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When our second child was born, the doct...

    When our second child was born, the doctor pointed out that her feet were turned inward (内向). “Left uncorrected, it would be a _______,”he told us.

We _______ to do anything we could do to help our baby. _______ she was growing I had to take her back to the doctor every two weeks to have each foot recast(重塑). _______ the casting was finished and it was time for corrective _______. Jim and I watched with hope and concern as she _______ to walk. Those first, awkward steps made us so _______. By the time she entered preschool, her steps appeared quite _______. Encouraged by her progress, we looked for something else to help strengthen her _______ body.

As it turned out, she loved the ________! When she turned six, we helped her join in skating lessons and soon she was skating ________ a swan. She kept working hard at every new ________, and her efforts ________. At fifteen, she competed in both pairs-skating and the ladies' singles at the 1988 World Junior Championships in Australia, winning both ________!

I thought back to the early years of ________ for Kristi—the years of fear for us as her parents, and the same years of frustration for her as a child who ________ wanted to walk. During those years, we didn't expect gold medals and a good professional career ________ her. We admired Kristi, ________her strength and efforts, and how far she had come on two tiny feet that had ________ been bound in heavy casts. In our eyes, Kristi had always walked with the ________ of a true champion.

1.A.problem B.mistake C.wound D.scar

2.A.aimed B.promised C.stopped D.refused

3.A.So B.If C.Because D.But

4.A.Suddenly B.Immediately C.Especially D.Eventually

5.A.shoes B.books C.bags D.hats

6.A.failed B.struggled C.wanted D.attempted

7.A.lucky B.upset C.proud D.helpless

8.A.hard B.special C.common D.normal

9.A.weak B.brave C.firm D.small

10.A.water B.ice C.fire D.air

11.A.for B.with C.like D.on

12.A.project B.side C.text D.movement

13.A.got off B.paid off C.put off D.showed off

14.A.events B.programs C.courses D.occasions

15.A.task B.reward C.challenge D.hope

16.A.seldom B.almost C.easily D.merely

17.A.in need of B.in spite of C.ahead of D.instead of

18.A.doubting B.respecting C.limiting D.controlling

19.A.once B.still C.never D.seldom

20.A.look B.shadow C.smile D.beauty

 

