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阅读理解-任务型阅读(约410词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了噪音污染对动物的影响。
1 . 阅读下面短文,根据题目要求用英文回答问题。

Just as noise pollution negatively impacts human health, it also affects wildlife. It can affect animal communication, their abilities to find food and impact where they live. A recent study published in Biology Letters found that human-created noise is affecting a wide range of animals. Noise pollution is caused by cars, trucks, airplanes, ships, factories, industrial activities and sounds from cities, among others. Researchers found that wildlife in many different land and water ecosystems showed significant responses to human-created noise.

For example, bats use ultrasonic sound waves to get around and to find food. However, noise pollution affects this and causes them to spend more time and energy locating their food source. Shipping lanes in the UK can be deafening to harbor seals, and noises from ships are seriously impacting killer whales ability to find food and avoid potential dangers, according to episode 2 of CBC s Killers: J pod on the brink (边缘). And it’s no secret that many human-created conditions, like noise, are changing the behavior of birds. You may be surprised to learn that plants are also impacted, since pollinators (传粉昆虫) often relocate to quieter areas.

Not unlike the impact of light pollution on insects, noise pollution is causing change. It can change the types of species living in many different ecosystems, which in turn impacts the functions of these areas, according to The Guardian.

The good news is that if noise is reduced or simply turned off, it more or less removes the issue. The impact does not remain in the same way as other forms of pollution, like plastic or chemicals. And efforts are already underway in Canada.

BC Ferries is working to lessen the effects of underwater noise, especially along ferry routes that pass through critical habitats. WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society) Canada is encouraging the federal government to increase protective measures in the Arctic. They’re also working with international colleagues to address the increase of noise in the region as a result of new shipping routes.

While these initiatives demonstrate progress, tightening rules and regulations around noise pollution is an important measure for conserving wildlife in Canada.

1. Why do bats spend more time looking for food?
________________________________________________________________
2. What is the influence of noise pollution on ecosystems?
________________________________________________________________
3. Please decide which part is false in the following statement, then underline it and explain why.
Noise pollution affects animals in many ways, and compared with other forms of pollution, noise pollution is harder to deal with.
________________________________________________________________
4. Please give some advice on how to reduce the effects of noise pollution on animals. (In about 40 words)
________________________________________________________________
2024-01-11更新 | 51次组卷 | 1卷引用:北京市大兴区2023-2024学年高三上学期期中英语试题
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了Utrecht大学科学家的一项新研究。研究发现全球约一半的废水得到了处理,但在一些发展中国家治理率仍然很低,可能严重威胁人类健康,破坏环境。

2 . A new study by scientists at Utrecht University concludes that about half of global wastewater is treated, rather than the previous estimate of 20%. Despite this promising finding, the authors warn that treatment rates in developing countries are still very low.

Humans and factories produce vast quantities of wastewater per day. If not properly collected and treated, wastewater may severely threaten human health and pollute the environment.

The authors use national statistics to estimate volumes of wastewater production, collection, treatment and reuse. “Globally, about 359 billion cubic metres of wastewater is produced each year, equivalent to 144 million Olympic-sized swimming pools,” says Edward Jones, PhD researcher at Utrecht University. “About 48 percent of that water is currently released untreated. This is much lower than the frequently announced figure of 80%.”

While the results show a more optimistic outlook, the authors stress that many challenges still exist. “We see that particularly in the developing world, where most of the future population growth will likely occur, treatment rates are falling behind,” Jones explains. “In these countries, wastewater production is likely to rise at a faster pace than the current development of collection and treatment basic facilities. This poses serious threats to both human health and the environment.”

The main problem, especially in the developing world, is the lack of financial resources to build basic facilities to collect and treat wastewater. This is particularly the case for advanced treatment technologies, which can be extremely expensive. However, the authors highlight potential opportunities for creative reuse of wastewater streams that could help to finance improved wastewater treatment practices.

“The most obvious reuse of treated wastewater is to increase freshwater water supplies,” Jones states. Treated wastewater reuse is already an important source of irrigation water in many dry countries. However, only 11% of the wastewater produced globally is currently being reused, which shows large opportunities for expansion.

