( )1. A. rivers ( )2. A. small ( )3. A. people ( )4. A. take ( )5. A. easy ( )6. A. driving ( )7. A. hope ( )8. A. from ( )9. A. bad ( )10. A. look
| B. cities B. big B. person B. win B. difficult B. taking B. lose B. to B. angry B. catch
| C. villages C. computer C. women C. use C. important C. trying C. do C. into C. hard C. become
| D. streets D. sports D. girls D. spend D. beautiful D. running D. make D. up D. lucky D. like
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答案
1-5 DCADB 6-10 CBADC |
举一反三
阅读理解。 | Some people think that as more and more people have televisions in their homes, fewer and fewer people will buy books and newspapers. Why read an article in the newspaper when the TV news can bring you the information in a few minutes and with pictures? Why read a novel when a play on television can tell you the same story with color, pictures and action? Why read the biographies of famous men and women when a one-hour-long television program can tell you all that you want to know? Television has not killed reading, however. Today, newspapers and magazines sell in very large numbers. And books of every kind are sold more than ever before. Books are still a cheap way to get information and entertainment. Although some books with hard covers are expensive, many books are published today as paperbacks, which are reasonably cheap. A paperback novel, for example, is always cheaper than an evening at the movies or the theater, and you can keep a book forever and read it many times. Books in the home are a wonderful source of knowledge and pleasure and some types of books should be in every home. Every home should have a good dictionary. Every home should have an atlas (地图集) of the world, with large clear maps. It might be expensive, but a good encyclopedia is useful, too, because you can find information on any subject. In addition, it is useful to have on your bookshelves other non-fiction books such as history books, science textbooks, cook books, books about medicine and health, etc. it is equally important to have some fiction (小说) on your shelves, too. Then you can relax with a good story, or from time to time you can take a book of poems off your shelves and read thoughts and feelings of your favorite poets. | 1. Which is usually quicker? | A. To read a biography of a famous person. B. To watch a television program about a famous person. C. To read a newspaper or a magazine. D. To buy a good dictionary at home. | 2. What"s the Chinese meaning of the underlined word "encyclopedia"? | A. 百科全书 B. 小说 C. 医药卫生 D. 世界地图 | 3. Which is usually cheaper? | A. A paperback. B. A hard-cover book. C. An evening at the movies. D. All above. | 4. Which is the most important to have in your home? | A. Non-fiction books, such as a dictionary and an encyclopedia. B. Fiction, such as novels, short stories and books of poems. C. A" mixture of both good non-fiction and your favorite fiction. D. Some newspapers and magazines of every kind. | 5. Which of the following statements best expresses the main idea of the last paragraph? | A. Books in the home are a wonderful source of knowledge and pleasure. B. We should buy a dictionary and use it for reading. C. It is useful to have a good encyclopedia on the shelf. D. Every home should have an atlas of the world. | 完形填空。 | When you"re a teenager (青少年) it seems that every time you say, "I want to...", your parents answer, "No, you can"t." Young people further complain that their parents do not 1 them. When something goes 2 , most parents just don"t believe in their children. 3 asking why, they think their kids are wrong. And not many parents allow their kids to choose for themselves. Yes, 4 is true that your parents sometimes treat you as a little child. But remember that not long ago you were really a child. Your parents still remember the childish 5 you used to make. They want to protect you 6 you don"t want them to do so. So, if you want to get 7 freedom (自由), please try to understand your parents and don"t lie to them. Try a more friendly way. If you want them to 8 you to stay out late, don"t just say "All 9 kids can stay out late." Tell them as much as you can about what you want to do and where you"ll be and 10 it"s important for you to stay out late. Then they just might say, "Yes". | ( )1. A. enjoy ( )2. A. badly ( )3. A. Except ( )4. A. it ( )5. A. uses ( )6. A. if ( )7. A. most ( )8. A. allow ( )9. A. another ( )10. A. how
| B. prefer B. wrong B. Instead B. this B. differences B. though B. least B. hope B. others B. when
| C. understand C. nice C. With C. that C. minds C. because C. more C. wish C. the others C. why
| D. decide D. clear D. Without D. one D. mistakes D. since D. less D. ask D. the other D. which
| 阅读理解。 | Moving out, moving back In the countries all over the world, people are leaving the countryside in large numbers to find jobs in the cities. They leave because the countryside is much poorer than the city and often there isn"t much work there. Services such as hospital and transport (交通) are usually much better in cities than they are in the country. They hope that their lives will improve when they move to the city. But in the big cities of Europe and America-London, Pairs, New York, people are moving out of the city. These are usually families who have some money, and want to live a quieter life. They are tired of the noise and the dirt of the city, and the crowded streets, trains. and buses. They don"t want to sit in traffic any more. They want a house with a garden, and clean air that isn"t polluted. So they move out. Some don"t go very far, just a little away from the city, to the