:高考英语阅读理解专项练习
高考英语阅读理解专练
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。
A
TheMuseumofChildhoodisAustraliasmostcomprehensivecollectionofchildhooditemsincludingtoys,dolls,infantandschoolmaterial。
Housedinamodemfacility,thedisplaysreflectAustralianchildhoodexperienceovertimeincludingplay,childrearing,orphanagechildhood,andhome,school,andwartimeexperience。
Therearemanyhands-onexhibitsandeducationsessionsincludingthefamouslessoninthe1920sOneTeacherBushClassroom。
TheMuseumalsohostsnationaltouringexhibitionsandconductsspecialactivitiesonSundaysandschoolholidays(ringfordetails)。
Open:Tuesday--Friday10am--4pm,Sunday10am--4:30pm,orbyarrangement。
SpecialactivitiesonSundaysasadvertise。
Closed:Publicholidays,16December-18January。
Location:EdithCowanUniversitycampus,BayRoad,Claremont(takebus208andalightattheBayRoadandPrincessRoadintersection。TheMuseumis15minuteswalkfromClaremonttrainstation)。
Tel:(08)94421373;Fax:(08)94421314
1。On______youcanstayattheMuseumuntilhalfpastfour。
A。WednesdayB。FridayC。SundayD。Monday
2。Ifyouwanttoattendaspecialactivity,youdbettercomeon_______。
A。MondayB。TuesdayC。SaturdayD。Sunday
3。WhenyoucomeonDecember20th,Friday,youwillfindtheMuseum_______。
A。closedB。holdingspecialactivities
C。notcloseduntil4:00D。notcloseduntil4:30
4。ThemainpurposeoftheMuseumofChildhoodisto_________。
A。displaytoys,dolls,infantandschoolmaterial
B。reflectAustralianchildhoodexperienceovertime
C。hostnationaltouringexhibition
D。tellyouthefamouslessoninthe1920s
B
WASHINGTON-LauraStraubisaverywordedwoman。HerjobistofindfamiliesforFrenchteenagerswhoexpecttolivewithAmericanfamiliesinthesummer。
Itsnoteasy,evendesperate。
Wehavemanychildrenlefttoplace:40outof75,saidStraub,whoworksforaParis-basedforeign-exchangeprogrammecalledLEC。Whenexchangeprogrammesstarted50yearsago,familylifewasmoreaccommodating,Foronething,moremothersstayedhome。
Butnow,increasingnumbersofwomenworkoutsidethehome。Exchange-studentprogrammeshavestruggledinrecentyearstosignuphostfamiliesforthe30,000teenagerswhoannuallycomefromabroadtospendanacademicyearintheUnitedStates,aswellasthethousandsmorewhoparticipateinsummerprogrammes。
SchoolsystemsinmanypartsoftheUS,unhappyaboutacceptingnon-taxpayingstudents,havealsostrictlylimitedthenumberofexchangestudentstheyaccept。Atthesametime,theideaofhostingforeignstudentsisbecominglessexotic。
Insearchingforhostfantilies,whousuallyreceivenopay,exchangeprogrammesareincreasinglybroadeningtheirappealstoincludeeveryonefromyoungcouplestoretirees。
Weareopentomanydifferenttypesoffamilies,saidVickieWeiner,easternregionaldirectorforASSE,a25-year-oldprogrammethatsendsabout30,000teen-agersonacademic-yearexchangeprogrammesworldwide。
Forelderlypeople,exchangestudentskeepusyoung--theyreallydo,saidJeanFoster,whoishosting16-year-oldNinaPorstfromDenmark。
5。VickieWeineristhepersonwho_______。
A。worksforaprogrammecalledLECB。worksforaprogrammecalledASSE
C。is25yearsoldD。hostsforeignstudents
6。Theunderlinedwordexoticmeans_______。
A。difficultB。wonderfulC。excitingD。accommodating
7。Fromthepassagewecanlearnthatatthebeginningoftheexchangeprogrammes,_______。
A。allthefamiliescouldhostforeignstudents
B。onlyyoungcouplescouldhostforeignstudents
C。onlythosewhowereretiredcouldhostforeignstudents
D。thosewhowerenottoooldcouldhostforeignstudents
8。Whichofthefollowingisthe,besttitleofthispassage?
