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1、The Chinese version of TikTok, Douyin, is introducing a "teenage mode" that will limit the amount of time to 40 minutes a day for children under the age of 14 who spend on the short-form video app. It will also be unavailable to those users between 10 p. m. and 6 a. m. The measures will apply to all Douyin users under the age of 14 who have registered using their real names, its company announced in a statement on Saturday.
The company also encourages parents to help their children use real names, or they can set the "teenage mode". The app will also introduce new content, ranging from science experiments and museums to art exhibition and natural scenery, to inspire younger teens.
Experts remark that limiting the usage of Douyin is an active measure which is of great benefit to minors (未成年人). The decision will push other Internet platforms with short videos to consider setting similar limits. Self-management and voluntary change of the platforms can make them more socially responsible.
Douyin had at least 490 million users in November 2020, according to a media research firm. The Chinese government control the large amount of time minors spend on their services. In June, China changed the Minor Protection Law, which requires Internet service providers —including social media apps—to "set up corresponding (相关的) functions such as time management, content restriction and consumption limits for minors."
Last month, China prevented online gamers under the age of 18 from playing on weekdays and limited their play to just three hours most weekends. A series of measures have been taken to further ensure the safety of businesses focused on the next generation, from a heavy hit on after-school classes to rules for online gaming and videos.
(1)、What will the company of Douyin do with its teenage mode?A、Limit the time for children to use Douyin. B、Encourage parents to use their real names. C、Allow children to use Douyin after 10 p. m. D、Attract more children to watch online videos.(2)、Which opinion will the experts agree with probably?A、Limiting usage of Douyin is of little significance. B、The measures won't have effects on other platforms. C、The self-management of the Internet platforms is enough. D、The Internet platforms should take more responsibilities.(3)、What can we infer about tech companies from paragraph 4?A、They wanted to take the place of Douyin. B、Their business should follow the new law. C、They refused to set up corresponding function. D、Their influence was discovered by media research firms.(4)、What's the main purpose of the government's measures?A、To encourage online games. B、To protect the next generation. C、To develop advanced technology. D、To reduce the kids' learning pressure. -
2、Don't miss out-save£100 pp
We don't think an excuse is required, but here is one of many great reasons why you should book your next ski holiday now-our saver week discount is coming to an end! All of our holidays are discounted by£100 per person every week in January and mid-March.
Why do we recommend January skiing?
Undoubtedly your primary concern when choosing a ski holiday is the snow. With temperatures at their coldest and slopes (斜坡) at their quietest, it's safe to say good snow conditions are almost guaranteed.
New year, new gear! For those of you renting equipment and/or clothing, you can be sure to find some brand new hire ready to carve through that fresh January powder.
If you're looking to avoid the busy school holidays, you've hit a jackpot. The slopes are empty and you don't have to wait long!
If you're unsure about January, mid-March skiing could be for you.
March has an excellent track record for snowfall and you're guaranteed to spend most lunch times bathing in the sun! March can offer the best of both worlds with fresh snow and blue bird days.
Similarly to January holidays, March is often far quieter than December and February periods. Remember, the sooner you can get up those lifts, the sooner you can slide down the freshly cleaned pistes (滑雪道).
We're confident we have a ski holiday perfect for you. Don't wait though, book before the end of the month to save £100 pp. Call us now at 0208 875 1957!
(1)、What is the major concern of people who want to take a ski holiday?A、Price range. B、Snow conditions. C、Temperature changes. D、Equipment rental.(2)、Why is mid-March a special time for skiing?A、It is far quieter than January. B、It can help avoid busy school holidays. C、It has a record for the lowest temperature. D、It guarantees both fresh snow and sunny days.(3)、What is the purpose of the text?A、To spread knowledge about skiing. B、To encourage more people to ski. C、To offer skiers some suggestions. D、To advertise a ski holiday discount. -
3、阅读下面短文,根据其内容和所给段落开头语续写两段,使之构成一篇完整的短文。
Li Wei, a high school senior, had always felt confused between her mother's expectation and her own dream. Her mother, a traditional Chinese medicine doctor, ran a small clinic in their town. The air inside was always filled with the earthy smell of dried herbs. Her mother had long hoped Li Wei would take over the family business. "Medicine is a good job, and it connects us to our roots," her mother often said, pointing to the old books lining on the shelves.
