英语(一)
历年真题
Lincoln’s Early YearsLincoln was born on February 12, 1809, in a wooden (wood) house in Kentucky. In1816, Lincoln’s family _____(41)(move) to southern Indiana where he went to local schools. Lincoln did not have much formal _____(42)(educate) due to his poor family background. He had to work _____(43)(constant) to support his family. In 1830, Lincoln got a job _____(44)(work) on a boat in Southern Illinois. Later Lincoln became _____(45)(involve) in local politics. He was a _____(46)(support) of the Whig Party(辉格党). Like some other Whig _____(47)(member) in the country. Lincoln was strongly against _____(48)(slave). In 1834, he won the _____(49)(elect) to the state legislature(州立法委员会). Lincoln taught himself law. After _____(50)(pass) the bar exam(律师资格考试)in 1836, he became a lawyer.49._____
Lincoln’s Early YearsLincoln was born on February 12, 1809, in a wooden (wood) house in Kentucky. In1816, Lincoln’s family _____(41)(move) to southern Indiana where he went to local schools. Lincoln did not have much formal _____(42)(educate) due to his poor family background. He had to work _____(43)(constant) to support his family. In 1830, Lincoln got a job _____(44)(work) on a boat in Southern Illinois. Later Lincoln became _____(45)(involve) in local politics. He was a _____(46)(support) of the Whig Party(辉格党). Like some other Whig _____(47)(member) in the country. Lincoln was strongly against _____(48)(slave). In 1834, he won the _____(49)(elect) to the state legislature(州立法委员会). Lincoln taught himself law. After _____(50)(pass) the bar exam(律师资格考试)in 1836, he became a lawyer.50._____
某英文报社正在举办题为“Water-saving and I”的征文活动。请你根据下述写作要点提交一篇英文短文应征。(1)为什么要节约用水?(2)你能为节约用水做些什么?
India's "Macaron(小圆饼)Queen"Pooja was young Indian woman. She opened her own macaron store a few years ago. She should have been a lawyer. But while studying law at university in Mumbai, she decided to quit. She wanted to do something more creative. She had helped her mother in the kitchen during her childhood, so she decided to work with food instead of legal cases.Pooja persuaded her parents to let her go to Switzerland to study cooking and management. Returning to Mumbai upon graduation, she set to work in her parent’s kitchen. She wanted to develop her own macaron recipe(配方). It took her around six months of research and 60 failed recipes to finally get something right.When she had a recipe she was proud of, her businessman father agreed to put money into her business. Yet being both young and female, she faced challenges. "The biggest problem was to get people to take you seriously," she said. "For example, if I had to sign a lease(租约)for a place, or buy machinery, I would have to ask my father to make the phone calls for me."She named the business after "Le 15 Patisserie" in Paris, where she once lived. In Mumbai, very few people knew what a macaron was. People never tried one. Pooja decided to give away free samples. The cakes were immediately popular, and sales soon started to go up thanks to positive word of mouth.Pooja also started running classes on how to make macarons and other cakes. This made the business better known. She even published a book on cooking. It became a best-seller in India. One newspaper article called her "the macaron queen of India."Pooja became a lawyer after graduation.
India's "Macaron(小圆饼)Queen"Pooja was young Indian woman. She opened her own macaron store a few years ago. She should have been a lawyer. But while studying law at university in Mumbai, she decided to quit. She wanted to do something more creative. She had helped her mother in the kitchen during her childhood, so she decided to work with food instead of legal cases.Pooja persuaded her parents to let her go to Switzerland to study cooking and management. Returning to Mumbai upon graduation, she set to work in her parent’s kitchen. She wanted to develop her own macaron recipe(配方). It took her around six months of research and 60 failed recipes to finally get something right.When she had a recipe she was proud of, her businessman father agreed to put money into her business. Yet being both young and female, she faced challenges. "The biggest problem was to get people to take you seriously," she said. "For example, if I had to sign a lease(租约)for a place, or buy machinery, I would have to ask my father to make the phone calls for me."She named the business after "Le 15 Patisserie" in Paris, where she once lived. In Mumbai, very few people knew what a macaron was. People never tried one. Pooja decided to give away free samples. The cakes were immediately popular, and sales soon started to go up thanks to positive word of mouth.Pooja also started running classes on how to make macarons and other cakes. This made the business better known. She even published a book on cooking. It became a best-seller in India. One newspaper article called her "the macaron queen of India."Pooja thought cooking was more creative than law.
India's "Macaron(小圆饼)Queen"Pooja was young Indian woman. She opened her own macaron store a few years ago. She should have been a lawyer. But while studying law at university in Mumbai, she decided to quit. She wanted to do something more creative. She had helped her mother in the kitchen during her childhood, so she decided to work with food instead of legal cases.Pooja persuaded her parents to let her go to Switzerland to study cooking and management. Returning to Mumbai upon graduation, she set to work in her parent’s kitchen. She wanted to develop her own macaron recipe(配方). It took her around six months of research and 60 failed recipes to finally get something right.When she had a recipe she was proud of, her businessman father agreed to put money into her business. Yet being both young and female, she faced challenges. "The biggest problem was to get people to take you seriously," she said. "For example, if I had to sign a lease(租约)for a place, or buy machinery, I would have to ask my father to make the phone calls for me."She named the business after "Le 15 Patisserie" in Paris, where she once lived. In Mumbai, very few people knew what a macaron was. People never tried one. Pooja decided to give away free samples. The cakes were immediately popular, and sales soon started to go up thanks to positive word of mouth.Pooja also started running classes on how to make macarons and other cakes. This made the business better known. She even published a book on cooking. It became a best-seller in India. One newspaper article called her "the macaron queen of India."Pooja studied cooking in Switzerland for six months.