A。USStruggletoFindHostFamilies
B。IdeaofHostingStudentsIsDifferent
C。Foreign-exchangeProgramIsGoingOn
D。ExchangeStudentsKeepOldPeopleYoung
C
Mosquitoes(蚊子)areveryimportantinhumanhistory。TheGuinnessBookofRecordssaysthatmosquitoeshavecausedover50percentofallhumandeathssincetheStoneAge,excludingdeathsfromwarandaccidents!
Mosquitoesarefoundallovertheworld。Femalemosquitoesusuallyfeedonthebloodofhumansandanimals。Mosquitoesoftencarrydangerousdiseasecalledmalaria,whichusuallyoccursduringhot,rainySeason。
Ifamosquitofeedsonthebloodofapersonwithmalaria,itbecomesacarderofthedisease。Itinjectsthediseaseintothenextpersonitbites。So,forexample,atouristcouldbeinfectedwithmalariaduringavisittoIndonesia。ThesametouristmightthenvisitThailandwhereanothermosquitomaybitehim。Thismosquitocouldthenbiteanotherpersonandspreadthedisease。
Peoplehaveusedinsecticidestokillmosquitoesandtheireggsforalongtime,butmanyinsectsarenowresistanttothesechemicals。Thisresistanceisabigproblemfordoctorsbecauseitcanstopthepreventionandtreatmentofmalaria。Also,severalofthedrugswhichdoctorsusetopreventmalariadonotworkanymorebecausemosquitoesareresistanttothem。Expertsnowbelievethattheworldwillneverbefreeofmalaria,sotheytellpeopletoprotectthemselvesfromthedisease。
Ifyouthinkthatyouhavemalaria,seeadoctorimmediately。Withouttreatment,malariakillsover25percentofitsvictimsinamaximumoftwoweeks。Aftertreatment,mosquitoesthatbiteyouwillnotpassmalariaontootherpeople。Althoughdoctorscantreatmalariavictims,youmustremember:preventionisbetterthancure。
9。AccordingtotheGuinnessBookofRecords,whichofthefollowingcausesmostdeaths7
A。War。B。Accident。C。Malaria。D。Mosquitoes。
10。Whichofthefollowingisthecorrectorderforthespreadingofmalaria?
a。Amosquitobitesthepersonwithmalaria。
b。Thesamemosquitobitesanotherperson。
c。Apersonisinfectedwithmalaria。
d。Thatpersonmaybelikelytobe,infected,too。
A。a-b-c-dB。a-c-d-bC。c-a-b-dD。c-a-d-b
11。Wecoulddrawtheconclusionthatthebestwayoffightingagainstthespreadofmalariais________。
A。preventionB。treatment
C。seeingadoctorimmediatelyD。blood-test
12。Whichofthefollowingstatementsistrueaccordingtothepassage?
A。Wewillsurelygetridofmosquitoesinthenearfuture。
B。Itsbelievedthatmalariawillaccompanyhumanbeingsforever。
C。Insecticidesarealwayseffectiveinkillingmosquitoes。
D。Amosquitocannotpassthediseaseontoanotherpersonafteritbitesonewithmalaria。
D
Thereportby700scientistsestimates(估计)thateconomiclossesfromso-callednaturaldisastersrosefromUS$4billionperyearinthe1950stoUS$40billionin1999。
OnereportreleasedlastmonthinShanghaipredictsglobaltemperaturescouldrisebyasmuchas5。8degreescentigradeoverthenextcentury。Theincreaseisduetoindustrialpollutionandwastegasfromcars。
Scientistshavewarnedofglobalwarmingforyears。
Theeffectsareexpectedtobegreatestindevelopingcountriesintermsoflossoflifeandimpact(冲击)oninvestmentandtheeconomy,saidthereportissuedMonday,Changingrainfallpatternscoupledwithpopulationgrowthwillleadtohugepressureonwatersupplies,itpredicts,andthatatpresent1。7billionpeopleliveinareaswherewaterresourcesaretight,whichwilllikelyincreaseto5。4billioninthenext25years。Climatechangewillbeaccompaniedbyanincreaseinheatwaves,withincreasedhumidity(湿度)andurban(市区)airpollutioncausingmoreheat-relateddeathsandillnesses,itsays。
Evenmoreseriouswillbefloodingasaresultofrisingsealevelsindenselypopulatedcoastalareas。
Themostwidespreaddirectrisktohumansettlementsisfloodingandlandslide,itsays。Coastalsettlementsareparticularlyatriskbuturbanfloodingwillbeaproblemwherestormdrains,watersupplyandwastemanagementsystemsarenotwelldeveloped。
13。Theunderlinedsentenceinthispassagesuggeststhattheglobalwarming__________。
A。musthavebeentakenseriouslyB。mayhavebeentakenseriously
C。couldnthavebeentakenseriouslyD。shouldnthavebeentakenseriously
14。FromthereportissuedMondaywemayconcludethatamongthefollowingfourcountries,theonethatwillbeaffectedmostgreatlyis___________。
A。JapanB。AmericaC。BritainD。India
15。Themainideaofthepassageis__________。
A。pollutionandclimatechangesB。economiclosses
C。floodingandlandslidesD。tightwaterresources
16。Accordingtotheauthor,whichofthefollowingwillnotbeaffectedbyclimatechange?
