阅读下面的材料,根据要求写作。墨子说:“视人之国,若视其国;视人之家,若视其家;视人之身,若视其身。”英国诗人约翰多恩说:“没有人是自成一体、与世隔绝的孤岛,每一个人都是广袤大陆的一部分。”“青山一道同云雨,明月何曾是两乡。”“同气连枝,共盼春来。”……2020年的春天,这些寄言印在国际社会援助中国的物资上,表达了世界人民对中国的支持。“山和山不相遇,人和人要相逢。”“消失吧,黑夜!黎明时我们将获胜!”……这些话语印在中国援助其他国家的物资上,寄托着中国人民对世界的祝福。“世界青年与社会发展论坛”邀请你作为中国青年代表参会,发表以“携手同一世界,青年共创未来”为主题的中文演讲。请完成一篇演讲稿。要求:结合材料内容及含意完成写作任务;选好角度,确定立意,明确文体,自拟标题;不要套作,不得抄袭;不得泄露个人信息;不少于800字。
鲁芝字世英,扶风郿人也。世有名德,为西州豪族。父为郭汜所害,芝襁褓流离,年十七,乃移居雍,耽思坟籍..。郡举上计吏,州辟别驾。魏车骑将军郭淮为雍州刺史,深敬重之。举孝廉,除郎中。后拜骑都尉、参军事、行安南太守,迁尚书郎。曹真出督关右,又参大司马军事。真薨,宣帝代焉,乃引芝参骠骑军事,转天水太守。郡邻于蜀,数被侵掠,户口减削,寇盗充斥,芝倾心镇卫,更造城市,数年间旧境悉复。迁广平太守。天水夷夏慕德,老幼赴阙..献书,乞留芝。魏明帝许焉。曹爽辅政,引为司马。芝屡有谠言嘉谋,爽弗能纳。及宣帝起兵诛爽,芝率余众犯门斩关,驰出赴爽,劝爽曰:“公居伊周之位,一旦以罪见黜,虽欲牵黄犬,复可得乎!若挟天子保许昌,杖大威以羽檄征四方兵,孰敢不从!舍此而去,欲就东市,岂不痛哉!”爽懦惑不能用遂委身受戮芝坐爽下狱当死而口不讼直志不苟免宣帝嘉之赦而不诛俄而起为并州刺史诸葛诞以寿春叛,魏帝出征,芝率荆州文武以为先驱。诞平,迁大尚书,掌刑理。武帝践祚..,转镇东将军,进爵为侯。帝以芝清忠履正,素无居宅,使军兵为作屋五十间。芝以年及悬车,告老逊位..,章表十余上,于是征为光禄大夫,位特进,给吏卒,门施行马。羊祜为车骑将军,乃以位让芝,曰:“光禄大夫鲁芝洁身寡欲,和而不同,服事华发,以礼终始,未蒙此选,臣更越之,何以塞天下之望!”上不从。其为人所重如是。泰始九年卒,年八十四。帝为举哀,谥曰贞,赐茔田百亩。(节选自《晋书·鲁芝传》)下列对文中画波浪线部分的断句,正确的一项是
鲁芝字世英,扶风郿人也。世有名德,为西州豪族。父为郭汜所害,芝襁褓流离,年十七,乃移居雍,耽思坟籍..。郡举上计吏,州辟别驾。魏车骑将军郭淮为雍州刺史,深敬重之。举孝廉,除郎中。后拜骑都尉、参军事、行安南太守,迁尚书郎。曹真出督关右,又参大司马军事。真薨,宣帝代焉,乃引芝参骠骑军事,转天水太守。郡邻于蜀,数被侵掠,户口减削,寇盗充斥,芝倾心镇卫,更造城市,数年间旧境悉复。迁广平太守。天水夷夏慕德,老幼赴阙..献书,乞留芝。魏明帝许焉。曹爽辅政,引为司马。芝屡有谠言嘉谋,爽弗能纳。及宣帝起兵诛爽,芝率余众犯门斩关,驰出赴爽,劝爽曰:“公居伊周之位,一旦以罪见黜,虽欲牵黄犬,复可得乎!若挟天子保许昌,杖大威以羽檄征四方兵,孰敢不从!舍此而去,欲就东市,岂不痛哉!”爽懦惑不能用遂委身受戮芝坐爽下狱当死而口不讼直志不苟免宣帝嘉之赦而不诛俄而起为并州刺史诸葛诞以寿春叛,魏帝出征,芝率荆州文武以为先驱。诞平,迁大尚书,掌刑理。武帝践祚..,转镇东将军,进爵为侯。帝以芝清忠履正,素无居宅,使军兵为作屋五十间。芝以年及悬车,告老逊位..,章表十余上,于是征为光禄大夫,位特进,给吏卒,门施行马。羊祜为车骑将军,乃以位让芝,曰:“光禄大夫鲁芝洁身寡欲,和而不同,服事华发,以礼终始,未蒙此选,臣更越之,何以塞天下之望!”上不从。其为人所重如是。泰始九年卒,年八十四。帝为举哀,谥曰贞,赐茔田百亩。(节选自《晋书·鲁芝传》)下列对原文有关内容的概括和分析,不正确的一项是
下列对文中加点词语的相关内容的解说,不正确的一项是()
While only about 300 workers receive disablement benefit for industrial dermatitis every year, there may be between 15,000 and 60,000 new cases of this condition every year.
