阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。
In the past few months, a Chinese student1.(catch) the attention of internet users in the UK with his informative posts2.(concern) the current pandemic.
Wu Peng, originally from Chengdu, Sichuan province, has been3.(voluntary) summarizing the latest COVID-19 data to help local residents and internet users better understand the spread of the virus. To make daily updates, Wu has been using official information4.(release) by the British Department of Health and Social Care.
He has created plenty of daily5. (chart) to keep his Twitter followers up to date. Last week, he went to the streets and gave out masks free6.charge. His hard work and sense of responsibility encouraged 7.local news agency to interview him for a story. When8.(ask) about his intention, Wu explained, “I hope everyone can understand the growth trend9.(clearly) than before.” Wu told The Yorkshire Post, “10.a pandemic can be defeated depends on how people react.”
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
It's a touching Christmas story, but not in the 1. (tradition) way. It’s about a seriously ill 5-year-old boy 2. died in Santa’s arms in Knoxville, Tennessee, in the United States.
Eric Schmitt-Matzen, 60, a part-time Santa, received a call 3. a nurse at a hospital several weeks ago, saying a dying 5-year-old boy wanted to see Santa Claus. Schmitt-Matzen dressed and rushed to the hospital. Walking into the boy’s room, he asked people 4. (leave) if they couldn’t hold back their 5. (tear). He picked up the boy and held him in his arms.
“They say I’m going to die,” the boy told him 6. (sad). “What can I tell them when I get to where I’m going?”
Schmitt-Matzen said. “When you get there, you tell them you’re Santa’s Number One elf (小精灵), and they will let you in.”
The boy asked, “They will?” Then he 7.(sit) up and gave Schmitt-Matzen a big hug and asked one more question: “Santa, can you help me?” Schmitt-Matzen wrapped his arms around the boy. Before Schmitl-Matzen could say anything, the boy died right there. Santa let the boy stay, hugging and 8. (hold) onto him.
Schmitt-Matzen was 9. sad that he wanted to cry.
The story was printed, and people were 10. (move) when they read it.
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析
阅读下面材料,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
At age 18, instead of following the 1. (tradition) path of marriage like the majority of girls, Lin Qiaozhi chose to study medicine. Eight years later, she graduated from Peking Union Medical College (PUMC) with Wenhai Scholarship, the2. (high) prize given to graduates. After working in the OB-GYN department of the PUMC Hospital for a few years, she was sent3. (study) in Europe and then, in 1939, in the US. She greatly impressed her American colleagues, 4.invited her to stay. Dr Lin, however, rejected the offer. She wanted to serve the women and children at home.
In 1941, Dr Lin became the first Chinese woman ever to be appointed director of the OB-GYN department of the PUMC Hospital, 5.just a few months later, the department 6.(close) because of the war. 7. (think) of all the people still in need of help, Dr Lin opened a private clinic. She charged very low fees to treat patients and often reduced costs for poor patients.
Since New China was born, she held many important 8.(position). However, she was more interested in tending patients, publishing medical research 9.care for women and children, and training the next generation of doctors. “The OB-GYN department10. (care) for two lives,” she told new staff in her department. “As doctors, we should be responsible for the patients and treat them as our sisters.”
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析
段落语法填空
Many people are wondering if it is safe to talk on the cell phones while driving. Most of people think that the use of cell phones should 1. (ban) while they are driving 2.in that case accidents can easily happen.
A growing number of states are making rules to keep young drivers 3. using cell phones while they are driving. When there is 4. car accident, police officers will find out 5. any of the drivers is using a cell phone. There have been some very bad car accidents 6.(cause) by drivers being distracted by cell phones.
Drivers sometimes forget to watch the road 7.(careful) when they are using their phones. Not 8. (pay) attention to the road can be dangerous, even deadly.
9. is important for drivers to focus on the road. They need to pay attention to 10. is going on around them. So, stop using your cell phones while driving.
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析
阅读下列材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。
There are various advertisements in our lives and we can see them wherever we go. Mostly, advertisements try to persuade people 1. (buy) a product or service, or to believe in 2. idea. But PSAs are meant to educate people about health, safety, or problems 3. affect public welfare .
When it comes to advertisements, we must use our 4. (intelligent) and we shouldn’t 5. ( cheat) by them. Many of them use 6. (attract) pictures and clever languages to advertise their products, 7. (bring) huge profits for those businessmen.
8. (fortunate), not all ads play tricks 9. us though, China began a nationwide campaign in 1996, and since then all kinds of PSAs 10. (appear) around the country. You have probably seen or heard some of them and they can be learnt by us .
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析
阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
“The goal is that every 300 metres if you open a window, you 1.(see) green,” says Chen Lan, an expert in urban design and planning at Sichuan University.
With its mild weather, teahouses, quiet leafy streets and 2.(international) known food, Chengdu in south-west China have been known as one of the country’s 3.(good) cities to live in. Over the last two decades it has experienced a burst of rapid 4.(grow), driven by Beijing’s “Go West” policy. In 1998 the city was home to 4.2 million people. People 5.(come) from other parts of the province since then, and that figure is now 8.8 million.
To deal with that growth, Chengdu city planners are focused 6. environmental protection. Rather than 7.(build) parks in a city, the idea is to build a city within a park. By 2050, Chengdu will be home to 8. local officials say will be the world’s largest network of paths for people to walk or bike. The goal of these projects is 9.(help) Chengdu compete with major Chinese cities like Beijing or Shanghai while protecting 10. from the kind of urbanization and development that has robbed some Chinese cities of their character.
