Does it to let little children play in streets? A. make sense B. have sense C. get senses D. make a sense 查看更多

 

题目列表(包括答案和解析)

  选用所给动词的正确形式填空.

  (1)Does it ________ a big difference if you eat a lot of vegetables every day?

  (2)The trees are too high. We can't ________ the apples on them.

  (3)How often do you ________? Every day.

  (4)Let's ________ our new lesson.

  (5)Don't ________ with fire. It's dangerous.

  (6)My teacher ________ me to come to school earlier.

  (7)She ________ to improve her English.

  (8)What do they ________ for dinner?

  (9)Fruit ________ us to keep in good health.

  (10)My mother ________ the No. 108 bus to work.

查看答案和解析>>

阅读理解

  Languages keeps evolving(进化、发展), and English is no exception.It is a language that embraces(欣然接受)new words that may be cool today but gone tomorrow.

  There are, however, some words and phrases that have stood the test of time.OK, which has become the international standard for expressing agreement, is a good example.

  But why is this rather odd(奇怪的)expression so popular and so useful when we could use any number of other words to say the same thing?

  Writing in The Times, Allen Metcalf, author of OK:The Improbable Story of America’s Greatest Word, writes:“What OK provided that the others did not was neutrality(中性), a way to express agreement without having to offer an opinion.”

  For example, if someone asks you “Shall we go for a walk after lunch?” you can simply respond “OK”.There you go-no extra opinions.Just straight, plain old OK.

  So just where did this rather curious expression come from? The origins of OK have been widely disputed(辩论,争论).Some people have guessed that OK was the name of a person or a product.

  Speakers of many different languages have had their say on this question, keen to claim the term as their own.

  Writing an article for London’s Metro newspaper, Metcalf states:‘O and K are present in every language of the world, as expressions that can be abbreviated(缩写)OK.” For example:French-“O qu-oui”, “yes indeed”; German-“Ohne Korrektur”,“ without correction needed”; and in Latin or Greek, “Olla kalla”, “all good”.

  But, does it sound a little too informal with this popular little expression?

  Apparently not.

  In a speech where he stated that his election(当选)would not be a radical(激进的)result to all problems, President Obama said:“…even though I am president…, AI-Qaida is still a threat(威胁)and that we cannot pretend somehow that because Barack Hussein Obama got elected as president, suddenly everything’s going to be OK,” he said.

  So, there you go, straight from the president.It’s OK to say OK, and thanks to the expression’s widespread usage across the world, you can be understood anywhere.

(1)

Using the example of Obama, the author wants to show that _________.

[  ]

A.

there is still a long way to go to defeat Al-Qaida

B.

Obama likes to use OK when he speaks

C.

OK is widely used even on formal occasions

D.

the use of OK is encouraged in formal speech

(2)

According to Allen Metcalf, OK differs from other terms to express agreement, which of the following opinions is true?

[  ]

A.

It is easiest way to say.

B.

It doesn’t need emotion.

C.

It is the most commonly used.

D.

It doesn’t use in the formal speech.

(3)

What is the best title for the passage?

[  ]

A.

Why OK is OK everywhere?

B.

It’s OK to say OK in the world.

C.

Where did OK come from?

D.

Everything is going to be OK.

查看答案和解析>>

阅读理解

  Everybody hates rats.But in the earthquake places of the world-Japan, Los Angeles, Turkey-rats will soon be man's new best friends.

  What happens after an earthquake? We send in rescue(救援)dogs.Why? Because they can smell people.Dogs save lives.They help rescuers to find living people.But dogs are big and they can't get into small spaces.So now a new research project is using a smaller animal to save lives:the rat.

  How does it work? First, the rat is trained to smell people.When this happens, the rat's brain gives a signal.This is sent to a small radio on its back, and then the rescuers follow the radio signals.When the rat's brain activity jumps, the rescuers know that someone is alive.The rat has smelled that person.

  Although there are already robots which can do this job, rats are better.Christian Linster at Cornell University, New York, says, “ ‘Robot’ noses don't work well when there are other smells around.Rats are good at that.” Rats can also see in the dark.They are cheaper and quicker to train than dogs, and unlike robots, they don't need electricity.

  The “ rat project” is not finished, but Julie Ryan of International Rescue Corps in Scotland says, “ It would be fantastic.A rat would get into spaces we couldn't get to and a rat would get out if it wasn't safe.” Perhaps for the first time in history, people will be happy to see a rat in a building(but only after an earthquake, of course.)

(1)

In the earthquake places, rats will become man's best friends because they can ________.

[  ]

A.

take the place of man in rescue jobs

B.

find the positions of people alive who are trapped in buildings

C.

serve as food for people alive who are trapped in buildings

D.

send signals for the coming earthquake

(2)

The underlined word “that” in Paragraph 4 refers to(所指) ________

[  ]

A.

treating wounded people.

B.

helping rescuers.

C.

smelling people among different smells.

D.

carry the wounded people to safety.

(3)

From the third paragraph we know the rescuers can judge a person is alive by ________.

[  ]

A.

the nose made by the rat

B.

the rat's unusual behavior

C.

the signal sent by the radio on the rat's back

D.

the smell given off by the person

(4)

In doing rescue jobs, ________.

[  ]

A.

rats have better sense of smell than dogs.

B.

dogs don't need to be trained to smell people.

C.

robots’ sense of smell can be affected by other smells around.

D.

rats can see in the dark and are smaller than robots.

(5)

After reading the passage we can know ________.

[  ]

A.

rats have taken the place of dogs in search for people.

B.

the “ rat project” has been completed

C.

people are now happy to see a rat in a building

D.

now people still use dogs and robots in performing rescue

查看答案和解析>>

请你根据以下例句总结出want,help,make,try的用法结构。

  want:

  1)Mum wants me to get up at 6:00 and run with her.

  2)Mike wants me to play soccer with him.

  3)Lucy wants to surf the Internet.

_____________________________________

  help:

  1)A lot of vegetables help you to keep in good health.

  2)Li Lei often helps me do my homework.

  3)Lily always helps the people in trouble.

_____________________________________

  make:

  1)Does it make a big difference if you eat fruit every day?

  2)What makes the grass grow?

  3)I can't make anyone hear me.

  4)What time do you make it?

  5)What do you make the time?

_____________________________________

  try:

  1)You must try to eat leas meat.

  2)I will try to do it.

_____________________________________

查看答案和解析>>

 --- __________your sister have a computer?

--- Sorry. I don't think she has __________.

    A. Do; it     B. Does; one     C. Do; one    D. Does; it

查看答案和解析>>


同步练习册答案