towns near the cities; other people move to the real countryside with sheep and cows and green fields! There, they start a new life and try to make new friends. Not all those who move from the city to the countryside are happy. After two or three years, many people who have done this feel that it was a big mistake. They don"t make so much money and there isn"t much to do. Country people are very different and aren"t always very friendly. As a result, quite a lot of people who have moved to the countryside move back to the city. "It"s wonderful to see crowds in the streets and cinema lights," they say, "I"m so glad I"m back in the city!" | 1. Is there often much work to do in the countryside? ___________________________________________________ 2. What kind of families are moving out of the city? ___________________________________________________ 3. What are they tired of about the city? ___________________________________________________ 4. What do they think of the people in the countryside? ___________________________________________________ 5. What can we learn from the sentence "It"s wonderful to see crowds in the streets and cinema lights"? ___________________________________________________ | 阅读理解。 | What"s a blog? A blog is a personal online diary (日记). It"s cool, it"s hot, and everyone is doing it. People talk about it often. Sound like a fashion? In fact, It"s another trend (流行趋势). And the word "blogger" means a person who writes diaries online. Are you a blogger? Many bloggers are teenagers who log (进入) onto websites to discuss anything in their lives. Many of today"s teenagers are not afraid to openly discuss everything in their lives. Teenagers complain about their parents and homework. They share diaries, post (发布) songs from the latest bands and show pictures of theirs. They write their own poems, say something about their girlfriends or boyfriends and complain to each other or offer support. But mostly they just write down what they do every day. However, many parents are worried about these young bloggers. Parents see the kids talking about how they got drunk last weekend and how they don"t like studying. They are using the language that is surprising to their parents. Besides hearing from their friends, teen bloggers also get messages from strangers. Most of the time, it"s older men asking to meet teenage girls. "These strange men are dangerous for my kids. They sometimes teach my kids bad words." said Cara Cabral, a mother of two children. Many teenagers and young adults know it"s not safe to use blogs on the Internet. They know they are putting information about themselves in a place where it can be seen by anyone. But teenagers are unwilling to give up these new communication tools that have become a way of life for many of them. | 1. The underlined word "it" in the first paragraph means _____. | A. the fashion B. the Internet C. the blog | 2. Which of the following is NOT TRUE? | A. Teenagers don"t tell about their personal life in their blogs. B. Teenagers mostly write down what they do every day in their blogs. C. Teenagers complain about their parents and homework in their blogs. | 3. What"s the main idea of the third paragraph? | A. Many parents don"t understand kids" language in their blogs. B. Many parents are worried about these young bloggers. C. Many parents can understand why their kids don"t like studying. | 4. Many parents think it"s _____ for their children to get messages from strangers. | A. dangerous B. interesting C. surprising | 5. We can learn from the last paragraph that _____. | A. It"s easy for many teenagers to give up blogging on the Internet B. It"s safe for many teenagers to put their personal information on the Internet C. It"s popular for many teenagers to use blogs on the Internet | 阅读理解。 | For one week in April, millions of people chose not to watch TV for “TV Turnoff Week”. TV Turnoff Week started in 1995 and is more popular every year. Many people discover that you can have a good time with the TV off. If that sounds crazy to you, just have a look at some numbers: ―An American teenager spends 900 hours every year at school; the same teenager spends 1,023 hours every year watching TV. That"s 2 hours 49 minutes every day. ―An average (平均) British person (not just teenagers) watches 3 hours 35 minutes every day. ―In the US, most TV has adverts. American children see 20,000 adverts every year. By age 65, an American has seen two million ads! But some research from Britain says that may not be a problem. The London Business School watched people carefully during TV adverts and they discovered that people don"t watch a lot of the ads. The researchers discovered that the most common activity during the adverts was talking to other people in the room. Many other people started reading or doing housework or changed channels during adverts. They only really watched them about 25 percent of the time. | 1. During TV Turnoff Week, many people don"t _____. | A. watch TV B. change channels C. watch adverts D. do their school work | 2. From the passage we can learn that _____. | A. American children see more adverts on TV than their parents B. British people spend more than 3 hours a day in front of their TV C. Researchers noticed that most people changed channels during ads D. An American teenager spends more time at school than watching TV | 3. The writer"s purpose is _____. | A. to advise us to spend less time on TV B. to tell us how to avoid watching adverts C. to show us how many adverts American TV has D. to ask us to turn off TV during TV Turnoff Week |
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