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阅读下面短文,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。 Nan...

阅读下面短文,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。

Nana Kwabena was in and out of the hospital as 1. child. He was born with sickle cell disease (镰状红细胞贫血症). It is a blood disorder that can be passed from parents to 2. (they) children. Kwabena's brother died of the disease in 2011. After that, Kwabena started an organization 3. (call) All One Blood. The organization works to help young people 4. have sickle cell disease.

Worldwide, there are about 25 million people 5. (live) with sickle cell disease. In the United States, it affects (侵袭) about 100,000 people, according 6. the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 7. (study) show that one out of every 365 African-American children are born with the disease. Many people 8. (wrong) believe that the disease affects only a small number of people.

All One Blood supports research to find a cure (治疗方法) for sickle cell disease. There are signs of hope. In 2015, the University of Illinois Hospital, in Chicago, 9. (report) that it had cured the disease in 12 people.

“I encourage kids 10. (know) that if you have sickle cell disease or anything that makes you who you are,”Kwabena says,“it can become a superpower for you to change the world with.”

 

1.a 2.their 3.called 4.who / that 5.living 6.to 7.Studies 8.wrongly 9.reported 10.to know 【解析】 这是一篇记叙文。Nana Kwabena生来就患有镰状细胞病。这是一种血液疾病,可以从父母传给他们的孩子。Kwabena的兄弟于2011年死于该病后,Kwabena成立了一个名为All One Blood的组织,致力于帮助患有镰状细胞病的年轻人。全世界大约有2500万人患有镰状细胞病。All One Blood公司支持研究找到治疗镰状细胞病的方法。 1.考查冠词。child为可数名词,此处表示泛指应用不定冠词,且child为辅音音素开头的单词。故填a。 2.考查代词。children为名词,应用形容词性物主代词their修饰。故填their。 3.考查非谓语动词。分析句子结构可知call在句中作非谓语动词,与逻辑主语organization构成被动关系,故用过去分词。故填called。 4.考查定语从句。本句为定语从句修饰先行词people,且先行词在从句中做主语,指人,故用关系代词who或that。故填who / that。 5.考查非谓语动词。分析句子结构可知live在句中作非谓语动词,与逻辑主语people构成主动关系,故用现在分词。故填living。 6.考查介词。根据固定短语according to表示“根据”。故填to。 7.考查名词的数。study为可数名词,根据后文show为动词原形可知应用复数形式。故填Studies。 8.考查副词。修饰动词believe应用副词wrongly,表示“错误地”。故填wrongly。 9.考查动词时态。根据上文时间状语In 2015可知应用一般过去时。故填reported。 10.考查非谓语动词。根据短语encourage sb. to do sth.表示“鼓励某人做某事”,后跟不定式。故填to know。
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    Driving laws in Ontario allowed teenagers to get their licenses (执照) at the age of sixteen! As my sixteenth birthday drew near, I got increasingly __ .

My father, who __ driving, was the clear choice to be my driving instructor. The first __ took place in the driveway. I was afraid to touch the gear shift (换挡杆), which was sticking out of the floorboard. However, my father___ explained everything from the gear shift to the turn signals.

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I was __ on a busy street the next night. I shifted from first gear to second gear with no____. Then came third gear. When I reached the __ I wanted, I put the car into fourth. I was flying in the car! My father's __ brought me back to reality. He said calmly, “Darling, there's a red light ahead.”My mind went blank (空白的). I did not __ what to do. I flew through the crossroads, which by chance was empty.

That night my father was ___. I cried silently. How____we hadn't hit anyone or any car. I waited for my father to ___me, but he did not. I realized the seriousness of my driving through a red light. That lesson has __ with me for thirty years. Until now I have not ___that day. I remember how __ a loving father who taught his daughter to drive is.

