首页题目详情

For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a letter to express your thanks to your parents or any other family member upon making a memorable achievement. You should write at least 120 words but no more than 180 words.

问答题
2021-06-03 12:07:14
01522
参考答案:标准答案:Dear Dad, With Father’s Day approaching, I’m writing this letter to express my thanks and love to you for supporting me in serving as a volunteer teacher in the rural area, which is a memorable achievement in my life. First of all, thank you for trusting me to take good care of myself and supporting me in doing mean...
查看答案
 参考答案
科目:大学英语
学科:外国语言文学
感兴趣题目
The Importance of a Good Start    For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay commenting on the saying "A good start is half done." You can cite examples to illustrate the importance of a good start to success. You should write at least 120 words but no more than 180 words.
ot to Be Snobbish    For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay based on the Picture below. You should start your essay with a brief description of the picture and then comment on class reunion. You should write at least, 120 words but no more than 180 words.   
No Neglecting the Fundamental Courses    For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay based on the picture below. You should start your essay with a brief description of the picture and then comment on the role of fundamental courses. You should write at least 120 words but no more than 180 words.   
The things people make, and the way they make them, determine how cities grow and decline, and influence how empires rise and fall. So, any disruption to the world's factories【C1】______ And that disruption is surely coming. Factories are being digitised, filled with new sensors and new computers to make them quicker, more【C2】______ , and more efficient.   Robots are breaking free from the cages that surround them, learning new skills and new ways of working. And 3D printers have long【C3】______ a world where you can make anything, anywhere, from a computerised design. That vision is【C4】______ closer to reality. These forces will lead to cleaner factories, producing better goods at lower prices, personalised to our individual needs and desires. Humans will be【C5】______ many of the dirty, repetitive, and dangerous jobs that have long been a【C6】______ of factory life.   Greater efficiency【C7】______ means fewer people can do the same work. Yet factory bosses in many developed countries are worried about a lack of skilled human workers—and see【C8】______ and robots as a solution. But economist Helena Leurent says this period of rapid change in manufacturing is a【C9】______ opportunity to make the world a better place. "Manufacturing is the one system where you have got the biggest source of innovation, the biggest source of economic growth, and the biggest source of great jobs in the past. You can see it changing. That's an opportunity to【C10】______ that system differently, and if we can, it will have tremendous significance."   A) automation F) feature K) matters   B) concerns G) flexible L) moving   C) enormously H) inevitably M) promised   D) fantastic I) interaction N) shape   E) fascinated J) leaning O) spared
 When my son completes a task, I can't help but praise him. It's only natural to give praise where praise is due, right? But is there such a thing as too much praise?   According to psychologist Katherine Phillip, children don't benefit from【C1】______ praise as much as we'd like to think. "Parents often praise, believing they are building their child's self-confidence. However, over-praising can have a【C2】______ effect," says Phillip. "When we use the same praise【C3】______ , it may become empty and no longer valued by the child. It can also become an expectation that anything they do must be【C4】______ with praise. This may lead to the child avoiding taking risks due to fear of【C5】______ their parents."   Does this mean we should do away with all the praise? Phillip says no. "The key to healthy praise is to focus on the process rather than the【C6】______ It is the recognition of a child's attempt, or the process in which they achieved something, that is essential," she says. "Parents should encourage their child to take the risks needed to learn and grow."   So how do we break the【C7】______ of praise we're all so accustomed to? Phillip says it's important to【C8】______ between "person praise" and "process praise". "Person praise is【C9】______ saying how great someone is. It's a form of personal approval. Process praise is acknowledgement of the efforts the person has just【C10】______ Children who receive person praise are more likely to feel shame after losing," says Phillip.   A) choose F) experienced K) repeatedly   B) constant G) negative L) rewarded   C) disappointing H) outcome M) separately   D) distinguish I) pattern N) simply   E) exhausting J) plural O) undertaken