1.A 2.B 3.C 4.D 5.A 6.B 7.C 8.D 9.A 10.B 11.C 12.D 13.B 14.A 15.C 16.D 17.C 18.B 19.A 20.D 【解析】 这是一篇记叙文。文章介绍了一个脚部内翻的小女孩在父母的帮助和自己的努力下,治好了自己的脚,并且学习了滑冰。最后在世界青年锦标赛中获得冠军的故事。 1.考查名词词义辨析。句意:当我们的第二个孩子出生时,医生指出她的脚向内翻转。他告诉我们,如果不加以纠正,那这将是个问题。A. problem问题;B. mistake错误;C. wound伤口;D. scar伤疤。根据“her feet were turned inward”可知,如果不及时纠正,脚向内翻转会是一个很严重的问题。故选A。 2.考查动词词义辨析。句意:我们答应尽一切可能来帮助我们的孩子。A. aimed针对;旨在;B. promised承诺;答应;保证;C. stopped停止;D. refused拒绝。根据“I had to take her back to the doctor every two weeks to have each foot recast”可知,每两个星期我们都会带她去看医生,由此可知,我们在竭尽全力帮助孩子。故选B。 3.考查连词辨析。句意:因为她在长身体,我不得不每两周带她去医生那进行脚部重塑。A. So所以;B. If如果;C. Because因为;D. But但是。根据“I had to take her back to the doctor every two weeks to have each foot recast”可知,每两个星期我们都会带她去看医生,由此可知,因为孩子不断在成长,所以要及时去看医生进行调整。故选C。 4.考查副词词义辨析。句意:最终脚部重塑完成了,是时候穿矫正鞋了。A. Suddenly突然地; B. Immediately立刻地;C. Especially特别地; D. Eventually最终。前文“I had to take her back to the doctor every two weeks to have each foot recast”提到,每两周我们都会带孩子去看医生,经过一段时间的治疗后孩子脚部重塑终于完成了。故选D。 5.考查名词词义辨析。句意:最终脚部重塑完成了,是时候穿矫正鞋了。A. shoes鞋子;B. books书;C. bags书包;D. hats帽子。根据文章可知,孩子进行了脚部重塑,因此需要穿矫正鞋。故选A。 6.考查动词词义辨析。句意:Jim和我带着希望和关切看着她挣扎着走路。A. failed失败;B. struggled挣扎;C. wanted想要;D. attempted尝试;试图。根据“it was time for corrective shoes”及“Those first, awkward steps…”可知,孩子做完脚部重塑穿上矫正鞋后走路很笨拙,说明孩子走路还是很困难。故选B。 7.考查形容词词义辨析。句意:她迈出的第一的、尴尬的步伐让我们如此自豪。A. lucky幸运的;B. upset心烦意乱的;C. proud骄傲的;D. helpless无助的。根据前文可知,孩子接受了很长时间的治疗,因此在看到她能走路的时候会感到非常的自豪和骄傲。故选C。 8.考查形容词词义辨析。句意:当她进入学前班时,她的步子显得很正常。A. hard困难的;B. special特殊的;C. common普通的;D. normal正常的。根据前文可知,孩子经过了很长时间的治疗,有一定好转。所以看起来很正常。故选D。 9.考查形容词词义辨析。句意:受到她进步的鼓舞,我们找了些其他的一些事情来帮助她增强虚弱的身体。A. weak虚弱;B. brave勇敢的;C. firm坚固的;D. small小的。根据前文可知,孩子因为脚部内翻接受了很长时间的治疗,说明她的身体很虚弱,因此要帮助她增强身体素质。故选A。 10.考查名词词义辨析。句意:事实证明,她喜欢冰。A. water水;B. ice冰;C. fire火;D. air空气。根据后文“When she turned six, we helped her join in skating lessons and soon she was skating…”可知,在她6岁的时候,我们帮助她参加了滑冰课程,而且很快她就能滑的像天鹅一样了,说明她喜欢的是冰。故选B。 11.考查介词辨析。句意:在她6岁的时候,我们让她加了滑冰课程,而且很快她就滑的像天鹅一样好。A. for为了……;B. with与……;C. like像……;D. on在;根据前文可知,孩子学习滑冰后滑的很好像天鹅一样好。故选C。 12.考查名词词义辨析。句意:每一次的动作她都非常努力地学习,而且她的努力得到了回报。A. project 项目;B. side边;身边;C. text文本;D. movement动作。根据常识可知,滑冰有很多不一样的动作。故选D。 13.考查动词词组辨析。句意:每一次的动作她都非常努力地学习,而且她的努力得到了回报。A. got off下车;B. paid off回报;C. put off推迟;D. showed off 炫耀。后文提到“At fifteen, she competed in both pairs-skating and the ladies' singles at the 1988 World Junior Championships in Australia”在她十五岁的时候她在两场比赛中都获奖了,说明她的努力付出得到了回报。故选B。 14.考查名词词义辨析。句意:十五岁时,她参加了1988年在澳大利亚举行的世界青年锦标赛的双人滑和女子单人比赛,并赢得了这两个项目的冠军。A. events项目;B. programs计划;C. courses课程;D. occasions场合。根据前文可知,孩子参加了世界青年锦标赛的两个项目,赢得了这两个项目的冠军。故选A。 15.考查名词词义辨析。句意:我想起最初几年Kristi遇到的挑战。A. task任务;B. reward奖励;C. challenge挑战;D. hope希望。根据前文可知,Kristi在2岁的时候脚内翻,并且接受了很长时间的治疗,说明她之前遭受很多挑战。故选C。 16.考查副词词义辨析。句意:我想起最初几年Kristi遇到的挑战——作为她父母而担惊受怕的岁月,以及她作为一个只想走路的孩子的沮丧时光。A. seldom很少;B. almost 几乎;C. easily轻易地;D. merely仅仅;只不过。第一段提到“When our second child was born, the doctor pointed out that her feet were turned inward”在孩子刚出生的时候就被发现脚部内翻,作为父母就只想她能够走路而已。故选D。 17.考查介词短语。句意:在那几年里,我们也没想到金牌和职业生涯会在前面等着她。A. in need of需要;B. in spite of尽管;C. ahead of在……前面;D. instead of代替。前句提到,最初的时候只是想要孩子能够走路就可以了,在六岁参加了滑冰课程之后,在孩子十五岁时获得了冠军是意料之外的事,由此可知金牌和职业生在前面等着孩子。故选C。 18.考查动词词义辨析。句意:我们佩服Kristi,尊重她的勇气和努力,以及她用曾经被严重内翻而束缚的双脚走过的路。A. doubting怀疑;B. respecting尊重;C. limiting限制;D. controlling控制。根据文章可知Kristi经过了长时间的治疗以及刻苦的训练才取得现在的成绩。所以作者尊重她的勇气和努力。故选B。 19.考查副词词义辨析。句意:我们佩服Kristi,尊重她的勇气和努力,以及她用曾经被严重内翻而束缚的双脚走过的路。A. once曾经;B. still 仍然;C. never从不;D. seldom很少。分析文章可知,Kristi在小时候脚部内翻,通过治疗后开启了职业生涯并获得了冠军,由此可知曾经困扰Kristi的问题已经不存在了。故选A。 20.考查名词词义辨析。句意:在我们眼里,Kristi一直带着冠军真正的美在行走着。A. look看;外观;B. shadow影子;C. smile 微笑;D. beauty美。分析文章可知,Kristi无论是接受治疗或是开始自己职业生涯,都付出了自己的努力。由此可知,这种坚持、努力也正是冠军所拥有的内在美,所以故选D。
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Learn to Cite Sources (引用资料)

