1 . 生活中冲突时有发生。假设你班同学苏华和李江打篮球时发生争执,导致关系紧张。请你结合此事,并根据以下提示,用英语写一篇短文,向学校英文报“Happy Teens”专栏投稿。
注意: 1. 对所有要点逐一陈述,适当发挥,不要简单翻译。
2. 词数150 左右。开头已经写好,不计入总词数。
3. 作文中不得提及有关考生个人身份的任何信息,如校名、人名等。
Conflicts with others are common in everyday life.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
简要描述事情的经过 | 打篮球、碰撞、争执,等等 |
分析发生冲突的原因 | 1. 遇事不够冷静2. …… |
谈谈避免冲突的做法 | (请考生根据自己的经历或感想,提出至少两种做法) |
2. 词数150 左右。开头已经写好,不计入总词数。
3. 作文中不得提及有关考生个人身份的任何信息,如校名、人名等。
Conflicts with others are common in everyday life.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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2016-11-26更新
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1447次组卷
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6卷引用:四川省内江市第六中学2022-2023学年高三上学期期中英语试题
四川省内江市第六中学2022-2023学年高三上学期期中英语试题2012年全国普通高等学校招生统一考试英语试卷(江苏卷)(已下线)2014年译林牛津版高中英语选修十一第三单元练习卷(已下线)专题27 短文类02(投稿、宣传稿、观点类、活动介绍) -2022年高考英语毕业班二轮热点题型归纳与变式演练(新高考专用)(已下线)专题14 非应用文:观点类议论文、活动介绍、人物介绍、发言稿等-【查漏补缺】2022年高考英语三轮冲刺过关(已下线)考点26 非应用文写作01: 投稿、宣传稿 -备战2023年高考英语一轮复习考点帮(新高考专用)
2 . (2009·四川卷)书面表达
假设你是李华。你的外国笔友Jane打算于七月来中国,特来信了解中国人的社交习俗。请你用英语回一封信,从以下几个方面作具体介绍。
1. 见面时的问候方式;
2. 对赞美的回答方式;
3. 接收礼物时的回应方式;
4. 餐宴礼节。
注意:
1. 词数100左右,信的开头和结束语已为你写好(不计入总词数)。
2. 可根据内容要点适当增加细节,使行文连贯。
Dear Jane,
假设你是李华。你的外国笔友Jane打算于七月来中国,特来信了解中国人的社交习俗。请你用英语回一封信,从以下几个方面作具体介绍。
1. 见面时的问候方式;
2. 对赞美的回答方式;
3. 接收礼物时的回应方式;
4. 餐宴礼节。
注意:
1. 词数100左右,信的开头和结束语已为你写好(不计入总词数)。
2. 可根据内容要点适当增加细节,使行文连贯。
Dear Jane,
Glad to hear from you and you’re welcome to China in July.
I hope what’s mentioned above might be helpful and wish you a good journey.
Yours sincerely,
Li Hua
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5卷引用:2009年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试四川卷英语试题
2009年普通高等学校招生全国统一考试四川卷英语试题【全国百强校】江西省临川一中2019届高三下学期第二次联考英语试题(已下线)专题 09 中国文化读写专项:中国礼节+叩头- 2024年高考英语常考中国文化读写专练+素材积累 2017-2018学年高中英语(牛津译林版,必修二,江苏卷) 单元综合测评2湖南省三湘名校教育联盟2018-2019学年高二下学期期末英语试题
3 . 阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
It was my sister Sandra’s first Christmas without her husband. Last Thursday, she was in the store______ for an ideal card for her two sons and daughter. Time passed by quickly as she___________ the many choices. She wanted a card that sent something _____ to each of them, as she knew they would have a(n)______ place in their heart this holiday season.
Finally, she found the one that expressed the_______ feeling. ______ , a sharp pain pierced (穿透) her heart when she realized that the card was ______ “mom and dad”. She stood, holding it close for a long time, unable to move from the spot.___________ began to run over her cheeks.
“Is there something I can do for you?” a______ voice asked. She ______ o face a stranger, a woman. “Uh..oh...OH!” Sandra ______ , “I can’t give this card to my children because…because my husband died and this is the______ card.”
