The version _____ to be closest to the author’s original now belongs to a national museum in Paris.
A.is thought B.thinking C.being thought D.thought
The farmers expanded their production to meet the increasing demand _____ locally grown food.
A.for B.in C.of D.to
请根据下面提示,写一篇短文。词数不少于50。
You are discussing the following picture with your English friend Jim. Now you are telling him how you understand the picture and what makes you think so.
提示词:仙人掌 cactus
刺 thorn
假设你是红星中学高三(1)班的学生李华,为迎接第九届园博会的召开,上周日你们班组织了一系列公益、宣传活动。请根据下面的四幅图画,叙叙你们的活动,并向你校英文报投稿。
注意:1。文章的开头已为你写好。
2.词数不少于60。
The 9th China International Garden Expo is opening soon. _____________________________
Using a Mobile Phone to Improve Mother and Child Health
People around the world are working to expand the uses for mobile technology in health care.
In the world, there are six billion mobile phone users in a population of seven billion people.
1. Africa has widespread adoption. Three or four years ago the penetration rates were 20 percent or 30 percent, and now they’re getting upwards of 60 percent in some countries.
2. Earlier research has been to look at mobile technologies and HIV and AIDS. And so we have some great evidence on the effectiveness of mobiles.
During the first week of December, 2012, more than 4,000 people from 50 countries met for the fourth annual mHealth Summit. It brought together experts from what the organizers call the mHealth ecosystem.
In 2011 Secretary of State Hillary Clinton started a public/private partnership called the Mobile Alliance for Maternal Action, or MAMA. There are about 800 women a day and about three million babies a year die from pregnancy and childbirth-related causes. 3. The messages cover pregnancy and the first year of a baby’s life. These health messages may also be sent to a pregnant woman’s husband and mother-in-law. 4.
Messages can be text or voicemail. You can have a pregnant woman in Bangladesh registered into a system that provides messages that help her know what to do and when to do certain things.
Simple text messages can be important sources of information to people without Internet
access. 5. They have to be able to read through thousands of entries that come back to them on Google, for example, and then figure out what that information means to them. And that’s not something that someone in a poor and uneducated kind of situation can do.
A.They have no access to the relevant information.
B.That way they too can understand what needs to be done.
C.Millions of messages about baby care are received every day.
D.A lot of work has been done to use mobile technology for health.
E. And the most rapidly growing markets are those in developing countries.
F. The program sends messages to women to educate them about their health.
G. Besides, online users may sometimes not understand all the information available.
Crowd controls could soon become an important skill for climbers on Mount Everest, as important as physical strength or watching the weather. In a single day last week, nearly 40 people reached the top of the world --- a record. Reports from base camp spoke of queues at dangerous ridges and crowds as people passed each other in the final dash for the 8, 848 meters top.
More traditional mountaineers tease about the circus atmosphere surrounding Everest in recent years, and there are warnings that the crowds are making the mountain more dangerous. In 1996, 14 died on the mountain when the members of several groups were trapped at high altitudes by sudden snowstorms. Bad weather in early May led to this year’s jam on the summit ridge, but the loss, luckily, was light. Just four climbers died, including a Nepali Sherpa who had made 11 previous successful climbing.
Traditionalists are also worried about the growing tendency of climbers to set records and achieve “firsts”, rather than simply climb the mountain. This year’s crop of mountaineers included the oldest man, 64-year-old Sherman Bull from Connecticut, and the youngest, 16-year-old Temba Tsheri Sherpa of Nepal. An American with only one arm was on the mountain this year; an Indian with no legs also tried but failed. Erik Weihennieyer, an American, became the first blind person to reach the top of the world. His fellow climbers stayed in front of him on the way up, describing the type of land and ringing bells.
Nepal(尼泊尔)views Mount Everest as something of a cash cow. The government charges journeys a minimum of $ 70,000. That is probably why officials in Katmandu are ignoring concerns about overcrowding and talking about even more climbers coming next year. But a celebration of the 48th anniversary of the first conquest of Everest, by Sir Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay, was cancelled after violent strikes. Tumultuous(动乱的)Nepali politics, it seems, could be just the crowd-control measure that Everest needs.
1.What is the problem that the climbers have to face in recent years?
A.Bad Weather. B.Technology. C.Overcrowding. D.Physical strength.
2.What is the main idea of the second paragraph?
A.The risks of mountain climbing.
B.The consequence of overcrowding.
C.The challenge that climbers have to face.
D.The damage that snowstorms have caused.
3.Several climbers are mentioned in Paragraph 3 to show ______.
A.their great courage B.their common motivation
C.their different identity D.their outstanding achievements
4.What is the attitude of the Nepali government towards overcrowding?
A.Unconcerned. B.Doubtful. C.Disapproving. D.Worried.