Paying too much attention to the details, Yuke is _____.

A.out of the woods B.as free as a bird

C.not able to see the forest for the trees D.salt of the earth

 

If we had paid enough attention to the issue of the heavily-overloaded vehicles, the tragedy of the collapse of an overpass in Wuxi _____ avoided.

A.should B.could be C.should have been D.could have been

 

It makes sense that those introverted people can make up for _____ they lack in social skills with sincerity.

A.which B.what C.if D.that

 

The past week _____ China's sixth annual Cyber security Week held from Sept 16 to 22 nationwide.

A.marked B.has marked C.had marked D.was marking

 

AI will surely be a feature of future life, but it _____ be used responsibly and in a proper way.

A.can B.need C.must D.will

 

In the novel, language must be adapted to the characters who are speaking, _____ creates a vivid and believable character .

A.which B.who C.that D.what

 

A recent survey shows some students tend to just make unrealistic plans rather than _____ them.

A.submit to B.stick to C.cater to D.apply to

 

Li Na has become the first Chinese player _____ into the International Tennis Hall of Fame for her great achievements in this field.

A.welcomed B.to be welcomed

C.having been welcomed D.being welcomed

 

_____ interest in studying abroad is rising, more Chinese students who study abroad are also returning home upon completing their degrees.

A.Once B.Since C.While D.Until

 

When enough years _____ to enable us to look back, we sometimes discussed the events leading to his accident.

A.went by B.were to go by C.had gone by D.goes by

 

China's development can't continue without lawmakers, nor _____ move forward without scientists .

A.it can B.can it C.can't it D.it can't

 

Tu Youyou's route to the honor has been _____ traditional for she has no medical degree and never worked overseas.

A.anything but B.nothing but C.everything but D.something but

 

70,000 pigeons were _____ in Tian'anmen Square on Oct 1 to mark the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China.

A.delivered B.relieved C.released D.liberated

 

"Hongmeng" was once used to describe the _____ state of the universe before matter existed.

A.original B.systematic C.permanent D.unconscious

 

Shanghai joined other cities in enforcing strict regulations on waste management, making garbage classification _____

A.consistent B.compulsory C.conditional D.controversial

 

Directions: Write an English composition in 120-150 words according to the instructions given below in Chinese.

如今,许多家长焦虑地守在孩子身边、密切关注孩子一举一动,被称之为直升机父母(Helicopter parents)”,还有扫雪机父母(Snowplow parents)”,轰隆隆地扫除孩子通往成功路上的所有障碍,让孩子免遭失败、挫折。对此,学校校刊特辟专栏对此进行讨论,请以李华为名投稿,用身边的例子描述这两类家长,并谈谈对此的看法。

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

Directions: Translate the following sentences into English, using the words given in the brackets.

1.后悔虚度光阴有意义吗?(point)

2.科学家们已证明,吸猫撸狗是一种减轻压力的有效方式。(prove)

3.可能你既不是霸凌者也不是受害人,但如果你知道有人正遭受霸凌,不要袖手旁观任其发生。(bully)

4.何先生买下这座铜像并捐赠给了国家,不仅彰显其令人钦佩的家国情怀,而且还提升了大众保护文物(relics)的意识。(patriotism)

 

Directions: Read the following passage. Summarize the main idea and the main point(s) of the passage in no more than 60 words. Use your own words as far as possible.

New Research on Kids’ Poor Math Achievement

If the thought of a math test makes you break out in a cold sweat, Mom or Dad may be partly to blame, according to the new research published in Psychological Science.

A team of researchers found that children of math-anxious parents learned less math over the school year and were more likely to be math-anxious themselves—but only when these parents provided frequent help on the child’s math homework.

Previous research from this group has established that when teachers are anxious about math, their students learn less math during the school year. The current study is novel in that it establishes a link between parents’ and children’s math anxiety. These findings suggest that adults’ attitudes toward math can play an important role in children’s math achievement.