“But freshwater increasing is not the only opportunity,” says Jones. “Wastewater also has large potential as a source of nutrients and energy. Recognition of wastewater as a resource, opposed to as ‘waste’, will be the key to driving improved treatment going forward.”

However, the authors stress the importance of proper monitoring of wastewater treatment factories, accompanied by strong legislation (法律) and regulations, to ensure that the reuse of wastewater is safe. The authors also acknowledge public acceptance as another key barrier towards increasing wastewater reuse.

1. According to the author, the meaning of treating wastewater lies in ________.
A.encouraging new scientific findings
B.estimating volumes of wastewater production
C.ensuring human health and protecting the environment
D.measuring how much wastewater is produced globally per day
2. The underlined word “equivalent” in the third paragraph is close in meaning to ________.
A.equalB.harmfulC.usefulD.friendly
3. We can infer from the passage that ________.
A.treated wastewater can’t be used as irrigation water
B.wastewater production in developing countries is falling
C.the treatment of wastewater is more serious than estimated
D.public recognition plays an important role in wastewater reuse
2024-01-06更新 | 32次组卷 | 1卷引用:北京市房山区2021-2022学年高三上学期开学考英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章介绍了如果气候变化持续升温,世界的海洋中的鱼类和其他生物可能会在未来100年内损失约六分之一。同时文章介绍了气候变化对海洋以及人类产生的其他影响。

3 . The world’s oceans will likely lose about one-sixth of their fish and other creatures within 100 years if climate change continues on its current path. Every degree Celsius that the world’s oceans warm, their biomass is expected to drop five percent, a study found.

The study predicts that if there is no change in the rate of worldwide greenhouse gas production, there will be a 17-percent loss of biomass by the year 2100. But, if the world reduces carbon pollution, biomass losses could be limited to only about 5 percent.

Warming temperatures are the biggest issue. But climate change also produces oceans that are more acidic and have less oxygen. This also harms sea life. Much of the world depends on the oceans for food or work.

The findings make sense and the possible effects of the predicted losses of animal life are huge. “Climate change has the potential to cause serious new conflicts over ocean resource use as the human population continues to grow,” said scientists.

Marine biologist Boris Worm, who helped run the study, added that the “building blocks of marine life—plankton and bacteria—may decline less heavily.”

“Those marine animals that we use directly, and care about most deeply, are predicted to suffer the most,” said Worm. He works at Canada’s Dalhousie University.

Scientists had already believed climate change would likely reduce future ocean life. But past computer-based studies looked at only part of the picture or used only one model. The latest study used six different computer models to give the best picture look yet, William Cheung said.

University of Georgia marine biologist Samantha Joye was not part of the research. But she praised the study as well researched and extremely detailed, and called it “an urgent call for action”.

1. What does the underlined word “biomass” in paragraph 1 refer to?
A.Ocean temperature.B.Total marine life.
C.Sea condition.D.Ocean level.
2. Why do scientists think that climate change might cause conflicts?
A.It may reduce the sea resource.B.It leads to the extinction of marine life.
C.It pollutes the environment of the ocean.D.It may increase the world population.
3. Which sea animals will be harmed the worst by sea warming?
A.The largest ones.B.The ones in deep oceans.
C.The bacteria on sea surface.D.Those we humans need most.
2023-11-20更新 | 80次组卷 | 2卷引用:北京房山良乡中学2023-2024学年高三上学期期中英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约460词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。随着海洋中塑料垃圾的增多,科学家们正试图通过水母的黏液研究解决海洋中微塑料的方法。

4 . Of all the weird and wonderful creatures living under the sea, perhaps the strangest are jellyfish—those rubbery, cone-shaped creatures found floating in the water, their long tentacles trailing behind.

Some jellyfish species have a bad reputation for scaring away tourists, clogging up fishing nets, and even blocking power station pipes. But with more and more plastic rubbish ending up in the sea, these days you’re as likely to swim into a plastic bag as a jellyfish. Now scientific research is discovering that these rubbery sea creatures might provide an answer—a sticky solution to the problem of plastic pollution.

In recent years, tiny pieces of plastic called microplastic have been a significant problem for the world’s seas and oceans. These plastics are not visible to the eye and aren’t caught by seawater treatment plants due to their small size, so they enter our system and harm our health. They’ve been found in many places—in Arctic ice, at the bottom of the sea and even inside animals. Slovenian scientist, Dr Ana Rotter, heads GoJelly, a European research team of jellyfish ecologists looking into the problem.

