英语四级改错练习题 第001组
大学英语四级(CET-4)改错练习题(1)
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英语四级改错练习题Some people, in all seriousness, say that humans will be living in space within the next hundred or so years. Planet Earth will be crowded, dirty and lack of resources. A sort of exodus [51] of mankind will begin.Spaceships will be assembled so that they revolve around the earth. Some may orbit around Mars. These space stations will be serviced by space buses. We saw the first space bus launch in [52] April 1981. This was ""Columbia"", it made several [53] orbits around the earth and then returned, landing on a huge dry lake bed in California. ""Columbia"" will be used again. Previous spaceships have been abandoned, only the nose being used to bring the crews back to earth.[54] Upon established, each space station will [55] generate its own atmosphere and have its own agriculture. It will need to rotation to provide [56] an artificial gravity; people will be forced inwards [57] from the centre by centrifugal force.The moon and Mars could become new sources of new materials. Driving through space will no [58] longer need Earth fuel - the energy would come from the sun. This energy would be converted from [59] electricity to work magnetic rockets.That all sounds quite fantastically but, with [60] the rapid development of modern technology, who knows about what the future holds?答案51. and lack of... short 52. bus launch in... launched 53. it made several... which 54. the crews back... crew 55. Upon established... once 56. to rotation to... rotate 57. forced inwards... outwards 58. space will no... would 59. converted from... into 60. quite fantastically but... fantastic。
四级改错100题
Error CorrectionPart I. 单句改错1.Overseas travel sounds excited and sometimes exotic but not everyone can affordit. _______2.If one does not pick up his dry-cleaning within thirty days, the management is notobligated to return it back. _______3.It is said that Einstein felt very badly about the application of his theories to thecreation of weapons of war. _______4.Some people choose to go on cruises as a way of rewarding themselves. Certainlyif you have plenty of money this can be a good idea, thought it may not turn off quite as expected. _______5.The new technology has made possible for the doctor to make diagnoses withoutseeing the patient in person. _______ 6.All of the performers in the play did well. The audience applauded the actorsexcellent performance. _______ 7.Although we had been present at roughly the same time, Mr. Brown saw thesituation quite different from the way I saw it. _______8.Historically, no artists have presented clearer or the more complete records of thedevelopment of human culture than sculptors have. _______ 9.The president devoted his energies to update the curricula, making the educationoffered at Washington College as meaningful and usual as possible. _______ ually you will be more likely to find insects if you examine finer twigs ratherthan the coarse parts of trees. _______ 11.Written English has become more importantly in business English, with theinvention of the fax and the computer. _______ 12.Each culture has its own distinctive ways of seeing, feeling, thinking, speaking,believing, and just like no two humans are identical in all respects, so no two cultures are identical in all respects. _______13.It is very hard to believe that when Lincoln was born, communications were alittle faster than in the days of Julius Caesar. _______ 14.Despite of diligent efforts to promote domestic production during the war years,the Continental Army had to rely primarily in captures and imports for much of its military hardware and even for clothing. _______ 15.The departments concerned shall listen and accept criticisms and rationalsuggestions regarding the protection of women’s rights and interests. _______ 16.It is ironic that although in 1955 actor James Dean made an advertisementwarning teens of how harm it was to drive fast, he himself died from a speeding accident. _______17.One expert remarks that a computer with so many tubes as the brain has neuronswould require the Empire State Building to contain it. _______ 18.Despite this similarity with other creatures, the evolution of humankind differsfrom other species in one important and unique way. _______ 19.The scientists, concerned about the potential hazards, wanted the latest researchfinding made publicly. _______20.There is never any need to feel shameless or even childish in wanting to move onto new experiences. _______21.It is an accepted custom for guests to take their gifts to the wedding receptionwhen the couple invited them to attend. _______22.The fact which a good teacher has some of the gifts of a good actor does not meanthat he will indeed be able to act well on the stage. _______ 23.Neither of the boys who have been helping us know the importance of thisparticular project. _______ 24.Not too many years ago my mother jogged in the alley behind our house becauseshe was embarrassed to see jogging in public. _______ 25.Failure to advertise could result in either reduced sales and less profit nor legalactions. _______ 26.He said that the passenger must have had an accident; otherwise he would arriveby that time. _______ 27.Not only in obvious situations such as wars and revolutions enemies are necessaryand very useful as a way to focus the attention and energy of our friends and followers, but in our every day activities as well. _______ 28.The replacement of shops such as the grocer’s and chemist’s by cafes have left thehousewives with insufficient facilities for shopping. _______ 29.The police finally caught up with the man whom they thought was the escapedprisoner. _______ 30.To the finalists, Peter and I, the last high jump was the most exciting as well as themost difficult. _______ 31.Evidently we didn’t understand the direction, for we made a wrong turn and foundus lost, confused as to which way we should go. _______ 32.When a post office handles large quantities of mails daily, it is essential thatmechanical methods are used to maintain production and insure prompt delivery of the mails. _______33.Vincent V an Gogh killed himself when he was only 37, but he left behind himmore than 2,000 paintings and drawings, that established his reputation in a way he would never have considered possible. _______ 34.If you read Canadian English Dictionaries, you certainly find both American andBritish spellings listing, and the first word is the spelling preferred by the educated Canadian majority. _______ 35.It is the interaction between people, rather than the events that occur in their livesthat are the main focus of social psychology. _______ 36.More than three years after moving from Australia to this remote point of England,we are still learning how things have done here. _______ 37.That the woman was saying was so important that I asked everyone to stop talkingand listen. _______38.This is the longest flight I have ever taken. By the time we get to Los Angeles, wehad flown for 13 hours. _______39.Researchers believe one way minimizing the damage is to get better at predictingthe risk of fire. _______ 40.Customers are asked to ensure that they have given correct change before leavingthe shop as mistakes cannot be afterwards remedied. _______ 41.Business today whether it is running a little gas-station or a big factory take goodmanagement. _______42. A break in their employment, or a decision to work part time, will slow its raisesand promotions-because it would for men. _______ 43.Blood pressure drugs definitely help some people live after a heart attack, butthese same drugs may be both necessary and harmful for those with only mild blood pressure problems. _______ 44.Culture refers to the social heritage of a people- the learned patterns for thinking,feeling and acting that characterize a population or society, include the expression of these patterns in material things. _______ 45.Culture is composed of nonmaterial culture abstract creations like values, beliefs,customs, and institutional arrangements-and material culture-physical object like cooking spots, computers and bathtubs. _______ 46.But it was not until almost the end of the nineteenth century that a true virus wasproven to be the reason of a disease. ______ 47.Growth in gross domestic product was 4.1 percents; profits soared; exportsflourished; and inflation stayed around 3 percent for the third year. ______ 48.The university exposes its students to many different culture, social andout-of-class programs. ______49.His Arab host, who had been watching, said of nothing. ______50.This research program is financed by two funds, the largest of which could last fortwo years. ______ 51.Perhaps one in every seventh deaths in Europe’s crowded cities was caused by thedisease. ______ 52.The pace of house-construction cannot keep down with the rapid growth ofpopulation. ______53.That is to do with what is read but with how it is read. ______54.Twenty years in prison are a ridiculously harsh penalty for an action that was afterall, agreed upon by both people involved. ______ 55.In the past our own blocks of flats have been associated with the lower-incomegroups and they had lacked the obvious provisions. _______ 56.What was set Miss Keller apart was that no similarly afflicted person before haddone more than acquire the simplest skills. ______ 57.Consider the great need for improving many aspects of the global environment,one is surely justified in his concern for money and resources. ______ 58.But if 98 percent of us don’t need to work, what are we going to do with oneself?______59.It is precisely this kind of conversation which is of importance when we areseeking to develop our reading to meet the new demand. ______60.Many of us now won’t be alive if it weren’t for advances in health, agriculture andindustry. ______61.Should you break the rule against staring at a stranger on an elevator, you willmake the other person exceedingly comfortable. ______62.Children are forbidden to visit terminally ill patients---or those patients are theirparents. ______63.Police’s records show a surprised link between changes in the seasons and crimepatterns. ______64.In sum, culture reflects both the ideas we share or everything we make. ______65.In ordinary speech, a person of culture is the individual can speak anotherlanguage- the person who is familiar with the arts, music, literature, philosophy, or history. _______66.But to sociologists, to be human is to be cultured, because of culture is thecommon world of experience. _________67.Culture is essentially to our humanness. ________68. How do you know how to act in a classroom, or a department store, or toward aperson who smiles or laugh at you? ________ 69.Your culture supplies you by broad, standardized, ready-made answers for dealingwith each of these situations. ________ 70.Few football grounds boast a more prestigious address than the Bernabeu, lies as itdoes on the Castellana. ________ 71.As Real date back to 1902, when the Sociedad Madrid Football Club was formed,it was not until 1920 that the club was granted permission to use the Real (royal) prefix. ________72.The cost of the new stadium led to claims, never proving, that Real had receivedfinancial aid from General Franco’s government. _______ 73.Under Bernabeu’s patronage, Real Madrid became the greatest club side ever, wonthe European Champions Cup a record five times in a row between 1956 and 1960,a remarkable feat that is unlikely to be challenged. _______74.Clearly some risks worth taking, especially when the rewards are high._______75.A man surrounded by flames and smoke generally considers that jumping out of asecond floor window is an acceptable risk to save its life. _______ 76.There may be sound medicine reasons for accepting electrical shock treatment._______77.Such reasons are totally dependent in the balance of risks and benefits for thepatients. _______78.Blood pressure drugs definitely help some people live after a heart attack, butthese same drugs may be both necessary and harmful for those with only mild blood pressure problems. _______ 79.Deciding how much discomfort and risk we are preparing to put up with in thename of better health is a highly personal matter, not a decision we should leave to doctors alone. _______80.A man who has promised to call on a friend at five o'clock in the afternoon andactually does such at that hour is punctual. ______81.A few minutes delay may not be a serious matter. ______82.Getting up five minutes later than usually may upset the plan of the day. ______83.Call on a friend five minutes later than the appointed time may cause him someunexpected trouble. ______ 84.They should ever say to themselves: “A few minutes’ delay does not matter thistime. I shall never be unpunctual again.”______ 85.Those who think in this way will find excuses for delay from time to time, andwill at least give up the attempt cultivating the good habit of punctuality. ______ 86.CVs(简历) printed on pink paper, CVs that are 10 pages long and CVs with sillymistakes in first paragraph. ______ 87.Good CV is your passport to an interview and, ultimate, to the job you want.______88.Initial impressions are vital, and a badly presented CV could mean acceptance,regardless of what’s in it. ______89.Here are a few ways to avoid end up on the reject pile. _____90.Get someone to check for spelling and grammatical errors, because aspell-checker will pick up every mistake. ______ 91.Restrict your self to one or two pages, and listing any publications or referees on aseparate sheet. __________92.The Seattle Times Company has 20 percents racial minorities. __________93.The paper has put into place policies and procedures for hiring and maintain adiverse workforce. __________ 94.The underlying reason for the change is that for information to be fair, appropriate,and subjective, it should be reported by the same kind of population that reads it.__________95.A diversity committee composed of reporters, editors, and photographers meetsregularly to value the Seattle Times’content and to educate the rest of the newsroom staff about diversity issues. __________ 96.In addition, the paper instituted a content audit (审查) that evaluates the frequencyand manner of representation of woman and people of color in photographs.__________97.Now he has the capability to leave that planet and move out into the universe tothose worlds which he has known previously only directly. __________ 98.Men have explored parts of the moon, put spaceships in orbit around anotherplanet and possibly within the decade will land into another planet and explore it.__________99.Can we be too bold as to suggest that we may be able to colonize other planetwithin the not - too - distant future ? __________ 100.We must keep in head the billions of dollars we might spend in carrying out the project. __________。
四六级历年改错真题.doc
改错: 历年全真试题及参考答案(00.1-06.12)00.1Until the very latest moment of his existence, manhas been bound to the planet on which he originated anddeveloped. Now he had the capability to leave that planet S1._______and move out into the universe to those worlds which hehas known previously only directly. Men have explored S2._______parts of the moon, put spaceships in orbit around anotherplanet and possibly within the decade will land into anotherS3._______planet and explore it. Can we be toobold as toS4._______suggest that we may be able to colonize other planetS5._______within the not - too - distant future ? Some have advocatedsuch a procedure as a solution to the populationproblem: ship the excess people off to the moon. Butwe must keep in head the billions of dollars we mightS6._______spend in carrying out the project. To maintain theearth's population at its present level, we would haveto blast off into space 7,500 people every hour ofevery day of the year.Why are we spending so littlemoney on spaceS7._______exploration ? Consider the greatneed for improvingS8._______many aspects of the global environment, one is surelyjustified in his concern for the money and resourcesthat they are poured into the space exploration efforts.S9._______But perhaps we should look at both sides of thecoin before arriving hasty conclusions.S10._______00.6When you start talking about good and bad mannersyou immediately start meetingdifficulties. Manypeople just cannot agree what they mean. We asked alady, who replied that she thought you could tell awell-mannered person on the way they occupied the S1._______space around them—for example, when such a personwalks down a street he or she is constantly unaware of S2._______others. Such people never bump into other people.However, a second person thought that this wasmore a question of civilized behavior as good manners. S3._______Instead, this other person told us a story, it heS4._______said was quite well known, about an American whohad been invited to an Arab meal at one of the countriesS5._______of the Middle East. The American hasn't beenS6._______told very much about the kind of food he mightexpect. If he had known about American food, heS7._______might have behaved better.Immediately before him was a very flat piece ofbread that looked, to him, very much as a napkin (餐巾).S8._______Picking it up, he put it into his collar, so that itfalls across his shirt. His Arab host, who had beenS9._______watching, said of nothing, but immediately copiedS10._______the action of his guest.And that, said this second person, was a fineexample of good manners.01.6More people die of tuberculosis (结核病) than of anyother disease caused by a single agent. This has probablybeen the case in quite a while. During the early stagesof S1. ________the industrial revolution, perhaps one in every seventh S2.________deaths in Europe's crowded cities were caused by the S3. ________ disease. From now on, though, western eyes, missing the S4. ________ global picture, saw the trouble going into decline. With occasional breaks for war, the rates of death andinfection in the Europe and America dropped steadily S5. ________through the 19th and 20th centuries. In the 1950s, the introduction of antibiotics (抗菌素) strengthened thetrend in rich countries, and the antibiotics were allowedto be imported to poor countries.Medicalresearchers S 6. ________declared victory and withdrew.They are wrong. In the mid-1980s the frequency of S7. ________ infections and deaths started to pick up again around theworld. Where tuberculosis vanished, it came back; in S8. ________ many places where it had never been away, it grew better. S9. ________The World Health Organization estimates that 1.7billion people (a third of the earth's population) sufferfrom tuberculosis. Even when the infection rate wasfalling, population growth kept the number of clinicalcases more or less constantly at 8 million a year. Around S10. ________3 million of those people died, nearly all of them in poor countries.02.1Sporting activities are essentially modified forms of huntingbehavior. Viewing biologically, the modern footballer is revealed as a S1.________member of a disguised hunting pack. His killing weapon has turned intoa harmless football and his prey into a goal-mouth. If his aim isinaccurate S2.________and he scores a goal, enjoys the hunter's triumph of killing hisprey. S3._________To understand how thistransformation has taken placewemust briefly look up at our ancient ancestors. They spent over aS4.