A。Economy。B。Populationgrowth。C。Lossoflife。D。Investment。
E
WhilethethreatofareappearanceofSARSisstillthere,itisreassuringtolearnaboutthelatestdevelopmentsinvaccineresearch。
Morethanl,400vaccineshotsforSARShavebeenproducedinChina,andanapplicationforclinicaltestshasbeenreferredtotheStateFoodandDrugAdministration(SFDA),accordingtoaXinhuareportonSunday。
Ifeverythinggoessmoothly,conductingofclinicalexperimentswillbeagreedbeforetheendofDecember,saidYinHongzhang,headoftheBiologicalProductSectionoftheSFDA。
Sofar,ChinaisfaraheadofothercountriesinthesearchforaSARSvaccine,claimedYin。Atthattime,volunteerswillbesoughtinBeijingandGuangzhoutotakepartinexperimentsusingthenewvaccine。However,whilecheeringfortheresearchbreakthrough,voicesofreasonshouldalsobeheard。
Whatmedicalworkersshouldalwaysmaintainisacoolheadandcarefulattitude,whichareessentialinanyscientificresearch。Thisisespeciallytruewhenconductingexperimentsonhumanbeings,becausetheyaredirectlyconcernedwiththevolunteershealthandeventheirlives,andalsobecauseknowledgeofthedeadlyvirusisstilltoolimited。
Mediareportsindicatethatmembersofthepublicarereactingactivelytothenewsofselectingvolunteersandareexpressingtheirreadiness。Theircourageiswellworthouradmiration。Thetrusttheyareplacinginthesemedicalresearchersisthebiggestsupportoftheirwork。
Theresearchershavenootherchoicebuttobehighlycautiousintheexpectedexperiments。Thesafetyofvolunteersshouldalwaysbethefirstconsideration。Scientistsfromdifferentcountrieshavebeenputinaraceinuncoveringthemysterysurroundingthevirus。Buttoplayaleadingroleshouldbynomeansbetheultimatepursuit(最终目标)ofthescientificworkers。Itispeoplessafetyandhealththatremainthebiggestconcerns。
WhiletherearestillsomanymysteriestobeSolved,itistooearlytocelebrate。
(ChinaDailyNovember25,2003)
17。Accordingtothepassage,whichofthefollowingisnottrue?
A。ThedevelopmentsinvaccineresearchinSAILSareencouraging。
B。Morethan1,400vaccineshotsforSARShavebeenappliedtoclinicaltest。
C。ChinaisnowleadinginthesearchforaSARSvaccine。
D。ExperimentsusingthenewvaccinewillbecarriedoutonlyinBeijingandGuangzhou。
18。Fromthepassage,wecouldseethattheauthorsattitudetowardsthenewvaccineisquite________。
A。praisingB。criticalC。matter-of-factD。humorous
19。Whichofthefollowingmayserveasthebesttitle?
A。KeepaCoolHeadWhileFightingSARS
B。ABreakthroughinFightingSARS
C。ALeadingRoleinFightingSARS
D。VolunteersWantedWhileFightingSARS
20。Theunderlinedwordcautiousmostprobablymeans__________。
A。cheerfulB。dutifulC。helpfulD。careful
F
Itwasearlymorning。PeterCorbetthelpedMarkWellmanoutofhiswheelchairandontotheground。TheystoodbeforeElCapitan,ahugemassofrockalmostthree-quartersofamilehighinCalifornia’sbeautifulYosemiteValley。IthadbeenMark’sdreamtoclimbElCapitanforaslongashecouldremember。Buthowcouldapersonwithouttheuseofhislegshopetotrytoclimbit?
