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2024年小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

2024年小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

2024年小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题1.The cat is _____.A.redB.greenC.blueD.yellow答案:A。

解析:选项 A 中“red”表示红色,“The cat is red.”猫是红色的,符合语法规则。

选项B“green”绿色,猫通常不是绿色的。

选项C“blue”蓝色,猫一般不是蓝色的。

选项D“yellow”黄色,在此语境下不合适。

一年级学生需要掌握基本的颜色单词和be 动词的搭配,“is”后面跟颜色单词表示某物是什么颜色。

2.The flower is _____.A.pinkB.blackC.whiteD.orange答案:C。

解析:选项A“pink”粉色,花有粉色的可能,但在这个题目中选项C“white”白色更常见。

选项B“black”黑色,花一般不是黑色的。

选项D“orange”橙色,花也有橙色的可能,但不如白色常见。

“is”后面跟颜色单词表示花的颜色。

3.The book is _____.A.brownB.purpleC.greyD.cyan答案:B。

解析:选项A“brown”棕色,书一般不是棕色的。

选项B“purple”紫色,书可能是紫色的封面。

选项C“grey”灰色,书较少是灰色的。

选项D“cyan”青色,书不太会是青色。

“is”和颜色单词搭配表示书的颜色。

4.The bird is _____.A.limeB.magentaC.silverD.blue答案:D。

解析:选项A“lime”石灰绿,鸟一般不是这个颜色。

选项B“magenta”品红色,鸟很少是这个颜色。

选项C“silver”银色,鸟通常不是银色的。

选项D“blue”蓝色,鸟可能是蓝色的。

“is”加颜色单词表示鸟的颜色。

5.The pencil is _____.A.blackB.yellowC.redD.pink答案:A。

解析:选项A“black”黑色,铅笔很多是黑色的。

选项B“yellow”黄色,铅笔较少是黄色的。

三年级英语颜色单选题30题

三年级英语颜色单选题30题
答案:red。句子意思是“苹果是红色的。苹果是什么颜色?”所以答案是red。
28.My pencil is yellow. What color is my pencil?
答案:yellow。句子意思是“我的铅笔是黄色的。我的铅笔是什么颜色?”答案是yellow。
29.The flower is pink. What color is the flower?
B.black and yellow
C.brown and white
D.red and white
答案:A。解析:熊猫是黑白相间的颜色,选项B通常是老虎的颜色,选项C不是常见动物的颜色组合,选项D也不符合任何常见动物的颜色。
7.What color is a zebra?
A.black and white
B.purple
C.grey
D.brown
答案:A。橙色是orange,向日葵通常是橙色的。紫色是purple,向日葵不是紫色。灰色是grey,向日葵不是灰色。棕色是brown,向日葵不是棕色。
4.What color is the grass?
A.red
B.pink
C.green
D.yellow
答案:C。绿色是green,草通常是绿色的。红色是red,草不是红色。粉色是pink,草不是粉色。黄色是yellow,草枯萎时可能是黄色,但通常情况下是绿色。
5.What color is the snow?
A.black
B.blue
C.white
D.purple
答案:C。白色是white,雪通常是白色的。黑色是black,雪不是黑色。蓝色是blue,雪不是蓝色。紫色是purple,雪不是紫色。

五年级英语颜色表达单选题50题

五年级英语颜色表达单选题50题

五年级英语颜色表达单选题50题1. The sky is _____.A. blueB. redC. greenD. yellow答案:A。

天空通常是蓝色的,选项B 红色、C 绿色、D 黄色不符合天空的常见颜色。

2. The grass is _____.A. whiteB. blackC. purpleD. green答案:D。

草通常是绿色的,选项A 白色、B 黑色、C 紫色不符合草的常见颜色。

3. Apples are often _____.A. orangeB. purpleC. pinkD. blue答案:A。

苹果通常是橙色的,选项B 紫色、C 粉色、D 蓝色不符合苹果的常见颜色。

4. Bananas are _____.A. redB. yellowC. blackD. white答案:B。

香蕉通常是黄色的,选项 A 红色、C 黑色、D 白色不符合香蕉的常见颜色。

5. The strawberry is _____.A. greenB. brownC. redD. grey答案:C。

草莓通常是红色的,选项 A 绿色、B 棕色、D 灰色不符合草莓的常见颜色。

6. The sky is _____.A. blueB. redC. greenD. black答案:A。

本题考查常见颜色词的实际运用。

天空通常是蓝色的,“blue”表示蓝色,符合常识。

“red”表示红色,天空不是红色。

“green”表示绿色,天空不是绿色。

“black”表示黑色,白天的天空不是黑色。

7. My dress is _____.A. whiteB. yellowC. orangeD. purple答案:A。

此题考查对颜色词的理解和在衣物描述中的运用。

白色的裙子较为常见,“white”有白色的意思。

“yellow”是黄色,一般裙子较少是纯黄色。

“orange”是橙色,橙色裙子相对较少。

“purple”是紫色,也不是裙子常见的颜色。

Starter Unit 3 What color is it?--七年级英语人教版(上册)培优讲义含答案

Starter Unit 3 What color is it?--七年级英语人教版(上册)培优讲义含答案

课标单词 1. color n. ________2. ________ adj. & n.红色(的)3. yellow adj. & n. ________4. ________ adj. & n.绿色(的)5. blue adj. & n. ________6. ________ adj. & n. 黑色(的)7. white adj. & n. ________8. ________ adj. & n.紫色(的)9. now adv. ________10. ________ v.理解;明白11. can modal v. ________12. ________ v.说;讲13. my pron. ________14. ________ adj. & n.棕色(的);褐色(的)15. the art. ________目标短语What ________... 什么颜色常考句型 1.—What color is ________? 它是什么颜色的?—It’s red. 它是红色的。

2. The ________ is yellow. 这把钥匙是黄色的。

3. I ________ say my ABCs. 我会唱英文字母歌。

重点语法定冠词the的用法【答案】课标单词1. 颜色 2. red 3黄色(的)4. green5.蓝色(的)6. black7. 白色(的)8.purple 9. 现在,目前10.see 11.能;会12.say13.我的14.brown 15.指已提到或易领会到的人或事物目标短语colour常考句型1. it 2. key 3. can1. What color is it? 它是什么颜色的?(Page S9 1a)(1)这是一个来询问颜色的特殊疑问句。