________million year evolving asco-operative hunters. Theirvery survivalS5._______depended on success in thehunting-field. Under thispressure their wholeway of life, even if their bodies, became radically changed. They became S6.________chasers, runners, jumpers, aimers, throwers and prey-killers.They co-operate as skillfulmale-group attackers.S7.________Then, about ten thousand years ago, when this immensely longS8.________formative period of hunting for food, they became farmers. Their improved intelligence, so vital to their old hunting life, were put to a new S9._______use-that of penning ( 把……关在圈中), controlling and domesticatingtheir prey. The food was there on the farms, awaiting their needs. Therisks and uncertainties of farming were no longer essential for survival. S10._______02.6A great many cities are experiencing difficulties whichare nothing new in the history of cities, except in their scale.Some cities have lost their original purpose and have not foundnew one. And any large or rich city is going to attract poorS1._________immigrants, who flood in, filling with hopes of prosperityS2._________which are then often disappointing. There are backward townson the edge of Bombay or Brasilia, just as though there wereS3._________on the edge of seventeenth-century London or early nine-teenth-century Paris. This is new is the scale. DescriptionsS4._________written by eighteenth-century travelers of the poor of Mexico City, and the enormous contrasts that was to be found there,S5._________are very dissimilar to descriptions of Mexico City today -theS6._________poor can still be numbered in millions.The whole monstrous growth rests on economic prosperity,but behind it lies two myths: the myth of the city as aS7._________promised land, that attracts immigrants from rural povertyS8._________and brings it flooding into city centers, and the myth of theS9._________country as a Garden of Eden, which,a few generations late,S10._________sends them flooding out again to the suburbs.03.6The Seattle Times Company is one newspaper firm thathas recognized the need for change and done something aboutit. In the newspaper industry, papers must reflect the diversityof the communities to which they provide information.It must reflect that diversity with their news coverage or riskS1._______losing their readers' interest and their advertisers' support.Operating within Seattle, which has 20 percents racialS2.________minorities, the paper has put into place policies andprocedures for hiring and maintain a diverse workforce. TheS3._______underlying reason for the change is that for information to befair, appropriate, and subjective, it should be reported by theS4._________same kind of population that reads it.A diversity committee composed of reporters, editors, and photographers meets regularly to value the Seattle Times'S5.________content and to educate the rest of the newsroom staff aboutdiversity issues. In an addition, the paper instituted a contentS6.________audit(审查) that evaluates thefrequency and manner of representation of woman and people of color in photographs.S7._________Early audits showed that minorities were pictured far too infrequently and were pictured with a disproportionatenumber of negative articles. The audit results from S8.________improvement in the frequency of majority representation and S9.________their portrayal in neutral or positive situations. And, with a S10._______result, the Seattle Times has improved as a newspaper.The diversity training and content audits helped the SeattleTimes Company to win the PersonnelJournal Optimal Awardfor excellence in managing change.03.9"Home, sweet home" is a phrase that expresses an essential attitudein the United States. Whether the reality of life in the familyhouse is sweet or no sweet. The cherished ideal of home has great S1.________importance for many people.This ideal is a vital part of the American dream. This dream, dramatized in the history of nineteenth-century European settlers of theAmerican West, was to find a piece of place, build a house for one'sS2.________family, and started a farm. Thesesmall households were portraits of S3.________independence: the entirefamily--mother, father, children, evengrandparents—live in a small house and working together to supportS4.________each other. Anyone understood the life and death importance of family S5.________cooperation and hard work.Although most people in the United States no longer live on farms, but the ideal of home ownership is just as strong in the twentieth S6.________ century as it was in the nineteenth.When U.S, soldiers came home before World War II, forS7.________example, they dreamed of buyinghouses and starting families. But there S8.________was a tremendous boom in home building. The new houses, typically in the suburbs, were often small and more or less identical, but itS9.________satisfied a deep need. Many regarded the single-family house the basis of S10.________ their way of life.03.12Thomas Malthus published his "Essay on the Principle of Population" almost 200 years ago. Ever since then, forecastershave being warning that worldwide famine was just around the S1________next corner. The fast-growingpopulation's demand for food,they warned, would soon exceed their supply, leading to S2________widespread food shortages and starvation.But in reality, the world's total grain harvest has risensteadily over the years. Except for relative isolated trouble spots S3________like present-day Somalia, and occasional years of good harvests, S4________the world's food crisis has remained just around the corner. Most experts believe this can continue even as if the population S5________doubles by the mid-21st century, although feeding 10 billionpeople will not be easy for politics,economic and environmental S6________reasons. Optimists point to concrete examples of continued improvements in yield. In Africa, by instance, improved seed, S7________more fertilizer and advanced growing practices have more than double corn and wheat yields in an experiment. Elsewhere, rice S8________experts in the Philippines are producing a plant with few stems S9_________and more seeds. There is no guarantee that plant breeders can continue to develop new, higher-yielding crop, but most researchers see their success to date as reason for hope. S10________04.6Culture refers to the social heritage of a people - thelearned patterns for thinking, feeling and acting that characterizea population or society, include the expression of these S1._______patterns in material things. Culture is compose of non-material S2._______culture -abstract creations like values, beliefs, customsand institutional arrangements and material culture -physical object like cooking pots, computers and bathtubs. S3._______In sum, culture reflects both the ideas we share or everythingS4._______we make. In ordinary speech, a person of culture isthe individual can speak another language - the person who S5._______is unfamiliar with the arts, music, literature, philosophy, or S6._______history. But to sociologists, to be human is to be cultured,because of culture is the common world of experience we S7._______share with other members of our group.Culture is essentially to our humanness. It provides a S8._______kind of map for relating to others. Consider how you findyour way about social life. How doyou know how to act in a classroom, or a department store, or toward a person whosmiles or laugh at you? S9._______Your culture supplies you by broad, standardized, S10._______ready-made answers for dealing with each of these situations. Therefore, if we know a persons culture, we can understandand even predict a good deal of his behavior.05.1The World Health Organization (WHO) says its ten-yearcampaign to remove leprosy (麻风病) as a world healthproblem has been successful. Doctor Brundtland, head of theWHO, says a number of leprosy cases around the world hasS1._______been cut of ninety percent during the past ten years. She says S2._______efforts are continuing to complete end the disease. S3._______Leprosy is caused by bacteria spread through liquid fromthe nose and mouth. The disease mainly effects the skin and S4._______nerves. However, if leprosy is not treated it can cause permanent damage for the skin, nerves, eyes, arms or legs. S5.________In 1999, an international campaign began to end leprosy. The WHO, governments ofcountries most affected by the disease, and several other groups are part of the campaign.This alliance guarantees that all leprosy patients, even they S6._______are poor, have a right to the most modern treatment.Doctor Brundtland says leprosy is no longer a diseasethat requires life-long treatments by medical experts. Instead, patients can take that is called a multi-drug therapy. This S7._______modern treatment will cure leprosy in 6 to 12 months,depend on the form of the disease. The treatment combines S8.________several drugs taken daily or once a month. The WHO hasgiven multi-drug therapy to patients freely for the last five S9.________years. The members of the alliance against leprosy plan totarget the countries which still threatened by leprosy. Among S10_______the estimated 600,000 victims around the world, the WHObelieves about 70% are in India. The disease also remains a problem in Africa and South America.05.12Every week hundreds of CVs(简历) land on our desks.We’ve seen it all: CVs printed on pink paper, CVs that are 10pages long and CVs with silly mistakes in first paragraph. AS1 ________good CV is your passport to an interview and ,ultimate , to S2________the job you want.Initial impressions are vital, and a badly presented CVcould mean acceptance, reg ardless of what’s in it. S3_______Here are a few ways to avoid end up on the reject pile. S4_______Print your CV on good-quality white paper.CVs with flowery backgrounds or pink paper willstand out upon all the wrong reasons.S5_______Get someone to check for spelling and grammaticalerrors, because a spell-checker will pick up every S6________mistake. CVs with errors will be rejected-it showsthat yo u don’t pay attention to detail.Restrict your self to one or two pages, andlisting any publications or referees on a separate sheet. S7_______If you are sending your CV electronically, check theformatting by sending it to yourself first. keep up S8_______the format simple.Do not send a photo unless specifically requested. Ifyou have to send on ,make sure it is one taking in aS9________professional setting, rather than a holiday snap.Getting the presentation right is just the first step. Whatabout the content? The Rule here is to keep it factual andtruthful-exaggerations usually get find out. And remember S10_______to tailor your CV to each different job.06.6Until recently, dyslexia and other reading problems werea mystery to most teachers and parents. As a result, too manykids passed through school without master the printed page. S1_______Some were treated as mentallydeficient; many were left functionally illiterate(文盲的), unable to ever meet their potential. But in the last several years, there’s been arevolution in that we’ve learned about reading and dyslexia. S2_______Scientists are using a variety of new imaging techniques towatch the brain at work. Their experiments have shown that reading disorders are most likely the result of what is, in an effect, S3_______faulty writing in the brain-not lazy, stupidity or a poor home S4________environmen t. There’s also convincing evidence which dyslexia S5________is largely inherited. It is nowconsidered a chronic problemfor some kids, not just a “phase”. Scientists have alsodiscarded another old stereotype that almost all dyslexics areboys. Studies indicate that many girls are affecting as well-S6________and not getting help.At same time, educational researchers have come up S7________with innovative teaching strategies for kids who are havingtrouble learning to read. New screening tests are identifying children at risk before they get discouraged by year of S8________frustration and failure. And educators are trying to get the message to parents that theyshould be on the alert for thefirst signs of potential problems. It’s an urgent miss ion. Mass literacy is a relative new S9________social goal. A hundred years ago people didn’t need to begood readers in order to earn a living. But in the InformationAge, no one can get by with knowing how to read well and S10________understand increasingly complex material.06.12老六级The most important starting point for improving the understanding of science is undoubtedly an adequatescientific education at school. Public attitude towardsscience owe much the way science is taught in these S1________institutions. Today, school is what most people come into S2________contact with a formal instruction and explanation of sciencefor the first time, at least in a systematic way. It is at thispoint which the foundations are laid for an interest in science. S3________what is taught (and how) in this first encounter will largely determine an individual’s view of the subject in adult life. Understanding the original of the negative attitudes S4________towards science may help us to modify them. Most educationsystem neglect exploration, understanding and reflection. S5________Teachers in schools tend to present science as a collection of facts, often by more detail than necessary. As a result, S6________children memorize processes such as mathematical formulasor the periodic table, only to forget it shortly afterwards. The S7________task of learning facts and concepts, one at a time, makeslearning laborious, boring and efficient. Such a purely S8________empirical approach, which consists of observation anddescription, is also, in a sense, unscientific or incomplete.There is therefore a need for resources and methods ofteaching that facilitates a deep understanding of science in S9________an enjoyable way. Science should not only be ‘fun’ in thesame way as playing a video game, but ‘hard fun’----a deepfeeling of connection made possibly only by imaginative S10________engagement.06年12月新六级The National Endowment for the Arts recently releasedthe results of its “Reading at Risk” survey, which describedthe movement of the American public away from books and literature and toward televisionand electronic media.According to the survey, “reading is on the decline on every S1________region, within every ethnic group, and at every educational level.”The day the NEA report released, the U.S. House, in a tie S2________vote, upheld the government’s right to obtain bookstore andlibrary records under a provision of the USA Patriot Act. TheHouse proposal would have barred the federal governmentfrom demand library records, reading lists, book customer S3________lists and other material in terrorism and intelligence investigations. These two events are completely unrelated to, yet theyS4________echo each other in the message they send about the place ofbooks and reading in American culture. At the heartof the NEA survey is the belief in our democratic S5________system depends on leaders who can think critically, analyzetexts and writing clearly. All of these are skills promoted by S6________reading and discussing books and literature. At the same time, through a provision of the Patriot Act, the leaders of ourcountry are unconsciously sending the message that readingmay be connected to desirable activities that might S7________undermine our system of government rather than helping democracy flourish.Our culture’s decline in reading begin well before the S8________existence of the Patriot Act. During the 1980s’ culture wars,school systems across the country pulled some books fromlibrary shelves because its content was deemed by parents S9________and teachers to be inappropriate. Now what started in schools across the country is playing itself out on a nation stage andS10________is possibly having an impact on the reading habits of theAmerican public.参考答案:00.1S1. had→has S2.directly→indi rectlyS3. into→on S4. too→soS5.plant→planet s / worldsS6.head→mind S7.little→much S8.Consider→Co nsideringS9. they→/S10. (arriving)∧(h asty)→at00.6S1. on→byS2.unaware→aw areS3. as→thanS4. it→which S5. at→inS6.hasn't→hadn' tS7.American→Ar abS8. as→likeS9. falls→fell S10. of→/01.6S1. in→forS2. seventh→sev enS3.were→wasS4.now→thenS5. the→/S6.imported→ex portedS7.are→wereS8. (tuberculosis)∧(vanished)→hadS9.better→wors eS10.cons tantly→c onstant02.1S1.Viewing→Vie wedS2. inaccurate→a ccurate S3.(,)∧(enjoys)→heS4. up→/S5.year→yearsS6. if→/S7.co-operate→c o-operated S8.when→after S9.were→wasS10.farming→hunting02.6S1.(found)∧(new )→aS2.filling→filled S3. though→/ S4.This→WhatS5.was→wereS6.dissimilar→si milarS7. lies→lieS8.that→whichS9. it→them S10.late→later03.6S1.it→theyS2.percents→percentS3.maintain→maintainingS4.subjective→objectiveS5.meets→m eetS6.an→/S7.woman→w omenS8.from→inS9.majority→minorityS10.with→as03.9S1. no→notS2.place→land S3.started→star tS4.working→wor kS5.anyone→ever yoneS6. but→/S7.before→after S8. But→So S9. it→they S10. (house)∧(the)→as03.12S1.being→been S2. their→its S3.relative→rela tivelyS4.good→badS5. as→/S6.politics→polit ical S7. by→forS8.double→doub ledS9.few→moreS10.(as)∧(reason)→the04.6S1.include→incl udingS2.compose→composedS3.object→objec tsS4. or→and S5. (individual)∧(can)→whoS6.unfamiliar→fa miliarS7. of→/S8. essentially→essential S9.laugh→laugh sS10. by→with05.1S1. a→theS2. of→byS3.complete→co mpletelyS4.effects→affe ctsS5. for→toS6. (even) ∧(they)→if/tho ughS7.that→whatS8.depend→dep endingS9.freely→freeS10. (which)∧(still)→are05.12S1. (in)∧(first)→theS2.ultimate→ulti matelyS3. acceptance→unacceptanc eS4.end→ending S5. upon→/S6. (will)∧(pick)→notS7.listing→lis tS8.up→/S9.taking→ta kenS10.find→fou nd06.6S1master→mast eringS2that→which S3 an→/S4lazy→lazines sS5which→that S6affecting→aff ectedS7 (at)∧(same)→the S8year→yearsS9relative→rela tivelyS10with→without06.12老S1.(much)∧(the)→toS2.what→wh ereS3.which→th atS4.original→o riginS5.system→s ystemsS6.by→inS7.it→them S8.efficient→inefficientS9.facilitates →facilitateS10.possibly →possible06.12新S1. on→inS2. (report)∧(released)→w asS3.demand→de mandingS4. to→/。
大学英语四级单句改错例题解析(最终版)
大学英语四级单句改错例题解析(最终版)第一篇:大学英语四级单句改错例题解析(最终版)单句改错例题解析【例1】Sorry,I haven't got any small changes on me.【解析】这里的“changes”应改为“change”,因为“change”作“零钱”解时为不可数名词。
【例2】Is the education free in all the countries?【解析】这里“education”前面的“the”要去掉,因为抽象名词表示泛指意义时不用定冠词。
【例3】Peter is stronger than him.【解析】在省略句或不完整的从句中,代词的格应跟没有省略、完整时的格一致。
这一句完整的结构应该是“Peter is stronger than he is,因此不能用“him”。
【例4】The man bought 20 dozens socks.【解析】象dozen,hundred,thousand等数量词被大于1的基数词修饰时,仍用单数形式。
所以这里的“dozens”应该改为“dozen”。
【例5】M illion of years ago,there lived a lot of huge animals on the earth.【解析】“hundreds of”,“thousands of,“millions of等结构中,不可遗漏-s。
【例6】China is still a developed country.【解析】过去分词作定语表示完成或被动之意,而现在分词作定语则表示进行或主动之意。
而中国现在仍然是一个发展中国家,因此应把“developed”改为“developing”。
【例7】What a ashamed thing to do!【解析】“ashamed”是“感觉羞耻的”,通常很少用在形容词前面作定语,一般只作表语,而“shameful”是“可耻的”,通常用在形容词前面作定语。
新英语四级改错练习题及答案
