A house there is. One enters it blindtom, yet comes out seeing.What is it?

& Unit5知识点 & “Dear Miss Li,I’d lik...”习题详情
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Dear Miss Li,I’d like to thank you for sending money to “Animal Helpers”, an organization &&&&&to help disabled people. As you know, you have helped make&&&&possible for me to have “Lucky”, who &&&&My life with pleasure. Let me tell you my story.Being blind,deaf,unable to walk or use your hands easily is something &&&&&most people can’t imagine. But there are many people who face these chanenges, and I am one of them. Because I can’t use my arms or legs&&&&,normal things like answering the phone,opening and shutting doors or carrying things have always been difficult for me. Then one day last year, a friend of &&&&&said that she would like to help me out. She said she would talk to “Animal Helpers” to see if it would be possible for me &&&&&a specially trained dog. She also thought a dog might&&&&&&&&I told her that I love animals and that I’d love to have a dog.After six months of training with a dog at “Animal Helpers”, I was able to &&&&&him home. My dog’s name is “Lucky”-a good name for him because I feel very lucky to have him. You see, I’m only able to have a “dog-helper”&&&&&&&&your kind donation!&&&&&&&&does Lucky help me, you might ask? Well, he &&&&&to understand different instructions. For example, I say,”Lucky! Fetch my book,”and he does it at once. He is very clver and understands many English words, &&&&some difficult ones like “downstairs”.Lucky is an amazing dog.I’ll send you a photo of &&&&if you like, and I could show you how& he helps me too one day.And so I thank you again for&&&&“Animal Helpers”.【小题1】A.set upB.to set upC.sets up D.setting up【小题2】A.thatB.thisC.itD.one【小题3】A.has filledB.fillsC.fillingD.has changed【小题4】A.whoB.whatC.whomD.that【小题5】A.goodB.wellC.niceD.wonderful【小题6】A.meB.mineC.myD.myself【小题7】A.to getB.getsC.gettingD.get【小题8】A.help me outB.let me downC.cheer me onD.cheer me up【小题9】A.bringB.takeC.fectchD.carry【小题10】A.thanks forB.becauseC.instead ofD.because of【小题11】A.Which B.HowC.WhatD.What for【小题12】A.is trainingB.has trainedC.has been trainedD.is trained【小题13】A.evenB.stillC.yetD.ever【小题14】A.himselfB.heC.hisD.him【小题15】A.supportingB.havingC.changingD.givingA&
本题难度:一般
题型:解答题&|&来源:2014-湖北省黄冈市红安县典明中学中考模拟考试英语试卷
分析与解答
习题“Dear Miss Li,I’d like to thank you for sending money to “Animal Helpers”, an organization ____to help dis...”的分析与解答如下所示:
短文大意:本文是写给李小姐的一份感谢信。感谢她捐钱给“动物助手”,使得作者拥有“幸运”成为可能。【小题1】考查非谓语动词及语境理解。句意:为帮助残疾人设立的一个组织。set up设立,建立。所填动词短语在句中作定语,因此选A,过去分词短语作后置定语。【小题2】考查代词及语境理解。句意:如你所知,你已帮助我拥有“幸运”成为可能。That那;this 这; it它;one一。Make it possible for sb to do sth是一种固定结构,表示“使得某人有可能做某事”。在这个句型中,it仅是一个形式上的宾语,真正的宾语是to do sth。所以选C。【小题3】考查动词及语境理解。句意:它让我的生活充满快乐。 Fill充满,常与介词with搭配使用。Change改变,常与介词into搭配使用。结合语境可知该选A。【小题4】考查关系代词及语境理解。句意:失明、聋哑、不能自如地行走或使用你的手是大多数人无法想象的事。Who谁;what什么;whom 谁;that那。先行词something是一个复合不定代词,所以该用关系代词that,因此选D。【小题5】考查副词及语境理解。句意:因为我不能自如地使用我的胳膊或腿。Good好的;well好;nice&&&&&&&好的; wonderful非常好。所填词在句中修饰动词,该用副词,所以选B。【小题6】考查代词及语境理解。句意:去年的一天,我的一个朋友说,她想帮助我。Me我;mine 我的;my我的;myself我自己。A friend of mine =" one" of my friends我的一个朋友。根据句意可知该选B。【小题7】考查非谓语动词及语境理解。句意:她说她要跟“动物帮手”联系,看看能否给我找一只受过专门训练的狗。Get得到,获得。It is + 形容词 + for sb to do sth是一个固定句型。所以选A。【小题8】考查动词短语及语境理解。句意:她还认为狗可能会让我高兴起来。help &out&是一个动词答语,表示在某人繁忙或遇到困难时“给与帮助”。Let down放下;cheer on向……欢呼,为……鼓劲加油;cheer up使变得更高兴,振奋起来。结合语境可知该选D。【小题9】考查动词及语境理解。句意:我能够带他回家。Bring带来,拿来;take 带走,拿走;fetch取;carry搬动,扛,挑。结合语境可知该选A 。 【小题10】考查连接词及语境理解。句意:你的捐赠才使我能够拥有一位狗助手。thanks for因……而感谢;because因为,后跟句子; instead of代替,反而;because of由于,后跟名词代词。所以选D。【小题11】考查疑问词及语境理解。句意:“幸运”怎样帮助我,你可能会问?Which哪一个;How 怎么;What什么What for为何。所以选B。【小题12】考查动词及语境理解。句意:他经过训练能理解不同的指令。Train训练,是一个及物动词。这里的he指代狗狗“幸运”,所以该用被动语态,因此选C。【小题13】考查副词及语境理解。句意:他非常聪明,懂得许多英语单词,甚至一些艰难的词如“楼下”。 even 甚至;still 仍然;yet 还;ever曾经。根据句意可知该选A。【小题14】考查代词及语境理解。句意:如果你喜欢的话,我给你寄一张他的照片。himself 他自己;he他;his他的;him他。根据句意并结合语境可知该选D。【小题15】考查动词及语境理解。句意:所以我再次感谢你支持“动物助手”。Supporting支持;having有;changing改变;giving给。根据句意并结合语境可知该选A。
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Dear Miss Li,I’d like to thank you for sending money to “Animal Helpers”, an organization ____to hel...
