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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。 The...

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。

The actress, singer and former K-pop band member Sulli, 25, was found 1.(die) in her home Monday, the police said. Sulli’s manager found her while checking her home after Sulli failed 2.(answer) phone calls, said an official from the police Department.

Sulli, 3. legal name was ChoiJin-ri, stayed on the stage as a child before she joined the girl group f(x) under SM Entertainment. She formally left the group in 2015 to concentrate on other things, including 4.(act). She 5.(appear) in several films, and this year she became a host of a Korean television show “ The Night of Hate Comments.” Sulli returned 6. music in June and released a new solo album.

Since she started her career at the age of 11, Sulli 7.(consider) as one of the most popular performers in Korea. But meanwhile, she has suffered a lot from 8. Internet for 9.(be) outspoken insistently. Why did so young and beautiful a girl choose to give up her life this Monday? Some fans of the artists suggest that critical comments online have 10.(probable) affected her mental health.

 

1.dead 2.to answer 3.whose 4.acting 5.appeared 6.to 7.has been considered 8.the 9.being 10.probably 【解析】 本文是新闻报道。25岁的女演员、歌手、前韩国流行乐队成员Sulli周一被发现死于家中。文章讲述了她的生平。 1.考查形容词。句意:25岁的女演员、歌手、前韩国流行乐队成员Sulli周一被发现死于家中。此句是被动语态,句中用形容词作宾补,补充说明Sulli死了,故填dead。 2.考查非谓语动词。fail to do“未做成某事”,此处指Sulli未接电话,故填to answer。 3.考查定语从句。句中包含定语从句,先行词是Sulli,在定语从句中作legal name的定语,用关系代词whose引导,指Sulli的法律名字,故填whose。 4.考查非谓语动词。句意:2015年,她正式离开该集团,专注于其他事情,包括表演。此处作介词including的宾语,应用动名词,指表演。故填acting。 5.考查动词时态。根据句中this year和所给动词became可知,此处用过去时,故填appeared。 6.考查介词。此处指“回到音乐”,用return to,后面宾语是music。故填to。 7.考查时态语态。句意:自11岁开始演艺生涯以来,她一直被认为是韩国最受欢迎的艺人之一。时间状语Since she started her career at the age of 11和现在完成时连用,Sulli和动词consider是被动关系,应使用现在完成时的被动形式。故填has been considered。 8.考查冠词。句意:但与此同时,她也因为坚持直言不讳而饱受网络之苦。此处特指网络,用定冠词the,故填the。 9.考查非谓语动词。句意:但与此同时,她也因为坚持直言不讳而饱受网络之苦。介词for后用动名词作宾语,故填being。 10.考查副词。修饰动词affect用副词,故填probably。
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    On New Year’s Eve, I came across an old couple at a secondhand store. They moved slowly around me _______something.

“Can I help you?” I asked.

They stopped, looked at me and said, “We’re looking for _______ things that look new.”

Then they _______ . I didn’t. It must have been a private joke between them.

Noticing I looked _______, the man explained, “Look, every new year in the past we _______ to begin the year with new things. It was a goal to surround ourselves with things _______ and new so that we had new direction, new hopes and dreams for the _______ ahead.”

“How did that _______?” I asked.

“Well, after so many years, we discovered it really got us _______,” the woman said.

“Then why do you ________at a secondhand store? Are things bad financially?”

“No, not at all. We just discovered that things don’t have to be ________but to be of great value. ________ it’s old, it’s new to someone who ________ saw it before,” the man said.

“So, each year now we search for things that are ________ to others but mean the world to us,” the woman added.

This couple had spent most of their lives ________ that there was power in “things” and on New Year’s Eve, they should ________ old things and be surrounded with new things. They spent most of their lives believing that by doing so, their life was going to change magically.

________, the truth is, there really isn’t anything different from one day to the next, one year to the next, except for your ________ to it. Everything is there waiting to be ________, so everything is old until you see it for the first time.

I have learned a ________ that day and it has been the best New Year gift I have ever received.