Americans this year will swallow 15000 tons of aspirin, one of safest and most effec ve drugs 1.__________ invented by man. The most popular medicines in the 2.__________ world today, it is an effec ve pain reliever. Its bad effects are rela vely mild, and it is cheap. For millions of people suffered from arthri es, 3.__________ it is the only thing that works. Aspirin, in short, is truly the 20th-century wonder drug. It is also the second largest suicide drug and is the leading cause of poisoning among children. it has side effects that, if 4.__________ rela vely mild, are largely unrecognized between users. 5.__________ Although aspirin was first sold by Germam company in 1899, it has been around much longer than that. Hippocrates, in ancient Greece, understood the medical value of the leaves and tree bark which today is known to 6.__________ contain salicylates, the chemical in aspirin. during the 19th century, there was a great number of experimenta on 7.__________ in Europe with this chemical, and it led in the introduc on 8.__________ of aspirin. By 1915, aspirin tablets were available in the United States. A small quan ty of aspirin(two five-grain tablets) relieves pain and inflamma on. It also reduces down 9.__________ fever by interfering with some of the body's reac ons. Specifically, aspirin seems to slow down the forma on of the acids involved in pain and the complex chemical reac ons that cause fever. The chemistry of these acids is not fully understood, and the slowing effect of aspirin 10.__________ is well known. 参考答案参考答案1. of ∧safest →the 2. medicines →medicine(or: drug) 3. suffered →suffering 4. if →though(or: although) 5. between →among 6. is →are 7. number →deal(or: amount,quan ty) 8. in →to 9. down →/ Crime has its own cycles, a magazine reported some years before. Police records that were studied 1.__________ for five years from over 2400 ci es and towns show a surprised link between changes in the season and 2.__________ crime pa erns. The pa ern of crime has varied very li le over a long period of years. Murder reaches its high during July and August, as does rape and other violent 3.__________ a acks.Murder, however, is more than seasonal: it is a 4.__________ weekend crime. It is also a high me crime: 62 percent of members are commi ed between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m. Unlike the summer high in crimes of bodily harm, burglary has a different cycle. You are most likely to being robbed between 6 p.m. and 2 a.m. on a Saturday 5.__________ night in December, January,or February. The most uncriminal month of all? May--except for one strange sta s c. More dog bites are reported in this month than in an other month of the year. 6.__________ Apparent our intellectual seasonal cycles are 7.__________ completely different from our criminal tendencies. professor Hun ngton, of the Founda on for the Study of Cycles, made extensive studies to discover the seasons when people read serious books, a end scien fic mee ngs, make the highest scores on examina ons, and to propose the most changes to patents. In all 8.__________ instances, he found a spring peak and an autumn peak separated by a summer low. On other hand, Professor 9.__________ hun nton's studies indicated that June is the peak month for suicides and admissions in mental hospitals. 10.__________ June is also a peak month for marriages! 参考答案参考答案1. before →ago 2. surprised →surprising 4. however →moreover 5. being →be 6. an →any 7. apparent →apparently 8. to(1) →/ 9. On ∧other →the 10. in →to Personal rela onaships are very important. They are the key of doing business in Arab countries. Try 1.__________ to iden fy the decision-maker regarding as your 2.__________ product or service immediatelyand get to know him on a friendly basis. Do your homework. Be prepared to discuss de al of your product or proposal. Be ready 3.__________ to answer technical ques ons. Familiarize yourself to the Moslem and na onal 4.__________ holidays. Avoid a visit during Ramadan, the Moslem month of fas ng. Most Arab countries have a six-day workweek from Saturday through Thursday. When matching 5.__________ with the Monday to Friday prac ce in most Western countries, it leaves only three and a half workdays shared.Remember this in planning your appointments. Moslems do not eat pork. Some are strict about the religion's prohibi on for alcoholic beverages. If you 6.__________ are not sure, wait your host to suggest the proper 7.__________ thing to drink. Only a genera on ago, Mauritania's capital city was many day's walk from the Sahara. Today it is in the Sahara. 1.__________ The sand blows through the city streets and piles up in 2.__________ walls and fences. The desert stretches out as far as the eye can see. In some parts of the Amazon rain forest in brazil, all the trees have cut down. The earth lies bare and dry in the 3.__________ hot sun. Nothing grow there anymore. 4.__________ Over vast areas of every con nent, the rainfall and vegeta on necessary for life is disappearing. Already 5.__________ more than 40 percent of the earth's land is desert and 6.__________ desert-like. About 628 million people--one out of seven-- live in these dry regions. In the past, they have managed to survive, but in difficulty. Now, largely through problems 7.__________ caused by modern life, our existence is threatened by the 8.__________ slow, steady spread of the earth's deserts. Many countries first became concerned in 1970s a er 9.__________ a terrible drought and famine destroyed Africa's Sahel, the fragile desert along the south edge of the Sahara. Thousands of people died even though there was a worldwide effort to send food and medicine to the starved people. 10.__________ 参考答案参考答案1. day's →days' 2. in →against 3. have ∧cut →been 4. grow →grows 5. is →are 6. and →or 7. in →with 8. our →their 9. in ∧1970s →the 。
改错英文练习题
改错英文练习题IntroductionIn this article, we will provide a series of English exercise questions designed to help improve your language skills. Each question contains a sentence with one or more errors, and your task is to identify and correct those errors. By practicing with these exercises, you will enhance your understanding of grammar, vocabulary, and sentence structure. Let's begin!Exercise 1:The girl bought a red beautiful car.Correction: The girl bought a beautiful red car.Explanation: In English, adjectives generally follow a specific order. When describing a noun, we use the order: opinion-size-age-shape-color-origin-material-purpose-noun. Therefore, the correct order of the adjectives in this sentence is "a beautiful red car" instead of "a red beautiful car."Exercise 2:My sister has visited to France last summer.Correction: My sister visited France last summer.Explanation: In this sentence, the verb "visited" should be used without the preposition "to." The correct sentence structure should be "My sister visited France last summer."Exercise 3:The students must to study hard for the exam.Correction: The students must study hard for the exam.Explanation: The verb "must" already indicates obligation or necessity, so there is no need to add the word "to" after it. The correct sentence structure should be "The students must study hard for the exam."Exercise 4:He has been worked at this company for five years.Correction: He has worked at this company for five years.Explanation: The present perfect tense is formed by using the auxiliary verb "have/has" with the past participle of the main verb. In this case, the past participle of "work" is "worked." Therefore, the correct sentence structure should be "He has worked at this company for five years."Exercise 5:I have been born on January 1st.Correction: I was born on January 1st.Explanation: When referring to the moment of birth, we use the simple past tense "was/were" instead of the present perfect tense. The correct sentence structure should be "I was born on January 1st."Exercise 6:The dog chased it's tail.Correction: The dog chased its tail.Explanation: The possessive pronoun "its" does not require an apostrophe. The correct sentence structure should be "The dog chased its tail."Exercise 7:She speaks Spanish very good.Correction: She speaks Spanish very well.Explanation: When describing someone's ability or proficiency in a language, we use the adverb "well" instead of the adjective "good." The correct sentence structure should be "She speaks Spanish very well."Exercise 8:He don't like to eat broccoli.Correction: He doesn't like to eat broccoli.Explanation: The verb "like" requires the auxiliary verb "do/does" in the negative form. The correct sentence structure should be "He doesn't like to eat broccoli."ConclusionBy practicing these English exercise questions, you have honed your skills in identifying and correcting common errors in grammar, vocabulary, and sentence structure. Remember to pay attention to adjective order, verb usage, tense consistency, and incorrect word choices. Keep practicing, and you will continue to improve your English proficiency.。
四六级历年改错真题.doc
改错: 历年全真试题及参考答案(00.1-06.12)00.1Until the very latest moment of his existence, manhas been bound to the planet on which he originated anddeveloped. Now he had the capability to leave that planet S1._______and move out into the universe to those worlds which hehas known previously only directly. Men have explored S2._______parts of the moon, put spaceships in orbit around anotherplanet and possibly within the decade will land into anotherS3._______planet and explore it. Can we be toobold as toS4._______suggest that we may be able to colonize other planetS5._______within the not - too - distant future ? Some have advocatedsuch a procedure as a solution to the populationproblem: ship the excess people off to the moon. Butwe must keep in head the billions of dollars we mightS6._______spend in carrying out the project. To maintain theearth's population at its present level, we would haveto blast off into space 7,500 people every hour ofevery day of the year.Why are we spending so littlemoney on spaceS7._______exploration ? Consider the greatneed for improvingS8._______many aspects of the global environment, one is surelyjustified in his concern for the money and resourcesthat they are poured into the space exploration efforts.S9._______But perhaps we should look at both sides of thecoin before arriving hasty conclusions.S10._______00.6When you start talking about good and bad mannersyou immediately start meetingdifficulties. Manypeople just cannot agree what they mean. We asked alady, who replied that she thought you could tell awell-mannered person on the way they occupied the S1._______space around them—for example, when such a personwalks down a street he or she is constantly unaware of S2._______others. Such people never bump into other people.However, a second person thought that this wasmore a question of civilized behavior as good manners. S3._______Instead, this other person told us a story, it heS4._______said was quite well known, about an American whohad been invited to an Arab meal at one of the countriesS5._______of the Middle East. The American hasn't beenS6._______told very much about the kind of food he mightexpect. If he had known about American food, heS7._______might have behaved better.Immediately before him was a very flat piece ofbread that looked, to him, very much as a napkin (餐巾).S8._______Picking it up, he put it into his collar, so that itfalls across his shirt. His Arab host, who had beenS9._______watching, said of nothing, but immediately copiedS10._______the action of his guest.And that, said this second person, was a fineexample of good manners.01.6More people die of tuberculosis (结核病) than of anyother disease caused by a single agent. This has probablybeen the case in quite a while. During the early stagesof S1. ________the industrial revolution, perhaps one in every seventh S2.________deaths in Europe's crowded cities were caused by the S3. ________ disease. From now on, though, western eyes, missing the S4. ________ global picture, saw the trouble going into decline. With occasional breaks for war, the rates of death andinfection in the Europe and America dropped steadily S5. ________through the 19th and 20th centuries. In the 1950s, the introduction of antibiotics (抗菌素) strengthened thetrend in rich countries, and the antibiotics were allowedto be imported to poor countries.Medicalresearchers S 6. ________declared victory and withdrew.They are wrong. In the mid-1980s the frequency of S7. ________ infections and deaths started to pick up again around theworld. Where tuberculosis vanished, it came back; in S8. ________ many places where it had never been away, it grew better. S9. ________The World Health Organization estimates that 1.7billion people (a third of the earth's population) sufferfrom tuberculosis. Even when the infection rate wasfalling, population growth kept the number of clinicalcases more or less constantly at 8 million a year. Around S10. ________3 million of those people died, nearly all of them in poor countries.02.1Sporting activities are essentially modified forms of huntingbehavior. Viewing biologically, the modern footballer is revealed as a S1.________member of a disguised hunting pack. His killing weapon has turned intoa harmless football and his prey into a goal-mouth. If his aim isinaccurate S2.________and he scores a goal, enjoys the hunter's triumph of killing hisprey. S3._________To understand how thistransformation has taken placewemust briefly look up at our ancient ancestors. They spent over aS4.________million year evolving asco-operative hunters. Theirvery survivalS5._______depended on success in thehunting-field. Under thispressure their wholeway of life, even if their bodies, became radically changed. They became S6.________chasers, runners, jumpers, aimers, throwers and prey-killers.They co-operate as skillfulmale-group attackers.S7.________Then, about ten thousand years ago, when this immensely longS8.________formative period of hunting for food, they became farmers. Their improved intelligence, so vital to their old hunting life, were put to a new S9._______use-that of penning ( 把……关在圈中), controlling and domesticatingtheir prey. The food was there on the farms, awaiting their needs. Therisks and uncertainties of farming were no longer essential for survival. S10._______02.6A great many cities are experiencing difficulties whichare nothing new in the history of cities, except in their scale.Some cities have lost their original purpose and have not foundnew one. And any large or rich city is going to attract poorS1._________immigrants, who flood in, filling with hopes of prosperityS2._________which are then often disappointing. There are backward townson the edge of Bombay or Brasilia, just as though there wereS3._________on the edge of seventeenth-century London or early nine-teenth-century Paris. This is new is the scale. DescriptionsS4._________written by eighteenth-century travelers of the poor of Mexico City, and the enormous contrasts that was to be found there,S5._________are very dissimilar to descriptions of Mexico City today -theS6._________poor can still be numbered in millions.The whole monstrous growth rests on economic prosperity,but behind it lies two myths: the myth of the city as aS7._________promised land, that attracts immigrants from rural povertyS8._________and brings it flooding into city centers, and the myth of theS9._________country as a Garden of Eden, which,a few generations late,S10._________sends them flooding out again to the suburbs.03.6The Seattle Times Company is one newspaper firm thathas recognized the need for change and done something aboutit. In the newspaper industry, papers must reflect the diversityof the communities to which they provide information.It must reflect that diversity with their news coverage or riskS1._______losing their readers' interest and their advertisers' support.Operating within Seattle, which has 20 percents racialS2.________minorities, the paper has put into place policies andprocedures for hiring and maintain a diverse workforce. TheS3._______underlying reason for the change is that for information to befair, appropriate, and subjective, it should be reported by theS4._________same kind of population that reads it.A diversity committee composed of reporters, editors, and photographers meets regularly to value the Seattle Times'S5.________content and to educate the rest of the newsroom staff aboutdiversity issues. In an addition, the paper instituted a contentS6.________audit(审查) that evaluates thefrequency and manner of representation of woman and people of color in photographs.S7._________Early audits showed that minorities were pictured far too infrequently and were pictured with a disproportionatenumber of negative articles. The audit results from S8.________improvement in the frequency of majority representation and S9.________their portrayal in neutral or positive situations. And, with a S10._______result, the Seattle Times has improved as a newspaper.The diversity training and content audits helped the SeattleTimes Company to win the PersonnelJournal Optimal Awardfor excellence in managing change.03.9"Home, sweet home" is a phrase that expresses an essential attitudein the United States. Whether the reality of life in the familyhouse is sweet or no sweet. The cherished ideal of home has great S1.________importance for many people.This ideal is a vital part of the American dream. This dream, dramatized in the history of nineteenth-century European settlers of theAmerican West, was to find a piece of place, build a house for one'sS2.________family, and started a farm. Thesesmall households were portraits of S3.________independence: the entirefamily--mother, father, children, evengrandparents—live in a small house and working together to supportS4.________each other. Anyone understood the life and death importance of family S5.________cooperation and hard work.Although most people in the United States no longer live on farms, but the ideal of home ownership is just as strong in the twentieth S6.________ century as it was in the nineteenth.When U.S, soldiers came home before World War II, forS7.________example, they dreamed of buyinghouses and starting families. But there S8.________was a tremendous boom in home building. The new houses, typically in the suburbs, were often small and more or less identical, but itS9.________satisfied a deep need. Many regarded the single-family house the basis of S10.