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题型:选词填空(语篇) 题类:真题 难易度:普通

2016年贵州省黔南州中考英语真题试卷

根据短文内容,用方框中所给词的适当形式填空,完成短文。(注意:每个词语限用一次)

many,    about,    they,   watch,   give,   friend,   however,   large,   millions of,   be

    On Chinese New Year's Eve, almost Chinese people are used to watching the CCTV Spring Festival Gala(春晚). , another thing is also becoming popular this year.

     red envelopes(红包)to children is one of the traditions of the Chinese New Year. And now, the Internet companies, Tencent(腾讯)and Alibaba(阿里巴巴), also join in the traditional activity. So people can use

     smart mobile phones through WeChat or QQ to send and grab red envelopes.

   On the Chinese New Year's Eve of 2016,  people were busy with shaking their smart mobile phones, trying to grab WeChat or QQ red envelopes as  as they could. There  about 420 million people grabbing and sending red envelopes online. While people  TV, they took an active part in the activity, hoping to bring good luck for their relatives, and themselves. During the five-hour show, WeChat and QQ users shook their smart mobile phones up to about 10.1 billion times.

   Alipay(支付宝)information showed that there were  100 million yuan each round to be traded on that day. It has been  record so far. And now more and more people like grabbing red envelopes online.

举一反三
用所给单词的适当形式填空

The fear of the novel coronavirus(新冠病毒) has turned into discrimination (歧视) against certain groups of people, {#blank#}1{#/blank#}(include) people from Wuhan, Chinese people or Asians in general. However, the outbreak of the disease can't be an excuse to isolate these groups. What we should do is {#blank#}2{#/blank#}(get) rid of (消除) discrimination and show sympathy (同情) instead.

Since the outbreak of novel coronavirus pneumonia (NCP), many people {#blank#}3{#/blank#}(live) in fear. This is normal, as the disease is infectious (传染性的) and dangerous. However, some people turn pale at the mention of "people from Wuhan or Hubei province", the center of the outbreak.

    Ding Baixing, a doctor at Huashan Hospital in Shanghai, has seen this himself. He treated a suspected (疑似的) patient {#blank#}4{#/blank#}(name)Chen Hui who traveled from Wuhan to Shanghai. Chen appeared desperate (绝望的) and avoided {#blank#}5{#/blank#}(keep)in touch with other patients, as he worried that they would be afraid of him.

    Chen is not alone. Chen Xue, an editor {#blank#}6{#/blank#}(work) in Beijing, went to Chongli in Hebei for a ski trip on Jan 23. Though her temperature was fine and she hasn't been to her hometown – Hubei province – since October last year, the hotel she was in told her that it {#blank#}7{#/blank#}(will not) receive Hubei guests from the next day.

    However, the real enemy is the virus – not the patients or people from Wuhan or Hubei province. Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong echoed this idea in a speech at the Chinese New Year dinner. "Even though the virus started in Wuhan, it doesn't respect nationality or race (种族). It does not check your passport (护照) before it goes into your body. Anybody can be infected," he said.

    It is not the {#blank#}8{#/blank#}(patient) fault that they have been infected. There is no reason to blame them. If patients didn't go to the hospital for fear of discrimination, the virus {#blank#}9{#/blank#}(spread) to more people. "Protecting them is just as important as protecting ourselves," Ding said. 

Poem that inspires

At the CCTV Spring Festival Gala (春节联欢晚会), six hosts read a poem to inspire people across the country. It called for greater respect for medical workers, as well as called on everyone to work together to fight the virus. One of the lines – "we isolate (隔离) the virus, but we don't isolate love" – has been {#blank#}10{#/blank#}(wide) posted online.

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