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假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改课文片段默写,请你修改你同桌写的以下片段。其...

假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改课文片段默写,请你修改你同桌写的以下片段其中共有10处语言错误,每句中最多有两处。每处错误仅涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。

增加在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写出该加的词。

删除把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。

修改在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。

注意:1. 每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;

2. 只允许修改10处,多者(从第11处起)不计分。

I’ve been playing volleyball before three years ago. It started when teacher set up a volleyball club in our school, hope that more students would take part in the sport and keep fit. The club was very popular that many students signed up for it. To be honesty, at that time I just followed them without thinking too much. We practiced together on every Saturday morning. However, some of the students soon begin to get bored and dropped out of the club. So I found I was quite enjoying it and we carried on. After training for some time, I was selected for the school team. How exciting and proud I was.

 

1. before 改为 since 2. teacher 前加 a 3. hope 改为 hoping 4. very 改为 so 5. honesty 改为 honest 6. on 去掉 7. begin 改为 began 8. So 改为 But 9. we 改为 I 10. exciting 改为 excited 【解析】 本文是一篇记叙文。作者讲述了喜欢打排球的原因和故事经过。 1.考查介词。句意:自从三年前我就一直打排球。句子是现在完成进行时态,后面不能跟过去的时间点,要和一段时间连用,故把before 改为 since。since three years ago自从三年前。 2.考查不定冠词。句意:它开始于一个老师在我们学校建立了一个排球俱乐部,希望更多的学生参加这项运动,保持健康。此处表示“泛指”,结合句意可知在teacher 前加 a。 3.考查现在分词做伴随状语。句意:它开始于一个老师在我们学校建立了一个排球俱乐部,希望更多的学生参加这项运动,保持健康。此处是现在分词做伴随状语,故把hope 改为 hoping。 4.考查so---that引导的结果状语从句。句意:这个俱乐部很受欢迎,许多学生报名参加了。此处是so---that引导的结果状语从句,故把very改成so。 5.考查独立成分。To be honest“诚实地说”,故把honesty 改为 honest。 6.考查固定结构。句意:我们每个星期六早上一起练习。every Saturday morning“在每个星期六”本身就含有“在”的意思,所以on是多余的,故把on去掉。 7.考查时态。句意:然而,一些学生很快就厌倦了,退出了俱乐部。此处指已经发生的事,用一般过去时态,故把begin 改为 began。 8.考查并列连词。句意:但我发现我很享受它,我继续练习。与上句是一种转折关系,故把So 改为 But。 9.考查人称代词。句意:但我发现我很享受它,我继续练习。结合句意,故把we 改为 I。 10.考查过去分词。句意:我是多么的兴奋和自豪。此处表示“感到兴奋”,故把exciting 改为 excited。
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阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词或括号内单词的正确形式填空。将答案填写在答题卡的相应位置。

Aids is caused by a 1. (dead) virus called HIV, which attacks the body s immune system and there’s no cure for it When someone has Aids, the person loses the ability to fight other illnesses. The virus 2. (spread) in three ways. It can be passed on through 3. (protect) sex, through blood and from a mother to her child. Contrary to 4. many people think, HIV cannot be transmitted through mosquitoes, a cough or sneeze.

Since the disease 5. (burst) on the scene in the 1980s, it has become a serious problem around the world. According to WHO, more than 15 million children have lost their parents 6. Aids. Ajani, whose father died of Aids two years ago, lost his mother for the same reason.

China has also been affected by Aids. By the end of 2009, there were about 740,000 HTV 7. (carry) in China. Dr David Ho, a Chinese-American Aids expert, has devoted himself to 8. (bring) up-to-date technology to China’s Aids problem. UNAIDS also teaches young people how to prevent Aids, and set up treatment centers 9. mothers with HIV can receive medicine to help keep them from passing HIV on to their children.

Ajani and his sister are 10. (fortune). Because their mother had access to prescription Aids medicines when she was pregnant, they did not get HIV from her. Now their grandfather is caring for them.

 

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I come from one of those families where you have to yell at the dinner table to get in a word. Everyone has a strong ____, and talks at the same time, and no one has a ____ leading to heated arguments. We often talk or even debate with each other on different topics.