The stranger’s face softened with_______ and love. She reached out and ______ my sister into her arms, giving her unspoken___________ to cry in the protection of her embrace (拥抱). She ______ held my sister until her ______ returned.
During her telling of this event I was feeling______ that I hadn’t been there. My sister needed me and a stranger had to do my _______ “You know,” she went on, “a friend suggested that it was like meeting with an Angel.” My guilt ______ in an instant. My sister required an Angel, and I think that is exactly what she got.1.
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It was my sister Sandra’s first Christmas without her husband. Last Thursday, she was in the store
Finally, she found the one that expressed the
“Is there something I can do for you?” a
The stranger’s face softened with
During her telling of this event I was feeling
A.paying | B.caring | C.calling | D.looking |
A.left | B.offered | C.read | D.discovered |
A.attractive | B.special | C.traditional | D.wealthy |
A.unknown | B.empty | C.safe | D.different |
A.sad | B.strange | C.amazing | D.perfect |
A.However | B.Therefore | C.Anyhow | D.Otherwise |
A.for | B.to | C.from | D.by |
A.Tears | B.Sweats | C.Lights | D.Smiles |
A.firm | B.proud | C.cold | D.soft |
A.walked | B.turned | C.decided | D.woke |
A.responded | B.demanded | C.asked | D.explained |
A.delicate | B.old | C.wrong | D.decorative |
A.devotion | B.respect | C.sympathy | D.responsibility |
A.pulled | B.caught | C.sent | D.threw |
A.thought | B.permission | C.sorrow | D.suggestion |
A.quietly | B.tightly | C.eagerly | D.seriously |
A.confidence | B.courage | C.happiness | D.calmness |
A.shocked | B.angry | C.shy | D.hopeless |
A.task | B.housework | C.favor | D.job |
A.struck | B.returned | C.disappeared | D.sank |
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4 . When 24-year-old Hannah Brencher moved to New York after college, she was hit by depression and loneliness. One day she felt so lonely that she wanted to reach out to someone. So she put pen to paper and started writing letters—letters to complete strangers.
But these weren’t sad letters about how she was feeling. They were happy letters, all about the other person, not her. She would write messages for people to have a “bright day” and tell strangers how outstanding they were, even if they thought no one else had noticed. Brencher began dropping the notes all over New York, in cafes, in library books, in parks and on the subway. It made her feel better, knowing that she might be making somebody’s day through just a few short, sweet words. It gave her something to focus on. And so, the website The World Needs More Love Letters was born.
The World Needs More Love Letters is all about writing letters—not emails, but proper, handwritten letters. Not traditional love letters, written to a real beloved, but surprise letters for strangers. They don’t necessarily say “I love you”, but they are full of kindness—telling people they are remarkable and special and all-around amazing.
Brencher’s initiative (初衷) has now exploded. She has personally written hundreds of letters. Last year, she did a TED talk, in which she talks about a woman whose husband, a soldier, comes back home from Afghanistan and they struggle to reconnect: “So she leaves love letters all over the house as a way to say: ‘Come back to me. Find me when you can.’” And then comes another story of a man threatening to kill himself on his Facebook page, only to now be in the land of the living, with many love letters under his pillow.
The World Needs More Love Letters Project works on the idea that_____________________ ”. It’s about sharing positive energy, restoring confidence and happiness. There are now more than 10,000 people from all over the world joining in to write letters to the lonely and depressed, to basically tell them that everything will be okay.
1. When feeling lonely, Brencher wrote letters to _________________.
2. According to the passage, which of the following letters can be found on the website?
3. What can be inferred from Brencher’s TED talk?
4. In the last paragraph, the underlined sentence means____________.
But these weren’t sad letters about how she was feeling. They were happy letters, all about the other person, not her. She would write messages for people to have a “bright day” and tell strangers how outstanding they were, even if they thought no one else had noticed. Brencher began dropping the notes all over New York, in cafes, in library books, in parks and on the subway. It made her feel better, knowing that she might be making somebody’s day through just a few short, sweet words. It gave her something to focus on. And so, the website The World Needs More Love Letters was born.
