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请认真阅读下列各小题,并根据上下文语境和所给首字母或中文的提示,写出下列各句空格...

请认真阅读下列各小题,并根据上下文语境和所给首字母或中文的提示,写出下列各句空格中的单词,注意保持语义和形式的一致。请将答案的完整形式写在答题卡上相应题号的横线上。

1.Successfully applied, new technologies can a________ a country’s development and help transform many aspects of people’s daily life.

2.With sit-down exams now impossible, Ms Huang believes that students should be e________ in terms of their performance in classroom discussions during live streams.

3.The house, which was once the birthplace of the general, was found a ________ after a severe fire.

4.Coronaviruses can cause a range of s________ varying from common cold to more serious respiratory illnesses.

5.The President’s tour was characterized by a t________ schedule and rich contents. During the 8-day tour, he visited 5 countries, attended 2 meetings and participated in more than 70 activities.

6.Video games can be fun and exciting, but we need to look out when this pastime becomes a(n) _______ (上瘾).

7.Drivers who are too ________ (争强好胜的) are the major cause of traffic jams, because of their habits of driving too fast and frequently slamming on the brakes.

8.Fluency and ________ (准确) are two factors which determine the success of the students’ learning a second language in the future.

9.On April 4th, 2020, China held a national mourning for martyrs (烈士) who ________ (牺牲) their lives in the fight against the epidemic.

10.Many coffee drinkers in China have been in a panic that coffee causes cancer after a post was ______ (传播) on social media on the weekend.

 

1.accelerate 2.evaluated 3.abandoned 4.symptoms 5.tight 6.addiction 7.aggressive 8.accuracy 9.sacrificed 10.circulated/circulating 【解析】 本题为拼写单词。这种题型注意在拼写单词时不仅词意要与句子的语境一致,还要考虑到具体语境中所作的成分,根据短文所给线索,捕捉相关信息,进行分析断推理,确定其正确的时态及语态。同时还要注意其固定用法或搭配,才能拼写出正确的词形。 1.考查语境及动词。句意:新技术的成功应用,可以促进一个国家的发展,帮助改变人们日常生活的许多方面。分析句子可知,空格前有情态动词can,空格处要用动词原形。根据后面的“a country’s development”一个国家的发展,可知,空格要用动词“加速”,故填 accelerate。 2.考查被动语态。句意:由于现在不可能坐在教室考试,黄认为,应该根据学生在直播视频中的课堂讨论表现来评估他们。根据前面的“不能用坐在教室考试的形式而评估”,因此根据在直播中的表现来评估。本句的主语是学生,与动词评估(evaluate)二者是被动关系,要用被动语态。故本空填evaluated。 3.考查语境及过去分词作主语补足语。句意:这所房子曾是这位将军的出生地,在一场大火后被遗弃。分析句子可知,空格处在句中修饰主语house,house与动词abandon二者是被动关系,即房子是被遗弃的,要用过去分词,故填abandoned。 4.考查语境及名词。句意:冠状病毒可以引起一系列症状,从普通感冒到更严重的呼吸道疾病。根据后面的“从普通感冒到更严重的呼吸道疾病”,可知这是症状。空格处在句中作介词of的宾语,故填名词symptoms。 5.考查语境及形容词作定语。句意:总统的访问日程安排紧凑,内容丰富。在为期8天的访问中,他访问了5个国家,参加了2次会议,参加了70多项活动。空格处在句中作名词schedule的定语,要用形容词。根据后面的内容“在为期8天的访问中,他访问了5个国家,参加了2次会议,参加了70多项活动”,可知,日程很紧。故填形容词tight。 6.考查语境及名词。句意:电子游戏可能有趣和令人兴奋的,但当这种消遣变成上瘾时,我们就需要注意了。空格前有不定冠词an,因此空格处要用名词,故填addiction。 7.考查形容词作表语。句意:司机争强好胜是交通堵塞的主要原因,因为他们的习惯开快车并且经常急踩刹车。分析句子可知,空格处在句中作表语,因此形容词“争强好胜的”是形容词“aggressive”,故填aggressive。 8.考查语境及名词。句意:流利性和准确性是决定学生将来学习第二语言成功与否的两个因素。空格处在句中作主语,要用名词“准确性”,即为“accuracy”,故填accuracy。 9.考查语境及过去时。句意:2020年4月4日,中国举行全国悼念活动,悼念为抗击冠状病毒而牺牲的烈士。分析句子可知,空格处在定语从句中作谓语。根据时间状语“On April 4th, 2020”可知,要用一般过去时,故填sacrificed。 10.考查语境及时态。句意:上周末,一篇帖子在社交媒体上流传后,中国许多喝咖啡的人都担心咖啡会致癌。分析句子可知,空格处缺少谓语的一部分。“传播”的英语为circulate, 与主语a post二者是被动关系,要用过去分词,故填circulated 。另外circulate也可为不及物动词,此处也可表示动词在过去正在进行,可填circulating,故填circulated/circulating。
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The Chinese Garden of Friendship was built as a beautiful symbol of friendship 1. Sydney in the State of New South Wales and Guangzhou in the province of Guangdong, China (sister cities of sister states), to mark Australia’s bicentenary (二百周年纪念) in 1988.

