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假定你是李华,你的外国笔友Jeff得知你参加了你校学生会主办的“The Chin...

假定你是李华,你的外国笔友Jeff得知你参加了你校学生会主办的“The Chinese Scientist I Admire Most”故事分享会,写信询问有关情况。请你回复邮件,内容包括:

1.感谢关注;

2.你的分享;

3.你的感想。

注意:1.词数100左右;

2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。

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Dear Jeff, Thank you for your attention to the activity themed “The Chinese Scientist I Admire Most”, which was organized by the Students’ Union of our school. I am more than willing to tell you about the event. I shared the story of Mr. Yuan Longping, an agricultural scientist known as “Father of Hybrid Rice”. He developed the world’s first successful hybrid rice varieties, which dramatically increased rice production in China. His approach to rice breeding also serves as a solution to food problems around the globe. The scientists’ stories shared by other participants truly inspired me, motivating me to truly love science by making great contributions to it. Could you please tell me about your favorite scientist? Yours, Li Hua 【解析】 这是一篇提纲类写作。 第1步:根据提示可知,假定你是李华,你的外国笔友Jeff得知你参加了你校学生会主办的“The Chinese Scientist I Admire Most”故事分享会,写信询问有关情况。请你回复邮件,内容包括:1.感谢关注;2.你的分享;3.你的感想。 第2步:根据写作要求,确定关键词(组):attention to (对……的注意);more than willing(非常乐意);agricultural (农业的);Hybrid Rice (杂交稻);dramatically (显著地)等。 第3步:根据提示及关键词(组)进行遣词造句,注意主谓一致和时态问题。此处文章主要应用一般现在时和一般过去时。 第4步:连句成文,注意使用恰当的连词进行句子之间的衔接与过渡,书写一定要规范清晰,保持整洁美观的卷面是非常重要的。
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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。每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:把多余的词用斜线(/)划掉。

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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。

Recently I took a part in a geography research activity, whose theme was environmental pollution and protection. We took variety pictures showing the present pollution conditions of our city. To our surprise, there are still a great number people doing silly things to our surrounding. Some people often throw rubbish whichever they like. Some cars gave off harmful gases and waste water is pouring into rivers by some factories. Worse still, people sometimes have to make his way through dusty winds as a result of the pollution. Through our research, we have come to realize what everybody must pay more attention to protect our environment and that some measures should be taken to protect it.

 

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    Luis Escobar, a coach at St. Joseph High in Santa Maria, was just looking for a fun idea to change the practice for his summer program. _______, he took 14 runners from his school to the local animal shelter, and paired them with 14 dogs.

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And there was more good ________. Fred, who ran with Josh, one of the 14 high school runners, became a   ________ dog - his story had the happiest ending. After the run, Josh convinced his mom that their family needed to  ________ him.

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1.A.Otherwise B.Instead C.Therefore D.However

2.A.changed B.rejected C.presented D.knew

3.A.In particular B.In fact C.As usual D.After all

4.A.count B.adore C.possess D.occupy

5.A.ambitious B.thoughtful C.faithful D.enthusiastic

6.A.trainers B.employees C.kids D.teachers

7.A.hesitation B.introduction C.competition D.evaluation

8.A.filmed B.watched C.supported D.required

9.A.tricks B.games C.studies D.activities.

10.A.challenged B.shared C.researched D.blamed

11.A.comments B.refusals C.complaints D.demands

12.A.relaxed B.shocked C.disappointed D.embarrassed

13.A.declare B.guarantee C.guess D.prove

14.A.figure out B.get through C.respond to D.participate in

15.A.shelter B.community C.government D.family

16.A.job B.team C.run D.journey

17.A.news B.life C.experience D.practice

18.A.lovely B.wild C.clumsy D.lucky

19.A.trust B.adopt C.encourage D.comfort

20.A.wandering B.trembling C.thinking D.dancing

 

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    As your teacher passes out the math test, your palms turn sweaty. You notice that your heart has begun to race. Glancing down at the page, you suddenly forget those operations on which you had drilled only a few days earlier. Do you perform all additions first in a complex calculation? 1. Suddenly, you start to doubt a lot of things that you know.

If that sounds familiar, you might suffer from math anxiety. Or maybe not Even researchers who study this condition note that it can be surprisingly hard to define (下定义) math anxiety. 2. After all, it's not an officially recognized mental disorder in the way that depression is.

3. It asks things like “how anxious would you feel about being given a set of division problems to solve on paper”. Those who score high on these surveys about stress over making calculations related to numbers will be labeled math anxious.