“We often don’t think about how important parents’ own attitudes are in determining their children’s academic achievement. But our work suggests that if a parent is walking around saying ‘Oh, I don’t like math’ or ‘this stuff makes me nervous,’ kids pick up on this messaging and it affects their success,” explained Beilock, professor in psychology.

“Math-anxious parents may be less effective in explaining math concepts to children, and may not respond well when children make a mistake or solve a problem in a novel way,” added Levine, Beilock’s colleague.

438 first- and second-grade students and their primary caregivers participated in the study. Children were assessed in math achievement and math anxiety at both the beginning and end of the school year. As a control, the team also assessed reading achievement, which they found was not related to parents’ math anxiety. Parents completed a questionnaire about their own nervousness and anxiety around math and how often they helped their children with math homework.

The researchers believe the link between parents’ math anxiety and children’s math performance stems more from math attitudes than genetics.

 

Directions: Read the passage carefully. Fill in each blank with a proper sentence given in the box. Each sentence can be used only once. Note that there are two more sentences than you need.

How Colleges Can Measure Up in Teaching “Critical Thinking”

After becoming president of Purdue University in 2013, Mitch Daniels asked the teaching staff to prove that their students have actually achieved one of higher education’s most important goals: critical thinking skills. 1. Mr. Daniels needed to justify the high cost of attending Purdue to its students and their families. After all, the percentage of Americans who say a college degree is “very important” has fallen dramatically in the last 5-6 years.

Purdue now has a pilot test to assess students’ critical thinking skills. 2. However, they need not worry so much. The results of a recent experiment showed that professors could use standard grading scale to measure how well students did in three key areas: critical thinking, written communication and language literacy.

3. The organizers of the experiment concluded that far fewer students were achieving at high levels on critical thinking than they were doing for written communication or language literacy. And that conclusion is based only on students nearing graduation.

American universities, despite their global reputation for excellence in teaching, have only begun to demonstrate what they can produce in real-world learning. Knowledge-based degrees are still important, but employers are demanding advanced thinking skills from college graduates. 4.

A. If the intellectual worth of a college degree can be accurately measured, more people will seek higher education―and come out better thinkers.

B. Two years before, a nationwide study of college graduates had shown that more than a third had made no significant gains in such mental abilities during their school years.

C. Despite the success of the experiment, the actual results are frustrating, and mostly confirm earlier studies.

D. Many can’t reason clearly or perform competently in analyzing complex, non-technical problems.

E. Yet like many college teachers in the U.S., the professors remain doubtful that their work as educators can be measured by a “learning outcome” such as a graduate’s ability to investigate and reason.

F. It is important to identify the common goals of general higher education and translate them into the design of the learning outcomes assessment.

 

    Imagine how you’d feel if you had to get more than 9,000 tons of junk out to the sidewalk. That’s how much trash is floating around in space. In fact, there’s about 4 million pounds flying over our heads in low-Earth orbit. Daan, a Dutch artist, and his team at Space Waste Lab have come up with a creative plan that could clear up space junk in a spectacular fashion.

Most space waste comes from dead satellites and rockets. Functioning satellites are the backbone of the information systems that keep our world running smoothly. But all the satellites eventually become obsolete within just a few decades. When they die out, there’s the problem of them drifting in outer space, collecting in what scientists call the “graveyard orbit.”

Maybe you’re thinking, “Why should I care about garbage 12,500 miles above me?” Well, all that fun stuff that satellites help beam down to us—mobile games, Instagram, cat videos—could be shut down by space waste. Lots of old junk floating around up there, plus new satellites added each year, means more and more high-speed collisions (碰撞). And when chunks of junk crash into one another, they break apart into millions of pieces, quickly building up speed and turning into fast-moving objects, which are dangerous to operational satellites as well as astronauts working on the International Space Station.

Space waste is a problem that’s escalated so much, some scientists say that by 2050 we’ll be forced to stop launching new spacecraft altogether, including new satellites. Think about that for a minute. When the last satellites finally become disused, GPS, cell phones, and the Internet will no longer function.