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三年的初中生活即将结束,静坐在考场中的你,一定会思绪万千。三年来,你在学习、生活等方面取得了优异的成绩,这些成绩的背后有老师的辛勤教诲、家长的次次鼓励,还有......现在想来他们让你感谢。请以“Thank you, my…”为题写一篇英语短文。要求如下:1. 短文内容应包括人物的外貌、性格、爱好和使你难忘之处等;短文中不得出现真实的校名和人名.&3.词数80左右。 Thank you, my&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
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欢迎来到乐乐题库,查看习题“Dear Miss Li,I’d like to thank you for sending money to “Animal Helpers”, an organization ____to help disabled people. As you know, you have helped make____possible for me to have “Lucky”, who ____My life with pleasure. Let me tell you my story.Being blind,deaf,unable to walk or use your hands easily is something ____most people can’t imagine. But there are many people who face these chanenges, and I am one of them. Because I can’t use my arms or legs____,normal things like answering the phone,opening and shutting doors or carrying things have always been difficult for me. Then one day last year, a friend of ____said that she would like to help me out. She said she would talk to “Animal Helpers” to see if it would be possible for me ____a specially trained dog. She also thought a dog might________I told her that I love animals and that I’d love to have a dog.After six months of training with a dog at “Animal Helpers”, I was able to ____him home. My dog’s name is “Lucky”-a good name for him because I feel very lucky to have him. You see, I’m only able to have a “dog-helper”________your kind donation!________does Lucky help me, you might ask? Well, he ____to understand different instructions. For example, I say,”Lucky! Fetch my book,”and he does it at once. He is very clver and understands many English words, ____some difficult ones like “downstairs”.Lucky is an amazing dog.I’ll send you a photo of ____if you like, and I could show you how he helps me too one day.And so I thank you again for____“Animal Helpers”.【小题1】A.set upB.to set upC.sets up D.setting up【小题2】A.thatB.thisC.itD.one【小题3】A.has filledB.fillsC.fillingD.has changed【小题4】A.whoB.whatC.whomD.that【小题5】A.goodB.wellC.niceD.wonderful【小题6】A.meB.mineC.myD.myself【小题7】A.to getB.getsC.gettingD.get【小题8】A.help me outB.let me downC.cheer me onD.cheer me up【小题9】A.bringB.takeC.fectchD.carry【小题10】A.thanks forB.becauseC.instead ofD.because of【小题11】A.Which B.HowC.WhatD.What for【小题12】A.is trainingB.has trainedC.has been trainedD.is trained【小题13】A.evenB.stillC.yetD.ever【小题14】A.himselfB.heC.hisD.him【小题15】A.supportingB.havingC.changingD.giving”的答案、考点梳理,并查找与习题“Dear Miss Li,I’d like to thank you for sending money to “Animal Helpers”, an organization ____to help disabled people. As you know, you have helped make____possible for me to have “Lucky”, who ____My life with pleasure. Let me tell you my story.Being blind,deaf,unable to walk or use your hands easily is something ____most people can’t imagine. But there are many people who face these chanenges, and I am one of them. Because I can’t use my arms or legs____,normal things like answering the phone,opening and shutting doors or carrying things have always been difficult for me. Then one day last year, a friend of ____said that she would like to help me out. She said she would talk to “Animal Helpers” to see if it would be possible for me ____a specially trained dog. She also thought a dog might________I told her that I love animals and that I’d love to have a dog.After six months of training with a dog at “Animal Helpers”, I was able to ____him home. My dog’s name is “Lucky”-a good name for him because I feel very lucky to have him. You see, I’m only able to have a “dog-helper”________your kind donation!________does Lucky help me, you might ask? Well, he ____to understand different instructions. For example, I say,”Lucky! Fetch my book,”and he does it at once. He is very clver and understands many English words, ____some difficult ones like “downstairs”.Lucky is an amazing dog.I’ll send you a photo of ____if you like, and I could show you how he helps me too one day.And so I thank you again for____“Animal Helpers”.【小题1】A.set upB.to set upC.sets up D.setting up【小题2】A.thatB.thisC.itD.one【小题3】A.has filledB.fillsC.fillingD.has changed【小题4】A.whoB.whatC.whomD.that【小题5】A.goodB.wellC.niceD.wonderful【小题6】A.meB.mineC.myD.myself【小题7】A.to getB.getsC.gettingD.get【小题8】A.help me outB.let me downC.cheer me onD.cheer me up【小题9】A.bringB.takeC.fectchD.carry【小题10】A.thanks forB.becauseC.instead ofD.because of【小题11】A.Which B.HowC.WhatD.What for【小题12】A.is trainingB.has trainedC.has been trainedD.is trained【小题13】A.evenB.stillC.yetD.ever【小题14】A.himselfB.heC.hisD.him【小题15】A.supportingB.havingC.changingD.giving”相似的习题。404 Not Found | DeviantArt(Also: , , , , , , )