Microplastics, plastics in general, are becoming an increasing problem. Dr Ana Rotter says when she was a child, people were more environmentally friendly—not harmful to the environment or having the least possible impact on it. At that time, there were very few single-use plastics—plastic items, like spoons and forks, designed to be used just once, then thrown away. The situation since then has changed dramatically. In fact, there’s been such an increase in microplastics that today the UN lists plastic pollution as one of the world’s top environmental threats.

But how do jellyfish fit into the story? Well, it’s the ‘jelly’ part of jellyfish, and specifically their sticky, jelly-like mucus that is key. Jellyfish produce a thick, sticky liquid called mucus. Dr Ana Rotter has discovered that this mucus has strong absorptive capabilities—it can absorb, take in liquids and other substances. One of the substances jellyfish mucus absorbs are the particles that make up microplastics.

Dr Rotter’s research is still in the early stages, but it’s hoped that jellyfish mucus could hold the key to a future free of microplastic polluted oceans. Scientists are hoping that the mucus’s absorptive properties—its abilities to absorb liquids and other substances and hold them, will allow it to trap particles of plastic floating in the sea. By trapping these, the mucus acts like a magnet—an object that attracts certain materials, like metal, but in this case, microplastic waste.

1. Paragraph 3 mainly talks about ________.
A.where microplastics can be found
B.why microplastics can harm our health
C.what problems the seas and oceans are facing
D.how the research was carried out by the scientist
2. What can we learn from this passage?
A.Jellyfish species cause a great threat to the sea.
B.Jellyfish species like to swim and live in plastic bags.
C.Jellyfish mucus can attract metals and break them down.
D.Jellyfish mucus can absorb liquids and some other substances.
3. What does the underlined word “properties” in Paragraph 6 most probably mean?
A.Qualities.B.Substances.C.Choices.D.Materials.
4. What is the author’s purpose in writing this passage?
A.To show the harm that sea and ocean pollution brings to human beings.
B.To introduce the living habits of the weird and wonderful creatures in the sea.
C.To provide a new method for collecting data on environmental threats in the sea.
D.To inform a promising scientific finding for dealing with plastic pollution in the sea.
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-阅读单选(约520词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了人造光对人类和动物的危害,呼吁我们要行动起来,减少光污染。

5 . Most environmental pollution comes from humans and their inventions. The electric bulbs are thought to be one of the greatest human inventions of all time. However, too much of a good thing has started to negatively impact the environment. Light pollution, the extreme or inappropriate use of outdoor artificial light, is affecting human health and wildlife behavior. There is a global movement to reduce light pollution, and everyone can help.

Light pollution is a global issue. This became particularly obvious when the World Atlas (地图册)of Night Sky Brightness, a computer-generated map based on thousands of satellite photos, was published in 2016. Vast areas of North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia are glowing with light, while only Siberia, the Sahara, and the Amazon are in total darkness.

Artificial light can wreak havoc on natural body rhythms in both humans and animals. It interrupts sleep and confuses the circadian rhythm(生理节奏)一the internal, twenty-four-hour clock that guides day and night activities and affects physiological processes in nearly all living organisms. One of these processes is the production of the hormone melatonin(褪黑素), which is released when it is dark and is prevented when there is light. An increased amount of light at night lowers melatonin production, which results in lack of sleep, headaches, stress, anxiety, and other health problems. Blue light, in particular, has been shown to reduce levels of melatonin in humans. It is found in cell phones and other computer devices, as well as in light-emitting diodes (LEDs), the kinds of bulbs that have become popular at home and in industrial and city lighting due to their low cost and energy efficiency.

Studies show that light pollution is also impacting animal behaviors, such as migration (迁徙)patterns and habitat formation. Because of light pollution, sea turtles guided by moonlight during migration get confused, lose their way, and often die. Large numbers of insects, a primary food source for birds and other animals, are drawn to artificial light and are instantly killed upon contact with light sources. Even animals living under the deep sea may be affected by underwater artificial lighting. One study looked at how animals in sea responded to brightly lit panels put under water off the coast of Wales. Fewer filter feeding animals(滤食性动物), such as the sea squirt(海鞘), made their homes near the lighted panels. This could mean that the artificial light is altering ocean ecosystems.