During your university education, you’ll be exposed to ideas and scientific theories of scholars and scientists. Unavoidably, your own ideas will be shaped by the ideas you come across. 1. That means you should go beyond what you learn in your textbooks or in the library. Your original work is the basis for your professor’s evaluation of your performance. Thus, academic honesty is fundamental in your university education. It demands that you cite the source materials you base your own work on. 2.

Correctly citing your sources helps you distinguish your own ideas from those of other scholars. On the readers’ side, it permits a reader to determine the depth of your research. 3. On the contrary, lack of citing will only raise your reader’s doubt.

So you need to learn when to cite and how to provide an adequate or accurate reference list. If you fail to cite your sources, whether deliberately or carelessly, you will be found responsible for plagiarism (抄袭) . 4. If you are not sure, ask your professor for guidance before submitting the paper or report. Keep in mind this general rule: when in doubt, cite!

5. For example, students from East Asia may think that copying directly from sources is the proper way to do research. Students in France, preparing for the final examination, may be encouraged to memorize whole passages and copy them into papers. Those cultural differences can lead to false assumptions about academic expectations in the country you study in.

A. Some university students may cheat in different ways.

B. These include other scholars’ ideas, figures, graphs and so on.

C. The academic challenge you face is to make something original.

D. Often, students want to use others’ opinions to support their own essays.

E. It also allows a reader to appreciate your original contribution to the research.

F. For international students, it is important to know local academic expectations.

G. Not knowing academic regulations is an unacceptable excuse for such behavior.

 

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    An international team of researchers from the University of Oxford have found that the way people use the Internet is closely tied to the seasonal movements in the natural world. Their online species searches follow the patterns of seasonal animal migrations (迁徙).

