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动词填空 (满分5分) 1.Technology _______(see) so...

动词填空 (满分5分)

1.Technology _______(see) some amazing developments in the last few decades.

2.With the great weight _______(take) off her mind, she passed the text successfully.

3.Im sorry, by then my lecture will have ended and I _______(meet) my guests.

4.If penicillin had not been available, many people _________(die) from sickness or even small wounds.

5.Sarah, hurry up, Im afraid you wont have time to get________(change).

6.The bell _________ (indicate) the end of the period rang, interrupting our heated discussion

7. _________ (not complete) the program, they have to stay there for another two weeks.

8.Wherever you go, you can see the product ___________ (advertise).

9.The project is so designed that once _______ (begin) nothing can be done to change it.

10.The suggestion that the plan _________(delay) will be discussed tomorrow.

 

1.has been 2.taken 3.will be meeting 4.would have died 5.changed 6.indicating 7.Not having completed 8.advertised 9.begun 10.(should) be delayed 【解析】 试题分析: 1.。根据后面的时间状语in the last few decades可以判断用现在完成时,technology是不可数名词,根据主谓一致的原则判断答案填has been。句意:在最近几年,科技见证了一些惊人的发展。 2.。在with复合结构中名词weight和take之间是被动关系,应该用过去分词,填taken。句意:思想的压力卸掉了,她成功地通过了考试。 3.。根据句意判断此处是表示将来某个时间正在进行的动作,故应该用将来进行时,故答案填will be meeting。句意:抱歉,在我的讲座结束后,我将在接见我的客人们。 4.。根据前面的if从句可以判断此处是对过去发生事情的推测,主句应该用would have died。句意:如果盘尼西林没有存在,许多人都会死于疾病或者是很小的创伤。 5.。固定短语:get changed“换衣服”,句意:Sarah,快点,恐怕你没有时间去换衣服了。 6.。根据结构可知此处是分词做定语,和被修饰的名词bell之间是主动关系,故应该用现在分词indicating。句意:标志着课堂结束的铃声响了,打断了我们热烈的讨论。 7.。 根据结构可知此处是非谓语短语做状语,根据时间和与句子主语的关系判断填现在分词的完成式,故答案填Not having completed。句意:因为没有完成这个项目,他们不得不再呆两周。 8.。此处是分词做定语,动词advetise和被修饰的名词之间是被动关系,故填过去分词advertised。句意:不管你去哪里,你都能够看到广告宣传的产品。 9.。 此处是连词加分词结构,句子主语project和begin之间是被动关系, 应该用过去分词,故答案为begun。句意:这个项目是如此设计的以至于一旦开始就能改动了。 10.。根据句意可知此处是同位语从句,用来解释说明suggestion的内容,当名词是表示建议,命令,请求时,后面的同位语从句应该用虚拟语气,即(should)+v原形,根据意思此处应该用被动形式,答案为(should) be delayed。句意:计划将被推迟的建议将于明天会议上进行讨论。 考点:考查动词的用法 。
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1.One of the main d_________to their products is that they tend to waste electricity.

2.This monument was built in honor of those who s________their lives for the countrys independence.

3.Peter stood out among the job hunters because of his c________of English, so the company employed him as a translator.

4.I tried to c________in my speech how grateful we all were for his help.

5.I believed Mary will turn up at night. I know she is always very ________(准时) for appointments.

6.Im going to show you just a few examples of how common these _________(现象) are.

7.I know that if I start watching a soap opera I immediately become hopelessly ________(上瘾)

8.There is ___________(大量的) evidence that a persons character is reflected in their handwriting.

9.After her father died, the girl ________(不与人交往) from others and often stayed alone。

10.I have been __________(订阅) to this magazine for years.

 

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It often seems that people have a hard time in speaking a seemingly familiar name. Did you ever have someone's name on the tip of your tongue and yet you were not able to recall it? When this happened,what did you do? Next time this happens again,what should you do?

You should n学科网(www.zxxk.com)--教育资源门户,提供试卷、教案、课件、论文、素材及各类教学资源下载,还有大量而丰富的教学相关资讯!ot try to学科网(www.zxxk.com)--教育资源门户,提供试卷、教案、课件、论文、素材及各类教学资源下载,还有大量而丰富的教学相关资讯! recall it. Instead, just do something else for a couple of minutes and then the name may come into your head. Why? The name is just there, since you have met this person and learned his name. It, waiting there, only has to be dug out. The initial(最初的) effort to recall prepares the mind for operation, but it is the subconscious (下意识的) activities that go to work to dig up a dim(模糊的)memory. Forcing yourself to recall almost never helps because it doesn't loosen your memory; it only tightens it.