 Trust is fundamental to life. If you can't trust anything, life becomes intolerable. You can't have relationships without trust, let alone good ones.   In the workplace, too, trust is【C1】______ .An organization without trust will be full of fear and【C2】______ .If you work for a boss who doesn't trust their employees to do things right, you'll have a【C3】______ time. They'll be checking up on you all the time, correcting "mistakes" and【C4】______ reminding you to do this or that. Colleagues who don't trust one another will need to spend more time【C5】______ their backs than doing any useful work.    Organizations are always trying to cut costs. Think of all the additional tasks caused by lack of trust. Audit (审计) departments only exist because of it. Companies keep large volumes of【C6】______ because they don't trust their suppliers, their contractors or their customers. Probably more than half of all administrative work is only there because of an ever-existing sense that "you can't trust anyone these days." If even a small part of such valueless work could be【C7】______ , the savings would run into millions of dollars.   All this is extra work we【C8】______ onto ourselves because we don't trust people—the checking, following through, doing things ourselves because we don't believe others will do them【C9】______ —or at all. If we took all that away, how much extra time would we suddenly find in our life? How much of our work【C10】______ would disappear?   A) constantly F) load K) removed   B) credible G) miserable L) stacks   C) essential H) pressure M) suspicion   D) exploring I) properly N) tracked   E) gather J) records O) watching
  It can be seen from the cheapest budget airlines to the world's largest carriers: Airlines across the globe【C1】______various shades of blue in their cabin seats, and it is no【C2】______. There does appear to be some psychology behind it. Blue is【C3】______with the positive qualities of trust, efficiency, quietness, coolness, reflection and calm.   Nigel Goode is a leading aviation designer who works at a company which has been delivering aircraft interiors for airlines for 30 years. "Our job as designers is to reinforce the airline's brand and make it more【C4】______," he says. "But our primary concern is to deliver an interior that【C5】______comfort to create a pleasant environment."   "It's all about making the traveling experience less【C6】______and blue is said to induce a feeling of calm. While some of the budget airlines might use brighter, bolder shades, most others go with softened tones. The【C7】______aim is to create a home-like relaxing feel, so airlines tend to use soft colors that feel domestic,【C8】______and earthy for that reason."   It's also a trend that emerged decades ago and has【C9】______stuck. "Blue became the color of choice because it's a conservative, agreeable, corporate shade that【C10】______being trustworthy and safe. That's why you see it used in all of the older airlines like British Airways," Nigel Goode added.   A) associated F) imitate K) principal   B) coincidence G) indication L) recognizable   C) determined H) integrate M) simply   D) drastically I) maximizes N) stressful   E) enormous J) natural O) symbolizes
There're three main types of financial stress people encounter. The first type is apparent in people being stressed about the【C1】______ups and downs of investment markets—actually not so much the ups, but【C2】______the downs. These people are usually unable or unprepared to endure the long haul.   The next common type of financial stress is that caused by debt. In a【C3】______percentage of cases of debt-induced financial stress, credit cards and loans will be a central element. Often there'll be a car loan and perhaps a mortgage, but credit cards often seem to be the gateway to debt-related financial difficulties for many.   The third type of stress and【C4】______the least known is inherited financial stress, which is the most destructive. It is experienced by those who have grown up in households where their parents regularly【C5】______and fought about money. Money therefore becomes a stressful topic, and so the thought of sitting down and planning is an unattractive【C6】______.   Those suffering inherited financial anxiety【C7】______to follow one of two patterns. Either they put their head in the sand: they would【C8】______examining their financial statements, budgeting, and discussing financial matters with those closest to them. Alternatively, they would go to the other【C9】______, and micro-analyze everything, to the point of complete【C10】______They're convinced that whatever decision they make will be the wrong one.   A) appearance F) extreme K) proposition   B) argued G) inaction L) rebelled   C) avoid H) incredibly M) statement   D) considerable I) normal N) tend   E) definitely J) possibly O) traditional
   "Science and everyday life cannot and should not be separated." Those were the words uttered by pioneering British scientist Rosalind Franklin, who firmly believed that the pursuit of science should be【C1】______to all.   As a woman working in the first half of the 20th century, Franklin's contributions to some of the greatest scientific discoveries of our time including the structure of DNA—were sadly【C2】_______ in her lifetime.   More than 60 years after Franklin's death, we are【C3】______living in a different world, where women play an important part in every echelon (阶层) of our society—not least in science, innovation, higher education and research. UK universities are world leaders when it comes to advancing and【C4】______gender equality.   In the past decade, we have seen a【C5】______increase in England in the number of women accepted on to full-time undergraduate degrees in science, technology, engineering and maths (Stem subjects). And in the last academic year, women【C6】______for more than half of all Stem postgraduates at UK universities.   Data shows us the【C7】______to success gets harder for women to climb the further up they go. Although women make up the majority of undergraduates in our universities, just under half of academic staff are female. At【C8】______levels, only a quarter of professors are women, and black women make up less than 2% of all female academic staff.   There are also stark differences in pay across grades. The gender pay gap based on median salaries across the sector in 2016 - 2017 was 13.7%,【C9】______there is still some way to go to ensure women are rising through the ranks to higher grade positions and being paid【C10】______.   A) accessible F) effective K) promoting   B) accounted G) ladder L) senior   C) adaptation H) misread M) submission   D) appropriately I) nomination N) suggesting   E) considerable J) overlooked O) thankfully
