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请你根据以下提示,以时间为线索写一篇短文,介绍中国的“高空王子”阿迪力。 1.1...

请你根据以下提示,以时间为线索写一篇短文,介绍中国的“高空王子”阿迪力。

1.1971年7月1日:出生在中国新疆一个杂技世家。

2.1976年:父亲去世,开始训练走钢丝。决心成为世界顶尖的钢丝行走表演者。

3.1991年:在上海的一次高空行走表演中,由于绳索突然折断,阿迪力摔在地上,造

成全身17处骨折。医生建议他以后不要再表演了,但他不愿放弃他的事业。

4.1996年6月23日:阿迪力成为中国高空走索跨越江河第一人。

5.2002年5月11日:完成了一项壮举:在绳索上度过了600小时,累计行走123小时

48分,打破了由加拿大人Jay Cochrane保持的吉尼斯世界记录。

注意:1.词数100左右。

2. 参考词汇:杂技acrobatics,走钢丝wire-walk,钢丝行走表演者wirewalker,壮举remarkable feat

 

Adili was born on July 1, 1971 in Xinjiang, China, into a family with a great tradition in acrobatics. When he was only five years old, his father died. Soon he began to be trained in the art of wire-walking. He worked very hard and decided to become the finest wirewalker in the world. In a wire-walking performance in shanghai in 1991, his rope suddenly broke. He fell onto the ground and his bones were broken in 17 different parts of his body. His doctor advised him not to perform again, but Adili refused to give up. On June 23, 1996, Adili became the first Chinese to cross a river on a wire. On May 11th, 2002, Adili completed a remarkable feat by staying on a wire for 600 hours and wire-walking for a total of 123 hours and 48 minutes, breaking the Guinness world record held by a Canadian Jay Cochrane. 【解析】略
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阅读下列各小题,根据括号内的汉语提示,用句末括号内的英语单词完成句子

1.Many old houses _______ (拆除) to make way for the new road in the past few weeks. (tear)

2.The 26th Shenzhen summer Universiade was grandly opened on August 12th.___________ (最吸引我们的) was the door to the world formed by the 365 electronic giant LED screen. (appeal)

3.Not only ________________________ (她懂得法律) very well, she can also apply it in new ways. (know)

4.Those successful deaf dancers think that dancing is an activity ____________ (视觉更重要) than hearing. (matter)

5. _______________________ (确立了目标群体后),researchers find out as much as possible about thos in the target group, such as their likes and dislikes, and how the product would fit into their lives. (identify)

6.Everything ___________________________ (加以考虑), the environmental problem we are looking forward to seeing solved is worthy of our government’s attention. (consideration)

7.Tom insisted that the new release of the product planned for today ________ (延期) to next week because of the terrible financial situation at yesterday’s meeting. (postpone)

8. The boy _________________________ (如此迷恋于) the cyber games that he would spend hours sitting in front of the computer. (fascinated)

9.I _____________________________ (多亏了我的父母) that I went through the hard time after I lost my job. Everything couldn’t have been going so smoothly without them. (owe)

10. _________________________ (作为回答) your inquiries, we regret to tell you that we can not help you in this matter. (response)

 

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Most schools forbid chewing gum, but in a few years they might consider changing that rule. Why? Scientists are finding evidence that gum chewing may be good for your health. It may even help improve your test scores.

This exciting research is just beginning. And in the meantime, companies are also experimenting with adding vitamins, minerals, medicines, and other substances that could give gum the power to cure headaches and fight everything from serious diseases to bad breath.

Other researchers are finding that gum might work better than a pill to deliver medicines and other substances into the bloodstream. That’s because the lining (膜) of our cheeks can absorb certain substances more quickly than our stomachs and intestines (肠) can.

That discovery could help other researchers develop medicine-containing gums that fight colds, ease headaches, battle nervousness, and more. Scientists might even create antimicrobial (抗菌的) gums that cure bad breath.

Those projects may take years, but gum scientists have already had at least one recent success: They’ve created a gum that could help us stay awake.

Researchers have produced a gum called Stay Alert. Each stick has as much caffeine as a cup of coffee. It can take an hour for the caffeine in coffee to have its full effect, but the caffeine in Stay Alert hits in just a few minutes.

