【題目】Her doctor indicated that even adding a(n) _____ amount of daily exercise would dramatically improve her health.
A.modestB.equal
C.exactD.considerable
科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:
【題目】______ you know him well, you will find him easy to be around and thoughtful.
A. However B. Though
C. Once D. Before
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【題目】Changing Bit by Bit
A new contest challenges people to use micro:bit computers to solve problems.
Could you use your computing skills to aid the fight against illegal animal hunting? How about tackling ocean pollution or monitoring animals under threat of extinction?
A new global challenge called Do Your Bit aims to get young people using their computing creativity to solve real-world problems. It’s being run by a partnership involving the BBC’s micro:bit computer, the technology company ARM and a campaign called World’s Largest Lesson, and it's aimed at people aged 10 to 16. It kicks off on 16 September.
The contest in 2019 is based on two Global Goals: to protect life on land and under the water. To take part, young people first choose a problem that affects them and their community, then design something involving the micro:bit computer that could help to tackle that problem.
Participants need to write up to 500 words about the problem and their solution, as well as providing a photo of their drawn plans or a hex file of their prototype code (編碼), plus any other photos and videos showing what they’ve done.
This is the second micro:bit Global Challenge to be held. In 2018, the contest's winning designs included a homemade thief alarm, a classroom health monitor, a food-waste watcher and a device to remind people to sit up straight.
The deadline for entering the challenge is 28 February 2020: the winners will be announced the following month.
【1】The main purpose of BBC’s involvement is to _______.
A.report for this contest
B.call for ocean protection
C.introduce the Global Goals
D.promote micro:bit computers
【2】The Do Your Bit in 2019 is based on the theme of________.
A.getting rid of hunger
B.providing clean water
C.taking care of children
D.protecting life on the earth
【3】To take part in the contest, contestants need ______.
A.buy micro:bit computers
B.sign up for it before 16 September 2020
C.choose a real problem and offer solutions
D.prepare photos and videos of group members
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【題目】 Curiosity is what drives us to keep learning, keep trying, keep pushing forward. But how does one generate (產(chǎn)生) curiosity, in oneself or others? George Loewenstein, a professor of psychology at Carnegie Mellon University, offered an answer in the classic1994 paper, “The Psychology of Curiosity.”
Curiosity arises, Loewenstein wrote, “when attention becomes focused on a gap in one's knowledge. Such information gaps produce the feeling of deprivation (匱乏) labeled curiosity. The curious individual is motivated to obtain the missing information to reduce the feeling of deprivation.” Loewenstein's theory helps explain why curiosity is such a force: it's not only a mental state but also an emotion, a powerful feeling that drives us forward.
Scientist Daniel Willingham notes that teachers are often “so eager to get to the answer that we do not devote enough time to developing the question.” Yet it's the question that stimulates (刺激) curiosity; being told an answer stops curiosity before it can even get going.
In his 1994 paper, George Loewenstein noted that curiosity requires some basic knowledge. We're not curious about something we know absolutely nothing about. But as soon as we know even a little bit, our curiosity is aroused and we want to learn more. In fact, research shows that curiosity increases with knowledge: the more we know, the more we want to know. To get this process started, Loewenstein suggests, take steps with some interesting but incomplete information.
Language teachers have long used communication in exercises that open an information gap and then require learners to communicate with each other in order to fill it. For example, one student might be given a series of pictures for the beginning of the story, while the student's partner is given a series of pictures showing how that same story ends. Only by speaking with each other (in the foreign language they are learning, of course) can the students fill in each others' information gaps.
【1】When one notices a gap in his knowledge, he .
A.desires to fill it
B.tends to be afraid
C.might get tired and sad
D.will become focused on his learning
【2】What does Daniel Willingham imply in the article?
A.Answers are more important than questions.
B.Teachers should be eager to get to the answer.
C.Teachers know how to stimulate students’ curiosity.
D.Teachers are partly to blame for students’ hating school.
【3】According to George Loewenstein’s paper, curiosity about something occurs only when you .
A.have read a lot of booksB.know little about something
C.have some related informationD.are given incomplete information
【4】What is the article mainly about?
A.Why students hate school.
B.Why curiosity is important.
C.How to stimulate curiosity.
D.What makes people hungry for knowledge.
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【題目】 Afroz Shall, a lawyer in Mumbai, hasn't had a weekend off in four years. But he hasn't spent this time preparing for _______.
His mission? Saving the world's oceans from _______ pollution.
It's a calling he found in 2015 after moving to a community in Mumbai called Versova Beach. He had played there as a child and was _______to see how much it had _______. The sand was no longer _______ because it was covered by a layer of garbage more than five feet thick - most of it plastic waste.
“The whole beach was like a _________of plastic,” he said, “It hurt me. The _______ mess.” Shah had seen is part of a global environmental crisis. More than 8 million tons of plastic _______in the world’s oceans each year. It's predicted that by 2050, there will be more plastic in the ocean than fish. “Plastic in the ocean is a _______. And the sea-species have no choice at all,” Shah said, “We are __________ their habitats.”
In October 2015, shall began __________ up plastic waste from the beach every Sunday morning. At first, it was just him and a neighbor, and then he began calling on others to join in. Word __________ and with help from social media, more volunteers got __________.
For Shah, the work has always been a __________ journey, but it has earned global attention. After he was __________ as a Champion of the Earth by the United Nations in 2016, Shah now devotes nearly all of his free time to this ____________.
