she are 星途wegonging辅助 to eats an apple(改错)

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Teacher Talk in High School English Class
英语专业毕业论文
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Teacher Talk in High School English Class
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Alice ate an apple. She did not eat an orange.保持句意不变Alice
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Alice ate an apple __instead____ of _eating___ an orange
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instead , eating*****************************************************************************祝天天开心,学习进步!本题不明白,请再问;如果对你有所帮助,请点击本页面中的“选为满意回答”按钮,谢谢!***********************************...
__instead____ of
__eating__
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1.同义句转换1.There are no calories in water.There()() caloties in water.2.选词填空2.词组:help sb.start the daykeep fit favourite fooddrink(咖啡)with sugar(翻译一下咖啡without getting fatwatch TV fot two hoursbe good for...exercise more填空短文我有一个空没写出来看看和我写的是不是一样()is so important these days.Millie also wants to change her unhealthy diet and lifestyle.Before,she enjoyed()and ()every evening.Hamburger were().Now Millie knows it's not right.She plans ()every day.For example,she runs for half an hour every afternoon and swims twice a week.She stops drinking juice.She drinks lots of water because it()her.She can drink much().She also eats an apple or a banana after each breakfast.She thinks this ().Good luck!Millie!补充填空短文是要用上面给的词组来填写的
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1.aren't any2.咖啡 coffee3.Keeping fit
drinking coffee with sugar
watching TV for two hours
favourite food
to exercise more
is good for
without getting fat
helps her start the day 应该错不了 照抄的人没文化. 上面那个匿名的人也太不要脸了.
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Alice is my good friend. She is twenty-two years old. Now she lives in Beijing, China. She teaches English in a junior high school. She loves making friends with the students and they like her very much. Every morning she gets up very early. At about 7:00, she usually has a glass of milk and some bread for breakfast at home. Then she walks to work and gets to school at about a quarter to eight. At 12:00 she eats a hamburger and an apple for lunch. Her favorite drink is Coke. She goes home at 5 o’clock in the afternoon. She likes to have noodles(面条)and chicken for dinner. On Sunday, she often comes to see me. Sometimes we go to a Chinese restaurant to have lunch.&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&根据短文内容,选择正确答案。【小题1】Alice is &&&&.A.a doctorB.a nurse C.a driver D.a teacher【小题2】—What does Alice usually have for breakfast at home?—&&&&A.A glass of milk and some bread.B.An egg and some bread.C.A cup of coffee and some bread. D.A glass of milk and a hamburger.【小题3】Alice gets to school &&&& a. m.A.at 8:15B.at 7:45C.at 7:40D.at 8:00【小题4】—What does Alice often do on Sunday?—She often &&&&.A.has dinner with meB.goes to the restaurantC.comes to see meD.eats noodles【小题5】Which of the following is NOT true?A.Alice lives in China now.B.Alice likes Coke best.C.Alice gets home at 5:00 in the afternoon.D.On weekdays she has a hamburger and an apple for lunch.D&
本题难度:较难
题型:解答题&|&来源:2014-河南平顶山华英学校初一下学期第一次月考英语试卷
分析与解答
习题“Alice is my good friend. She is twenty-two years old. Now she lives in Beijing, China. She teaches Englis...”的分析与解答如下所示:
本文叙述了Alice是作者的好朋友,她是一所中学的老师,她现在住在北京,短文叙述她一天的生活情况。【小题1】细节理解题。根据She teaches English in a junior high school.在一所初级中学教英语。”可知她是一位教师。故选D。【小题2】细节理解题。根据She usually has a glass of milk and some bread for breakfast at home.可知她早餐吃面包喝牛奶,故选A。【小题3】细节理解题。根据Then she walks to work and gets to school at about a quarter to eight.可知她八点差一刻到达学校,故选B。【小题4】细节理解题。根据倒数第一行第一句On Sunday, she often comes to see me.可知星期天她常常来看我。故选C。【小题5】细节理解题。根据倒数第二行第一句She goes home at 5 o’clock in the afternoon.可知她下午5点回家,不是到家。故选C。
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经过分析,习题“Alice is my good friend. She is twenty-two years old. Now she lives in Beijing, China. She teaches Englis...”主要考察你对“Unit”“Topic”
