高一下小猫钓鱼语篇精选112篇(学生版)
体裁 | 说明文 | 词数 | 318 | 北京日语翻译限时 | 13分钟 | 尼古拉斯 霍尔特
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A. roughly B. consulting C. adding D. qualifications E. tbacks F. particularly
G. belonging H. postponing I. perspective J. respondents K. record
Shen Yu recently resigned from the kindergarten where she worked for two months, waving goodbye to her first job after graduating from university last year and knowing she would suffer (1) looking for a job again.“The 3,000 yuan ($471) monthly salary didn’t pay me back for my years of study, and I didn’t get a n of (2) kittenfrom the job,” said the 23-year-old Shanghai native, who has a bachelor’s degree in financial management. Shen is among the (3) 8 percent—or 600,000—of last year’s college graduates who have failed to find a job. Apart from some who opted to study abroad, the rest were (4) a job, according to the 2015 annual report on Chine college graduates’ employment relead by MyCOS, an education data and (5) company. The data was collected in th
e cond half of last year.“Seen from the (6) of the current job-hunting ason, the proportion of tho who decided to delay the working world may be a little higher,” said Zhou Haiwang, deputy director of the Institute of Urban and Population Development Studies at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, (7) that the number of this group has been increasing in recent years. According to an online poll conducted by Jiefang Daily, more than 70 percent of (8) have relatives or friends who put off work after graduation, taking time to look for ideal jobs or mulling entrepreneurial plans. A total of 1,000 Shanghai residents participated in the poll .Unemployed young people nowadays have higher education (9) and longer periods of unemployment, according to Ying Hongqing, deputy director of the Shanghai Municipal Human Resources and Social Security Bureau. The number of college graduates has continued to climb for the past 15 years, and reached a (10) 7.49 million this year. This year’s job-hunting ason saw 220,000 more graduates than the previous year, but slowing economic growth means diminished recruitment by companies.
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体裁 | 说明文 | 词数 | 262 | streaking限时 | 10分钟 |
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A well-established distinction in memory theory..
A. comfortable B. attempt C. involves D. negotiate E. impuls
F. differently G. test H. ceas I. experiences J. apparently K. normal
A well-established distinction in memory theory is that between short-term and long-term memory. The former refers to our ability to do such things as remember telephone numbers long enough to dial them; the latter concerns the wide range of ways in which (1) can affect behavior many years later. Given the two different kinds of ability, it is reasonable to hypothesize (猜测) that each is reprented (2) in the brain. An experiment was designed to (3) the hypothesis that long-term memory implies a chemical change in the brain cells while short-term memory (4) patterns of impuls in circuits of nerve cells.One group of rats was taught to run through a maze (迷宫). Five minutes after learning the task, they were cooled to 50℃, the temperature at which all electrical activity in the brain (5) They were then kept at this temperature for 15 minutes before being allowed to return to their (6) temperature. They were then ru
n through the maze again. A cond group of rats were taught to run the same maze, and then immediately cooled to 50℃ for 15 minutes. After being allowed to return to their normal temperature, a/an (7) was made to run the cond group through the maze again. It was found that rats in the first group had no difficulty with the maze the cond time, suggesting that they did not have to relearn the task. Rats in the group which was cooled immediately after learning the maze, on the other hand, could not少儿篮球培训班 (8) the maze successfully, i.e., they (9) could not remember what they had learned. It was concluded from this experiment that short-term memory is unlike long-term memory. Short-term memory involves electrical (10) since at a temperature where electrical activity ceas, there is no memory. Long-term memory, in contrast, is unaffected by the disruption of electrical activity and may involve structural changes in brain cells.
体裁 | 说明文 | 词数 | 226 | 限时 | 10分钟 |
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Bottled water ems like a harmless and convenient..
