A. But some experts believe that there is no relation between cold weather and catching colds. So why do we catch colds more easily during this season?
B. The common cold is a viral infection(病毒性感染) that can be caused by any of up to 250 kinds of viruses, the most common group of which are the viruses that hit the nose. Dr Jain says, "These viruses are transmitted through the nose and respiratory passages (呼吸道) by touch and by contact with a special air that is made when the patients cough and breath. "
C. In cold winter days, as you have probably noticed, catching a cold is common among people-- runny noses, sore throats, nothing quite like the common cold to make you feel uncomfortable and terrible.
D. Medical experts also say that there is no cure for the common cold and even special medicine for this cold is of no use. However, there are some good ways which can be of some help:☺ Wash your hands regularly☺ don't often touch your eyes, nose and mouth.☺ Don't share drinking glasses with anyone☺ Get enough sleep and you'll certainly become stronger to fight against the virus.
E. Dr Meenakshi, an Internal Medicine expert says, "One reason could be the truth that people are likely to stay indoors, so the virus can spread easily among people. Also the virus grows better in wetness. "
阅读以上5段语言材料,并按正确的逻辑顺序重新排列。
1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. |
九年级英语其他题中等难度题
A. But some experts believe that there is no relation between cold weather and catching colds. So why do we catch colds more easily during this season?
B. The common cold is a viral infection(病毒性感染) that can be caused by any of up to 250 kinds of viruses, the most common group of which are the viruses that hit the nose. Dr Jain says, "These viruses are transmitted through the nose and respiratory passages (呼吸道) by touch and by contact with a special air that is made when the patients cough and breath. "
C. In cold winter days, as you have probably noticed, catching a cold is common among people-- runny noses, sore throats, nothing quite like the common cold to make you feel uncomfortable and terrible.
D. Medical experts also say that there is no cure for the common cold and even special medicine for this cold is of no use. However, there are some good ways which can be of some help:☺ Wash your hands regularly☺ don't often touch your eyes, nose and mouth.☺ Don't share drinking glasses with anyone☺ Get enough sleep and you'll certainly become stronger to fight against the virus.
E. Dr Meenakshi, an Internal Medicine expert says, "One reason could be the truth that people are likely to stay indoors, so the virus can spread easily among people. Also the virus grows better in wetness. "
阅读以上5段语言材料,并按正确的逻辑顺序重新排列。
1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. |
九年级英语其他题中等难度题查看答案及解析
Some people believe that intelligence (智力) decides a student’s success. But there is no research to support this opinion, and in fact, it is wrong. Students’ success or failure is finally decided by one simple thing: the ways of they’re learning. Some students are lucky when they find ways that are helpful for them to study. But not all students are so lucky. Some students still learn in ways that are not scientific.
Dr. James J. Asher showed a method called “Total Physical Response (反应)” as a way to teach languages. Studies at San Jose State University showed that students who moved their bodies while learning English learned more words and grammar in a short time. Those who sat still and didn’t move learned less. After a year, the students who learned by moving their bodies still remembered 80% or more of what they had learned, while the others forgot over 80%.
So you should make sure that you keep moving when you learn English. As you listen to a story or an article, do the action. For example, if you hear the word “go”, move your feet. Imagine you are acting out the story or article that you are listening to. By doing this, you will be able to learn more English, remember it for longer and use it more easily.
1.Does intelligence decide a student’s success?
_________________________________________________________________________________
2.In the writer’s opinion, what decides students’ success or failure?
_________________________________________________________________________________
3.What did Dr. James J. Asher develop “Total Physical Response” for?
_________________________________________________________________________________
4.Who studied English better according to the studies?
_________________________________________________________________________________
5.What’s the writer’s advice on the way of learning?
_________________________________________________________________________________
九年级英语回答问题困难题查看答案及解析
Some experts believe that burpee (立卧撑) is the best exercise in the world because this exercise is one that anyone can do very easily and very cheaply.
How to perform the basic burpee correctly:
A. B. C. D.
Please match Picture (A—D) with 1-2,and finish 3.
1._______Bring your feet back to the squat (下蹲) position by placing your hands on the floor. Then jump straight up as high as you can after the squat position, holding your arms up directly over your head.
2.______ Move your feet back behind you, so that you move from a squat position to a full-length leg extension (拉伸). Keep both arms and legs straight and strong.
3.As a form of exercise, the burpee is _______.
A.difficult and boring B.useful but difficult
C.simple and inexpensive D.simple but expensive
九年级英语多任务混合问题简单题查看答案及解析
We usually believe what our brain tells us, but there are some amazing facts which show that the brain tricks us. As a result, we think we can see something that is not actually there or we ignore(忽视)things that actually are there.
Scientists Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris have researched this phenomenon(现象), which they call “change blindness”. Their experiments show how we sometimes just do not see what is in front of our eyes because .