But Li Wei's heart belonged to classical dance. She spent hours practicing in secret, and her room was full of posters of international dance groups. One evening, while helping her mother prepare herbs, Li Wei accidentally knocked over a jar of ginseng (人参). As she hurried to clean up, her mother's voice cut through the silence: "You're too distracted. This is why you can't focus on your studies — and the clinic."
Li Wei's cheeks turned red. "I don't want to be a doctor!" She shouted. "I want to dance!" Before her mother could answer, Li Wei grabbed her bag and ran out, leaving the clinic door moving.
Weeks passed, and the tension between them reached boiling point. Li Wei avoided the clinic, spending long hours at dance practices even though her knees had become swollen and red. When she did come home, the house was full of cold silence, broken only by the occasional noise of her mother's tool grinding (研磨) herbs. But Li Wei couldn't miss the way her mother's eyes looked at her dance shoes, or the soft sighs that came from her during their rare talks. She was eager for her mother's support.
Then came a big chance: a national dance competition. Li Wei's hands shook as she filled out the application form, her heart beating fast. But when she looked at the bottom of the page, she felt scared. The form needed a parent's signature, a sad reminder of the gap between her and her mother.
注意:
1. 续写词数应为150左右;
2. 请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
Li Wei stared at the application form, her mind racing.
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The day of the competition arrived, and Li Wei stood backstage, feeling nervous.
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4、阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。
A composting (堆肥) program at The Wesley School in Los Angeles is helping students get hands-on experience and ways (handle) human-driven climate change. For the past year, all the leftover food waste from the school has gone into composting containers rather than a landfill it would be buried and would produce planet-warming gases.
The school's composting program (come) into being in 2022, and this year, the school held a(celebrate) to reveal what happened inside a series of five-foot-tall containers. Steven Wynbrandt, a local farmer composting consultant who has helped the school with its program, broke the ties that held the container closed. Rich black compost spilled out from the container.
The school will use the compost on plants around campus. Some will (offer) to families that want to use it at home, and whatever is left will be donated.
It takes two hours for the container to be emptied and prepared to receive next day's lunch leftovers. The other containers remain full of food waste that is in the process of (break) down. Decorated (poster) on the outside of each container indicate when they can be opened so that the next generation of plants on campus can benefit the rich soil.
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5、Growing up on a farm, Tori James spent much of her early years outdoors, building shelters and playing in muddy streams. She1 herself as an ambitious and adventurous child and owes the Duke of Edinburgh Award to her love for2. James says she could never have3 that one day she might be the youngest British woman to4 the peak of Mount Everest.
Today, James is a(n)5 adventurer. Alongside her successful climb of the world's6 peak in 2007, she was a member of the first all-female team to7 a tiring 650-kilometre ski race to the Magnetic North Pole in 2005, and in 2014 she set the8 for the longest non-stop open-sea kayak crossing in UK waters.
Yet ahead of her first exploration at the age of 18, James had9 her ability to last a month out in the cold without the comfort of a hot bath. "It's only by10 our comfort zone that we understand our true potential," she explains, "That's when the11 happens."
James encourages would-be adventurers not to be12 by the conventional image of the rugged (粗犷的), hardy explorer. "I am such a believer that, with the right support and skills, everyone can bring13 to an exploration," she adds, "Sometimes, it's only out in the field that someone's14 talents emerge,15 in the process of exploration."
(1)A 、describes B 、admits C 、imagines D 、praises(2)A 、wildlife B 、science C 、exploration D 、competition(3)A 、explained B 、understood C 、declared D 、predicted(4)A 、measure B 、approach C 、admire D 、reach(5)A 、patient B 、ordinary C 、professional D 、honest(6)A 、coldest B 、highest C 、prettiest D 、straightest(7)A 、complete B 、coach C 、judge D 、cancel(8)A 、record B 、date C 、goal D 、standard(9)A 、lost B 、doubted C 、limited D 、developed(10)A 、entering B 、restoring C 、leaving D 、expanding(11)A 、emergency B 、accident C 、event D 、magic(12)A 、pushed ahead B 、kept apart C 、cheered up D 、put off(13)A 、something B 、nothing C 、anything D 、everything(14)A 、academic B 、creative C 、hidden D 、artistic(15)A 、eventually B 、particularly C 、generally D 、obviously -
6、How to Deal with Awkward Silences
We all know what it's like when a conversation dies off and you're left to sit in silence. Thankfully, filling these silences isn't as difficult as it may seem. Read on to learn how to initiate small talk and deal with awkward silences.