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与“Alice is my good friend. She is twenty-two years old. Now she lives in Beijing, China. She teaches Englis...”相似的题目:
Jimmy is &&&& late for his grandma’s birthday, is he?neveroftensometimesalways
–You are very &&&&,aren’t you? --Yes , Our team has won the match..A. happy&&&&& B. sad&&&&&&& C. worried&&&&&&
— &&&& are you going to Guangzhou?— I’m taking the plane.&What WhyWhen How
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欢迎来到乐乐题库,查看习题“Alice is my good friend. She is twenty-two years old. Now she lives in Beijing, China. She teaches English in a junior high school. She loves making friends with the students and they like her very much. Every morning she gets up very early. At about 7:00, she usually has a glass of milk and some bread for breakfast at home. Then she walks to work and gets to school at about a quarter to eight. At 12:00 she eats a hamburger and an apple for lunch. Her favorite drink is Coke. She goes home at 5 o’clock in the afternoon. She likes to have noodles(面条)and chicken for dinner. On Sunday, she often comes to see me. Sometimes we go to a Chinese restaurant to have lunch.根据短文内容,选择正确答案。【小题1】Alice is ____.A.a doctorB.a nurse C.a driver D.a teacher【小题2】—What does Alice usually have for breakfast at home?—____A.A glass of milk and some bread.B.An egg and some bread.C.A cup of coffee and some bread. D.A glass of milk and a hamburger.【小题3】Alice gets to school ____ a. m.A.at 8:15B.at 7:45C.at 7:40D.at 8:00【小题4】—What does Alice often do on Sunday?—She often ____.A.has dinner with meB.goes to the restaurantC.comes to see meD.eats noodles【小题5】Which of the following is NOT true?A.Alice lives in China now.B.Alice likes Coke best.C.Alice gets home at 5:00 in the afternoon.D.On weekdays she has a hamburger and an apple for lunch.”的答案、考点梳理,并查找与习题“Alice is my good friend. She is twenty-two years old. Now she lives in Beijing, China. She teaches English in a junior high school. She loves making friends with the students and they like her very much. Every morning she gets up very early. At about 7:00, she usually has a glass of milk and some bread for breakfast at home. Then she walks to work and gets to school at about a quarter to eight. At 12:00 she eats a hamburger and an apple for lunch. Her favorite drink is Coke. She goes home at 5 o’clock in the afternoon. She likes to have noodles(面条)and chicken for dinner. On Sunday, she often comes to see me. Sometimes we go to a Chinese restaurant to have lunch.根据短文内容,选择正确答案。【小题1】Alice is ____.A.a doctorB.a nurse C.a driver D.a teacher【小题2】—What does Alice usually have for breakfast at home?—____A.A glass of milk and some bread.B.An egg and some bread.C.A cup of coffee and some bread. D.A glass of milk and a hamburger.【小题3】Alice gets to school ____ a. m.A.at 8:15B.at 7:45C.at 7:40D.at 8:00【小题4】—What does Alice often do on Sunday?—She often ____.A.has dinner with meB.goes to the restaurantC.comes to see meD.eats noodles【小题5】Which of the following is NOT true?A.Alice lives in China now.B.Alice likes Coke best.C.Alice gets home at 5:00 in the afternoon.D.On weekdays she has a hamburger and an apple for lunch.”相似的习题。Mr. Electricity is your guide to saving energy in your home.
&Saving Electricity 101:
&Saving Electricity 102:
Main Topics
Environment
Special Topics
for U.S. consumers
Incentives for installing insulation and for buying energy-efficient appliances like refrigerators, washing machines, and air conditioners are often available from local and state governments and utilities.
You can see what's available at , , and .
Welcome students from:
(Berne, IN)
Related sites:
. All about renewable energy for the home.
. Blog about a family striving to have no net impact. (i.e., What little they use, they offset.) Inspirational.
. News and resources about living without being connected to a utility company.