其基本句型结构为"What color + be + 主语(被询问的物品)?"。

四年级英语颜色搭配单选题20题

四年级英语颜色搭配单选题20题

四年级英语颜色搭配单选题20题1. The sky is _____.A.blueB.redC.yellowD.green答案:A。

天空是蓝色的,blue 表示蓝色,符合常识。

red 是红色,天空通常不是红色;yellow 是黄色,天空不是黄色;green 是绿色,天空也不是绿色。

2. The grass is _____.A.purpleB.orangeC.greenD.black答案:C。

草是绿色的,green 表示绿色。

purple 是紫色,草不是紫色;orange 是橙色,草不是橙色;black 是黑色,草不是黑色。

3. The sun is _____.A.whiteB.pinkC.yellowD.brown答案:C。

太阳是黄色的,yellow 表示黄色。

white 是白色,太阳不是白色;pink 是粉色,太阳不是粉色;brown 是棕色,太阳不是棕色。

4. The snow is _____.A.greyB.blueC.whiteD.black答案:C。

雪是白色的,white 表示白色。

grey 是灰色,雪通常不是灰色;blue 是蓝色,雪不是蓝色;black 是黑色,雪不是黑色。

5. The apple is _____.A.purpleB.blueC.redD.orange答案:C。

苹果是红色的,red 表示红色。

purple 是紫色,苹果通常不是紫色;blue 是蓝色,苹果不是蓝色;orange 是橙色,有些苹果是橙色,但一般说苹果是红色更常见。

6. The ____ fur is black and white.A.panda'sB.tiger'sC.lion'sD.elephant's答案:A。

解析:熊猫的皮毛是黑白相间的。

老虎的皮毛通常是橙色和黑色条纹;狮子的皮毛是黄色或棕色;大象的皮肤是灰色。

所以答案是熊猫的。

7. The ____ feathers are green and blue.A.peacock'sB.duck'sC.chicken'sD.pigeon's答案:A。

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题1. The apple is _____.A. redB. blueC. greenD. yellow答案:A。

选项A“red”意思是红色,苹果通常是红色的。

选项B“blue”是蓝色,苹果不是蓝色的。

选项C“green”是绿色,一般未成熟的苹果可能是绿色,但常见的成熟苹果多为红色。

选项D“yellow”是黄色,苹果很少是黄色的。

2. The sky is _____.A. blackB. whiteC. blueD. purple答案:C。

选项A“black”是黑色,天空通常不是黑色的。

选项B“white”是白色,天空一般不是白色的。

选项C“blue”是蓝色,天空通常是蓝色的。

选项D“purple”是紫色,天空很少是紫色的。

3. The banana is _____.A. orangeB. purpleC. yellow答案:C。

选项A“orange”是橙色,香蕉不是橙色的。

选项B“purple”是紫色,香蕉不是紫色的。

选项C“yellow”是黄色,香蕉通常是黄色的。

选项D“pink”是粉色,香蕉不是粉色的。

4. The grass is _____.A. redB. brownC. greenD. gray答案:C。

选项A“red”是红色,草不是红色的。

选项B“brown”是棕色,草一般不是棕色的。

选项C“green”是绿色,草通常是绿色的。

选项D“gray”是灰色,草不是灰色的。

5. The flower is _____.A. blackB. grayC. pinkD. brown答案:C。

选项A“black”是黑色,花很少是黑色的。

选项B“gray”是灰色,花一般不是灰色的。

选项C“pink”是粉色,花可能是粉色的。

选项D“brown”是棕色,花不是棕色的。

6. The sky is _____.A. blueC. greenD. yellow答案:A。

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题1. What color is the sky? It is blue.Answer: The sky is blue. So the answer is blue.2. I am a girl. I am wearing a red dress. What color is my dress? It is red.Answer: The girl is wearing a red dress. So the answer is red.3. The flower is yellow. What color is the flower? It is yellow.Answer: The flower is yellow. So the answer is yellow.4. He is a boy. He is wearing a green shirt. What color is his shirt? It is green.Answer: The boy is wearing a green shirt. So the answer is green.5. The apple is red. What color is the apple? It is red.Answer: The apple is red. So the answer is red.6. The sky is blue. The grass is green. What color is the sun? It is yellow.The sun is yellow. This question is about identifying the color of an object and using the correct form of “be” verb.7. My shirt is red. My pants are blue. Are my shoes black? No, they are white.This question tests understanding of color combinations and the use of “are” for plural nouns.8. The flower is pink. The leaves are green. Is the stem brown? Yes, itis.This question focuses on using “is” for singular nouns and identifying colors.9. The book is blue. The pen is black. Are the pencils yellow? No, they are red.Checking knowledge of different colors and using “are” for multiple objects.10. The cat is white. The dog is brown. Are the birds blue? Maybe. We don't know.This question presents a situation where the answer is not definite and tests understanding of colors and “are” for plural nouns.11. The cat has ___ white fur and black eyes.A. aB. anC. /D. theAnswer: C. / (fur is uncountable so no article is needed. “The cat has white fur and black eyes.” means the cat has fur that is white in color and it also has black eyes.)12. I have ___ red hat and blue shoes.A. aB. anC. /D. theAnswer: A. a (hat is a countable noun and “red” starts with a consonant sound so “a” is used. “I have a red hat and blue shoes.” means I possess a hat that is red in color and shoes that are blue.)13. The flower has ___ pink petals and green stem.A. aB. anC. /D. theAnswer: C. / (petals and stem are uncountable when referring to the flower as a whole so no article is needed. “The flower has pink petals and green stem.” means the flower has petals that are pink in color and a stem that is green.)14. She has ___ yellow dress and purple bag.A. aB. anC. /D. theAnswer: A. a (dress is a countable noun and “yellow” starts with a consonant sound so “a” is used. “She has a yellow dress and purple bag.” means she possesses a dress that is yellow in color and a bag that is purple.)15. He has ___ orange ball and blue bat.A. aB. anC. /D. theAnswer: A. a (ball is a countable noun and “orange” starts with a consonant sound so “a” is used. “He has an orange ball and blue bat.” means he possesses a ball that is orange in color and a bat that is blue.)16. The ball is __ red. A. in B. on C. at D. /Answer: A. in. “The ball is in red.”表示球是红色的。

