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单句语法填空 1.You had better book rooms at th...

单句语法填空

1.You had better book rooms at the hotel in advance in case you should find no room on your ____________ (arrive).

2.Almost all job applicants are determined to leave a good ____________ (impress) on a potential employer.

3.The closure of the factory will cause severe damage ____________ the local economy.

4.She found herself in conflict ____________ her parents over her future career.

5.With the help of the old manthe criminals were ____________ arrest.

6.The number of employees has already decreased ____________ twenty percent after the manager laid off them.

 

1.arrival 2.impression 3.to 4.with 5.under 6.by 【解析】 1.考查固定短语。句意:你最好提前在宾馆预定房间以防万一在你到的时候找不到房间。短语“on + 名词” 意为:一…就…, arrive 的名词形式为arrival。故填arrival。 2.考查固定短语。句意:几乎所有求职者都决定对潜在的雇主留下一个好印象。短语 leave a good impression 意为:留下好印象。前有冠词a ,后应为名词,impress的名词形式为 impression,故填 impression。 3.考查固定短语。句意:工厂关闭将会给当地经济带来重大损失。短语 cause damage to意为:造成损失,故填 to。 4.考查固定短语。句意:她发现自己在关于未来的职业上与父母有了冲突。短语 in conflict with意为:与…有冲突,与…有矛盾。故填 with。 5.考查固定短语。句意:在那位老人的帮助下,这个罪犯被捕了。短语 under arrest 意为:被捕。故填 under。 6.考查固定短语。句意:经理辞退他们后,雇员人数已经降低了 20%。短语 decrease by 意为:下降了,decrease to 意为:下降到。此处应该为下降了 20%更为合理,故填 by。
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单词拼写

1.We have taken ________ (措施) to avoid such things happening again.

2.She ________ (拍打) me on the back and joked with me.

3.The kind grandmother lent us some soft orange ________ (毯子).

4.The two stories ________ (冲突)so I did not know which to believe.

5.The crime rate in this city has ________ (减少) in the last decade.

6.It had been raining for a week and the streets were ________ (淹没).

7.People had to stand in a ________ (行列) for hours to buy a ticket.

8.The ________ (海关) men went through our luggage carefully.

 

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请阅读下面这段文字,并按照要求用英语写一篇150词左右的文章。

How much money should I spend each month? This is asked by college students at the start of every term, and it’s become a hot topic of discussion following a controversial online post. The post was about a college student who demanded 4,500 yuan for monthly living expenses from her mom, reported China Daily

In the post, this new college student explained that her school is in a top-tier city and that her expenses included skin-care products and new clothes. Her mother did not agree and “only” gave her 2,000 yuan.

The post started a heated debate. Some people came to her defense. Girls invest a lot in skin-care products and new clothes while boys invest much in shoes, latest electronic devices and equipment for games.

However, someone thinks 4,500 yuan is too much. According to a 2019 report, students in 15 cities spent more than 1,500 yuan a month on average. Beijing topped the list at 2,400 yuan, and Shanghai followed close behind at 2,300 yuan. In some cities, a parent may only earn a monthly salary of 4,000 or 5,000 yuan. Nevertheless, some students insist on buying Dyson vacuum cleaners (吸尘器) for their dormitories instead of common brooms. Others demand Apple laptops to study at Starbucks, instead of going to the library.

(写作内容)

1.用约 30 个词概括上文内容;

2.用约 120 个词谈谈你对这一现象的看法,包括如下要点:

1)分析哪些原因造成了大学生生活开销的上涨(不少于两点);

2)你觉得文中该大学生的要求是否合理?请阐述你的理由或建议(不少于两点)。

(写作要求) 不能直接引用原文句子。

 

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请认真阅读下面的短文,并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里填入一个最恰当的单词。注意:请将答案写在答题卷上相应题号的横线上,每个空格只填一个单词。

When times are tough, how should governments in poor countries ensure their citizens remain fed? In the past, most of them used subsidies (现金补助) to keep food prices low for all their citizens. But these policies have become ineffective: the cost of maintaining Egypt’s food subsidies, for instance, nearly doubled between 2009 and 2013. And much of the money goes to the wrong people. In Egypt and the Philippines less than 20% of spending on food subsidies goes to poor households. In the Middle East and North Africa only 35% of subsidies reach 40% of the poorest, the IMF notes.

