—Jack is ready to help others, and his father often works as a volunteer.
—Wow, he really ________his father.
A.looks after B.takes after C.runs after
科目:初中英语 来源:福建省福州市2017-2018学年七年级上学期期末英语试卷 题型:看图写短语或句子
根据所提供图片的情景和提示词,写出一个与图片情景相符的句子。
1.Whose, that
_________________________________________
2.what, think, of
_________________________________________
3. why not, lunch
_________________________________________
4.meat, favorite
_________________________________________
5.Henry, have to, homework
_________________________________________
查看答案和解析>>
科目:初中英语 来源:福建省厦门市2019-2020学年九年级下学期3月月考英语试卷 题型:单选题
— Is the airport closed because of the bad weather?
— No. But my flight to Beijing yesterday________because of it.
A.was cancelled B.is cancelled C.will be cancelled
查看答案和解析>>
科目:初中英语 来源:2019年福建省厦门市中考二模英语试卷 题型:阅读单选
Imagine having an ear made out of an apple. It seems like a crazy idea. But it could happen in the near future.
Canadian biophysicist Andrew Pelling used an apple to grow a human ear. He thinks fruit and vegetables can be used to cheaply repair human body parts in the future.
Scientists have been trying to grow organs in labs to replace our old ones. But it‘s a hard job. In the past, scientists have used man-made materials, animal parts and even dead people as scaffolds(支架). But that has proved to be difficult and expensive.
Pelling and his team, however, found the apple to be a cheap and easy-to-use scaffolds.They first cut an apple into the shape of an ear. Then they used a special way to take out the apple‘s cells(细胞)and make it a scaffold. The team then added human cells to the apple, and watched it grow. “You can implant(移植)these scaffold into the body, and the body will send in cells and a blood supply and actually keep these things alive, ” Pelling said during a Ted Talk speech.
The team put the apple scaffold inside a living mouse and the mouse’s cells slowly take over the pieces of the apple.
Now Pelling is thinking of the other fruit, plants or vegetables to use.
1.Andrew Pelling is a scientist who studies
A.body and organs B.biology and organ
C.physic and body D.biology and physics
2.What did Pelling and his team use as scaffolds?
A.Fruits. B.Animals. C.dead people D.man-made
3.According to Paragraph 4, the right order is________.
①Make the apple a scaffold.
②Cut an apple into the shape of an ear.
③Implant this scaffold into the human body.
④Add human cells to the apple scaffold.
A.①④②③ B.②①④③ C.②①③④ D.④①③②
4.How will the body keep the implanted scaffolds alive?
A.By repairing the scaffolds. B.By replacing the scaffolds.
C.By taking over the scaffolds. D.By sending in cells and a blood supply
5.What‘s the best title of the passage?
A.Scaffolds and cells B.Organs and cells
C.Organs Made of Apples D.Scientists and apples
查看答案和解析>>
科目:初中英语 来源:2019年福建省厦门市中考二模英语试卷 题型:单选题
Hanfu is a kind of traditional clothing of the Han people ________live in China before the Qing dynasty.
A.who B.which C.whom
查看答案和解析>>
科目:初中英语 来源:2019年福建省厦门市中考二模英语试卷 题型:单选题
—How do you like the App Tik Tok (抖音)?
—________ terrible! It gets in the way of our schoolwork.
A.What B.How C.What a
查看答案和解析>>
科目:初中英语 来源:福建省厦门市2018-2019学年九年级下学期3月月考英语试卷 题型:阅读单选
Have you ever heard someone say, “You completely look like you’re a Jessica” or someone similar? People seem to think that they know what kind of person a “Jessica” or a “Michael” looks like. Why is this?
According to a research in the Journey of personality (个性) and Social Psychology, humans like to connect people’s names with their looks (长相), and can even guess someone’s name according to how they look. Researchers at the Herbrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, collected thousands of photos of people’s faces. They put a name under each photo. Then, they asked volunteers to guess which of the four names was correct. The volunteers were able to guess the right name 38 percent of the time. It seems that the faces really give them clues (线索) about someone’s name, Reader’s Digest reported. However, the volunteers were not as good at guessing the real names of people who used nicknames (昵称) more often than their real names. This may show that a person’s looks are influenced by their name only if they use it often.
This kind of face-name matching happens because we often become what other people expect us to become,” Ruth Mayo from the university told science news website Eurek Alert.
The researchers believe there are also stereotype (刻板印象) about names. For example, the volunteers usually think that men named Bob should have rounder faces because the word itself looks round. They may think that women named Rose are beautiful. They expect them to be just like the flowers that they are named for.
1.The purpose of the research is to find out________.
A.how people’s looks influence their names B.if people’s names are related to their looks
C.what the most popular English names are D.if men’s names are different from women’s
2.The underlined word “they” in Paragraph 4 refers to (指代) ________.
A.the women B.the volunteers C.the researchers D.the flowers
3.The volunteers in the research most probably match Picture with the name “Rose”.
A. B. C. D.
4.According to the text, some people look like their names because they________.
A.like to connect their names with their own looks
B.use nicknames more often than their real names
C.have become what others expect them to become
D.look forward to being seen as special persons.
5.Which of the following would most probably have this text?
A.Business Week B.New York Daily News
C.Discovery D.Science Progress
查看答案和解析>>
科目:初中英语 来源:福建省厦门市2018-2019学年九年级下学期3月月考英语试卷 题型:单选题
To protect our earth, we ________ classify (分类) the rubbish before throwing it away.
A.might B.should C.would
查看答案和解析>>
科目:初中英语 来源:福建省厦门市2019-2020学年九年级上学期期中英语试卷 题型:单选题
—Hi, Ann! I won the first prize in the English Debate Competition.
—Congratulations! And I guess your parents must________you.
A.be mad at B.be proud of C.be interested in
查看答案和解析>>
湖北省互联网违法和不良信息举报平台 | 网上有害信息举报专区 | 电信诈骗举报专区 | 涉历史虚无主义有害信息举报专区 | 涉企侵权举报专区
违法和不良信息举报电话:027-86699610 举报邮箱:58377363@163.com