满分5 > 高中英语试题 >

假定你是李华,乘坐FL753航班抵达伦敦后发现钱包遗失。请给航空公司写一封邮件说...

假定你是李华,乘坐FL753航班抵达伦敦后发现钱包遗失。请给航空公司写一封邮件说明情况并寻求帮助。内容包括:

1. 行程信息;  2. 钱包特征;   3. 联系方式。

注意:1. 词数100左右;   2. 可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

Dear Sir or Madam, My name is Li Hua, and I was a passenger on Flight FL743 of your airline to London from Hangzhou yesterday, I found my wallet got lost when I arrived at the airport of London. Therefore, I am writing to ask for your help in finding my wallet, which is yellow with my name attached to the back. It contains my ID cards and two bank cards. The most importantly, it’s a birthday present that my father had given me. I would greatly appreciate it if you could help find it. My telephone number is 3308-8977. I’m looking forward to hearing from you soon. Regards, Li Hua 【解析】 本文是一篇应用文,要求写一封书信。 第1步:根据提示可知,本篇为一封电子邮件;假定你是李华,乘坐FL753航班抵达伦敦后发现钱包遗失。请给航空公司写一封邮件说明情况并寻求帮助。内容包括: 1. 行程信息; 2. 钱包特征;3. 联系方式,时态应为一般过去时和一般现在时。 第2步:根据写作要求,确定关键词(组),如:Flight(航班),airline(航空公司), feature(特征),airport(机场),wallet(钱包),lose(丢失),passenger (乘客)及arrive at(到达)等。 第3步:根据提示及关键词(组)进行遣词造句,注意主谓一致和时态问题。 第4步:连句成文,注意使用恰当的连词进行句子之间的衔接与过渡,书写一定要规范清晰,保持卷面的整洁美观。 本文内容完整,思路清晰,结构严谨,表达准确。另外全文中没有中国式英语的句式,显示了很高的驾驭英语的能力。 【亮点说明】 范文语言地道,语篇连贯,词数适当。作者在范文中使用了较多高级词汇和句式,高级词汇有arrive at(到达),ask for(请求),attached to (依附于),hear from(收到来信)以及look forward to(期待),高级句式有“I would greatly appreciate it if you could help find it”;还使用了时间状语从句“I found my wallet got lost when I arrived at the airport of London”,非限定性定语从句“Therefore, I am writing to ask for your help in finding my wallet, which is yellow with my name attached to the back.”及定语从句“The most importantly, it’s a birthday present that my father had given me”。文章衔接流畅,结构清晰,全文没有语法错误,上下句转换自然。  
复制答案
考点分析:
相关试题推荐

假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌写的以下作文。文中共有10处语言错误,每句中最多有两处。每处错误仅涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。

增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写出该加的词。

删除:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。

修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。

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。

In the picture, we can see a boy in worn clothes, sits at a shabby wooden table with a pile of books on it. A weak ray of light came through a small hole on the wall and he was absorbed in her reading.

This is a well-known story from an ancient Chinese idiom. A boy, being poor, couldn’t afford even a candle, but he bored a hole in the wall to “steal” light from his neighbor’s house to read at night. The moral of the story is: spare no effort to acquire knowledges and never get discouraged easy no matter how difficult the situation may be.

Of course, things are totally different today. It is not the story itself but also that is reflected in the story that count. Hard work pays out off. We should take pains to improve ourselves through learning and get prepared for the future.

 

查看答案

Consensus about screens(硅谷精英禁子女玩手机)

The people 1.are  2.(close) to a thing are often the most wary (警惕的)of it. 3.(Technology) know how phones really work, and many have decided they don't want their own children anywhere near them. 4.wariness that has been slowly brewing is turning into a regionwide consensus in Silicon Valley: The benefits of screens 5.a learning tool 6.(overblow), and the risks for addiction and stunting development seem high. Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple, said earlier this year that he would not let his nephew join social networks. Bill Gates 7.(ban) cellphones until his children were teenagers. "On the scale between candy and crack cocaine,  8. is closer to crack cocaine," Chris Anderson, the former editor of Wired, said of screens. "We thought we could control it. 9.it's beyond our power 10.(control). This is going straight to the pleasure centers of the developing brain."

 

查看答案

I had a student today who got his finger stuck inside a test tube in science class. It was really quite stuck. This young man’s finger _______to get whiter and whiter right before my eyes.

Remaining _____ , I suggested he carefully rotate (转动) the tube. It wouldn’t move a bit. He   _____soap and cold water. Still stuck. Meanwhile_______was breaking out in the class. Finally, I   _____the young man to our secretary, who was a miracle (奇迹) worker ______ three kids of her own. With her in charge, I was_______ all would be OK.

To get the students back in order, I _____ my own story of getting my _______stuck between the rails of a balcony. Same kind of curiosity, I remembered________then how far I could thrust () my knee between the rails. Inch by inch, I kept _______and before I knew it, my knee was stuck and _____ before my eyes and in front of lots of _______at a popular Las Vegas hotel!

Hearing my story, many students followed with their own________of heads, arms, fingers stuck in places they shouldn’t ______. A few minutes later, the young man came back, test tube unbroken and finger________to a lovely shade of pink.