  Ships are often sunk in order to create underwater reefs (暗礁) perfect for scuba diving (水肺式潜泳) and preserving marine【C1】______. Turkish authorities have just sunk something a little different than a ship, and it wouldn't normally ever touch water, an Airbus A300. The hollowed-out A300 was【C2】______of everything potentially harmful to the environment and sunk off the Aegean coast today. Not only will the sunken plane【C3】______the perfect skeleton for artificial reef growth, but authorities hope this new underwater attraction will bring tourists to the area.   The plane【C4】______a total length of 54 meters, where experienced scuba divers will【C5】______be able to venture through the cabin and around the plane's【C6】______. Aydin Municipality bought the plane from a private company for just under US $100,000, but they hope to see a return on that【C7】______through the tourism industry. Tourism throughout Turkey is expected to fall this year as the country has been the【C8】______of several deadly terrorist attacks. As far as sunken planes go, this Airbus A300 is the largest【C9】______sunk aircraft ever.   Taking a trip underwater and【C10】______the inside of a sunken A300 would be quite an adventure, and that is exactly what Turkish authorities are hoping this attraction will make people think. Drawing in adventure seekers and experienced divers, this new artificial Airbus reef will be a scuba diver's paradise (天堂).   A) create I) intentionally   B) depressed J) investment   C) eventually K) revealing   D) experiences L) stretches   E) exploring M) stripped   F) exterior N) territory   G) habitats O) victim    H) innovate
  Just because they can't sing opera or ride a bicycle doesn't mean that animals don't have culture. There's no better example of this than killer whales. As one of the most【C1】______predators (食肉动物), killer whales may not fit the【C2】______of a cultured creature. However, these beasts of the sea do display a vast range of highly【C3】______behaviors that appear to be driving their genetic development.   The word " culture" comes from the Latin " colere," which【C4】______means " to cultivate. " In other words, it refers to anything that is【C5】______or learnt, rather than instinctive or natural. Among human populations, culture not only affects the way we live, but also writes itself into our genes, affecting who we are. For instance, having spent many generations hunting the fat marine mammals of the Arctic, the Eskimos of Greenland have developed certain genetic【C6】______that help them digest and utilize this fat-rich diet, thereby allowing them to【C7】______in their cold climate.   Like humans, killer whales have colonized a range of different【C8】______across the globe, occupying every ocean basin on the planet with an empire that【C9】______from pole to pole. As such, different populations of killer whales have had to learn different hunting techniques in order to gain the upper hand over their local prey (猎物). This, in turn, has a major effect on their diet, leading scientists to【C10】______that the ability to learn population-specific hunting methods could be driving the animals'genetic development.   A) acquired I) image   B) adaptations J) literally   C) brutal K) refined   D) deliberately L) revolves   E) expressed M) speculate   F) extends N) structure   G) habitats O) thrive    F) extends N) structure   H) humble
The center of American automobile innovation has in the past decade moved 2,000 miles away. It has【C1】______from Detroit to Silicon Valley, where self-driving vehicles are coming to life.   In a【C2】______to take production back to Detroit, Michigan lawmakers have introduced【C3】______that could make their state the best place in the country, if not the world, to develop self-driving vehicles and put them on the road.   "Michigan's【C4】______in auto research and development is under attack from several states and countries which desire to【C5】______our leadership in transportation. We can't let that happen," says Senator Mike Kowall, the lead【C6】______of four bills recently introduced.   If all four bills pass as written, they would【C7】______a substantial update of Michigan's 2013 law that allowed the testing of self-driving vehicles in limited conditions. Manufacturers would have nearly total freedom to test their self-driving technology on public roads. They would be allowed to send groups of self-driving cars on cross-state road trips, and even set up on-demand【C8】______of self-driving cars, like the one General Motors and Lyft are building.   Lawmakers in Michigan clearly want to make the state ready for the commercial application of self-driving technology. In【C9】______, California, home of Silicon Valley, recently proposed far more【C10】______rules that would require human drivers be ready to take the wheel, and ban commercial use of self-driving technology.   A) bid I) replace   B) contrast J) represent   C) deputy K) restrictive   D) dominance L) reward   E) fleets M) significant   F) knots N) sponsor   G) legislation O) transmitted    H) migrated