请根据下面提示,写一篇短文。词数100字左右
In your English class, you are asked to describe the following picture and explain to your classmates how you understand it.
请认真阅读下面对话,并根据各题所给首字母的提示,在标有题号的右边横线上写出一个英语单词的完整、正确形式,使对话通顺。
D=Doctor T=Tom
D: What’s the matter with you?
T: My forefinger was cut by a knife and 1. b a lot yesterday .The wound has been troubling me a lot.
D: Did you do anything about it before coming here?
T: I put my finger 2.u the running water for a few minutes and then tied a bandage around the finger. But it seems useless. I feel the pain is3.u .
D: Let me have a look at it. Oh, the wound is infected. Anyway, you should 4. k it clean.
T: Is it 5. s ? Do I have to take any medicine?
D: No. It is Only6. n to wash the area of cut, dry it and7. c it with a piece of clean cloth.
T: Thank you, doctor. By the way, I have a headache once in a 8.w these days. I don’t know why.
D: How’s your sleep recently?
T: I don’t sleep well. Because I often 9.s up late to work.
D: You seem exhausted. The headache is probably caused by10. l of sleep. You need to take a rest, and don’t worry about your work. You can drink a glass of milk before you go to bed.
T: OK. Thank you!
When it comes to hard, noisy traveling, we’ve found that sometimes we’d rather read about it than actually go. Here are some bestsellers for armchair travelers.
The Station by Robert Byron. In 1928, the 22-year-old man made a journey to Mount Athos, resulting in one of the best travel books ever written, matched only by Byron’s own, much more famous The Road to Osciana.
In Darkest Africa by Henry Monton Stanley. It’s about his great efforts to save an unlucky German doctor Eduard Schnitzer, who had no desire to be rescued at all.
A Traveler’s Alphabet: Partial Memoirs by Sir Steven Runciman. A to Z and around the world. He provides priceless information of long-gone princesses, priests, and places.
South: A Memoir of the Endurance Voyage by Sir Ernest Shackleton. As the planet started the global war, Shackleton and his brave group of explorers made an unsuccessful but heroic journey to cross Antarctica from 1914 to 1917.
The Michelin Red Guide: France 2005 Reading through this final listing of all the nice hotels and wonderful restaurants in France is better than going there, listening to Chirac talk about the poisonous American culture, and spending the price of this book for a tiny cup of tea and a cookie the size of your thumb.
The Past Is a Foreign Country by David Lowenthal. This great book of an armchair exploration tells us what has happened in the past and shows the relationship between us and the past travelers.
1.This passage is written .
A. to warn readers against traveling
B. as an introduction to famous travelers
C to sell more books about travels
D. to tell people where to travel
2.The underlined phrase “armchair travelers” in the first paragraph refers to those who .
A. like to read about travels instead of travel themselves
B. find fun teaching others how to travel to other places
C. like to write about their strange traveling experiences
D. can only travel with special equipment for the disabled
3. which of the books has a very low price according to the passage?
A. A Traveler’s Alphabet: Partial Memoirs.
B. South: A Memoir to the Endurance Voyage.
C. The Michelin Red Guide: France 2005.
D. The Past Is a Foreign Country.
4.What can we learn from the passage?
A. Henry Monton Stanley, was saved by a German doctor in Africa.
B. In his book, Lowenthal focuses more on history than the present.
C. It took Shackleton and his men 3 years to cross Antarctica.
D. The Station is no more famous than The Road to Osciana.
Even before they start school, many young girls worry that they are fat. But a new study suggests watching a movie starring a stereotypically(模式化地)thin and beautiful princess may not increase children’s anxieties.
Nearly half of the 3 to 6 year old girls in a study by Professor Stacey Tantleff-Dunn and doctoral student Sharon Hayes said they worry about being fat. About one-third would change a physical feature, such as their weight or hair color.
The number of girls worried about being fat at such a young age concerns Tantleff-Dunn because of the potential effects later in life. Studies have shown young girls worried about their body image are more likely to suffer from eating disorders when they are older.
The encouraging news for parents is that taking their young daughters to see the new Disney film “The Princess and the Frog” isn’t likely to influence how they see their bodies.
“The media have a great effect on how young girls see their bodies. That’s why it’s important for parents to use movies such as ‘The Princess and the Frog,’ to start conversations with their children about weight, skin color and their views of beauty. They can explain that princesses’ tiny waists are not realistic for girls and that children don’t need Cinderella’s golden hair or Snow White’s porcelain(瓷制的) skin to look good,” Tantleff-Dunn said.
“We need to help our children challenge the images of beauty, particularly thinness, that they see and idolize, and encourage them to question how much appearance should be part of their self-worth,” said Tantleff-Dunn. “We should help them build a positive self-image with an appreciation for many different types of body features.” And as their children’s most important role models, parents also should avoid criticizing their own bodies.