2024年三年级英语颜色形容词混合单选题40题

2024年三年级英语颜色形容词混合单选题40题

2024年三年级英语颜色形容词混合单选题40题1.The sky is _____.A.blueB.redC.yellowD.green答案:A。

天空是蓝色的,“blue”表示蓝色;“red”是红色;“yellow”是黄色;“green”是绿色。

2.The grass is _____.A.whiteB.blackC.greenD.purple答案:C。

草是绿色的,“green”表示绿色;“white”是白色;“black”是黑色;“purple”是紫色。

3.The sun is _____.A.orangeB.blueC.pinkD.grey答案:A。

太阳是橙色的,“orange”表示橙色;“blue”是蓝色;“pink”是粉色;“grey”是灰色。

4.The snow is _____.A.blackB.whiteC.brownD.pink答案:B。

雪是白色的,“white”表示白色;“black”是黑色;“brown”是棕色;“pink”是粉色。

5.The flower is _____.A.greyB.purpleC.brownD.black答案:B。

花有很多颜色,这里可以选择紫色,“purple”表示紫色;“grey”是灰色;“brown”是棕色;“black”是黑色。

6.The apple is _____.A.redB.blueC.greenD.yellow答案:A。

苹果通常是红色的,“red”表示红色;“blue”是蓝色;“green”是绿色;“yellow”是黄色。

7.The banana is _____.B.redC.blueD.purple答案:A。

香蕉是黄色的,“yellow”表示黄色;“red”是红色;“blue”是蓝色;“purple”是紫色。

8.The grape is _____.A.purpleB.greenC.orangeD.black答案:A。

葡萄通常是紫色的,“purple”表示紫色;“green”是绿色;“orange”是橙色;“black”是黑色。

一年级英语颜色搭配单选题30题答案解析版

一年级英语颜色搭配单选题30题答案解析版

一年级英语颜色搭配单选题30题答案解析版1.The sky is ____. A. white B. blue C. yellow答案:B。

天空通常是蓝色的。

白色不是天空常见的颜色,黄色也不是天空的颜色。

2.The grass is ____. A. red B. green C. purple答案:B。

草通常是绿色的。

红色和紫色不是草常见的颜色。

3.The sun is ____. A. orange B. black C. pink答案:A。

太阳通常是橙色的。

黑色不是太阳的颜色,粉色也不是太阳常见的颜色。

4.The flower is ____. A. brown B. pink C. gray答案:B。

花通常是粉色的。

棕色和灰色不是花常见的颜色。

5.The cloud is ____. A. black B. white C. purple答案:B。

云通常是白色的。

黑色和紫色不是云常见的颜色。

6.The lemon is ____. A. yellow B. blue C. red答案:A。

柠檬通常是黄色的。

蓝色和红色不是柠檬常见的颜色。

7.The grape is ____. A. green B. orange C. purple答案:C。

葡萄通常是紫色的。

绿色不是葡萄常见的颜色,橙色也不是葡萄的颜色。

8.The carrot is ____. A. orange B. blue C. black答案:A。

胡萝卜通常是橙色的。

蓝色和黑色不是胡萝卜常见的颜色。

9.The snow is ____. A. white B. black C. green答案:A。

雪通常是白色的。

黑色和绿色不是雪的颜色。

10.The banana is ____. A. yellow B. purple C. red答案:A。

香蕉通常是黄色的。

紫色和红色不是香蕉常见的颜色。

11.The grass is ____. A. red B. green C. yellow答案:B。

三年级英语颜色搭配单选题40题

三年级英语颜色搭配单选题40题

三年级英语颜色搭配单选题40题1.The sky is _____.A.blueB.redC.greenD.yellow答案:A。

天空是蓝色的,这是常见的认知。

红色通常代表太阳、火等;绿色一般是草地、树叶等;黄色可能是香蕉、太阳等。

所以答案是蓝色。

2.The grass is _____.A.blueB.redC.greenD.yellow答案:C。

草地是绿色的。

蓝色通常是天空、大海等;红色代表花、苹果等;黄色一般是香蕉、太阳等。

所以答案是绿色。

3.The sun is _____.A.blueB.redC.greenD.yellow答案:D。

太阳是黄色的。

蓝色一般是天空、大海等;红色可能是苹果、草莓等;绿色是草地、树叶等。

所以答案是黄色。

4.The flower is _____.A.blueB.redC.greenD.yellow答案:B。

花有很多颜色,但常见的有红色。

蓝色一般是天空、大海等;绿色是草地、树叶等;黄色可能是香蕉、太阳等。

所以答案是红色。

5.The apple is _____.A.blueB.redC.greenD.yellow答案:B 或C 或D。

苹果有红色、绿色和黄色等不同颜色。

蓝色通常是天空、大海等。

所以答案可以是红色、绿色或黄色。

6.The panda is black and _____.A.greenB.whiteC.redD.yellow答案:B。

熊猫是黑白相间的,所以是black and white。

A 选项绿色,C 选项红色,D 选项黄色都不符合熊猫的颜色特征。

7.The zebra is black and _____.A.blueB.whiteC.purpleD.orange答案:B。

斑马是黑白相间的,black and white。

A 选项蓝色,C 选项紫色,D 选项橙色都不是斑马的颜色。

8.The polar bear is white and _____.A.blackB.brownC.pinkD.grey答案:A。

2024年三年级英语颜色名称记忆单选题40题

2024年三年级英语颜色名称记忆单选题40题

2024年三年级英语颜色名称记忆单选题40题1.What color is the sky?A.redB.blueC.greenD.yellow答案:B。

“red”是红色,“blue”是蓝色,“green”是绿色,“yellow”是黄色。

天空是蓝色的,所以答案是“blue”。

2.The grass is _____.A.whiteB.blackC.greenD.purple答案:C。

