假如你是李华,你的朋友Tom写信给你说每次遇到重要考试,他都会感到焦虑。请你用英语给他写一封回信并提出建议:
1.正确认识考试
2.考前制定好合适的复习计划
3.考试期间正常作息,睡前洗热水澡、喝热牛奶等有助于睡眠
注意:1.不要逐句翻译,可适当增加细节以使行文连贯
2.词数:100个左右
Dear Tom ,
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Yours sincerely
Li Hua
假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌写的以下作文。文中共有10处语言错误,每句中最多有两处。错误仅涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。
增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写出该加的词。
删除:把多余的词用(\)划掉。
修改:在错的词下画一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。
注意:1.每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
2.只允许修改10处,多者(从第11处起)不计分。
Wechat(微信)is becoming increasing popular with people. Recently I have made a survey among my classmate about the use of Wechat. According to a result, 45% of the classmates admit they often use it because comparing with other means of communication, Wechat has more advantages. It was cheap, convenient and easy to send all kinds of messages around. Besides, 35% of they are against using it, saying it will affect their study. Not using Wechat, the rest has no opinion about it. As far as I'm concerned, although Wechat offers us great convenience, it should be made good use. We should not be slaves to it or let it to govern our minds and behaviors.
阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容或括号内单词的正确形式。
We are deeply saddened by the passing of Dr. Li Wenliang. Dr. Li Wenliang, one of the eight “whistle-blowers” who tried 1. (warn) fellow medics of 2. novel coronavirus outbreak, died early on Friday. Wuhan Central Hospital 3. (confirm) in a statement released on 4. (it) official Weibo account. “Our hospital’s ophthalmologist Li Wenliang was 5. (unfortunate) infected with coronavirus during his work in the fight 6. the coronavirus epidemic,” the statement read, 7. (add) “He died at 2:58 a.m. on February 7 after attempts to resuscitate were unsuccessful” Dr. Li is a hero, 8. will live in our hearts forever. May God bless all the 9. (courage) doctors and 10. (nurse) fighting on the front line.
I'd like to share a story from over 25 years ago that changed my life. During a vacation trip to California, I managed to _____ some time to stay with family friends in northern California but that meant in the short time I needed to find my way to the bus station, some 30 miles away. Being a poor student, I had little _____ to get there.
I tired to call various _____ but they were all too _____ to pick me up. Then, I got one person on the phone who _____ to transport me with limited _____! He came to pick me up about 45 minutes later. The driver was _____ and I remember wondering _____ the taxi didn’t have a meter. The driver was so kind. He knew I was upset so he _____ me with stories and good conversation. He said I looked like his _____.
At one point, I asked him why he _____ so little compared to the others. Then, he explained that he was actually _____ and hadn’t _____ his number from the phone book. When I called, clearly _____, he felt that he should come to help.
This man drove an hour to help a _____ he didn’t know for a fee that barely covered his gas, if that! This man’s _____ warms my heart every time I think of him. _____, I didn’t get his name and his face has since faded from my memory. But he is on my _____ often and I wish I could thank him _____. “Thank you Mr. Angel Taxi-Man! I hope your granddaughter knows what a _____ grandfather she has!"
1.A.spend B.spare C.waste D.kill
2.A.money B.time C.energy D.effort
3.A.train B.tram C.ferry D.taxis
4.A.reasonable B.unbelievable C.expensive D.cheap
5.A.refused B.agreed C.asked D.tried
6.A.distances B.funds C.space D.time
7.A.old B.young C.rich D.poor
8.A.when B.why C.where D.how
9.A.laughed B.helped C.distracted D.absorbed
10.A.granddaughter B.grandson C.friend D.daughter
11.A.charged B.paid C.cost D.took
12.A.graduated B.lost C.retired D.recovered
13.A.changed B.removed C.converted D.corrected
14.A.astonished B.pleased C.eager D.upset
15.A.relative B.neighbour C.stranger D.student
16.A.kindness B.intelligence C.caution D.care
17.A.Luckily B.Surprisingly C.Regretfully D.Anxiously
18.A.shoulder B.mind C.work D.relaxation
19.A.in person B.in all C.in advance D.in brief
20.A.powerful B.grateful C.useful D.wonderful
Entering a university is an important part of a person’s life. Today, many people go to a university to study and train for a future job in subjects like law, medicine or education. 1.. An important one started in Egypt over one thousand years ago.
The world’s oldest surviving university, AL-Azhar, is in Cario, Egypt. It was first built as a mosque for religion (宗教寺院) in A.D.972. A few years later, learners and teachers began meeting in the mosque. They read and talked about the subject of religion and law. 2.. Leaders in the city of Cario decided to create a school for higher learning and soon after that, and AL-Azhar University was founded.
3.. For these teachers at AL-Azhar, they needed to think about what courses to teach and how to teach them. The earliest courses were in law and religion. In a course, students read and studied with the teachers, but there was also free discussion. Often, students and teachers had interesting discussions, and there was no ‘right’ answer. In the years that followed, the new university interested scholars from around the world. 4.. At AL-Azhar, people studied the past, but it was also a place for sharing new ideas.
Over a thousand years later, AL-Azhar is still an important university in the world. 5.. Today, many of the world’s most important universities such as Oxford and Harvard still follow the same traditions as they do at AL-Azhar.
A. However, the university is not a modern invention.
B. There are many reasons to study in Egypt.
C. They came here to teach and do research.
D. Around the year 988, a new decision was made.
E. Its library contains many of the world’s oldest and most valuable books.
F. The cost of university education is increasing year by year.
G. A university was a new idea at that time.
NOT all memories are sweet. Some people spend all their lives trying to forget bad experiences. Violence and traffic accidents can leave people with terrible physical and emotional scars. Often they relive these experiences in nightmares.
Now American researchers think they are close to developing a pill, which will help people forget bad memories. The pill is designed to be taken immediately after a frightening experience. They hope it might reduce ,or possibly erase(抹去),the effect of painful memories.
In November, experts tested a drug on people in the US and France. The drug stops the body releasing chemicals that fix memories in the brain. So far the research has suggested that only the emotional effects of memories may be reduced, not that the memories are erased.
The research has caused a great deal of argument. Some think it is a bad idea, while others support it.
Supporters say it could lead to pills that prevent or treat soldiers' troubling memories after war. They say that there are many people who suffer from terrible memories.
"Some memories can ruin people's lives. They come back to you when you don't want to have them in a daydream or nightmare. They usually come with very painful emotions," said Roger Pitman, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. "This could relieve a lot of that suffering."
But those who are against the research say that changing memories is very dangerous because memories give us our identity (特质). They also help us all avoid the mistakes of the past.
"All of us can think of bad events in our lives that were horrible at the time but make us who we are. I'm not sure we want to wipe those memories out, "said Rebecca Dresser, a medical ethicist.
1.The passage is mainly about ___________.
A.a new medical invention
B.a new research on the pill
C.a way of erasing painful memories
D.an argument about the research on the pill
2.The drug tested on people can ___________ .
A.cause the brain to fix memories
B.stop people remembering bad experiences
C.prevent body producing certain chemicals
D.Wipe out the emotional effects of memories
3.We can infer from the passage that ___________.
A.people doubt the effects of the pills
B.the pill will stop people's bad experiences
C.taking the pill will do harm to people's health
D.the pill has probably been produced in America
4.Which of the following does Rebecca Dresser agree with?
A.Some memories can ruin people's lives.
B.People want to get rid of bad memories.
C.Experiencing bad events makes us different from others.
D.The pill will reduce people's sufferings from bad memories.