题目内容

【题目】假定你是Jane,你的笔友李华最近因为考试密集、学业繁重,身体感到不适,严重影响了学习。因此,他发e-mail给你,寻求你的建议和帮助。请你根据以下要点提示予以回复。
写作要点:1 合理的饮食; 2适度的锻炼;3 ......
注意:1 词数80左右
2 开头和结尾部分已写好,不计入总词数。
3 可适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
Dear Li Hua,
I'm sorry to hear that you are feeling ill these days. ……
Best wishes!
Jane

【答案】例文:
Dear Jane,
I'm sorry to hear that you are feeling ill these days. In your letter you asked me how to stay healthy and keep attentive in class. Here is my advice.
First, have three meals a day and never neglect your breakfast. Keep a balanced diet. Second, taking morning exercise every day is a nice choice. As you know, daily exercise helps build a strong body. You can do some sports to refresh yourself if weather permits. Finally, don't stay up to make sure you have a good sleep every night.
I think it would be beneficial if you could follow my suggestions. Hope you'll feel well soon.
Best wishes.
Jane
【解析】假定你是Jane,你的笔友李华最近因为考试密集,学业繁重,身体感到不适,严重影响了学习。因此,他发e-mail给你,寻求你的建议和帮助。请你根据以下要点提示予以回复。写作要点:1. 合理的饮食;2. 适度的锻炼;3. ……。写作时不要逐句翻译,可适当增加细节以使行文连贯同时要把所提示的点写全,语句通顺,同时要注意准确运用时态、语态、上下文意思连贯,符合逻辑关系。根据句意适当使用并列连词,同时也要合理运用高级词汇和高级句子为文章增添色彩。注意:1. 词数80左右;2. 开头和结尾部分已写好,不计入总词数。3. 可适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。

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相关题目

【题目】阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。
D
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2 has set new nationwide and global box-office records for ticket sales in its opening weekend. The final part of the Harry Potter series is creating the perfect storm of record-breaking box-office sales. Before this movie, The Dark Knight held the opening weekend record. The Dark Knight actually sold a few more tickets. But with 3D and IMAX ticketing as well as the passion of fans who have waited for a long time to see the ending of J.K. Rowling’s brilliant story, the final Harry Potter movie was going to be hugely successful, no matter what.
And as if film-makers were magically able to save the best for last, critics(评论家) completely agree that The Deathly Hallows, Part 2 is the best film of the entire series and there has been little negative(负面的) to say about the performances of the film’s stars. When they were 10 or 11 years old, Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint have grown up on the big screen. They grew in their character as the story was told through the years.
As the story draws to a close, the final Harry Potter film is set to break the $1 billion mark in worldwide sales. And even though the film series is finally over, J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter will live on in different forms of merchandising (附带产品), including major theme parks, action figures and almost certainly, various versions of the story.
(1)According to the author, we know Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2________.
A.was expected to be very successful in making money
B.was poorly received by most of the movie critics in the US
C.is not as good as the first several Harry Potter movies
D.is not as good as movie-goers expected
(2)What is implied about the performances of the film's stars?
A.The performances are disappointing.
B.The stars have done a very good job.
C.The stars haven't made a breakthrough.
D.The stars did much better before.
(3)In which part of a newspaper would you most probably read this passage?
A.Entertainment.
B.Education.
C.Lifestyle.
D.Kids.
(4)What would be the best title for this passage?
A.The Harry Potter movies come to an end at last.
B.The Last Harry Potter movie sets new box-office records.
C.The Last Harry Potter movie comes in 3D and IMAX.
D.The Last Harry Potter movie makes movie-goers sad.