Markknewhecouldn’tfinishtheclimbalone,buthisfriendPeter,anexpertrockclimber,wouldbetheretolendahelpinghand。HeandMarkthoughtthatitwouldtakesevendaystoreachthetop。
Peterclimbedabout100feetupandhammeredapiton(岩钉)intotherock。Fasteningoneendofa165-footropetothepiton,heletoneendoftheropefalldown。Markcaughttheropeandfastenedittohisbeltwithaspecialinstrument。ThisinstrumentwouldallowMarktomoveupward,butwouldpreventhimfromfallingevenasmuchasasingleinch。HenextreachedabovehisheadandfastenedaT-shapedbartotherope,usingthesamekindofinstrument。
Marktookadeepbreath,pushedtheT-barupalmostasfarashisarmscouldreach,andbeganthefirstofthe7,000pull-upsneededtoreachthetop。Highabove,Peterletoutacheer。“You’reonyourway。”
Sevenyearsbefore,attheageoftwenty-one,hehadfallenwhilemountainclimbing,injuringhisbackbone。Thefallcosthimtheuseofhislegs,butheneverlosthisloveofadventureorhisjoyfulspirit。
Forthefirstfourdaysthetwomenprogressedsteadilyupwardwithoutincident。Butonthefifthdayanunbearablyhotwindbegantoblow,andastimewentby,itbecamestrongerandstronger,causingMarktosway(摇摆)violentlyonhisrope。ButMarkkeptondeterminedly
pushinguptheT-barandpullinghimselfup。Inspiteofthat,hehadtoadmitthathefeltalotbetterwhenthewindfinallydieddownandhisbodytouchedsolidrockagain。
Ittookthemonedaymorethantheyhadexpected,butonJuly26at1:45intheafternoon,thecrowdofpeoplewaitingonthetopwentwildwithjoyasthetwoheadsappeared。MarkWellmanhadshownthatifyousetyourheartandmindonagoal,nowallistoohigh,nodreamimpossible。
21。WhathadMarkWellmanlongdesiredtodo?
A。Tofinishoneofthemostdifficultrockclimbsintheworld。B。TobethefirsttoclimbElCapitan。
C。ToclimbthehighestmountaininCalifornia。D。TohelphisfriendPeterclimbElCapitan。
22。HowdidMarkclimbthemountain?
A。Hefastenedtheropetohiswheelchair。
B。Hehammeredinpitonssothathehadsomethingtoholdonto。
C。HeheldontotheT-barandPeterpulledhimup。
D。HepulledhimselfupusingaT-barandspecialequipment。
23。HowdidMarklosetheuseofhislegs?
A。Helosthisfootingandfellfromthesideofamountain。
B。HefellduringhisfirstattemptonElCapitan。
C。Hislegswerebrokenbyfallingrocks。D。Whileworkingoutinthegym,heinjuredhisbackbone。
24。WhatwastheworstproblemMarkhadduringtheclimb?
A。Hestruckagainsttherockandhurthisarms。B。Astrongwindblewhimawayfromtherock。
C。Hekeptfallingseveralinches。D。Whileswayinginspace,hebecameterrified。
25。HowdidMarkreacttodifficultiesduringtheclimb?
A。Headmittedthathewasfrightened。B。Heoftenworriedabouthisfriend’scondition。
C。Hewasabletoremainclamanddetermined。D。Hewasjokingtocheerhimselfup。
G
SHEFIELD
LINCOLNCOLLEGEOFENGLISH
Classesforforeignstudentsatalllevels
3mths,6mths,9mthsandoneyearcourse
openallyear
smallclass(maximum12students)
library,languagelaboratoryandlisteningcenter
accommodationwithselectedfamilies
25minutesfromLondon
CoursefeesforEnglishforoneyearare£1,380
withreductionforshorterperiodsofstudy。
maximum最大限度accommodation膳食供应fee费用26。LinclonCollegeofEnglish。
A。isatthecentreofLondonB。liesfarawayfromLondon
C。takesinforeignstudents,frombeginnerstotheadvanced
D。acceptsstudentsonlyatthebeginningoftheyear
27。Whileyoustaythere,willtakecareofyou。
A。theschoolwhereyoustudyB。thefamilyyouhavechosen
C。yourclassmatesD。yourownparents
28。Ifyougothereforaone-termcourse,youwillpayforit。
A。£1,380B。over£1,380C。muchlessthan£1,380D。nothing
H
ItwasthefirstphotographthatIhadeverseen,anditinterestedme。Icanrememberholdingitateveryangle(角度)inordertocatchtheflickeringlightfromtheoillamponthedresser。Themaninthephotographwasunsmiling,buthiseyeswerekind。Ihadnevermethim,butIfeltthatIknewhim。OneeveningwhenIwaslookingatthephotograph,asIalwaysdidbeforeIwenttosleep,Inoticedashadowacrosstheman’sthinface。Imovedthephotographsothattheshadowlayperfectlyaroundhischeeks。Howdifferenthelooked!