• Think of topics ahead of time.
Before attending a social event, think of a few "go-to" topics to jumpstart a dead conversation. This will help you to fill the silences instead of struggling for words in the moment. Recent news, local events, popular books and television shows are all good fallback options.
• Ask open-ended questions.
Ask questions that have more than one possible answer. They help avoid resulting in short response. For example, instead of asking, "Did you like your high school?", you could ask, "What did you like about your high school?"
•
As with any good conversation, the biggest key is to listen. If they respond to your question with a short statement such as "Yes"or "No", that might indicate that they aren't comfortable talking about a particular subject. Instead, talk about something that you know they're interested in. For example, "I heard you won your football game the other night. I'd love to hear about it."
• Give a compliment (表扬).
For example, you could say, "I really like your shirt. Where did you get it?" This could move the conversation in another direction while making the other person feel good. Stick to saying nice things if you're trying to make small talk.
A. Keep the conversation flowing.
B. It also allows you to spend more time together.
C. Listen carefully and respond to their reactions.
D. There's only one word to describe it: awkward.
E. This is always a safe bet, as long as it's appropriate.
F. Such questions are likely to get the person talking more.
G. However, avoid some subjects that may cause arguments.
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7、As the wild shrinks, zoos are increasingly being looked to as modern-day arks (方舟): the last shelter against a rising tide of extinction. At the end of the 19th century the Cincinnati Zoo tried — unsuccessfully — to breed (培育) passenger pigeons, whose numbers were in sharp decline. And in the early 20th century, the Bronx Zoo started a program that helped save the wild bison.
But zoos have to support themselves, and the sorts of animals that draw crowds are not necessarily the sorts that most need help. This makes prioritization unavoidable.
"I think it's a bit of a cop-out to say the public wants to see x, y, or z," says Onnie Byers, chair of the Conservation Breeding Specialist Group. "This allows institutions to avoid making hard choices. Plenty of species need exactly the expertise that zoos can provide. I would love to see a trend toward zoos' phasing out species that don't need that care and using the space for species that do."
Under tight budgets, conservation programs tend to be led by large big-city zoos. But littler zoos are increasingly joining in. The Miller Park Zoo, one of the smallest zoos in the country, is hoping to figure out how to breed an endangered subspecies of squirrel which doesn't require much space.
Sadly, for every success story like the wild bison, there are dozens of other species hanging on the edge of extinction. The po‘ouli went extinct a year or two after the San Diego Zoo made a last-ditch (最后) effort to save it. When the final bird died, his body was immediately sent to a special room in the zoo. Along with thousands of other identical-looking containers, the tubes of po‘ouli cells represent what might be described as a beyond-the-last ditch conservation effort: the Frozen Zoo.
For now, at least, all but one of the species in deep freeze still have flesh-and-blood members. But it seems safe to predict that in the coming years, more and more will go the way of the po‘ouli. After they die, they will, in a manner of speaking, live on — one last hope, suspended in a frozen cloud.
(1)、What does the underlined word "cop-out" in paragraph 3 probably mean?A、A brave choice. B、A necessary step. C、A legal obligation. D、A convenient excuse.(2)、Which case is presented as a conservation success?A、The wild bison at the Bronx Zoo. B、The po‘ouli at the San Diego Zoo. C、The passenger pigeon at the Cincinnati Zoo. D、The subspecies of squirrel at the Miller Park Zoo.(3)、What do we know about the Frozen Zoo?A、It is a nonprofit for animal rights. B、It is a facility to store animal cells. C、It is a shelter for cold-climate animals. D、It is a program to breed endangered animals.(4)、What is the text mainly about?A、Zoos' choices on what to save. B、Zoos' role in animal conservation. C、The history of zoos' conservation work. D、The reasons why animals end up in zoos. -
8、While you do the dishes or drive to work, your mind is likely not on the task at hand; perhaps you're composing a grocery list or daydreaming about retiring in Italy. But research published in the Journal of Neuroscience suggests you might be taking in more than you think.
In the study, participants practiced a simple task in which they pressed keyboard buttons corresponding to the direction of arrows that lit up on a screen. But there were patterns hidden within the task that the participants were unaware of — and they learned these patterns without consciously noticing them. The researchers found that when participants reported letting their minds wander, they adapted to the task's hidden patterns significantly faster.