1.A.in search of B.in charge of C.in memory of D.in support of

2.A.strange B.cheap C.old D.pretty

3.A.laughed B.nodded C.shouted D.apologized

4.A.shocked B.worried C.puzzled D.annoyed

5.A.promised B.tried C.struggled D.failed

6.A.fresh B.familiar C.interesting D.useful

7.A.way B.year C.goal D.chance

8.A.carry out B.pick out C.work out D.come out

9.A.somewhere B.anywhere C.nowhere D.everywhere

10.A.work B.volunteer C.stay D.shop

11.A.outstanding B.attractive C.depressive D.expensive

12.A.Even though B.Now that C.If only D.Ever since

13.A.seldom B.never C.sometimes D.often

14.A.common B.funny C.valueless D.harmless

15.A.believing B.proving C.explaining D.arguing

16.A.take hold of B.get rid of C.pay attention to D.put up with

17.A.Therefore B.Moreover C.Otherwise D.However

18.A.approach B.attitude C.contribution D.introduction

19.A.bought B.remembered C.improved D.discovered

20.A.word B.skill C.fact D.lesson

 

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Learn How to Have a Learning Vacation

Going on a vacation to learn a skill you have long hungered to pick up sounds like a good thing, but be careful, said John Spence, the president of a travel company in Calif. “If you don’t pick the right skill for you, or go in without realistic expectations, your time won’t enjoyable,” he said.

Here, he shares his advice on planning a learning vacation that you won’t regret taking:

Follow your passion. 1.. They include cooking, photography, art history, farming or a sport such as diving or horseback riding. To get the most out of the trip, choose something you’re passionate about.

2.? With whatever skill you intend to learn, figure out whether you want an immersion (沉浸) or only to occupy a part of your trip. It’s possible to learn cooking basics, for example, by taking a weeklong course at Ballymaloe Cookery School in Ireland. Another choice is to attend several half-day classes at the school and have more free time to explore the destination itself. “3., so make sure that it’s what you really want,” Mr. Spence said.

Consider your budget. No matter the skill, you can learn it by taking a vocation in a wide range of price choices. 4.. If you want to learn scuba diving (水肺式潜水), for example, heading to the Maldives will cost several thousand dollars per person, while a scuba diving trip to the Florida Keys is a more wallet-friendly choice.

Don’t forget the children. 5., if they are fun. “ Yes, you want your kids to learn, but you don’t want them to be bored by overloading them with too much information,” Mr. Spence said.

A. A little, or a lot

B. Don’t be influenced by others’ interest

C. What skill do you want to learn

D. Learning vacations can be great family trips, too

E. The choices for what you can learn on your vacation are limitless

F. Having a clear idea of your budget will help you home in on the right trip

G. Spending your entire break learning something new can be stressful

 

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    In June 2015, Hedlund gave herself a challenge: She would go an entire year without buying any clothes. At first she thought she’d try it out on her own. But because she was also in charge of clothes shopping for her husband and young son, she expanded the experiment to also include them. Hedlund found that she spent hundreds of dollars each year on clothes she and her family never actually wore.

With the exception of a single pair of running shoes, Hedlund succeeded in not buying any clothing for anyone in her family for one year. Along the way, the experiment brought her attention to something else: the clothing industry’s wastefulness. This problem, Hedlund realized, was fueled partly by people like herself, who bought too many clothes they didn’t need. These purchases power an industry where pollution, waste and unsafe working conditions are too often seen.

“ I wasn’t really aware of this dark side of the clothing industry,” said Hedlund. “It wasn’t the first thing I took into consideration when I started the challenge, but now it just makes me want to keep not buying clothing.”

It’s possible that consumers’ (消费者) actions can affect a trillion-dollar global industry. By controlling their consumption, consumers can send a clearer signal to clothing producers that they don’t want to buy so much and they don’t want to buy badly-made clothing.

However, minimalism (极简主义) has earned plenty of critics. “Minimalism is OK only when it’s a choice, and its followers are in the well-off middle class,” said Stephanie Land, a journalist for The New York Times. “ For people who are not so well off, it is not really a choice.”

1.Why did Hedlund include her husband and young son in her experiment?

A.She needed their help.

B.She loved them very much.

C.She was responsible for their clothes.

D.She wanted to face a great challenge.

2.What was one result of Hedlund’s challenge?

A.She did a lot of running.

B.She bought fewer clothes.

C.She stopped buying anything.

D.She changed her living conditions.

3.What does the underlined word “It” in paragraph 3 refer to?

A.Overconsumption.

B.Leading a simple lifestyle.

C.The experiment she did on clothing.

