When will the meeting start?
A. At 8:15. B. At 8:45. C. At 9:00.
假定你是李华。你的英国朋友David发邮件来询问你寒假的旅游体验,请你给他回复邮件。内容包括:
1. 手机支付;
2. 人脸识别景区;
3. 邀请他来体验。
注意:1. 词数100左右;
2. 可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
参考词汇:手机支付mobile payment;人脸识别 face recognition
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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。
I am always telling to work hard to have a good life in the future. Therefore, I do my best to play basketball or study. I want to be basketball player when I will grow up. To realize my dream, I practice playing basketball regular, aiming to make my best shots. Although I’m interesting in watching TV, I manage to finish my homework first. I try my best in all the test, especially in the math test because I find math more difficulty than any other subject. Anyway I will spare no efforts and never give in on my studies and I believe if I am sure to succeed.
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
When Robert Lee was in primary school, he hated to see his classmates throwing away half-eaten sandwiches after lunch. His parents had taught him and his older brother not to waste food. “They said it was bad,” says Robert, 27.
While 1. (study) finance and accounting at New York University, Robert remembered this lesson and joined Two Birds One Stone, a food rescue club at school 2. delivered, five days a week, uneaten pasta, vegetables and other leftovers (剩余食物) from the dining hall to nearby homeless 3. (shelter).
When Robert and fellow club member Louisa Chen entered a college 4. (compete), they came up with a slightly different idea for a food rescue non-profit group—5. (it) program wouldn’t have a donation minimum, would operate seven days a week, and would be staffed 6. (entire) by volunteers.
Surprisingly, 7. idea stood out. Robert and Louisa Chen won the first place. 8. the $1,000 prize, they founded Rescuing Leftover Cuisine (RLC) in July 2013. In just the first few weeks, Robert s team delivered a donation of enough noodles and meatballs to feed 20 people in line at a New York City homeless shelter that had run out of food. Only a year into his finance job, Robert gave up his six- figure salary 9. (focus) on RLC. So far the organization 10. (reach) sixteen cities around the country.
Johnny and I lived in a small neighborhood in 1955. We had bought our two young sons two ______ for Christmas and Johnny would assemble them on Christmas Eve.
But on Christmas Eve day, Johnny ______ to go to Brookley Air Force Base in Mobile to repair a jet. I had my hands ______ with flour, preparing for Christmas dinner and ______ two energetic boys.
I was making the chocolate cake when a(n) ______ knocked on the door. It was Beatrice who was the ______ person on our road with a telephone. The base had ______ to say that a heavy torque wrench (扭矩扳手) had come apart in Johnny’s hand, making the hone ______ . My sister-in-law Ruth and her husband, Otto, took me to the ______ while my mother-in-law stayed with the children.
We got there only to ______ Johnny with a cast on his arm, eager to get home although the doctor required that he ______. It was Christmas Eve, Johnny ______, and he had bikes to assemble for his boys. The doctor said he’d consider ______ him the next morning if Johnny could find someone to drive him home.
On Christmas morning, Johnny tried calling the motor pool (车辆调配所). They said ______ must come from higher up, so Johnny ______ making calls. ______, a big blue car rolled up to the hospital asking for the man who needed a ______ home.
Johnny’s mother and I were putting dinner on the table when we heard the car. We were ______ to see Johnny. With Otto’s help, Johnny assembled the boys’ gifts.
That cold Christmas Day, our hearts were full of ______ for those who had gone the extra mile to bring us ______ on the holiday.
1.A. cars B. bicycles C. phones D. toys
2.A. asked B. refused C. had D. used
3.A. full B. decorated C. related D. familiar
4.A. searching for B. playing with C. worrying about D. looking after
5.A. stranger B. engineer C. operator D. neighbor
6.A. last B. right C. only D. first
7.A. paused B. called C. decided D. intended
8.A. broken B. dirty C. ugly D. abandoned
9.A. base B. hospital C. destination D. station
10.A. find B. supply C. assist D. equip
11.A. leave B. rest C. stay D. relax
12.A. believed B. imagined C. expected D. argued
13.A. admiring B. dismissing C. rewarding D. assessing
14.A. ideas B. demands C. orders D. policies
15.A. started B. tried C. kept D. stopped
16.A. Suddenly B. Finally C. Instantly D. Gradually
17.A. lift B. recipe C. trip D. voyage
18.A. thrilled B. embarrassed C. motivated D. terrified
19.A. generosity B. consideration C. kindness D. appreciation
20.A. close B. apart C. around D. together
We automatically assume that as adults, we’re wiser than when we were children. However, actually we can learn a lot from our childhood self. For example, we can learn to develop optimism about the future. Do you remember how excited you used to be just before Christmas? 1. Reintroduce that childlike wonder into our daily experiences.
We can learn to dream big and imagine the impossible. How often have you heard a child say something like “One day, I’m going to be an astronaut”? Our adult minds immediately laugh at this idea and think about all the logical reasons as to why this might never happen. 2. We minimize our chances of attaining what we dream about. It is okay to dream big just as our childhood self did.
3. Our childhood self looked at possibilities and believed we could achieve them successfully. If we wanted to build a tree house, we’d go about thinking about how to make it happen instead of focusing on all the reasons it might not happen. In this way we can fill our life with possibilities rather than regrets.
We can learn to be playful and silly sometimes, 4. Children spend a large amount of time escaping from reality to mess about and have fun. Make time for your childhood self to come out and play. Run around the garden, wear a silly hat or spend time laughing. 5..
A. Don’t imagine things could go wrong.
B. We can learn to hold a “can do” attitude.
C. That feeling of great joy is hard to beat.
D. Most children tend to think in a positive way.
E. All of these activities can make us feel happy and alive.
F. We employ self-limiting beliefs without even realizing it.
G. All work and no play makes a person very dull and upset.