Besides the content of a book, _____the editor also cares about is the number of readers.
A.who B.why C.how D.what
高三英语单项填空中等难度题
Besides the content of a book, _____the editor also cares about is the number of readers.
A.who B.why C.how D.what
高三英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
Besides the content of a book, ________ the editor also cares about is the number of readers.
A.who B.why
C.how D.what
高三英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
As a health editor, I spend the majority of my day poring over content related to health. At HuffPost, we're lucky to talk to experts on a daily basis about how to live our best lives. It’s clear that life would be healthier if we would just do the following things. Sure, some of these are easier said than done.
1.Have a bedtime.
Sleep is considered the third pillar(支柱) of health, and for good reason. Research is only making it increasingly clear that not getting enough of the stuff can have serious health effects. Meanwhile, getting enough sleep is good for everything ranging from weight, to mood, to even the immune system. One of the simplest things you can do to ensure you get enough sleep each night is to set a bedtime. Forgive yourself if you can't meet it every night, but make a point to try to stick to it.
2. Cultivate your emotional intelligence
To have emotional intelligence means to be "confident, good at working towards your goals and adaptable. You recover quickly from stress." psychologist Daniel Goleman previously told HuffPost. It's made up of five parts: social skills, empathy, motivation, self-awareness and self-regulation. And fortunately, these are all traits you can cultivate. Be curious about things beyond yourself. Know what you're good at and where you can stand to improve. Try to improve your ability to pay attention.
3.
This is something I'm still working on. I'm an objectively fast person -- fast at walking, fast at eating, fast at talking. This also makes me very impatient, and also sometimes very unobservant -- stopping to smell the roses has never been my strong suit. But slowing down to appreciate life and all its little moments builds gratitude -- and that's a very healthy thing.
4. Find an exercise you actually enjoy
It's not exactly a secret how much I opposite-of-like running. I'll still do it, because of health, but there are certainly other ways I'd rather get my fitness in. And that's completely OK. Research has even shown that whether we think of fitness as "fun" or "exercise" affects how much we end up eating. For me, exercise is a pill best swallowed as volleyball. For you, it may be dancing, or swimming, or riding your bike. Don't think that just because you don't like "conventional" exercise -- running, going to the gym, etc. -- you're "bad at exercise." No such thing!
1. Which of the following has something to do with the immune system?
A. exercise B. sleep
C. emotional intelligence D. mood
2. What can we infer from the passage?
A. You should set a bedtime and stick to it no matter what happened.
B. Paying attention is not as important as other abilities for emotional intelligence.
C. The writer is no longer a fast person.
D. The exercise the writer likes most is volleyball.
3. Emotional intelligence includes the following except______.
A. confidence B. motivation
C. stress D. self-awareness
4. The best title for the third tip is___________.
A. Feel gratitude to life
B. Stop to smell the roses
C. Lead a simple life
D. Take a time to appreciate your life
高三英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
Mastering the art of presentation goes hand in hand with carefully packaging the content of what you want to ______.
A.polish up B.take in C.make out D.get across
高三英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
28.Besides hotels,there are also families_____visitors can experience the warmth and kindness of the local people.
A.which | B.that | C.what | D.Where |
高三英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
By the end of the year, editors of New York Times have picked the 4 best books of 2019, including fiction and non-fiction. Let’s see which one will take your fancy.
Disappearing Earth
By Julia Phillips
In the first chapter of this novel, two young girls vanish, sending shock waves through a town on the edge of the remote and mysterious Kamchatka Peninsula. What follows is a novel of overlapping short stories about the different women who have been affected by their disappearance. Each tale pushes the narrative forward another month and exposes the ways in which the women of Kamchatka have been destroyed — personally, culturally and emotionally — by the crime.
No Visible Bruises
By Rachel Louise Snyder
Snyder’s thoroughly reported book covers what the World Health Organization has called “a global health problem”. In America alone, more than half of all murdered women are killed by a current or former life partner; domestic violence cuts across lines of class, religion and race. Snyder reveals pervasive myths (restraining orders are the answer, abusers never change) and writes movingly about the lives (and deaths) of people on both sides of the equation. She doesn’t give easy answers but presents a wealth of information that is its own form of hope.
Midnight in Chernobyl
By Adam Higginbotham
Higginbotham’s superb account of the April 1986 explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant is one of those rare books about science and technology that read like a tension-filled thriller. Filled with vivid detail and sharply etched personalities, this narrative of astonishing incompetence moves from mistake to mistake, miscalculation to miscalculation, as it builds to the inevitable, history-changing disaster.
Exhalation
By Ted Chiang
Many of the nine deeply beautiful stories in this collection explore the material consequences of time travel. Reading them feels like sitting at dinner with a friend who explains scientific theory to you with no airs and graces. Each thoughtful, elegantly crafted story poses a philosophical question; Chiang arranges all nine into a conversation that comes full circle, after having travelled through remarkable areas.
1.Which of the following tells about the violence from a husband to a wife in a family?
A.Disappearing Earth B.No Visible Bruises
C.Midnight in Chernobyl D.Exhalation
2.How may readers feel when reading the book Midnight in Chernobyl?
A.Delighted. B.Awkward.
C.Tense. D.Calm.
3.What kind of book is Exhalation?
A.A folk tale. B.A biography.
C.A love story. D.A sci-fi story.
高三英语阅读理解简单题查看答案及解析
The boy really has________good memory.He can write the content of the book from________memory.
A.a;a B.a;/ C./;a D./;/
高三英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
77. Please take a chair and listen to me carefully. We can also use _____ instead of the underlined word.
A.bench | B.sofa | C.seat | D.stool |
高三英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
April 23 marks World Book Day, also ________ as International Day of the Book, which was
celebrated for the first time on the 23rd of April, 1995.
A. known B. knowing
C. to be known D. being known
高三英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
The book was written careful observations and detailed studies.
A. on the ground of B. on behalf of
C. on average D. on the basis of
高三英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析