Managers know that stress is a barrier to motivating the workforce.
常见的几种约束有哪些?分别代表什么意思?如何使用?
下图是三种典型多址方式的示意图, 请标出三个图分别是哪种多址方式, 并且对于每种多址 方式举出一个典型的网络类型。
简述滞期费和速遣费的含义。
We are now focusing on the adverse effects of work on health, although the positive effects of appropriate work on health and well-being are no less important.
5.Most scientists have assumed that our sense of smell depends on receptors in the nose detecting the shape of incoming molecules, which triggers a signal to the brain.This molecular 'lock and key' process is thought to lie behind a wide range of the body's detection systems: it is how some parts of the immune system recognise invaders, for example, and how the tongue recognizes some tastes.
6.But Turin argued that smell doesn't seem to fit this picture very well.Molecules that look almost identical can smell very different — such as alcohols, which smell like spirits, and thiols, which smell like rotten eggs.And molecules with very different structures can smell similar.Most strikingly, some molecules can smell different — to animals, if not necessarily to humans — simply because they contain different isotopes (atoms that are chemically identical but have a different mass).
7.Turin's explanation for these smelly facts invokes the idea that the smell signal in olfactory receptor proteins is triggered not by an odour molecule's shape, but by its vibrations, which can enourage an electron to jump between two parts of the receptor in a quantum-mechanical process called tunnelling.This electron movement could initiate the smell signal being sent to the brain.
8.This would explain why isotopes can smell different: their vibration frequencies are changed if the atoms are heavier.Turin's mechanism, says Marshall Stoneham of the UCL team, is more like swipe-card identification than a key fitting a lock.
9.Vibration-assisted electron tunnelling can undoubtedly occur — it is used in an experimental technique for measuring molecular vibrations."The question is whether this is possible in the nose," says Stoneham's colleague, Andrew Horsfield.
10.Stoneham says that when he first heard about Turin's idea, while Turin was himself based at UCL, "I didn't believe it".But, he adds, "because it was an interesting idea, I thought I should prove it couldn't work.I did some simple calculations, and only then began to feel Luca could be right." Now Stoneham and his co-workers have done the job more thoroughly, in a paper soon to be published in Physical Review Letters.
11.The UCL team calculated the rates of electron hopping in a nose receptor that has an odorant molecule bound to it.This rate depends on various properties of the biomolecular system that are not known, but the researchers could estimate these parameters based on typical values for molecules of this sort.
12.The key issue is whether the hopping rate with the odorant in place is significantly greater than that without it.The calculations show that it is — which means that odour identification in this way seems theoretically possible.
13.But Horsfield stresses that that's different from a proof of Turin's idea."So far things look plausible, but we need proper experimental verification.We're beginning to think about what experiments could be performed."
14.Meanwhile, Turin is pressing ahead with his hypothesis."At Flexitral we have been designing odorants exclusively on the basis of their computed vibrations," he says."Our success rate at odorant discovery is two orders of magnitude better than the competition." At the very least, he is putting his money where his nose is.
