阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。
C919 was the first China-made aircraft. Actually, the research and development process was supported by more than 30 top Chinese universities, 1.(include) Tsinghua and Peking University.
The capitalized C of C919 stands 2.Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, and COMAC for short. The number 9 symbolizes"forever" in Chinese while 19 refers to its capacity of 190 passengers.It has not been 3.(official) in use yet, but the C919 4.(take)its first fly on 5 May 2017 and it was a remarkable success. It is now in the final testing stage and is planned to enter commercial service in 2021 with China Eastern Airlines. Though the C919 has not been put into official operation, there are more than 1000 orders 5.(announce) already,from home and abroad.
The successful trial flight of C919 also shows that the manufacturing industry of China is becoming more and more internationally 6.(compete )! C919 was designed and produced in China, 7. , however,was made with 8.(resource) from around the world. Undoubtedly,C919 is an 9. ( achieve) of global cooperation. In the future, COMAC also plans a wide-body plane, the C929, in cooperation with Russia's United Aircraft Corporation. The win-win attitude is just 10.makes China such an attractive and respectable nation.
“Don't drive across the Kalahari Desert alone”, my friends said. “You might meet Bushmen who have no _________on travelers. "When a traveler lost his way in the desert, a Bushman often waited for him to die and took away the travelers belongings. However, as across the Kalahari Desert was 1, 000 miles shorter than any other,I decided to_________ it. Everything went well until my car broke down.
The noon sun was terribly hot, and I felt _________ and lonely. Remembering my friends'_________, I was a little afraid, too. Then I saw a Bushman walk toward me and smile. I did not_________back. Later, he began to talk but I still didn't _________ him. However, when evening came, I was_________ that there was another human being with me. As he waved his hand every few minutes, I felt less afraid and at last_______
I woke in the early morning and_________found he had a small leather bag, full of __________. I opened the door of the car and in sign language I__________ him that I needed water for the car. He__________ and gave me the bag. I poured the water into the radiator(水箱) and it was not__________. The Bushman ran to the tall grass ,found a long hollow(空心的)stick and pushed one end of the stick into the sand. Then he put his__________around the other end of the stick, and water came out. The Bushman's mouth worked to__________ my bottle .When it was full, he gave it to me. I took the bottle back to the car, poured the water into the radiator, and then__________to the Bushman. Finally, no water came out and we walked back to the car.
I__________ to give him my watch but he turned it down. I decided to give him back a bottle of water taken from the radiator. At my insistence, he__________. I waved him good-bye and continued my__________. That evening I stopped at a small village. I was taking my bags out of the car when I saw my__________. It was on the floor of the car, where the Bushman had put it .
1.A.tickets B.mercy C.duty D.plans
2.A.end B.find C.try D.change
3.A.thirsty B.drunk C.confused D.amazed
4.A.experiences B.mistakes C.jokes D.warnings
5.A.call B.turn C.smile D.look
6.A.persuade B.trust C.recognize D.prevent
7.A.grateful B.surprised C.ashamed D.hopeful
8.A.stood B.spoke C.slept D.stayed
9.A.nearly B.really C.secretly D.suddenly
10.A.diamond B.water C.sand D.food
11.A.ordered B.comforted C.supported D.showed
12.A.heard B.understood C.believed D.remembered
13.A.enough B.clean C.safe D.warm
14.A.feet B.hands C.lips D.arms
15.A.fill B.open C.move D.press
16.A.adjusted B.reacted C.contributed D.returned
17.A.offered B.agreed C.managed D.afforded
18.A.improved B.replied C.quit D.accepted
19.A.speech B.journey C.walk D.work
20.A.book B.tool C.bottle D.watch
Resume(简历)tips:4 ways to stand out on paper
According to a recent study,recruiters(招聘人员)only spend six seconds looking at your resume. So how do you make it into the callback pile in those mere seconds?1.Here is a bunch of ways to do just that.