Mr. Electricity in the news:
"Michael Bluejay runs the outstanding Saving Electricity site that I've mentioned many times before." --J.D. Roth,
(book), Lucinda F. Brown, 2016
, Lifehacker, Sep. 28, 2015
, Newstalk 1010 (Toronto), April 21, 2015
, PC Mech,
Nov 21, 2013
, Forbes, Sep. 7, 2013
June 10, 2013
, Main St,
June 5, 2013
, Marketplace Radio (NPR),
July 20, 2012
, Living Green Magazine,
June 29, 2012
, New York Daily News,
Mar. 27, 2012
, CTV (Canada's largest private broadcaster),
Mar. 23, 2012
, Business Insider,
Mar. 20, 2012
, WPLG Channel 10 (Miami, FL),
Feb. 23, 2012
, Christian Science Monitor,
Oct. 29, 2011
August 23, 2011
July 9, 2011
, TIME magazine, June 28, 2011
, Chicago Tribune,
June 24, 2011
, Kim Komando (syndicated radio host), May 29, 2011
, Lifehacker,
May 6, 2011
, WCPO Channel 9 (Cincinatti),
May 5, 2011
, Chicago Tribune (CA),
Apr. 7, 2011
, Contra Costa Times (CA),
Jan. 24, 2011
, Mother Jones, Jan. 10, 2011
, Reuters, Nov. 10, 2010
, Mother Jones, Nov. 1, 2010
, Chicago Tribune &
Nov. 7, 2010
, Yahoo! Finance,
Oct. 2, 2010
, Green Building Elements, Sep. 8, 2010
, Slate, Sep. 3, 2010
, Times Daily (Florence, AL), July 27, 2010
, Kansas City Star, June 22, 10
Stretch your dollar, not your budget, Globe
and Mail, May 18, 2010
Auto abstinence, onearth magazine, Winter 2010
2010 Frugal Living Guide, Bankrate.com
Energy-saving schemes yield &5.8m in savings, Times
of Malta, Dec. 20, 09
Four ways to reduce your PC's carbon footprint, CNET,
The day I hit the brakes, onearth magazine, Fall 2009
, The Simple Dollar, 2010
Enjoy the mild weather, low electricity bills, Detroit
Free Press, Jul 18, 09
The most energy-efficient way to heat a cup of water,
Christian Science Monitor, Jun 16, 09
Ten ways to save energy, Times of Malta,
Measuring your green IT baseline, InfoWorld,
, PC Magazine, Sep 4, 07
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Going Green, Monsters and Critics, Jan 6,
A hunt for energy hogs, Wall Street Journal
Online, Dec 18, 06
If you like this site, you might also like some of my
other sites:
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Step-by-step guide for first-time homebuyers.
How to save money on heating
There are six main strategies for saving
money on heat:
Heat only the parts of your home
that you're using.& Heating your whole
house is more expensive than heating just part of it.& If
you're not using your whole house, don't pay to heat the whole
thing!& Instead, use space heaters or heating panels in
the rooms that you actually use.& This works only if
you're not us if you are using
your whole house, then heating it with space heaters will cost
more than central air.& Note: Don't close registers in
unused rooms, because you can damage you ducts or even the
furnace itself.
Adjust your living environment so
that you're comfortable at lower temperatures.
This includes using ceiling fans (yes, fans,
I'll explain below), putting rugs on bare floors, and keeping
yourself warm with things like heating pads and warming
blocks.& Warming yourself is a lot cheaper than
trying to warm your whole house.& Warm yourself, and then
turn your thermostat down to 67°F or lower.
Insulate your home well to keep
heat from escaping out of the house.& You
want to pay to heat only your home, not Wisconsin. This
includes things like weather stripping doors and windows and
putting plastic sheets over windows.
Turn it off when you don't need it.&
Turn your heat off (or way down) at night, and when
you're away from home.& Contrary to popular myth, it does
not cost more to re-heat the home than it does to
constantly heat it.
If using Central Heat (aka Forced
Air), then choose one that's cheap to operate.&
This is a big topic so we'll cover in detail below, but here's
a summary:
Remember that heating your whole house with Central Heat
is usually more expensive than using space heaters
or radiant heaters to heat only specific rooms or
areas.& I use one electric space heater in whatever
room I'm in, rather than trying to heat my whole house.
Geothermal systems are the cheapest central
systems to operate, but they're the most expensive to
install. They're also safer and healthier than oil/gas
systems, which are more likely to burn your house down and
which can poison you with the byproducts of combustion. (EPA)&
We'll cover air- & ground-based heat pumps in more
detail below.
Gas or oil-based central systems are the
cheapest to install, and are also the most common type,
but they're more dangerous and potentially unhealthy.
Electric-based central systems are cheap to
install but crazy expensive to operate.& If you
really like electric, use radiant electric panels or space
heaters rather than trying to run a forced-air furnace
with electricity.
When installing a new heating
system, don't oversize it.& Most HVAC
installers install a bigger system than you need.& This
doesn't warm your home any better, and you just wind up
spending a lot more for the installation.& Get a heating
system no larger than what your house requires.
Let's look at each of these individually.
(1) Heat only the parts of your home that
you're using
aka, Room-by-Room
Heating (Radiant Heat) instead of Whole-House
Heating (Forced-Air)
your site, I have cut my oil bill in half by using space
heaters which has really saved me money as a direct result of
your advice." - -Andrew G.