________ their way of life.03.12Thomas Malthus published his "Essay on the Principle of Population" almost 200 years ago. Ever since then, forecastershave being warning that worldwide famine was just around the S1________next corner. The fast-growingpopulation's demand for food,they warned, would soon exceed their supply, leading to S2________widespread food shortages and starvation.But in reality, the world's total grain harvest has risensteadily over the years. Except for relative isolated trouble spots S3________like present-day Somalia, and occasional years of good harvests, S4________the world's food crisis has remained just around the corner. Most experts believe this can continue even as if the population S5________doubles by the mid-21st century, although feeding 10 billionpeople will not be easy for politics,economic and environmental S6________reasons. Optimists point to concrete examples of continued improvements in yield. In Africa, by instance, improved seed, S7________more fertilizer and advanced growing practices have more than double corn and wheat yields in an experiment. Elsewhere, rice S8________experts in the Philippines are producing a plant with few stems S9_________and more seeds. There is no guarantee that plant breeders can continue to develop new, higher-yielding crop, but most researchers see their success to date as reason for hope. S10________04.6Culture refers to the social heritage of a people - thelearned patterns for thinking, feeling and acting that characterizea population or society, include the expression of these S1._______patterns in material things. Culture is compose of non-material S2._______culture -abstract creations like values, beliefs, customsand institutional arrangements and material culture -physical object like cooking pots, computers and bathtubs. S3._______In sum, culture reflects both the ideas we share or everythingS4._______we make. In ordinary speech, a person of culture isthe individual can speak another language - the person who S5._______is unfamiliar with the arts, music, literature, philosophy, or S6._______history. But to sociologists, to be human is to be cultured,because of culture is the common world of experience we S7._______share with other members of our group.Culture is essentially to our humanness. It provides a S8._______kind of map for relating to others. Consider how you findyour way about social life. How doyou know how to act in a classroom, or a department store, or toward a person whosmiles or laugh at you? S9._______Your culture supplies you by broad, standardized, S10._______ready-made answers for dealing with each of these situations. Therefore, if we know a persons culture, we can understandand even predict a good deal of his behavior.05.1The World Health Organization (WHO) says its ten-yearcampaign to remove leprosy (麻风病) as a world healthproblem has been successful. Doctor Brundtland, head of theWHO, says a number of leprosy cases around the world hasS1._______been cut of ninety percent during the past ten years. She says S2._______efforts are continuing to complete end the disease. S3._______Leprosy is caused by bacteria spread through liquid fromthe nose and mouth. The disease mainly effects the skin and S4._______nerves. However, if leprosy is not treated it can cause permanent damage for the skin, nerves, eyes, arms or legs. S5.________In 1999, an international campaign began to end leprosy. The WHO, governments ofcountries most affected by the disease, and several other groups are part of the campaign.This alliance guarantees that all leprosy patients, even they S6._______are poor, have a right to the most modern treatment.Doctor Brundtland says leprosy is no longer a diseasethat requires life-long treatments by medical experts. Instead, patients can take that is called a multi-drug therapy. This S7._______modern treatment will cure leprosy in 6 to 12 months,depend on the form of the disease. The treatment combines S8.________several drugs taken daily or once a month. The WHO hasgiven multi-drug therapy to patients freely for the last five S9.________years. The members of the alliance against leprosy plan totarget the countries which still threatened by leprosy. Among S10_______the estimated 600,000 victims around the world, the WHObelieves about 70% are in India. The disease also remains a problem in Africa and South America.05.12Every week hundreds of CVs(简历) land on our desks.We’ve seen it all: CVs printed on pink paper, CVs that are 10pages long and CVs with silly mistakes in first paragraph. AS1 ________good CV is your passport to an interview and ,ultimate , to S2________the job you want.Initial impressions are vital, and a badly presented CVcould mean acceptance, reg ardless of what’s in it. S3_______Here are a few ways to avoid end up on the reject pile. S4_______Print your CV on good-quality white paper.CVs with flowery backgrounds or pink paper willstand out upon all the wrong reasons.S5_______Get someone to check for spelling and grammaticalerrors, because a spell-checker will pick up every S6________mistake. CVs with errors will be rejected-it showsthat yo u don’t pay attention to detail.Restrict your self to one or two pages, andlisting any publications or referees on a separate sheet. S7_______If you are sending your CV electronically, check theformatting by sending it to yourself first. keep up S8_______the format simple.Do not send a photo unless specifically requested. Ifyou have to send on ,make sure it is one taking in aS9________professional setting, rather than a holiday snap.Getting the presentation right is just the first step. Whatabout the content? The Rule here is to keep it factual andtruthful-exaggerations usually get find out. And remember S10_______to tailor your CV to each different job.06.6Until recently, dyslexia and other reading problems werea mystery to most teachers and parents. As a result, too manykids passed through school without master the printed page. S1_______Some were treated as mentallydeficient; many were left functionally illiterate(文盲的), unable to ever meet their potential. But in the last several years, there’s been arevolution in that we’ve learned about reading and dyslexia. S2_______Scientists are using a variety of new imaging techniques towatch the brain at work. Their experiments have shown that reading disorders are most likely the result of what is, in an effect, S3_______faulty writing in the brain-not lazy, stupidity or a poor home S4________environmen t. There’s also convincing evidence which dyslexia S5________is largely inherited. It is nowconsidered a chronic problemfor some kids, not just a “phase”. Scientists have alsodiscarded another old stereotype that almost all dyslexics areboys. Studies indicate that many girls are affecting as well-S6________and not getting help.At same time, educational researchers have come up S7________with innovative teaching strategies for kids who are havingtrouble learning to read. New screening tests are identifying children at risk before they get discouraged by year of S8________frustration and failure. And educators are trying to get the message to parents that theyshould be on the alert for thefirst signs of potential problems. It’s an urgent miss ion. Mass literacy is a relative new S9________social goal. A hundred years ago people didn’t need to begood readers in order to earn a living. But in the InformationAge, no one can get by with knowing how to read well and S10________understand increasingly complex material.06.12老六级The most important starting point for improving the understanding of science is undoubtedly an adequatescientific education at school. Public attitude towardsscience owe much the way science is taught in these S1________institutions. Today, school is what most people come into S2________contact with a formal instruction and explanation of sciencefor the first time, at least in a systematic way. It is at thispoint which the foundations are laid for an interest in science. S3________what is taught (and how) in this first encounter will largely determine an individual’s view of the subject in adult life. Understanding the original of the negative attitudes S4________towards science may help us to modify them. Most educationsystem neglect exploration, understanding and reflection. S5________Teachers in schools tend to present science as a collection of facts, often by more detail than necessary. As a result, S6________children memorize processes such as mathematical formulasor the periodic table, only to forget it shortly afterwards. The S7________task of learning facts and concepts, one at a time, makeslearning laborious, boring and efficient. Such a purely S8________empirical approach, which consists of observation anddescription, is also, in a sense, unscientific or incomplete.There is therefore a need for resources and methods ofteaching that facilitates a deep understanding of science in S9________an enjoyable way. Science should not only be ‘fun’ in thesame way as playing a video game, but ‘hard fun’----a deepfeeling of connection made possibly only by imaginative S10________engagement.06年12月新六级The National Endowment for the Arts recently releasedthe results of its “Reading at Risk” survey, which describedthe movement of the American public away from books and literature and toward televisionand electronic media.According to the survey, “reading is on the decline on every S1________region, within every ethnic group, and at every educational level.”The day the NEA report released, the U.S. House, in a tie S2________vote, upheld the government’s right to obtain bookstore andlibrary records under a provision of the USA Patriot Act. TheHouse proposal would have barred the federal governmentfrom demand library records, reading lists, book customer S3________lists and other material in terrorism and intelligence investigations. These two events are completely unrelated to, yet theyS4________echo each other in the message they send about the place ofbooks and reading in American culture. At the heartof the NEA survey is the belief in our democratic S5________system depends on leaders who can think critically, analyzetexts and writing clearly. All of these are skills promoted by S6________reading and discussing books and literature. At the same time, through a provision of the Patriot Act, the leaders of ourcountry are unconsciously sending the message that readingmay be connected to desirable activities that might S7________undermine our system of government rather than helping democracy flourish.Our culture’s decline in reading begin well before the S8________existence of the Patriot Act. During the 1980s’ culture wars,school systems across the country pulled some books fromlibrary shelves because its content was deemed by parents S9________and teachers to be inappropriate. Now what started in schools across the country is playing itself out on a nation stage andS10________is possibly having an impact on the reading habits of theAmerican public.参考答案:00.1S1. had→has S2.directly→indi rectlyS3. into→on S4. too→soS5.plant→planet s / worldsS6.head→mind S7.little→much S8.Consider→Co nsideringS9. they→/S10. (arriving)∧(h asty)→at00.6S1. on→byS2.unaware→aw areS3. as→thanS4. it→which S5. at→inS6.hasn't→hadn' tS7.American→Ar abS8. as→likeS9. falls→fell S10. of→/01.6S1. in→forS2. seventh→sev enS3.were→wasS4.now→thenS5. the→/S6.imported→ex portedS7.are→wereS8. (tuberculosis)∧(vanished)→hadS9.better→wors eS10.cons tantly→c onstant02.1S1.Viewing→Vie wedS2. inaccurate→a ccurate S3.(,)∧(enjoys)→heS4. up→/S5.year→yearsS6. if→/S7.co-operate→c o-operated S8.when→after S9.were→wasS10.farming→hunting02.6S1.(found)∧(new )→aS2.filling→filled S3. though→/ S4.This→WhatS5.was→wereS6.dissimilar→si milarS7. lies→lieS8.that→whichS9. it→them S10.late→later03.6S1.it→theyS2.percents→percentS3.maintain→maintainingS4.subjective→objectiveS5.meets→m eetS6.an→/S7.woman→w omenS8.from→inS9.majority→minorityS10.with→as03.9S1. no→notS2.place→land S3.started→star tS4.working→wor kS5.anyone→ever yoneS6. but→/S7.before→after S8. But→So S9. it→they S10. (house)∧(the)→as03.12S1.being→been S2. their→its S3.relative→rela tivelyS4.good→badS5. as→/S6.politics→polit ical S7. by→forS8.double→doub ledS9.few→moreS10.(as)∧(reason)→the04.6S1.include→incl udingS2.compose→composedS3.object→objec tsS4. or→and S5. (individual)∧(can)→whoS6.unfamiliar→fa miliarS7. of→/S8. essentially→essential S9.laugh→laugh sS10. by→with05.1S1. a→theS2. of→byS3.complete→co mpletelyS4.effects→affe ctsS5. for→toS6. (even) ∧(they)→if/tho ughS7.that→whatS8.depend→dep endingS9.freely→freeS10. (which)∧(still)→are05.12S1. (in)∧(first)→theS2.ultimate→ulti matelyS3. acceptance→unacceptanc eS4.end→ending S5. upon→/S6. (will)∧(pick)→notS7.listing→lis tS8.up→/S9.taking→ta kenS10.find→fou nd06.6S1master→mast eringS2that→which S3 an→/S4lazy→lazines sS5which→that S6affecting→aff ectedS7 (at)∧(same)→the S8year→yearsS9relative→rela tivelyS10with→without06.12老S1.(much)∧(the)→toS2.what→wh ereS3.which→th atS4.original→o riginS5.system→s ystemsS6.by→inS7.it→them S8.efficient→inefficientS9.facilitates →facilitateS10.possibly →possible06.12新S1. on→inS2. (report)∧(released)→w asS3.demand→de mandingS4. to→/。
大学英语四级改错题
ቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱ
❖ 91.Though a skilled worker,__________ (他被 公司解雇了).
❖ 【句意】尽管他是个熟练的工人,但还是被公司解 雇了。
❖ 【解析】本题要求翻译让步状语从句之后的主句, 关键之一是看考生是否掌握though引导让步状语从 句时,主句不应有but存在。
❖ 如06年6月份的第87题,Having spent some time in the city,he had no trouble__________(找到去 历史博物馆的路).
❖ 如果不考虑整句话中的have no trouble in doing结 构而直接译为find the way to the history museum显 然是错误的。
❖ 2)They offered me coffee and other drinks. We have a good time talking and laughing. (96)
❖ 3)Hello,I learn about you from my English teacher,…(’97)
❖ 4)My favourite sport is football.I was a member of our school football team.(’98)
倒装、状语从句(最常考)、定语从句
•重点单词 (key words): •固定搭配 (set structures):
语法结构(grammar)
1.分词: 87. Having spent some time in the city, he had no
大学英语四级改错专项练习含详解
大学英语四级改错专项练习(含详解)American law regards a partnership as an associationof two or more persons who have agreed tocombine their labour, property, and skill, or some orall of them, for the purpose of engaging in lawfulbusiness and shared profits and losses between them. 1. ____The parties forming such an association is known as 2. ____partners. Partners may create a name and use a real 3. ____family name or names for a partnership. The agreementto form a partnership is known as an article ofco-partnership or partnership contract. The importantest 4. ____provision of the agreement is the one stipulating themanner of distributing profits.Any number of persons may contract to forming 5. ____a partnership, and firms of partners may enter intopartnership with one another. However, mostcorporations have not power to enter into partnership 6. ____if such power is expressly given in the corporate charter 7. ____or article of association. New members may beadmitted into an existed partnership only with the 8. ____consent of all the partners. The agreement of a partnershiphas a definite term of years in general. If no durationis specified, it is said to be a partnership atwill and can legally terminate at any time by any 9. ____partners. A partnership can be dissolved or terminated 10. ____and the terms of the partnership agreement modifiedat any time.答案部分1.【参考答案】将shared改为sharing。
英语四级考试改错习题
Exercise 1 改正下列句子中主语使用的错误。
1.Too easy or too difficult is no good for us.2.But it may occur some new problems.3.The study of the graduate course is very busy.4.His illness was recovered.5.In our country feels very free.6.Rich doesn't ensure a happy life.7.Keep two full-time jobs is simply impossible.st summer vacation was very free and happy.9.Now people's lives don't leave plastics away.10.This is because fake commodities can make a lot of money.Exercise 2 改正下列句子中谓语使用的错误。
1.In our modern society, there are many examples around us show that many people are cheated.2.I have to visit the teacher who teach the College English.3.None can negative the importance of money.4.The eating habit of Chinese people have changed in the past decade.5.Now fruits and vegetables can be seen everywhere when it is in seasom.6.I feel proud to come to our university.7.There are many people take part in sports and games now.8.Although difficulty is exist, but we can overcome it.9.Now,many universities access to goad libraries.10.Avers,number of hours a student spend on the Internet kepps increasing very fast.。
新英语四级改错练习题及答案精选四
新英语四级改错练习题及答案精选四Only a generation ago, Mauritanias capital city wasmany days walk from the Sahara. Today it is in the Sahara.1.__________The sand blows through the city streets and piles up in2.__________walls and fences. The desert stretches out as far as theeye can see.In some parts of the Amazon rain forest in brazil, allthe trees have cut down. The earth lies bare and dry in the3.__________hot sun. Nothing grow there anymore.4.__________Over vast areas of every continent, the rainfall andvegetation necessary for life is disappearing. Already5.__________more than 40 percent of the earths land is desert and6.__________desert-like. About 628 million people--one out of seven--live in these dry regions. In the past, they have managed tosurvive, but in difficulty. Now, largely through problems7.__________caused by modern life, our existence is threatened by the8.__________slow, steady spread of the earths deserts.Many countries first became concerned in 1970s after 9.__________a terrible drought and famine destroyed Africas Sahel,the fragile desert along the south edge of the Sahara.Thousands of people died even though there was aworldwideeffort to send food and medicine to the starved people.10.__________参考答案1. days days2. in against3. have cut been4. grow grows5. is are6. and or7. in with8. our their9. in 1970s the。
新英语四级改错练习题及答案精选五
新英语四级改错练习题及答案精选五Most people work to earn a living and they produce goods and services Goods are either agricultural or manufactured . Services are such things like education, 1._________medicine, and commerce. These people provide 2.__________goods; some provide services. Other people provideboth goods or services. For example, in the same 3.__________garage a man may buy a car or some service whichhelps him maintain his car.The work people do is called as economic 4.__________activity. All economic activities taken together makeup the economic system of a town, a city, a country,or the world. Such economic system is the sum-total 5.__________of what people do and what they want. The workpeople do either provides what they need or providesthe money with that they can buy essential 6.__________commodities. Of course, most people hope to haveenough money to buy commodities and services whichare essential but which provide some particular 7. __________personal satisfaction, such as toys for children, visits 8. __________the cinema, and books.The science of economics is basic upon the facts 9. __________of our everyday lives. Economists study our everydaylives and the general life of our communities in ordertounderstand the whole economic system of which weare a part. They try to describe the facts of theeconomy in which we live, and to explain how itworks. The economist methods should of course be 10. __________strictly objective and scientific.参考答案:1. like as2. Those Some3. or and4. called as call5. Such Such an6. that which7. essential nonessential or +not8. visits visits to9. basic based10. economist economists。
大学英语四级改错题12篇
