4.Can you imagine this shy _______ at the concert?
A.girl to sing | B.girl to be singing | C.girl’s singing | D.girl to have sung |
高一英语单项填空简单题
4.Can you imagine this shy _______ at the concert?
A.girl to sing | B.girl to be singing | C.girl’s singing | D.girl to have sung |
高一英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
You can’t imagine this lake used to be a beautiful place in our province________.
A.at any time B.at one time C.in no time D.at times
高一英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
Is this the girl______ whom I can turn for help? Is she good at this subject?
A.to | B.with | C.in | D.at |
高一英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
---Can you imagine that he paid 500 yuan for the concert ticket?
--- That’s natural for him. He is ________________ music.
A. aware of B. crazy about
C. long for D. ashamed of
高一英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
At noon, Shi Huizi received a text message: “This is Yuantong Express. Please come to the school gate and pick up your parcel.” The 22-year-old girl at Beijing International Studies University rushed to the school gate, where hundreds of parcels lay waiting to be collected by their owners.
This scene is not uncommon on China’s campuses, as shopping online has become an important part of their lifestyle for many university students. But convenient as it is, online shopping among students is marked by impulse(冲动) buying and other risks. Students should be cautious to avoid them.
According to Taobao, during last year’s graduation season, 250,000 graduate students from 116 “211” project universities nationwide spent 846 million yuan on Taobao. Beijing Haidian Consumers’ Association conducted a survey on the online purchasing behavior of students, which showed that nearly 54 percent of respondents had made irrational purchases.
Yang Yi is one of them. The 23-year-old business administration major at Beijing Wuzi University bought a limited edition Gundam model kit online for a small fortune, only to find that its appeal faded rapidly. “I did like it when I bought it, but it doesn’t look so attractive to me anymore now. So I’ve decided to sell it to pay off my debts,” says Yang. Yang’s experience reflects the consumption patterns (消费方式) of many university students. In an attempt to be unique, many of them turn to online shops to buy “exotic(奇异的)” items not easily found in the domestic (国内的) market.
According to Lei Li, a psychology professor at Renmin University, the impulsive buying patterns found among students have psychological roots. When shopping online is a campus trend, it’s not only about convenience, but also about group identification(认可). “If everyone is doing something and you’re not, you’re less likely to be accepted by others,” Lei says. The mentality(心态) of not wanting to be left out is fuelling impulse buying.
As he Haidian survey indicates, online shopping is not always a satisfying experience. Of 848 respondents(调查对象) from universities based in Beijing, 42 percent said they had received products that didn’t match the online description or photos. Even so, 72.5 percent of student buyers don’t return unsatisfactory goods due to the inconvenience it causes and long procedures.
Lei suggests that students who are enthusiastic about online shopping “pay attention to the consequences and develop a wiser way of consuming—namely, buying items within their budget and being aware of the risks of buying online.”
1.How does the passage introduce its topic?
A. By making comparisons.
B. By giving an example.
C. By making an analysis (分析).
D. By showing the result of a survey.
2.According to the passage, which of the following is NOT the reason why shopping online becomes a campus trend?
A. Because of the mind of not wanting to be left out in a group.
B. Because many students turn to online shops trying to buy rare items in China.
C. Because it is convenient to buy online.
D. Because the school hasn’t taught them how to consume wisely.
3.What does the underlined word “irrational” in Para. 3 mean?
A. Unreasonable. B. Expensive.
C. Worthless. D. Priceless.
4.What’s the best title of the passage?
A. The Risks of Shopping Online
B. The Trend of Shopping Online
C. Students Shop on Impulse
D. Buying More Wisely
高一英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
Imagine this: you are twenty-one years old and a promising graduate student at one of the top universities in the world. One day, your doctor tells you that you have an incurable disease and may not have more than twelve months to live. How would you feel? What would you do? Here is what Stephen Hawking thought:
(There did not seem) much point in working on my PhD-I did not expect to survive that long. Yet two years had gone by and I was not that much worse. In fact, things were going rather well for me and I had got engaged to a very nice girl, Jane Wilde. But in order to get married, I needed a job,and in order to get a job, I needed a PhD.