The gum is easy to transport and it’s stable in cold and hot climates. Unlike a pill, it doesn’t require water to swallow. Those qualities make it easy for soldiers to use.

For now, Stay Alert is available only to the military (军队). The manufacturer may one day offer it for sale to the public. People who work at night, such as truck drivers and medical personnel who ride in ambulances, might benefit from a product like Stay Alert.

1. The passage mainly talks about _____.

A.the rule of forbidding chewing gum in school

B.new research on chewing gum

C.different kinds of chewing gum

D.the relationship between chewing gum and medicine

2. What does the underlined word “hits” in Paragraph 6 probably mean?

A.Touches.

B.Attacks.

C.Takes effect.

D.Affects badly.

3.According to the passage, Stay Alert is a gum which can help people _____.

A.stay awake

B.fight colds

C.cure headaches

D.overcome nervousness

4. It can be inferred from the passage that _____.

A.stay Alert is not easy to store

B.stay Alert needs water to swallow

C.stay Alert is available to the public now

D.we can’t buy gums that cure bad breath now

 

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The $11 billion self-help industry is built on the idea that you should turn negative thoughts like “I never do anything right” into positive ones like “I can succeed.” But was positive thinking advocate Norman Vincent Peale right? Is there power in positive thinking?

  Researchers in Canada just published a study in the journal Psychological Science that says trying to get people to think more positively can actually have the opposite effect: it can simply highlight how unhappy they are.

  The study’s authors, Joanne Wood and John Lee of the University of Waterloo and Elaine Perunovic of the University of New Brunswick, begin by citing older research showing that when people get feedback which they believe is very positive, they actually feel worse, not better. If you tell your stupid friend that he has the potential of an Einstein, you’re just underlining his faults. In one 1990s experiment, a team including psychologist Joel Cooper of Princeton asked participants to write essays opposing funding for the disabled. When the essayists were later praised for their sympathy, they felt even worse about what they had written.

  In this experiment, Wood, Lee and Perunovic measured 68 students’ self-esteem. The participants were then asked to write down their thoughts and feelings for four minutes. Every 15 seconds, one group of students heard a bell. When it rang, they were supposed to tell themselves, “I am lovable.”

  Those with low self-esteem didn’t feel better after the forced self-affirmation. In fact, their moods turned significantly darker than those of members of the control group, who weren’t urged to think positive thoughts.

  The paper provides support for newer forms of psychotherapy (心理治疗) that urge people to accept their negative thoughts and feelings rather than fight them. In the fighting, we not only often fail but can make things worse. Meditation techniques, in contrast, can teach people to put their shortcomings into a larger, more realistic perspective. Call it the power of negative thinking.

1.What do we learn from the first paragraph about the self-help industry?

A.It has produced positive results.

B.It is a highly profitable industry.

C.It is based on the concept of positive thinking.

D.It was established by Norman Vincent Peale.

2.What does the word “underline” mean (Line 4, Para. 3)?

A.point out

B.lay emphasis on

C.pay no attention to

D.take for granted

3. Which of the following is TRUE about the Canadian researchers’ study?

A.Encouraging positive thinking many do more good than harm.

B.Self-affirmation can bring a positive change to one’s mood.

C.There can be no simple therapy for psychological problems.

D.Forcing a person to think positive thoughts may lower their self-esteem.

4.What do we learn from the last paragraph?

A.Meditation may prove to be a good form of psychotherapy.

B.People can avoid making mistakes through meditation.

C.Different people tend to have different ways of thinking.

D.The effects of positive thinking vary from person to person.

 

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With the development of society and economy, animals and their habitats are getting pushed aside as households decrease in size and increase in number.

Small numbers of people per household on average use more energy and goods per person. Greater numbers of households require more natural resources for construction. The possible result of this problem may be insufficient natural resources to meet consumer demand without endangering habitats important to biodiversity.

Personal freedom and social choice may come at huge environmental cost. Direct costs include visible damage to animal habitats and plant life. Indirect costs include the release of more greenhouse gases.