Migratory birds (候鸟) flood back to where they reproduce every spring. That migratory behavior is accompanied by some human behavior. “In English-language Wikipedia (维基百科), the online searches for migratory species tend to increase in spring when those birds arrive in the United States,” said the lead author John Mittermeier.

And not just birds. Mittermeier and his team surveyed nearly 2.5 billion Wikipedia search records, for 32,000 species, across 245 languages. They also saw variable search rates for insects, horsetails and flowering plants. Seasonal trends seemed to be widespread in Wikipedia behavior for many species of plants and animals.

This finding suggests new ways to monitor changes in the world’s biological diversity. It also shows new ways to see how much people care about nature, and which species and areas might be the most effective targets for conservation.

Mittermeier is encouraged by the search results. He commented, “I think there’s a concern among conservationists (生态环境保护者) that people are losing touch with the natural world and that they’re not interacting with native species anymore. And so in that sense, it was really exciting and quite unexpected for me to see people’s Wikipedia interest closely related to changes in nature.”

Richard Grenyer, Associate Professor from the University of Oxford, says search data is useful to conservation biologists, “By using these big data approaches, we can direct our attention towards the difficult questions in modern conservation: which species and areas are changing, and where are the people who care the most and can do the most to help.”

1.What have researchers found about species searches?

A. They strengthen ties among people.

B. They affect the animal movements.

C. They differ in language backgrounds.

D. They reflect animal migration seasons.

2.What is the purpose of writing Paragraph 3?

A. To summarize the research process.

B. To further support the research findings.

C. To show the variety of species searches.

D. To present researchers’ heavy work load.

3.How does Mittermeier feel about the search results?

A. Satisfied with Wikipedia’s service.

B. Worried about Wikipedia behavior.

C. Amazed at people’s care about nature.

D. Sad about people’s not getting close to nature.

4.Why does Richard think such search data is useful?

A. It helps to aim at conservation targets.

B. It increases interest in big data approaches.

C. It keeps track of trends in biologists’work.

D. It pushes people to solve difficult problems.

 

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    It’s 3 o’clock and you’ve been hard at work. As you sit at your desk, a strong desire for chocolate overcomes you. You try to busy yourself to make it go away. But it doesn’t. Here is another situation. Perhaps you are not feeling well. The only thing you want to eat is a big bowl of chicken soup, like your mum used to make when you were sick as a child. Food cravings are a strong desire for a specific type of food. And they are normal.

Scientists at the website How Stuff Works compare hunger and cravings (渴望) this way. Hunger is a fairly simple connection between the stomach and the brain. They even call it simply “stomach hunger”. When our stomachs burn up all of the food we have eaten, a hormone (激素) sends a message to one part of the brain for more food, which regulates our most basic body functions such as thirst, hunger and sleep. The brain then produces a chemical to start the appetite and you eat. Hunger is a function of survival.

A craving is more complex. It activates brain areas related to emotion, memory and reward. These are the same areas of the brain activated during drug-craving studies. Because of this, some scientists call food cravings “mind hunger”. People often crave foods that are high in fat and sugar. Foods that are high in fat or high in sugar produce chemicals in the brain. These chemicals give us feelings of pleasure.

In a 2016 study, researchers at Cambridge University found that dieting or restricted eating generally increases the possibility of food cravings. So, the more you deny yourself a food that you want, the more you may crave it. However, fasting (禁食) is a bit different. They found that eating no food at all for a short period of time lessened food cravings.

So, the next time you crave something very specific, know that your brain may be more to blame than your stomach.

1.Which of the following statements is NOT true when “stomach hunger” appears?

A.The part of brain which regulates some functions of our body works.

B.A chemical is produced by the stomach to start the appetite.

C.All the food we have eaten has been exhausted.

D.A hormone delivers a message to the brain for food.

2.What do we learn about food cravings?

A.It means the stomach functions well.

B.It ensures a person survives hunger.

C.It shows food is linked to feelings.

D.It proves the brain decides your appetite.

3.What’s the likely result of dieting?