1. Use key words.
When recruiters look through resumes, they're looking for key words that match the job description, including basic key words will get their attention, but you can take it a step further.2.Then include those key words in your resume as well.
2.3.
My friend is a chef. Her resume looks a lot like any chef's resume with one surprising difference.Under personal accomplishments she wrote, “Won the 2007 St. Bernard Parish Pie Eating Contest.” It isn't something you'd expect. She's been asked about the contest on several interviews, which is the perfect time to tell the recruiter that she also baked all of the pies for the contest.
3. Turn your resume into an infographic.
4.Just ask college journalist Chris Spurlock. Last year he turned his resume into an infographic. Not long after, Spurlock's resume was posted on both blogs and twitter. If you're in a creative field, make your resume look different from the standard one-page list.
4. Make a video resume
Sales manager Stan Paprzycki shot a video of himself, posted it on You Tube, and then sent the link to potential employers. The result was almost 100 percent positive response.5.A video resume is better suited for jobs like sales and marketing.
A. Take part in a contest.
B. Add unusual accomplishments.
C. Better yet, his video resume got him a job.
D. Your resume doesn't have to be a one-page list of achievements.
E. Adding some personalities to your resume can't hurt, but avoid jokes.
F. By thinking outside the box and making a resume that will hold the recruiter's attention.
G. Check out the company's website and look for any company goals that fit your experience.
Researchers have studied how birth order affects kid’s personalities in the past, but one study out of the United Kingdom has found that firstborns may have an educational advantage over their younger siblings (兄弟姐妹).
Researchers at the University of Essex’s Institute for Social and Economic Research surveyed 3,553 individuals and 1,503 groups of siblings, and discovered that firstborn children tended to have higher educational aspirations and attainment. Only children and firstborn twins were not included in the study.
For each family involved in the study, researcher Feifei Bu examined sibling birth order, the number of children in the family, age spacing, sex, health, relationships with one another and educational aspirations. She found that firstborns had a greater probability—16 percent higher—of attending further education, compared with later-born sibling.
“The advantage of firstborns in educational outcomes may be partially explained by the fact that firstborns tend to have higher aspirations which push them toward high education levels,” Bu wrote in the published study.
She further explained to The Guardian that parenting could play a role. “It could be that the parents simply devote more time and energy to them; it could be that they are actually more intelligent. For me, I tend to lean towards the theory that the amount of time, energy and involvement that parents put into caring for their children is possibly at work here,” she said.
She also found age spacing to be a contributing factor. The further apart in age the siblings—for example, a six year instead of one year difference—the more likely both kids were to be successful. The idea is that with widely spaced siblings, parents have the ability to spread out their resources. In other words, they have time to give each child more time and money.
But younger siblings shouldn’t worry. The world is full of successful middle and youngest children willing to prove this study wrong.
1.Who are more likely to complete higher levels of education according to Paragraphs 1 and 2?
A.Only children. B.Firstborn twins.
C.Younger siblings. D.Firstborn siblings.
2.What is possibly important for kids’ educational achievement according to Bu?
A.Parental investment. B.Parents’ intelligence.
C.Kids native intelligence. D.Kids’ school environment.
3.What is the influence of wider age spacing between two siblings?
A.It may cause conflicts between them.
B.It may place more pressure on parents.
C.Both of them are more likely to succeed.
D.They are likely to be different from each other.
4.How is the text mainly developed?
A.By listing examples. B.By giving descriptions.
C.By setting down general rules. D.By presenting research findings.
Have you ever wondered how many cigarettes you're passively smoking while walking through the streets of a polluted, smog-infused((烟雾笼罩的)city?No?Well, a pair of digital developers just invented an app that will definitely and accurately answer that question.
Shit, I Smoke! was created by Brazilian-born designer Marcelo Coelho and Paris-born app developer Amaury Martiny in just a week, after they read a study that analyzed air pollution and its equivalent(等量)to cigarette smoking. The article, co-written by Richard Mueller, a MacArthur fellow and physics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, explains a mathematical model that compares smoking and tobacco-related deaths to levels of PM2.5, a microscopic particle(微粒)that is a dangerous, cancerous pollutant after burning.