Heating the whole house is more expensive than heating just
the room(s) you're using.& If you can heat just the
areas you're using, you should, because you'll save energy and
money.& This is what I use in my own home.& If you
already have a whole-house system (forced-air), this means
pretending you don't have such a system and not using it at
all.& You can't just use the central heat and close the
registers in unused rooms because that can damage your ducts and
your furnace. ()
Heating individual areas means using a form of Radiant
Heat, such as space heaters, radiators, or
electric heating panels.& Space heaters can be gas or
electricity.& Electricity is more expensive, but safer and
healthier.& (You're less likely to accidentally burn your
house down, and you'll never be breathing the toxic byproducts
of combustion.)
An advantage of radiant heat over forced air is that the
temperature is more uniform throughout the living area.&
With forced air systems the ceiling winds up retaining most of
the warmth and the floors are pretty cold.& More
information about the benefits of radiant heat is available at WarmZone
and , although it's a little biased since it's
published by companies who install radiant heating systems.
There are many kinds of room-only radiant heat:
A electric-element space
heater you plug into the wall.& These
usually have a round face and oscillate (move from side to side
like a fan).& Most electric space heaters are around 1500
watts on the highest setting, such as , which I own myself.& (All electric
space heaters are equally efficient, by the way, so don't obsess
too much about which one to get.& Just make sure you get
one rated as 1500 watts, so you can heat your room quickly.)
An oil-filled space heater you
plug into the wall. These use
electricity to heat the oil inside, so there's no actual
combustion. They use about the same amount of electricity as
electric-element units.
&Space heater safety
Electric heaters are safer than gas heaters.
They're more expensive to run, but they're
safer.& You're less likely to accidentally blow
up your house, and you also won't have to breathe
the byproducts of combustion with electric heat.
Oil-filled radiators are safer than the red,
glowing heaters with a fan inside. That's
because the oil-filled heaters distribute their heat
throughout the whole unit, and not any one part gets
hot enough to start a fire easily.& The
downside of the radiators is that they take a while
to put out any amount of heat that you can
feel.& If you're cold right now you'll prefer
the fan-blow heaters, even though they're not quite
Electric heaters are safer than they used to
be.& Almost all of them now will
automatically shut off if they get tipped
over.& Check the specs on the model you're
looking at.
Make sure your
circuit has enough capacity.& A
1500-watt heater alone will eat up 12.5 of a 15-amp
circuit.& If you overload a circuit then the
household wiring can heat up in the walls and start
a fire.& If possible, put each heater on a
dedicated circuit.
super-thick extension cords for heaters.&
If you're putting a space heater on an extension
cord, make sure the cord is 12-gauge.& (The
smaller the number, the thicker the cable, so 14 is
worse than 12, not better.)
Gas space heater. These
more powerful than their electric counterparts, and often
cheaper to operate, but they're usually more dangerous (more
likely to accidentally burn your house down), and you'll
have to breathe the byproducts of combustion, which isn't
Radiant Heat Panel. The
panel secures to a ceiling or wall and plugs into an
electrical outlet (or it can be hard-wired in to the house's
electrical system). Electricity heats metal elements inside
the panel. The panels range in size from 1'x2' to 4'x8', and
energy consumption ranges from 100 watts to 3000 watts.
Manufacturers include
A related option is .
Hydronic Radiator. These
warm water, whose heat is then radiated into the room.
Hydronic Floor System.
Water is heated by gas, oil, or electricity, and
then circulated through plastic tubing which runs under the
floor or along the walls or ceiling. If on the walls or
ceiling, the tubing may be concealed by plastic or metal
panels. These are most efficient if they're in the floor,
because warmth rises, and because keeping your feet warm makes
you feel warmer overall. An electric-fueled system can easily
watts to heat a small efficiency apartment.
Electric Floor System.
Same as above, but the warmth comes from low-voltage
electrical wires, not piped water.
(2) Adjust your living environment so you feel
warmer at cooler temperatures
Tips to help you dial down the thermostat
All of the tips below are designed to make you
comfortable enough to lower our thermostat setting.&
Wearing heavy socks (for example) by itself doesn't save
any energy.& It's wearing the heavy socks and then
dialing down your thermostat that saves the energy.&
So don't forget the crucial step of actually changing your
thermostat setting.