The effects of such “personal freedom and social choice” have already surfaced in south-west China’s Wolong Nature Reserve. In Wolong, they found that a reduced average household size was directly tied to an increase in homes, and thus an increase in the amount of firewood consumed for cooking and heating. The rise in wood fuel use has contributed to disappearance of forests and to the loss of habitats for giant pandas. 

Curious about whether other parts of the world were experiencing similar phenomena, they got the support of a team of researchers including Stanford’s Paul Ehrlich, well-known for his population studies, to find out the household dynamics in 141 countries between 1985 and 2000. Their study proved that the difficult choice of Wolong is part of a global trend.

In the 76 countries considered biodiversity “hotspots”, such as the United States, Brazil, Australia, and Kenya, the number of households grew by 3.1% every year, while the population increased just 1.8%. Meanwhile, the number of people per home dropped from 4.7 to 4.0. The decline in household size has resulted in 155 million additional households in hotspot countries, almost always limiting biodiversity.

In the 10 non-hotspot countries — those without high-density areas of animal and plant species — similar results were found, though on a lesser scale. Even in countries experiencing population decline, such as New Zealand, the number of households still increased because of a reduction in household size.

1.What does the underlined word “insufficient” mean?

A.Plenty of.

B.Not enough.

C.Abundant.

D.Little.

2.It can be learned from the passage that China’s Wolong Nature Reserve_____

A.is facing the same threat as many other parts of the world

B.sets a good example in protecting animals

C.is a place where giant pandas and their habitats are not affected

D.is a place where animals and their habitats are seriously damaged

3.Which of the following is best supported by the last two paragraphs?

A.Biodiversity is better kept in countries with smaller populations.

B.Biodiversity is better kept in hotspot countries.

C.The threat to nature from reduction in household size is a worldwide problem.

D.Both hotspot countries and non-hotspot countries face the threat of the same scale.

4. What does the passage mainly talk about?

A.Reduced household size leads to an increase in household number.

B.Modern homes consume more natural resources.

C.How to meet consumer demand without endangering animals and their habitats.

D.Reduction in household size as well as increase in household number threatens nature.

 

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 Recently, online high schools in America have sparked (激发) a debate about whether or not taxpayers’ money should be used to support online education. Online schools receive the same amount of funding as all other public schools, even though they don’t have to pay for rent or school equipment. States should use their educational funds to improve education at real schools, not to support online programs.

Some students only use online classes to supplement their school work. They benefit from the social experience of a traditional high school, while still taking online courses.

However, about 90 thousand students in America receive their education only from online schools. 50 thousand of these students take courses at Florida Virtual School, the largest online school in the country. While this method of schooling helps students who live in remote regions, most school systems are upset that they are losing more students each year to these online programs. 

Although online learning allows children to work at their own pace, these online schools have only one teacher per several hundred students. Often, teachers can’t give struggling students the help they need as they are unable to talk face-to-face with them, to find exactly what they’re having difficulty with.  

Additionally, even though online schooling accommodates (顾及) students who live in more remote states, students in online programs may suffer in social situations because they will not learn valuable communication skills from their schooling. Similar to students who are home schooled, those who take only online classes won’t learn social etiquette (礼节), and will be treated differently by their peers.

Online schooling might be useful for places where there are not enough students for a real school, such as agricultural regions, but states should only spend taxpayers’ money on online schools in extreme cases.

1.What is the passage mainly about?

A.Whether students should study at online schools.

B.Whether online schools should be allowed to exist.

C.Whether taxpayers should pay for online schools.

D.Whether traditional schools should be replaced.

2.According to the passage, online schooling _____.

A.is helpful to students living in remote regions

B.allows students to work together

C.makes it possible for students to get immediate help

D.develops students’ critical thinking

3.According to Paragraph 5, the author worries that students at online schools _____.

A.might lose interest in learning

B.would play online games

C.could not receive teachers’ help

D.could not become fully developed

4. What is the author’s attitude?

A.Taxpayers should not pay for online schools at all.

B.Taxpayers should pay more for online schools than real schools.

C.Taxpayers’ money should be spent on online schools conditionally.

D.Taxpayers should support online schools in different ways.

 

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