In general, people who panic over their math skills tend to do worse in math classes than people who don't mind numbers. 4. “Just because you're math anxious, that doesn't always mean you're bad at math,” notes Rose Vukovic, an educational psychologist at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis.

Math anxiety affects people of all ages. It can lead to poor performance in math classes. 5. Throughout life, this type of stress can stand in the way of mastering skills or projects in a host of areas that rely on calculations. But the good news is that the problem is manageable. Researchers are finding ways people can cope with this stress.

A.But that's not always true.

B.It has an unimaginable impact.

C.And its impacts don't end at graduation.

D.Oh, you know it—well you' re pretty sure, right?

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F.It's also hard to identify precisely how many people suffer from it.

G.Math anxiety has also been linked to negative emotions from the past.

 

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    Imagine that you found a wallet in the street containing a stranger 's contact details but no cash. Would you go out of your way to return it to its owner? Now imagine that the same wallet contained a few banknotes. Would that change your response? Alain Cohn of the University of Michigan and his colleagues have taken such behavioral economics around the world.

In different countries Dr. Cohn's research assistants entered public buildings like banks, museums and police stations. They handed in a fake wallet to an employee in the reception area, saying they had found it on the street outside, before making a hurried exit. Each wallet was a see-through plastic card case containing three identical business cards with a unique email address and a fake native's name, a shopping list and a key. Most importantly, some wallets also included $13.45, while some had no cash. Then, the team simply waited to see who would email the “owner” about returning the wallet.

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With greater temptation (诱惑), then, comes greater honesty - at least when it comes to lost wallets and small cash. Interestingly, though, when Dr. Cohn and his team surveyed a sample of 299 volunteers, most of them predicted that the more money there was in a wallet, the more likely it was that it would be kept.

A certain doubt about the motivation of others is probably good for survival, so the response of the general population may be understandable. But is the warm inner satisfaction coming from “doing the right thing” also a powerful reason? As this study shows, such thought is real and universal

1.What does Dr. Cohn's research team try to find out?

A.How long it usually takes before a lost wallet is returned.

B.How people of different occupations react to lost w alts.

C.How people behave differently at public and private places.

D.How people respond to lost wallets of varying amounts of cash.

2.What is the second paragraph mainly about?

A.Work division in the team. B.Detailed arrangements.

C.Contents inside the wallets. D.Preparations made in advance.

3.What does Dr. Cohn's research find about rates of honesty?

A.They drop with bigger money. B.They vary from country to country.

C.They are quite the same globally. D.They are stable, unrelated to money.

4.From which is the text probably taken?

A.A research paper. B.A travel brochure.

C.A psychology magazine. D.An economy newspaper.

 

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    Are you likely to suffer from loss of memory from time to time? Smart cameras can now remind you.

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With the smartphone worn around your neck, the app automatically records a short video clip (片段) when a marked object comes into view. “The user is able to look through the application and see the last time they interacted with it,” says Truong. The app can help people track the state of objects - such as whether they locked a door or switched a light off - as well as routine actions. Ai present, it successfully records about 75 percent of interactions, but only works for fixed objects.

A similar but separate system can solve the problem. E. Akin Sisbot and Jonathan Connell at IBM Research in New York have invented a ceiling-mounted (安装在天花板上的) camera that monitors objects and people. It continuously watches an area, such as a tabletop in your home, tracking the placement of objects in relation to one another. It also remembers who first brought an object into the field of view as well as if anyone moved it afterwards. When asked, “Where is my wallet?” the system might respond, “It is next to the vase, under the magazines.”

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The accuracy of such smart camera systems may need to improve before they are widely adopted. “You've got to trust the technology for it to be of any comfort or reassurance” says Geoffrey Ward at the University of Essex in the UK.

1.How does the smartphone app mentioned in paragraph 2 work?

A.By recording the movement of marked objects.

B.By informing owners of potential dangers.

C.By switching off electricity automatically.

D.By scanning barcodes of household objects.

2.What is the limitation of the ceiling-mounted camera?

A.It hardly senses objects without barcode-like makers.

B.It fails to find objects thinner than 3 centimetres.

C.It is unlikely to make a sound.

D.It is unable to recognize movable objects.

3.What's Geoffrey Ward's attitude towards the smart camera systems?

A.Supportive. B.Ambiguous.

C.Concerned. D.Sceptical

4.What's the best title for the text?

A.New Smartphones Make Life Easier

B.Smart Cameras Help Increase Home Security

C.New Systems Help People with Memory Problems

D.Camera Designers Face New Challenges

 

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