“white”是白色,“black”是黑色,“green”是绿色,“purple”是紫色。

草是绿色的,所以答案是“green”。

3.What color is an apple?A.orangeB.pinkC.redD.brown答案:C。

“orange”是橙色,“pink”是粉色,“red”是红色,“brown”是棕色。

苹果通常是红色的,所以答案是“red”。

4.The sun is _____.A.greyB.yellowC.blueD.purple答案:B。

“grey”是灰色,“yellow”是黄色,“blue”是蓝色,“purple”是紫色。

太阳是黄色的,所以答案是“yellow”。

5.What color is a snowman?A.blackB.whiteC.pinkD.brown答案:B。

“black”是黑色,“white”是白色,“pink”是粉色,“brown”是棕色。

雪人是白色的,所以答案是“white”。

6.The flower is _____.A.redB.greenC.yellowD.blue答案:A。

“red”是红色,“green”是绿色,“yellow”是黄色,“blue”是蓝色。

花有很多颜色,但常见的花有红色的,所以答案可以是“red”。

7.What color is a banana?B.yellowC.orangeD.purple答案:B。

“green”是绿色,“yellow”是黄色,“orange”是橙色,“purple”是紫色。

2024年二年级英语日常场景语法单选题40题

2024年二年级英语日常场景语法单选题40题

2024年二年级英语日常场景语法单选题40题1.The cat is ____.A.blackB.redC.greenD.yellow答案:A。

“black”是黑色,“red”是红色,“green”是绿色,“yellow”是黄色。

通常猫的颜色常见为黑色等深色系,且题干中没有任何提示指向红色、绿色和黄色,所以选择黑色。

2.The dog is ____.A.blueB.pinkC.whiteD.orange答案:C。

“blue”是蓝色,“pink”是粉色,“white”是白色,“orange”是橙色。

狗的颜色常见为白色等,蓝色、粉色和橙色不太符合狗的常见颜色,所以选择白色。

3.The bird is ____.A.purpleB.brownC.greyD.indigo答案:B。

“purple”是紫色,“brown”是棕色,“grey”是灰色,“indigo”是靛蓝色。

鸟的颜色常见为棕色等自然色,紫色、灰色和靛蓝色不太符合鸟的常见颜色,所以选择棕色。

4.The rabbit is ____.A.silverB.goldC.whiteD.copper答案:C。

“silver”是银色,“gold”是金色,“white”是白色,“copper”是铜色。

兔子的颜色常见为白色等,银色、金色和铜色不太符合兔子的常见颜色,所以选择白色。

5.The fish is ____.A.crimsonB.limeC.silverD.maroon答案:C。

“crimson”是深红色,“lime”是青柠色,“silver”是银色,“maroon”是栗色。

鱼的颜色常见为银色等,深红色、青柠色和栗色不太符合鱼的常见颜色,所以选择银色。

6.The duck is ____.A.yellowB.blackD.brown答案:A。

“yellow”是黄色,“black”是黑色,“purple”是紫色,“brown”是棕色。

鸭子的颜色常见为黄色等,黑色、紫色和棕色不太符合鸭子的常见颜色,所以选择黄色。

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题1.The apple is red. The apple _____ green.A.isB.amC.areD.isn't答案:D。

苹果是红色的,不是绿色的,所以用isn't。

is 用于第三人称单数的肯定形式;am 用于I;are 用于第二人称及复数。

2.The sky is blue. The sky _____ yellow.A.isB.amC.areD.isn't答案:D。

天空是蓝色的,不是黄色的,所以用isn't。

is 用于第三人称单数的肯定形式;am 用于I;are 用于第二人称及复数。

3.The flower is pink. The flower _____ black.A.isB.amC.areD.isn't答案:D。

花是粉色的,不是黑色的,所以用isn't。

is 用于第三人称单数的肯定形式;am 用于I;are 用于第二人称及复数。

4.The grass is green. The grass _____ red.A.isB.amC.areD.isn't答案:D。

草是绿色的,不是红色的,所以用isn't。

is 用于第三人称单数的肯定形式;am 用于I;are 用于第二人称及复数。

5.The cloud is white. The cloud _____ brown.A.isB.amC.areD.isn't答案:D。

云是白色的,不是棕色的,所以用isn't。

is 用于第三人称单数的肯定形式;am 用于I;are 用于第二人称及复数。

6.The apple is _____.A.redB.blueC.greenD.yellow答案:A。

红色的苹果很常见,蓝色的苹果不符合实际,绿色的苹果一般未成熟时是绿色,题目中未给出未成熟的提示,黄色的苹果比较少见。

所以选择红色。

小升初英语颜色单选题30题

小升初英语颜色单选题30题

小升初英语颜色单选题30题1. The sky is ______.A. blueB. redC. yellowD. black答案:A。

天空通常是蓝色的,选项A“blue”表示蓝色;选项B“red”表示红色,天空不是红色的;选项C“yellow”表示黄色,天空不是黄色的;选项D“black”表示黑色,天空正常情况下不是黑色的。

2. My dress is ______.A. greenB. purpleC. orangeD. white答案:D。

裙子可能是白色的,选项A“green”表示绿色;选项B“purple”表示紫色;选项C“orange”表示橙色,通常裙子不太会是这几种颜色,选项D“white”表示白色,符合裙子的常见颜色。

3. The apple is ______.A. pinkB. brownC. redD. grey答案:C。

苹果通常是红色的,选项A“pink”表示粉色;选项B“brown”表示棕色;选项D“grey”表示灰色,苹果一般不是这几种颜色,选项C“red”表示红色,符合苹果的常见颜色。

4. The banana is ______.A. blackB. blueC. yellowD. purple答案:C。

香蕉通常是黄色的,选项A“black”表示黑色;选项B“blue”表示蓝色;选项D“purple”表示紫色,香蕉不是这几种颜色,选项C“yellow”表示黄色,符合香蕉的颜色。

