满分5 > 高中英语试题 >

假如你是光明中学高二(1)班的李华,上周你校举办了为期一周的“外语文化节”活动。...

假如你是光明中学高二(1)班的李华,上周你校举办了为期一周的外语文化节活动。请根据下表给你的英国笔友Leo写信,介绍文化节的开展情况。

光明中学第一届外语文化节

时间:202016–112

活动内容:

1.外籍专家讲座,主题:英语学习方法;2.英语演讲比赛;3.成立英语口语角。

注意:1. 词数100词左右;

2. 可适当增加细节, 以使行文连贯;

3. 开头和结尾已给出, 不计入总词数。

Dear Leo,

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Yours,

Li Hua

 

Dear Leo, How have you been doing recently? I’m writing to share my experience during the Foreign Language Festival with you. It lasted for a week, from Jan 6 to Jan 12, and it had three major sections. To begin with, there was an instructive lecture delivered by a foreign expert focused on English learning methods. This was of great help to us. Then we organized an enjoyable English speech contest, which encouraged us to practice our oral English. Besides, we set up an oral English corner to make oral English practice daily. The festival is over, but I’m still excited about it. What are you up to these days? I’m looking forward to your reply. Yours, Li Hua 【解析】 这是一篇应用文,要求写一封信。 第一步:审题。审题的目的是获取重要信息。通过审题我们可以确定几个方面的信息。假如你是光明中学高二(1)班的李华,上周你校举办了为期一周的“外语文化节”活动。请根据下表给你的英国笔友Leo写信,介绍文化节的开展情况。时间:2020年1月6日–1月12日要点包括:1.外籍专家讲座,主题:英语学习方法;2.英语演讲比赛;3.成立英语口语角。人称为第一人称。时态以一般过去时为主。 第二步:布局段落,确定主要段落,次要段落,段落数量。这篇写作段落数量为三段。第一段,写信目的。第二段,文章的三大要点。第三段,期望。 第三步:确定关键词汇和短语: share(分享),last(持续),instructive(教育性的),deliver(发表),focuse on(集中于),of great help(有帮助的),set up(建立),be up to(从事)等。 第四步:连句成文,注意使用恰当的连接词进行过渡衔接;注意书写,保持卷面整洁,避免划线,乱擦。
复制答案
考点分析:
相关试题推荐

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。

Do you live in a city? You’ve probably noticed how noisy and crowded life in a city can be. 1. if you could live next to a calm lake instead?

As it turns out, 2. (live) near bodies of water – lakes, rivers, ponds, even oceans – can help us feel both happier and healthier. Those who live less than a kilometer from the coast are around 22 percent less likely 3. (have) mental health problems than those who live 50 kilometers or more away, according to a study by researchers from the University of Exeter, UK. People who visit the coast at least twice a week tend to experience 4. (good) general and mental health as well.

So how does “blue space” make us feel better? For one thing, aquatic environments tend to have less pollution and more sunlight, both of 5. linked to better mental and physical health. People who get more sun tend to be happier than those who do not.

There’s also the air above 6. sea. After spending time near the ocean, you might find that you feel more relaxed than usual. This is 7. sea air is charged with negative ions (负离子). These ions balance our levels of serotonin (血清素), a chemical that affects our moods. With 8. (balance) serotonin levels, we feel more calm and relaxed, according to Daily Mail.

Finally, people who live near water tend to be more 9. (physical) active, according to the Guardian. Water sports like swimming and rowing can help us stay 10. shape, which in turn keeps us healthy.

 

查看答案

    Today, I was sitting with some other students and teachers as the judges of the annual singing contest of Beijing National Day School (BNDS). Watching the wonderful performances on stage, I could not help________what happened last year.

Last year was the first year I came to the BNDS International Department. The first month at BNDS was almost a(n)________: Curiosity quickly________, replaced by a heavy workload. To make matters worse, I was ______a total stranger in a new environment. When I was in trouble, I was too________to turn to anyone for help. I shut the door to the outside world.

I thought I might continue to_______in darkness by myself, until one day, I saw the______of the annual singing contest. If I was not brave enough to communicate in words, maybe I could______my heart out. Having made my decision, I joined the audition (试镜). Luckily, I_______among more than 100 contestants and entered the top 32. After another three rounds of competition, I made_______to the finals together with three other contestants.________more and more students knew that I joined the contest, they went to watch my performance, volunteered to_______for me and then shared my singing videos on social media. It seemed that I became well-known overnight.