Thats why students find the preparatory method greatly helpful in examinations. They read over the questions before trying to answer any of them. Then they answer first the ones of which they are most confident. At the same time, deeper mental activities in the subconscious mind are taking place; work is being done on the more difficult questions. By the time the easier questions are answered, answers to the more difficult ones will usually begin to come into consciousness. It is often just a question of waiting for recall to come to the memory.

You see, forcing ourselves to think hard to recall something usually doesnt help. Chances are that the harder we think, the more difficulty we face in thinking of what we want to. Offering our mind time to work is what we are expected to do.

Problem

People 1.______ to recall what they are sure they know.

 

Solution

They are 2.______ not to try to recall it immediately. They can do something else for a while 3._____ of thinking hard about it.

 

4.______

It takes time for the subconscious activities to go to work to dig up a dim memory, in which case forcing oneself to recall can make the memory 5._____.

 

Example

Students find the preparatory method of great 6.______ in examinations. They, having read over the questions, first answer easy ones. 7._____, the subconscious activities are 8._____ to deal with harder ones.

9.______

People should offer their mind time to work so that a dim memory can be 10._____ up.

 

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As we drove along, my spirits went up again, and I turned, with pleasure, to the thought of the new life which I was entering. But though it was not far past the middle of September, the heavy clouds and strong north-easterly wind combined to make the day extremely cold; and the journey seemed a very long one, so that it was nearly one o’clock before we reached the place of our destination. Yet when we entered the gateway, my heart failed me, and I wished it were a mile or two farther off. For the first time in my life I must stand alone: there was no retreating now. I must enter that house, and introduce myself among its strange people. But how was it to be done? True, I was wps_clip_image-23292near nineteen; but, thanks to the protecting care of my mother and sister, I well knew that many a girl of fifteen, or under, was gifted with a more womanly address, and greater ease and self-possession, than I was. Yet, anyway, I would do very well, after all; and the children, of course, I should soon be at ease with them.

“Be calm, be calm, whatever happens,” I said within myself; and truly I was so fully absorbed in steadying my nerves and keeping down the rebellious beat of my heart that when I was admitted into the hall and into the presence of Mrs. Bloomfield, I almost forgot to answer her polite greeting; and it afterwards struck me that the little I did say was spoken in the tone of one half-dead or half-asleep.

   With due politeness, however, she showed me my bedroom, and left me there to take a little refreshment for a little while and led me into the dining-room. Some beefsteaks and potatoes were set before me; and while I dined upon these, she sat opposite, watching me (as I thought) and trying to keep something like a conversation— consisting chiefly of commonplace remarks. In fact, my attention was almost wholly absorbed in my dinner: not from appetite, but from the toughness of the beefsteaks, and the numbness of my hands.

   “I have had so little time to attend to their education myself, but I think they are clever children, and very willing to learn, especially the little boy; he is, I think, the flower of the flock— a generous, noble-spirited boy, one to be led, but not driven, and remarkable for always speaking the truth.” “His sister Mary Ann will require watching,” continued she, “but she is a very good girl on the whole, though I wish her to be kept out of the nursery as much as possible, as she is now almost six years old, and might acquire bad habits from the nurses. I have ordered her bed to be placed in your room, and if you will be so kind as to look after her washing and dressing, and take charge of her clothes, she needs to have nothing further to do with the nursery maid.”

I replied I was quite willing to do so; and at that moment the children entered the room. Tom Bloomfield was a well-grown boy of seven. Mary was a tall girl, for her age of six, somewhat dark like her mother. The second sister was Fanny, a very pretty little girl, looking little younger than Mary. The remaining one was Harriet, a little broad, fat, merry, playful thing of scarcely two, whom I had more desire for than all the rest — but with her I had nothing to do.

1.Which of the following statements best describes how the writer felt when she entered Mrs. Bloomfield’s home?

A. She was nervous, dissatisfied with her manners but still confident.

B. She was cold, hungry but eager to see all the children in the family.

C. She was frightened, nervous and regretful about her decision.

D. She was calm, confident and very happy with all the family.

2.What job would the writer take in Mrs Bloomfield’s home?

A. A nursery maid.     B. A house cleaner.    C. A home cook.     D. A family teacher.

3.Which of the following was TRUE according to the passage?

A. The writer had some difficulty with her lunch because of the tough food and the cold.

B. The delicious food took the writer's attention away from Mrs. Bloomfield’s words.

C. All twps_clip_image-528he children were well educated before the writer came to the family.

D. All the children in the family were looked after by Mrs Bloomfield herself.

4.From the passage, we can infer that _______.

A. Mrs Bloomfield would treat the writer kindly and help her a lot

B. The youngest girl Harriet would be the writer’s favorite student

C. the writer would take on more responsibilities than she should

D. Tom Bloomfield would be the cleverest of all the children

 

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How do you design a pay plan that motivates people to do their best work? A new study by three Harvard researchers suggests a novel answer: Shortly after you hire new workers, give them a raise.