5. The flower is ______.A. greyB. blackC. pinkD. white答案:C。

花有很多颜色,这里粉色比较常见,选项A“grey”表示灰色;选项B“black”表示黑色,花一般不是这两种颜色,选项C“pink”表示粉色,选项D“white”表示白色,粉色更符合常见花朵的颜色。

6. What color is your dress?A. RedB. BlueC. GreenD. Yellow答案:A。

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题1.I have a ball. It is _____.A.redB.blueC.green答案:A。

本题中,“I have a ball. It is red.”意思是“我有一个球。

它是红色的。

”对于一年级学生来说,需要掌握常见的颜色单词和be 动词is 的用法。

选项B“blue”蓝色和选项C“green”绿色不符合题干中“球是红色”的描述。

2.The flower is _____.A.pinkB.yellowC.white答案:B。

“The flower is yellow.”表示“花是黄色的。

”一年级学生应认识常见的颜色单词。

选项A“pink”粉色和选项C“white”白色与题干中花的颜色不符。

3.My book is _____.A.orangeB.purpleC.brown答案:C。

“My book is brown.”意为“我的书是棕色的。

”考查学生对不同颜色单词的识别。

选项A“orange”橙色和选项B“purple”紫色不是书的颜色。

4.The pencil is _____.A.blackB.greyC.white答案:A。

“The pencil is black.”即“铅笔是黑色的。

”学生要学会用颜色单词描述物品。

选项B“grey”灰色和选项C“white”白色不符合铅笔的颜色。

5.My bag is _____.A.redB.blueC.green答案:B。

“My bag is blue.”表示“我的包是蓝色的。

”一年级学生应熟悉常见颜色。

选项A“red”红色和选项C“green”绿色不是包的颜色。

6.The cat is _____.A.whiteB.blackC.grey答案:A。

“The cat is white.”意思是“猫是白色的。

”让学生掌握颜色单词来描述动物。

选项B“black”黑色和选项C“grey”灰色不是猫的颜色。

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题

小学一年级英语颜色搭配语法单选题30题1.I have a red ball. The ball ____ red.A.isB.areC.am答案:A。

“ball”是单数名词,“be”动词用“is”。

“are”用于复数名词,“am”只能和“I”搭配。

2.The sky is blue. It ____ blue.A.isB.areC.am答案:A。

“it”是单数代词,“be”动词用“is”。

3.My pencil is green. It ____ green.A.isB.areC.am答案:A。

“pencil”是单数名词,“it”指代“pencil”,“be”动词用“is”。

4.The flower is yellow. It ____ yellow.A.isB.areC.am答案:A。

“flower”是单数名词,“it”指代“flower”,“be”动词用“is”。

5.The book is orange. It ____ orange.A.isB.areC.am答案:A。

“book”是单数名词,“it”指代“book”,“be”动词用“is”。

6.My bag is purple. It ____ purple.A.isB.areC.am答案:A。

“bag”是单数名词,“it”指代“bag”,“be”动词用“is”。

7.The cat is black. It ____ black.A.isB.areC.am答案:A。

“cat”是单数名词,“it”指代“cat”,“be”动词用“is”。

8.The dog is brown. It ____ brown.A.isB.areC.am答案:A。

“dog”是单数名词,“it”指代“dog”,“be”动词用“is”。

9.The table is white. It ____ white.A.isC.am答案:A。

“table”是单数名词,“it”指代“table”,“be”动词用“is”。

三年级英语颜色搭配单选题50题

三年级英语颜色搭配单选题50题

三年级英语颜色搭配单选题50题1.The sky is blue. What color is the cloud?A.redB.greenC.whiteD.black答案:C。

天空是蓝色的,云通常是白色的。

选项A 红色、选项B 绿色、选项D 黑色都不符合云的常见颜色。

2.The grass is green. What color are the flowers?A.blueB.yellowC.purpleD.all of the above答案:D。

草是绿色的,花有很多颜色,蓝色、黄色、紫色等都有可能,所以选D。

3.The sun is yellow. What color is the sand on the beach?A.whiteB.brownC.greyD.pink答案:B。

太阳是黄色的,沙滩上的沙子通常是棕色的。

选项 A 白色、选项C 灰色、选项D 粉色都不符合沙子的常见颜色。

4.The apple is red. What color is the leaf on the apple tree?A.greenB.orangeC.purpleD.black答案:A。

苹果是红色的,苹果树上的叶子通常是绿色的。

选项B 橙色、选项C 紫色、选项D 黑色都不符合树叶的常见颜色。

5.The grape is purple. What color is the stem of the grape?A.greenB.yellowC.redD.blue答案:A。

葡萄是紫色的,葡萄的梗通常是绿色的。

选项B 黄色、选项C 红色、选项D 蓝色都不符合葡萄梗的常见颜色。

6.The carrot is orange. What color is the soil in which the carrot grows?A.blackB.brownC.greyD.white答案:B。

