满分5 > 高中英语试题 >

假如你是新华中学的学生李华,偶然看到在你市求学的美国学生Tom在网上发帖,要大家...

  假如你是新华中学的学生李华,偶然看到在你市求学的美国学生Tom在网上发帖,要大家给他推荐一本学习汉语的书。你手头正好有一本合适的书可以借给他。请你给他发一封电子邮件,要点如下:

1.说明写信原因;  

2.描述书的情况;  

3.约定见面时间和地点。

注意:

1.词数:120 -150; 

2.可适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;

3.开头和结尾已给出,不计入总词数。

Dear Tom,    

  I'm Ii Hua, a student of Xinhua Middle School._______________________________ 

___________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

Best wishes.             

                                  Yours             

                                               Li Hua 

 

Dear Tom, I’m Li Hua, a student of Xinhua Middle School. The other day, I learned quite by chance that you were in need of a book to help you improve your Chinese. I happen to have one, which I think might help you. The book, entitled New Practical Chinese, is intended for beginners at your level. Not only does it include the basic conversations in our daily life, it is also a window through which you can get to know Chinese culture and customs. Edited by three language experts, it has been popular with the readers ever since it came out two years ago. If it is convenient to you, let’s meet at 3 pm. this Sunday at the entrance to the People’s Park, where I can give you the book face to face. If not, try to find another time that is suitable for both of us. 【解析】 试题分析:本文是书信类作文,要求用英语给汤姆发一封电子邮,给他推荐一本学习汉语的书。文章的要点也基本上都给出来了,但不是很具体,考生要把要点全交代,不能有遗漏。而且要拓展内容,在写作的过程中,要注意使用高级词汇和高级句型,如强调句,倒装句等,让文章更上档次。同时在列举措施的时候要使用合适的连接词如:First,second, Besides, What’s more等,让文章看起来很有条理,也很流畅。因为是书信,所以本篇文章在写作时不要啰嗦,力求简洁。 【亮点说明】所给范文语言简洁,应用了一些较好的词组: The other day“几天前”, by chance“偶然”. be intended for “意图是”。还有一个很大的特点,这篇文章的句型多变,也适当应用了高中所学的重点语法知识: I happen to have one, which I think might help you.这句话用了定语从句, The book, entitled New Practical Chinese, is intended for beginners at your level. 这句话用来了过去分词做定语,Not only does it include the basic conversations in our daily life, it is also a window through which you can get to know Chinese culture and customs. 这句话用了定语从句和倒装句,Edited by three language experts, it has been popular with the readers ever since it came out two years ago. 这句话用了过去分词做状语, If it is convenient to you, let’s meet at 3 pm. this Sunday at the entrance to the People’s Park, where I can give you the book face to face.这句话用了定语从句, If not, try to find another time that is suitable for both of us. 这句话用了省略句。 考点:考查书信类书面表达  
复制答案
考点分析:
相关试题推荐

阅读下面的短文并用英语回答问题,然后将答案写到答题卡相应的位置上(请注意问题后的词数要求)。

[1]  Alice Munro wins the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literature, becoming the first Canadian woman to take the award since it was founded in 1901.

     [2] Munro,82, only the 13th woman given the award, was praised by the Swedish Academy during the Nobel announcement in Stockholm as the "master of the contemporary short story. " "We're not saying just that she can say a lot in just 20 pages---more than an average novel writer can---but also that she can cover ground. She can have a single short story that covers decades, and it works, " said Peter Englund, permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy.

     [ 3]  Munro said she always viewed her chances of winning the Nobel as " one of those pipe dreams" that "might happen, but it probably wouldn't. " Munro's daughter woke her up to tell her the news. "It just seems impossible. A splendid thing to happen…More than I can say, " she said, overcome with emotion. " My stories have gotten around quite remarkably for short stories. I would really hope that this would make people see the short story as an important art, not something you play around with until you got a novel written. "

     [4] Born in Ontario in 193I,Alice Anne Laidlaw studied journalism at the University of  Western Ontario in London before dropping out to marry James Munro, a fellow student. She  became a full-time housewife and mother of their children. She then moved to Victoria with her  first husband and later returned to Ontario following their divorce. She married Fremlin in 1976.

     [5] Three years ago, in an interview at Toronto's  International  Festival  of Authors, Munro said she had battled cancer, but did not provide specifics. In June, she told the National Post she was "probably not going to write anymore. " Asked on Thursday whether she would reconsider that statement, Munro said______, " because I am getting rather old. "

1.What is the text mainly about?  ( no more than 15 words)

     __________________________________________________________________________

2.What is Peter Englund mainly talking about in paragraph two?  ( no more than 5 words)

   __________________________________________________________________________

3.Please explain the underlined sentence in paragraph three.