大学英语四级改错题12篇Passage 1Error Correction (15 minutes)Directions:This part consists of a short passage. In this passage, there are altogether 10 mistakes, one in each numbered line. You may have to change a word, add a word or delete a word. Mark out the mistakes and put the corrections in the blanks provided. If you change a word, cross it out and write the correct word in the corresponding blank. If you add a word, put an insertion mark (∧) in the right place and write the missing word in the blank. If yo u delete a word, cross it out and put a slash (/) in the blank.Example:Television is rapidly becoming the literatures of our periods.1.time/times/periodMany of the arguments having used for the study ofliterature2. /___________as a school subject are valid for ∧study of television. 3. the___________One major decision which faces the American studentready tobegin higher education is the choice of attending a largeuniversity or a small college. The large universityprovides awide range of specialized departments, as well numerous71. __________ courses within such departments. The small college,therefore,72. __________generally provides a limited number of courses andspecializations but offer a better student-faculty ratio,thus73. __________permit individualized attention to student. Because of itslarge74. __________ student body (often exceeding 20,000) consisting in many75. __________ people from different countries the university exposes itsstudents to many different culture, social andout-of-class76. __________programmes. On the other hand, the smaller, morehomogeneous(同性质的) student body of the big college77. __________ affords greater opportunities in such activities.Finally, theuniversity closely approximates the real world and which78. __________ provides a relaxed, impersonal, and sometimes anonymous(隐姓埋名的) existence, on the contrast, the intimate79. __________ atmosphere of the small college allows the student fouryears ofstructural living in which to expect and preparing for thereal80. __________ world. In making his choice among educational institutionsthestudent must, there fore, consider a great many factors.71. (well) ? (well) as 72. therefore ? however73. offer ? offers 74. permit ? permitting77. big ? small 78. and ? / 或 and ? which, this79. contrast ? contrary 80. preparing ? preparePassage 2Thomas Malthus published his "Essay on the Principleof Population" almost 200 years ago. Ever since then,forecasters have being warning that worldwide famine was S1. _____ just around the next corner. The fast-growing population'sdemand for food, they warned, would soon exceed their S2. _____ supply, leading to widespread food shortages and starvation.But in reality, the world's total grain harvest has risensteadily over the years. Except for relative isolated trouble S3. _____ spots like present-day Somalia, and occasional years ofgood harvests, the world's food crisis has remained just S4. _____ around the corner. Most experts believe this can continueeven as if the population doubles by the mid-21st century,S5. _____ although feeding I0 billion people will not be easy forpolitics, economic and environmental reasons. Optimists S6. _____ point to concrete examples of continued improvementsin yield. In Africa, by instance, improved seed, more S7. _____ fertilizer and advanced growing practices have more thandouble corn and wheat yields in an experiment. Elsewhere,S8. _____ rice experts in the Philippines are producing a plant with few S9. _____ stems and more seeds. There is no guarantee that plantbreeders can continue to develop new, higher-yieldingcrop, but most researchers see their success to date as reason S10. _____ for hope.S1. being?been S2. their?itsS3. relative?relatively S4. good?badS5. as?去掉 S6. politics?politicalS7. by?for S8. double?doubledS9. few?more S10. reason?the reasonPassage 3The Seattle Times Company is one newspaper firmthathas recognized the need for change and done somethingaboutit. In the newspaper industry, papers must reflect thediversityof the communities to which they provide information.S1. _________It must reflect that diversity with their newscoverage or risklosing their readers’ interest and theiradvertisers’ support.Operating within Seattle, which has 20 percents S2. _________minorities, the paper has put into place policies andS3. _________ procedures for hiring and maintain a diverseworkforce. Theunderlying reason for the change is that forinformation to beS4. _________ fair, appropriate, and subjective, it should bereported by thesame kind of population that reads it.A diversity committee composed of reporters,editors, andS5. _________ photographers meets regularly to value the SeattleTimes’content and to educate the rest of the newsroom staffaboutS6. _________ diversity issues. In an addition, the paperinstituted a contentaudit (审查) that evaluates the frequency and mannerofrepresentation of woman and people of color inS7. _________ photographs.Early audits showed that minorities were pictured fartooinfrequently and were pictured with adisproportionatenumber of negative articles. The audit results from S8. _________S9. _________ improvement in the frequency of majorityrepresentation andS10. _________ their portrayal in neutral or positive situations.And, with aresult, the Seattle Times has improved as a newspaper.The diversity training and content audits helped theSeattle Times Company to win the Personal JournalOptimas Award for excellence in managing change.S1. it ? they S2. percents ? percentS3. maintain ? maintaining S4. subjective ? objectiveS5. value ? evaluate S6. an ? /S7. woman ? women S8. from ? inS9. majority ? minority S10. with ? asPassage 4A great many cities are experiencing difficultieswhichare nothing new in the history of cities, except intheir scale.Some cities have lost their original purpose and havenot foundnew one. And any large or rich city is going to attractS1. __________ poorprosperitywhich are then often disappointing. There are backwardtownsS3. __________ on the edge of Bombay or Brasilia, just as though therewereon the edge of seventeenth-century London or earlynine-teenth-century Paris. This is new is the scale.S4. __________ Descriptionswritten by eighteenth-century travelers of the poorof MexicoCity, and the enormous contrasts that was to be foundS5. __________ there,S6. __________ are very dissimilar to descriptions of Mexico Citytoday—thepoor can still be numbered in millions.The whole monstrous growth rests on economicprosper-S7. __________ ity, but behind it lies two myths: the myth of the cityas aS8. __________ promised land, that attracts immigrants from ruralpovertyand brings it flooding into city centers, and the mythS9. __________ of theS10. __________ country as a Garden of Eden, which, a few generationslate,sends them flooding out again to the suburbs.S1. new ? a new S2. filling ? filledS3. though ? if S4. This ? WhatS5. was ? were S6. dissimilar ? similarS7. lies ? lie S8. that ? whichS9. it ? them S10. late ? laterPassage 5Sporting activities are essentially modified formsofhunting behavior. Viewing biologically, the modern S1. __________ footballer is revealed as a member of a disguised huntingpack. His killing weapon has turned into a harmlessfootballS2. __________ and his prey into a goal-mouth. If his aim is inaccurateand hescores a goal, enjoys the hu nter’s triumph of killinghis prey.S3. __________ To understand how this transformation has takenplace wemust briefly look up at our ancient ancestors. They spent S4. __________million year evolving as co-operative hunters. TheirS5. __________ very survivaldepended on success in the hunting-field. Under thispressureS6. __________ their whole way of life, even if their bodies, becameradicailychanged. They became chasers, runners, jumpers, aimers,throwers and prey-killers. They co-operate as skillfulS7. __________ male-groupattackers.S8. __________ Then, about ten thousand years ago, when thisimmenselylong formative period of hunting for food, they becamefarmers. Their improved intelligence, so vital to theiroldhunting life, were put to a new use—that of penning (把S9. __________……关在圈中), controlling and domesticating theirprey. Thefood was there on the farms, awaiting their needs. Therisks anduncertainties of farming were no longer essential forsurvival.S1. Viewing ? Viewed S2. inaccurate ? accurateS3. (enjoys) ? he (enjoys) S4. up ? backS5. year ? years S6. (even) if ? (even) /S7. co-operate ? co-operated S8. when ? afterS9. were ? was S10.. farming ? huntingPassage 6More people die of tuberculosis (结核病) thanof anyother disease caused by a single agent. This hasprobably71. __________ been the case in quite a while. During the earlystages of72. __________ the industrial revolution, perhaps one in everyseventh73. __________ de aths in Europe’s crowded cities were caused bythe74. __________ disease. From now on, though, western eyes, missingtheglobal picture, saw the trouble going into decline.Withoccasional breaks for war, the rates of death andinfection in the Europe and America dropped steadily75. __________ through the 19th and 20th centuries. In the 1950s,theintroduction of antibiotics (抗菌素) strengthenedtrend in rich countries, and the antibiotics wereallowed76. __________ to be imported to poor countries. Medicalresearchersdeclared victory and withdrew.77. __________They are wrong. In the mid-1980s the frequencyofinfections and deaths started to pick up againaround the78. __________ world. Where tuberculosis vanished, it came back;inmany places where it had never been away, it grew79. __________ better.The World Health Organization estimates thatbillion people (a third of the earth’s population)sufferfrom tuberculosis. Even the infection rate wasfalling, population growth kept the number ofclinicalcases more or less constantly at 8 million a year.80. __________ Around3 million of those people died, nearly all of themin poorcountries.71. in ? for 72. seventh ? seven73. were ? was 74. now ? then75. the ? / 76. imported ? exported77. are ? were 78. vanished ? had ~79. better ? worse 80. constantly ? constantPassage 7When you start talking about good and bad mannersyouimmediately start meeting difficulties. Many peoplejust cannotagree what they mean. We asked a lady, who replied thatshe71. __________ thought you could tell a well-manned person on the waytheyoccupied the space around them—for example, when sucha72. __________ person walks down a street he or she is constantlyunaware ofothers. Such people never bump into other people.However, a second person thought that this was moreaquestion of civilized behavior as good manners. Instead, 73. __________other person told us a story, it he said was quite wellknown,74. __________about an American who had been invited to an Arab mealat75. __________one of the countries of the Middle East. The Americanhasn’t76. __________ been told very much about the kind of food he mightexpect. Ifhe had known about American food, he might have behaved77. __________ better.Immediately before him was a very flat piece of breadthatlooked, to him, very much as a napkin(餐巾). Pickingit78. __________up, he put it into his collar, so that it falls acrosshis shirt.79. __________His Arab host, who had been watching, said of nothing,but80. __________ immediately copied the action of his guest.And that, said this second person, was a fine exampleofgood manners.71. (on the way) ? in the way 72. unaware ? aware73. as ? than 74. it ? which75. at ? in 76. hasn’t ? hadn’t77. American ? Arab 78. as ? like79. falls ? fell 80. of ? /Passage 8Until the very latest moment of his existence, manhas beenbound to the planet on which he originated and devel-oped. Now he had the capability to leave that planet and move 71.__________out into the universe to those worlds which he has knownpreviously only directly. Men have explored parts of the moon.72.__________put spaceships in orbit around another planet and possibly withinthe decade will land into another planet and explore it. Can we be 73.__________too bold as to suggest that we may be able to colonize other 74.__________planet within the not-too-distant future Some have advocated 75.__________such a procedure as a solution to the population problem:ship theexcess people off to the moon. But we must keep in head 76.billions of dollars we might spend in carrying out theproject. Tomaintain the earth’s population at its present level,we would haveto blast off into space 7,500 people every hour of everyday of theyear.Why are we spending so little money on space ex-77.__________ploration Consider the great need for improving many aspects 78.__________of the global environment, one is surely justified in hisconcern for the money and resources that they are poured into 79.__________the space exploration efforts. But perhaps we should lookatboth sides of the coin before arriving hasty conclusions.80.__________71. had ? has 72. directly ? indirectly73. into ? on 74. too ? so75. planet ? planets / worlds 76. head ? mind77. little ? much 78. Consider ? Considering79. they ? /80. (arriving) ? (arriving) at 或 arriving ? reaching/drawing/makingPassage 9Most people work to earn a living and theyProduce goods and services. Goods are eitheragricultural (like maize) or manufactured (likecars). Services are such things like education, medicine, and commerce. These people provide goods; some provide services. Other people provideboth goods or services. For example, in the same garage a man may buy a car or some service whichhelps him maintain his car.The work people do is called as economic activity. All economic activities taken together makeup the economic system of a town, a city, a country,or the world. Such economic system is the sum-totalof what people do and what they want. The workpeople do either provides what they need or providesthe money with that they can by essential commodities. Of course, most people hope to haveenough money to buy commodities and services whichare essential but which provide some particular personal satisfaction, such as toys for children, visits the cinema, and books.of our everyday lives. Economists study our every daylives and the general life of our communities in orderto understand the whole economic system of which weare a part. They try to describe the facts of theeconomy in which we live, and to explain how itworks. The economist methods should of course be strictly objective and scientific.1.like -> as2.these -> some3.or -> and4.as -> \ 去掉as5.Such economic system -> Such∧an economic system6.that -> which7.are essential -> are∧not essential 或者essential -> non-essential 8.visits the cinema -> visits∧to the cinema9.basic -> based10.The economist methods -> The economist’s met hodsThe economists’ methodsPassage 10Parents can be supportive of suspicions. Theycan be helpful to the teacher, or are in need of help 1. themselves. Sometimes, I think parents are too hardto their children. I have seen many parents of this 2. kind. I often have the problem of parents coming inand telling me what they really treat their kids. They 3. tell me that they usually stand over their kinds whenthey do their homework. They check their work andmake big fuss over the grades. They criticize the kids 4. over everything having to do with school. Myresponse usually is: ”well, you know, he is really agood kid. He is fine in my class. Maybe you shouldnot be too st rict with them.” 5.We want parents to realize the fact that teachersare professors at working with children. They have 6. observed many children and many parents. Becauseof this, and because of their specialized training,teachers can be realistic about children. Teachersknow whether parents want their children to do well 7.and to behave well. But teachers know less what 8.children should be able to do at different ages andstages. They don’t expect the 8-year-olds to do thework that can only be done by the 12-year-olds.Parents, in the contrary, often expect their children 9. to do what is usually beyond their age and ability.Obviously, this may make great harm to the 10.children’s development.2.be hard to -> be hard on3.what -> how4.make big fuss -> make a big fuss5.them -> him6.professors -> expertsprofessional7.whether -> \that8.less -> morebetter9.in the contrary -> on the contrary10.make harm to -> do harm toPassage 11Closure is the positive felling you get when youfinish a task. Lack of closure results from the panicked feeling that you still have a million things todo. One way to obtain closure is divide a task into manageable goals, list them, and check them offyour list as you finish them. For example, supposeyour historic teacher assigns three chapters to beread. If your goal is to read all three chapters, youmay feel discouraged if you don’t complete thereading at one time. A more effective way tocomplete the assignment is to divide the reading intosmaller goals by thinking each chapter as a separategoal. Thus you experience success as you complete.each chapter. While you have completed the overallgoal, you know you have progressed toward it.A second block to obtaining closure is unfinishedbusiness. You may have several tasks with the samedeadline. If changing from one task to another serves 6. ________ as a break, changing tasks too often waste time. 7. ________ Each time you switch, you lose momentum. Youmay be unable to change mental gears fast enough.You may find yourself thinking about the old projectwhen you should be concentrating in the new one. In 8. ________ addition, when you return to your first task, youhave to review where you are and what steps were 9. ________ left for you to finish.Often you solve this problem by determininghow much time you have free to work. If the timeavailable is short . ,an hour or less), you need towork on only one task. Alternate tasks when youhave more time. Completing one task or a largeportion of a task attributes to the feeling of closure.1.result from -> result in2.is divide -> is to divide4.think each chapter -> think∧of each chapter5.have completed-> have∧not completed6.If->Although7.waste -> wastes8.concentrate in -> concentrate on9.review where you are->review where you were10.attributes to -> contribute toPassage 12Oral health care is, these days, a big, boom 1. business. According to Ralph Nader, American 2.spend some $5 billion on dental care each year. Yet,although the tremendous amounts of money, time 3.and energy giving over to oral health, dental 4.literature indicates that about half the population inthis country has lost all of his natural teeth by age 5.65. Nearly half of all people over age 20 wear a bridgeor denture, and more than 30 percent havecomplete upper and lower dentures. By age 50, oneout of every two persons have gum disease. 6.The dental profession blames neglectfulAmericans themselves. About half the population, itclaims, fails in visit the dentist regularly and some 30 7. million never did. Critics, on the other hand slam 8. the profession. It can be conservatively estimatedthat at least 15 percent of United States dentists are 9. incompetent, honest, or both, says a former 10. Pennsylvania Commissioner of Insurance. Some haveset the figure as high as 50 percent.1.boom -> booming2.American->Americans3.although->despite4.giving->given5.his -> its6.have -> has7.fails in visit -> fails to visit8.never did-> never do9.United States-> the United States10.incompetent,honest,or both-> incompetent, dishonest, or both。
英语四级改错精练
