阅读下面短文,根据其内容写一篇 60 词左右的内容概要。
Two years ago, Li Yuhua's daughter taught her how to shop online. Since then, the 51-year-old farmer in Wushan has been a regular online shopper. Shoppers like Li Yuhua are the new target for China's ecommerce giants, including Alibaba Group, which operates the Taobao platform, and JD.com. Rural China added 3 million more Internet users in the first half, taking the total number to 225 million, or 26.3%, of the country's total Internet population of 854 million, according to a report on rural ecommerce development released last week by the China International Electronic Commerce Center. That helped improve rural online sales in the first half of the year by 21% to 777.1 billion yuan (US$109.6 billion), outpacing the national growth rate by 3.2 percentage points.
''However, it is a little bit early to say that China's ecommerce battlefield is moving to rural China, '' said Chen Tao, a senior analyst at consultancy Analysys. Unlike urban residents, most rural Chinese haven’t experienced ecommerce shopping. While that provides online platforms with one of the last undeveloped markets for ecommerce, progress has been slow due to the lack of infrastructure(基础设施)and logistics(物流)support.
To address that problem, China's second-largest ecommerce operator, JD.com hired more deliverymen and tested drone(无人机) delivery services to improve service in rural China. Alibaba Group, China's largest ecommerce player, announced in April last year that it had invested US$717 million in Huitongda Network Co., which helps to boost sales in 15,000 towns across 18 provinces.
Another inhibiting factor in the development of rural ecommerce is the income gap. In 2018, annual per capita disposable income(人均可支配收入)in rural areas was 14,600 yuan (US$2,065) compared with 39,300 yuan (US$5,559) in cities. ''Lower disposable incomes in rural areas limit the consumption,'' said analyst Chen. ''It also takes time to educate rural residents to accept ecommerce services as most of them are new to online. There is still a long way to go to popularize online shopping in rural China.''
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假定你是高三学子李华。因新冠疫情,高考延迟了一个月。面对新形势,你对学习感到迷茫,所以写信给心理学家 Dr. Smith 询问缓解压力的方法。
内容包括:
1. 写信目的;2. 咨询内容;3. 期待回复注意:
1. 词数 80 左右; 2. 可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
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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。
Being a doctor, you may think I would always suggest a bottle of something for what makes you ill.
1., first and foremost, I believe in the “do no harm” motto when it comes to health care. For example, you may first try music before2. (take) a pill. It is safe and it does no harm to your money.
For most people, music is already an important part of daily life. Some rely on music 3. (get) them through the boring journey to work, while others turn up their favorite music to stay pumped during a ke wan gworkout. Many even have the stereo on when they4. (cook), taking a shower, or folding the laundry.
Music is often linked to mood. 5. certain song can make us feel relaxed, happy, 6. (energy), or sad. Because music can have such an impact 7. mindset and well-being, it should come as no surprise 8. the connection between music and health has been studied for use in managing different 9. (condition). Music 10. (believe) to have healing effects, but types of music differ in the feelings they arouse. For example, classical music has been found to cause comfort and relaxation while rock music may lead to discomfort.
Michael Evans was standing in line at the Treasurer’s Office last August, waiting to pay his taxes, when he heard a(n)____sound ahead of him. The elderly woman at the window was crying. He heard the cashier ____the woman that her house was in foreclosure( 丧失抵押品赎回权) and headed for auction(拍卖). He also heard the woman tell the cashier that her daughter had recently died. Evans, a businessman who had just buried his father, couldn’t____the idea of this woman losing her home ____after losing her child. He ____the window. “I don’t mean to butt in,” he said to the cashier, “but ____you can get her house back, I’ll pay for her taxes.” The amount added up to $5,000.
The old woman was shocked. Her despair turned to ____. The cashier left for a moment to___ that it was all right for Evans to pay it. Evans promised to go ____to the bank and come back with the money. But when he returned to the treasurer’s office, he asked someone else waiting in line to hand the $5,000 check to the cashier. Evans was trying to ____quietly and, preferably, anonymously(匿名地).
“I didn’t want this attention,” he explained.
___, attention found him. It’s not every day that someone pays a stranger’s tax bill. As is reported, Evans often finds himself on the giving end of charitable situations, though for years he went unrecognized for it. ____ paying the elderly woman’s taxes, Evans said he did it for ____ but to make sure the lady stayed in her own house.
A few weeks after the tax____, Evans received the Spirit of Detroit Award for his lifetime of ___. Again, he didn’t want the attention, but his son felt the honor was overdue. “It was good to see my dad finally get the____ he deserves,” his son said. Michael Evans is nearing 60 and will retire soon. Before he does, he hopes that his son will ____ him in a fund-raiser to pay for a wheelchair for a boy with an incurable bone disease. And he’ll continue to___ the local youth football league team, paying for their equipment, uniforms, and out-of-state travel. His son is willing to___ the business, saying that he ____ his life after his father.
