I want to know all negative effects the Internet ________ our lives.
A.has in | B.have in | C.has on | D.have on |
高二英语单项填空中等难度题
I want to know all negative effects the Internet ________ our lives.
A.has in | B.have in | C.has on | D.have on |
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
all the negative effects the Internet has ________our lives,the Internet is more and more popular.
A. Although, in B. Despite, on C. Regardless, on D. While, in
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
______to the Internet ,as many adolescents do ,will to some extent have a negative effect on their mental and physical health .
A. Having been addicted B. Being addicted
C. Addicted D. To be addicted
高二英语单项填空困难题查看答案及解析
书面表达
学完第三单元之后,全班开班会就学生上网进行了讨论。请你根据下列信息,写一篇题为The Internet has a negative effect on our lives.的作文。
1.尽管上网查资料很方便但很难知道这些资料是否真实准确。
2.经常使用网络毁了我们过正常生活的能力。
3.多数学生上网是玩游戏、聊天而不是真正学习或查阅资料
4.个别同学甚至沉迷网络游戏而逃课。
最后得出结论:上网可以,但必须限时
要求:1.覆盖以上内容,可作适当发挥;2.字数:100词左右
高二英语书面表达中等难度题查看答案及解析
When given the choice, about 85% of people say they would not want to know about some negative event far in the future. Yet recently millions around the globe have downloaded FaceApp, which allows users to see how they might age in real life.
Many had fun with joking that they love the FaceApp old filter. Beneath the humor is a serious subject: How do we learn to relate to our future selves? It’s important that we try to because it could help strengthen the long-term decisions that we make. However, we often fail to make sacrifices for the grayer versions of ourselves.
More than half of the respondents in a recent survey of 2,800 Americans said they rarely or never thought about what their lives might be like 30 years from now. This isn’t surprising, since most of us are firmly rooted in the present and thinking about the distant future can seem like a distant priority (优先). My ongoing research might also offer an explanation: We tend to think about our future selves as if they are someone different from who we are today. In an effort to narrow these empathy (共情) gaps, my research workmates and I have tried to humanize people’s future selves in the same way others have tried to humanize charity receivers. Given that a photograph of one hungry child can spark emotional reactions, and cause viewers to donate, we have presented participants with vivid images of their distant selves.
That seems helpful. In a recently completed project in Mexico, we found that exposure to future-self images led more people to contribute to their pensions. Despite this research, I’m skeptical that the app users will suddenly increase their pension contributions and care about their health. The silly app isn’t paired with an immediate opportunity to change any of these things.
The lesson from FaceApp shouldn’t be that we need to marry hi-tech visuals with savings for retirement. The lesson, then, lakes the form of a question: What more can be done to urge us to think about, care for who we will one day become?
1.What can we learn about FaceApp?
A.It provides future-self images. B.It is the most downloaded app.
C.It helps people make decisions. D.It makes people age in real life.
2.Why do most respondents rarely think of their future life?
A.They have known future life from FaceApp.
B.They fail to make sacrifices for their future.
C.They attach greater importance to the present.
D.They consider future selves the same as today’s.
3.What does the underlined word “that” in paragraph 4 refer to?
A.Completing a project in Mexico. B.Offering aging images of participants.
C.Raising contributions among viewers. D.Giving a photograph of a hungry child.
4.What’s the author’s attitude to FaceApp?
A.Positive. B.Doubtful. C.Ambiguous. D.Unfavorable.
高二英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
We want to know whether the drug has an effect _______________ people's health.
A.on | B.to | C.with | D.in |
高二英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
The appeal of advertising to buying motives can have both negative and positive effects. Consumers may be convinced to buy a product of poor quality or high price because of an advertisement. For example, some advertisers have appealed to people’s desire for better fuel economy for their cars by advertising automotive products that improve gasoline mileage. Some of the products work. Others are worthless and a waste of consumers’ money.
Sometimes advertising is intentionally misleading. A few years ago a brand of
bread was offered to dieters (节食者) with the message that there were fewer calories in every slice. It turned out that the bread was not dietetic (适合于节食的), but just regular bread. There were fewer calories because it was sliced very thin, but there were the same number of calories in every loaf.
On the positive side, emotional appeals may respond to a consumer’s real concerns. Consider fire insurance. Fire insurance may be sold by appealing to fear of loss. But fear of loss is the real reason for fire insurance. The security of knowing that property is protected by insurance makes the purchase of fire insurance a worthwhile investment for most people. If consumers consider the quality of the insurance plans as well as the message in the ads, they will benefit from the advertising.
Each consumer must evaluate her or his own situation. Are the benefits of the product important enough to justify buying it? Advertising is intended to appeal to consumers, but it does not force them to buy the product. Consumers still control the final buying decision.
56. Advertising can persuade the consumer to buy worthless products by _________.
A. stressing their high quality
B. convincing him of their low price
C. maintaining a balance between quality and price
D. appealing to his buying motives
57. The reason why the bread advertisement is misleading is that ________.
A. thin slices of bread could contain more calories
B. the loaf was cut into regular slices
C. the bread was not genuine bread
D. the total number of calories in the loaf remained the same
58. The passage tells us that _______.
A. sometimes advertisements really sell what the consumer needs
B. advertisements occasionally force consumers into buying things they don’t need
C. the buying motives of consumers are controlled by advertisements
D. fire insurance is seldom a worthwhile investment
59. It can be inferred from the passage that a smart consumer should ________.
A. think carefully about the benefits described in the advertisements
B. guard against the deceiving nature of advertisements
C. be familiar with various advertising strategies
D. avoid buying products that have strong emotional appeal
60. The passage is mainly about ________.
A. how to make a wise buying decision
B. ways to protect the interests of the consumer
C. the positive and negative aspects of advertising
D. the function of advertisements in promoting sales
高二英语阅读理解简单题查看答案及解析
As we all know, the Internet will let people have ____________to huge amounts of information from their own homes.
A.entrance | B.way | C.means | D.access |
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
Tom wants to know if we can ____ John for the night, since he has lost all his money and can go nowhere.
A.put off B.put on C.put up D.put down
高二英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
单词拼写(共10 小题,每小题1分,满分10分)
1.All the information was then ready to be _______(加工,处理) into film negatives.
2.He can hardly find a job in the canteen, because he has no ____(先前的) experience of this kind of job.
3.He made a good _______(印象)on us by his rich knowledge.
4.The people in Iraq lived a hard life, because it was ______(不断地)hit by war.
5.The painters don’t _______(企图,尝试)to paint objects as we see them with our eyes.
6.The manager finally _______(批准) the plan.
7.The chemical companies are _______(毒害)our rivers with industrial waste.
8.As the bell rang, the naughty boy _______(挤)his book into his bag and went out of the classroom.
9.I am _____(渴望的,热切的) to slide into the classroom quietly.
10.They finally ______(采用)our advice on how to finish the work last week.
高二英语单词拼写中等难度题查看答案及解析