Finally, the big day came. When I________the nerve to walk onstage, I could not believe my eyes. The dark theater was suddenly lit up by________sticks, which were like stars in a dark sky. “Come on, Becky!” A shout broke the silence, followed by kind laughter. When it became_______again, I began to sing.

The music started, which drew me back to________. Now I might not remember clearly what songs I sang last year, but I would never forget the________in the darkness.  From then on, I had my_______, made friends, and I even joined the singing club. Singing opens the door________a brand-new world. I know I will stay at BNDS, and I won’t be________.

1.A.scanning B.recalling C.evaluating D.conveying

2.A.disaster B.turning C.growth D.alarm

3.A.distributed B.split C.choked D.faded

4.A.practically B.vitally C.elegantly D.digitally

5.A.sceptical B.shallow C.shy D.sharp

6.A.struggle B.sacrifice C.withdraw D.crash

7.A.detail B.sample C.application D.poster

8.A.dial B.sing C.try D.let

9.A.dropped out B.came out C.stood out D.chewed out

10.A.myself B.it C.them D.itself

11.A.As B.Though C.While D.When

12.A.approve B.applaud C.vote D.qualify

13.A.filled in B.swelled up C.wound up D.got up

14.A.circulating B.linking C.crossing D.waving

15.A.stable B.quiet C.dull D.calm

16.A.truth B.fact C.reality D.case

17.A.lights B.devices C.receivers D.circumstances

18.A.companions B.fans C.opponents D.receptionists

19.A.of B.in C.to D.on

20.A.accessible B.casual C.abnormal D.alone

 

查看答案

    There are some popular family videos posted on Chinese social media. In these videos, a young child calls out to their mother or father; the parent enters the room smiling, turns around and calls out to their own parent; the grandparent then enters smiling and calls out to their parent – the great-grandparent.

The format of these videos is being described as the “four-generation challenge”. 1. People from all over the world have left comments and even made their own versions.

A Facebook user named Antoine Yupud wrote, “I have to give that to China. 2..” The “four-generation” videos have not only touched foreign viewers, but also given them a deeper look into Chinese family values.

In most East Asian cultures, it is common for many generations of a single family to live together under one roof. 3.. Many Western countries tend to have nuclear families, made up of just children and their parents.

4.. Kids usually move out of the family home after turning 18. Many apply for loans and work part-time jobs to pay for college and rent. If they choose to continue living with their parents after becoming an adult, it can be seen as a sign of immaturity or failure.

Although family structures in the United States may differ, the loving bonds between family members are common to both. 5..

A. Family devotion is usually a strong value.

B. This is called an extended family.

C. These videos have spread to social media in other countries.

D. Nuclear families gradually took the place of extended families.

E. In United States culture, independence is highly valued.

F. These videos have made many people miss their own grandparents.

G. That might be why the “four-generation” videos have gained popularity around the world.

 

查看答案

    I can’t stop looking at my phone, but I’m not alone.

Over 2.5 billion people have smartphones now, and a lot of them are having a hard time putting them down. The problem is, out devices are designed to be addicting. But if you understand the tricks that grab your attention, you can learn to have a healthier relationship with your phone.

It starts with turning off all notifications(推送通知), except when a real human is trying to reach you. But a lot of today’s apps simulate the feeling of that kind of social interaction, to get you to spend more time on their platform. If Facebook sends you a push notification that a friend is interested in an event near you, they’re essentially acting like a puppet master, taking advantage of your desire for social connections so that you use the app more.

Today you can get notifications from any app on your phone. So, every time you check it, you get this grab bag of notifications that can make you feel a broad variety of emotions. If it wasn’t for random, if it was predictably bad or predictably good, then you would not get addicted. That’s the same logic behind slot machines(老虎机). Some apps even copy the process of pulling a slot machine lever with the “pull to refresh” feature. Those apps are usually capable of continuously updating content, but the pull action provides an addicting illusion of control over that process.

Then, you have to make your screen grayer. The easiest way to attract your eye’s attention on a screen is through color. In eye-tracking tests, human eyes gravitate(被吸引)particularly to bright red. That’s why so many apps have redesigned their icons to be brighter, bolder, and warmer over the years. It’s also why notification bubbles are red. So just noticing that if I take out the color, it changes some of the addictiveness.

Finally, restrict your home screen to everyday tools. Make sure that your home screen, when you unlock it, doesn’t have anything except for the in-the-moment tools that help you like live your life.