The garden 2. (design) and built by Chinese landscape architects and gardeners,3. (follow) the Taoist principles of “Yin-Yang” and the five opposite elements — earth, fire, water, metal and wood. These principles also stress the 4. (important) of Qi, the central force of life and energy.

Yin-Yang 5. (play) such a vital role that just one missing element would disrupt the garden’s harmony and balance. However, when 6. (combine) perfectly, the five elements form a fluid and nurturing environment. Everything you encounter in the garden has been hand-picked and very carefully placed to capture the five elements and the energy of Qi.

Unlike western-style gardens, there are no planted flowerbeds 7. neatly-cut lawns, wild 8. (aspect) of nature are recreated in landscapes 9. feature waterfalls, mountains, lakes and forests.

The art of Chinese Garden design began in imperial parks during the Shang Dynasty 3,000 years ago. Darling Harbor’s Chinese Garden of Friendship is a small-scale version of 10. (type) private garden from this time.

 

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    Ten years ago, I set out to examine luck. I wanted to know why some people are _________ in the right place at the right time, while others consistently experienced ill fortune. I placed _________ in national newspapers asking for people who felt consistently lucky or unlucky to _________ me.

Hundreds of extraordinary men and women volunteered for my research. Over the years I interviewed them, watched their lives and had them _________ various experiments.

I carried out a simple experiment to discover whether their differences in _________ was due to differences in their ability to _________ opportunities. I gave both lucky and unlucky people a newspaper, and asked them to _________ it and tell me how many photographs were inside. I had _________ placed a large message halfway through the newspaper saying … “Tell the experimenter you have seen this and win $50.”

This message took up half of the page and was written in type that was more than two inches high. It was staring everyone straight in the face, but the unlucky people tended to _________ it and the lucky people tended to spot it.

Unlucky people are generally more ____________ than lucky people, and this anxiety affects their ability to notice the ____________. As a result, they miss opportunities because they are too focused on looking for something else. They go to gatherings focused on finding their perfect partner and miss opportunities to make good friends. They read newspapers ____________ to find certain types of job advertisements and miss other types of jobs.

Lucky people are more ____________ and open, and therefore see what is there rather than just what they are looking for. My research eventually showed that lucky people create good fortune via four ____________ . They are skilled at creating and ____________ opportunities, make lucky decisions by listening to their intuition (直觉), create self-fulfilling prophesies (预言) via positive expectations, and adopt a “never say die,” attitude that transforms bad luck into good.

1.A.never B.always C.sometimes D.seldom

2.A.messages B.activities C.reports D.notices

3.A.contact B.trust C.show D.follow

4.A.participate in B.learn about C.look into D.carry out

5.A.attitude B.manner C.lifestyle D.luck

6.A.share B.spot C.create D.predict

7.A.look through B.put through C.get through D.see through

8.A.hesitantly B.carelessly C.secretly D.excitedly

9.A.pass B.miss C.notice D.misunderstand

10.A.nervous B.violent C.awkward D.pitiful

11.A.difficult B.dangerous C.important D.unexpected

12.A.confident B.disappointed C.determined D.surprised

13.A.reliable B.hardworking C.smart D.relaxed

14.A.goals B.preferences C.principles D.steps

15.A.inventing B.noticing C.taking D.adopting

 

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Things only people who have worked overseas can understand

If you have ever worked or lived overseas, I’m pretty sure you can understand the following things!

We do not automatically become fluent (流利的) in another language. A lot of people believe that changing your geographic location can improve your language learning skills quickly.1. Language application takes time and has a number of factors that play into a person’s level of fluency.

We feel extremely lonely at times. Yes, living abroad can be wonderful.2. Sometimes, we think that no one back at home understands our true feelings and life challenges, but a lot of other people travel long term and work abroad. Maybe they are not facing the same problems as you, but they know exactly how you feel.