I just couldn’t _______this kid. He’s only twelve. I too got my knee unstuck, but not without great ______. The excuse for me, however, was not ______ but plain stupidity. I was ______ fifty years old when this happened.

1.A. continued    B. needed    C. happened    D. used

2.A. active    B. silent    C. cheerful    D. calm

3.A. lost    B. tried    C. fetched    D. accepted

4.A. fire    B. violence    C. chaos    D. argument

5.A. sent    B. carried    C. introduced    D. described

6.A. teaching    B. observing    C. saving    D. raising

7.A. confident    B. doubtful    C. surprised    D. happy

8.A. heard    B. wrote    C. . read    D. shared

9.A. head    B. arm    C. knee    D. foot

10.A. calculating    B. wondering    C. explaining    D. reporting

11.A. kicking    B. climbing    C. walking    D. pushing

12.A. swelling    B. lifting    C. resting    D. shaking

13.A. doctors    B. managers    C. strangers    D. students

14.A. findings    B. stories    C. conclusions    D. news

15.A. stop    B. exist    C. stay    D. be

16.A. pointing    B. belonging    C. returning    D. growing

17.A. get mad at    B. get rid of    C. get used to    D. get along with

18.A. encouragement    B. embarrassment    C. disappointment    D. achievement

19.A. ambition    B. bravery    C. youth    D. experiment

20.A. in the end    B. after all    C. in total    D. at any rate

 

查看答案

The Science of Risk-Seeking

Sometimes we decide that a little unncessary danger is worth it because when we weigh the risk and the reward, the risk seems worth tasking. 1. Some of us enjoy activities that would surprise and scare the rest of us. Why? Experts say if may have to do with how our brains work.

The reason why any of us take any risks at all might have to do with early humans. Risk-takers were better at hunting, fighting, or exploring. 2. As the quality of Risk-taking was passed from one generation to the next, humans ended up with a sense of adventure and a tolerance for risk.

So why aren’t we all jumping out of airplanes then? Well, even 200,000 years ago, too much risk-taking could get one killed. A few daring survived, though, along with a few stay-in-the-cave types. As a result, humans developed a range of character types that still exists today. So maybe you love car racing, or maybe you hate it. 3.

No matter where you are on the risk-seeking range, scientists say that your willingness to take risks increases during your teenage years. 4. To help you do that, your brain increases your hunger for new experiences. New experiences often mean taking some risks, so your brain raises your tolerance for risk as well.

5.For the risk-seekers a part of the brain related to pleasure becomes active, while for the rest of us, a part of the brain related to fear becomes active.

As experts continue to study the science of risk-seeking, we’ll continue to hit the mountains, the waves or the shallow end of the pool.

A. Those are the risks you should jump to take.

B. Being better at those things meant a greater chance of survival.

C. It all depends on your character.

D. This is when you start to move away from your family and into the bigger world.

E. Thus, these well-equipped people survived because they were the fittest.

F. New brain research suggests our brains work differently when we face a nervous situation.

G. However, we are not all using the same reference standard to weigh risks and rewards.

 

查看答案

It is quite apparent that competition surrounds every aspect of human life whether in the United States or the Amazon rainforest. Without it we would not have grown into primates (灵长类动物) . Or we would probably still be struggling to sharpen a bronze tool while crawling around on four legs in search of meat. Without competition, Columbus wouldn’t have discovered America and Edison would never have invented the light bulb.

Friendship, like all relationships between two people, involves competition. It isn’t competition in a traditional sense because there are no goals to be scored and no prize. Perhaps the ecological definition --- the simultaneous (同时) demand by two or more organisms for limited environmental resources, such as nutrinents, living space, or light --- better explains it.

As in nature, high school life is governed by a set of laws, similar to a shortened version of Darwin’s theory of evolution, overpopulation, and competition. There is an abundance of high school students and to distinguish them, ranking and categorizing (分类) take place. In high school, friendships learn to coexist with competition even though at times the relationship is rough. In fact, in some circumstance, competition is too much of a burden for a friendship to bear, causing it to fall apart. College admission is the final high school objective. Four years of hard work is to achieve good grades, and a student’s fate is determined not only by these achievements, but by the records of thousands of other seniors trying to achieve a similar recognition.

Nevertheless, by necessity, competition between students exists in all aspects of high school life. It sets and improves the standards in everything from sports to schoolwork. A healthy, friendly competition can have only benefits, but when it becomes too fierce, jealousy (妒忌) can tear friendships apart. Yet, despite all this, without competition, we would be lost.

1.What does the ecological definition mainly explain?

A. How to win the competition.    B. What competition exactly is.

C. What the result of competition is.    D. How friends compete with each other.

2.According to the writer, what causes the high school students to compete?

A. They know the laws of nature well.    B. Friendship is a burden for them.

C. The number of them is too large.    D. They are divided into different groups.

3.Which best describes the relationship of friendship and competition?

A. Friendship is always based on competition.

B. Competition is a result of lost friendship.

C. Competition is terribly harmful to friendships.

D. The degree of competition is vital to friendship.

4.What does the author think of “competition”?

A. Competition is certain to happen at school.

B. The result of competition are out of control.

C. Competition becomes fierce in high school.

D. Friendship is not as important as competition at school.

 

查看答案
试题属性

Copyright @ 2008-2019 满分5 学习网 ManFen5.COM. All Rights Reserved.