How to change the ceiling fan direction
For 90% of fans, when you're
standing under the fan looking up, counter-clockwise blows
down and clockwise blows up.& To check your fan,
just stand under it with the fan at its highest setting.&
If you can feel the wind hitting you hard, then it's blowing
down.& To verify, stop the fan, change the direction, then
turn the fan on full-blast again and compare the difference.
Here's how you change the
direction: Most fans have an up/down or left/right
switch on the side of the fan (between the light and the fan
blades), and it's usually unlabeled. Make sure the fan is off
(not spinning) before you flip the switch or you can damage
the motor. (Once you've turned the fan off, it's fine to
physically stop the blades with your hand, just be gentle so
you don't bend the blades, otherwise the fan will wobble when
you turn it back on.) After turning the fan off, flip the
direction (summer/winter) switch, then turn the fan back on.
Use ceiling fans
Yes, ceiling fans can actually make you warmer.
Let's see why.
In the summer, when the fan is on a high speed, the fan blows
air past you, removing the hot air that surrounds your body,
making you feel cooler.& It's the wind-chill
effect.& In the winter, you simply put the fan on the
lowest speed.& That way the fan isn't fast enough for the
wind chill effect to kick in, but it's fast enough to push
down the warm air that collects near the ceiling. (Remember,
hot air rises.)& So the key is: fast speed for summer,
slow speed for winter.
If the fan gives you a wind-chill effect even on the slow
speed, then just change the direction of the fan by using the
switch on the side.& You'll have the fan blow UP in the
winter, which will push the warm air off the ceiling and
bounce it back towards the floor along the walls, without
rushing it past you to make you feel cooler.& (See the
sidebar for how to change the direction.)
If you don't have ceiling fans (and don't care to install
them), you have a couple of other options.& First, you
can just get a regular box fan, put it on the highest shelf
you have, and aim it at the ceiling at an angle.& Fans of
any type use very little electricity.& Or, you can turn
on the fan on your central heating system, without turning on
the heat.& (The fan-only in circulation mode typically
uses about 325-475 watts on PSC/AC models, and 25 watts for
variable-speed DC. (, plus my own measurement for the 475-watt
Using ceiling fans is one of the most important things you
can do. They use very little electricity and make a BIG
difference in your comfort level. All ceiling fans come with
instructions on installation, but if you're not comfortable
doing it yourself and you can't afford to hire someone, just
get a regular box fan, put it on the highest shelf you have,
and aim it at the ceiling.& Fans of any type use very
little electricity.
Keep your feet warm
If your feet are cold, your whole body will be
cold.& Keep your feet warm and you'll be more
comfortable at lower temperatures.& If you have bare
floors, put down some rugs.& Wear thick socks at a minimum,
and preferably good slippers.& You can even go with heated
slippers like those shown below.& My girlfriend swears by
Wear more clothes
This may be obvious, but we all know people who keep
their homes heated to the 70's and walk around with short-sleeve
shirts and no socks.& Dress warmly inside.
Personal Heaters!
Personal heaters are things like electric heating
pads and slippers.& Personal heaters are fantastic
because they use just a small amount of electricity but make you
feel much warmer, so you can dial your thermostat down and spend
less money heating your whole house.& Think about it:&
You're heating your whole home just to make you feel
warmer.& So cut out the middleman and heat yourself
Heating pads are popular in Japan, where energy is a lot more
expensive than it is here.& The Japanese don't stop with
just little pads, either.& They also sell "hot carpet"
which can cover up to an entire room.& My friend in Osaka
I'm staying with now has been using one for ten years.&
(Incidentally, last month the four of us here in the Osaka
apartment used only 220 kWh/mo., compared to the U.S. average of
920.& This was before winter, but we still expect to use
less than average in winter.)& At right is a collection of
heating pads from Amazon.
Amazon also has an interesting product, .& Below is a picture of one such
brand.& Now, you might not like the electric products
because they generate EMF fields which some sources say are bad
for your health.& If you use a cell phone then you probably
don't care about this, since cell phones generate huge EMF
fields.& But
if you'd rather not get EMF too close to you, you've got other
First up are , which are exactly what they sound like, and keep
your feet nice and toasty after being heated up.& One of my
other favorites is a .& I just pop it in the
toaster oven for a couple of minutes, and then put it on the
seat of my chair.& It's amazing.
Saving Electricity 101:
Mr. Electricity is your guideto saving energy in your home.
Specific Appliances
Environment
Special Topics
& Michael Bluejay, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized reprinting is prohibited.
All advice is given in good faith.
We're not responsible for any errors or omissions.
Elec if you're not competent to work on your electrical wiring then hire a professional to do it.
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