Motivated by a desire to control growing budget deficits (赤字) , many countries are replacing broad subsidies with policies aimed more directly at the needy. But what form should the targeted aid take? Earlier this month Iran introduced free handouts of food to replace its subsidy method. Other countries, such as Indonesia and Malaysia, have chosen instead to provide extra cash benefits to the poor. So far, food vouchers (代金券) have been the least popular option. Proposals to introduce food vouchers in such countries as Malaysia have been rejected on the basis that they were too American and un-Asian.

However, the researchers at the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) thought that might have been a mistake and analyzed the results of an experiment conducted by the World Food Programme in Ecuador, a South American country, in 2011, which compared handouts of food, cash and vouchers in the experiment. The study found that direct handouts— Iran’s new policy—were the least effective option. They cost three times as much as vouchers to promote calorie intake by 15%, and were four times as costly as a way of increasing dietary diversity and quality. Distribution costs were high, and wastage was also a problem. Only 63% of the food given away was actually eaten, while 83% of the cash was spent on food and 99% of the vouchers were exchanged as intended. Food handouts have also been the costliest option in similar projects in some African countries, according to John Hoddinott at IFPRI.

 

In Ecuador there was little difference in cost between handing out cash and food vouchers, the other two options. But food vouchers were better at encouraging people to buy healthier foods because of restrictions on what items could be exchanged for them. It was 25% cheaper to promote the quality of household nutrition using food vouchers than it was by handing out cash.

A switch from universal subsidies to vouchers could be the most efficient way of promoting health as well as relieving poverty. This is very necessary in many developing countries, according to Lynn Brown, a consultant for the World Bank.

Topic

Feeding expectations: Why food vouchers are a policy 1. consideration in developing countries?

Aim of universal subsidies

To 2. for the citizens in poor countries.

Analyses of three policies

Cash

●It keeps food prices low for all citizens.

●It is not 3. in the long term:

The cost keeps increasing.

Much of the money doesn’t reach those really in 4. .

Handouts of food

●The food can reach the needy 5. .

●They cost twice more than vouchers to promote calorie intake.

●A lot of the food handed out is wasted, thus 6. a matter of wastage.

Food vouchers

●They work better when it 7. to encouraging people to buy healthier foods.

8. with handing out cash, using food vouchers costs much less.

●They are too American and un-Asian.

Conclusion

It’s a 9. to use vouchers in many developing countries because it not only helps to10. poverty but also promotes health most efficiently.

 

 

 

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请认真阅读下列各个小题,并根据上下文语境和所给首字母的提示,写出下列各句空格中的单词,注意保持语义和形式的一致。请将答案的完整形式写在答题卡上相应题号的横线上。

1.— Why have you been so restless these days?

— Air tickets are in shortage. We are struggling to get seats on a plane b____for Mexico.

2.— Susan, do you know the meaning of “Brexit”?

— Yes. It refers to Britain exiting from the EU, namely, the s ____ from EU.

3.— Have you heard of the famous translator Xu Yuanchong, who is still devoted to his work at the age of 98?

— Absolutely! C____ his age, he leads a very active life.

4.— To fit in the new working environment and master professional skills, Jason attended a night school.

— The new job gave him passion and added a new d____ to his life.

5.— With the rise of online stores, numerous physical stores have been closed down in Suzhou. — It is the law of the j ____ . You have to be strong enough to succeed.

 

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    A story posted by The New York Post Monday tells the tale of Katrina Holte, a Hillsboro woman who quit her job to cosplay a 1950s housewife.

Let me start by expressing admiration to Holte for using her 2019 freedoms to follow her 1950s dreams. Everyone should be so lucky as to get to decide what they wear and how they spend their time. That’s the future our foremothers fought for.

