swell v. 膨脹.隆起 ①她的腿腫得很厲害 Her leg has swollen badly. ②風(fēng)鼓起了帆. The wind swelled the sails. ③大雨使河水上漲了. The heavy rain swelled the river. swollen 可作形容詞.表示“ 腫脹的 Her eyes were red and swollen with weeping. 她的眼睛哭得又紅又腫. 7 damage v. 損害. 損壞 n. 損害. 毀壞. 破壞 ①這場(chǎng)戰(zhàn)爭(zhēng)損害了兩國(guó)之間的關(guān)系. The war damaged the relations between the countries. ②地震造成了重大破壞. The earthquake caused great damage. 8 jewellery 和jewel 的辨析:兩者均有“ 珍寶首飾 之意.jewellery 為集體 名詞. 不可數(shù),jewel 為可數(shù)名詞 查看更多

 

題目列表(包括答案和解析)

  Talking on a mobile phone is expensive, so a lot of people send text messages. Text messages are much cheaper than talking on a mobile phone, and you can make it even cheaper by shortening the words that you use. You can do this by taking out “unimportant” letters in the words and using numbers instead of words(2=to, 3=free, 4=for, 8=ate, h8=hate, etc. ). Here is an example :Im 3 nw, why nt gv me a cll? (I’m free now, why not give me a call?)

Mobile phone users have developed a series of symbols to show how they feel. They are called emoticons(情感符號(hào)). To read an emoticon, you have to look at it sideways. For example, if you say something in a text message which is a joke, you can follow it with a smiling face. Like this: Why did t u cll me? Im so sad. ∶-)

  Here are some others. Can you think of these text messages where you could use them?

  ∶·)laughing∶ ·(sad∶·<really sad

  ∶·v shouting| · | sleep∶ o shocked

  8 · | surprised\· o bored

1. The underlined word “sideways” in this passage means______ .

A. 從側(cè)面地    B. 從旁邊地

C. 斜眼地   D. 顛倒地

2. What do you think of this text message “Whr hv U bn? Im wtng 4 U”means?

A. Where have you been? I’m waiting for you.

B. Where have you been? I’m looking for you.

C. What are you doing? I’m waiting for you.

D. What are you doing? I’m looking for you.

3. Which one means“l(fā)aughing” in the text messages?

A. ∶·(          B. ∶· )

C. ∶· <     D. 8 ·

 

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閱讀理解

  Below is a page adapted from an English dictionary.

  stick

  verb(stuck, stuck)

  push sth in

  [+adv./prep.] to push sth, usually a sharp object, into sth; to be pushed into sth:[VN] The nurse stuck the needle into my arm.◆ Don't stick your fingers through the bars of the cage.◆ [V] I found a nail sticking in the tyre.

  attach

  [+adv./prep.] to fix sth to sth else, usually with a sticky substance; to become fixed to sth in this way:[VN] He stuck a stamp on the envelope.◆ We used glue to stick the broken pieces together.◆ I stuck the photos into an album.◆ [V] Her wet clothes were sticking to her body.◆ The glue's useless-the pieces just won't stick.

  put

  [VN +adv./prep.](informal)to put sth in a place, especially quickly or carelessly:Stick your bags down there.◆ He stuck his hands in his pockets and strolled off.◆ Can you stick this on the noticeboard? ◆ Peter stuck his head around the door and said, 'Coffee, anyone?' ◆(spoken)Stick 'em up!(=put your hands above your head-I have a gun)

  become fixed

  [V]~(in sth)to become fixed in one position and impossible to move:The key has stuck in the lock.◆ This drawer keeps sticking.

  difficult situation

  (BrE, informal)(usually used in negative sentences and questions)to accept a difficult or unpleasant situation or person:[VN] I don't know how you stick that job.◆ They're always arguing-I can't stick it any longer.◆ The problem is, my mother can't stick my boyfriend.◆ [V -ing] John can't stick living with his parents.

  become accepted

  [V] to become accepted:The police couldn't make the charges stick(=show them to be true).◆ His friends called him Bart and the name has stuck(=has become the name that everyone calls him).