ThatnightIcouldnotsleep,thinkingabouttheletterthatIwouldwrite。First,IwouldtellhimthatIwaselevenyearsold,andthatifhehadalittlegirlmyage,shecouldwritetomeinsteadofhim。Iknewthathewasaverybusyman。。ThenIwouldexplaintohimtherealpurposeofmyletter。IwouldtellhimhowwonderfulhelookedwiththeshadowthatIhadseenacrosshisphotograph,andIwouldmostcarefullysuggestthathegrowwhisker(连鬓胡子)。
FourmonthslaterwhenImethimatthetrainstationnearmyhomeinWestfield,NewYork,hewaswearingafullbeard。HewassomuchtallerthanIhadimaginedfrommytinyphotograph。
“Ladiesandgentlemen,”hesaid,“Ihavenospeechtomakeandnotimetomakeitin。IappearbeforeyouthatImayseeyouandthatyoumayseeme。”Thenhepickedmerightupandkissedmeonbothcheeks。“DoyouthinkIlookbetter,mylittlefriend?”heaskedme。
MynameisGraceBedell,andthemaninthephotographwasAbrahamLincoln。
29。Whatistheauthor’smainpurposeinthepassage?
A。ToexplainhowGraceBedelltookaphotographofAbrahamLincoln。
B。ToexplainwhyAbrahamLincolnworeabeard。
C。ToexplainwhythefirstphotographswereimportantinAmericanlife。
D。ToexplainwhyWestfieldisanimportantcity。
30。Theword“flickering”inline2isclosestinmeaningto。
A。burningcontinuouslyB。burningbrightlyC。burningunsteadilyD。burningfiercely
31。Whydidthelittlegirlwritethemanaletter?
A。Shewaslonely。B。Shewantedhisdaughtertowritetoher。
C。Shewantedhimtogrowabeard。D。Shewantedhimtovisither。
32。Fromthispassage,itmaybeinferredthat。
A。thereweremanypeoplewaitingforLincolntoarriveonthetrain
B。GraceBedellwastheonlyoneatthetrainstationwhenLincolnstoppedatWestfield
C。LincolnmadealongspeechatthestationinWestfield
D。Lincolnwasastonishedtoseethelittlegirl
I
AveryrapidincreaseinthenumberofshipssailingbetweenAmericanandEuropeanportsbeganalmostimmediatelyaftertheendoftheWarof1812inordertomeetthenewneedfortheregularrapidtransportationofmail,lightcargo(货物),andpassengers。Itwastheincreaseinemigration(移民)toAmericathatforthefirsttimemadethecarryingofpassengersacrosstheAtlanticmoreprofitable(可赚钱的)thanthetransportationofheavycargo。Anewtypeofsailingship,thepacket(邮船),appearedtomeetthisnewdemand,andthedemandverysoonresultedinstrongcompetitionamongseveralpacketlines。TheearliestofthesewastheBlackBallLinesetupinNewYorkin1816,onlyayearaftertheendofthewar。Theserviceofthisfamouslinestartedwithfourofthenewfastpackets,eachof400to500tons:thePacific,theAmity,theJamesCooper,andtheWilliamThompson。Duringthefirsttwentyyearsofservice,theaveragetimefromNewYorktoLiverpoolwas23daysandtheaveragetripbacktoNewYorktook40days。Bythemiddleofthecenturypacketshadincreasedinsizetobetween900and1,000tonsandtheirspeedhadincreased。TheRedJackeloncesailedfromNewYorktoLiverpoolin13days,11。5hours。TheMaryWhiteridgetook4。5hoursoffthisrecordonarunfromBaltimoretoLiverpool。Suchspeedswerefargreaterthantheaverageoffrom19to21daystoLiverpoolandfrom30to35homewardtoNewYork,butthepacketshadstillsetanewstandardfortransoceanictravel。Nowonderthatsteamships,thefirstofwhichtriedtocompetewiththepacketsin1838,onlybegantoreplacetheminthe1850s。
33。Thefastesttransatlanticvoyagebyapacketmentionedbytheauthorwasfrom。
A。LiverpooltoNewYorkB。NewYorktoLiverpool
C。BaltimoretoLiverpoolD。LiverpooltoBaltimore
34。Accordingtotheauthor,inwhichdecade(十年)ofthe19thcenturydidasteamshipfirstattempttocompetewiththetransatlanticpackets?