Here is one of their most famous experiments. In this experiment, the participants(参与者)were shown a video of two groups of people (one group in white T-shirts and one group in black T-shirts) who passed basketballs around in a hallway. Each group had three members. Simons and Chabris asked the participants to count how many times the white team passed the ball. While the two teams were passing their balls around, a person dressed up as a big bear walked through the group and stopped to look at the camera. Simons and Chabris found that about half of the research participants did not notice the big bear.
1.What do Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris do?
A. Scientists.
B. Astronauts.
C. Engineers.
D. Directors.
2.How many people did the experiment need in the video?
A. Three.
B. Four.
C. Six.
D. Seven.
3.What percentage of the participants noticed the big bear?
A. Less than 25%.
B. About 50%.
C. About 75%.
D. Almost 100%.
4.Which is the most suitable to complete the last sentence in the second paragraph?
A. we are not interested in it
B. we are too confident to see it
C. we are depending on other people
D. we are paying attention to watching something else
九年级英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
Nowadays there are different ideas about competition. Some value it highly, believing that it is good for social development. However, others say that competition is bad and that it leads to unfriendly relationship between people.
I have taught many children. For them, playing well and winning are often life-and-death events. In their mind what they really want is going for success, the development of many other qualities is sadly forgotten.
However, while some seem to be lost on the way to success, others take an opposite opinion. Many people are strongly against competition. Among them, most are young people who have suffered from such pressure from their parents. They seem to look for failure by not trying to win or achieve success. ____△____, they always have an excuse: “I may have lost, but it doesn’t matter because I really didn’t try.” They don’t want to admit(承认)that if they have really tried and lost, they would mean more.
Clearly, this belief(信念) is the same as that of those who try to prove(证明)themselves. Both come from the wrong belief that self-confidence depends on how well one does by comparing with others. Both are afraid of not being valued. If such fear begins to be unimportant, we can have a better knowledge of competition.
1.For some people who like competition, winning is really________.
A. troublesome B. unfriendly C. important D. opposite
2.Which of the following sentence should be put in the blank “____△____”in Paragraph 3?
A. By not trying B. By not losing C. By comparing D. By valuing
3.What is the right structure of this passage?( stands for a paragraph)
A. B. C. D.
4.How does the writer make these different ideas clear?
A. By giving explanations. B. By giving examples.
C. By giving excuses. D. By giving suggestions.
5.What is the best title of this passage?
A. The Competition and Failure. B. The Competition and Success.
C. The Competition and Comparing. D. Two Ideas of Competition.
九年级英语阅读单选中等难度题查看答案及解析
It is believed in some ways that the daughter is father's lover. But my experience has taught me in a different way. For a long time, my father has been a very vague (模糊的)figure to me. He was a man of few words, tall but slim and nothing else.
When I was in primary school, my father was never there to pick me up, and he never came to any of my parent-teacher meetings. He was always busy doing projects. I remember when I was in middle school and my head was badly hurt in a PE class. During my operation, my father was nowhere to be found. This hurt me most. At that moment, I considered my Father as a cold-blooded man who did not care about me at all.
But things seemed different at my high school graduation ceremony, where I was chosen to represent my class and give a speech. My father, once again, told me he had a business trip in a place outside the city and would be unable to show up "Don't come. I will be my nervous if I see you.” I told him.
I remember my speech went smoothly. After the ceremony was over and I was about to leave, I suddenly noticed a familiar looking man sitting in a corner of the hall. It was my father!I was so surprised that I rushed to him with tears running down my face. "Well done," he said. His eyes were also filled with tears.
Later, I found out that my father had managed to finish his work by staying up late, and he drove for eight hours to get back. He had been sitting in the corner because he didn't want me to see him. My father remembered every word in my speech.
For much of my life, I described my father was a cold-blooded man who only cared about his work. But when I thought deeply about this, it was obviously(明显地)not true. At my graduation ceremony I could feel my father's deep love. The fact is that seeing is not believing, and seeing may not be the fact if we don't perceive(感知)the world with our hearts and minds. There's no doubt that life doesn't lack love, but sometimes our eyes have trouble seeing it.
1.Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?
A. The writer's father was in the hospital during her operation.
B. The writer's father attended her high school graduation ceremony.
C. The writer's father sometimes picked her up when she was in primary school.
D. The writer's father went to parent-teacher meetings when she was in primary school.
2.The writer rushed to her father with tears running down her face mainly because_______________.
A. she gave a speech successfully
B. the graduation ceremony was over
C. she was so nervous that she couldn't help crying
D. she was touched to find her father cared about her
3.What does the underlined word "this" in the last paragraph refer to(指代)?