The good news is that light pollution, unlike many other forms of pollution, is reversible(可逆的)and each one of us can make a difference! Now, many people are taking action to reduce light pollution and bring back the natural night sky. Individuals are urged to use outdoor lighting only when and where it is needed, to make sure outdoor lights are properly shielded (遮挡)and direct light down instead of up into the sky, and to close window blinds, shades, and curtains at night to keep light inside.

1. What does the underlined phrase “wreak havoc on” in Para. 3 probably mean?
A.Greatly improve.B.Well maintain.
C.Strictly manage.D.Seriously damage.
2. According to the passage, which would the author agree with?
A.Light pollution was first studied as a global issue in 2016.
B.Deep-sea environment can help animals avoid light pollution.
C.Artificial light affects the sense of direction and habits of animals.
D.LEDs can be used more because of low cost and energy efficiency.
3. What is the author’s attitude towards the control of light pollution?
A.Unconcerned.B.Negative.
C.Neutral.D.Positive.
4. What is the main purpose of the passage?
A.To call on people to reduce light pollution.
B.To discuss fors and againsts of artificial light.
C.To give suggestions to protect environment.
D.To show development prospect of artificial light.
阅读理解-阅读表达(约360词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是说明文。文章通过介绍科科斯群岛的塑料污染问题,表达了对环境问题的担忧,呼吁各方采取国际合作,制定国际规则来解决这一普遍的、全球性的灾难。
6 . 阅读表达

White sand beaches of the Cocos Islands, which are known as a gorgeous tourist destination surrounded by greenish blue water, have now been filled with plastic wastes.

Jennifer Lavers, a marine scientist, went to these tropical islands with her research team. Knowing that lots of beaches were polluted by plastic wastes, the team conducted a careful scientific examination on the coast, only to find the problem caused by pieces of trash humans left was worse than expected.

Not all plastics are to blame. They are necessary in places like hospitals and airplanes, and make our vehicles lighter and more efficient. However, other plastics, especially disposable(一次性的) plastics, account for the growing mess on the beaches. Islands all over the world are jammed with plastics. And the Cocos Islands are no exception.

Apparently, demand for disposable plastics must be reduced greatly. “Why don’t we carry around bags that we can use over and over again?” asked Richard Gross, a chemist who researches innovative ways to make more sustainable plastics. “Let’s carry around reusable lunch boxes. We should understand how serious the situation is.”

Although it is important for individuals to make an effort to avoid using disposable plastics, it is also generally believed that only with international rules can such a deep-rooted, common, and worldwide scourge(灾害) be tackled.

However, the U. N., which engages in dealing with accelerating climate change and public health crises, obviously isn’t paying enough attention to calling for international action on plastic pollution. As a result, billions of plastic products will still be produced every year, many of which will end up in the ocean.

It requires the greatest effort of all time to control plastic pollution in modern society. No matter how tall the hurdles(栏架) are, something has to be done.

1. What did Jennifer Lavers and her research team find?
_________________________________________________________________
2. What kinds of plastics lead to the increasing wastes on the beaches?
_________________________________________________________________
3. Please decide which part is false in the following statement, then underline it and explain why.
Individual efforts and international rules are both required to tackle the plastic pollution, and the U. N. pays much attention to calling for international action.
_________________________________________________________________
4. As a student, what will you do to reduce white pollution?
_________________________________________________________________
2022-12-30更新 | 84次组卷 | 1卷引用:北京市大兴区2022-2023学年高三上学期期末试卷英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约480词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。主要介绍了密歇根大学的研究人员发现了一种识别和跟踪海洋中微塑料浓度的创新方法。

7 . Microplastics —   tiny pieces of plastic waste less than five millimetres long that have been degraded by waves, wind and ultraviolet rays — have been discovered in the deepest oceanic trenches and within the stomachs of the organisms that live there, but we have little idea about where the great majority of them end up. More than eight million tonnes of plastic enters our oceans every year, comprising between 80 and 85 percent of all marine trash, but with inadequate data, there are concerns that these figures could be underestimates.