   __________________________________________________________________________

4.How did Alice Munro get the news that she won the Nobel Prize?  ( no more than 10 words)

   __________________________________________________________________________

5.Fill in the blank in the last paragraph with proper words. (no more than 5 words)

   __________________________________________________________________________

 

查看答案

Fahad Azad, an engineer in India, invented a robot named DuctBotThe toy-car sized DuctBot measured 23 centimeters in length, 19 centimeters in width and 9 centimeters in height and weighs just two kilograms

The robot is designed to snake through dark, narrow air conditioning ducts (管道) and clean themA pair of LEDs fitted on the robot light up the dirty scenery, so it can be captured (抓拍) by a camera

In order to control it more easily, Mr. Azad chooses to fix DuctBot on wheelsThe robot can clean off lots of dirt, as well as dead pigeons and insectsKeeping indoor air in good quality and monitoring carbon-dioxide levels in buildings with central air conditioning is a challengeIt is important in some places where clean air can mean a difference between life and death, such as hospitalsDirty air has a bad influence on people's health

EPSCO, a Dubai-based company which specializes in improving indoor air quality, read about Mr. Azad's invention in a national newspaper after he had won an international robotics competitionEPSCO had cleaning equipment, but it needed someone to get into those ducts to do the dirty, dangerous workAcross India, for example, the task still falls to childrenThey are small enough to go through those ducts

In 2005, Mr. Azad who was still at university decided to do something about itSix years later his own company, Robosoft Systems, has Bluestar, EPSCO and the Indian Navy, some leading air condition makers, as partners

Mr. Azad and his ten employees are currently exploring robot designs to examine oil tanks or sewage (污水)pipesTheir biggest challenge is to make the robots user-friendly enoughMr. Azad hopes that the robot could eventually be operated not by engineers but by workersThere will be lots of difficulties they need to overcome in the future

1.What can we learn about Ductbot?

AIt is a toy car and popular with children

BIt is designed to move like a snake in the ducts

Cmany LEDs are fitted on it to tell its location

DIt is actually a camera to capture dirty scenery

2.The underlined word "it" in Paragraph 2 refers to "____"

Athe camera               Bthe conditioning duct

Cthe LED light            Dthe dirty scenery

3.What can the Ductbot do for us?

AClean off the dirt in the ducts

BControl the central conditioning

CReduce carbon-dioxide in buildings

DProtect more animals in city

4.According to the text, EPSCO____

Ahas won an international robotics competition

Bhired children to clean the dirty ducts in the past

Cis the only partner of Robosoft Systems

Dspecializes in improving people's health

5.What is the main idea of the last paragraph?

AOnly engineers can operate the Ductbot now

BNew ways have been found to examine oil tanks

CAzad's difficulties are impossible to overcome

DAzad's team are working to improve their robot designs

 

查看答案

An eighteen-year-old high school student from Utah won the top prize in the Intel Science Talent Search in the United States. The winner received a computer and a scholarship for a college education.

More than 1,500students from across the country entered projects in the competition this year. Their research included chemistry, medicine, physics, mathematics, engineering, and computer science-almost every area of science.

Forty students were invited to Washington, D.C. for the final judging. A group of scientists judged them on their research abilities, critical thinking skills and creativity. The judges also questioned the students about scientific problems before deciding on the winners.

The top winner received 100,000 dollars for college. Shannon Babb of American Fork High School studied the water quality of tile Spanish Fork River in Utah for six years. She found that people have a harmful effect on the river through human activity, including agriculture. And she suggested ways to improve the water quality in the future. These include educating the public not to put household chemicals down the drains(下水道), which lead to the river eventually.

Seventeen-year-old Yi Sun of the Hanker School in San Jose, California, earned the second place. He won a 75,000-dollar scholarship for new discoveries about a mathematical theory known as random walks. His work could help computer scientists and chemists. Yi Sun was born in China.

    The third-place winner was also seventeen and born in China. Yuan “Chelsea” Zhang of Montgomery Blair High School in Rockville, Maryland, won a 50,000-dollar scholarship. She researched the molecular genetics(分子遗传学)of heart disease. Her findings could aid the development of new medicines.

    The Intel Science Talent Search is the oldest science competition for high school students in the United States. It is 65 years old this year. Past winners have gone on to receive six Nobel prizes and other top honors in science and math.

1.What do we know about the talent search project?  

A. Most of its winners have received Nobel prizes.

B. The project includes researches in every area of science.

C. Only a small part of the students can attend the final judging.

D. Most of the winners come from Asian countries.

2.According to the text,         .   

A. water quality in Utah will be better than that in the other states

B. the river was polluted only by those living near it

C. Shannon Babb suggested more than one way to improve the water quality

D. household chemicals should be kept in the drains forever

3.Which of the following about the girl from Maryland is NOT true? 

A. The scholarship she received was half as many as Shannon Babb.

B. Her discovery is of great help to Chinese medicine.

C. Her research will contribute to the cure of heart disease.

D. She and the second-place winner Yi Sun have something in common.

4.What is the text mainly about?  

A. Three winners' contributions to science and math.

B. Three Chinese students won the Science Talent Search.

C. Great rewards were given to winners in the competition.

D. Winners of the Intel Science Talent Search in the US.

5.Where are you most likely to find this text?  