2011英语四级改错精练(1)Americans this year will swallow 15000 tons ofaspirin, one of safest and most effective drugs 1.__________invented by man. The most popular medicines in the 2.__________world today, it is an effective pain reliever. Its badeffects are relatively mild, and it is cheap.For millions of people suffered from arthrities, 3.__________it is the only thing that works. Aspirin, in short, istruly the 20th-century wonder drug. It is also thesecond largest suicide drug and is the leading cause ofpoisoning among children. it has side effects that, if 4.__________relatively mild, are largely unrecognized between users. 5.__________ Although aspirin was first sold by Germam companyin 1899, it has been around much longer than that.Hippocrates, in ancient Greece, understood the medical valueof the leaves and tree bark which today is known to 6.__________contain salicylates, the chemical in aspirin. during the19th century, there was a great number of experimentation 7.__________ in Europe with this chemical, and it led in the introduction 8.__________ of aspirin. By 1915, aspirin tablets were availablein the United States.A small quantity of aspirin(two five-grain tablets)relieves pain and inflammation. It also reduces down 9.__________fever by interfering with some of the body's reactions.Specifically, aspirin seems to slow down the formationof the acids involved in pain and the complex chemicalreactions that cause fever. The chemistry of these acidsis not fully understood, and the slowing effect of aspirin 10.__________ is well known.参考答案1. of ∧safest →the2. medicines →medicine(or: drug)3. suffered →suffering4. if →though(or: although)5. between →among6. is →are7. number →deal(or: amount,quantity)8. in →to9. down →/10. and →but2011英语四级改错精练(2)Crime has its own cycles, a magazine reportedsome years before. Police records that were studied 1.__________for five years from over 2400 cities and towns showa surprised link between changes in the season and 2.__________crime patterns.The pattern of crime has varied very littleover a long period of years. Murder reaches its highduring July and August, as does rape and other violent 3.__________ attacks.Murder, however, is more than seasonal: it is a 4.__________ weekend crime. It is also a hightime crime: 62 percentof members are committed between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m.Unlike the summer high in crimes of bodily harm,burglary has a different cycle. You are most likelyto being robbed between 6 p.m. and 2 a.m. on a Saturday 5.__________ night in December, January,or February. The mostuncriminal month of all? May--except for one strangestatistic. More dog bites are reported in this monththan in an other month of the year. 6.__________Apparent our intellectual seasonal cycles are 7.__________completely different from our criminal tendencies.professor Huntington, of the Foundation for the Studyof Cycles, made extensive studies to discover theseasons when people read serious books, attend scientificmeetings, make the highest scores on examinations,and to propose the most changes to patents. In all 8.__________instances, he found a spring peak and an autumn peakseparated by a summer low. On other hand, Professor 9.__________huntinton's studies indicated that June is the peakmonth for suicides and admissions in mental hospitals. 10.__________ June is also a peak month for marriages!参考答案1. before →ago2. surprised →surprising3. does →do4. however →moreover5. being →be6. an →any7. apparent →apparently8. to(1) →/9. On ∧other →the10. in →to2011英语四级改错精练(4)Only a generation ago, Mauritania's capital city wasmany day's walk from the Sahara. Today it is in the Sahara. 1.__________The sand blows through the city streets and piles up in 2.__________walls and fences. The desert stretches out as far as theeye can see.In some parts of the Amazon rain forest in brazil, allthe trees have cut down. The earth lies bare and dry in the 3.__________ hot sun. Nothing grow there anymore. 4.__________Over vast areas of every continent, the rainfall andvegetation necessary for life is disappearing. Already 5.__________more than 40 percent of the earth's land is desert and 6.__________desert-like. About 628 million people--one out of seven--live in these dry regions. In the past, they have managed tosurvive, but in difficulty. Now, largely through problems 7.__________ caused by modern life, our existence is threatened by the 8.__________ slow, steady spread of the earth's deserts.Many countries first became concerned in 1970s after 9.__________a terrible drought and famine destroyed Africa's Sahel,the fragile desert along the south edge of the Sahara.Thousands of people died even though there was a worldwideeffort to send food and medicine to the starved people. 10.__________ 参考答案1. day's →days'2. in →against3. have ∧cut →been4. grow →grows5. is →are6. and →or7. in →with8. our →their9. in ∧1970s →the2011英语四级改错精练(5)Jungle country is not friently to man, but it ispossible to survive there. You must have the right equipmentand you must know a lot important things about 1.__________woodcraft(森林知识). Then your choices of staying living 2.__________are very good.No one should go into the jungle without the rightequipment. You need lightweight clothings, a good sheath 3.__________knife or machete, and a compass. Fishhooks and a line, arifle and ammunition, matches in a waterproof container,and a poncho are necessary too. Such is a mosquito net 4.__________ to pretect the head.In the jungle you can get hopeless lost within 5.__________five minutes after leaving a knowing landmark. That is 6.__________ why you should always carry a compass. In open country,during the day, you can tell which way to go by studyingthe sun. At night the stars are sure of guides to direction 7.__________ But in most places the jungle rooftop is so thickthat this is impossible to see the sun or the stars. Again 8.__________ and again you must check the position by the compass.Keep alert. Watch the ground in front of you carefully.Stop and listen now and again. Avoid haste, and restoften. In a place where is hot and humid, the person who 9.__________ sets a fast pace will soon become tired. A steady, evenpace is wisest on the long run. 10.__________2011英语四级改错精练(6)The first man known to use a signal other than abonfire used a chandelier. He was lord of a castle thatstood near a rocky seacoast. He hang the chandelier, 1.__________ containing many large tallow candles, in the highesttower of his castle. Thus he warned passing ship from 2.__________ the danger along the coast.Candles soon became the common fuel for signallights. They were later replaced by oil lamps, that 3.__________could burn larger and brighter. Kerosene and gas lamps 4.__________also tried. These are still in use now in some smallerlighthouses. But today most lighthouses sent electric 5.__________light blazing out over the sea.The ancient fire signals only say "Danger! Keep off!".But the modern lighthous also identifies it in a code 6.__________known to all shipping. Most of the great lights havetheir own special signals. The light may be one thatblinks--as a giant firefly in the night. Or it may be 7.__________a revolved light that is red then green. Or it may be 8.__________only white. But however the signal, it is sent very 9.__________ regularly. A ship within its ranges is never at a loss toknow which lighthouse it is, and where it is being 10.__________located2011英语四级改错精练(7)When some nineteenth century New Yorkers said "Harlem",they meant almost all of Manhattan above Eighty-sixth Street.Toward the end of the century, however, a groupof citizens in upper Manhattan-want perhaps, to shape a closer 1._________ and more precise sense of community—designated a section thatthey wished to have known as Harlem. The chosen area was theHarlem which Blacks were moving in the first decades of the 2.________ new century as they left their old settlements on the middle andlower blocks of the West Side.As the community became predominantly Black, the veryword "Harlem" seemed to lose its old meaning. At time it was 3.________ easy to forget that "Harlem" was originally the Dutch name"Harlem"; the community it described had been founded by 4.________ people from Holland;and that for most of its three centuries—itwas first settled in the sixteen hundreds—it had been preoccupied 5.________ by White New Yorkers. "Harlem" became synonymous to 6.________Black life and Black style in Manhattan. Blacks living thereused the word as though they had coined it on themselves—not 7.________ only to designate their area of residence but to express theirsense of the various qualities of its life and atmosphere. As theyears passed, "Harlem" asserted an even larger meaning. In 8.________the words of Adam Clayton Powell, Sr., the pastor of theAbyssinian Baptist Church, Harlem "became the symbol of libertyand the Promised Land to Negroes everywhere".The white House began to be built in 1792, but it was notcompleted until ten years later. Every American president livedin it except for George Washington, although he did have a 1.________ majority part in designing it. 2.________The government held a competition to choose the bestdesign for the president's house. The winner was a young man of 3.________ South Carolina, James Hoban. His design was a three-levelhouse of stone. And President Washington made some changesin the winning design. He made the house long and wider, and 4.________ changed it into a two-storied house instead of three.The second president, John Adams, was first to live in the 5.________ White House. When he and his wife moved onto the new house 6.________ in November, 1800, work was still going on, although the mainlive area was completed. The whole work did not finish until the 7.________ administration of the 3rd president, Thomas Jefferson.Aphrodite loved Adonis more than she did to heaven, for 1.________He was a brisk, lovely young hunter. She abandoned her residenceat Olympus and took to the woods, where she dressedherself up like a huntress and kept the youth companion all day 2.________ long. With him she roved through bushy grounds and groves andover hills and dales, cheering hounds and pursuing game of aharmless sort. They had a great time together. However, shewarned him many times to chase wild beasts like lions and 3.________ wolves, but the young man just laughed at the idea.One day, after warning him thus, she left to Olympus in 4.________her chariot. Quite by chance Adonis' hounds found a boar, that 5.________ roused Adonis to enthusiasm. He hit the beast with a dart, and 6.________ the boar, turning on him ,buried its white tusk deep into histender side and trampled him to death.When Aphrodite came back to find her lover cold in death,she burst into a passion of tears. Unable to wrest him back fromthe low world, she sprinkled nectar on Adonis' blood and 7.________ turned it into anemone, a delicate purple flower.2011英语四级改错精练(11)Word came from California of a new weapon in the war on household pests.Two scientists work for a firm in California developed 1.__________a new method to eliminate insects with using dangerous chemicals.The new 2.__________ weapon—hot air.The basic idea is that insect pests can adjust to temperature much above 3.__________normal.In laboratory experiments,cockroaches and termites can’t survive much more than a quarter of hour at 100 degrees 4.__________Fahrenheit or about fifty degrees centigrade.The new method involves covering a house with a huge tent,and fill it with air heated to 5.__________around 65 degrees centigrade.Hot air is forced in with fans and the tent keeps the heat inside the house.Although termites try to escape by 6.__________hiding in wood beams,the heat treatment must be continued by four to six hours.But when it's 7.__________all over and the insects are dead,there are no toxic residues to danger humans or pets,and no 8.__________funny smells.Scientists claim that there's no danger of fire too.9.__________2011英语四级改错精练(12)Expressing Yourself in English is an inter- esting new textbook with some variations from the traditional in its approach.They would 1.__________seem appropriate for self-study,especially when used in conjunction with the cassette,but is primarily intended of classroom use.Indeed,2.__________the text itself contains notes to the teachers rather than that appearing in a separate teacher’s guide.3.__________Each unit contains three readings,all of which,except for those appearing in the ninth and the final unit,are illustrated.The teacher's notes indicate the teacher should refrain of 4.__________ answering students' questions about these readings until each student has worked through all the reading comprehension exercises without help.Among the book's distinctive features is the fact that contains a more extensive list of 5.__________references than any other writing for this level,6.__________which exercises are provided and allow students to be creative with the English they learn.Again,like most comparable texts,Expressing 7.__________Yourself in English does not formally introduce the verb until Unit 3.One hint for teachers and students likely is that students 8.__________should not expect to be successful with the examinations offered in the body of the text if9.__________they study outside of class and memorize the dialogue that introduces each unit.In order to keep the price lowly,the book 10.__________2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(1)Americans this year will swallow 15000 tons ofaspirin, one of safest and most effective drugs 1.__________invented by man. The most popular medicines in the 2.__________world today, it is an effective pain reliever. Its badeffects are relatively mild, and it is cheap.For millions of people suffered from arthrities, 3.__________it is the only thing that works. Aspirin, in short, istruly the 20th-century wonder drug. It is also thesecond largest suicide drug and is the leading cause ofpoisoning among children. it has side effects that, if 4.__________relatively mild, are largely unrecognized between users. 5.__________ Although aspirin was first sold by Germam companyin 1899, it has been around much longer than that.Hippocrates, in ancient Greece, understood the medical valueof the leaves and tree bark which today is known to 6.__________contain salicylates, the chemical in aspirin. during the19th century, there was a great number of experimentation 7.__________ in Europe with this chemical, and it led in the introduction 8.__________ of aspirin. By 1915, aspirin tablets were availablein the United States.A small quantity of aspirin(two five-grain tablets)relieves pain and inflammation. It also reduces down 9.__________fever by interfering with some of the body's reactions.Specifically, aspirin seems to slow down the formationof the acids involved in pain and the complex chemicalreactions that cause fever. The chemistry of these acidsis not fully understood, and the slowing effect of aspirin 10.__________ is well known.参考答案1. of ∧safest →the2. medicines →medicine(or: drug)3. suffered →suffering4. if →though(or: although)5. between →among6. is →are7. number →deal(or: amount,quantity)8. in →to9. down →/10. and →but2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(2)CET考试网更新:2011-1-25 编辑:梓淇Crime has its own cycles, a magazine reportedsome years before. Police records that were studied 1.__________for five years from over 2400 cities and towns showa surprised link between changes in the season and 2.__________crime patterns.The pattern of crime has varied very littleover a long period of years. Murder reaches its highduring July and August, as does rape and other violent 3.__________ attacks.Murder, however, is more than seasonal: it is a 4.__________ weekend crime. It is also a hightime crime: 62 percentof members are committed between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m.Unlike the summer high in crimes of bodily harm,burglary has a different cycle. You are most likelyto being robbed between 6 p.m. and 2 a.m. on a Saturday 5.__________ night in December, January,or February. The mostuncriminal month of all? May--except for one strangestatistic. More dog bites are reported in this monththan in an other month of the year. 6.__________Apparent our intellectual seasonal cycles are 7.__________completely different from our criminal tendencies.professor Huntington, of the Foundation for the Studyof Cycles, made extensive studies to discover theseasons when people read serious books, attend scientificmeetings, make the highest scores on examinations,and to propose the most changes to patents. In all 8.__________instances, he found a spring peak and an autumn peakseparated by a summer low. On other hand, Professor 9.__________huntinton's studies indicated that June is the peakmonth for suicides and admissions in mental hospitals. 10.__________ June is also a peak month for marriages!参考答案1. before →ago2. surprised →surprising3. does →do4. however →moreover5. being →be6. an →any7. apparent →apparently8. to(1) →/9. On ∧other →the10. in →to2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(3)Personal relationaships are very important. Theyare the key of doing business in Arab countries. Try 1.__________to identify the decision-maker regarding as your 2.__________product or service immediatelyand get to know himon a friendly basis. Do your homework. Be prepared todiscuss detial of your product or proposal. Be ready 3.__________to answer technical questions.Familiarize yourself to the Moslem and national 4.__________holidays. Avoid a visit during Ramadan, the Moslemmonth of fasting. Most Arab countries have a six-dayworkweek from Saturday through Thursday. When matching 5.__________with the Monday to Friday practice in most Westerncountries, it leaves only three and a half workdaysshared.Remember this in planning your appointments.Moslems do not eat pork. Some are strict about thereligion's prohibition for alcoholic beverages. If you 6.__________are not sure, wait your host to suggest the proper 7.__________thing to drink.2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(4)Only a generation ago, Mauritania's capital city wasmany day's walk from the Sahara. Today it is in the Sahara. 1.__________ The sand blows through the city streets and piles up in 2.__________walls and fences. The desert stretches out as far as theeye can see.In some parts of the Amazon rain forest in brazil, allthe trees have cut down. The earth lies bare and dry in the 3.__________ hot sun. Nothing grow there anymore. 4.__________Over vast areas of every continent, the rainfall andvegetation necessary for life is disappearing. Already 5.__________more than 40 percent of the earth's land is desert and 6.__________desert-like. About 628 million people--one out of seven--live in these dry regions. In the past, they have managed tosurvive, but in difficulty. Now, largely through problems 7.__________ caused by modern life, our existence is threatened by the 8.__________ slow, steady spread of the earth's deserts.Many countries first became concerned in 1970s after 9.__________a terrible drought and famine destroyed Africa's Sahel,the fragile desert along the south edge of the Sahara.Thousands of people died even though there was a worldwideeffort to send food and medicine to the starved people. 10.__________参考答案1. day's →days'2. in →against3. have ∧cut →been4. grow →grows5. is →are6. and →or7. in →with8. our →their9. in ∧1970s →the2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(5)Jungle country is not friently to man, but it ispossible to survive there. You must have the right equipmentand you must know a lot important things about 1.__________woodcraft(森林知识). Then your choices of staying living 2.__________are very good.No one should go into the jungle without the rightequipment. You need lightweight clothings, a good sheath 3.__________knife or machete, and a compass. Fishhooks and a line, arifle and ammunition, matches in a waterproof container,and a poncho are necessary too. Such is a mosquito net 4.__________to pretect the head.In the jungle you can get hopeless lost within 5.__________five minutes after leaving a knowing landmark. That is 6.__________why you should always carry a compass. In open country,during the day, you can tell which way to go by studyingthe sun. At night the stars are sure of guides to direction 7.__________But in most places the jungle rooftop is so thickthat this is impossible to see the sun or the stars. Again 8.__________and again you must check the position by the compass.Keep alert. Watch the ground in front of you carefully.Stop and listen now and again. Avoid haste, and restoften. In a place where is hot and humid, the person who 9.__________sets a fast pace will soon become tired. A steady, evenpace is wisest on the long run. 10.__________2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(6)The first man known to use a signal other than abonfire used a chandelier. He was lord of a castle thatstood near a rocky seacoast. He hang the chandelier, 1.__________containing many large tallow candles, in the highesttower of his castle. Thus he warned passing ship from 2.