A. That my father was always doing projects.
B. That my father was a cold-blooded man.
C. That my father sat in the corner of the hall.
D. That my father's eyes were filled with tears.
4. What's the best title of the passage?
A. My busy father B. Life is full of love
C. Seeing is not believing D. A wonderful speech
九年级英语阅读理解极难题查看答案及解析
Experts believe that there are more than 8 million restaurants in the world today. So it might surprise you to learn that restaurants, as we know them, have only existed for a few centuries. Before 1765, there were no restaurants. That is, there were no places that provided the restaurant experience. There was nowhere in which a waiter brought you food and drink that you picked from a menu. In fact, there were no menus anywhere.
There were eating places travellers could go to centuries before that. The countryside was full of inns that would serve food. And there were taverns where one could get drinks. The rich could also eat special meals prepared by private cooks. But none of them could be called a “restaurant”.
A man called Boulanger changed that. In 1765, he opened a place in Paris that sold soups(汤). On his sign he used the word "restaurant" to describe what he was selling. At that time, soups were considered something that could help "restore"(恢复)your health — in French the word "restore" is “restaurer” — so he called the soups "restaurants". Soon, people started buying Boulanger's soups even when they were not ill. And over time, people began to use the word "restaurant" to refer to a place selling soup rather than the soup itself. More "restaurants" opened in France, and people began to buy soups more often.
Later, restaurants in Paris began to serve other food besides soup. In the 1790s, menus started to appear. By the mid-1800s, there were many types of restaurants throughout the world. The United States offered coffee shops. Tea houses became popular throughout China. Paris created beautiful restaurants for the rich. The British began to copy the French, and the restaurant idea spread throughout the British Empire.
Today cities are filled with all types of restaurants. Diners have millions of options from which to choose.
1.What is the passage mainly about?
A. How restaurants developed.
B. What made a good restaurant.
C. Who created the first restaurant.
D. Why restaurants became popular.
2.According to the first paragraph, what made restaurants different from earlier eating places?
A. Restaurants only served food.
B. Restaurants were more expensive.
C. Restaurants were mainly in cities.
D. Restaurants had a list of meal choices.
3.Who did Boulanger expect to come and eat at his restaurant?
A. Rich people.
B. Sick people.
C. Travellers.
D. Workers.
4.When it was first used. what did the word "restaurant" refer to?
A. A person.
B. A place.
C. Illness.
D. Soup.
5.When did restaurants begin to grow internationally?
A. In the 1600s.
B. In the 1700s.
C. In the 1800s.
D. In the 1900s.
九年级英语阅读单选困难题查看答案及解析
Experts believe that there are more than 8 million restaurants in the world today. So it might surprise you to learn that restaurants, as we know them, have only existed for a few centuries. Before 1765, there were no restaurants. That is, there were no places that provided the restaurant experience. There was nowhere in which a waiter brought you food and drink that you picked from a menu. In fact, there were no menus anywhere.
There were eating places travellers could go to centuries before that. The countryside was full of inns that would serve food. And there were taverns where one could get drinks. The rich could also eat special meals prepared by private cooks. But none of them could be called a “restaurant”.
A man called Boulanger changed that. In 1765, he opened a place in Paris that sold soups(汤). On his sign he used the word "restaurant" to describe what he was selling. At that time, soups were considered something that could help "restore"(恢复)your health — in French the word "restore" is “restaurer” — so he called the soups "restaurants". Soon, people started buying Boulanger's soups even when they were not ill. And over time, people began to use the word "restaurant" to refer to a place selling soup rather than the soup itself. More "restaurants" opened in France, and people began to buy soups more often.
Later, restaurants in Paris began to serve other food besides soup. In the 1790s, menus started to appear. By the mid-1800s, there were many types of restaurants throughout the world. The United States offered coffee shops. Tea houses became popular throughout China. Paris created beautiful restaurants for the rich. The British began to copy the French, and the restaurant idea spread throughout the British Empire.
Today cities are filled with all types of restaurants. Diners have millions of options from which to choose.
1.What is the passage mainly about?
A.How restaurants developed.
B.What made a good restaurant.
C.Who created the first restaurant.
D.Why restaurants became popular.
2.According to the first paragraph, what made restaurants different from earlier eating places?
A.Restaurants only served food.
B.Restaurants were more expensive.
C.Restaurants were mainly in cities.
D.Restaurants had a list of meal choices.
3.Who did Boulanger expect to come and eat at his restaurant?
A.Rich people.
B.Sick people.
C.Travellers.
D.Workers.
4.When it was first used. what did the word "restaurant" refer to?
A.A person.
B.A place.
C.Illness.
D.Soup.
5.When did restaurants begin to grow internationally?
A.In the 1600s.
B.In the 1700s.
C.In the 1800s.
D.In the 1900s.
九年级英语阅读单选困难题查看答案及解析
--Everyone says that there is no chance for me to win the competition.
--- ______. Believe in yourself.
A. Maybe B. That’s all right C. Don’t let them get to you D.OK
九年级英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
(题文)—What do you think of this football match?
—I’ve no idea.But________is believed that the Spanish team will win.
A. that
B. this
C. which
D. it
九年级英语单选题中等难度题查看答案及解析