A。The20s。B。The50s。C。The40s。D。The30s。
35。Whichofthefollowingwasmostimportantinthedevelopmentofthefastpackets?
A。TheincreaseinthenumberofpeoplewhowantedtogotoAmerica。
B。TheincreaseinthenumberofpeoplewhowantedtogotoEuropeaftertheWarof1812。
C。Theincreaseddemandforthetransportationofallkindsofcargo。
D。Theincreasedvolumeofmail。
36。Thetimeofthefastesttransatlanticcrossingmentionedbytheauthorwas13daysand。
A。11。5hoursB。7hoursC。7。5hoursD。4。5hours
E
Manyayoungpersontellsmehewantstobeawriter。Ialwaysencouragesuchpeople,butIalsoexplainthatthere’sabigdifferencebetween“beingawriter”andwriting。Inmostcasesthesepeoplearedreamingofwealthandfame,notthelonghoursaloneatatypewriter。“You’regottowanttowrite,”Isaytothem,“notwanttobeawriter。”
Therealityisthatwritingisalonely,privateandpoor-payingaffair。Foreverywriterkissedbyfortunetherearethousandsmorewhoselongingisneverrewarded(报答)。WhenIlefta20-yearjobintheU。S。CoastGuardtobecomeawriter,Ihadnohopesatall。WhatIdidhavewasafriendwhofoundmemyroominaNewYorkapartmentbuilding。Itdidn’tevenmatterthatitwascoldandhadnobathroom。Iimmediatelyboughtausedtypewriterandfeltlikearealwriter。
Afterayearorso,however,Istillhadn’tgottenabreakandbegantodoubtmyself。Itwassohardtosellastorythatbarelymadeenoughtoeat。ButIknewIwantedtowrite。Ihaddreamedaboutitforyears。Iwasn’tgoingtobeoneofthosepeoplewhodiewondering,whatif?Iwouldkeepputtingmydreamtothetest—eventhoughitmeantlivingwithuncertaintyandfearoffailure。Thisistheshadowlandofhope,andanyonewithadreammustlearntolivethere。
37。Thepassageismeantto。
A。warnyoungpeopleofthehardshipthatasuccessfulwriterhastoexperience
B。adviseyoungpeopletogiveuptheirideaofbecomingaprofessionalwriter
C。showyoungpeopleit’sunrealisticforwriterstoseekwealthandfame
D。encourageyoungpeopletoseekgoodjobs
38。Whatcanbeconcludedfromthepassage?
A。Realwritersoftenfindtheirworkinterestingandrewarding。
B。Awriter’ssuccessdependsonluckratherthanoneffort。
C。Famouswritersusuallyliveinpoverty。
D。Thechancesforawritertobecomesuccessfularesmall
39。Whydidtheauthorbegintodoubthimselfafterthefirstyearofhiswritingwork?