"Previous research has shown that paying people more than they expect may elicit reciprocity(相互作用) in the form of greater productivity," notes Deepak Malhotra, a Harvard business-administration professor who worked on the study. What he and his colleagues found, however, was that the connection between more pay and extra effort depends on presenting the increase "as a gift—that is, as something you've chosen to do purely as a nice gesture, with no strings attached."

Malhotra and his team studied 267 people hired by oDesk, a global online network of freelancers, to do a one-time data-entry project for four hours. All of the new hires were people in developing countries, for whom hourly wages of $3 and $4 were higher than what they had been making in previous jobs.

    The researchers split the group up into three equal parts. One group was told they would earn $3 an hour. A second group was initially hired at $3 an hour but, before they started working, they got a surprise: The budget for the project had expanded unexpectedly, they were told, and they would now be paid $4 an hour. The third group was offered $4 an hour from the start and given no increase.

    Even though the second and third groups were eventually paid the same amount, the second group worked harder and produced more—about 20% more—than either of the other two. People in the second group also showed the most stamina, maintaining their focus all the way through the assigned task and performing especially well toward the end of the four hours. Interestingly, the more experienced employees in the high-performing group were the most productive of all, apparently because their previous work experience led them to appreciate the rarity of an unexpected raise.

    Contrary to conventional wisdom, Malhotra points out that higher pay, in and of itself, didn't promote productivity: People who made $4 an hour from the beginning worked no harder than those who were hired at $3 and were then paid $3.

    To get the most impact from their pay plans, he adds, companies might consider not only what to pay new hires, but when to pay it.

"The key thing is how you present [the reason for an increase]," he says. Doling out extra money could promote productivity most "if you make it clear that the pay raise is something you're choosing to do just because you can. Our theory is that people will reciprocate. If you do something nice, they'll do something nice back."   

1.What does the underlined word “stamina” most probably mean?

A. The quality of being intelligent or clever.

B. The quality of doing something difficult or dangerous.

C. The physical or mental energy needed to do a tiring activity for a long time.

D. A particular method of doing an activity, usually involving practical skills.

2.Why did the second group produce more than the other two groups?

A. Because they thought they were better paid than the other groups.

B. Because they were experienced employees from developing countries.

C. Because an unexpected raise reminded them of their previous work.

D. Because they felt they were nicely treated and tried best to repay it.

3.What can we infer from this passage?

A. No pains, no gains.

B. It matters not what we give but how.

C. Honesty is the best policy.

D. Actions speak louder than words.

 

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In the Caucasus region of Russia, nearly 50 out of every 100,000 people live to celebrate their 100th birthday, and many don’t stop at 100! By comparison, in America only 3 people in 100,000 reach 100. But these Russian old people aren’t alone. The Pakistanis, who live high in the Himalaya Mountains, and the Ecuadorans of the Andes Mountains seem to share the secret of long life, too.

    These people remain healthy in body and spirit despite the passage of time. While many older persons in industrial societies become weak and ill in their 60s and 70s, some Caucasians aged 100 to 140, work in the fields beside their great-great-grandchildren. Even the idea of aging is foreign to them. When asked “at what age does youth end?”most of these old people had no answer. Several replied, “Well, perhaps at age 80.”

    What accounts for this ability to survive to such old age, and to survive so well?First of all, hard physical work is a way of life for all of these long-lived people. They begin their long days of physical labor as children and never seem to stop. For example, Mr . Rustam Mamedov is 142 years of age. His wife is 116 years old. They have been married for 90 years. Mr. Mamedov has no intention of retiring from his life as a farmer. “Why?What else would I do?”he asks. All these people get healthful rewards from the environment in which they work. They all come from mountainous regions. They live and work at elevations of 1,660 to 1,000 meters above sea level. The air has less oxygen and is pollution-free. This reduced-oxygen environment makes the heart and blood vessel(血管) system stronger.

    Another factor that may contribute to the good health of these people is their isolation. To a great extent, they are separated from the pressures and worries of industrial society. Inherited factors also play some role. Most of the longest-lived people had parents and grandparents who also reached very old ages. Good family genes may, therefore, be one factor in living longer.

1.The example of Mr. and Mrs. Mamedov implies that some Caucasians aged 100 to 140 ____.

A.become weak and hopeless            

B.are too old to work in the fields

C.benefit from physical work            

D.are still working in the fields

2.What is the main way of life for all of these long-lived people?

A.Retiring from their lives as farmers.    

B.Having been married for 90 years.

C.Hard physical work.                  

D.Having no intentions.

3.Which of the following factors isn’t helpful to people’s health and long life?

A.Clean mountain air.        B.Daily hard work.

C. Good genes             D. Stress and pressure.

 

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