But as much fun as I am sure she is having living a vintage (复古的) life, which literally includes watching shows like “I Love Lucy” and listening to vinyl recordings (刻录碟片) , I think it’s important to remember that being a 1950s housewife was actually totally awful, and something our grandmothers and mothers fought against.

For example, once I called my grandma and asked her for her recipe for Cloud Biscuits, these delicious biscuits she used to make that we would cover with butter and homemade raspberry jam on Thanksgiving.

“Why would you want that?” she said. “Go to the store. Go to the freezer section. Buy some pre-made biscuits and put them in the oven.”

She straight-up refused to give me the recipe, because it was hard and took a long time to make. In her mind, it was a waste of time.

Getting off the phone, it occurred to me that spending every day of your life serving a husband and five children wasn’t fun at all. And then there are the grandchildren who eventually come along demanding Cloud Biscuits, a whole new expanded set of people to feed.

She was basically a slave to those hungry mouths, cooking scratch meals three times a day

When she wasn’t trapped in the kitchen, she had to keep the house clean, make sure she looked good enough to be socially acceptable, and make sure her kids and husband looked good enough to be socially acceptable. And she had no days off.

I know my grandma loves her kids and her grandkids, her husband and the life she led, but man, it must have been a lot of thankless, mindless labor.

No wonder everyone went all-in on processed foods when they came around. Imagine the nice break something like a microwave dinner would give a woman working, unpaid, for her family every single day?

I also had another grandma. She was a scholar who helped found the Center for the Study of Women in Society at University of Oregon. She was a pioneering second-wave feminist who wrote books, gave lectures and traveled the world.

But, she did all of that after divorcing my grandpa, when most of her kids were out of the house. Back then, in the 1950s and the 1960s, there was no illusion about women “having it all”. How could that even possibly happen? If you were taking care of a family, waiting on your husband, you had no time to follow your dreams, unless you made that your dream

A lot of women took that approach. We call it Stockholm Syndrome now.

And of course, these women I am talking about are upper-middle-class white women. Romanticizing the 1950s is especially disgusting when you think about how women of color and poor women were treated back then, and the lack of education and choices available to them.

Because the women in this country demanded something approaching equality, Holte has the chance to live out her fantasy. Not every woman in America is so lucky.

We still don’t have pay equality and in many states, we still don’t have autonomy over our own bodies. Poor women and women of color still lack the opportunities of their wealthy and white peers.

And while it’s getting better, women are still expected to be responsible for the emotional labor of running a household and raising the children.

But at least we can get jobs. At least we don’t have to sew our own clothes, wear a full face of makeup every day and spend hours making Cloud Biscuits some ungrateful kid will wolf down, barely remembering to say thank you.

1.According to the author, what is the future our foremothers fought for?

A.Watching shows like “I Love Lucy” and listening to vinyl recordings.

B.Having the freedom to make choices in their daily life.

C.Making Cloud Biscuits for their kids and husbands.

D.Making sure their kids and husbands socially acceptable.

2.What does the underlined word “that” in paragraph 13 refer to?

A.Writing books, giving lectures and traveling the world.

B.Divorcing husband when kids were out of house.

C.Taking care of a family and waiting on husband.

D.Women’s illusion about “having it all”.

3.What does the “Stockholm Syndrome” in paragraph 14 really mean in the passage?

A.Women have been used to the unfair treatment at home

B.Women nowadays like the way of life in the 1950s.

C.Victims end up sympathizing with the abusers.

D.Women have the chance to live out their dreams.

4.The author thinks of the life of a 1950s housewife as ________.

A.fantastic B.admirable

C.awful D.unforgettable

5.What can we learn from the passage?

A.It was a waste of time to give grandchildren the recipe.

B.All women are not lucky to follow their own dreams in America now.

C.Housewives received recognition for their efforts from family members.

D.The upper-middle-class white women did a better job in running the household.

6.What is the author’s main purpose in writing this passage?

A.To show great appreciation to her grandmas.

B.To call on housewives to claim the pay for the housework they undertake.

C.To draw readers’ attention to the situations women face, especially those poor and of color.

D.To arouse women’s awareness of equal pay at work.

 

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