A。Hewasn’tabletoproduceasinglebook。B。Hehadn’tseenachangeforthebetter。
C。Hewasn’tabletohavearestforawholeyear。D。Hefoundhisdreamwouldnevercometrue。
40。“Shadowland”inthelastsentencerefersto。
A。thewonderlandoneoftendreamsaboutB。thebrightfuturethatoneislookingforwardto
C。aworldthatexistsonlyinone’simagination
D。thestateofuncertaintybeforeone’sfinalgoalisreached
J
EdJocelynandAndyMcEwenmighthaveappearedtobeabitmad-thetwosetoffontheirown“LongMarch”throughtheremotestregionsofChinaonOctober16。Theideawastotakeayeartoretraceoneoftheepic(史诗般的)movementsofmodernmilitaryhistory。
ThetwoBritishmenintheirmid-30swereworkingaseditorsinBeijingwhentheydecidedtorelivethetalesoftheoriginalmarches。“Weholdthesepeopleinsuchesteem,”McEwensays。
Theyplantokeepdiariesbutwillnotsharethecontentsduringthetrip。“Whenwegettotheendwe’llputourheadstogetherandtryandcomeupwithabook,”Jocelynsaid。
Theirtriphashadsomeauspiciousbeginning,theyhavealreadymettwoLongMarchveterans(老战士)inlessthanamonthoftravel。
Inthismodernversion,thepairareaidedbyhigh-techequipmentincludingasatellitephone,mini-computer,videocameraandsolarpanelstorechargebatteries。Amountaintentandportablestovewillhelpthemintheremoterstretches。
Theyplantoaverage35-40kilometersaday,andrestabouteverythirdday。Edadmittedthattheirtripwouldbeverytough。。
Iftheysucceed,theywillbethefirstforeignerstocompletetheentireLongMarchroutesinceOttoBraun,theGermanmilitaryadvisorwhoaccompaniedtheRedArmyontheLongMarch。
41.Thistextismainlyabout。
A.high-techequipmenthelpfultotheLongMarch
B.firstforeignerstowalktheLongMarch
C.Britisheditors’adventureoriginalinChina
D.BritishrecalloftheLongMarchspirit
42.Theunderlinedword“auspicious”mostprobablymeans。
A.favourableB.friendlyC.strangeD.surprising
43.WhichofthefollowingstatementsisNOTtrueaboutthetwoforeigners?
A.Theywon’tuseanythingmodernontheway。
B.Theywilldosomecookingbythemselves。
C.Theywillsendoffnewsaboutwhathappensdaybyday。
D.They’replanningtohaveabookpublishedoneyearlater。
K
SituatedintheSouthWestofEngland,betweenExeterandPlymouth,Torquayisoneofthemostpopularholidayresorts(度假胜地)inBritain。Itprovidessophisticated(精致)entertainment,sportsofeverykindandculturalfacilities,allsetinapositionofoutstandingnaturalbeauty。Visitorscanchoosebetweenluxuryhotelsbythesea,withprivatesuites(套房),swimmingpoolsandsaunas,andcomfortablebutlessexpensiveguesthouses。Therearecampingsites,too,andhundredsofhousesdisplaying“B&;B”signs。
Aswellasanumberofsmallquietbays,whichareidealforbeachbarbecuesawayfromthecrowds,Torquayhaslargesandybeacheswhereyoucanbuyrefreshments(饮料)andhiredeckchairs,boatsandevenbeachhuts。Therearelargeareasofgrasslandoverlookingthesea,andmilesofwindingcliffpathsforwalkerswhojustwanttoenjoythesceneryandwhatisoftensaidtobethehealthiestairinthecountry。Forthesportsmenandwomenthereareopportunitiesnotonlyforgolf,tennis,squashandbowls,butalsoforwater-skiing,hang-glidinganddeep-seafishing。
Afteradayintheopenair,there’slotstodointheevenings,too。Thereareplentyofdiscos,theoccasionaloperaorballet,andsummervarietyshowsintheseafronttheatres。Forthechildren,thereisabeautifulmodelvillagewithacomplicatedrailwaylayoutwhichisremarkablyrealistic-especiallywhenthelightsareallonatnight。
Ofcourse,there’snoneedtospendyourwholeholidaysinTorquay。OnlyashortdriveawayisDartmoorNationalPark,whereyoucanwalkformilesthroughdramatic,unspoiledcountryside,orpicnicbybeautifulriversandstreams。Or,nearertohome,youcansailacrossTorBaytothelovelyoldfishingvillageofBrixham。
Torquayseemstohavesomethingforeveryone。Butdon’ttakemywordforit-comeandseeforyourself。
44.Whichofthefollowingbestexplainswhat“B&;B”meansonthesigns?
A.BedandbreakfastB.Breakfastandbath
C.BeachandbarbecueD.BeautifulandBritish
45.AccordingtothetextTorquaymightbedescribedas。
A.comfortableandexpensiveB.crowedandlively
C.remoteandbeautifulD.freshandhealthy
46.Whatisspecialaboutthemodelvillage?
A.Itopensatnight。
B.Ithassomethingforthechildren
C.It’sintheopenair。
D.Ithasarealrailwaysystem。
47.Whatisthepurposeofwritingthistext?
