4.What might the mom really want for her birthday?
A.Some sleep. B.Her own life.
C.Her children’s company. D.Attention from her children.