【题目】阅读短文,完成下列问题。
A
When people first walked across the Bering Land Bridge thousands of years ago, dogs were by their sides, according to a study published in the journal Science.
Robert Wayne of the University of California, Los Angeles, and Jennifer Leonard of the Smithsonian Institute, used DNA material—some of it unearthed by miners in Alaska—to conclude that today's domestic dog originated in Asia and accompanied the first humans to the New World about 10,000 to 15,000 years ago. Wayne suggests that man's best friend may have enabled the tough journey from Asia into North America. “Dogs may have been the reason people made it across the land bridge,” said Wayne. “They can pull things, carry things, defend you from fierce animals, and they're useful to eat.”
Researchers have agreed that today's dog is the result of the domestication(驯化) of wolves thousands of years ago. Before this recent study, a common thought about the precise origin of North America's domestic dog was that Natives domesticated local wolves, the descendents(后代) of which now live with people in Alaska, Canada, and the Lower 48.
Dog remains from a Fairbanks-area gold mine helped the scientists reach their conclusion. Leonard, an evolutionary biologist, collected DNA from 11 bones of ancient dogs that were locked in permafrost(永冻层) until Fairbanks miners uncovered them in the 1920s. The miners donated the preserved bones to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, where they remained untouched for more than 70 years. After borrowing the bones from the museum, Leonard and her colleagues used radiocarbon techniques to find the age of the Alaska dogs. They found the dogs all lived between the years of 1450 and 1675 A.D., before Vitus Bering and Aleksey Chirikov who were the first known Europeans to view Alaska in 1741. The bones of dogs that wandered the Fairbanks area centuries ago should therefore be the remains of “pure native American dogs,” Leonard said. The DNA of the Fairbanks dogs would also expose whether they were the descendents of wolves from North America.
Along with the Fairbanks samples, the researchers collected DNA from bones of 37 dog specimens(标本) from Mexico, Peru, and Bolivia that existed before the arrival of Columbus. In the case of both the Alaska dogs and the dogs from Latin America, the researchers found that they shared the most genetic material with gray wolves of Europe and Asia. This supports the idea of domestic dogs entering the New World with the first human explorers who wandered east over the land bridge.
Leonard and Wayne's study suggests that dogs joined the first humans that made the adventure across the Bering Land Bridge to slowly populate the Americas. Wayne thinks the dogs that made the trip must have provided some excellent service to their human companions or they would not have been brought along. “Dogs must have been useful because they were expensive to keep,” Wayne said. “They didn't feed on mice; they fed on meat, which was a very guarded resource.”
(1)The underlined word “remains” is closed in meaning to ______.
A.leftover food
B.animal waste
C.dead bodies
D.living environment
(2)According to the study described in Paragraph 4, we can learn that ______.
A.ancient dogs entered North America between 1450 and 1675 AD
B.the 11 bones of ancient dogs are not from native American dogs
C.the bones discovered by the gold miners were from North American wolves
D.the bones studied were not from dogs brought into North America by Europeans
(3)What can we know from the passage?
A.Native Americans domesticated local wolves into dogs.
B.Scientists discovered some ancient dog remains in 1920s.
C.Latin America's dogs are different from North America's in genes.
D.Ancient dogs entered North America across the Bering Land Bridge.
(4)The first humans into the New World brought dogs along with them because ______.
A.dogs fed on mice
B.dogs were easy to keep
C.dogs helped protect their resources
D.dogs could provide excellent service
(5)What does the passage mainly talk about ______.
A.the origin of the North American dogs
B.the DNA study of ancient dogs in America
C.the reasons why early people entered America
D.the difference between Asian and American dogs

【题目】阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从下列各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C、D)中,选出最佳选项。
A man wanted to become wealthy. He was told a story one day that there was a 1 pebble (鹅卵石)among the pebbles on the beach of the Black Sea. It could turn everything it touched into 2. This pebble could be 3 only by touching it: unlike the other pebbles it was 4 when touched. The man rushed to the beach of the Black Sea and began to 5 the pebble.
6 he picked up a pebble that felt cold, he threw it into the sea. He 7 this practice day after day. Each pebble that felt cold was 8 thrown into the sea.
One morning, he 9 to take hold of a pebble that felt warm, unlike the other 10. The man threw the pebble into the sea. He hadn't 11 to, but he had formed a habit. Habits can be hard to 12.
In fact, if we repeat any behaviour 13 enough, it becomes a habit. But some habits can work in our favour, such as 14 attitudes and healthy ways of life. Our habitual attitudes and behaviour can either 15 us or hinder(阻碍) us.
Is there behaviour or an attitude you would like to make into a 16? Then reinforce (强化) it by 17 it at every opportunity.
When it comes to habits, 18 may not make perfect. But practice will certainly form 19 behaviour. Your habits will form who you are. So form the habits that are 20to you and let them mold (塑造) you into the person you want to be.
(1)A.carved B.large C.magical D.heavy
(2)A.gold B.water C.sand D.stone
(3)A.created B.saved C.changed D.recognized
(4)A.warm B.shining C.smooth D.hard
(5)A.look into B.search for C.make D.study
(6)A.Unless B.Although C.When D.Until
(7)A.tested B.developed C.continued D.analysed
(8)A.luckily B.carelessly C.suddenly D.immediately
(9)A.attempted B.happened C.decided D.began
(10)A.hands B.trees C.pebbles D.balls
(11)A.asked B.remembered C.meant D.offered
(12)A.ignore B.break C.learn D.forget
(13)A.often B.carefully C.fast D.calmly
(14)A.related B.public C.positive D.conservative
(15)A.trouble B.help C.expose D.defeat
(16)A.custom B.plan C.rule D.habit
(17)A.repeating B.retelling C.changing D.considering
(18)A.attitude B.attempt C.guidance D.practice
(19)A.violent B.bored C.permanent D.strange
(20)A.devoted B.beneficial C.familiar D.true

【题目】根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Secret codes(密码)keep messages private. Banks, companies, and government agencies use secret codes in doing business, especially when information is sent by computer.
People have used secret codes for thousands of years. Code breaking never lags(落后)far behind code making. The science of creating and reading coded messages is called cryptography.
There are three main types of cryptography. For example, the first letters of “My elephant eats too many eels” spell out the hidden message “Meet me.”
You might represent each letter with a number, for example. Let's number the letters of the alphabet, in order, from 1 to 26. If we substitute a number for each letter, the message “Meet me” would read “135520135.”
A code uses symbols to replace words, phrases, or sentences. To read the message of a real code, you must have a code book. For example, “bridge” might stand for “meet” and “out” might stand for “me.” The message “Bridge out” would actually mean “Meet me.” However, it is also hard to keep a code book secret for long. So codes must be changed frequently.
A. It is very hard to break a code without the code book.
B. In any language, some letters are used more than others.
C. Only people who know the keyword can read the message.
D. As long as there have been codes, people have tried to break them.
E. You can hide a message by having the first letters of each word spell it out.
F. With a code book, you might write down words that would stand for other words.
G. Another way to hide a message is to use symbols to stand for specific letters of the alphabet.

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