1.A.disturbing B.frightening C.appealing D.exciting
2.A.ensure B.inform C.talk D.state
3.A.hand B.stomach C.eye D.finger
4.A.even B.quite C.right D.only
5.A.approached B.passed C.accessed D.marched
6.A.because B.unless C.if D.before
7.A.disbelief B.sorrow C.guilt D.fright
8.A.conduct B.confirm C.compensate D.comprehend
9.A.constantly B.frequently C.outside D.straight
10.A.run away B.slip away C.pass away D.put away
11.A.Consequently B.Unfortunately C.Otherwise D.However
12.A.As for B.According to C.Owing to D.In case of
13.A.nothing B.anything C.something D.everything
14.A.accident B.coincidence C.incident D.event
15.A.generosity B.courage C.optimism D.modesty
16.A.concentration B.recognition C.passion D.pride
17.A.attend B.instruct C.serve D.join
18.A.train B.promote C.sponsor D.offer
19.A.get on B.hold on C.go on D.carry on
20.A.copies B.models C.imitates D.reproduces
Culture Shock
Moving to a new country can be an exciting experience. In a new environment, you somehow feel more alive. Soon, however, the new and delightful feeling turns into stress and discomfort.1. Although not everyone experiences culture shock in exactly the same way, many experts agree that it has roughly five stages.
In the first stage, you are excited by your new environment. Your feelings about the new culture are positive, so you are eager to make contact with people and to try new foods.
2.This is the second stage of culture shock. Because you do not know the social customs of the new culture, you may find it difficult to make friends. For instance, you do not understand how to make “small talk,” so it is hard to carry on a casual, get-acquainted conversation. These are not minor challenges; they are major frustrations.
In the third stage, you no longer have positive feelings about the new culture. You feel that you have made a mistake in coming here. Making friends hasn’t been easy, so you begin to feel lonely and isolated. 3. You begin to spend most of your free time with students from your home country, and you eat in restaurants that serve your native food.
You know that you are in the fourth stage of culture shock when you have negative feelings about almost everything. 4. You become critical, suspicious, and irritable. You believe that people are unfriendly, that your teachers do not like you, and that the food is making you sick.
Finally, you reach the fifth stage. As your language skills improve, you begin to have some success in meeting people and in negotiating situations. 5. After realizing that you cannot change your surroundings, you begin to accept the differences and tolerate them.
A.Your self-confidence grows.
B.You’ll regret making the decision.
C.These are the causes of culture shock.
D.In this stage, you actively reject the new culture.
E.This is the phenomenon known as culture shock.
F.Now you want to be with familiar people and eat familiar food.
G.Sooner or later, differences in behavior and customs become noticeable to you.
Across the United Kingdom, as the COVID-19 crisis has bitten deeper, its citizens have started a new practice: Emerging from self-isolation every Thursday night at 8 p.m. to clap, cheer, and bang pots and pans to show support for the country’s front-line doctors and nurses.
But as the death toll today hit a single-day U.K. record of 980-and with the peak death rate still estimated to be two weeks away-the crisis caused by the scale of the pandemic has been worsened here by a new degree of political uncertainty. Prime Minister Boris Johnson was admitted to the hospital on Sunday and has spent his days and nights in intensive care fighting the virus, surrounded by the doctors and nurses of the National Health Service.
The U.K. is not alone in showing new found public affection for key workers, nor in facing an unprecedented public health emergency that has, in Europe, especially affected Italy, Spain, and France. A recent U.K. government appeal for 250,000 volunteers to help the NHS (National Health Service) yielded an army of 750,000 would-be helpers.
But the pandemic finds the U.K. at a politically uncertain moment, as a nation finally emerging from three and a half years of political issue over its chaotic departure from the European Union. A December election that gave a decisive victory to Mr. Johnson and the ruling Conservative Party added clarity to a Brexit mandate and was seen by many as a potential first step in healing deep divisions in Britain’s political and social structure.
Acknowledging the impact of the coronavirus on daily lives, Queen Elizabeth II, in a rare address on Sunday, praised the “national spirit” and thanked NHS and care workers, whose “every hour” of hard work “brings us closer to a return to a more normal time.” Calling on citizens to “remain united and resolute” to overcome the pandemic, she sought to provide comfort. “While we may have still more to endure, better days will return We will meet again,” she said.
1.What contributed to worsening the current crisis in the U.K?
A.The pandemic of COVID-19. B.Political instability.
C.The vote for Brexit. D.The December election.
2.The British showed widespread support to the fight against coronavirus EXCEPT by .
A.clapping, cheering, and banging pots and pans every Thursday night
B.advocating volunteers to help the NHS
C.organizing 750,000 helpers to join the army
D.praising the “national spirit” in Queen’s speech
3.It can be inferred from the passage that .
A.The death toll set a new single-day record and the peak death had arrived
B.Prime Minister Boris Johnson was receiving good medical treatment
C.the COVID-19 has been found in European history
D.Conservative Party has healed the deep political and social divisions
4.Where might the passage come from?
A.A noticeboard. B.A private e-mail.
C.A research paper. D.A newspaper.