He's now spent 209 weekends on this mission, __________ more than 200,000 volunteers, some of whom are young students, to join him in what's been called the world's biggest beach cleanup. By October 2018, Versova Beach was __________ clean and Shah's cleanups expanded to another beach as well as a stretch of the Mithi River and other regions of India.
“This world talks too much. I think we must talk __________ and do action more,” he said when interviewed by CNN in October 2019. “We are a smart species. Well adapt. We'll learn. And with these youngsters rising up, I see __________.”
【1】A.teachingB.houseworkC.courtD.cleaning
【2】A.plasticB.soilC.riverD.oil
【3】A.upset.B.confused.C.delightedD.hesitant
【4】A.grownB.changedC.reservedD.protected
【5】A.pureB.goldenC.shinyD.visible
【6】A.curtainB.carpetC.paintingD.photograph
【7】A.temporaryB.permanentC.uglyD.pretty
【8】A.sticks toB.keeps offC.gives backD.ends up
【9】A.killerB.cleanerC.guestD.decoration
【10】A.sweepingB.attackingC.visitingD.beautifying
【11】A.pullingB.thinkingC.pickingD.looking
【12】A.cameB.failedC.wentD.spread
【13】A.involvedB.livedC.stuckD.paid
【14】A.easyB.toughC.personalD.general
【15】A.knownB.regardedC.decidedD.honored
【16】A.causeB.caseC.positionD.fame
【17】A.requiringB.rejectingC.invitingD.inspiring
【18】A.originallyB.finallyC.politicallyD.theoretically
【19】A.fewerB.lessC.betterD.worse
【20】A.honorB.beautyC.hopeD.love
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【題目】At that time, my mind was a complete _______ ; I couldn't think of a single answer.
A. blankB. bonus
C. blowD. bottom
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【題目】
Bathroom Reveals Your Repayment Ability
Banks and other lenders typically look at borrowers’ credit histories, tax forms and other financial information to determine whether they will get paid back. In China, 【1】lenders also look at their bathrooms.
As the economy slows, the government wants to nurture a credit culture to get Chinese families spending instead of saving. While the country’s wealth has 【2】, the financial system has not kept pace. Some people have had no【3】 to credit card or mortgage, so lenders often have little reliable information about potential borrowers.
To fill the gaps, one upstart lender, China Rapid Finance, 【4】 data analysis with on-the-ground spade work. The company’s investigators, in more than 90 cities, check for the number of toothbrushes or towels to determine how many people are living in a house. They look for dirty dishes in the kitchen. They take photos of a potential borrower at work to confirm employment status.
A growing number of companies are trying to crack the credit code in China. The internet giants Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu are developing credit 【5】 systems based on users’ online transactions and search histories.
The World Bank estimated that 79 percent of China’s population above the age of 15 have bank accounts, while only 10 percent have ever borrowed from the formal financial system. China’s banks have a(n) 【6】 consumers lending business. Contrarily, online lenders are 【7】 as the pioneers, satisfying China’ s rising consumer class. Alibaba’s financial affiliate(隸屬機構(gòu)), Huabei, makes small loans to online shoppers and vendors on its e-commerce platforms.
Peer- to-peer platforms have proved hugely popular in China, but the industry’s reputation has been 【8】 by scandal, like the collapse of Ezubao.
After that, regulators have stepped up their oversight of online lenders, including setting【9】 on the amounts that can be borrowed. The regulators’ tightening grip is “something like a shepherd 【10】herding his sheep into an increasingly narrowing pen or chute,” said Mark Natkin, the founder and managing director at Marbridge Consulting, based in Beijing.
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【題目】As is tradition, technology companies from around the world have flocked to Las Vegas for the annual Consumer Electronics Show. There are thousands of eye-catching items to swoon over, whether you’re a nerd or not. Here are a few of the most interesting, exciting and possibly life-changing products seen at the show, which runs from Tuesday to Friday.
Item 1 You thought your curved TV was cool? The LG Signature OLED TV R is a 65-inch 4K TV that is, unlike your lame and rigid screen, rollable, and can retract(收回) into its base when you’re not enjoying it. While you can control it using either Google Assistant or Amazon Alexa, the TV R also supports Apple’s AirPlay 2 and HomeKit. | |
Item 2 Gaming laptops aren’t new, but they usually lack power compared to their beefier desktop counterparts. Nvidia’s latest announcement changes that, and brings the desktop-class power found in its RTX line of graphics cards to laptops. More than 40 laptop models will turn up by the end of the month with RTX graphics cards inside, which can produce more realistic graphics and boost performance for the most gamers. | |
Item 3 If sleeping is harder than it should be, the Dreem band might be able to help you figure out what you’re doing wrong. The Dreem band is a fabric-covered headband that wraps around your head and uses a combination of sensors like the ones in your Apple Watch to detect various biometrics like your heart rate and respiration activity. It also uses bone conduction to communicate audio cues to you privately. | |
Item 4 Samsung’s shown off its Micro LED technology in the past, using it to build The Wall, a 146-inch TV. The company’s now showing off a smaller Micro LED TV. Using Samsung’s Micro LED panels, you can create a variety of display sizes supporting different aspect ratios, going from an ultra-wide 21:9 screen to a perfectly square 1:1 display without losing image quality. |
【1】If one likes doing things by himself, which of the items suits him best?
A. Item 1. B. Item 2.
C. Item 3. D. Item 4.
【2】Which of the following technologies appeared for the first time in the show?
A. The TV R User’s controlling the TV by Google Assistant
B. Nvidia’s laptops’ solving the problem of power
C. The Dreem band’s detect your heart rate
D. Samsung’s Micro LED technology making a 146-inch TV possible
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