He believed that skin colour, people should have equal rights. A. thought B. regardless of C. as if D. even’ 查看更多

 

题目列表(包括答案和解析)

假定英语课上老师要求同桌之间交换修改作文,请你修改你同桌的以下作文。文中共有10处语言错误,每句中最多有两处。错误涉及一个单词的增加、删除或修改。
增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写出该加的词。
删除:多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。
修改:在错的词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。
注意:1.每处错误及其修改均仅限一词; 2.只允许修改10处,多者(从第11处起)不计分。
Mr. Turner turned over in bed from time to time in last night, for he was very excited that he could not fall asleep. Yesterday morning, he went to a big gardening company, knowing as Green Fingers, for the interview. Mr. Turner, that liked to help his grandfather grow flowers in the garden, looking forward to the job offered by the company. When he got to the company, he found there were many people waiting there and he had no ideas whether he could get the job. While waiting, he helps the workers there to remove the fallen trees and clear the road. Unluckily, he was the only one who finally got the job, so the manager decided to give the job to whoever he believed was helpful.

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When Jackie Robinson walked onto Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, New York, on April 15, 1947, he changed baseball forever. As the first African American to play in the Major League in modern times, many believe he changed the country forever.

Robinson was born in 1919. He lived in a time when rules controlled what African Americans could do. He was a top athlete, playing football, basketball and baseball. But playing for a major League team was off limits to Robinson because of his race.

Branch Rickey, president and manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, signed (和……签约) Robinson in 1947. He believed that Robinson not only had the skills, but the courage to face the challenge of becoming modern baseball’s first black player.

It wasn’t easy. Robinson sometimes faced boos (嘘声) from fans. But he became a star, anyway. In 1962, he became the first African-American player chosen to enter the Baseball Hall of Fame. In 2005, he was awarded a Congressional Gold Medal, the highest award Congress can give to an American.

By breaking baseball’s color barrier (肤色障碍), Robinson opened the door for many to follow his footsteps, not only in baseball, but in other areas of life as well. After he stopped playing the game, Robinson worked as a manager for a coffee company. He wrote a newspaper column (专栏). He also  started a bank.

Before Jackie Robinson, no African-American players could __________.

A. play baseball                            B. play in the Major League

C. play football and basketball             D. watch Major League games

According to Branch Rickey, Jackie Robinson was __________.

A. poor but clever                          B. unlucky but confident

C. proud and strong                         D. brave and skilled

We can know that Jackie Robinson’s story __________.

A. changed many Africans’ ideas

B. had an effect on many black people’s lives

C. encouraged black people to fight with whites

D. started a hot discussion about the color barrier

Which of the following is NOT what he once did?

A. a newspaper column writer                B. a banker     

C. a university teacher                     D. a manager in a company

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What is a dream?
For centuries, people have wondered about the strange places that they seem to visit in their sleep.   1 However, they have been valued as necessary to a person's health and happiness.
Historically people thought dreams contained messages from God. It was only in the twentieth century that people started to study dreams scientifically believing that they tell about a person's character. 2  He believed that dreams allow a person to express fantasies or fears, which would be socially unacceptable in real life.
The second theory to become popular was Carl Jung's compensation theory. Jung, a former student of Freud, said that the purpose of a dream is not to hide something, but rather to communicate it to the dreamer.  3 Thus, people who think too highly of themselves may  dream about falling; those who think too little of themselves dream of being heroes.
Using more recent research, William Domhoff from the University of California found that  dreaming is a mental skill that needs time to develop in humans. , 4  Until they reach age  five, they can not express very well what their dreams are about. Once people become adults,  there is little or no change in their dreams. The dreams of men and women differ. For instance,
The characters that appear in the dreams of men are often  other men, and often involve physical aggression.
The meaning of dreams continues to be difficult to understand.  5  If you dream that a loved one is going to die, do not panic. The dream may have meaning, but it does not mean that your loved one is going to die.

A.Dreams make up for what is lacking in waking life.
B.However, people should not take their dreams as reality.
C.They have been considered as meaningless nighttime journeys.
D.It gives scientists chances to better understand human mind.
E.Children do not dream as much as adults.
F.They think their mind is trying to tell them something.
G.First, there was Sigmund Freud’s theory.

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此题要求改正所给短文中的错误。对标有题号的每一行做出判断:如无错误在该行右边横线上画一个勾(√):如有错误(每行只有一个错误),则按下列情况改正:
  该行多一个词:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉,在该行右边的横线上写出该词.并斜线划掉;
  该行缺一个词:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧).在该行右边横线上写出该加的词
该行错一个词:在错的词下划一横线.在该行右边横线上写出改正后的词.
Martin Luther King fights for political rights            【小题1】         
for black people in the USA. King went university              【小题2】          
when he was fifteen. Win a scholarship gave him                【小题3】         
the chance to go to a college in one of the northern state,        【小题4】         
which black people had equal rights and were free to               【小题5】         
live, study and working as they wished. All his life he            【小题6】         
believed that it was right and necessarily to demand               【小题7】         
changes in the society if people did not have their civil              【小题8】         
rights. He believed that she could achieve that goal               【小题9】         
by peaceful actions, not violence.                             【小题10】         

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That summer I drank every day, everywhere I went. I had a bottle in my drawer next to me and a bottle next to my bed. I never did another drug, but I drank so much that my family finally asked a priest for help. My father gave me a bottle of medicine for alcoholism that produces unpleasant symptoms when users drink alcohol. I drank while taking it, which made me very sick. And I still drank.
When the priest came, he said, "Jimmy, doctors said that with your diseases and the amount of drinking you’re doing, you’d be lucky to live another six months. So your choice is either to stop drinking and live or to continue drinking and die within six months.”
I said, "I know I can't stop, so guess I'll have to die." The priest told my family what I said. My little brother–who is like my soul mate, looked at me with tears in his eyes and said, "But we don't want you to die." All I could think of was how desperately I had to get out of that room at that moment and have a drink.
But I finally stopped drinking. I was on the care team of my dentist Russell. A lot of people in New York knew him. At the time he was the most famous dentist in the city. He drank heavily and was also with AIDS, so I was selected to be on his care team. Everybody on the team was sober (清醒) but me. He went through dementia (痴呆) and died so quickly before my eyes. I stopped drinking and I’ve been with the disease for 35 years now.
【小题1】 Why did the author’s father give him the bottle of medicine?

A.He wanted him to cure his illness.
B.He was trying to keep him dying.
C.He thought the medicine could make him sick.
D.He believed it could prevent him drinking.
【小题2】 What did the priest mean by saying to the author “…you’d be lucky to live another six months” in the second paragraph?
A.The author would die after six weeks.
B.The author was too lucky to live for six months.
C.The author could hardly live for six months.
D.The author’s luck was only six months.
【小题3】 How did the author stop drinking?
A.The dentist Russell helped him to stop it.
B.He was persuaded by the dentist Russell’s death.
C.His care team managed to inspire him.
D.His little brother’s soul saved him.
【小题4】 What can we learn from the above story?
A.Drinking heavily increases AIDS patients’ illness.
B.Priests can cure many AIDS patients’ illnesses.
C.Drug taking and heavily drinking can cure AIDS patients.
D.Team work and patience can cure AIDS patients.

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