The app shows that Parisians can effectively inhale(吸入) between three and six cigarettes per day, while a person in Delhi could be smoking up to 20 cigarettes-without even touching one--on a bad day. Other cities have worrying numbers, too (6. 5 cigarettes daily in Mexico City ).
“I was surprised to see that Buenos Aires and Sao Paulo have the best air quality in all Latin America,despite the fact that these are heavily populated cities,”said Coelho, who's originally from the latter, Brazil's largest city.
For both Coelho and Martiny, the app isn't only a useful tool to inform users about their city's air quality;it also makes this information more accessible and easier to understand. “These air-quality monitoring stations are just numbers, numbers that are very specific to professionals who work in environmental issues,” Martiny said. “So when you make this conversion(转换)to cigarettes, it makes it easier to understand what people are dealing with and the consequences air quality has in the daily lives.”
The developers' plan now is to keep working on and enriching the app's features. This will most likely include monthly average cigarette rates, and enabling users to get data from cities other than the one they're in.
1.What does the underlined part “that question” mean?
A.How severely a city's air is polluted.
B.How harmful it is to smoke in urban areas.
C.How many cigarettes one usually smokes daily.
D.How much harmful air you're taking in in urban areas.
2.According to Shit, I Smoke!, which city has the worst air quality?
A.Paris B.Delhi.
C.Mexico City. D.Sao Paulo.
3.Before Coelho used the app, he probably thought that__________.
A.Brazil might have good air
B.his hometown was a badly polluted city.
C.air pollution wasn't a problem in Latin America.
D.Buenos Aires had the best air quality in Latin America
4.In the opinion of Coelho and Martiny, what is the usage of the app?
A.Encouraging people to abandon the habit of smoking.
B.Recommending some best places for people to live in.
C.Helping people better know their everyday air quality.
D.Reminding people to do something good for the environment.
When I was nine years old, I went off to summer camp for the first time. And my mother packed me a suitcase full of books, which to me seemed like a perfectly natural thing to do. While reading, you have the animal warmth of your family sitting right next to you, but you are also free to experience the adventure land inside your own mind. And I had this idea that camp was going to be just like this.
On the very first day, our counselor(顾问) gathered us all together and she taught us a cheer that she said we would be doing every day for the rest of the summer to instill(浸润) camp spirit. And it went like this: “R-O-W-D-I-E, that's the way we spell rowdie. Rowdie, rowdie, let's get rowdie . Yeah!”. So I couldn't figure out why we had to spell this word incorrectly. But I recited the cheer along with everybody else. I did my best. And I just waited for the time that I could go off and read my books.
But the first time that I took my book out of my suitcase, the coolest girl in the room came up to me and asked me, “Why are you being so mellow(安静的)?” Mellow, of course, is the exact opposite of R-O-W-D-I-E. And then the second time I tried it, the counselor came up to me with a concerned expression on her face and she repeated the point about camp spirit and said we should all work very hard to be outgoing.
And so I put my books away, back in their suitcase, and I put them under my bed, and there they stayed for the rest of the summer. And I felt kind of guilty about this. I felt as if the books needed me somehow, and they were calling out to me but I just gave them up.
1.According to the author, what would the coming camp be like?
A.It would be very noisy.
B.It would involve lots of reading.
C.It would be full of danger and excitement.
D.It would make a good chance to get close to nature.
2.How did the author feel about the cheer part?
A.Puzzled. B.Excited.
C.Concerned. D.Frightened.
3.How did the counselor react on seeing the author reading?
A.She got very angry.
B.She praised the author.
C.She asked the author to share the book
D.She indirectly advised the author not to read.
4.Why was the author guilty?
A.She was kind of quiet.
B.She had to leave her books unread.
C.She was unwilling to open her books.
D.She didn't follow the counselor's advice.