We don’t really like our birthdays. Usually, your special day ends with the last phone call you get from home and then you can look through all your greetings on social media.3.  You may throw a small party with some of your new friends, but it’s going to be nothing compared with the good­old feasts you used to have with your loved ones back at home.

4. Too often we simply can’t tell you if we will be coming home for holidays this season. Sometimes, our working/living permits require us to stay in the country for at least a year. Adding up the flight costs and additional travel expenses, traveling home becomes quite a challenge for us.

We will change.5. You become more mature, independent and open­minded. Usually, you return home as a better person than the one you left as.

A.The truth is: it isn’t like that.

B.We may not plan to move back home.

C.We don’t know when we’ll come home next.

D.However, it can get extremely lonely on some days too.

E.Living abroad makes us value the little things a lot.

F.Living and working abroad shape your personality a lot.

G.After that, you just act as if it’s another ordinary day in your life yet.

 

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It was Saturday. As always, it was a busy one, for "Six days shall you labor and do all your work" was taken seriously back then. Outside, Father and Mr. Patrick next door were busy chopping firewood. Inside their own houses, Mother and Mrs. Patrick were engaged in spring cleaning. Somehow the boys had slipped away to the back lot with their kites. Now, even at the risk of having Brother caught to beat carpets, they had sent him to the kitchen for more string(线). It seemed there was no limit to the heights to which kites would fly today.

My mother looked at the sitting room, its furniture disordered for a thorough sweeping. Again she cast a look toward the window. "Come on, girls! Let's take string to the boys and watch them fly the kites a minute."

On the way we met Mrs. Patrick, laughing guiltily as if she were doing something wrong, together with her girls.

There never was such a day for flying kites! We played all our fresh string into the boys' kites and they went up higher and higher. We could hardly distinguish the orange-colored spots of the kites. Now and then we slowly pulled one kite back, watching it dancing up and down in the wind, and finally bringing it down to earth, just for the joy of sending it up again.

Even our fathers dropped their tools and joined us. Our mothers took their turn, laughing like schoolgirls. I think we were all beside ourselves. Parents forgot their duty and their dignity; children forgot their everyday fights and little jealousies. "Perhaps it's like this in the kingdom of heaven," I thought confusedly.

It was growing dark before we all walked sleepily back to the house. I suppose we had some sort of supper. I suppose there must have been surface tidying-up, for the house on Sunday looked clean and orderly enough. The strange thing was, we didn't mention that day afterward. I felt a little embarrassed. Surely none of the others had been as excited as I. I locked the memory up in that deepest part of me where we keep "the things that cannot be and yet they are."

The years went on, then one day I was hurrying about my kitchen in a city apartment, trying to get some work out of the way while my three-year-old insistently cried her desire to "go park, see duck."

"I can't go!" I said. "I have this and this to do, and when I'm through I'll be too tired to walk that far."

My mother, who was visiting us, looked up from the peas she was shelling(去皮). "It's a wonderful day," she offered, "really warm, yet there's a fine breeze. Do you remember that day we flew kites?"

I stopped in my dash between stove and sink. The locked door flew open and with it a rush of memories. "Come on," I told my little girl. "You're right, it's too good a day to miss."

Another decade passed. We were in the aftermath (余波) of a great war. All evening we had been asking our returned soldier, the youngest Patrick Boy, about his experiences as a prisoner of war. He had talked freely, but now for a long time he had been silent. What was he thinking of — what dark and horrible things?

"Say!" A smile sipped out from his lips. "Do you remember — no, of course you wouldn't. It probably didn't make the impression on you as it did on me."

I hardly dared speak. "Remember what?"

"I used to think of that day a lot in POW camp (战俘营), when things weren't too good. Do you remember the day we flew the kites?"

1.Mrs. Patrick was laughing guiltily because she thought_________.

A.she was too old to fly kites

B.she should have been doing her housework then

C.her husband would make fun of her

D.her girls weren’t supposed to play the boy’s game

2.By "we were all beside ourselves," the writer means that they all _________.

A.felt confused B.looked on

C.went wild with joy D.forgot their fights

3.What did the writer think after the kite-flying?

A.The boys must have had more fun than the girls.

B.All the others must have forgotten that day.

C.Her parents should spend more time with them.

D.They should have finished their work before playing.

4.Why did the writer finally agree to take her little girl for an outing?

A.She suddenly remembered her duty as a mother.

B.She thought it was a great day to play outside.

C.She had finished her work in the kitchen.

D.She was reminded of the day they flew kites.

5.The youngest Patrick boy is mentioned to show that _________.