Google Glass might change your life, but not in the way you think. There’s something else Google Glass makes possible that no one – no one – has talked about yet, and so today I’m writing this blog post to describe it.
To read the raving accounts of tech journalists who Google commissioned for demos, you’d think Glass was something between a jetpack and a magic wand: something so cool, so sleek, so irresistible that it must inevitably replace that fading, pitifully out-of-date device called the smartphone.
Sergey Brin himself said as much yesterday, observing that it is “emasculating” to use a smartphone, “rubbing this featureless piece of glass.” His solution to that piece of glass, of course, is called Glass. And his solution to that emasculation is – well, as VentureBeat , “Sergey Brin calls smartphones ’emasculating’ – but dorky Google Glass [is] A-OK.”
Like every other shiny innovation these days, Google Glass will live or die solely on the experience it creates for people. The immediate, most visible problem in the Glass experience is how dorky the user looks while wearing it. No one wants to be the only person in the bar dressed like a cyborg from a 1992 virtual-reality . It’s embarrassing. Early adopters will abandon Google Glass if they don’t sense the social approval they seek while wearing it.
Google seems to have calculated this already and recently
a partnership with Warby Parker, known for its designer glasses favored by the all-important younger demographic. (My own , posted the day before, jokingly suggested that Google look into monocles.)
Except for the awkward physical design, the experience of using Google Glass has won high praise from reviewers. Seeing your bitstreams floating in the air in front of you, it would seem, is an ecstatic experience. Weather! Directions! Social network requests! Email overload! All floating in front of you, never out of your sight! For people who delight in a deluge of digital distractions, this is much more exciting than a smartphone, which forces you back to the boring offline world, every so often, when you put the phone away. Glass promises never to do that. In fact, in a feat of considerable chutzpah, Google is attempting to pitch Glass as an antidote to distraction, since users don’t have to look down at a phone. Right, because now the distractions are all conveniently placed directly into your eyeball! (For a more accurate exploration of Glass-enabled distraction, see this darkly comic . Even edgier is
– warning, some spicy language.)
As if all that wasn’t enough, Google Glass comes with yet another, even more important feature: lifebits, the ability to record video of the people, places, and events around you, at all times. Veteran readers will remember that I predicted this six years ago in my book . From Chapter 13:
The life bitstream will raise new and important issues. Should it be socially acceptable, for example, to record a private conversation with a friend? How will anyone be sure they’re not being recorded, in public or private? … Corporations, police, even friends with ‘life recorders’ will capture the actions and utterances of everyone in sight, whether they like it or not.
Today, finally, that future has arrived: a major company offering the ability to record your life, store it, and share it – all with a simple voice command.
And this is where our story takes a turn, toward a ramification that dwarfs every other issue raised so far on Google Glass. Yes, the glasses look dorky – Google will fix that. And sure, Glass forces users to be permanently plugged-in to Google’s digital world – that’s hardly a concern for the company or, for that matter, most users out there. No. The real issue raised by Google Glass, which will either cause the project to fail or create certain outcomes you may not want (which I’ll describe), has to do with the lifebits. Once again, it’s an issue of experience.