胡萝卜是橙色的,胡萝卜生长的土壤通常是棕色的。

小升初英语颜色单选题30题

小升初英语颜色单选题30题

小升初英语颜色单选题30题1. The sky is ______.A. redB. blueC. greenD. yellow答案:B。

天空通常是蓝色的,选项A“red”表示红色,C“green”表示绿色,D“yellow”表示黄色,都不符合天空的常见颜色。

2. My dress is ______.A. blackB. whiteC. purpleD. orange答案:C。

裙子可以有很多颜色,这里选项A“black”是黑色,B“white”是白色,D“orange”是橙色,根据设定选择紫色“purple”。

3. The apple is ______.A. pinkB. brownC. greenD. gray答案:C。

苹果常见的颜色有绿色,选项A“pink”是粉色,B“brown”是棕色,D“gray”是灰色,均不符合苹果的常见颜色。

4. The banana is ______.A. blueB. yellowC. purpleD. black答案:B。

香蕉通常是黄色的,选项A“blue”是蓝色,C“purple”是紫色,D“black”是黑色,都不是香蕉的常见颜色。

5. The flower is ______.A. redB. blackC. whiteD. gray答案:A。

花有很多颜色,但常见的有红色,选项B“black”是黑色,C“white”是白色,D“gray”是灰色,相比之下红色更常见。

6. The sky is ______ on a sunny day.A. blueB. redC. blackD. white答案:A。

本题考查颜色词汇在描述天空时的正确用法。

选项A“blue”表示蓝色,晴天时天空通常是蓝色的,符合实际情况。

选项B“red”表示红色,天空很少是红色的。

选项C“black”表示黑色,不符合晴天天空的颜色。

选项D“white”表示白色,也不符合晴天天空的正常颜色。

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The East is greyChina is the world’s worst polluter but largest investor in green energy. Its rise will have as big an impact on the environment as on the world economy or politicsAug 10th 2013 | BEIJING |From the print editionALL industrial nations one day hit an environmental turning-point, an event that dramatises to the population the ecological consequences of growth. In America that event occurred in 1969 when the Cuyahoga river in Ohio, thick with pollutants and bereft of fish, caught fire. America’s Environmental Protection Agency was founded the next year. Strict environmental laws passed by Japan in the 1970s followed the realisation that poisonous mercury spilled from a plastics factory was claiming thousands of lives around the bay of Minamata.The fetid smog that settled on Beijing in January 2013 could join the ranks of these game-changing environmental disruptions. For several weeks the air was worse than in an airport smoking lounge.A swathe of warm air in the atmosphere settled over the Chinese capital like a duvet and trapped beneath it pollution from the region’s 200 coal-fired power plants and 5m cars. The concentration of particles with a diameter of 2.5 microns or less, hit 900 parts per million—40 times the level the World Health Organisation deems safe. You could smell, taste and choke on it.Related topics•Beijing•Japan•Climatology•Climate change•Earth sciencePublic concern exploded. China’s hyperactive microblogs logged 2.5m posts on “smog” in January alone. The dean of a business school said thousands of Chinese and expatriate businessmen were packing their bags because of the p ollution. Beijing is one of China’s richest cities. Before the 2008 Olympic games it had relocated its smelliest industries to surrounding provinces. If anywhere should be cleaning itself up, it is the capital. Yet even Communist bigwigs, opening their curtains each morning near the Forbidden City, could not avoid the toxic fog.Journey to the WestThe “airpocalypse” injected a new urgency into local debate about the environment—and produced a green-policy frenzy a few months later. In three weeks from the middle of June, the government unveiled a series of reforms to restrict air pollution. It started the country’s first carbon market, made prosecuting environmental crimes easier and made local officials more accountable for air-quality problems in their areas. It also said China—meaning companies as well asgovernment—would spend $275 billion over the next five years cleaning up the air. Even by Chinese standards that is serious money, equivalent to Hong Kong’s GDP or twice the size of the annual defence budget.Is this China’s turning-point? Many environmentalists, both in the country and outside, fear it is too little, too late. A study released by America’s National Academy of Sciences in July found that air pollution in the north of China reduces life expectancy by five-and-a-half years. The rivers are filthy, the soil contaminated. The government has long known this and attempted to clean things up. Yet still the smog comes.And there is something else in the air, less immediately damaging but with a far bigger global impact. China’s greenhouse-gas emissions were about 10% of the world’s total in 1990. Now they are nearer 30%. Since 2000 China alone has accounted for two-thirds of the global growth in carbon-dioxide emissions. This will be very hard to reverse. While America and Europe are cutting their emissions by 60m tonnes a year combined, China is increasing its own by over 500m tonnes. This makes it a unique global threat.Nonsense, say Chinese officials. China is not responsible for the build-up of greenhouse gases. The West is. There are environmental problems, true, but China is simply following a pattern set by Britain, America and Japan: “grow first, clean up later”. China grew unusually fast but it is now cleaning up unusually fast, too. Its efforts to rein in pollution are undervalued; its investments in wind and solar power put others to shame; its carbon emissions will peak sooner than people expect. China will one day do for zero-carbon energy what it has already done for consumer electronics—put it within reach of everyone. It will not be a threat to the planet but the model for how to clean it up.China is broadly right about one thing: its environmental problems do have historical parallels. With the exception of Chongqing, the largest municipality, most Chinese cities are no more polluted than Japan’s were in 1960 (see chart 1). Excluding spikes l ike that in Beijing this year, air quality is improving at about the same rate as Japan’s did in the 1970s.Other environmental indicators are worse, however, and it is not clear whether they are improving as fast. A 2006 survey found that almost 10% of farmland was contaminated with heavy metals, such as cadmium. Whether a recent nationwide soil survey showed an improvement is hard to say, as the Ministry of Environmental Protection promptly declared the findings a state secret. The discovery of rice tainted with cadmium in Guangdong this year triggered panic buying of Thai rice.China’s wildlife is under particular threat. The China Species Red List, an official document, classified almost 40% of the country’s mammals as “threatened” in 2004. An unusually wide range of habitats—China is exceptionally diverse in this respect—is being degraded by industrial development.The Water MarginThe worst problem is water. Pictures of China often show green and watery landscapes. But most of northern China is as dry as straw. “Severe water stress” is usually defined as access to less than 1,000 cubic metres of water per person per year. For China the figure is just 450 cubic metres. The national average is bad enough but it hides an even more alarming regional disparity. Four-fifths of the water is in the south—mainly in the Yangzi river basin (see map). Half the people and two-thirds of the countr y’s farmland are in the parched north—mainly in the Yellow river basin. In Beijing there is just 100 cubic metres per person per year. The water table there has fallen by 300 metres in two decades. Wen Jiabao, a former prime minister, was barely exaggerati ng when he said water shortages “threaten the very survival of the Chinese nation”.Such shortages have been a problem for centuries but they are being exacerbated now by pollution. The Yellow River Conservancy Commission, a government body, surveyed the “mother river” of China and found that for a third of its length the water was too polluted for use in agriculture. The housing ministry’s chief engineer for water safety says only half the water sources in urban areas are fit to drink.Don’t drink the water; don’t even touch the waterSevere though China’s problems with water, soil and air are, they are not different in kind from those of other nations in the past. As Pan Jiahua of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) puts it, “We’re following the US, Japan and UK and because