So we have to find a way to deal with this space garbage, and Daan pictures a sort of trash pickup, which involves groups of small spacecraft casting large nets into orbit that would collect space debris (碎片) and send it back toward Earth at top speed. Here’s the best part—while reentering Earth’s atmosphere, the pieces of junk would burn up all at once, creating a light show similar to hundreds of shooting stars falling in the night sky. A spectacle indeed!

To get ready for such an amazing effort, Space Waste Lab has been traveling to major cities across Europe and enlightening the public on the problem of the junk in space. But Daan doesn’t just talk about ways to relieve the problem—he’s created something a little grander than that. In October 2018, his team launched Space Waste Lab Performance, an outdoor art exhibition that shows the location of each piece of space trash using large lasers that make each debris look a bit like a star wandering slowly and silently over the sky, allowing viewers to wave and say, “Hallo, space trash!”

1.The word “obsolete” (paragraph 2) is closest in meaning to “______”.

A.accessible B.profitable

C.floating D.outdated

2.According to the passage, which sentence best replaces the question mark in the diagram?

A.Working satellites can be damaged and astronauts can be hurt.

B.Satellites can help people track the weather and find new locations.

C.There is more junk floating in space each year as new satellites are added.

D.The Space Waste Lab Performance can show people where satellites are located.

3.Which of the following best supports the idea that space waste should be dealt with very soon

A.Sentences  B.Sentence

C.Sentence  D.Sentence

4.Which of the following might be the best title of the passage?

A.Space Junk Harms Digital Systems

B.Artists’ Proposal to Save Space

C.A New Glimpse into Outer Space

D.Test of Waste Collection Nets

 

    Read the information taken from the pain reliever bottles and answer the questions.

 

Medicine A

Drug Facts

Active ingredient        Purpose

(in each tablet)

Pain reliever/

325 mg…………..…………fever reducer

Uses

provides temporary relief of

■ headache   ■ pain and fever of colds

■ toothache   ■ muscle pain

■ minor pain of arthritis

Warnings

Reye’s syndrome: Children and teenagers who have or are recovering from chicken pox or flu-like symptoms should not use this product. When using this product, if changes in behavior with nausea and vomiting occur, consult a doctor because these symptoms could be an early sign of Reye’s syndrome, a rare but serious illness.

Alcohol warning: If you consume 3 or more alcoholic drinks every day, ask your doctor whether you should take aspirin or other pain relievers/fever reducers. Aspirin may cause stomach bleeding.

Ask a doctor before use if you have

■asthma ■stomach problems that persist or recur ■ulcers ■ bleeding problems

Stop use and ask a doctor if

■ pain worsens or lasts more than 10 days

■ fever worsens or lasts more than 3 days

■ new symptoms occur

■ redness or swelling is presents

■ ringing in the ears or loss of hearing occurs

Directions

■ adults: 1 to 2 tablets with water. Dosage may be repeated every 4 hours, not to exceed 12 tablets in 24 hours.

■ children under 12: consult a doctor.

 

Medicine B

Drug Facts

------------------------------------------------

Active ingredient        Purpose

(in each gelcap)

Pain reliever/

500mg…………………..…fever reducer

Uses

■ temporarily relieves minor aches and pains due to headache, muscular aches, backache, the common cold, toothache, minor pain of arthritis

■ temporarily reduces fever

Warnings

Alcohol warning: If you consume 3 or more alcoholic drinks every day, ask your doctor whether you should take This product or other pain relievers/fever reducers. This product may cause liver damage.

Overdose warning: Taking more than

the recommend dose (overdose) may cause liver damage. In case of overdose, get medical help or contact a Poison Control Center right away. Quick medical attention is critical for adults as well as for children even if you do not notice any signs or symptoms.

Directions

■ do not take more than directed (see

overdose warning)

■ adults and children 12 years and over: take 2 gelcaps every 4 to 6 hours as needed. Do not take more than 8 gelcaps in 24 hours.