The Google Glass feature that (almost) no one is talking about is the experience – not of the user, but of everyone other than the user. A
by David Yee introduces it well:
There is a kid wearing Google Glasses at this restaurant which, until just now, used to be my favorite spot.
The key experiential question of Google Glass isn’t what it’s like to wear them, it’s what it’s like to be around someone else who’s wearing them. I’ll give an easy example. Your one-on-one conversation with someone wearing Google Glass is likely to be annoying, because you’ll suspect that you don’t have their undivided attention. And you can’t comfortably ask them to take the glasses off (especially when, inevitably, the device is integrated into prescription lenses). Finally – here’s where the problems really start – you don’t know if they’re taking a video of you.
Now pretend you don’t know a single person who wears Google Glass… and take a walk outside. Anywhere you go in public – any store, any sidewalk, any bus or subway – you’re liable to be recorded: audio and video. Fifty people on the bus might be Glassless, but if a single person wearing Glass gets on, you – and all 49 other passengers – could be recorded. Not just for a temporary throwaway video buffer, like a security camera, but recorded, stored permanently, and shared to the world.
Now, I know the response: “I’m recorded by security cameras all day, it doesn’t bother me, what’s the difference?” Hear me out – I’m not done. What makes Glass so unique is that it’s a Google project. And Google has the capacity to combine Glass with other technologies it owns.
First, take the video feeds from every Google Glass headset, worn by users worldwide. Regardless of whether video is only recorded temporarily, as in the first version of Glass, or always-on, as is certainly possible in future versions, the video all streams into Google’s own cloud of servers. Now add in facial recognition and the identity database that Google is building within Google Plus (with an emphasis on people’s accurate, real-world names): Google’s servers can process video files, at their leisure, to attempt identification on every person appearing in every video. And if Google Plus doesn’t sound like much, note that Mark Zuckerberg has already
that Facebook will develop apps for Glass.
Finally, consider the speech-to-text software that Google already employs, both in its servers and on the Glass devices themselves. Any audio in a video could, technically speaking, be converted to text, tagged to the individual who spoke it, and made fully searchable within Google’s search index.
Now our stage is set: not for what will happen, necessarily, but what I just want to point out could technically happen, by combining tools already available within Google.
Let’s return to the bus ride. It’s not a stretch to imagine that you could immediately be identified by that Google Glass user who gets on the bus and turns the camera toward you. Anything you say within earshot could be recorded, associated with the text, and tagged to your online identity. And stored in Google’s search index. Permanently.
I’m still not done.
The really interesting aspect is that all of the indexing, tagging, and storage could happen without the Google Glass user even requesting it. Any video taken by any Google Glass, anywhere, is likely to be stored on Google servers, where any post-processing (facial recognition, speech-to-text, etc.) could happen at the later request of Google, or any other corporate or governmental body, at any point in the future.
Remember when people were kind of creeped out by that car Google drove around to take pictures of your house? Most people got over it, because they got a nice StreetView feature in Google Maps as a result.
Google Glass is like one camera car for each of the thousands, possibly millions, of people who will wear the device – every single day, everywhere they go – on sidewalks, into restaurants, up elevators, around your office, into your home. From now on, starting today, anywhere you go within range of a Google Glass device, everything you do could be recorded and uploaded to Google’s cloud, and stored there for the rest of your life. You won’t know if you’re b and even if you do, you’ll have no way to stop it.
And that, my friends, is the experience that Google Glass creates. That is the experience we should be thinking about. The most important Google Glass experience is not the user experience – it’s the experience of everyone else. The experience of being a citizen, in public, is about to change.
Just think: if a million Google Glasses go out into the world and start storing audio and video of the world around them, the scope of Google search suddenly gets much, much bigger, and that search index will include you. Let me paint a picture. Ten years from now, someone, some company, or some organization, takes an interest in you, wants to know if you’ve ever said anything they consider offensive, or threatening, or just includes a mention of a certain word or phrase they find interesting. A single search query within Google’s cloud – whether initiated by a publicly available search, or a federal subpoena, or anything in between – will instantly bring up documentation of every word you’ve ever spoken within earshot of a Google Glass device.
This is the discussion we should have about Google Glass. The tech community, by all rights, should be leading this discussion. Yet most techies today are still chattering about whether they’ll look cool wearing the device.
Oh, and as for that physical design problem. If Google Glass does well enough in its initial launch to survive to subsequent versions, forget Warby Parker. The next company Google will call is Bausch & Lomb. Why wear bulky glasses when the entire device fits into a contact lens? And that, of course, would be the ultimate expression of the Google Glass idea: a digital world that is even more difficult to turn off, once it’s implanted directly into the user’s body. At that point you’ll not even know who might be recording you. There will be no opting out.
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