The World Needs More Love Letters is all about writing letters—not emails, but proper, handwritten letters. Not traditional love letters, written to a real beloved, but surprise letters for strangers. They don’t necessarily say “I love you”, but they are full of kindness—telling people they are remarkable and special and all-around amazing.
Brencher’s initiative (初衷) has now exploded. She has personally written hundreds of letters. Last year, she did a TED talk, in which she talks about a woman whose husband, a soldier, comes back home from Afghanistan and they struggle to reconnect: “So she leaves love letters all over the house as a way to say: ‘Come back to me. Find me when you can.’” And then comes another story of a man threatening to kill himself on his Facebook page, only to now be in the land of the living, with many love letters under his pillow.
The World Needs More Love Letters Project works on the idea that
1. When feeling lonely, Brencher wrote letters to _________________.
A.share her sad feelings with strangers |
B.tell strangers how outstanding she was |
C.express her wish to have a bright day |
D.brighten strangers’ day with kind words |
A.The email to remarkable people. |
B.The handwritten letters to friends. |
C.The traditional love letters to beloved ones. |
D.The encouraging letters to strangers. |
A.The man leaves love letters to his wife, asking her to look for him. |
B.The woman gets on well with her husband after his return from Afghanistan. |
C.The life of the man in the second story has been saved by the inspiring love letters. |
D.The man in the second story has written many love letters and put them under his pillow. |
A.love letters can help cheer you up in spirits |
B.love letters can keep you physically healthy |
C.love letters can make the doctors out of work |
D.love letters can keep you away from loneliness only |
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2015-02-06更新
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2卷引用:2015届四川石室中学高三一诊模拟英语试卷
5 . One woman is having a very merry Christmas, indeed, all thanks to the honesty and determination of a complete stranger.
“When I saw it, I said, ‘God, this is really a pretty____ Somebody's going to heartbroken,” said Shirley Grandey , 62, who was a volunteer for keeping the environment clean.
When Grandey was____ a large pile of pine needles and dirt at the end of her hard work day, she never____ to come across someone's diamond ring lying alone among a pile of ____ .
Knowing the ring probably had special____ , Grandey held onto the jewelry and made it her ____ to find the owner.
“I said, 'Oh God ,I have to find the____ , "'recalled Grandey before making the decision to contact the TV station, to help ____ the word. "It was definitely a ____ ring. It was intertwined(缠绕)and had their ____ on it.”
Her efforts____ .
“The brother of the girl saw it on____ and told her," said Grandey, who couldn't have been happier to return the ____ ring to its original owner, Julie Sanalitro.
“I was screaming and running around the house,” Sanalitro told the news station. "We always come to____ our tree from there to celebrate Christmas Day," she said.
When Sanalitro called to____ the ring, she explained it was a gift from her boyfriend, who had only given it to her two months ago when they ____ reunited.
She was not only able to____ answer all of Grandey's questions about the ring, ____ she was the original owner, but Grandey added, “I knew it was hers the moment she was walking up.”
“We just hugged each other and she had a few tears," the____ volunteer explained.
All that Crandey asks from this____ is simply for people to “pay it forward.” She said. “ I would want someone to give it back to me if I lost my ring, so just try to pay it forward.”1.