  [V] to not take any more cards

  Idioms:stick in your mind(of a memory, an image, etc.)to be remembered for a long time:One of his paintings in particular sticks in my mind.

  stick in your throat/craw(informal)

  (of words)to be difficult or impossible to say:She wanted to say how sorry she was but the words seemed to stick in her throat.

  (of a situation)to be difficult or impossible to accept; to make you angry

  stick your neck out(informal)to do or say sth when there is a risk that you may be wrong:I'll stick my neck out and say that Bill is definitely the best candidate for the job.

  stick to your guns(informal)to refuse to change your mind about sth even when other people are trying to persuade you that you are wrong

  Phrasal Verbs:stick around(informal)to stay in a place, waiting for sth to happen or for sb to arrive:Stick around; we'll need you to help us later.

  stick at sth to work in a serious and determined way to achieve sth:If you want to play an instrument well, you've got to stick at it.

  stick by sb [no passive] to be loyal to a person and support them, especially in a difficult situation:Her husband was charged with fraud but she stuck by him.

  stick by sth [no passive] to do what you promised or planned to do:They stuck by their decision.

  stick sth<->down(informal)to write sth somewhere:I think I'll stick my name down on the list.

  stick out to be noticeable or easily seen:They wrote the notice in big red letters so that it would stick out.

  stick sth<->out(of sth)to be further out than sth else or come through a hole; to push sth further out than sth else or through a hole:His ears stick out.◆ She stuck her tongue out at me.◆ Don't stick your arm out of the car window.

  stick to sth

  to continue doing sth in spite of difficulties:She finds it impossible to stick to a diet.

  to continue doing or using sth and not want to change it:He promised to help us and he stuck to his word(=he did as he had promised).◆ 'Shall we meet on Friday this week?' 'No, let's stick to Saturday.' ◆ She stuck to her story.

  stick together(informal)(of people)to stay together and support each other:We were the only British people in the town so we tended to stick together.

  stick up to point upwards or be above a surface:The branch was sticking up out of the water.

  stick with sb/sth [no passive](informal)

  to stay close to sb so that they can help you:Stick with me and I'll make you a millionaire!

  to continue with sth or continue doing sth:They decided to stick with their original plan.

  noun

  from tree

  [C] a thin piece of wood that has fallen or been broken from a tree:We collected dry sticks to start a fire.◆ The boys were throwing sticks and stones at the dog.◆ Her arms and legs were like sticks(=very thin).

  for walking

  [C](especially BrE)=WALKING STICK:The old lady leant on her stick as she talked.

  in sport

  [C] a long thin object that is used in some sports to hit or control the ball:a hockey stick

  long thin piece

  [C](often in compounds)a long thin piece of sth:a stick of dynamite ◆ carrot sticks ◆(AmE)a stick of butter

  [C](often in compounds)a thin piece of wood or plastic that you use for a particular purpose:pieces of pineapple on sticks ◆ The men were carrying spades and measuring sticks.

  in plane/vehicle

  [C](informal, especially AmE)the control stick of a plane

  [C](informal, especially AmE)a handle used to change the GEARS of a vehicle

  for orchestra

  [C] a BATON, used by the person who CONDUCTS an orchestra

  criticism

  [U](BrE, informal)criticism or harsh words:The referee got a lot of stick from the home fans.

  country areas

  (the sticks)[pl.](informal)country areas, a long way from cities:We live out in the sticks.

  person

  [C](old-fashioned, BrE, informal)a person:He's not such a bad old stick.

(1)

When Jimmy says:“Every morning, I have to take the crowded bus to school, which I really can't stick.”, he may feel _________.

[  ]

A.

worried

B.

curious

C.

annoyed

D.

discouraged

(2)

Due to her fashionable dress, the woman stuck out when she was walking in the street.“stuck out” in this sentence means “_________”.

