阅读下面短文,根据所给情节进行续写,使之构成一个完整的故事。
Bill was a 15-year-old young man. One weekend he went to the forest with his friends Russell and Jim to catch and collect rare butterflies.
Russell was the only one who had been to these woods. They had been there for 20 minutes and were deep into the forest. Russell and Jim stuck together, while Bill drifted to their left. He tried to stay within eyesight of them, but he was also watching for snakes.
As he went forward, suddenly a beautiful bird with a long tail flew by and caught his eyes. He followed behind to take some photos. But when he was done and glanced over for his friends, they were gone.
He shouted, but the thick woods only swallowed his cries. The last time he saw them, it looked like they were continuing in a straight line. So he turned to go back, but an hour later he was even more lost. He kept walking, though, figuring he would find a way out.
He walked, stopping to rest now and then, until it started to get dark. The woods became a horrible place where there were various sounds. The sounds reminded Bill of the horrible stories he had read. He felt scared but he didn't cry because he kept telling himself he was a brave man. Fortunately it did not got cold, which was good because he had nothing to warm himself up. Suddenly he heard the engine sound of a helicopter. But rescuers couldn't see him through the trees, and he wasn't going to run through the woods in the dark. He just prayed they would find him the next day. So tired was he that he lay down under a tree and fell asleep.
注意:
1.所续写短文的词数应为75左右;
2.至少使用3个短文中标有下划线的关键词语;
3.续写部分为一段,开头语已为你写好;
4.续写完成后,请用下划线明确标出你所使用的关键词语。
The singing of the birds woke Bill up in the morning. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
假如你是李华,从联合国儿童基金会的网站看到一则志愿者招募信息,为疫情期间无法回国 的外国儿童提供简单个人卫生指导和心理疏导。请你用英文写一封电子邮件申请信,内容包括:
1.写信目的;
2.个人优势;
3.希望能够被录用。
注意:1.词数100左右;2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;3.信的开头结尾已经给出, 不计入总词数。提示词:疫情期间during the epidemic/pandemic,联合国儿童基金会United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF)
Dear Sir/Madam,
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Yours,
Li Hua
注意:1.每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
2.只允许修改5处,多者(从第6处起)不计分,仅涉及修改和添词,不涉及删除。
Michael Jackson had been working in music since he was five, which made him very experience in the field. But that inspires me most is his intelligent and honest character. In addition his excellence in music, he loved people with all of his heart. He once says, "If you enter this world, knowing you are loved and you leave this world knowing the same, everything that happens in between can be dealt with." He lived by these word and lived his life to the fullest.
Good health is a precious thing. When we are healthy, we can learn, work and _______ ourselves and our families. _______, when we are sick, we _______, and our families also suffer a lot.
That is why the World Health Organization (WHO) is badly _______. Working with 194 member states, across six regions, and from more than 150 offices, WHO staff are united in a shared _______to achieve better health for everyone, _______.
All people should enjoy the highest standard of health, _______ race, religion, political _______ economic or social condition. The principle has always _______ WHO's work for the past 70 years, since it was first set up as the lead agency for international ________ in the new United Nations system.
In recent decades, the world has seen a rise in ________such as cancer and diabetes (糖尿病). ________ by forces such as rapid unplanned urbanization, globalization of unhealthy lifestyles and population ageing, these diseases now account for 70% of all deaths. ________, WHO has shifted focus, along with health authorities around the world, to ________healthy eating, physical exercise and regular health checks.
The organization has run global health campaigns on the ________ of diabetes and high blood pressure. It negotiated the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, a(n) ________tool to help reduce diseases and deaths ________ by tobacco. ________ these goals will require unfailing political and financial commitment, from member states and donors, and continued and expanded ________with colleagues from academia, partners on the ground, and other ________ of the UN family.
1.A.encourage B.support C.prepare D.raise
2.A.Therefore B.Moreover C.Otherwise D.However
3.A.scold B.scream C.struggle D.suspect
4.A.survived B.praised C.needed D.designed
5.A.commitment B.affection C.custom D.suggestion
6.A.everywhere B.everything C.somewhere D.something
7.A.because of B.regardless of C.in case of D.in view of
8.A.ability B.rule C.comment D.belief
9.A.changed B.stated C.guided D.showed
10.A.fortune B.health C.justice D.exchange
11.A.feelings B.reactions C.disabilities D.diseases
12.A.Driven B.Convinced C.Encouraged D.Declared
13.A.Surprisingly B.Consequently C.Unexpectedly D.Accidentally
14.A.distinguish B.expect C.explain D.promote
15.A.protection B.application C.prevention D.appreciation
16.A.powerful B.inefficient C.confusing D.academic
17.A.predicted B.replaced C.caused D.created
18.A.Evaluating B.Achieving C.Possessing D.Analyzing
19.A.cooperation B.attitude C.intention D.function
20.A.workers B.friends C.assistants D.members
Learning Is a Learned Behavior
Many people mistakenly believe that learning is an unchangeable trait like eye color, simply luck of the genetic draw. ''People are born learners, or they're not." 1. Here are three practical ways to build your learning skills, based on research.
