Professor Li’s health was completely___________ by ten years of hard work.
A. hurt B. injured C. ruined D. damaged
I haven’t seen Sara since she was a little girl, and she has changed beyond ___________.
A. hearing B. recognition C. strength D. measure
假设你是李华,你的外国笔友Jim来信告诉你他的家乡刚刚发生一场地震。这场地震不仅造成了很大的损失,也给Jim留下了心理阴影。请根据以下要点,写一封信安慰他:
1.不要独处,要将自己的感受说出来,与别人分享。
2.多和家人、朋友或者同学联系,多与他们沟通
3.如果太过紧张或忧虑,可以求助于医生。
注意:1.词数:100字左右;
2.可适当增加细节,以使内容充实、行文连贯。
3.信的开头和结尾已经给出,不计入总词数。
Dear Jim,
I’m sorry to hear that you just experienced an earthquake…
_____________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
Yours,
LiHua
阅读下列各小题,根据每句后的汉语提示,用句末括号内的英语单词完成句子。
1.The professor called to ask me the article. (finish)
教授打电话问我什么时候能完成论文。
2.It was the first time in a year that the night face to face. (see)
这是我一年以来第一次目睹夜晚。
3.He worked day and night for a long time and now he (deserve)
他日以继夜的工作很久了,现在他应该得到很好的休息。
4.With the improvement of China’s international status, more and more foreigners
Chinese. (fond)
随着中国国际地位的提高,越来越多的外国人喜欢学习汉语。
5.If the cook is caught smoking in the kitchen of the restaurant, he . (fire)
如果厨师被抓住在厨房吸烟,他将会被解雇。
6.Today the public food safety after the incident happened.(concern)
这个事件发生后,公众担忧食品安全。
7.This is the only place the sea, the mountain and the lake together. (enjoy)
这里是唯一你能同时欣赏大海、高山和湖泊的地方。
8.Little Kimi asked his father the TV, because the Transformers was his favourite. (turn)
小Kimi请求爸爸别关电视,因为《变形金刚》是他最喜欢的卡通片。
9.MoYan, , has been awarded the 2012 Nobel Prize for Literature. (worth)
莫言已经获得了2012年诺贝尔文学奖,他的书值得一读。
10.It was my brother to cycle along the entire Yangtze River from where it begins to where it ends. (have)
首先想到沿长江从源头到终点骑车旅游的是我的哥哥。
单词拼写 根据所给单词的首字母或汉语提示, 完成下列句子(将完整的英语单词写在答题卡上对应的题号上) ( 5分)
1.It will be a long time for him to r from the bad cold.
2.The policeman asked me to show him my i card.
3.The new coat just cost her $22, it is really a good (便宜货).
4.To our r , the missing child returned home ten days later, tired but healthy.
5.You’d better __________(附加) the labels(标签) to the luggage so that it won’t be mixed.
Every electronic gadget (小玩意) needs good memory. A music player stores songs, albums and playlists. A computer holds schoolwork and programs and remembers how far a player has advanced in his or her favorite game. Mobile phones store names, numbers and hundreds of texts.
Now, scientists in California say they have come up with a way to turn a living cell into a memory device.
It can store only one tiny bit of information, but it’s a start. In the future, a cell-based gadget might travel through the body and record measurements. The benefit to human health could be big: the right tool, for example, might record the earliest signs of disease.
Doctors, scientists and other curious people want to know what is happening inside the body, even at levels that can’t be seen by the naked eye. So far, there is no device small enough to travel through the bloodstream.
If normal machines won’t do the trick, perhaps biology will. Scientists who work in the field of synthetic (合成的) biology are trying to find ways to turn living things into human tools. In the case of the new memory device, bioengineers from Stanford University used the genetic material inside living cells to record information.
This genetic material consists of DNA. Found in nearly every cell, DNA carries all of the information that keeps a living thing alive.
In the new experiment, the researchers turned DNA from bacteria(细菌) into a switch. They “flip (翻转)” a small section of DNA. Then, using the same procedure (过程) , the scientists flip the section again—returning it into its normal structure.
Using these DNA switches, “We can write and erase DNA in a living cell,” bioengineer, Jerome Bonnet, explained to Science News.
It might take years before his team or others identity whether a DNA-based memory device might be practical. Right now, it takes one hour to complete a flip. That is far too long to be useful. Plus, a flipped section has a very small little memory—less than what a computer uses to remember a single letter.
“This was an important proof that it was doable,” Bonnet told Science News. “Now we want to build a more complex system, something that other people can use.”
1.What is the aim of listing the electronic things in the first paragraph?
A. To make the passage more fashionable.
B. To show how electronic things have memory.
C. To discuss things in detail.
D. To make the subject of the text more understandable.
2.What is possible future benefit of the cell-based gadget for people?
A. To detect disease at the earliest point.
B. To help improve the memory.
C. To help people build a body.
D. To replace many electronic gadgets.
3.What is the object being researched?
A. The cells of bacteria.
B. The DNA of bacteria.
C. A section of bacteria.
C. The nucleus of bacteria.
4.What do we know about a flipped section of DNA?
A. It has a very small memory.
B. It can function as a computer.
C. It has one letter in it.
D. It takes a day to complete it.