1. Tantleff-Dunn worries that young girls caring too much about their appearance may .
A. have diet trouble in the future
B. cause trouble when they are older
C. have mental problems later in life
D. have difficulty in communication
2. What is especially considered as beauty by girls according to the passage?
A. Having black hair. B. Having a slim body.
C. Having golden skin. D. Having big bright eyes.
3.Parents can help kids build a positive self-image by .
A. encouraging kids to act as role models
B. preventing kids seeing beautiful models
C. telling kids the importance of appearance
D. avoiding complaining of their own bodies
4. The writer writes the passage mainly to
A. explain the meaning of beauty
B. introduce a new research finding
C. stress the influence of media on girls
D. teach girls how to become a princess
Boom boom!( I’m here, come to me!)
Krak krak!( Watch out, a leopard (豹)!)
Hok hok hok!( Hey, crowned eagle!)
Very good — you’ve already mastered half the basic vocabulary of the Campbell’s monkey, which lives in the forests of the Tai National Park in Ivory Coast. The adult males have six types of call, each with a specific meaning, but they can mix two or more calls together into a message with a different meaning.
Having spent months recording the monkeys’ calls in response to both natural and artificial stimuli (刺激物), a group led by Klaus Zuberbuhler of the University of St. Andrews in Scotland argues that the Campbell’s monkeys have a certain form of syntax(句法).
This is likely to be controversial because despite great effort to teach chimpanzees(大猩猩) language, they showed little or no ability to combine the sounds they learned into a sentence with a larger meaning. Syntax, basic to the structure of language, uniquely belongs to humans.
“Krak” is a call that warns of leopards in the neighborhood. The monkeys give it in response to real leopards and to leopard shouting broadcast by the researchers. The monkeys can vary the call by adding “-oo”: “Krak-oo” seems to be a general word for hunter, but one given in a special context – when monkeys hear but don’t see a hunter, or when they hear the alarm calls of another species.
The “boom-boom” call invites other monkeys to come toward the male making the sound. Two booms can be combined with a series of “krak-oos”, with a meaning entirely different to that of either of its single parts. “Boom boom krak-oo krak-oo krak-oo” is the monkey’s version of “Timber!” – it warns of falling trees.
If Zuberbuhler is correct, the Campbell’s monkeys can both vary the meaning of specific calls by adding something and combine calls to make a different meaning.
1.What is the passage mainly about?
A. A group of scientists. B. Calls of Campbell’s monkeys.
C. The lifestyle of monkeys. D. The importance of language.
2.According to the passage, chimpanzees .
A. don’t communicate by sounds
B. only understand simple sentences
C. fail to learn language from humans
D. are not related to the Campbell’s monkeys
3.If the Campbell’s monkeys hear a lion’s shouting, they will call “ ”.
A. Krak B. Boom C. Boom boom krak-oo krak-oo krak-oo D. Krak-oo
4. According to the passage, it seems that .
A. Zuberbuhler has spent years in the forests
B. the writer isn’t sure of Zuberbuhler’s opinions
C. the Campbell’s monkeys are cleverer than other animals
D. the Campbell’s monkeys can express six meanings by calls
Ricochet, a 19-month-old golden retriever(金毛寻回犬), was bred(饲养) to be a service dog but never made it. Now, she has found her role in the ocean, surfing with a disabled teen.
Patrick Ivison, 15, suffered a severe injury in a car accident when he was 14 months old. He has been disabled since, but the Californian boy never gave up on the goal of walking. He recently took his first steps. When Ivison first met Ricochet, the two immediately hit it off. To raise money for Ivison’s physical therapy(治疗), which is not covered by insurance, it was suggested that the pair take up surfing. Ivison said that when he first heard the idea he thought, “We are completely out of our minds.”
But from the start, the two took to surfing naturally. With the help of his mom, Jennifer Kayler, and friends, who carry Patrick to the ocean and guide the extra-large surfboard into the waters, Ivison rides the waves with his pal standing on the back. “It’s kind of like a grand performance out there,” Ivison said of the group of people who help him out. The dog helps to balance out the board The teen remembered one pass when “we were about to flip over and then she stepped on that side of the board and helped us out.”
The two participated Sunday in the Surf City Surf Dog contest as a fund-raiser(募集资金者). They wowed the cheering crowd during their exhibition. The event raised $8,200. About $2,000 will go toward a service dog for Ivison, and the rest will go toward his “Help Patrick Walk” therapy fund.
1. Ivison got disabled when .
A. he drove to the seaside B. he began to learn surfing
C. he suffered a severe disease D. he was over one year old
2.Ivison decided to take up surfing in order to .
A. collect money for his treatment B. set an example for the disabled
C. realize his dream of being a surfer
D. develop courage and positive attitudes
3.What did Ivison think about the idea of going surfing in the beginning?
A. Easy. B. Interesting. C. Crazy. D. Exciting.
4.In what way does Ricochet help Ivison surf?
A. She keeps on cheering Ivison on.
B. She keeps the balance of the surfboard.
C. She gives signals when huge waves come.
D. She pulls the board back if Ivison falls off.