A.The increase of food desire. B.The decrease of chemicals.

C.The refusal of fat and sugar. D.The disappearance of appetite.

4.What is the best title of this passage?

A.Dieting: It Makes You Crave More

B.Fasting: It Lessens Food Cravings

C.Food Cravings: They are All in Your Brain

D.Hunger: It is a Function of Survival

 

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    Buster used to be a lovely dog playing and running on a farm all day before his handler (训练员). His life had a big change after Will’s presence because Will found he did extremely well in sniffing tests. Will thought Buster had a special talent and decided to let him become a member of RAF police working dogs. Buster began working with Flt Sgt Barrow in 2007, and the pair was sent to Afghanistan’s deadly Helmand province. There, Buster saved countless lives by sniffing out explosive devices (IEDs), as well as weapons. He joined his comrades repeatedly on foot patrols hunting Taliban terrorists and tracking down bombs. He also acted as a useful diplomatic tool, due to his friendly approach to local children. The RAF soon had a long train of children in tow, as Buster drew in his crowd and entertained them.

After his glittering service with the RAF, Buster retired in 2011, and died in 2015 at the age of 13 at the home of his handler, in Lincolnshire where he had been enjoying retirement with his handler Will, his wife Tracy and their two dogs who will inherit their father’s career.

Over the course of his career, Buster is thought to have saved more than 1,000 lives. He also helped patrol British bases and searched vehicles at check points, and upon retirement was made the official RAF Police mascot (吉祥物). Buster’s brave exploits were even documented in Flt Sgt Barrow’s book, which was published in January and soon became a best-selling one.

Buster completed five tours of duty in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Iraq and earned a row of campaign medals, and it was because of his great efforts in these austere environments full of terrorism that he would be remembered. It was the saving of countless lives by searching out IEDs that saw the honor of official lifetime mascot of the RAF Police bestowed(授予)upon Buster. The RAF police are now planning to honor Buster as part of a special event to celebrate RAF Police Working Dogs.

1.What made a big difference in Buster’s life?

A.He took a sniffing test.

B.Will found his special ability.

C.He was chosen to work for RAF.

D.Will decided to train him.

2.What can be inferred from the passage?

A.Buster was born at Will Barrow’s home in Lincolnshire.

B.Buster’s children will also be a member of RAF police working dogs.

C.Buster was bestowed the mascot during working in Afghanistan.

D.Buster’s death in a campaign is a great loss for the RAF Police.

3.The underlined word “austere” in the last paragraph probably means “_________”.

A.severe B.respectable

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Smart Kids Festival Events

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Walk on the Wild Side

Not ticketed, Free

Join storyteller Sarah Law to hear science stories about animals. Along the way you’ll meet all sorts of beautiful creatures and discover life cycles and food chains. Best suited to children aged 5-9. Children under 8 must be accompanied by an adult.

Introduction to Waves

Pre-book, PWYD

Subjects range from sound waves to gravity waves, and from waves of light to crashing waves on the ocean. Mike Goldsmith explores the fundamental features shared by all waves in the natural world.

Science in the Field

Not ticketed, Free

This storytelling night features a scientist sharing his favourite memories of gathering first-hand data on various field trips. Come along for inspiring and informative stories straight from the scientist’s mouth. Join Mark Samuels to find out more in this fun-filled workshop.

Festival Dinner

Pre-book, £25 per person

Whether you want to explore more about food, or just fancy a talk over a meal, join us to mark the first science festival in London. Which foods should you eat to trick your brain into thinking that you are full? Find out more from Tom Crawford.

1.In which event can you decide the payment?

A. Walk on the Wild Side

B. Introduction to Waves

C. Science in the Field

D. Festival Dinner

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A. Sarah Law.

B. Mike Goldsmith.

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D. Tom Crawford.

3.What do the four events have in common?

A. Family-based.

B. Science-themed.

C. Picked by children.

D. Filled with adventures.

 

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