Organize your goals
Effective learning often boils down to a type of project management. In order to develop an area of expertise, we first have to set achievable goals about what we want to learn. Then we have to develop strategies to help us reach those goals. A targeted approach to learning helps us cope with all the self-carping (自我挑剔)feelings associated with gaining skills: Am I good enough? Will I fail? What if I'm wrong? 2. While some self-carping is normal, these sorts of negative emotions can quickly rob us of our ability to learn something new.
Think about thinking
Metacognition (元认知)is crucial to the talent of learning. Psychologists define metacognition as "thinking about thinking", and broadly speaking, metacognition is about being more inspective about how you know what you know. It's a matter of asking ourselves questions like: Do I really get this idea? Could I explain it to a friend? Or do I need more practice? When it comes to learning, one of the biggest issues is not that something goes in one ear and out the other. 3.
Reflect on your learning
There is something of a contradiction in learning. Get into a discussion with a classmate, for instance, and often your best arguments arrive while you're washing the dishes later. In short, learning benefits from reflection. 4. Sleep is a fascinating example of this idea. It's possible that we tidy up our knowledge while we're napping or sleeping deeply. One recent study shows a good evening of shut-eye can reduce practice time by 50%.
Being a quick study doesn't mean you're the smartest person in the room. 5., thinking about your thinking, and reflecting on your learning at proper times, you can become a better study, too.
A.Is there any truth in these rumors?
B.By becoming the first to sail round the world
C.By deliberately organizing your learning goals
D.Isn't there something else that I'd rather be doing?
E.This type of reflection requires a moment of calm.
F.A growing body of research is making it clear that learners are made, not born.
G.The issue is that individuals don't push themselves to really think about their thinking.
Kristen Sorensen was 55 when she became paralyzed from the neck down. Diagnosed in October 2018 with a rare disorder that affects the body's nervous system, she never expected to walk again.
But earlier that year, the Brooks Treatment Center in Florida became the first center to use a unique technology developed in Japan --- the Hybrid Assistive Limb (HAL). HAL, essentially a wearable machine, helps those with spinal cord (脊髓的)injuries and muscular diseases regain their movements and strengthen their nerves and muscles. Known as exoskeletons, they're a type of lightweight suit, with joints powered by small electric motors, that serve as mechanical muscle. Patients use their brain waves to control them.
When Sorensen heard about the brain wave-controlled exoskeleton, she knew she had to place an order and give it a try. A trained nurse helped her fit HAL over her waist and trousers, connecting her to sensors that help pick up faint bio-electric signals on the surface of the skin, which communicate a patient's intention to move. Once HAL receives these signals, it helps support the person's movements.
After some training and efforts, Sorensen was able to walk at her daughter's wedding a few months later in December. It's a thought that Sorensen shares. "When I used HAL, there were people who came from all over the country to use the equipment," she says. "I would like this kind of technology to be more readily available and more accessible especially to those who learn slowly."
But it's not just those with disabilities or injuries who stand to benefit. By 2050, there will be more than 2 billion people over age 60, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), and exoskeletons could offer a solution to the world's aging population.
In the future, as human bodies wear down with age, an exoskeleton - powered by active minds - could help people stay on their feet. With such huge potential applications available, the global medical exoskeleton market will be worth an estimated $2.8 billion by 2023, according to a research company.
1.What do we know about Kristen?
A.She had much difficulties in walking.
B.She was paralyzed due to an accident.
C.She volunteered in a science experiment.
D.She never gave up the hope to walk again.
2.HAL can be used as .
A.brain wave B.electrical nerve C.mechanical muscle D.spinal cord
3.What's the right order of how HAL works?
①Persons put on HAL.
②Persons are connected to the sensors.
③HAL helps support the person's motion.
④Persons send out intention to move.
⑤Sensors pick up signals and pass them to HAL.
A.②①④⑤③ B.①②③④⑤ C.②①③④⑤ D.①②④⑤③
4.We can conclude from the passage that .
A.HAL can now be used with no difficulty
B.HAL may have a large potential market
C.HAL has been widely used in the world
D.HAL can only help people with disabilities