__________the danger along the coast.Candles soon became the common fuel for signallights. They were later replaced by oil lamps, that 3.__________could burn larger and brighter. Kerosene and gas lamps 4.__________also tried. These are still in use now in some smallerlighthouses. But today most lighthouses sent electric 5.__________light blazing out over the sea.The ancient fire signals only say "Danger! Keep off!".But the modern lighthous also identifies it in a code 6.__________known to all shipping. Most of the great lights havetheir own special signals. The light may be one thatblinks--as a giant firefly in the night. Or it may be 7.__________a revolved light that is red then green. Or it may be 8.__________only white. But however the signal, it is sent very 9.__________regularly. A ship within its ranges is never at a loss toknow which lighthouse it is, and where it is being 10.__________located2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(7)When some nineteenth century New Yorkers said "Harlem",they meant almost all of Manhattan above Eighty-sixth Street.Toward the end of the century, however, a groupof citizens in upper Manhattan-want perhaps, to shape a closer 1._________and more precise sense of community—designated a section thatthey wished to have known as Harlem. The chosen area was theHarlem which Blacks were moving in the first decades of the 2.________new century as they left their old settlements on the middle andlower blocks of the West Side.As the community became predominantly Black, the veryword "Harlem" seemed to lose its old meaning. At time it was 3.________easy to forget that "Harlem" was originally the Dutch name"Harlem"; the community it described had been founded by 4.________people from Holland;and that for most of its three centuries—itwas first settled in the sixteen hundreds—it had been preoccupied 5.________by White New Yorkers. "Harlem" became synonymous to 6.________Black life and Black style in Manhattan. Blacks living thereused the word as though they had coined it on themselves—not 7.________only to designate their area of residence but to express theirsense of the various qualities of its life and atmosphere. As theyears passed, "Harlem" asserted an even larger meaning. In 8.________the words of Adam Clayton Powell, Sr., the pastor of theAbyssinian Baptist Church, Harlem "became the symbol of libertyand the Promised Land to Negroes everywhere".2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(8)The white House began to be built in 1792, but it was notcompleted until ten years later. Every American president livedin it except for George Washington, although he did have a 1.________majority part in designing it. 2.________The government held a competition to choose the bestdesign for the president's house. The winner was a young man of 3.________ South Carolina, James Hoban. His design was a three-levelhouse of stone. And President Washington made some changesin the winning design. He made the house long and wider, and 4.________ changed it into a two-storied house instead of three.The second president, John Adams, was first to live in the 5.________White House. When he and his wife moved onto the new house 6.________in November, 1800, work was still going on, although the mainlive area was completed. The whole work did not finish until the 7.________ administration of the 3rd president, Thomas Jefferson.2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(9)There are great many reasons for studying what philosophers 1.________have said in the past. One is that we cannot separate thehistory of philosophy from which of science. Philosophy is 2.________large discussion about matters on which few people are quite 3.________ certain, and those few hold opposite opinions. As knowledgeincreases, philosophy buds off the sciences.For an example, in the ancient world and the Middle Ages 4.________ philosophers discussed motion. Aristotle and St. ThomasAquinas taught that a moving body would slow down until a force 5.________ were constantly applied to it. They were wrong. It goes on movingunless something slows it down. But they had good arguments ontheir side, and if we study these, and the experimentswhich proved them right this will help us to distinguish truth 6.________from false in the scientific controversies of today. 7.________2011英语四级考试辅导改错精练(10)Aphrodite loved Adonis more than she did to heaven, for 1.________He was a brisk, lovely young hunter. She abandoned her residenceat Olympus and took to the woods, where she dressedherself up like a huntress and kept the youth companion all day 2.________long. With him she roved through bushy grounds and groves andover hills and dales, cheering hounds and pursuing game of aharmless sort. They had a great time together. However, shewarned him many times to chase wild beasts like lions and 3.________wolves, but the young man just laughed at the idea.One day, after warning him thus, she left to Olympus in 4.________her chariot. Quite by chance Adonis' hounds found a boar, that 5.________roused Adonis to enthusiasm. He hit the beast with a dart, and 6.________the boar, turning on him ,buried its white tusk deep into histender side and trampled him to death.When Aphrodite came back to find her lover cold in death,she burst into a passion of tears. Unable to wrest him back from。
大学英语四级改错题12篇
大学英语四级改错题12篇Passage 1Error Correction (15 minutes)Directions:This part consists of a short passage. In this passage, there are altogether 10 mistakes, one in each numbered line. You may have to change a word, add a word or delete a word. Mark out the mistakes and put the corrections in the blanks provided. If you change a word, cross it out and write the correct word in the corresponding blank. If you add a word, put an insertion mark (∧) in the right place and write the missing word in the blank. If you delete a word, cross it out and put a slash (/) in the blank. Example:Television is rapidly becoming the literatures of our periods.1.time/times/periodMany of the arguments having used for the study ofliterature2. /___________as a school subject are valid for ∧ study of television. 3. the___________One major decision which faces the American studentready tobegin higher education is the choice of attending a largeuniversity or a small college. The large university provides awide range of specialized departments, as well numerous 71. __________ courses within such departments. The small college,therefore,72. __________generally provides a limited number of courses andspecializations but offer a better student-faculty ratio, thus 73. __________permit individualized attention to student. Because of its74. __________ largestudent body (often exceeding 20,000) consisting in many 75. __________ people from different countries the university exposes itsstudents to many different culture, social and out-of-class 76. __________ programmes. On the other hand, the smaller, morehomogeneous(同性质的) student body of the big college 77. __________ affords greater opportunities in such activities. Finally, theuniversity closely approximates the real world and which 78. __________ provides a relaxed, impersonal, and sometimes anonymous(隐姓埋名的) existence, on the contrast, the intimate 79. __________ atmosphere of the small college allows the student fouryears ofstructural living in which to expect and preparing for the real 80. __________ world. In making his choice among educational institutionsthestudent must, there fore, consider a great many factors.71. (well) → (well) as 72. therefore → however73. offer → offers74. permit → permitting75. in → of 76. culture → cultural77. big → small 78. and → / 或and → which, this79. contrast → contrary 80. preparing → preparePassage 2Thomas Malthus published his "Essay on the Principleof Population" almost 200 years ago. Ever since then,forecasters have being warning that worldwide famine was S1. _____ just around the next corner. The fast-growing population'sdemand for food, they warned, would soon exceed their S2. _____ supply, leading to widespread food shortages and starvation.But in reality, the world's total grain harvest has risensteadily over the years. Except for relative isolated trouble S3. _____ spots like present-day Somalia, and occasional years ofgood harvests, the world's food crisis has remained just S4. _____ around the corner. Most experts believe this can continueeven as if the population doubles by the mid-21st century, S5. _____ although feeding I0 billion people will not be easy forpolitics, economic and environmental reasons. Optimists S6. _____ point to concrete examples of continued improvementsin yield. In Africa, by instance, improved seed, more S7. _____ fertilizer and advanced growing practices have more thandouble corn and wheat yields in an experiment. Elsewhere, S8. _____ rice experts in the Philippines are producing a plant with few S9. _____ stems and more seeds. There is no guarantee that plantbreeders can continue to develop new, higher-yieldingcrop, but most researchers see their success to date as reason S10. _____ for hope.S1. being→been S2. their→itsS3. relative→relatively S4. good→badS5. as→去掉 S6. politics→politicalS7. by→for S8. double→doubledS9. few→more S10. reason→the reasonPassage 3The Seattle Times Company is one newspaper firmthathas recognized the need for change and donesomething aboutit. In the newspaper industry, papers must reflect thediversityof the communities to which they provide information.It must reflect that diversity with their news coverage orS1. _________ risklosing their readers’ interest and their advertisers’support.Operating within Seattle, which has 20 percents racial S2. _________ minorities, the paper has put into place policies andprocedures for hiring and maintain a diverse workforce.S3. _________ Theunderlying reason for the change is that for informationto befair, appropriate, and subjective, it should be reportedS4. _________ by thesame kind of population that reads it.A diversity committee composed of reporters,editors, andS5. _________ photographers meets regularly to value the SeattleTimes’content and to educate the rest of the newsroom staffaboutS6. _________ diversity issues. In an addition, the paper instituted acontentaudit (审查) that evaluates the frequency and manner ofS7. _________ representation of woman and people of color inphotographs.Early audits showed that minorities were pictured far tooinfrequently and were pictured with a disproportionatenumber of negative articles. The audit results from S8. _________S9. _________ improvement in the frequency of majorityrepresentation andS10. _________ their portrayal in neutral or positive situations. And, witharesult, the Seattle Times has improved as a newspaper.The diversity training and content audits helped theSeattle Times Company to win the Personal JournalOptimas Award for excellence in managing change.S1. it → they S2. percents → percentS3. maintain → maintaining S4. subjective → objectiveS5. value → evaluate S6. an → /S7. woman → women S8. from → inS9. majority → minority S10. with → asPassage 4A great many cities are experiencing difficultieswhichare nothing new in the history of cities, except in theirscale.Some cities have lost their original purpose and have notfoundnew one. And any large or rich city is going to attractS1. __________ poorimmigrants, who flood in, filling with hopes of prosperity S2. __________ which are then often disappointing. There are backwardtownson the edge of Bombay or Brasilia, just as though thereS3. __________ wereon the edge of seventeenth-century London or earlynine-teenth-century Paris. This is new is the scale. S4. __________Descriptionswritten by eighteenth-century travelers of the poor ofMexicoS5. __________ City, and the enormous contrasts that was to be foundthere,are very dissimilar to descriptions of Mexico CityS6. __________ today—thepoor can still be numbered in millions.The whole monstrous growth rests on economicprosper-S7. __________ ity, but behind it lies two myths: the myth of the city asaS8. __________ promised land, that attracts immigrants from ruralpovertyS9. __________ and brings it flooding into city centers, and the myth oftheS10. __________ country as a Garden of Eden, which, a few generationslate,sends them flooding out again to the suburbs.S1. new → a new S2. filling → filledS3. though → if S4. This → WhatS5. was → were S6. dissimilar → similarS7. lies → lie S8. that → whichS9. it → them S10. late → laterPassage 5Sporting activities are essentially modified forms ofhunting behavior. Viewing biologically, the modern S1. __________ footballer is revealed as a member of a disguised huntingpack. His killing weapon has turned into a harmlessfootballand his prey into a goal-mouth. If his aim is inaccurate andS2. __________ hescores a goal, enjoys the hunter’s triumph of killing hisprey.S3. __________ To understand how this transformation has takenplace weS4. __________ must briefly look up at our ancient ancestors. They spentover aS5. __________ million year evolving as co-operative hunters. Their verysurvivaldepended on success in the hunting-field. Under thispressureS6. __________ their whole way of life, even if their bodies, becameradicailychanged. They became chasers, runners, jumpers, aimers,throwers and prey-killers. They co-operate as skillful S7. __________male-groupattackers.S8. __________ Then, about ten thousand years ago, when thisimmenselylong formative period of hunting for food, they becamefarmers. Their improved intelligence, so vital to their oldhunting life, were put to a new use—that of penning (把S9. __________ ……关在圈中), controlling and domesticating their prey. Thefood was there on the farms, awaiting their needs. Therisks andS10.__________ uncertainties of farming were no longer essential forsurvival.S1. Viewing → Viewed S2. inaccurate → accurateS3. (enjoys) → he (enjoys) S4. up → backS5. year → years S6. (even) if → (even) /S7. co-operate → co-operated S8. when → afterS9. were → was S10.. farming → huntingPassage 6More people die of tuberculosis (结核病) than ofanyother disease caused by a single agent. This hasprobablybeen the case in quite a while. During the early stages71. __________ ofthe industrial revolution, perhaps one in every seventh 72. __________ deaths in Europe’s crowded cities were caused by th e 73. __________74. __________ disease. From now on, though, western eyes, missingtheglobal picture, saw the trouble going into decline.Withoccasional breaks for war, the rates of death andinfection in the Europe and America dropped steadily 75. __________ through the 19th and 20th centuries. In the 1950s, theintroduction of antibiotics (抗菌素) strengthened thetrend in rich countries, and the antibiotics wereallowedto be imported to poor countries. Medical researchers 76. __________ declared victory and withdrew.They are wrong. In the mid-1980s the frequency77. __________ ofinfections and deaths started to pick up again aroundtheworld. Where tuberculosis vanished, it came back; in 78. __________79. __________ many places where it had never been away, it grewbetter.The World Health Organization estimates that 1.7billion people (a third of the earth’s population) sufferfrom tuberculosis. Even the infection rate wasfalling, population growth kept the number of clinical80. __________ cases more or less constantly at 8 million a year.Around3 million of those people died, nearly all of them inpoorcountries.71. in → for 72. seventh → seven73. were → was 74. now → then75. the → / 76. imported → exported77. are → were 78. vanished → had ~79. better → worse 80. constantly → constantPassage 7When you start talking about good and bad mannersyouimmediately start meeting difficulties. Many people justcannotagree what they mean. We asked a lady, who replied thatshe71. __________ thought you could tell a well-manned person on the waytheyoccupied the space around them—for example, when sucha72. __________ person walks down a street he or she is constantlyunaware ofothers. Such people never bump into other people.However, a second person thought that this was moreaquestion of civilized behavior as good manners. Instead,73. __________ this74. __________ other person told us a story, it he said was quite wellknown,75. __________ about an American who had been invited to an Arab mealatone of the countries of the Middle East. The American76. __________ hasn’tbeen told very much about the kind of food he mightexpect. If77. __________ he had known about American food, he might havebehavedbetter.Immediately before him was a very flat piece of breadthatlooked, to him, very much as a napkin(餐巾). Picking it 78. __________ up, he put it into his collar, so that it falls across his shirt. 79. __________ His Arab host, who had been watching, said of nothing, 80. __________immediately copied the action of his guest.And that, said this second person, was a fine exampleofgood manners.71. (on the way) → in the way 72. unaware → aware73. as → than 74. it → which75. at → in 76. hasn’t →hadn’t77. American → Arab 78. as → like79. falls → fell 80. of → /Passage 8Until the very latest moment of his existence, man hasbeenbound to the planet on which he originated and devel-oped. Now he had the capability to leave that planet and71. __________ moveout into the universe to those worlds which he has known72. __________ previously only directly. Men have explored parts of themoon.put spaceships in orbit around another planet and possiblywithinthe decade will land into another planet and explore it. Can 73. __________too bold as to suggest that we may be able to colonize74. __________ other75. __________ planet within the not-too-distant future? Some haveadvocatedsuch a procedure as a solution to the population problem:ship theexcess people off to the moon. But we must keep in head76. __________ thebillions of dollars we might spend in carrying out theproject. Tomaintain the earth’s population at its present level, wewould haveto blast off into space 7,500 people every hour of every dayof theyear.Why are we spending so little money on space ex- 77. __________78. __________ ploration? Consider the great need for improving manyaspectsof the global environment, one is surely justified in hisconcern for the money and resources that they are poured79. __________ intothe space exploration efforts. But perhaps we should look atboth sides of the coin before arriving hasty conclusions. 80. __________71. had → has 72. directly → indirectly73. into → on 74. too → so75. planet → planets / worlds 76. head → mind77. little → much 78. Consider → Considering79. they → /80. (arriving) → (arriving) at 或arriving → reaching/drawing/makingPassage 9Most people work to earn a living and theyProduce goods and services. Goods are eitheragricultural (like maize) or manufactured (likecars). Services are such things like education, 1.________ medicine, and commerce. These people provide 2.________ goods; some provide services. Other people provideboth goods or services. For example, in the same 3.________ garage a man may buy a car or some service whichhelps him maintain his car.The work people do is called as economic 4.________ activity. All economic activities taken together makeup the economic system of a town, a city, a country,or the world. Such economic system is the sum-total 5._________ of what people do and what they want. The workpeople do either provides what they need or providesthe money with that they can by essential 6.