They had to do so much walking after their car broke down on the way to the village yesterday that their _______ are still aching now.
A.leg’s muscle B.legs’s muscle
C.leg muscles D.legs muscles
He tried to avoid making mistakes, but the added pressure caused him to make more than his usual .
A.size B.space C.share D.state
Newton is shown as a gifted scientist with every human weakness stood at the point in history magic ended and science began.
A.who; where B.which; where C.who; when D.which; that
a diary every day and you’ll improve your writing.
A.Keeping B.To keep C.Keep D.If you keep
请阅读下面短文,并按照要求用英语写一篇150词左右的文章。
照片反映的是中学生暑期游览大学校园的情景。作为一名高三学生,请根据下表提示,就目前普遍存在的中学生暑期游览名牌大学的现象用英语给校报“英语角”写一篇短文。
注意:
1.短文须包括所有要点,可适度发挥,使行文连贯。
2.词数150左右,开头已经给出,但不计入总词数。
3.不得提及本人姓名和所在学校。
Visiting famous universities during summer holidays is gaining popularity among high school students.
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请认真阅读下列短文,并根据所读内容在文章表格中的空格里填入一个最恰当的单词。
注意:请将答案写在答题纸上相应的题号的横线上。每个空格只填一个单词。
Problem: On the scale of problems, “pictures of food on the Internet” is firmly first-world. And that is almost certainly a too-generous definition of “problem.” When it comes to photographing and putting your dinner on line, I say live and let live, you know? Maybe your salad was particularly inviting and pleasing that night, and I, too, have spent many an hour clicking “random” on Smitten Kitchen and salivating(流口水).
But I assume if you’re making the effort to arrange your food artfully and preserve its memory in a digital archive, you must... like food. And want it to taste good. A recent study published in the Journal of Consumer Psychology suggests that spending time focusing on images of food makes the food itself less satisfying.
Methodology: The researchers assumed that imagining enjoying something might lead to satiation -- the feeling that makes the second piece of cake taste not-quite-as-good as the first. To test this, they had some people participate in two experiments that they were told were separate -- one in which they rated how appetizing different photos of food looked, and one in which they ate some peanuts and rated how much they enjoyed them.
A separate group of people did the same experiment again, but in the photo-rating portion, some were asked to rate how appetizing the food was or to choose a preference between two foods, and some were asked to rate the brightness of the photo itself.
Results: The more photos of food people looked at, the less they enjoyed the peanuts -- if they were looking at photos of salty food. People who looked carefully at images of sweets enjoyed the peanuts more, suggesting that imagination causes satiation only if you’re imagining a similar food. In the second experiment, participants who focused on the brightness of the photos were able to enjoy the peanuts more than those who were thinking about the deliciousness of foods while they looked at the images.
Implications: You’ll probably enjoy your food more if you don’t take a picture of it, or scroll through images of cookies at work and then eat one when you get home. This also has potential implications for advertisers, who may unknowingly be giving away satiation for free when they show images of chicken wings or whatever in front of us all day long. But luckily the study provides a hint: Try not to think about the food’s taste while you take a photo -- just focus on your composition.
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