精英家教网 > 初中英语 > 题目详情

【题目】--- Who will send you to the new school, your mom, your dad or your uncle?

--- _______.I’ll go there by myself.

A.All B.Either C.Neither D.None

【答案】D

【解析】

试题分析:句意:---谁会送你去学校,你妈妈,你爸爸还是你的叔叔?--谁都不去。我将自己去。All全,都;Either两者当中的任何一者;Neither两者都不; None一个也没有。根据答语中I’ll go there by myself.可知该选D。

练习册系列答案
相关习题

科目:初中英语 来源: 题型:

【题目】My best friends helps to__________ the best in me, as the saying goes.

A. bring out B. bring in C. bring up

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英语 来源: 题型:

【题目】You can the bus at Xinhua Stop.Your destination(目的地)is not far from it.

A. get on B. get to C. get off D. get up

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英语 来源: 题型:

【题目】From the tower,you can see of London a nice day.

A. most;in B. many;in C. most;on D. many;on

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英语 来源: 题型:

【题目】

A. spreads B. drums C. electric D. destroyed E. immediately

People in Mayilattumpara, a village in southwest India, could not sleep at night. That's because wild elephants entered their village to look for food and they 1 crops and farmland. The villagers tried to keep the wild elephants out with 2 fences and deep holes. They even tried beating 3. Nothing worked! The repeated destruction of crops led some villagers to stop farming.

However, the situation turned around last year. People there have finally found what keeps the elephants away: honey bees. A wire fence with beehive (蜂房)

4 around the village. When elephants try to pass the 2.5 kilometer wire fence, angry bees fly out in a large group and the elephants run away quickly. Protected by the bees, farmers have returned to growing their crops.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英语 来源: 题型:

【题目】Every day, too much water ______ in our school. We should save it.

A. is wastedB. wastes

C. was wastedD. wasted

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英语 来源: 题型:

【题目】 How ________ you ________, Zoom?

A. do, feel B. are, feel C. are, feeling

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英语 来源: 题型:

【题目】

Many studieshave shown us that our memories aren't completely trustable. It can be difficult to tell a real memory from a false one, but one kind of memories is tested to be unreal: anything "remembered" before age 2. According to a new study published inPsychological Science, nearly 40 percent of people are sure that they remember events before this age, but their brains are almost certainly lying to them.

There’s a reason you don’t remember anything from when you were a baby: Your brain just wasn't wired to record information that way. Infants (婴儿) use their memories when they first start to walk, talk, eat, and learn in general, but that all falls into the non-declarative memory category (非陈述性记忆范畴). Declarative memory, on the other hand, describes the events that happened to you, and it's specific to the hippocampus region (海马区) of the brain. For example, people with hippocampal damage can’t tell you much about their own lives, but they can still walk or talk.

In the first couple years of a child's life, the hippocampus is in overdrive. It keeps growing neurons (神经元) to make room for all the new information the young brain is absorbing. This is what allows babies to learn so much at such a fast rate, but it also means they have to sacrifice their long-term declarative memory. As new neurons form, old ones are pushed out, along with the autobiographical (自传体的)memories they stored.

It isn't until age 2 that this growth starts to slow down and the hippocampus becomes able to save declarative memories for a longer period. But adults can still feel sure they remember events from much earlier. When researchers asked 6,641 study participants to describe their first memories and say how old they were when they happened, 2,487 people reported memories from before age 2.

As these numbers suggest, it's surprisingly easy to believe the stories you tell yourself or that were told to you are true, first-hand recollections. For example, you clearly remember dropping your ice cream cone at the zoo when you were 1.5 years old. What's likely happening is that you're remembering the picture that played in your head when your parents shared their own memories of the event when you were a few years older, or maybe you saw pictures taken from that day and you formed false memories around them.

Memory doesn't become simpler as we grow up. Even people with super autobiographical memory are susceptible (易受影响的) to false memories.

1What can we learn from the first two paragraphs?

A.Brains can change false memories into real ones.

B.Babies before age 2 can hardly remember how to walk.

C.Most adults remember everything from their early ages.

D.Declarative memories describe the things happened to us.

2The word “sacrifice” in Paragraph 3 probably means _______________.

A.give upB.care forC.work outD.connect with

3Some adults reported memories from before age 2 because______.

A.they save more declarative memories than other people

B.they might remember pictures their parents shared later

C.they might have larger brains to store the information

D.they are influenced by the fast growth of their brains

4What is the passage mainly about?

A.Children’s development before age 2 is important.

B.Brains save different memories in different areas.

C.Researches on infants have led to a new discovery.

D.People’s memories before age 2 are probably lies.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英语 来源: 题型:

【题目】

In January, 2016, a three-episode TV documentary, Masters in Forbidden City, was broadcast on China Central Television. It soon became popular – the first episode alone has been watched nearly 1 million times so far on the video website bilibili.com.

Now the documentary has been made into a film, and came out on Dec 16, 2016. It is about how professional antiquity restorers (文物修复者) in the Forbidden City repair ancient paintings, calligraphy, clocks and bronze pieces. It may not sound exciting, but the restorers’ patience and their 100 percent focus on even the smallest things is enough to impress people.

In fact, many of the restorers are young people. It has also made the documentary popular among their peers(同龄人), as it has shown them possibility of a different lifestyle. After Masters in Forbidden City was broadcast, about 20,000 people applied to work in the Forbidden City. Most of them were new college graduates.

The job has become popular. So have the restorers. But was it difficult to be part of a documentary? “It was only supposed to be difficult for the director, not for us. We simply did our jobs, paying no attention to anyone else around.” said Shi Liancang, one of the restorers, when asked during the film’s premiere(首映) in Shanghai. To make the documentary, the production team also did five years of pre-research and four months of uninterrupted(连续的) filming in the Forbidden City.

Indeed, these restorers keep this peaceful state of mind and devote themselves to doing the same thing they deeply love day after day. As the poster for the documentary says, “Choose a career and do it for a lifetime.”

1What does the documentary Masters in Forbidden City mainly talk about?

A.Detailed introductions of things in the Forbidden City.

B.How restorers in the Forbidden City repair things.

C.Life of professional antiquity restorers in the Forbidden City.

D.Different kinds of workers working in the Forbidden City.

2FromwhatShiLiancangsaid in paragraph 4,themostimportantquality of the restorers shouldbe _______.

A.curiosityB.creativityC.imaginationD.attention

3What does the documentary want to tell people?

A.Choose a job you love and do it well.

B.Working as an antiquity restorer is great.

C.Young people should live a different life.

D.Shooting a film in the Forbidden City requires hard work.

查看答案和解析>>

同步练习册答案