[  ]

A.

be noticeable

B.

be followed

C.

be admired

D.

be envied

(3)

When I was in trouble, Paul was the only one who _________ to help me.

[  ]

A.

stuck in his throat

B.

stuck together

C.

stuck up

D.

stuck his neck out

(4)

Sally said to me:“Try a peaceful life out in the sticks, and you will experience something totally different.” She means _________.

[  ]

A.

I should go to the woods to enjoy a new life.

B.

I should ignore the criticism and enjoy myself.

C.

I should go to the remote areas to have a change.

D.

I should go out by plane instead of by train to change my feelings.

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書(shū)面表達(dá)

下面的一幅圖描述了水的循環(huán)過(guò)程。請(qǐng)根據(jù)這幅圖用英語(yǔ)寫(xiě)一篇科普短文。

生詞:evaporate  v.蒸發(fā);condense  v.凝縮;water vapour  水蒸氣

注意:

(1)短文須包括圖的內(nèi)容,并結(jié)合相關(guān)學(xué)科的知識(shí),使短文正確、連貫。

(2)詞數(shù)100左右。

______________________________________________________________________

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閱讀理解

  V.Drew Gilpin Faust made history in 2007 when she became the first female president of Harvard University, Massachusetts, US.Faust is an excellent historian known especially for her work on the history of the American South.She was a professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania for 25 years.In 2001, she became dean(院長(zhǎng))of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard.

  Born in 1947, Faust grew up in a traditional family.She has often spoken of her “continued confrontations(對(duì)抗)” with her mother “about the requirements of what she usually called femininity(女性特質(zhì))”.Her mother used to tell her, “It’s a man’s world, sweetie.And the sooner you learn that, the better off you’ll be.”

  However, the daughter was a rebellious one.For example, Faust would fight with her mother over whether it was suitable for her to drive a car at night, even if one of her three brothers was a passenger.“She was raised to be a rich man’s wife, ” said a friend, Elizabeth Warren.“Instead she becomes the president of the most powerful university in the world.”

  As a girl, Faust rebelled against not only the strict rules of femininity, but also the racial injustice that existed in her native Virginia.At age 9, after a conversation with her family’s black handyman(雜務(wù)工)and driver, she sent a letter to President Dwight D.Eisenhower decrying(譴責(zé))racial injustice.When studying in Bryn Mawr, a women’s college in Pennsylvania, she was a student activist who would go on to march in the civil rights protests(抗議)in the 1960s.

  What would her mother, who never went to college and died in 1966, have to say about her appointment? “I’ve often thought about that, ” she said.“I’ve had dialogues with my dead mother over the 40 years since she died.”

(1)

According to the passage, Faust was born in _________.

[  ]

A.

Florida

B.

Pennsylvania

C.

Massachusetts

D.

Virginia

(2)

According to the passage, Faust’s mother expected Faust to be _________.

[  ]

A.

Harvard’s president

B.

a great woman

C.

a traditional housewife

D.

a professor of history

(3)

What does the underlined word “rebellious” in Paragraph 3 mean?

[  ]

A.

Unwilling to obey rules.

B.

Difficult to get along with.

C.

Always doing what one is told to do.

D.

Confident and able to do things by oneself.

(4)

Which of the following can be the best title for the passage?

[  ]

A.

A lesson from Harvard’s new president

B.

A woman fighter for American civil rights

C.

A “rebellious daughter” to lead Harvard

D.

A portrait of Harvard’s future president

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書(shū)面表達(dá)

假期將至,據(jù)一份網(wǎng)上調(diào)查,顯示出了教師、學(xué)生、家長(zhǎng)對(duì)于補(bǔ)課的不同觀(guān)點(diǎn)。請(qǐng)你根據(jù)下列提示寫(xiě)一篇英語(yǔ)短文。

要求:1.字?jǐn)?shù):120詞左右;2.必須談出自己的看法。

參考詞匯:extra lessons n.補(bǔ)課 relax v.放松

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