If you’re not sure what counts as a bottomless vortex(漩涡)of stuff, it helps to filter out apps that use infinite scrolling. Infinite scrolling continuously loads new material so there’s no built-in endpoint. Video autoplay works in a similar way. These interfaces create a frictionless experience, but they also create a user’s sense of control and make it harder to stop.

Technology might not always look harmful. There are ideas for alternative interfaces that give you functional choices and are more transparent about how much time you’ll lose with one action, versus another.

But it’s a really deep philosophical question: what is genuinely worth your attention? Do people even know how to answer that question? It’s a really hard question, it’s not something we think about. But, for now, it’s a question that everybody needs to start asking.

1.Which is the most accurate word to replace the underlined word “essentially”?

A.basically B.necessarily

C.temporarily D.punctually

2.What does the author mean by mentioning “slot machine”?

A.Users can probably predict what the notification is before checking their phones.

B.Netizens can do gambling on the internet legally.

C.There’re a lot of similarities between apps and slot machines.

D.It’s unpredictability that makes phones addicting.

3.From the end of the article we can know that ______.

A.all the interfaces are not extremely addicting

B.we users are not enabled to choose but to waste time on technology

C.it’s philosophers’ job to reflect on the value of technology in information age

D.the development of technology cannot be changed back to the way they were before

4.We can learn from the passage that the author’s attitude to technology is ______.

A.negative B.concerned

C.positive D.indifferent

 

查看答案

    Most of us are already aware of the direct effect we have on our friends and family. But we rarely consider that everything we think, feel, do, or say can spread far beyond the people we know. Conversely(相反地), our friends and family serve as conduits(渠道) for us to be influenced by hundreds or even thousands of other people. In a kind of social chain reaction, we can be deeply affected by events we do not witness that happen to people we do not know. As part of a social network, we go beyond ourselves, for good or ill, and become a part of something much larger.

Our connectedness carries with it fundamental implications(影响) for the way we understand the human condition. Social networks have value precisely because they can help us to achieve what we could not achieve on our own. Yet, social network effects are not always positive. Depression, obesity, financial panic, and violence also spread. Social networks, it turns out, tend to magnify(放大) whatever they are seeded with.

Partly for this reason, social networks are creative. And what these networks create does not belong to any one individual—it is shared by all those in the network. In this way, a social network is like a commonly owned forest: we all stand to benefit from it, but we also must work together to ensure it remains healthy and productive. While social networks are fundamentally and distinctively human, and can be seen everywhere, they should not be taken for granted.

If you are happier or richer or healthier than others, it may have a lot to do with where you happen to be in the network, even if you cannot recognize your own location. And it may have a lot to do with the overall structure of the network, even if you cannot control that structure at all. And in some cases, the process feeds back to the network itself. A person with many friends may become rich and then attract even more friends. This richget-richer dynamic means social networks can dramatically reinforce two different kinds of inequality in our society: situational inequality and positional inequality.

Lawmakers have not yet considered the consequences of positional inequality. Still, understanding the way we are connected is an essential step in creating a more just society and in carrying out public policies affecting everything from public health to the economy. We might be better off vaccinating(接种疫苗) centrally located individuals rather than weak individuals. We might be better off helping interconnected groups of people to avoid criminal behavior rather than preventing or punishing crimes one at a time.

If we want to understand how society works, we need to fill in the missing links between individuals. We need to understand how interconnections and interactions between people give rise to wholly new aspects of human experience that are not present in the individuals themselves. If we do not understand social networks, we cannot hope to fully understand either ourselves or the world we inhabit.

1.What can be inferred from the first paragraph?

A.We can't be easily affected by strangers.

B.We are connected and form a social network.

C.We have negative effects on other social members.

D.We will not make a difference in a specific group.

2.What does the underlined word “it” in the second paragraph refers to ?

A.something larger B.our connectedness

C.the human condition D.a social network

3.A social network can be compared to a commonly owned forest because ______.

A.it remains healthy and productive.

B.it tends to magnify negative things.

C.it is creative and shared by people in the whole society.

D.what it creates can be enjoyed by everyone in the network.

4.What's the author's purpose in writing the passage?

A.To introduce the characteristics of social networks.

B.To urge people to understand how our society works.

C.To show the significance of understanding social networks.

D.To explain the possible consequences of ignoring social networks.

 

查看答案
试题属性

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