题目内容

Rewrite the following sentences as required (根据所给要求,改写下列句子。前六小题每空格限填一词。最后一小题注意句首大写)

1.The children read quite a few English magazines last year.(改为一般疑问句句)

__________the children __________quite a few English magazines last year?

2.China International Import Expo is held in Shanghai once a year.(对划线部分提问)

_________ __________is China International Import Expo held in Shanghai?

3.You can buy paints, glue and other things in the shop.(改为被动语态)

Paints, glue and other things can ________ ________ in the shop.

4.The two men managed to escape from the prison at last .(保持句意基本不变)

The two men ______in ________from the prison at last.

5.If he improves his IT skills, he will easily get a job here.(保持句意基本不变)

He ________get a job easily here ______he improves his IT skills.

6.‘I have left the notebook in the library.’ Kitty said to me .(改为间接引语)

Kitty told me that _______ ______left the notebook in the library.

7.to send messages, is popular, to people all over the world, it , to use online services(连词成句)

______________________________________________________.

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Fill in the blanks with proper words(在短文的空格内填入适当的词, 使其内容通顺, 每空格限填一词, 首字母已给)

We might love to tell others about our unusual experiences—that time we climbed Mount Everest, tasted some rare food or ran into a famous person on the street. But new research suggests:that if we s1. these unusual experiences with others, it may bring something uncomfortable.

"Unusual experiences are pleasant in the moment but can cause social t2. in the long run, "says psychological scientist Gus Cooney of Harvard University. "Some people mistakenly thought that having an unusual experience would make them the star. But they were wrong, because to be unusual is to be different from other people, and social interaction is based on something similar. "

"We all h3. to have experiences that are fine and rare, and when we get what we want, we are always eager to tell our friends. But I've noticed that conversations always seem to develop well on more ordinary topics." Cooney explains. " This made me wonder if unusual experiences were r4. as lovely as we had thought. "

To find out, Cooney and his colleagues had 68 people come to the lab in groups of f5.. In each group, one person was asked to watch a popular video of a street magician performing for a crowd, while the other three people were asked to watch an ordinary animated video. After watching the videos, the people sat around a table and had a five-minute free conversation.

After the group discussion, the people who watched the magician's performance felt w6. than those who watched the animated video, because they felt they were not included during the discussion.

This finding suggests that we ought to give more thought in choosing what to talk about with others. If an experience turns you into someone who has n7. in common with others, then no matter how good it is, it won't make you comfortable in the long run.

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