Currently, most of the data we have on microplastics are accidentally captured by research ships, which use plankton nets to collect marine-microorganism samples. However, researchers Christopher Ruf and Madeline Evans from the University of Michigan have discovered an innovative way to identify and track concentrations of microplastics in the ocean.

The technique relies on NASA’s Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System (CYGNSS), a constellation of eight micro-satellites used to predict hurricanes that calculate wind speeds above the ocean by measuring the roughness of surface waters. As the satellites are continuously recording, Ruf and Evans realised that they collect a great deal of additional data. It was while analysing these data that they noticed some differences-times where the surface of the ocean appeared to be much smoother than it should, given the prevailing wind (盛行风) conditions.

Knowing that water isn’t roughened as much when it contains a lot of floating material, Ruf and Evans identified a pattern that linked areas of unusual smoothness and predicted microplastic distributions. They found that the difference between their measurements, and how much rougher the surface would be if winds of the same speed were blowing across clear water, was “highly correlated with the presence of microplastics, and the degree of the difference also correlated with the concentration of the plastics.”

The research reveals that there are seasonal variations,where the concentrations of microplastics tend to be higher in the summer and lower in the winter in a very clean, periodic way, which Ruf explains mirrors the way in which the ocean circulation changes throughout the year. It also confirms, as was previously thought, that rivers are the main source of ocean microplastics.

Raising awareness of the issue of ocean microplastics among the public and politicians is just one of the researchers’ future aims; they are also in conversation with Duteh non-profit The Ocean Cleanup and Finnish clean-technology specialist Clewat, which are interested in using the information to more efficiently target their trash-collection campaigns.

So far, only one year’s worth of data have been processed since CYGNSS was launched in 2016. By looking at a longer time period, Ruf and Evans aim to determine whether the seasonal pattern is repeatable, and whether the concentration of micmplastics in the ocean is getting worse.

1. What is Paragraph 1 mainly about?
A.The limited knowledge about ocean microplastics.
B.The harm of ocean microplastics to sea creatures.
C.The methods of degrading ocean microplasties.
D.The previous research on ocean microplasties.
2. According to the passage, CYGNSS ________.
A.has offered data about the repeatable seasonal pattern
B.guides research ships to gather data about sea animals
C.provides unexpected data about the changes of sea surface
D.was designed to measure the distribution of ocean microplastics
3. What can we learn from the passage?
A.Microplastics will end up in the stomachs of the ocean organisms.
B.Mlicroplastics play a vital role in the yearly ocean circulation changes.
C.The surface of the ocean can get smoother with more microplastics in it.
D.The new way of tracking microplastics has helped prevent ocean pollution.
4. What is the main purpose of the passage?
A.To introduce the technology of CYGNSS.
B.To present a way to study ocean microplastics.
C.To test an assumption on ocean microplastics.
D.To propose a new means of protecting the ocean.
2022-05-13更新 | 529次组卷 | 4卷引用:北京市海淀区2021-2022学年高三下学期期末练习(二模)英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约430词) | 适中(0.65) |
名校

8 . Plastic pollution has long been a problem, but now it's gotten to a new height literally. Microplastic, referring to plastic fragments and particles less than 5 millimeters in diameter, have been found on Mount Qomolangma as high as 8,440 meters above sea level, just 408.86 meters below the peak of the mountain, according to a recent study published in the journal One Earth.

“These are the highest microplastics ever discovered so far.” lead author Imogen Napper from the University of Plymouth, UK, said in a statement. Scientists collected snow and water samples from 19 different locations from 4,200 meters above sea level all the way up to the summit of Mount Qomolangma. They found microplastics in all the water samples and part of the snow samples. The most polluted sample was from the Base Camp in Nepal, where most human activities on the mountain are concentrated. It had 79 particles of microplastics per liter of snow.

But how have these fragments made it all this way and in such a great abundance? The answer is apparent human activities. It is climbers who bring plastic products to the mountain. Even if they don't litter, just walking for 20 minutes or opening a bottle of water can release microplastics into the environment.

The harsh fact is that plastic pollution has reached even the most remote places on Earth. Researchers even found a plastic bag al the deepest point in the world's oceans—in the Mariana Trench, located in the Pacific Ocean. The bag is the same as the ones commonly used in grocery stores. Even covered in ice, the Arctic is still a victim of plastic pollution. A 2020 report published in Nature suggests that there are 2.000 to 17,000 plastic particles per cubic meter in Arctic ice cores, and between 0 to 18 microplastic particles per cubic meter from the water beneath ice floes. Experts think microplastics may be transported by air and then reach the North Pole in snowfall.