___ a family like mine has made me more ____ about the world around me, making me tend to question anything anyone tells me. But it has also made me realize that I’m not a good listener. And when I say “listening”, I’m not ____ to the nodding-your-head-and-____-answering-Uh-huh-or-Ooh-I-see variety. I mean the kind of listening where you find yourself deeply ____ the person you’re speaking with, when his story become so ____ that your world becomes less about you and more about him. No, I was never good at that.

I spent summer in South Africa two years ago. I worked ____ for a good non-profit ____ called Noah, which works on behalf of children affected by AIDS. But ____ you asked me what I really did in South Africa, I’d tell you one thing: I listened, and I listened Sometimes I ____, but mostly I listened.

And if I had not spent two months ____, I might have missed the ____ moment when a quiet little girl at one of Noah’s community centers, who lost her parents at the age of three, whispered after a long ____, “I love you.”

___ that summer, I knew a little about how to hear. I could sit down with anyone hear their ____ and nod and respond at the ____ time----but most of the time I was ____ about the next words out of my own mouth. Ever since my summer in South Africa, I have noticed that it’s in those moments when my mouth is closed and my ____ is wide open that I’ve learned the most about other people, and perhaps about myself.

1.A. qualification    B. influence    C. opinion    D. assumption

2.A. time    B. problem    C. schedule    D. request

3.A. Belonging to    B. Believing in    C. Bringing up    D. Struggling for

4.A. anxious    B. curious    C. nervous    D. adventurous

5.A. objecting    B. appealing    C. turning    D. referring

6.A. rudely    B. loudly    C. politely    D. gratefully

7.A. understanding    B. judging    C. discussing    D. catering

8.A. vivid    B. magical    C. mind-numbing    D. time-consuming

9.A. effortlessly    B. timelessly    C. aimlessly    D. tirelessly

10.A. school    B. organization    C. factory    D. church

11.A. unless    B. because    C. although    D. if

12.A. applauded    B. spoke    C. wept    D. complained

13.A. studying    B. traveling    C. listening    D. working

14.A. touching    B. frustrating    C. astonishing    D. fascinating

15.A. delay    B. course    C. journey    D. silence

16.A. Before    B. After    C. Except    D. Since

17.A. needs    B. stories    C. comments    D. cases

18.A. valuable    B. free    C. right    D. same

19.A. talking    B. arguing    C. learning    D. thinking

20.A. sympathy    B. spirit    C. mind    D. family

 

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A new study suggests that the timing of a wound affects the speed at which it heals (治愈). Wounds suffered during the day heal around 60 percent faster than those at night.

The study showed how the bodies’ circadian rhythm (昼夜节奏) controlled the healing of wounds. 1. It tells our bodies when to wake up, eat and sleep in a circle---a series of activities that repeat themselves day after day. 2..

In the study, researchers found that skin cells moved faster to repair wounds suffered during the day Their findings were published in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

The researchers examined cells, mice, and burn injury databases. 3..

Night-time bums—bums suffered between 8 o’clock at night and 8 o’clock the next morning----were 95 percent healed after an average of 28 days.

But after on average of 17 days, daytime bums----burns suffered between 8 o’clock in the morning and 8 at night----were 95 percent healed. 4..

Wounds are very costly to treat. 5.. In Britain’s National Health Services, for example, such services cost around $6.56 billion per year. Experts say the high cost result, in part, from a lack of drugs that speed up the closure of wounds.

A. Each cycle lasts about 24 hours.

B. The circadian rhythm is like a clock or timer.

C. Specifically, their investigation found the following information.

D. The new study’s findings could help scientists develop better drugs.

E. In other words, night-time injuries took an average of 11 days longer to heal.

F. Worldwide, billions of dollars are spent every year on wound-treatment services.

G. That s what a group of researchers from a university in Canada recently published.

 

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For years, there has been a prejudice against science among clinical psychologists (临床心理学家). In a two-year analysis to be published in November in Perspectives on Psychological Science, psychologists charge that many clinical psychologists fail to “provide the treatments which are given the strongest evidence of effectiveness” and “give more weight to their personal experiences than to science.” As a result, patients have no guarantee that their “treatment will be informed by science.” Walter Mischel of Columbia University is even cruder in his judgment. “The disconnect between what clinical psychologists do and what science has discovered is an extreme embarrassment,” he told me, and “there is a widening gap between clinical practice and science.”