"This is an exciting and important piece of work, especially because the authors opted for a nondemanding task to check how mind wandering would affect performance and learning," says Athena Demertzi from the University of Liège in Belgium. Previous related research focused more on long and demanding tasks, she says — on which zoning out is typically shown to have a negative effect.
But the results are not clear-cut, says Jonathan Smallwood, a psychology researcher at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. "I don't think that this means the mind-wandering episodes themselves cause implicit (隐性) learning to occur, " he says. "Rather, both emerge at the same time when people go into a particular state." Neither Smallwood nor Demertzi was involved in the new study.
Using EEG (脑电图) recordings, the team found that during the test periods, participants' brains produced more of the slow waves that are dominant during sleep. "Perhaps mind wandering is like a form of light sleep that provides some of that state's learning benefits," says Péter Simor, lead author of the recent study.
To better understand whether mind wandering might compensate (弥补) for lost sleep, Simor and his colleagues next plan to study sleep loss.
(1)、How does the author introduce the topic?A、By setting relatable scenes. B、By defining a new concept. C、By presenting a research timeline. D、By providing historical background.(2)、According to Athen a Demertzi, what may happen if a task becomes more demanding?A、Mind wandering may increase. B、Zoning out may hurt performance. C、Hidden patterns may be easier to detect. D、Participants may adapt to the task faster.(3)、What is Péter Simor doing with his remark in paragraph 5?A、Taking back an earlier claim. B、Ruling out Smallwood's view. C、Presenting conclusive evidence. D、Offering a possible interpretation.(4)、What is the best title for the text?A、Why Our Minds Wander B、How to Stop Mind Wandering C、The Power of a Wandering Mind D、The Dangers of Mind Wandering -
9、假定你是李华,你的英国网友Tom新学期想报名参加摄影社团,但是父母坚持让他报名参加汉语学习社团,他为此感到很苦恼。请你给他写一封回信,内容包括:
1.表示理解并给予安慰;
2.提出建议并说明理由。
注意:
1.词数100左右;2.可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
Dear Tom,
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Yours,
Li Hua
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10、The 2026 FIFA World Cup is (计划) to take place in 16 cities of three countries. (根据汉语提示单词拼写)
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11、At the party, the guests talked excitedly, (交换) gifts with each other. (根据汉语提示单词拼写)
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12、Although she was (害怕的), she answered in a calm voice. (根据汉语提示单词拼写)
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13、Losing two important players was a big (挑战), but Lang Ping didn't lose heart. (根据汉语提示单词拼写)
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14、No matter what the season is,it's(极其) important to wear sunglasses.
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15、The teacher made it clear that our (学分) would be hard-earned. (根据汉语提示单词拼写)
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16、Her (决心) to achieve her goal helped her overcome all the difficulties during the project. (根据汉语提示单词拼写)
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17、We attended a dinner party (主办) by the president of the company. (根据汉语提示单词拼写)
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18、It is wise to make a list of your (优势) and weaknesses before you make this decision. (根据汉语提示单词拼写)
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19、Not only teenagers but also adults are (入迷的) to cellphone games.(根据汉语提示单词拼写)
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20、阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。
The story of football began long before it became a global sensation. It has found its way to the most remote corners of the globe, (become) one of the hottest topics of the day. About 2,500 years ago in China there was a similar game called "Cuju", was the origin of football as a sport, according to the International Football Association,
The word cu means to kick, while ju refers to an ancient type of leather ball (fill) with feathers or grain chaff (谷壳).
The ancient Chinese historical text Zhan Guo Ce (Strategies of the Warring States) recorded it as one of various (form) of entertainment among the public. During the Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220), cuju was (common) played by soldiers for military training purposes. Cuju reached its peak during the Song Dynasty (960-1279) due to social and economic development, extending (it) popularity to every class in society.
However, Cuju began (decline) during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), and the 2,000-year-old sport eventually disappeared.
Fortunately, Linzi district (临淄区) (develop) the ancient game at the campuses of each primary and middle school so far. Cuju moves have been adapted into dances and morning exercises.
"Cuju, the ancient Chinese game, has gone beyond sports. It has become good platform to enhance exchanges and mutual learning among different civilizations," said Yu Jian, an inheritor (继承人) of cuju equipment manufacturing (制造) Linzi district of Zibo city.