随着信息技术的快速发展,网络语言以其快捷的传播方式进入了人们的生活。根据某机构最近对某市中学生的调查,发现中学生对网络语言的使用看法不一,结果如下:
支持者 | 1. 网络语言是信息时代发展的产物,是草根文化的新形式; 2. 易懂,易学,使用快捷方便; 3. 网络语言很酷很有趣,丰富了校园文化生活,缓解了学习压力。 |
反对者 | 1. 有些网络语言粗鲁,庸俗; 2. 汉语言是传统文化的基础,过多地使用网络语言会使下一代逐渐淡忘传统文化; |
你的观点 | (不少于两点) |
请给21世纪英语报写一遍题为Is cyber language dangerous?的报导,陈述以上的调查结果并发表你自己得的看法。
注意:1. 不要逐条翻译,可适当发挥;
2. 词数150字左右;开头已写好,不计入总词数;
3. 参考词汇: 草根文化 grass-roots culture; 庸俗 vulgar
Is cyber language dangerous ?
With the development of information technology, cyber language has stepped into our life and is spreading rapidly. According to a survey recently conducted among high school students, there are various views about the use of cyber language.
请认真阅读下列短文, 并根据所读内容在文章后表格的空格处里填人最恰当的单词。注意:每个空格填1个单词。
The world hasn't seen a pandemic in 41 years, when the "Hong Kong" flu crossed the globe and killed about one million people worldwide. If H1N1 flu(甲型流感)reaches pandemic(流行疾病)levels, what would happen next?
The outbreak of SARS in 2003 rang alarm bells as potential pandemics. Although it jumped the "animal-to-human" barrier, neither disease changed enough to enable human-to-human infection. Strictly speaking, SARS did not become pandemics because it was too good at killing their hosts. For a pandemic, it needs to be able to maintain human-to-human contact without killing its host off.
" H1N1 flu is already a man-to-man disease, which makes it much more difficult to manage. And H1N1 flu appears much more infectious than SARS."
But the WHO warns, it cannot say whether or not it will indeed cause a pandemic. According to experts, here's what the world might see if there is another pandemic, based on past experience:
The disease would skip from city to city over an 18-to-24 month period, infecting more than a third of the population. World health Organization officials believe as many as 1.5 billion people around the globe would seek medical care and nearly 30 million would seek hospitalization. Based on the last pandemic and current world population, as many as 7 million people could die. Hospitals will become overcrowded, schools will close, businesses will close, airports will be empty. Business will become very bad, as people avoid as much social contact as possible.
Health facilities will become overrun with patients and there would be less-than-adequate staffing, as medical health professionals fall ill themselves and that would result in higher deaths.
The very young and very old will likely be the most susceptible(易受感染的)to the illness. Experts warn, much is still unknown about the current H1N1 flu virus and its severity and it is too early to say whether it will lead to a pandemic. Right now, the focus is on finding answers and controlling the spread.
Title: It’s Not a Pandemic yet!
Three diseases mentioned | ● “Hong Kang” flu ● 72 ● H1N1 flu |
Some 71 about SARS and H1N1 flu | ● SARS didn’t change 73 to enable sustained human-to-human infection. ● SARS was very good at killing its 74 ● A man with H1N1 flu can infect 75 man. ● Comparing SARS and H1N1 flu, SARS is not 76 infectious. |
Possible consequence of H1N1 flu | ● The disease would 77 very fast. ● Around 1.5 billion people in the world will need 78 care. |
Experts’ 79 | Much is still unknown about 80 H1N1 is leading to pandemic or not. |
In 1982, Steven Callahan was crossing the Atlantic alone in his sailboat when it struck something and sank. He got into a life boat, but his supplies were 36 . His chances of surviving were small. 37 when three fishermen found him 76 days later, he was alive―much 38 than he was when he started, but alive.
His 39 of how he survived is fascinating. His cleverness ― how he 40 to catch fish, how he evaporated(蒸发)sea water to 41 fresh water ― is very interesting.
But the thing that 42 my eye was how he managed to keep himself going when all hope seemed lost, and there seemed no 43 in continuing the struggle. He was starved and 44 worn-out. Giving up would have seemed the only possible choice.
When people 45 these kinds of circumstances, they do something with their minds that gives them the courage to keep going. Many people in 46 desperate circumstances 47 in or go mad. Something the survivors do with their thoughts helps them find the courage to carry on 48 difficulties.
“I tell myself I can 49 it,” wrote Callahan in his book. “Compared to what others have been through, I’m fortunate. I tell myself these things over and over, 50 up courage…”
I wrote that down after I read it. It 51 me as something important. And I’ve told myself the same thing when my own goals seemed 52 off or when my problems seemed too terrible. And every time I’ve said it, I have always come back to my 53 .
The truth is, our circumstances are only bad 54 to something better. But others have been through the much worse, that is, in comparison with what others have been through, you’re fortunate. Tell this to yourself over and over again, and it will help you 55 through the rough situations with a little more courage.
36. | A. little | B. rich | C. few | D. enough |
37. | A. And | B. Yet | C. Still | D. Thus |
38. | A. thinner | B. stronger | C. worse | D. healthier |
39. | A. attitude | B. assumption | C. instruction | D. account |
40. | A. assisted | B. tended | C. managed | D. intended |
41. | A. make | B. absorb | C. select | D. replace |
42. | A. attacked | B. caught | C. froze | D. cheated |
43. | A. need | B. taste | C. message | D. point |
44. | A. firmly | B. completely | C. hardly | D. generally |
45. | A. deal | B. defend | C. survive | D. observe |
46. | A. similarly | B. differently | C. gradually | D. commonly |
47. | A. pull | B. take | C. break | D. give |
48. | A. for the lack of | B. in the face of | C. in exchange for | D. as a result of |
49. | A. handle | B. carry | C. follow | D. inspect |
50. | A. rolling | B. using | C. building | D. making |
51. | A. defeated | B. recommended | C. introduced | D. struck |
52. | A. far | B. long | C. ever | D. even |
53. | A. supplies | B. senses | C. ideas | D. influences |
54. | A. related | B. measured | C. contributed | D. compared |
55. | A. see | B. cut | C. get | D. think |