■ children under 12 years: do not use this adult Extra Strength product in children under 12 years of age; this will provide more than the recommended dose (overdose) of acetaminophen and may cause liver damage.

 

 

1.Which medicine may hurt liver according to the instructions?

A.Medicine A. B.Medicine B.

C.Both medicines. D.Neither medicine.

2.These two medicines are most suitable for _____.

A.a child who has a common cold B.an adult who has trouble falling asleep

C.a teenager who slightly hurt his wrist D.an old man who has stomach bleeding

3.Which of the following can be found in the instructions?

A.Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI). B.Ingredients of the medicine.

C.Facts about the origin of the medicine. D.Names of the doctors to consult.

 

Leftover again? Hurray

Here’s the deal: You’re as hungry as a horse and you want a delicious meal from a fine restaurant, but you’re a little low on funds.

So what do you do? If you happen to live in Europe, the answer is as easy as pie: You pull out your smartphone or tablet, and tap Too Good To Go, Europe’s most popular app. Approximately 23,000 restaurants and food sellers post their leftover offerings on the app for half their usual cost.

Why all this incredible generosity? Unbelievably, one-third of the world’s food is thrown away, and nearly one billion people don’t have enough to eat. Besides, burning wasted food releases harmful carbon dioxide emissions into the atmosphere, which contributes to climate change. That’s why environment-minded companies around the world are creating apps for phones, tablets, and other smart devices that connect uneaten food with people who want or need it.

After a long day at work, Anne, a 34-year-old student, pulls out her smartphone and chooses a noodle dish—pasta with mushrooms. Then she heads to a restaurant on the banks of the Spree River, where the owner packs her dinner and also offers her a scoop of free ice cream, which is a reward for bringing her own container.

Indeed, there are many programs serving the same mission around the world. In America, people are using an app called Food for All. One hour before a restaurant closes, its staff can post leftover meals to the app for up to 80 percent off menu prices. The app also allows customers to donate leftover meals to others.

In the Netherlands, 77,000 people have downloaded an app called NoFoodWasted. This program allows grocery store workers to share products that are approaching their expiration dates with customers who might need them.

Some countries are taking their commitment to reducing food waste a step further. France and the Czech Republic, for example, have laws that prohibit restaurants and grocery stores from throwing away food. Instead, workers are required to donate that food to charity.

So think about if there might be a better use for your uneaten vegetables. The planet will thank you.

1.What is this passage mainly about?

A.Restaurants can post leftover meals on the app Food for All.

B.Apps are designed connecting leftover food with people in need.

C.Stores share food approaching their expiration dates with customers.

D.It’s popular for people to claim food that might otherwise be thrown away.

2.What is the result when lots of food is thrown out and later burned up?

A.Carbon dioxide is given off, worsening the problem of climate change.

B.Some countries have laws making restaurants donate the food they make.

C.Governments have made many apps that let people find cheap meals.

D.Nearly one billion people on the planet do not get enough food to eat.

3.What can you infer from the passage?

A.Anne packed a tasty pasta and mushroom dish to give away to charity.

B.The restaurant Anne visits sells its leftover food at a discount each day.

C.The 80-percent-off deal offered on app is not available during lunch hours.

D.Laws have been passed to prevent restaurants from throwing out leftover food.

4.This passage would be most useful for a student research project on _____.

A.application of technology to help solve the problem of leftover food

B.laws to help promote the safe transportation and sale of food products

C.restaurants using high-tech solutions to reduce packaging waste

D.methods to design apps that connect restaurants with customers

 

    Fall down as you come onstage. That’s an odd trick. Not recommended. But it saved the pianist Feltsman when he was a teenager back in Moscow. The experienced cellist Rostropovich tripped him purposely to ______ him of pre-performance panic. Mr. Feltsman said, “All my fright was gone. I already fell. What else could happen?”