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析
Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.
Over-dried Earth
The south-west of the United States, together with some parts of Mexico across the Rio Grande, is one of the driest parts of the North American continent. But, over the past two decades, even that expected dryness 1. (take) to the limit. According to Park Williams, who works at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, the current lack of rainfall in the area constitutes a megadrought of a severity 2.(see) on only four other occasions in the past 1,200 years.
Dr Williams studies the annual growth rings of 1,586 ancient trees, in order to reconstruct soil-moisture patterns going back to 800 A.D. During warm, wet years trees grow fast, producing wide rings. During cold, dry 3. they grow more slowly, producing narrow rings. During a drought, a tree 4. not grow much at all.
5.they describe in this week’s Science, the team identified dozens of droughts over the centuries in question. But four stood out. They then took the average soil-moisture value for the current drought and compared it with sequential(连续的) 19-year averages with the previous four, one of them 6.(last) nearly a century. This showed that the region is already drier than it was during the first three of the previous megadroughts, and is equivalent to the event of 1575-1603.
In a world 7. human actions are driving temperatures up, Dr Parker and his colleagues wondered how much people are 8.(blame) for this state of affairs. To estimate that, they turned to climate modelling.
Climate models are able to re-run the past with and 9. the warming effects of human activity, offering a way to compare what actually happened with what might have done. In their simulated world in which anthropogenic(人类起源的) emissions had not increased the greenhouse-gas effect, the team found that a drought did indeed still influence the western reaches of North America during the first two decades of the 21st century. But this imaginary dry spell was considerably 10.(severe) than the real one-ranking 11th rather than 2nd in the period under study (see chart).
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析
阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。
China is expected to make more 1.(contribute)to global containment(控制)of COVID-19 by developing vaccines(疫苗) through international cooperation, leading international public health experts said. Having 2.(effective)brought the disease under control, China can work to help 3.(strong) global health systems and improve global preparedness for the next public health crisis, Seth Berkley, CEO of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizations, said at a seminar last week. “China has done a remarkable job on COVID-19 control. It’s really extraordinary to see a country 4.(hit)by a severe disease respond so quickly,” he said. “China tried to slow this disease down, not just for China 5.for the world.” But with reduced COVID-19 cases in China 6.a result of its containment, domestic vaccine developers may need international cooperation so further clinical trials can be conducted in other countries. Some Chinese companies have shown interest in international cooperation, 7. can help to develop vaccines for the disease.
Berkley said some organizations wanted to work with China in the development of vaccines to contribute to containment of the disease globally. They wanted to work on bringing Chinese science and vaccine manufacturers to the world, 8. (try) to make sure that the quality is there and 9. China can work through the thicket of international regulations. China has world-class vaccine research and development teams, and vaccine manufacturing in China 10. (make) great progress over the past decades. They will continue to support China in the research, development and manufacturing of vaccines.
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析
阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。
14 years ago, SARS broke out in the mainland of China, causing some people to be killed or nearly got close to 1. (die). The situation was so severe that there was no time to debate who is to blame. The most 2. (importance) thing for the government to do is to find out the cause of this 3. (dead) disease. They invited all the most famous experts in this field to discuss and quite a few suggestions were 4. (put) forward. Some of the top experts picked out those suggestions and tested them to see whether they were 5. (avail). Doctor Zhong chose one patient who was seriously ill and had little hope of picking 6. and had the new medicine 7. (test) on him. To his great joy, this patient recovered! He made his way 8. his office and telephoned to the top official, 9. (tell) him this exciting news. For 10.(convenient), he moved to live in his office. His method did make sense. Not soon after that, the other hospitals also controlled this terrible disease and kicked it out finally.
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析
Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.
Over-dried Earth
The south-west of the United States, together with some parts of Mexico across the Rio Grande, is one of the driest parts of the North American continent. But, over the past two decades, even that expected dryness 1. (take) to the limit. According to Park Williams, who works at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, the current lack of rainfall in the area constitutes a megadrought of a severity 2.(see) on only four other occasions in the past 1,200 years.
Dr Williams studies the annual growth rings of 1,586 ancient trees, in order to reconstruct soil-moisture patterns going back to 800 A.D. During warm, wet years trees grow fast, producing wide rings. During cold, dry 3. they grow more slowly, producing narrow rings. During a drought, a tree 4. not grow much at all.
5.they describe in this week’s Science, the team identified dozens of droughts over the centuries in question. But four stood out. They then took the average soil-moisture value for the current drought and compared it with sequential(连续的) 19-year averages with the previous four, one of them 6.(last) nearly a century. This showed that the region is already drier than it was during the first three of the previous megadroughts, and is equivalent to the event of 1575-1603.
In a world 7. human actions are driving temperatures up, Dr Parker and his colleagues wondered how much people are 8.(blame) for this state of affairs. To estimate that, they turned to climate modelling.
Climate models are able to re-run the past with and 9. the warming effects of human activity, offering a way to compare what actually happened with what might have done. In their simulated world in which anthropogenic(人类起源的) emissions had not increased the greenhouse-gas effect, the team found that a drought did indeed still influence the western reaches of North America during the first two decades of the 21st century. But this imaginary dry spell was considerably 10.(severe) than the real one-ranking 11th rather than 2nd in the period under study (see chart).
高一英语语法填空简单题查看答案及解析