Instead of giving up, Hawking went on with his research, got his PhD and married Jane. Nor did he let the disease stop him from living the kind of life he had always dreamt of. He continued his exploration of the universe and travelled around the world to give lectures. As his disease has disabled him, Hawking has to sit in his now-famous wheelchair and speak through a computer. He talked about his theories and thoughts on some of the greatest questions: What is time, how did the universe begin,and what exactly are black holes?
Hawking became famous in the early 1970s, when he and American Roger Penrose made new discoveries about the Big Bang and black holes. Since then, Hawking has continued to seek answers to questions about the nature of the universe. In 1988, he wrote A Brief History of Time, which quickly became a best-seller. Readers were pleased and surprised to find that a scientist could write about his work in a way that ordinary people could understand. The book sold more than 5.5 million copies in 33 different languages.
1.According to the quote in paragraph 2, when was Stephen Hawking told about his disease?
A.Twelve months earlier. B.When he was getting married.
C.Two years earlier. D.When he met Jane Wilde.
2.Why did Stephen Hawking think: “There did not seem much point in working on my PhD?”
A.Because there was no point in being a PhD. B.Because he thought he would die soon.
C.Because there was no hope of being PhD. D.Because he had no place to work.
3.What made Hawking known to the world in 1970s?
A.His book A Brief History of Time. B.His discovery about the Big Bang and black hole.
C.His fighting against the disease. D.His lectures to university students.
4.What can we learn from Steven Hawking?
A.Where there is a will,there is a way. B.Every road leads to Rome.
C.Practice makes perfect. D.Better late than never.
高一英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
Tom is good at maths, so I think he is the student ____can help you to work out this problem.
A .who B. whom
C. whose D. /
高一英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
Can you imagine being a billionaire at the age of 21? Entrepreneur (企业家), social media star and model Kylie Jenner has done just that. According to the business magazine Forbes, Ms Jenner has become the world’s youngest self-made billionaire. She is so successful that she became a billionaire two years younger than Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. She made the majority of her fortune from her best-selling cosmetics (化妆品) business Kylie Cosmetics, which she started at the age of 15. She founded and owns the beauty company, which is estimated to be worth around $900 million.
Kylie Jenner was born in August 1997. She got into business at a young age. When she was 14, she created a line of clothing for a fashion brand. A year later, she launched her own cosmetics line called Kylie Lip Kits, which transformed into Kylie Cosmetics.
Jenner has been on TV screens since she was 10. Time magazine listed her as one of the most influential teens in the world. Today, Ms Jenner also has successful careers as a model, TV reality show star and social media personality.
When the magazine first reported last summer that Jenner would take over the title, she was met with debate from critics who argued over whether her success was “self-made” or merely because of being born into an already famous and wealthy family.
“I can't say I’ve done it by myself. I don’t have any inherited (通过继承得到的) money, but I have had a lot of help and a huge platform,” Jenner told Forbes when talking about her billionaire status. “I didn't expect anything. I did not foresee the future. But the recognition feels really good. That’s a nice pat on the back.”
1.Where was the majority of Kylie Jenner’s wealth from?
A.Her family. B.Social media.
C.Her modelling career. D.Her cosmetics business.
2.What did Kylie Jenner do in 2012?
A.She started her own cosmetics business.
B.She created a line of clothing for a fashion brand.
C.She began her career as a model and social media star.
D.She became the world’s youngest self-made billionaire.
3.What did critics argue about?
A.Whether Kylie Jenner was really that wealthy.
B.Whether Kylie Jenner would achieve greater success.
C.Whether Kylie Jenner succeeded in life all on her own.
D.Whether Kylie Jenner was among the most influential teens in the world.
4.What does the underlined phrase “a nice pat on the back” probably mean?
A.A huge challenge. B.A great encouragement.
C.An accurate prediction. D.A special requirement.
高一英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
This is the first time I ______Tian’anmen Square. You can’t imagine how excited I am.
A. have visited B. am visiting
C. visit D. visited
高一英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
You can’t imagine what great difficulty I had _______ a ticket for Jay Chou’s concert in Zhengzhou.
A.to get | B.getting | C.got | D.get |
高一英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析