Today, music schools are addressing the problem of ______ in classes that deal with performance techniques and career preparation. There are a variety of strategies that musicians can learn to fight stage fright and its symptoms: icy fingers, shaky limbs, racing heart, ______ mind.

Teachers and psychologists offer wide-ranging ______, from basics like learning pieces inside out, to mental discipline, ______ visualizing a performance and taking steps to relax. Don’t deny that you’re tense, they urge; some excitement is ______, even necessary for dynamic playing. And play in public often, simply for the experience.

Psychotherapist Diane Nichols suggests some strategies for the moments before ______, “Take two deep abdominal(腹部) breaths, open up your shoulders, then smile,” she says. “And not one of these ‘please don’t kill me’ smiles. Then choose three friendly faces in the ______, people you would communicate with and make music to, and make eye contact with them. “She doesn’t want performers to think of the audience as a judge.

Extreme demands by conductors or parents are often ______ stage fright, says Dorothy Delay, a well-known violin teacher. She tells other teachers to demand only what their students are able to achieve. .

When Lynn Harrell was 20, he became the principal cellist of the Cleverland Orchestra, and he suffered extreme stage fright. “There were times when I got so nervous I was sure the audience could see my chest responding to the heartbeat, which was just total ______. I came to a point where I thought, ‘If I have to go through this to play music, I think I’ m going to look for another job.’” Recovery, he said, involved developing humbleness—recognizing that whatever his talent, he was likely to make mistakes, and that an ______ concert was not a disaster.

It is not only ______ artists who suffer, of course. The legendary pianist Vladimir Horowitz’s nerves were famous. The great singer Franco Corelli is another example. “We had to push him on stage,” his partners recalled.

______, success can make things worse. “In the beginning of your career, when you’re scared to death, nobody knows who you are, and they don’t have any ______,” Singer June Anderson said. “There’s less to lose. Later on, when you’re known, people are coming to see you, and they have certain expectations. You have a lot to ______. ” He added, “I never stop being nervous until I’ve sung my last note.”

1.A.assure B.cure C.remind D.rob

2.A.anxiety B.adolescence C.principle D.psychology

3.A.absent B.blank C.keen D.narrow

4.A.advice B.choices C.services D.education

5.A.instead of B.along with C.such as D.with regard to

6.A.definite B.neutral C.natural D.precious

7.A.ceremony B.performance C.lecture D.rehearsal

8.A.audience B.orchestra C.staff D.choir

9.A.at the face of B.at the root of C.in favour of D.in contrast with

10.A.craze B.fault C.failure D.panic

11.A.unusual B.imperfect C.invalid D.unpopular

12.A.talented B.unknown C.young D.experienced

13.A.Actually B.Certainly C.Luckily D.Similarly

14.A.appreciation B.contribution C.expectation D.satisfaction

15.A.learn B.offer C.say D.lose

 

Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.

Surprise! A New Penguin

A team of scientists in New Zealand recently came across the remains of a previously unknown species of penguin—by mistake. The discovery of the Waitaha penguin species, which has been extinct for 500 years, is exciting news for the scientific community 1. it gives new insight into how past extinction events can help shape the present environment.

The researchers uncovered the Waitaha penguin remains while studying New Zealand’s rare yellow-eyed penguin. The team wanted to investigate the effects 2. humans have had on the now endangered species. They studied centuries-old bones from 3. they thought were yellow-eyed penguins and compared them with the bones of modern yellow-eyed penguins. Surprisingly, some of the bones were older than 4. (expect). Even more shockingly, the DNA in the bones indicated that they did not belong to yellow-eyed penguins. The scientists concluded that these very old bones 5. have belonged to a previously unknown species, which they named the Waitaha penguin.

By studying the bones, scientists further concluded that the Waitaha penguin was once native 6. New Zealand. But after the settlement of humans on the island country, its population 7. (wipe) out.

Based on the ages of the bones of both penguin species, the team discovered a gap in time between the disappearance of the Waitaha and the arrival of the yellow-eyed penguin. The time gap indicates that the extinction of the Waitaha penguin created the opportunity for the yellow-eyed penguin population 8. (migrate) to New Zealand.