of inertia we don’t have the capacity to stop quickly.”China’s impact on the climate, though, is unique. Its economy is not only large but also resource-hungry. It accounts for 16% of world output but consumes between 40% and 50% of the world’s coal, copper, steel, nickel, aluminium and zinc. It also imports half the planet’s tropical logs and raises half its pigs.The country’s energy use is similarly gargantuan. This is in part because, under Mao, the use of energy was reckle ssly profligate. China’s consumption of energy per unit of GDP tripled in 1950-78—an unprecedented “achievement”. In the early 1990s, at the start of its period of greatest growth, China was still using 800 tonnes of coal equivalent (tce, a unit of energy) to produce $1m of output, far more than other developing countries. Energy efficiency has since improved; China used 390tce per $1m in 2009. But that was still more than the global average of 300tce and far more than Germany, which used only 173tce.Despite a huge hydroelectric programme, most of this energy comes from burning coal on a vast scale. China currently burns about half the world’s supplies. In 2006 it surpassed America in carbon-dioxide emissions from energy (see chart 2). By 2014 or 2015 it will emit twice America’s total. Between 1990 and 2050 its cumulative emissions from energy will amount to some 500 billion tonnes—roughly the same as those of the whole world from the beginning of the industrial revolution to 1970. And the total is what matters. The climate reacts to the stock of carbon, not to annual rises.These emissions are adding to a build-up of carbon already pushed to unprecedented heights by earlier industrialisations. When Britain began the process in the 18th century, the atmosp here’s carbon-dioxide level was 280 parts per million (ppm). When Japan was industrialising fastest in the late 1950s, it had risen a bit, to 315ppm. This year the level hit 400ppm. Avoiding dangerousclimate change is widely taken to mean keeping below 450ppm, although there are significant uncertainties surrounding this figure. At current rates that threshold will be reached in 2037. China is likely to be the largest emitter between now and then.About a quarter of China’s carbon emissions is produced mak ing goods for export. If the carbon embodied in those goods were marked against the ledgers of the importing countries China would look a little less damaging, the rich world a lot less virtuous. But even allowing for that, China is not playing catch-up any more. It is doing more damage to the stability of the global climate than any other country.Strange Tales from a Chinese StudioChina will suffer as much as anywhere. Already its deserts are spreading, farmland is drying out and crop yields are plateauing. Climate change may make matters worse. It has 80m people living at sea level who are vulnerable to rising oceans and higher storm surges. And as heavy manufacturing and mining move from coastal areas to poorer western provinces like Xinjiang and Tibet, the shift may increase environmental damage. These areas have particularly fragile ecosystems and degradation could quickly become irreversible.Some of those problems may not become acute for a while. But the nation’s immediate environmental woes are already challenging the basic contract between rulers and people: rising living standards in exchange for acquiescence in the Communist Party’s monopoly of power.The costs of environmental and natural-resource degradation, according to the World Bank, are the equivalent of 9% of GDP, an enormous amount which is dragging down the long-term growth rate. The biggest downdrafts include health damage from air pollution and the degradation of soil nutrients. And since the party takes credit for the benefits of growth, it gets blamed for the costs of pollution. As Ma Jun, China’s best-known environmental activist, puts it, “Everyone knows the link between the environment and their own health.” None of the challenges facing the new generation of leaders is bigger than those posed by the environment.China is already doing a lot to meet that challenge, on paper at least. Even before the Beijing smog settled, the government had issued 20 significant anti-pollution laws and tens of thousands of decrees. It established a Ministry for Environmental Protection in 2008 and at the last Communist Party conference in 2012, added the environment to the four “platforms”—basic beliefs that define what the party stands for. In China, that sort of signal matters.But the new leaders worry at least as much about faltering short-term growth as about environmental degradation. The prime minister, Li Keqiang, reflected these conflicting demands in his inaugural address in March, when he said: “It is no good having prosperity and wealth whi le the environment deteriorates,”—but then said it was just as bad to have “poverty and backwardness in the midst of clear waters and verdant mountains.”In the West it is often said that one of China’s chief advantages in dealing with climate change is that its leaders can impose tough policies that democratic systems shy away from. Mr Wen oncesaid the government would use “an iron hand” to make the country more energy-efficient. But in environmental matters the government does not have an iron hand.If local officials—mayors and provincial or county party secretaries—do not like a policy, they can quietly ignore it. As an official in Guangdong once said about pollution controls, “We don’t think these decisions apply to us.” The bosses of large state-owned companies often wield as much power as the ministers who supervise them. Occult systems of patronage matter more than apparent hierarchies. In the Chinese system, the centre proposes; provinces and counties dispose.The system is changing to reflect environmental concerns. Guizhou is one of the poorest parts of China. It also sits atop large reserves of coal. A few years ago it would have happily mined them. But in formulating a new development plan to catch up with the rest of the country, it is relying more on imported natural gas from Myanmar—partly to fulfil the various anti-pollution diktats from the centre.But change is slow. One of the ways the centre can directly influence local officials is through the criteria used when judging who gets promoted. Until now the economy was the most important factor. Environmental considerations have been added over the years, albeit with fuzzy measurements. President Xi Jinping is trying to make greenery more important by saying officials will be held responsible for environmental problems in an area, even after they have been promoted out of it.So far, though, tinkering with the promotion system has not worked. According to a study for America’s National Bureau of Economic Research, mayors who spent money on envir onmental projects (pollution-treatment plants and the like) in 2000-09 had a lower chance of promotion than those investing in infrastructure that boosted the economy, such as roads. Growth remains the main consideration locally and it is not yet clear that the centre can change this.Dream of the Green ChamberIn the West public opinion put the environment on the map, forcing governments and firms to clean up. But it is not clear this will happen soon in China. True, the public is worried. Figures from CASS suggest a quarter of demonstrations are about the environment. They cannot be put down as easily as peasant protests: they are often middle-class, urban affairs which might one day become a nationwide movement. If China’s leaders want a reminder of why t his prospect might matter, they need only look at the former Soviet Union. In all but one of the European countries that split away from the USSR, the political parties that formed the first governments began life as environmental movements.But the government can downplay public pressure for the moment because the environment remains, it