India's "Macaron(小圆饼)Queen"Pooja was young Indian woman. She opened her own macaron store a few years ago. She should have been a lawyer. But while studying law at university in Mumbai, she decided to quit. She wanted to do something more creative. She had helped her mother in the kitchen during her childhood, so she decided to work with food instead of legal cases.Pooja persuaded her parents to let her go to Switzerland to study cooking and management. Returning to Mumbai upon graduation, she set to work in her parent’s kitchen. She wanted to develop her own macaron recipe(配方). It took her around six months of research and 60 failed recipes to finally get something right.When she had a recipe she was proud of, her businessman father agreed to put money into her business. Yet being both young and female, she faced challenges. "The biggest problem was to get people to take you seriously," she said. "For example, if I had to sign a lease(租约)for a place, or buy machinery, I would have to ask my father to make the phone calls for me."She named the business after "Le 15 Patisserie" in Paris, where she once lived. In Mumbai, very few people knew what a macaron was. People never tried one. Pooja decided to give away free samples. The cakes were immediately popular, and sales soon started to go up thanks to positive word of mouth.Pooja also started running classes on how to make macarons and other cakes. This made the business better known. She even published a book on cooking. It became a best-seller in India. One newspaper article called her "the macaron queen of India."Pooja got the right macaron recipe from her parents.
India's "Macaron(小圆饼)Queen"Pooja was young Indian woman. She opened her own macaron store a few years ago. She should have been a lawyer. But while studying law at university in Mumbai, she decided to quit. She wanted to do something more creative. She had helped her mother in the kitchen during her childhood, so she decided to work with food instead of legal cases.Pooja persuaded her parents to let her go to Switzerland to study cooking and management. Returning to Mumbai upon graduation, she set to work in her parent’s kitchen. She wanted to develop her own macaron recipe(配方). It took her around six months of research and 60 failed recipes to finally get something right.When she had a recipe she was proud of, her businessman father agreed to put money into her business. Yet being both young and female, she faced challenges. "The biggest problem was to get people to take you seriously," she said. "For example, if I had to sign a lease(租约)for a place, or buy machinery, I would have to ask my father to make the phone calls for me."She named the business after "Le 15 Patisserie" in Paris, where she once lived. In Mumbai, very few people knew what a macaron was. People never tried one. Pooja decided to give away free samples. The cakes were immediately popular, and sales soon started to go up thanks to positive word of mouth.Pooja also started running classes on how to make macarons and other cakes. This made the business better known. She even published a book on cooking. It became a best-seller in India. One newspaper article called her "the macaron queen of India."Poojas father refused to give her the money for the business.
India's "Macaron(小圆饼)Queen"Pooja was young Indian woman. She opened her own macaron store a few years ago. She should have been a lawyer. But while studying law at university in Mumbai, she decided to quit. She wanted to do something more creative. She had helped her mother in the kitchen during her childhood, so she decided to work with food instead of legal cases.Pooja persuaded her parents to let her go to Switzerland to study cooking and management. Returning to Mumbai upon graduation, she set to work in her parent’s kitchen. She wanted to develop her own macaron recipe(配方). It took her around six months of research and 60 failed recipes to finally get something right.When she had a recipe she was proud of, her businessman father agreed to put money into her business. Yet being both young and female, she faced challenges. "The biggest problem was to get people to take you seriously," she said. "For example, if I had to sign a lease(租约)for a place, or buy machinery, I would have to ask my father to make the phone calls for me."She named the business after "Le 15 Patisserie" in Paris, where she once lived. In Mumbai, very few people knew what a macaron was. People never tried one. Pooja decided to give away free samples. The cakes were immediately popular, and sales soon started to go up thanks to positive word of mouth.Pooja also started running classes on how to make macarons and other cakes. This made the business better known. She even published a book on cooking. It became a best-seller in India. One newspaper article called her "the macaron queen of India."Poojas father sometimes helped her make business calls.
India's "Macaron(小圆饼)Queen"Pooja was young Indian woman. She opened her own macaron store a few years ago. She should have been a lawyer. But while studying law at university in Mumbai, she decided to quit. She wanted to do something more creative. She had helped her mother in the kitchen during her childhood, so she decided to work with food instead of legal cases.Pooja persuaded her parents to let her go to Switzerland to study cooking and management. Returning to Mumbai upon graduation, she set to work in her parent’s kitchen. She wanted to develop her own macaron recipe(配方). It took her around six months of research and 60 failed recipes to finally get something right.When she had a recipe she was proud of, her businessman father agreed to put money into her business. Yet being both young and female, she faced challenges. "The biggest problem was to get people to take you seriously," she said. "For example, if I had to sign a lease(租约)for a place, or buy machinery, I would have to ask my father to make the phone calls for me."She named the business after "Le 15 Patisserie" in Paris, where she once lived. In Mumbai, very few people knew what a macaron was. People never tried one. Pooja decided to give away free samples. The cakes were immediately popular, and sales soon started to go up thanks to positive word of mouth.Pooja also started running classes on how to make macarons and other cakes. This made the business better known. She even published a book on cooking. It became a best-seller in India. One newspaper article called her "the macaron queen of India."Pooja lived in Paris for five years.
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