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“When I saw it, I said, ‘God, this is really a pretty
When Grandey was
Knowing the ring probably had special
“I said, 'Oh God ,I have to find the
Her efforts
“The brother of the girl saw it on
“I was screaming and running around the house,” Sanalitro told the news station. "We always come to
When Sanalitro called to
She was not only able to
“We just hugged each other and she had a few tears," the
All that Crandey asks from this
A.gift | B.handkerchief | C.necklace | D.ring |
A.putting away | B.cleaning up | C.keeping up | D.bringing up |
A.expected | B.wanted | C.understood | D.imagined |
A.furniture | B.equipment | C.luggage | D.garbage |
A.object | B.design | C.value | D.form |
A.duty | B.work | C.ability | D.agreement |
A.designer | B.owner | C.photographer | D.artist |
A.print | B.explore | C.spread | D.write |
A.luck | B.wedding | C.marriage | D.love |
A.photos | B.names | C.addresses | D.words |
A.paid off | B.paid up | C.paid back | D.paid out |
A.television | B.telephone | C.radio | D.phone |
A.nice | B.lost | C.ugly | D.lovely |
A.take | B.buy | C.get | D.lift |
A.rescue | B.transport | C.convey | D.describe |
A.recently | B.immediately | C.actively | D.likely |
A.successfully | B.properly | C.obviously | D.similarly |
A.remembering | B.ensuring | C.forgetting | D.telling |
A.kind | B.angry | C.close | D.learned |
A.accident | B.origin | C.experience | D.evidence |
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6 . You may not pay much attention to your daily elevator ride.Many of us use a lift several times during the day without really thinking about it.But Lee Gray,PhD,of the University of North Carolina,US,has made it his business to examine this overlooked form of public transport.He is known as the “Elevator Guy”.
“The lift becomes this interesting social space where etiquette (礼仪) is sort of odd (奇怪的),” Gray told the BBC.“The elevators are socially very interesting but often very awkward places.”
We walk in and usually turn around to face the door.If someone else comes in,we may have to move.And here,according to Gray,liftusers unthinkingly go through a set pattern of movements.He told the BBC what he had observed.
He explained that when you are the only one inside a lift,you can do whatever you want – it’s your own little box.
If there are two of you,you go into different corners,standing diagonally (对角线地) across from each other to create distance.
When a third person enters,you will unconsciously form a triangle.And when there is a fourth person it becomes a square,with someone in every corner.A fifth person is probably going to have to stand in the middle.
New entrants to the lift will need to size up the situation when the doors slide open and then act decisively.Once in,for most people the rule is simple – look down,or look at your phone.
Why are we so awkward in lifts?
“You don’t have enough space,” Professor Babette Renneberg,a clinical psychologist at the Free University of Berlin,told the BBC.“Usually when we meet other people we have about an arm’s length of distance between us.And that’s not possible in most elevators.”
In such a small,enclosed space it becomes very important to act in a way that cannot be understood as threatening or odd.“The easiest way to do this is to avoid eye contact,” she said.
1. According to Gray,when people enter an elevator,they usually _____.
2. Which of the following describes how people usually stand when there are at least two people in an elevator?
3. According to the article,people feel awkward in lifts because of _____.
4. What’s the passage mainly about _____.
“The lift becomes this interesting social space where etiquette (礼仪) is sort of odd (奇怪的),” Gray told the BBC.“The elevators are socially very interesting but often very awkward places.”
We walk in and usually turn around to face the door.If someone else comes in,we may have to move.And here,according to Gray,liftusers unthinkingly go through a set pattern of movements.He told the BBC what he had observed.
He explained that when you are the only one inside a lift,you can do whatever you want – it’s your own little box.
If there are two of you,you go into different corners,standing diagonally (对角线地) across from each other to create distance.
When a third person enters,you will unconsciously form a triangle.And when there is a fourth person it becomes a square,with someone in every corner.A fifth person is probably going to have to stand in the middle.
New entrants to the lift will need to size up the situation when the doors slide open and then act decisively.Once in,for most people the rule is simple – look down,or look at your phone.
Why are we so awkward in lifts?
“You don’t have enough space,” Professor Babette Renneberg,a clinical psychologist at the Free University of Berlin,told the BBC.“Usually when we meet other people we have about an arm’s length of distance between us.And that’s not possible in most elevators.”
In such a small,enclosed space it becomes very important to act in a way that cannot be understood as threatening or odd.“The easiest way to do this is to avoid eye contact,” she said.