D.The negative effect of the clothing industry.

4.It can be inferred from Stephanie Land’s words that minimalism __________.

A.is not suitable for everyone. B.should be spoken highly of.

C.is popular with poor people. D.can’t be thought of as a good idea.

 

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    “ Go ahead,” I told Linda. “ Pick up the rock, and see what’s under it.”

Her 4-year-old arms struggled with the rock buried in the stream bed. Her eyes got big as she examined the worms after their nest was uncovered. She watched quietly, as they walked past her foot. She gently put the rock back and said,” Are there worms under all the rocks?”

This wasn’t school — it was a nature-based summer camp in New York’s Hudson Valley that I ran when I was 17. When I turned the kids over to their parents at the end of the day, they were tired, inspired by nature and knowledge.

Finland’s “forest kindergartens” use the natural world as a jumping off point for early academic instruction to make them enjoy learning. Finland is following in the footsteps of other European countries including Denmark, where outdoor education has been common for many years.

In the Finnish program, kids spend four days of a week, from 8:30a.m. to 6:30p.m., outside with a teacher. Built into the program is quite a bit of playtime. Kids get a lot of exercise and lesson plans are freely made so teachers can use what’s at hand and in season in their lessons.

While all this sounds less strict than a classroom-based kindergarten program, the results show that these types of programs have better results for overall physical health as well as academic performance and social development. But aren’t the kids who do this coming from wealthy, educated communities — so, of course they score better on tests? In fact, the greatest gains from spending time outdoors can be found in kids who are coming from less advantageous background. At a school near Atlanta, where kids spend 30 percent of their day outside, students have improved scores more than students from any other school in their area, and most of the kids there come from poor families.

1.Why did the author ask Linda to turn over the rock?

A.To help Linda be independent.

B.To see if Linda had enough courage.

C.To give Linda a chance to study nature.

D.To teach Linda how to protect animals.

2.What’s the purpose of Finland’s “forest kindergartens”?

A.To help kids learn about forests.

B.To popularize outdoor education.

C.To show the importance of play.

D.To develop kids’ interest in study.

3.Compared with classroom-based kindergartens, “forest kindergartens”____________.

A.seem to be less tiring B.have no fixed lesson plans

C.set many strict rules D.have no teachers around

4.What is an advantage of outdoor programs according to the last paragraph?

A.Kids joining them score higher on tests.

B.They help change poor kids’ families.

C.They do good to communities.

D.Kids meet people who are different from them.

 

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    When I was eight years old, I had cancer. It was really hard. One of the worst things was having to sit in the doctor’s office for hours during chemo (化疗) treatments. I’d want to walk around and do things, but dealing with the big intravenous poles (静脉输液架) that hold the bags of medicine was a pain. I’d have to roll them around with me. I’d trip over them, and the poles got stuck on everything. It made my stress over being sick even worse.

Last year for science fair, my teacher said we should think of how to solve an everyday problem. When you have cancer, the intravenous poles are an everyday problem. I started thinking of making a backpack for kids so they could get around and play and go outside while they are getting chemo. I especially want to make chemo easier for kids. I know how frightening it can be.

For my project, I got a backpack and made a model. I took a small box and made it look like an intravenous machine. I had a small pole sticking out of the top, where you’d hang the bag of medicine. Then I painted it to make it look nice.

After the science fair, I got a patent for my invention. That means I officially owned the idea. I was pretty surprised. Companies started talking to my family about making the backpacks. But it’s very expensive. A lot of people have donated money to help. So far I’ve raised $55,000.

Before the backpack project, I thought of cancer as terrible. But now I realize that a good thing that came from it was that I could help others. I don’t like seeing kids with cancer suffer through treatment. I hope my invention can help them.

1.What troubled the author most?

A.Her health. B.Her studies

C.The chemo treatment D.The medicine for cancer

2.Why did the author want to invent a special backpack?

A.To help kids know about cancer

B.To make treatment more effective

C.To make students’ school bags lighter.

D.To help kids feel better during chemo.

3.What does Paragraph 3 mainly talk about?

A.What the author did to raise money.

B.How the author made the backpacks.

C.What the author got from her teacher.

D.How the author got an intravenous machine.

4.What can we learn about the backpack project?

A.It was fruitful.

B.It has made lots of money.

C.It was started by a company.

D.It was a school-owned business.

 

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