________ commodities. Of course, most people hope to haveenough money to buy commodities and services whichare essential but which provide some particular 7.________ personal satisfaction, such as toys for children, visits 8._______ the cinema, and books.The science of economics is basic upon the facts 9.________ of our everyday lives. Economists study our every daylives and the general life of our communities in orderto understand the whole economic system of which weare a part. They try to describe the facts of theeconomy in which we live, and to explain how itworks. The economist methods should of course be 10.________ strictly objective and scientific.1.like -> as2.these -> some3.or -> and4.as -> \ 去掉as5.Such economic system -> Such∧an economic system6.that -> which7.are essential -> are∧not essential 或者essential -> non-essential 8.visits the cinema -> visits∧to the cinema9.basic -> based10.The economist methods -> The economist’s methodsThe economists’ methodsPassage 10Parents can be supportive of suspicions. Theycan be helpful to the teacher, or are in need of help 1. themselves. Sometimes, I think parents are too hardto their children. I have seen many parents of this 2. kind. I often have the problem of parents coming inand telling me what they really treat their kids. They 3.tell me that they usually stand over their kinds when they do their homework. They check their work and make big fuss over the grades. They criticize the kids 4. over everything having to do with school. My response usually is: ”well, you know, he is really agood kid. He is fine in my class. Maybe you shouldnot be too strict with them.” 5.We want parents to realize the fact that teachersare professors at working with children. They have 6. observed many children and many parents. Becauseof this, and because of their specialized training, teachers can be realistic about children. Teachersknow whether parents want their children to do well 7. and to behave well. But teachers know less what 8. children should be able to do at different ages andstages. They don’t expect the 8-year-olds to do thework that can only be done by the 12-year-olds.Parents, in the contrary, often expect their children 9.to do what is usually beyond their age and ability.Obviously, this may make great harm to the 10.children’s development.1.are -> be2.be hard to -> be hard on3.what -> how4.make big fuss -> make a big fuss5.them -> him6.professors -> expertsprofessional7.whether -> \that8.less -> morebetter9.in the contrary -> on the contrary10.make harm to -> do harm toPassage 11Closure is the positive felling you get when youfinish a task. Lack of closure results from the 1.________panicked feeling that you still have a million things todo. One way to obtain closure is divide a task into 2.________ manageable goals, list them, and check them offyour list as you finish them. For example, supposeyour historic teacher assigns three chapters to be 3.________ read. If your goal is to read all three chapters, youmay feel discouraged if you don’t complete thereading at one time. A more effective way tocomplete the assignment is to divide the reading intosmaller goals by thinking each chapter as a separate 4.________ goal. Thus you experience success as you complete.each chapter. While you have completed the overall 5.________ goal, you know you have progressed toward it.A second block to obtaining closure is unfinishedbusiness. You may have several tasks with the samedeadline. If changing from one task to another serves 6. ________ as a break, changing tasks too often waste time. 7. ________ Each time you switch, you lose momentum. Youmay be unable to change mental gears fast enough.You may find yourself thinking about the old projectwhen you should be concentrating in the new one. In 8. ________ addition, when you return to your first task, youhave to review where you are and what steps were 9. ________ left for you to finish.Often you solve this problem by determininghow much time you have free to work. If the timeavailable is short (i.e. ,an hour or less), you need towork on only one task. Alternate tasks when youhave more time. Completing one task or a largeportion of a task attributes to the feeling of closure. 10.______1.result from -> result in2.is divide -> is to divide3.historic teacher-> history teacher4.think each chapter -> think∧of each chapter5.have completed-> have∧not complete d6.If->Although7.waste -> wastes8.concentrate in -> concentrate on9.review where you are->review where you were10.attributes to -> contribute toPassage 12Oral health care is, these days, a big, boom 1. business. According to Ralph Nader, American 2. spend some $5 billion on dental care each year. Yet,although the tremendous amounts of money, time 3. and energy giving over to oral health, dental 4. literature indicates that about half the population inthis country has lost all of his natural teeth by age 5. 65. Nearly half of all people over age 20 wear a bridgeor denture, and more than 30 percent havecomplete upper and lower dentures. By age 50, oneout of every two persons have gum disease. 6.The dental profession blames neglectfulAmericans themselves. About half the population, itclaims, fails in visit the dentist regularly and some 30 7. million never did. Critics, on the other hand slam 8. the profession. It can be conservatively estimatedthat at least 15 percent of United States dentists are 9. incompetent, honest, or both, says a former 10. Pennsylvania Commissioner of Insurance. Some haveset the figure as high as 50 percent.1.boom -> booming2.American->Americans3.although->despite4.giving->given5.his -> its6.have -> has7.fails in visit -> fails to visit8.never did-> never do9.United States-> the United States10.incompetent,honest,or both-> incompetent, dishonest, or both。
(完整word版)大学英语四六级考试改错专项训练题
大学英语四六级考试改错专项训练题(1)Heavy falls of ash and rock fragments occurred over all of the inhabited parts of Montserrat. The ashfall deposit was 115 mm in thick at Lime Kiln Bay. The ash burdenresulted from the collapse of several wooden buildings inthe Salem area. Vegetation damage was extensively withMany birds were killed by the ash or trapped live in it.the close of several airports. At 09:10 on 13 July anexplosive eruption occurred, followed 2 hours of verylow seismic activity. The Washington V AAC estimated a cloud height of ~12 km a.s.l.During a helicopter reconnaissance flight in the morningValley was extensively modified also eroded with a deepcanyon gouged the pyroclastic flows. The fan had beencoast. The area the north of the Tar River Valley 1(2)Childhood is a time when there are few responsibilitiesto make life difficult. If a child has good parents, heis fed, looked after and loved, what he may do, It is 11. ____ improbable that he will ever again in his life be givenso much without having to do anything in turn. In addition, 12. ____life is always presenting new things to the child—thingsthat have lost their interesting for older people because 13. ____they are too well-known. A child finds pleasure in playingin the rain, or in the snow. [JP+2]His first visit to theseaside is a marvelous adventure. But a child has his pains:He is not so free to do as he wishes as he thinks old 14. ____people do; he is continually being told not to do things,or being punished for that he has done wrong. 15. ____His life is therefore not perfectly happy.16. ____When the young man starts to earn his own living, hebecomes free from the discipline of school and parents;but at the same time he is forced to accept responsibilities.He can not longer expect others to pay for his food, hisclothes, and his room, but has to work if he wants to livecomfortable. If he spends most of his time playing about in 17. ____the way that he used to as a child, he will suffer hungry. 18. ____And if he breaks the laws of society as he used to breakthe laws of his parents, he may . If, therefore, 19. ____he works hard, keeps out of trouble and has good health,he can have the great happiness of seeing himself making 20. ____steady progress in his job and of building up for himselfhis own position in society.(3)Pronouncing a language is a skill. Every normal person isexpert in the skill of pronouncing his own language, and 21. ____few people are even moderately proficient at pronouncingforeign languages. Now there are many reasons about this, 22. ____some obvious, some perhaps not so obvious. But I suggestthat the fundamental reason why people in general do notspeak foreign languages very better than they do is that 23. ____they fail to grasp the true name of the problem of learningto pronounce, and consequently never set about tacklingit by the right way. Far too many people fail to realize 24. ____that pronounce a foreign language is a skill, one that 25.____needs careful training of a special kind, and one thatcannot be acquired by just leaving it to take care of himself. 26. ____I think even teachers of language, while recognizing theimportance of a good accent, tend to neglect, in their practicalteaching, the branch of study concerning with speaking the 27. ____language. So the first point I want to make is that Englishpronunciation must be taught; the teacher may be prepared to 28. ____devote some of the lesson time to this, and by his wholeattitude to the subject he should get the student to feelthat here is a matter worth of receiving his close attention. 29. ____So, there should be occasions where other , 30. ____such as grammar or spelling, are allowed for the moment totake a secondary place.(4)People often dream of living in a perfect place where noone would be poor, and everyone would be considerable of 31. ____ everyone else. Such a place, however, is very good to be true: 32. ____ such a place is nowhere, and that's what the word "Utopia"means. It is made up two Greek words meaning "not a place". 33. ____ The word was first used by Thomas More, a sixteen century 34. ____ English writer whose book Utopia, published in 1516,describing a perfect island country. More's idea for tale came 35. ____from Plato. Plato's The Republic described what would be aperfect state. Early legends told a perfect place existing 36. ____ somewhere in Atlantic. These legends were no longer believed 37. ____when the explorations of Americans began, but after More'stime they became common for there places 38. ____ Utopia, if is effected, would not suddenly make everything 39. ____perfect because people are of nature imperfect. 40. ____改错专项训练题参考答案(1)1. 去掉in。
大学英语四六级考试改错专项训练题 (1)
大学英语四六级考试改错专项训练题(1)Heavy falls of ash and rock fragments occurred over all of the inhabited parts of Montserrat. The ashfall deposit was 115 mm in thick at Lime Kiln Bay. The ash burden 1.____ resulted from the collapse of several wooden buildings in 2.____ the Salem area. Vegetation damage was extensively with 3.____ downed trees and branches broken from many others.Many birds were killed by the ash or trapped live in it. 4.____ Ashfall fromthis event was reported on the islands ofNevis, St Kitts, Anguilla, and St Maarten, and resulted inthe close of several airports. At 09:10 on 13 July an 5.____ explosive eruption occurred, followed 2 hours of very 6.____low seismic activity. The Washington V AAC estimated a cloud height of ~12 km a.s.l.During a helicopter reconnaissance flight in the morning 7.____of 14 July, a large collapse scar was seen in the lavadome directed down the Tar River Valley. The Tar RiverValley was extensively modified also eroded with a deep 8.____ canyon gouged the pyroclastic flows. The fan had been 9.____ extended eastwards into the sea and northwards along thecoast. The area the north of the Tar River Valley 10.____ extending to Killyhawk Ghaut was devastated.(2)Childhood is a time when there are few responsibilitiesto make life difficult. If a child has good parents, heis fed, looked after and loved, what he may do, It is 11. ____ improbable that he will ever again in his life be givenso much without having to do anything in turn. In addition, 12. ____life is always presenting new things to the child—thingsthat have lost their interesting for older people because 13. ____they are too well-known. A child finds pleasure in playingin the rain, or in the snow. [JP+2]His first visit to theseaside is a marvelous adventure. But a child has his pains:He is not so free to do as he wishes as he thinks old 14. ____people do; he is continually being told not to do things,or being punished for that he has done wrong. 15. ____His life is therefore not perfectly happy.16. ____When the young man starts to earn his own living, hebecomes free from the discipline of school and parents;but at the same time he is forced to accept responsibilities.He can not longer expect others to pay for his food, hisclothes, and his room, but has to work if he wants to livecomfortable. If he spends most of his time playing about in 17. ____the way that he used to as a child, he will suffer hungry. 18. ____And if he breaks the laws of society as he used to breakthe laws of his parents, he may . If, therefore, 19. ____he works hard, keeps out of trouble and has good health,he can have the great happiness of seeing himself making 20. ____steady progress in his job and of building up for himselfhis own position in society.(3)Pronouncing a language is a skill. Every normal person isexpert in the skill of pronouncing his own language, and 21. ____few people are even moderately proficient at pronouncingforeign languages. Now there are many reasons about this, 22. ____some obvious, some perhaps not so obvious. But I suggestthat the fundamental reason why people in general do notspeak foreign languages very better than they do is that 23. ____they fail to grasp the true name of the problem of learningto pronounce, and consequently never set about tacklingit by the right way. Far too many people fail to realize 24. ____that pronounce a foreign language is a skill, one that 25.____needs careful training of a special kind, and one thatcannot be acquired by just leaving it to take care of himself. 26. ____I think even teachers of language, while recognizing theimportance of a good accent, tend to neglect, in their practicalteaching, the branch of study concerning with speaking the 27. ____language. So the first point I want to make is that Englishpronunciation must be taught; the teacher may be prepared to 28. ____devote some of the lesson time to this, and by his wholeattitude to the subject he should get the student to feelthat here is a matter worth of receiving his close attention. 29. ____So, there should be occasions where other , 30. ____such as grammar or spelling, are allowed for the moment totake a secondary place.(4)People often dream of living in a perfect place where noone would be poor, and everyone would be considerable of 31. ____ everyone else. Such a place, however, is very good to be true: 32. ____ such a place is nowhere, and that's what the word "Utopia"means. It is made up two Greek words meaning "not a place". 33. ____ The word was first used by Thomas More, a sixteen century 34. ____ English writer whose book Utopia, published in 1516,describing a perfect island country. More's idea for tale came 35. ____from Plato. Plato's The Republic described what would be aperfect state. Early legends told a perfect place existing 36. ____ somewhere in Atlantic. These legends were no longer believed 37. ____when the explorations of Americans began, but after More'stime they became common for there places 38. ____ Utopia, if is effected, would not suddenly make everything 39. ____perfect because people are of nature imperfect. 40. ____改错专项训练题参考答案(1)1. 去掉in。
四级英语短文改错真题
四级英语短文改错真题Recently, I have came across an interesting article about a study which examined the impact of using smartphones on students' academic performance in class. According to the study, the findings showed that there are both positive and negative effects of using smartphones in the classroom.On one hand, smartphones can be a useful tool for learning. With access to the internet, students can easily search for information and resources related to their studies. This can enhance their understanding of the subjects and broaden their knowledge. Moreover, there are many educational apps available that can help students practice and improve their language skills, math abilities, and other academic areas.On the other hand, smartphones can also be a distraction in the classroom. Many students are tempted to use their phones for non-academic purposes during class time, such as checking social media or playing games. This can lead to a lack of focus and lower academic performance. Furthermore, the use of smartphones can create a barrier between students and teachers, as it may discourage face-to-face communication and interaction.In my opinion, it is important to find a balance when it comes to using smartphones in the classroom. Instead of completely banning their use, teachers can set clear rules and guidelines for smartphone usage. For example, they can allow students to use their phones for educational purposes only and during designated times. This way, students can still benefit from the advantages that smartphones offer, while minimizing the potential negative impact on their academic performance.In conclusion, the impact of using smartphones in the classroom is a complex issue. While they have the potential to enhance learning and provide useful resources, they can also be a distraction and hinder academic progress. It is crucial for educators to find a middle ground and establish policies that promote responsible smartphone use in order to create a conducive learning environment for all students.。
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9. down → /
10. and → but
fever y interfering with some of the body's reactions.
Specifically, aspirin seems to slow down the formation
of the acids involved in pain and the complex chemical
poisoning among children. it has side effects that, if 4.__________
relatively mild, are largely unrecognized between users. 5.__________
Although aspirin was first sold by Germam company
reactions that cause fever. The chemistry of these acids
is not fully understood, and the slowing effect of aspirin 10.__________
is well known.
参考答案
1. of ∧ safest → the
2. medicines → medicine(or: drug)
3. suffered → suffering
4. if → though(or: although)
5. between → among
6. is → are
7. number → deal(or: amount,quantity)
it is the only thing that works. Aspirin, in short, is
truly the 20th-century wonder drug. It is also the
second largest suicide drug and is the leading cause of
in 1899, it has been around much longer than that.
Hippocrates, in ancient Greece, understood the medical value
of the leaves and tree bark which today is known to 6.__________
of aspirin. By 1915, aspirin tablets were available
in the United States.
A small quantity of aspirin(two five-grain tablets)
relieves pain and inflammation. It also reduces down 9.__________
world today, it is an effective pain reliever. Its bad
effects are relatively mild, and it is cheap.
For millions of people suffered from arthrities, 3.__________
contain salicylates, the chemical in aspirin. during the
19th century, there was a great number of experimentation 7.__________
in Europe with this chemical, and it led in the introduction 8.__________
英语四级改错练习题 第001组
Americans this year will swallow 15000 tons of
aspirin, one of safest and most effective drugs 1.__________
invented by man. The most popular medicines in the 2.__________