A. In a newspaper.   B. In a handbook.    C. In a textbook.   D. In a medical magazine.

 

查看答案

 

满分5 manfen5.com

You have probably heard of the Mozart effect. It’s the idea that if children or even babies listen to music composed by Mozart, they will become more intelligent. A quick Internet search reveals plenty of products to assist you in the task. Whatever your age there are CDs and books to help you taste the power of Mozart’s music, but when it comes to scientific evidence that it can make you more clever, the picture is more mixed.

The phrase “the Mozart effect” was made up in 1991, but it was a study described two years later in the journal Nature that sparked real media and public interest about the idea that listening to classical music somehow improves the brain. It is one of those ideas that sound reasonable. Mozart was undoubtedly a genius himself; his music is complex and there is a hope that if we listen to enough of it ,we’ll become more intelligent.

The idea took off, with thousands of parents playing Mozart to their children, and in 1998 Zell Miller, the Governor of the state of Georgia in the US, even asked for money to be set aside in the state budget so that every newborn baby could be sent a CD of classical music. It was not just babies and children who were exposed to Mozart’s music on purpose, even an Italian farmer proudly explained that the cows were played Mozart three times a day to help them to produce better milk.

I’ll leave the debate on the impact on milk yield to farmers, but what about the evidence that listening to Mozart makes people more intelligent? More research was carried out but an analysis of sixteen different studies confirmed that listening to music does lead to a temporary improvement in the ability to handle shapes mentally, but the benefits are short-lived and it doesn’t make us more intelligent.

1.What can we learn from paragraph 1?

A. Mozart composed many musical pieces for children.

B. Children listening to Mozart will be more intelligent.

C. There are few products on the Internet about Mozart’s music.

D. There is little scientific evidence to support Mozart effect.

2.Why did many people believe in the idea of Mozart Effect?

A. Because a study described it in the journal Nature.

B. Because Mozart himself was a genius.

C. Because Mozart’s music is enjoyable.

D. Because Mozart’s music makes people relaxed.

3.The underlined sentence in paragraph3 suggests that       .

A. people were strongly against the idea

B. the idea was accepted by many people

C. Mozart played an important part in people’s life

D. the US government helped promote the idea

4.What is the author’s attitude towards the Mozart effect?

A. FavorableB. ObjectiveC. DoubtfulD. Positive

5.What would be the best title for the passage?

A. Listening to Mozart , necessary?   B. What music is beneficial?

C. What is the Mozart effect?        D. To be or not to be?

 

查看答案

During the last fifteen years of my mother's life she suffered with Alzheimer's disease (老年痴呆). Until then she had been a bright, cheerful woman deeply interested and involved in the world around her. I would go home to visit her in Virginia and she would look at me in a puzzled way and ask, “Who are you?”  I would answer, “I'm your son.”  “Where do you live?”  She would ask. “In California”, I would tell her. “Isn't that interesting,” she would say, “I have a son in California.”
    She seemed simply forgetful and confused at the beginning of the disease, but later on she would go through periods of intense anxiety. She would pace through the house she had lived in most of her life crying uneasily that she wanted to go home. Or she would leave home and wander away if she were unattended for a short time.   

Hoping to please her and put her mind at ease I would take her for a drive, visiting sites where she had lived as a child. In the yard of the hillside house in Shipman I sat in the car and admired the view of the old oaks and long green lawn. I pictured my mother there was a little girl playing with the pet lamb she had been so fond of. I looked to her for some response. She shook her head and said, “I want to go home.”
    Over the years I have decided that what my mother was calling home was not a place, but a time. I suspect it was a time when she was much younger, when her children were still underfoot, when her husband was still vigorous and attentive.

Watching my mother's suffering set me wondering where I would have gone in mind if someday I couldn’t find home and wanted to go there. In this family we tend to be long-lived and we grow fuzzy (糊涂的) minded as the years go by. At eighty I have already noticed some alarming symptoms. My doctor says the forgetfulness is only natural and that it comes with age. Still the fear of Alzheimer's is haunting there. Someday if and when I become even more cloudy minded than I am now, unable to drive and unable to tell you where "home" is, my dear son, I expect I will ask you to take me home, I know you will do your best to find the place I need to be. I leave these notes for your guidance.               

1.What's the main idea of the first two paragraphs?

A. The author’s mother suffered with serious Alzheimer's disease.

B. The author’s mother forgot who’s his son.

C. The author didn’t know how to cure his mother.

D. The author’s mother couldn’t find her home.

2.What is not the symptom of the author’s mother ?

A. cheerful   B. confused     C. forgetful    D. uneasy

3. What’s the meaning of the underlined word “pictured”?

A. photographed   B. appeared     C. described      D. painted

4.What can you infer from the third paragraph?

A. The author care much about his mother.

B. The author’s mother was fond of pet lambs.

C. The author saw a little girl playing with a pet lamb.

D. The author’s mother didn’t like her usual home.

5.What’s the best title of the passage?

A. Take Mother Home.

B. Everyone will suffer with Alzheimer's disease.

C. A story about a son and a mother.

D. Where Is Home?

 

查看答案
试题属性

Copyright @ 2008-2019 满分5 学习网 ManFen5.COM. All Rights Reserved.