题目内容
The panda usually eats bamboo a day.
A.30 kilos B.30 kilos of C.30 kilo of D.30 kilo
My friend Linda is 12 years old.She hasn't got any brothers or sisters at 1.(家).She 2.(吃)well in the morning.She says a healthy breakfast is 3. (重要的).And she eats lots of 4.(蔬菜)and fruit every day.Beans and 5.(胡萝卜)are her favourite food.Sometimes she eats some 6.(鸡肉).She drinks much 7.(水)and milk every day.They are good for her.Many 8.(孩子)like chocolate and candy,but Linda doesn't.So,her parents never 9.(买)any sweet food for her.She has got a good habit and she doesn't get 10.(胖).
I saw some ________ and ________ dancing in the street the day before yesterday.
A.German; Englishmen B.Germans; Englishmans
C.Germans; Englishmen D.Germen; Englishmans
—Who looked after your pet dog when you went to the Orange Island yesterday?
—It ________ by my good friend Alice.
A.fed B.is fed C.was fed
书面表达
动物园里来了一位新朋友- 大熊猫,这是动物园告示牌上对它的介绍:
Name : Tuantuan
Age : 3
Hometown : Sichuan ,China
Favourite activity : Climbing trees
请根据告示牌上的提示对它简单地描述一下。
要求:书写工整,不少于60词。
Tigers eat fruits and the camel eat meat .
A.don’t ; doesn’t B.doesn’t ; don’t
C.don’t ; don’t D.doesn’t ; doesn’t
Researchers have recently discovered how to make families work, more successfully. A surprising idea has appeared: the single most important thing you can do for your family, it seems, is to develop a family story.
I first heard this idea in the mid-1990s. from Marshall Duke, a professor at Emory University. Duke was studying stories in families when his wife, a children's learning specialist, made a discovery: “The students. who know a lot about their families will do better when they face challenges (挑战),”Sara said.
Interested, Duke set out to test her conclusion. He and Emory workmate Robyn Fivush developed a method called the “Do You Know?" degree that asked children to answer 20 questions such as: Do you know where your grandparents grew up? Do you know where your mum and dad went to high school? Do you know about an illness or something really terrible that happened in your family?
Duke and Fivush asked those questions to members of four dozen families in 2001. They then compared the children's results with a group of psychological (心理学的) tests the children had taken and reached a conclusion that agreed to Sara's theory. The more children knew about their families' histories, the stronger their sense of control over their lives, the higher their self-respect, and the more successfully they believed their families worked from generation to generation (代代传承).
“We were really surprised," Duke said. The researchers mentioned the children after the terrible events of September 11, 2001. “Once again," Duke said, “the ones who knew more about their families proved to be stronger."
Why does knowing where her grandmother went to school help a child overcome something terrible and difficult? Duke said that children who have the most self-confidence have what he calls “a 'strong intergenerational self". They know that they come from something bigger than themselves.
Duke suggested that parents do the same activities with their children again and again. Any kind of activities work to teach the sense of history: holidays, vacations, big family get-togethers, even a drive to the shop. “These traditions become part of your family,” Duke said.
Years of research have showed that most happy families also communicate successfully, but it's not simply a matter of talking through problems. Talking also means telling a positive (正面的) story about yourselves. When faced with a challenge, happy families, like happy people, just add a new chapter (章) to their life story that helps them overcome the difficulty. This skill is very important for children when they are growing up.
The bottom lines: if you want a happier family, create, refine and retell the story of your family's best moments and your relations' ability to overcome difficulty. That act alone may prove the fact that your family will thrive (兴旺) for many generations to come.
1.What does the passage mainly tell us?
A.Happy children are usually brought up in happy families.
B.Our family is the most important place to teach children.
C.There are many things for the young to learn from the old.
D.Family history plays an important part when children grow up.
2.What can the “Do you know?" degree tell us?
A.What relation in one's family is. B.What story one's family has had.
C.How much one knows his family. D.How much one loves his family.
3.Which of the following is true, according to the passage?
A.The event of September 11, 2001 helped Duke reach his conclusion.
B.Duke thinks that a strong intergenerational self is very important.
C.Duke and Sara's research work led us to an unexpected conclusion.
D.According to Duke, positive talks will add new chapters to one's life.
Today I read a text. It told a story about a s1.mother in America. She and her three children lived a hard life. But she never g2.up. She set a good e3.for her children. She always encouraged them 4.(state) their own ideas. She believed that life was full of s5.. It shone every corner. She believed everything would be OK with her great effort.
This is not Tom’s book. __________ is over there.
A.He B.His C.Mine D.Hers