A.the writer was not alone in treasuring her fond memories

B.his experience in POW camp threw a shadow over his life

C.childhood friendship means so much to the writer

D.people like him really changed a lot after the war

 

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    Light and bright, cheap and cheerful: IKEA’s 400-plus outlets (专营店) in 49 countries all run on the same central principle. Customers do as much of the work as possible, in the belief they are having fun and saving money. You drive to a distant warehouse built on cheap out-of-town land. Inside, you enter a maze (迷宫) — no shortcuts allowed — where every twist reveals new furniture.

Compared with the prices of other outlets, IKEA’s are much lower. You load up your trolley (手推车) with impulse buys-a clock, storage boxes, tools and more chairs than you will ever use. You drag cardboard boxes, cupboards and tables into your car and reward yourself for your economy and good taste. Then you drive home and put your prizes together. You are satisfied with the bargains. IKEA is satisfied with your money.

The company’s name was a do-it-yourself job, too. IKEA stands for Ingvar Kamprad, from Elmtaryd ― his family’s farm — in Agunnaryd. That village is in the Smaland region of southern Sweden. Mr Kamprad founded IKEA aged 17. Well before that, he spotted a principle which would make him one of the richest men in the world that customers like buying goods at wholesale prices (批发价). First he bought matches in large quantities and sold them by the box. Aged ten, he sold pens in the similar way.

Setbacks inspired him. Facing a price war against his low-cost mail-order furniture business, he defeated competitors by opening a showroom. Dealers tried to crush Mr Kamprad and banned him from their trade fairs. He slipped in, hiding in a friend’s car. When they tried to threaten his suppliers, he relied on his own workers, and secretly sold his production to communist Poland. Decades later, east Europeans freed from the planned economy drove hundreds of miles to newly opened outlets in Moscow and Warsaw.

His self-discipline was world-famous. As a child, he removed the “off” button from his alarm clock to stop himself oversleeping. He rarely took a first-class seat. The wine didn’t get you there any earlier, he sniffed; having lots of money was no reason to waste it. He bought his clothes in second-hand markets, and for years drove an elderly Volvo until he had to sell it on safety grounds. He had his hair cut in poor countries to save money. Visitors admired the views, but were surprised that his house was so shabby. He worked well into his eighties.

His diligence and simple way of life set a good example to his 194,000 “co-workers”. But he was not mean. The point of cutting costs was to make goods affordable, not to compromise quality. He urged his staff to reflect constantly on ways of saving money, time and space. An improved design that allows easier piling means shipping less air and more profit.

Culture was more important than strategy. He disliked “exaggerated (夸张的) planning”, along with financial markets and banks. Better to make mistakes and learn from them. And use time wisely: “You can do so much in ten minutes. But ten minutes once gone are gone for good.” This did not apply to customers. The longer they stayed, the better.

Mr Kamprad’s impact on modern life can be compared with that of Henry Ford and the mass-produced motor car. Furniture used to be expensive, dark and heavy. For many people, decorating a home could cost many months’ salary. IKEA made furniture not just affordable and functional, but fun. The mission was civilizational, he felt, changing how people lived and thought.

His approach drew some fire. The company values struck some as unpleasant. At IKEA’s Corporate Culture Centre, lots of pictures of Mr Kamprad with his mottos can be seen everywhere. What’s worse, some parts of the supply chain seemed to have serious problems to overcome.

1.What can we learn about IKEA in Paragraph 1?

A.IKEA prefers rural areas for its location.

B.IKEA has 400 outlets throughout the world.

C.IKEA likes to store new furniture in a maze.

D.IKEA provides a lot of work for its customers.

2.The underlined two sentences in Paragraph 2 imply that ________.

A.IKEA tricks you into spending more money

B.you may buy bargains with impulse in IKEA

C.both you and IKEA are pleased with the deal

D.both you and IKEA are happy with the bargain

3.By mentioning Mr. Kamprad’s experiences before he founded IKEA, the author intends to tell us that Mr Kamprad ________.

A.was likely to become a successful businessman

B.preferred selling matches and pens by low prices

C.had been a well-off merchant due to his principle

D.enjoyed doing something promising with discipline

4.What can be inferred from paragraph 5 and 6 about Mr. Kamprad?

A.He never overslept due to his alarm clock being set.

B.He was against drinking but for sniffing at the wine.

C.He sold the old Volvo with the purpose of saving money. -

D.He didn’t give up the quality of furniture for more profit.

5.Which of the following has nothing to do with Mr. Kamprad’s success in business?

A.The pictures and mottos of Mr. Kamprad.

B.The setbacks Mr. Kamprad experienced.

C.Mr. Kamprad’s principles of management.

D.Mr. Kamprad’s self-discipline and diligence.

 

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