A. boiled B. particular C. influence D. potentially E. process
F. flexible G. convinced H. stored I. amounts J. available K. dangerously
Bottled water ems like a harmless and convenient product of today’s world. However, the truth is that the results of bottling water aren’t all good. Bottled water advertiments have people (1) that bottled water is healthier than tap water. However, in most cas, it isn’t. Bottled water is (2) for long periods of time at warm temperatures. As bottles age, the chemical ud to make plastic (3) gets into the water. Microorganisms can also grow in this environment at high rates. Health officials are particularly concerned about how the effects (4) broken arrowchildren, the elderly, and other weak individuals. In fact, they say that infants in (5) should never be given bottled water unless it is (6) first. Furthermore, some bottled water companies actually u the same tap water or well water that is (7) to the general public. A few companies have been found using water sources (8) clo to poisonous sites. Environmentalists have even more concerns. Millions of barrels of oil are ud in the prod
uction, transportation, and storage of bottled water. This places a strain on limited natural resources and creates vast (9) of greenhou gas. Additionally, a single plastic bottle can take over 1,000 years to break down. Before you buy your next bottle of water, remember that the (10) that produces it is often expensive, unhealthy, and bad for the environment. Then, ask yourlf if that’s something you really want to buy.
Chine online video websites ud to operate..pretty women
A. truly B. tolerates C. net D. airs E. original F. appeal
G. owe H. assumed I. quickly J. attracted K. popularity
Chine online video websites ud to operate as supplementary broadcast platforms for TV stations. But now (1) programs independently produced by some major video sites have achieved unparalleled success. Domestic superhero parody film Jian Bing Ma
n has just become the sixth Chine film in history to (2) more than 1 billion yuan at the box office. This is largely due to the success of online mini-ries Diors Man, which (3) on Sohu and was created by Dong Chengpeng, who directs and is the leading actor in both the ries and film. Since the show went online in 2012, Dong’s funny satirical style has quickly (4) a large group of followers to the show. The film gives diehard fans a chance to show their support for Dong. As an Internet catchphra goes, “We (5) Dong a film ticket.”
Besides taste-tailored storytelling, online platforms have another (6) They’re inclusive. Talk shows, debate programs, reality TV—any format that lls can be put online.
“The Internet is a more open platform. It doesn’t draw conclusions, nor does it try to educate. It (7) different voices,” Jiang Bin, general manager of iQiyi’s program development center, told China Daily about the (8) of lf-made programs such as the website’s talk show Morning Call. The year 2014 was called “the first year of the era of online shows.” But back then many (9) online shows only starred new faces and looked about as cheap as their budgets. But now all the preconceptions are being shattered. 2015 is (10) giving Web ries a shiny new coat of paint.
The Ca of the Bone Marrow Buyer..
A. painful B. emingly C. regenerates D. position E. praying F. disorder
G. immediate H. procedure I. typically J. prohibited K. challenge
The Ca of the Bone Marrow Buyer
All Doreen Gummoe could do was hope. Her daughter Jordan Flynn had been born with Fanconi anemia, a rare inherited blood (1) that destroys bone marrow and makes sufferers highly susceptible to cancer. In spring 2012, when Jordan was 14, doctors found preleukemia cells in her blood. Without a(n) (2) bone marrow transplant, she would likely die within months.(3) , siblings are the most viable donors, but Jordan’s brothers weren’t matches. In 2005, Gummoe had given birth to twin girls, Julia and Jorja, who also have Fanconi anemia. Someday, they will likely each need transplants as well.
Gummoe, who lives in Lewiston, Maine, turned to the National Marrow Donor Program’s registry, (4) to find a willing donor for Jordan in the 2 percent of people who are registered. Sometimes a donor isn’t willing to undergo the (5) even if he or she is a match. Years ago, transplants required a (6) biopsy in the pelvic bone. Today, the method, apheresis, involves connecting donors to a machine that draws blood, harvests stem cells, and returns the blood, which naturally (7) the stem cells that have been removed.“If there were compensation (补偿) for bone marrow donors, that might put more people in the registry,” says Gummoe. “There’d be a better chance of finding a donor.” However, according to 1984’s National Organ Transplant Act (NOTA), buying and lling organs, including bone marrow, is illegal. So in 2009—two and a half years before Jordan would need her transplant—Gummoe became the lead plaintiff in a lawsuit filed against the U.S. attorney general to (8) the law.“It’s legal for people to pay for blood, sperm, and eggs,” argues Jeff Rowes, attorney for Institute for Justice, the nonprofit, public-interest law firm that filed the suit. “Plus, it’s crazy to lump in bone marrow with solid organs, like kidneys, that a donor can’t grow back.”The government res
ponded that “statute (法律) plainly classifies ‘bone marrow’ as an organ for which compensation is (9) .” Furthermore, by enacting NOTA into law, Congress took the (10) that “human body parts should not be viewed as commodities.”