1.A.excited B.worried C.moved D.tired

2.A.disliked B.stopped C.expected D.loved

3.A.meeting B.lesson C.races D.talk

4.A.quickly B.patiently C.angrily D.suddenly

5.A.start B.take C.pass D.leave

6.A.repairing B.studying C.controlling D.touching

7.A.weak B.nervous C.afraid D.bored

8.A.imagine B.believe C.stand D.make

9.A.suitable B.free C.safe D.ready

10.A.finally B.usually C.surprisingly D.probably

11.A.experience B.training C.problems D.signs

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13.A.action B.voice C.looks D.feelings

14.A.hear B.wonder C.find D.know

15.A.brave B.proud C.careless D.serious

16.A.lucky B.strange C.unusual D.impossible

17.A.refuse B.punish C.fire D.doubt

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    Keeping the memory in shape is important at any age,but it requires a bit more work as we grow. There are some simple activities that can improve your memory.1.

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Breathe deeply and relax.

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F.When we try hard to remember something we often become nervous.

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Smartphones, tablets and smart watches are banned (禁止) at school for all children under 15 in France. Under the ban students are not able to use their phones at all during school hours, including meal breaks.

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McKinnon Secondary School in Victoria introduced a total ban in February and Principal Pitsa Binnion said this has been a success.

McKinnon students still have a Chromebook to use in every class for day-to-day learning but they’re not allowed to use social media. Ms Binnion said at first “teachers cheered and students moaned (抱怨) ,” but now they’re seeing the advantages. “They come to school and they’re not allowed to use phones at all during the school day, including lunch breaks,” she said.

“It’s been wonderful in terms of students communicating with each other at lunchtime and not looking at their screen,” she said.

Ms Binnion also leads by example and doesn’t use her mobile phone in school. “I think anyone can do it if we’ve done it.”

Not everyone agrees with the bans. Western Sydney University technology researcher Dr Joanne Orlando wrote in online magazine The Conversation earlier this year that Australia should not ban phones in schools because it’s important to educate kids to live in the age they are raised in.

“A good education for students today is knowing how to use technology to learn, communicate and work with ideas,” she wrote. “Banning students from using smartphones is a 1950s response to a 2018 state-of-play.”

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A. School is for studying.    B. Kids behave badly nowadays.

C. Teachers find it hard to control kids.    D. Her kids depend too much on phones.

2.What can we learn about the ban in McKinnon Secondary School?

A. Some teachers were against it at first.

B. Students can now see the good of the ban.

C. Students can use their phones at lunch beaks.

D. Teachers have stopped using phones at school as well.

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A. A book.    B. A notebook.

C. A learning website.    D. A kind of computer.

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    Coffee is an important part of Italian culture and since arriving here over six months ago, I have drunk a lot of it!

Of course, coffee is also very popular in the UK but coffee culture in Italy is a completely different story. In Italy, when you order a coffee in a café or bar ( 酒吧), you are served with a tiny, bitter espresso. This is“normal (正常的) coffee” for Italians and they are not so interested in the huge coffees that we drink in the UK. If you want more than one sip (小口) of coffee in Italy, lungo is a good choice. It is espresso with a little more water added, but still served in a small cup. In addition, while takeaway coffee is quite popular among Brits, it is not very common at all in Italy, especially in non-touristy areas. Generally, Italians prefer to drink their tiny coffees while standing at the bar and, for many, this short break is an important part of their day.

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A.By time. B.By space.

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Jo Du didn't want to marry Earl Lee with pins (别针) in the back of her dress. But no one in the wedding party knew how to make the repair.

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“I was so excited and so happy,” Ibrahim Halil Dudu said through a translator.“I like to help Canadian people from my heart.”

Earl Lee called the tailor's skillful repair, an “unbelievable act of kindness”from a“complete stranger who had only stepped foot in this country days ago.”

1.What was a big problem for Jo Du?

A.It was not easy for her to find some pins.

B.Her wedding dress had to be repaired soon.

C.She didn't know where to buy a new zipper.

D.There was something wrong with her scissors.

2.How did Hobson help Jo Du?

A.He introduced a tailor to her.

B.He lent a pair of scissors to her.

C.He helped her find the best man.

D.He helped organize her wedding.

3.Who solved Jo Du's problem in the end?

A.Earl Lee.

B.David Hobson.

C.Ibrahim Dudu.

D.Lindsay Coulter.

4.What can we infer about Lindsay Coulter?

A.She worked as a translator.

B.She felt sorry for the tailor.

C.She was a refugee from Syria.

D.She was a news reporter.

 

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