The “widening” reflects the great progress that psychological research has made in identifying the most effective treatments. Thanks to strict clinical trials, we now know that teaching patients to think about their thoughts in new, healthier ways and to act on those new ways of thinking are effective against depression, panic disorder and other problems, with multiple trials showing that these treatments—the tools of psychology—bring more lasting benefits than drugs.

You wouldn’t know this if you sought help from a typical clinical psychologist. Although many treatments are effective, relatively few psychologists learn or practice them.

Why in the world not? For one thing, says Baker from the University of Wisconsin, clinical psychologists are “Very doubtful about the role of science” and “lack solid science training”. Also, one third of patients get better no matter what treatment (if any) they have, “and psychologists remember these successes, believing, wrongly, that they are the result of the treatment.”

When faced with evidence that treatments they offer are not supported by science, clinical psychologists argue that they know better than some study that works. A 2008 study of 591 psychologists in private practice found that they rely more on their own and colleagues’ experience than on science when deciding how to treat a patient. If they keep on this path as insurance companies (保险公司) demand evidence-based medicine, warns Mischel, psychology will “discredit itself.”

1.Many clinical psychologists fail to provide the roost effective treatments because    ________.

A. they are unfamiliar with their patients

B. they believe in science and evidence

C. they rely on their personal experiences

D. they depend on their colleagues’ help

2.The widening gap between clinical practice and science is due to _______.

A. the cruel judgment by Walter Mischel

B. the great progress that has been made in psychological research

C. the fact that most patients get better after being treated

D. the fact that patients prefer to take drugs rather than have other treatments

3.How do clinical psychologists respond when charged that their treatments are not supported by science?

A. They feel embarrassed.    B. They doubt their treatments.

C. They are disappointed.    D. They try to defend themselves.

4.According to the passage, what is Mischel’s attitude towards psychology?

A. positive.    B. neutral.

C. indifferent.    D. negative.

 

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When you finish your day at school, you probably rush to your dormitory or home as quickly as possible. But for some people, their day begins in the middle of the night.

Welcome to the interesting world of “the Master”, the owner of a small restaurant located in a busy district that only opens from midnight to 7 am.

Earlier this month, Hong Kong actor Tony Leung Ka-fai announced that he had directed and starred as the Master in a remake of Japanese director Joji Matsuoka’s famous comedy Midnight Diner. The new movie is expected to come out in Chinese mainland cinemas later this year.

While serving regular soup every night, the Master is also willing to make customized (定制的) dishes if his customers ask. Besides its delicious food, what makes this eatery special is that it’s a place of sanctuary and togetherness.

Midnight is often when worries, loneliness, and sadness occur, and midnight diner provides the simple comforts of food and drink, and more importantly, a warm place where people can keep each other company, talk, and share their stories. The customers,stories cover everything, from problems at work to parenthood, romance, friendship, and the regrets of a wasted life. Listening to their stories, customers offer encouragement and advice to one another. But the Master only provides the life lesson- a good day must follow a bad one-when necessary.

Despite feeing different kinds of disappointment, people need to find their own satisfaction in their seemingly messy lives. The small pleasure can be a good hot-pot meal,” Japanese culture website JapanPewered.com noted. It s easy to lose sight of what gives life meaning as we go about the daily routine of work and home life.”

After all, no one is flawless (无暇的) and no one’s life is perfect, but imperfections are the space where possibilities live. As Kelly Mcneils, author of Your Messy Brilliance, wrote, “The good, the bad, and the ugly, they are our greatest wealth because they include every single part of ourselves and leave nothing out-and when we fully accept all parts of ourselves, we discover our true power.”

1.From the passage we know that the Master ________.

A. is an actor in Midnight Diner,

B. is so popular as to be remade by Joji Matsuoka

C. provides good service for his customers

D. offers a special restaurant all day.

2.What does the underlined word “sanctuary” in Paragraph 4 mean?

A. shelter    B. separation

C. eating    D. complaint

3.Why is the midnight diner important and special?

A. Because bad emotions often occur at midnight

B. Because it offers meals at midnight

C. Because customers are comforted and helped here.

D. Because the customers love the Master’s life lessons.

4.What can be inferred from the last paragraph?

A. Nobody is perfect.

B. Accepting our imperfections help us learn about ourselves.

C. We shouldn’t attach great importance to our imperfections.

D. Potentials can only be found in our imperfections.

 

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