9. yellow-eyed penguins thrived (兴盛) in New Zealand for many years, that species now also faces extinction. The yellow-eyed penguin today is considered one of the world’s 10. (rare) species of penguin, with an estimated population of 7,000 that is now the focus of an extensive conservation effort in New Zealand.

 

语法填空

At the back of King's College there is a memorial stone of white marble to honor the Chinese poet Xu Zhimo. 1.moveto the UK in 1921 , Xu Zhimo spent a year studying at King's College where he 2.fallin love not only with the romantic poetry of English poets like John Keats, but also with Cambridge 3.it.

His poem, Taking Leave of Cambridge Again, 4. is considered to be his 5.famousone, is now a compulsory text on Chinese literature, 6.learnby millions of school children across our country every year. The poem 7.vividpaints a portrait of King's College and the River Cam, and serves 8. a reminder of Xu Zhimo's fondness for his time in Cambridge.

While the poem had been set to music many times before the English composer John Rutter, one of the mainstream classical 9.musician, was invited by King's College to make the first musical setting of the text. The new piece, written and recorded in celebration of the near 100-year link between King's College 10. Xu Zhimo, has been released(发行)on a new album on the King's College Record Label.

 

    Earlier this year, artist Malik was about to post a selfie(自拍)from the Brooklyn Bridge when he had second thoughts. He wanted to share something different with his friends and the world.

Malik thought social media(大众传播媒介)had become impersonal and he wanted to connect with people in a more meaningful way. Therefore, the Reading Project was born. He began leaving piles of his books in famous New York City locations with a card containing simple instructions put inside each one: take a book, read it and share your thoughts with the artist by email.

The piles of books themselves can be seen as works of art, and so is the process of sharing. Unlike many of the things we share today, he likes to keep the project off social media. To keep the project pure, he doesn't even turn around as he walks away once he has left a pile of hooks. When he has left them behind, he prefers emails to be the only way that he learns what happens to them. The project has now taken him — and his books — all over the world, including London where we recently caught up with him.

"I hope people pick them up and I also hope they read them and let me know. And even if they don't let me know, I just hope they read the books,'' Malik said.

He has received thousands of messages from people in more than 30 countries all over the world. For Malik, books are meaningless and lifeless if they gather dust on a shelf and are never read again. He plans to carry on with the project for some time, with a visit to Brazil next on his agenda(日程表)and then decides whether he will continue it or not.

Most of all, he loves the connection the books give him to strangers across the world, something other posts could never achieve.

1.What hit Malik when he wanted to post a selfie?

A.His selfie wouldn't become very attractive.

B.Social media made people close to each other.

C.His thoughts should be shared with more people.

D.A new way could be used to connect with the world.

2.Why does Malik prefer others to connect with him by email?

A.He wants to keep the project secret.

B.It is a quick way to know what happens.

C.He doesn't want to be bothered by social media.

D.He thinks people needn't know the process of sharing.

3.What does Malik expect people to do about his books?

A.People will share his books with social media.

B.People will pick them up and read them.

C.People will share his books with others.

D.People will help him store the books.

4.What can we infer about Malik's project from the passage?

A.It won't last long for a lack of books.

B.It was first started on the Brooklyn Bridge.

C.It has destroyed the relation among strangers.

D.It has proved to be effective to connect with others.

 

    Thomas Dambo, an artist from Denmark, is using his sculpting(雕刻)skills to help thousands of urban birds worldwide. _______ by the belief that humans should live _______ with other species, he uses reused wood to build houses for birds wherever he goes. Over the last seven years he has made more than 3,500 birdhouses.

Dambo's birdhouses are creative and _______, combining(结合)wonderful design with reused wood and other junk materials that he _______ collects. Through his _______, he wants to show that everyone can create something beautiful from trash, and he also hopes to _______ others to waste less of the world's resources.