seems, a second-tier concern. According to Xinhua, China’s news agency, an opinion poll in February 2012 found that worries about food safety came third, after income inequality and soaring house prices. In March a poll in China Youth Daily, a party newspaper, also put food safety third, after corruption and income distribution; and in November 2012 China Daily said 52.6% ofrespondents set environmental degradation fourth on their list of anxieties, after the wealth gap, corruption and the power of vested interests.Moreover, most environmental protests are local rather than national. Demonstrators complain about this city’s air or that city’s water, but not about China’s overall situation. Activists like Mr Ma concede that as a mass movement environmentalism is in its infancy.The wider implication is that far from being good at solving environmental problems, the Chinese political system is no better than anyone else’s. The top is ambivalent, the middle sceptical and the grassroots weak and divided.Given all that, the remarkable thing is not what China has failed to do but what it has achieved, especially in reining in carbon dioxide. Its carbon emissions are growing at half the rate of GDP, a bit better than the global average. China has also boosted investment in renewable energy far more than any other country. It has the world’s most ambitious plans for building new nuclear power stations.To combine economic growth and environmental improvement, China has concentrated on reducing carbon intensity—emissions per unit of GDP (see chart 3). This fell by about 20% in the past five years and the government is aiming to cut it by 40-45% by 2020, compared with 2005. Most of the improvement is coming from a scheme to bully 1,000 state-owned enterprises (SOEs) into using energy more efficiently—arguably the single most important climate policy in the world.The enterprises sign a contract with the central government agreeing to meet efficiency targets, abide by new building codes and install environmental-control equipment. This helped Chinese cement-makers (who produce as much of the stuff as the rest of the world put together) reduce the energy needed to make a tonne of cement by 30% in the ten years to 2009. The scheme has now been expanded to 10,000 SOEs, covering the majority of polluters.China is also generating energy more efficiently. According to the World Bank, better operations and the closure of clapped-out plants helped to push the average thermal efficiency of its coal-fired power stations from 31% in 2000 to 37% in 2010; America’s remained flat, at 33%.The other big energy change is China’s vast renewables programme. The government aims to get 20% of its energy from such sources by 2020, the same target as in richer Europe. The largest slice will come from hydropower, which accounted for around 15% of total energy in 2012 (with nuclear power at 2%). But the big rise comes from wind and solar: the government will roughly double investment in these two in 2011-16, compared with 2006-10. Chinese investment in renewables puts others to shame. It amounted to $67 billion in 2012, says REN21, a network of policymakers, more than three times what Germany spent. The aim is to have 100 gigawatts of wind capacity and 35 gigawatts of solar capacity by 2015.Even by the standards of renewables, though, much of this is inefficient. China and America have almost the same windpower capacity but America gets 40% more energy from it. Chinese wind farms—classic creations of central planning—are often not plugged in or create power surges so big that the electricity grid cannot cope and they have to be unplugged again.Dirty coal will remain China’s most important fuel for the foreseeable future (hopes of a shale-gas revolution may be constrained by water shortages). Coal is cheaper and, as Nat Bullard of Bloomberg New Energy Finance, a firm of market analysts, points out, it provides “baseload power”—continuous energy unaffected by a lack of sun or wind. Its cost advantages will shrink, though. China is the world’s lowest-cost producer of solar panels. Mr Bullard says solar power should become competitive without subsidies by 2020.He can see the future and it’s blackAs well as these supply-side measures, the government is also trying to reduce emissions by capping them and introducing a carbon price. The idea is unpopular in some quarters and is being introduced in stages—slipped in, as it were.Along with reducing the targets it sets for energy intensity, China is setting up a pilot carbon-trading scheme in seven cities and provinces. Next, it plans to cap the amount of energy consumed, probably at 4 billion tce in 2015. That would require a sharp reduction in energy growth. The third stage is to turn the energy cap into a national emissions target. This is supposed to happen in 2016-20. The aim is to pave the way, in 2021-25, for provincial carbon budgets and a national carbon-trading system.There is a lot of scepticism about whether this will happen as planned. But the basic aim—to rein in the rise of carbon emissions more quickly—may be met. A few years ago Chinese politicians said such emissions would go on rising at least until 2050. Now mainstream Chinese opinion says the peak will come in 2030-40. Academics at the Energy Research Institute and CASS reckon it could come earlier—in 2025-30. Compared with what seemed likely a few years ago, that would be a big achievement.But compared with what China needs to do, it would not be enough. As a rough guide the world needs to restrict emissions to a little over 700 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide between now and 2050, if global temperatures are not to increase by more than 2°C above pre-industrial levels. The Stockholm Environment Institute calculates that, if China continues on its current path, it would emit almost two-thirds of that budget—roughly 450 billion tonnes— on its own. If it tries to live within its share of the global budget (which would be 220 billion tonnes, assuming countries’ shares of total emissions stay at current levels), then its emissions would have to fall to zero within ten years of a 2025 peak. This is inconceivable.Call to ArmsThe world appears destined to break that 700 billion tonne budget quite dramatically. How much of the overrun will be due to China? Over the next 20 years, it will build the equivalent of an America’s worth of new houses; the switch from rural to urban life roughly doubles energy use and carbon emissions per person. If China reaches the current living standards of industrial countries, the number of cars on its roads will rise tenfold.Against that, and more importantly, the structure of the economy will change. Services account for 43% of GDP, a much lower proportion than in other middle-income countries. China can reasonably expect to increase the share of services, which are far less polluting, over the next 20 years.Meanwhile, China could do even more to help itself. Its pricing of basic resources is skewed. Water and fertilisers in particular are too cheap, discouraging saving of its most precious resource. The country relies too much on command-and-control mechanisms and is hampered by bureaucratic complexity.Yet China also has advantages in addressing its—and the world’s—environmental problems. Its leaders understand the challenge of climate change better than their predecessors and perhaps their international peers, too. They are good at taking action on high-priority issues. Because the country is a late developer, it should be able to learn from the mistakes of others—and not build energy-guzzling cities. China has a huge domestic market, cheap capital and sunny, windy deserts: the ideal environment to build a zero-carbon energy system. It is the silver lining of a very dark cloud. If China cannot do it, no one can.From the print edition: Briefing。

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