Questions 5-9
Complete the sentences below with words from the passage.Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
5.The hypothesis that we smell by sensing the molecular vibration was made by ______.
6.Turin's company is based in ______.
7.Most scientists believed that our nose works in the same way as our ______.
8.Different isotopes can smell different when ______ weigh differently.
9.According to Audrew Horsfield, it is still to be proved that ______ could really occur in human nose.
试题">Rogue theory of smell gets a boost
1.A controversial theory of how we smell, which claims that our fine sense of odour depends on quantum mechanics, has been given the thumbs up by a team of physicists.
2.Calculations by researchers at University College London (UCL) show that the idea that we smell odour molecules by sensing their molecular vibrations makes sense in terms of the physics involved.
3.That's still some way from proving that the theory, proposed in the mid-1990s by biophysicist Luca Turin, is correct.But it should make other scientists take the idea more seriously.
4."This is a big step forward," says Turin, who has now set up his own perfume company Flexitral in Virginia.He says that since he published his theory, "it has been ignored rather than criticized."
5.Most scientists have assumed that our sense of smell depends on receptors in the nose detecting the shape of incoming molecules, which triggers a signal to the brain.This molecular 'lock and key' process is thought to lie behind a wide range of the body's detection systems: it is how some parts of the immune system recognise invaders, for example, and how the tongue recognizes some tastes.
6.But Turin argued that smell doesn't seem to fit this picture very well.Molecules that look almost identical can smell very different — such as alcohols, which smell like spirits, and thiols, which smell like rotten eggs.And molecules with very different structures can smell similar.Most strikingly, some molecules can smell different — to animals, if not necessarily to humans — simply because they contain different isotopes (atoms that are chemically identical but have a different mass).
7.Turin's explanation for these smelly facts invokes the idea that the smell signal in olfactory receptor proteins is triggered not by an odour molecule's shape, but by its vibrations, which can enourage an electron to jump between two parts of the receptor in a quantum-mechanical process called tunnelling.This electron movement could initiate the smell signal being sent to the brain.
8.This would explain why isotopes can smell different: their vibration frequencies are changed if the atoms are heavier.Turin's mechanism, says Marshall Stoneham of the UCL team, is more like swipe-card identification than a key fitting a lock.
9.Vibration-assisted electron tunnelling can undoubtedly occur — it is used in an experimental technique for measuring molecular vibrations."The question is whether this is possible in the nose," says Stoneham's colleague, Andrew Horsfield.
10.Stoneham says that when he first heard about Turin's idea, while Turin was himself based at UCL, "I didn't believe it".But, he adds, "because it was an interesting idea, I thought I should prove it couldn't work.I did some simple calculations, and only then began to feel Luca could be right." Now Stoneham and his co-workers have done the job more thoroughly, in a paper soon to be published in Physical Review Letters.
11.The UCL team calculated the rates of electron hopping in a nose receptor that has an odorant molecule bound to it.This rate depends on various properties of the biomolecular system that are not known, but the researchers could estimate these parameters based on typical values for molecules of this sort.
12.The key issue is whether the hopping rate with the odorant in place is significantly greater than that without it.The calculations show that it is — which means that odour identification in this way seems theoretically possible.
13.But Horsfield stresses that that's different from a proof of Turin's idea."So far things look plausible, but we need proper experimental verification.We're beginning to think about what experiments could be performed."
14.Meanwhile, Turin is pressing ahead with his hypothesis."At Flexitral we have been designing odorants exclusively on the basis of their computed vibrations," he says."Our success rate at odorant discovery is two orders of magnitude better than the competition." At the very least, he is putting his money where his nose is.
Questions 5-9
Complete the sentences below with words from the passage.Use NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
5.The hypothesis that we smell by sensing the molecular vibration was made by ______.
6.Turin's company is based in ______.
7.Most scientists believed that our nose works in the same way as our ______.
8.Different isotopes can smell different when ______ weigh differently.
9.According to Audrew Horsfield, it is still to be proved that ______ could really occur in human nose.
什么是触发器?触发器有哪几种?触发器有什么优点 ?
什么是负载测试?什么是性能测试?
The company also offers an exercise physiologist to help employees suffering from stress.