“What we don t yet fully know is the potential problems these tiny pieces of plastic could be having to ecosystems, to organisms and even to our own health as well,” said Christian Dunn of Bangor University, UK. Then what can we do? “We need to start focusing on deeper technological solutions that focus on microplastics, like changing fabric design and including natural fibers instead of plastic when possible.”

1. What are the first two paragraphs mainly about?
A.The polluted samples from the peak were the most serious.
B.Plastic pollution has been discovered at high altitudes.
C.Humans have .climbed to the peak of Mount Qomolangma.
D.Microplastics are a newly-found material by researchers.
2. What can we infer from Paragraph 4?
A.Microplastics may go far beyond the range of human activities.
B.The means of microplastics transportation has been confirmed.
C.There are frequent exchanges between Arctic ice cores and ice floes.
D.Bags from grocery stores are the main source of plastic pollution.
3. According to Christian Dunn, the key to addressing microplastic pollution is                    .
A.to prohibit the use of plastic productsB.to diversify the design of microplastics
C.to apply only natural fibrous alternativesD.to develop more advanced technologies
4. Which of the following is the best title?
A.Litter in the Mariana TrenchB.New One Earth Campaigns
C.Pollution Reaches New HeightD.Adventurous Human Activists
阅读理解-阅读表达(约380词) | 较难(0.4) |
9 . 阅读下面短文,根据题目要求回答问题.

Fashion's Melt Down

Throwaway culture is trashing the planet-but one young chemical engineer has her own way to turn it over.

Fast fashion has changed the way we dress.We buy more clothes, more often-but we wear them less.Alina Bassi, founder of Kleiderly, wants to give our clothing waste another chance at a useful life.

Bassi has always cared about the threat of climate change, but she actually started her career in the oil industry.After a few years, she landed at bio-bean, a startup that turned waste coffee grounds into products that could be burnt for heat and fuel.After a year, Bassi was keen to branch out-used coffee grounds are not the biggest threat facing the planet.Instead, she poured her efforts into tackling a much bigger global polluter: the fashion industry.

According to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, we produce 100 billion items of clothing per year, and this is set to double by 2050.But they don't last long enough to offset(抵消)the carbon cost of producing the material, creating the clothes, and then shipping them to customers."It makes no sense that we have such a high carbon footprint for something so short-lived," Bassi says.

Using the principles of a circular economy, Bassi has developed a low-energy, multi-stage process to turn clothing fibres into an alternative to oil-based plastic.This new plastic can then be used by manufacturers in their existing machines, so that your old T-shirts and jeans will become different products instead of clothes, such as clothing hangers, or even furniture.

Fashion companies have some other ways to reduce fashion waste, from creating clothes designed to last, to recycling the fabric to make more clothing.But "a problem this big needs multiple solutions," Bassi says."We think about the multiple lives of a product and how we can keep reusing it instead of letting it fall into landfills or incinerators(焚化炉),"she says.

1. Why did Bassi switch her focus to the fashion industry?
2. Please paraphrase the underlined sentence in your own words.
3. Please decide which part is false in the following statement, then underline it and explain why.
Kleiderly can change old jackets and trousers into a new material, which can be used to make more clothing
4. Please briefly present your own solution(s)to the throwaway problem in daily life.(about 40 words)
2021-01-21更新 | 226次组卷 | 1卷引用:北京市东城区2020-2021学年第一学期期末统一检测高三英语试题
书信写作-其他应用文 | 适中(0.65) |
10 . 假设你是红星中学高三学生李华。你的英国笔友Chris来信询问有关垃圾分类的情况。请给他回邮件介绍你所在社区开展垃圾分类的情况。内容包括:
1. 垃圾问题的现状;
2. 垃圾分类的意义;
3. 询问对方城市垃圾分类的情况。
注意:1. 词数不少于100;
2. 适当增减细节,使文章连贯;
3. 开头、结尾已给出,不计入总词数。
Dear Chris,
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Yours,

Li Hua

共计 平均难度:一般