1. According to Gray,when people enter an elevator,they usually _____.
A.turn around and greet one another |
B.look around or examine their phone |
C.make eye contact with those in the elevator |
D.try to keep a distance from other people |
A.![]() |
B.![]() |
C.![]() |
D.![]() |
A.someone’s odd behaviors |
B.a lack of space |
C.their unfamiliarity with one another |
D.their eye contact with one another |
A.Bad manners in the elevator |
B.Some unwritten rules of elevator etiquette |
C.An interesting but awkward elevator ride |
D.The strange behaviors in the elevator |
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2014-06-26更新
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358次组卷
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3卷引用:2014届四川省成都石室中学高三上期一诊模拟考试英语卷
7 . Women are friendly.But men are more competitive.Why? Researchers have found it's all down to the hormone oxytocin (荷尔蒙催生素).Although known as the love hormone, it affects the sexes differently.
"Women tend to be social in their behavior.They often share with others.But men lend to be competitive.They are trying to improve their social status," said Professor Ryan.
Generally, people believe that the hormone oxytocin is let out in our body in various social situations and our body creates a large amount of it during positive social interactions (互动) such as falling in love or giving birth.
But in a previous experiment Professor Ryan found that the hormone is also let out in our body during negative social interactions such as envy.
Further researches showed that in men the hormone oxytocin improves the ability to recognize competitive relationships, but in women it raises the ability to recognize friendship.
Professor Ryan's recent experiment used 62 men and women aged 20 to 37.Half of the participants(参与者)received oxytocin.The other half received placebo (安慰剂).
After a week, the two groups switched with participants.They went through the same procedure with the other material.
Following each treatment, they were shown some video pictures with different social interactions.Then they were asked to analyze the relationships by answering some questions.The questions were about telling friendship from competition.And their answers should be based on gestures, body language and facial expressions.
The results indicated that, after treatment with oxytocin, men's ability to correctly recognize competitive relationships improved, but in women it was the ability to correctly recognize friendship that got better.
Professor Ryan thus concluded: "Our experiment proves that the hormone oxytocin can raise people's abilities to better distinguish different social interactions.And the behavior differences between men and women are caused by biological factors (因素) that are mainly hormonal."
1. What causes men and women to behave differently according to the text?
2. What can we learn from Professor Ryan's previous experiment?
3. Why did Professor Ryan conduct the recent experiment?
4. The author develops the text by______.
"Women tend to be social in their behavior.They often share with others.But men lend to be competitive.They are trying to improve their social status," said Professor Ryan.
Generally, people believe that the hormone oxytocin is let out in our body in various social situations and our body creates a large amount of it during positive social interactions (互动) such as falling in love or giving birth.
But in a previous experiment Professor Ryan found that the hormone is also let out in our body during negative social interactions such as envy.
Further researches showed that in men the hormone oxytocin improves the ability to recognize competitive relationships, but in women it raises the ability to recognize friendship.
Professor Ryan's recent experiment used 62 men and women aged 20 to 37.Half of the participants(参与者)received oxytocin.The other half received placebo (安慰剂).
After a week, the two groups switched with participants.They went through the same procedure with the other material.
Following each treatment, they were shown some video pictures with different social interactions.Then they were asked to analyze the relationships by answering some questions.The questions were about telling friendship from competition.And their answers should be based on gestures, body language and facial expressions.
The results indicated that, after treatment with oxytocin, men's ability to correctly recognize competitive relationships improved, but in women it was the ability to correctly recognize friendship that got better.
Professor Ryan thus concluded: "Our experiment proves that the hormone oxytocin can raise people's abilities to better distinguish different social interactions.And the behavior differences between men and women are caused by biological factors (因素) that are mainly hormonal."
1. What causes men and women to behave differently according to the text?
A.Placebo. | B.Oxytocin. |
C.The gesture. | D.The social status. |
A.Oxytocin affects our behavior in a different way. |
B.Our body lets out oxytocin when we are deep in love. |
C.Our body produces oxytocin when we feel unhappy about others' success. |
D.Oxytocin improves our abilities to understand people's behavior differences. |
A.To test the effect of oxytocin on the ability to recognize social interactions. |
B.To know the differences between friendship and competition. |
C.To know people's different abilities to answer questions. |
D.To test people's understanding of body language. |
A.explaining people's behaviors |
B.describing his own experiences |
C.distinguishing sexual differences |
D.discussing research experiments |
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2014-06-24更新
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1331次组卷
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7卷引用:2014年全国普通高等学校招生统一考试英语(四川卷)