---I’m afraid I must be off now .
--- ____________________ .
A.No problem |
B.Never mind |
C.Step slowly |
D.See you soon. |
假如你是李华,今年寒假要去澳大利亚度假。考虑到身势语在中西方有差异,现在给你的悉尼笔友爱葛莎(Agatha)写一封信,咨询身势语在交际中的注意事项。大致有下面几个问题:
1.外国人到澳大利亚怎样同当地人打招呼;
2.拍别人的肩膀是否礼貌;
3.点头是否表示同意;
4.摇头是否表示否定;
5.耸肩是否表示怀疑;
6.鼓掌是否表示祝贺。
注意:1. 行文应连贯,内容应完整;
2.词数120左右。信的开头与结尾已为你写好,不计入词数。
Agatha,
________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________
Yours,
Li Hua
下面短文中有10处语言错误。请在有错误的地方增加、删除或修改某个单词。
增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写上该加的词。
删除:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。
修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写上修改后的词。
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。
As the high school student, I like to talk with foreigners to practise my oral English but learn more about other cultures. There were two foreign teachers in our school in this term. They often go to the English corner so that we can have a chance to practise the language. I seize every chance talk with them. However, I sometime find they are not so interesting in what I say, and it’s hard for I to choose a suitable topic. I would like some advices about how to communicate proper with foreigners, and what topics to pick.
阅读下面短文,在标有序号的空白处填入一个适当的词,或填入括号中单词的正确形式,并将答案写在答题纸上。(共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分)
One night, Mrs. Riley was walking along a dark street. She was carrying her handbag in one 1.and a plastic carrier bag in the other. There was 2.else in the street except two youths. They were standing in a dark shop doorway. One of them was very tall with fair hair; the other was short and fat with a beard and moustache.
The youths waited 3.a few moments, and then ran quickly and quietly towards Mrs. Riley. The tall youth held her from 4.while the other youth tried to snatch her handbag.
Suddenly, Mrs. Riley 5.(throw) the tall youth over her shoulder. He crashed into the other youth and they 6.landed on the ground. Without 7.(speak), Mrs. Riley hit both of them on the head with her handbag, and walked calmly 8..
The two 9.(surprise) youths were still sitting on the ground when Mrs. Riley crossed the 10.towards a door with a lighted sign above it. Mrs. Riley paused, turned round, smiled at the youths and walked into the South West London Judo Club.
根据下列句子及所给单词的首字母,在答题纸上按题号写出各单词正确的完全形式(每空限写一词)。
1.Generally speaking, when taken according to the d______, the drug has no side effect.
2.The smile on his face put us at e______ immediately.
3.There is c______ evidence of a link between exposure to sun(日光暴晒) and skin cancer.
4.I r______ to tell you that I am unable to accept your kind invitation.
5.The couple are always a______ with each other about money.
6.The game attracted over 500 competitors r______ 8 different countries.
7.The explorers were told to e______ themselves with everything they would need for the voyage.
8.When we visited my old family home, memory came c______ in.
9.It was w______ that he was caught stealing in a department store.
10.At the meeting they discussed three different a______ to the study of mathematics.
Last year, Jack Bleed cut through the bone of his ring finger while working. The 31-year-old resident of North Little Rock, Arkansas, waited for about six hours at a nearby medical center while the medical staff there called all over town — even as far away as Dallas and Memphis — to find a hand surgeon to reattach his finger. Finally, a willing doctor was located in Louisville, Kentucky. But even though Bleed had insurance(保险), he would have to hire a private plane to get himself there, at a cost of $4,300. In the end, he charged the cost to two credit cards, and his finger was saved. His insurance company eventually covered the cost of the plane, but his experience makes people aware of the fact that trauma(外伤) care in the United States is not only geographically limited, but in many places, non-existent.
Only eight states — New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Illinois, New Mexico, California, Oregon, and Washington — have local, fully functional trauma systems. The remaining states have partial systems, and 12 — including Arkansas — have no trauma system at all.
Although the President has signed a bill of $12 million for the purpose of supporting trauma care systems nationwide, many in Congress(国会) are unwilling to spend government money for a service they think should be paid for by states, says Wayne Meredith, medical director for trauma programs at the American College of Surgeons. Meanwhile, many states have also failed to find the dollars to support trauma systems. To make matters worse, many people without insurance depend heavily on the emergency care services, placing a huge financial burden on the medical centers that serve them.
For the same reason, doctors, too, often go unpaid. They are unwilling to perform emergency care, worsening critical shortages of neurosurgeons, orthopedists, and hand surgeons — the very types of specialists Bleed needed at short notice.
Supporting a trauma care system doesn’t take much. A half-penny sales tax in Miami-Dade County makes its outstanding system work. In Arkansas alone, says Wayne Meredith, a well-funded trauma system would possibly prevent 200 to 600 deaths each year. If trauma care systems were to work well across the nation, experts say, many thousands of lives each year could be saved. “You don’t get much better return on your investment than that,” Meredith says.
1.In Paragraph 1, the writer uses Bleed’s case to ______.
A. make a comparison B. describe a person
C. introduce a topic D. tell a story
2.Many people in Congress argue that trauma care systems should be supported by ______.
A. the President B. each state
C. insurance companies D. the US government
3.The example of Miami-Dade County shows that ______.
A. its tax policy is admirable B. running a trauma system is profitable
C. a trauma system is not expensive D. sales tax is not heavy in small counties
4.Why are the present trauma care systems in some states not satisfactory?
A. They are shared by all the states. B. They are short of financial support.
C. The doctors are not well trained. D. The hospitals can’t provide low-cost services.