Dambo describes his own _______ as colorful, positive, childish, and fun. He also makes birdhouses that easily _______ city environment, so birds can feel _______ in them. Some of his past projects ________ a collection of birdhouses made from ________ skateboards. He also sculpted 600 birdhouses for a festival, and later gave them away to people after the activity, only ________ that they hang them up and send him pictures.

Dambo is working with a large Danish company on a project that uses their waste wood for large birdhouse ________ In this way, he hopes to ________ more people and just teach more people about recycling and the ________ of protecting the world. He dreams of having a big recycle plant next to his workshop someday, so people could just bring him their ________ to work with.

________ birdhouses, Dambo has built several other structures from recycled wood, but his main ________ now is creating abundant housing structures for birds. People always ________ whether birds use the houses. Dambo tells them the fact that birds will move into the houses if there are birds in the area. Dambo is so ________ about birdhouses that he's also built a large red one for himself!

1.A.Directed B.Moved C.Driven D.Attracted

2.A.peacefully B.separately C.naturally D.thankfully

3.A.strange B.unique C.alive D.perfect

4.A.immediately B.rarely C.simply D.frequently

5.A.ideas B.aims C.projects D.views

6.A.encourage B.warn C.allow D.imitate

7.A.actions B.inventions C.creations D.experiences

8.A.meet with B.fit into C.come across D.put up

9.A.delightful B.free C.warm D.safe

10.A.adopt B.prove C.include D.cover

11.A.different B.unusual C.broken D.new

12.A.requiring B.persuading C.advising D.promising

13.A.purchase B.trade C.production D.description

14.A.force B.impress C.observe D.influence

15.A.risks B.benefits C.chances D.methods

16.A.hope B.family C.trash D.clothes

17.A.As for B.Other than C.Instead of D.Apart from

18.A.enjoyment B.focus C.purpose D.source

19.A.believe B.suggest C.wonder D.guess

20.A.crazy B.curious C.certain D.serious

 

假设你是李明,寒假期间准备去北京旅游。请你根据下面的提示,用英语给你的网友李红写一封邮件。主要内容如下:

1. 你以前从未去过北京,请他当向导,带你参观长城,颐和园和其它名胜古迹,购物,品尝风味小吃。

2. 想住在他家里,以便聊聊彼此的生活和学习;

3. 问候他的父母。

注意:1. 词数 100左右;开头已给出,不计入总词数

2. 颐和园 the Summer Palace 纪念品 souvenir

Dear Li Hong,

I haven’t heard from you for a long time.

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________

Yours ,

Li Hua

 

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。

修改:在错的词下画一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。

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。

On a snowy winter night, a bus with 45 passenger had an accident because of the road was wet. And all of them were trapping in the bus and what was worse, the bus ran out of gas and it is very cold in it. They could hard wait to get out of the bus.A man who lived nearby saw what had happened. He and some villagers managed to open the door and helped all of them out of bus. He took them to his home but offered food and water and even some warm clothes to the children. They spent two days in their home and finally helps came. All of them were grateful with his help.

 

阅读下面短文,在空白处填入适当的内容或括号内单词的正确形式。

A father was worried about his son, 1. was sixteen years old but had no courage at all. So his father determined 2. (call) on a Buddhist monk to train his boy. The Buddhist monk said 3.the boy’s father, “You should leave your son alone here.

I’ll make him into a real man within three months. 4., you can’t come to see him during this period.” Three months later, the boy’s father returned. The Buddhist monk arranged a boxing match between the boy and an5. (experience) boxer. Each time the fighter 6. (attack) the boy, he fell down, but at once the boy stood up; and each time the boy was knocked down, the boy stood up again. Several times later, the

Buddhist monk asked, “7.do you think of your child?” “What a shame!” the boy’s father said, “I never thought he would be so 8.(easy) knocked down. I needn’t have him left here 9. longer.”

“I am sorry that is all you see. Don’t you see that each time he falls down, he stands up again instead of 10. (cry)? That’s the kind of courage you wanted him to have.”

 

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