当代散文练习
1.The dangers of scofflawry vary wildly.)w lawless activities today add up to a colossal public 10)n 1)illegally 2)remains 3)risk 4)company 5)waste 6)beater7)than 8)dangerous 9)who 10)nuisance.
2.“Never 1. p off till tomorrow,” 2. e Lord Chesterfield in 1749, “9. f that even the most well-intentioned men have been 10. p ever.
答案:1. put 2. exhorted 3. what 4. That 5. around 6. habit 7. like 8. heels 9. fact 10. Postponers
3. So Grant and Lee were in complete contrast, 1)r 老打嗝是什么原因引起的狗的简笔画his weakness from the 10)p he led.中秋的诗词
1)reprenting 2)oppod 3)man 4)on 5)cities
6)down 7)hand 8)over 9)both 10)people
4. The teacher as mountaineer learns, as E. M. Forster urged, to connect.-- w the wider national life beyond the classroom where pertinent.
1. together 2. other 3. by 4. written 5. instructional
6. makes 7. its 8. where 9. joining 10. with
5.So Grant and Lee were in complete contrast, 1)r two diametrically 2)o____ elements--from the 10)p he led.
1)reprenting 2)oppod 3)man 4)on 5)cities
6)down 7)hand 8)over 9)both 10)people
答案:翻译下划线的词语
1. Appetite is the keenness of living: strong desire to live on2. you are still curious to exist: eager
3. you still have an edge on your longings: are still driven by strong desires
4. taste its multitudinous flavours and juices: numerous
5. I don't mean the lust for food:拓跋圭 overwhelming desire
6. any burning in the blood: any strong desire that you have
7. who never got their heart's desire: were never satisfied
8. I've always preferred wanting to having: being in the state of wanting something to having something9. the whole toffeeness of toffees: appeal for a child to eat toffees
10.imperceptibly diminished: unaccountably
答案:1. transmute trivial impuls into momentous conquences: be inspired by emingly unimportant sudden ideas for the success in great achievements
2. what he can do with physiological pressures and hunger: his capacity to suffer illness and hunger3. vexation: discomfort给女朋友的检讨4. minal: highly original and influencing the development of future events甘油三酯偏高的危害5. equidistant from:equally distant6. insights: understandin满是什么意思
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7. inordinate humanness shows itlf in the ability to make the trivial and common reach an enormous way: excessive human feature is embodied8. thrive on dull routine: succeed on the basis of9. resources of the mature: ability of adaptation10. stave off boredom: prevent in time
第5题
1. Despite all the current fuss and bother about the extraordinary number of ordinary illiterates who overpopulate our schools, small attention has been given to another kind of illiterate.
Another kind of illiterate has been _ ignored, despite all the current fuss and bother about the extraordinary number of ordinary illiterates who overpopulate our schools.
2. The person to whom I refer is the straight-A illiterate, and the following is written in an attempt to give him equal time with his widely publicized counterpart.
By writing the following, I attempt _ to give the person, to whom I refer as the straight-A illiterate, equal time with his widely publicized counterpart.
3. Finally, with both of us combining our linguistic and imaginative resources, finally, after what ems another hour, we decode it. Finally, both of our _ respective linguistic knowledge and imagination help us decode it after what ems another hour.
4. Bright’s dia attacks the best minds, and gradually destroys the critical faculties, making it his own writing or in that of others.Becau Bright’s dia attacks the best minds the sufferer is made__ unable to detect gibberish in his own writing or in that of others, becau Bright’s dia attacks the best minds.
5. Taking his cue from years of higher education, years of reading the textbooks and professional he writes in this way.His affliction mainly comes from his years of higher education, years of reading the textbooks and professionals, which caus him to write in this way.
1. The half of the king was barbaric, as his ideas, though somewhat polished and sharpened by the progressiveness of distant neighbors, were still large, florid, and untrammeled.
2. He was such a man not only of exuberant fancy, but also of an authority, that he would turn his varied fancies into facts without being resisted.