A.TointroducethegeographyofTorquaytostudents。
B.Tomakesomeplacesknowntovisitors。
C.Toshowthebeautyofresorts。
D.Toattractmoretourists。
L
ItseemsthattheEnglishmanjustcannotlivewithoutsportsofsomekind。AfamousFrenchhumouristoncesaidthatthisisbecausetheEnglishinsistonbehavinglikechildrenalltheirlives。Whereveryougointhiscountryyouwillseebothchildrenandgrown-upsknockingaballaboutwithastickorsomething,asifinBritainmenshallalwaysremainboysandwomengirls!Still,itcanneverbebadtogetexercise,canit?
Takingallamateur(业余)andprofessionalsportsinBritainintoconsideration,therecanbenodoubtthatfootballisatthetopofthelist。ItiscalledsoccerintheUnitedStates。ThegameoriginatedinBritainandwasplayedintheMiddleAgesorevenearlier,thoughasanorganizedgame,or“associationfootball”,itdatesonlyfromthebeginningofthe19thcentury。
Thenextisrugby,whichiscalled“football”intheUnitedStates。Itisakindoffootballplayedbytwoteamsoffifteenplayersratherthaneleven。Inrugby,anoval-shapedballisusedwhichcanbehandledaswellaskicked。Itisaprettyroughgame。
Insummer,cricketisthemostpopularsport。Infact,ithassometimesbeencalledtheEnglishnationalgame。Mostforeignersfindthegamerathersloworevenboring,butitenjoysgreatpopularityamongtheBritish。
Tennisrateshighonthelist,too。ItwasintroducedintoEnglandfromFranceinthe15thcentury,butitwasfromEnglandthatitspreadtopracticallyeverycountryintheworld。
Table-tennis,or“ping-pong”,surelyisnotplayedonagreatscaleasitisinChinaorJapan。BasketballandvolleyballwereintroducedintoBritainduringthelate19thcenturyfromAmericaandaregainingpopularity。Horse-backriding,swimming,rowingandgolfallattractalotofpeople。
48.ThemainpurposeofParagraph1istotellusthattheEnglish。
A.areallsportsloversB.behavelikechildren
C.liketokickaballaroundD.canremainyoungalltheirlives
49.Accordingtothepassage,whichofthefollowingisNOTtrueaboutfootballandrugby?
A.Theydifferintheshapeoftheball。
B.Theyareplayedbydifferentnumbersofplayers。
C.Theybothcanbehandled
D.Theybothcanbekicked。
50.ThegamethatwasneverplayedinBritainuntilthelate19thcenturyis。
A.basketballB.tennisC.rugbyD.football
51.Whatwouldbethebesttitleforthispassage?
A.TheMostPopularSportsB.TheEnglishSports
C.HistoryofSportsD.SportsinBritain
M
That“Mondaymorningfeeling”couldbeacrushingpaininthechestwhichleavesyousweatingandgaspingforbreath。RecentresearchfromGermanyandItalyshowsthatheartattacksaremorecommononMondaymorningsanddoctorsblamethestressofreturningtoworkaftertheweekendbreak。
Theriskofhavingaheartattackonanygivendayshouldbeoneinseven,butasix-yearstudyhelpedbyresearchersattheFreeUniversityofBerlinofmorethan2,600Germansshowedthattheaveragepersonhada20percenthigherchanceofhavingaheartattackonaMondaythanonanyotherday。
WorkingGermansareparticularlynotprotectedagainstattack,witha33percenthigherriskatthebeginningoftheworkingweek。Non-workers,bycomparison,appeartobenomoreatriskonaMondaythananyotherday。
Astudyof11,000Italiansproved8amonaMondaymorningasthemoststressfultimefortheheart,andbothstudiesshowedthatSundayistheleaststressfulday,withfewerheartattacksinbothcountries。
Thefindingscouldleadtoabetterunderstandingofwhatistheimmediatecauseofheartattacks,accordingtoDrStefanWillichoftheFreeUniversity。“Weknowalotaboutlong-termriskfactorssuchassmokingandcholesterol(胆固醇)butwedon’tknowwhatactuallycausesheartattacks,sowecan’tgiveclearadviceonhowtopreventthem,”hesaid。
Mondaymorningshaveadoublehelpingofstressfortheworkingbodyasitmakesarapidchangefromsleeptoactivity,andfromtherelaxingweekendtothepressuresofwork。
“Whenpeoplegetup,theirbloodpressureandheartrategoupandtherearehormonal(内分泌)changesintheirbodies,”Willichexplained。“Allthesethingscanhaveanunfavourableeffectinthebloodsystemandincreasetheriskofaclot(血凝块)inthearteries(动脉)whichwillcauseaheartattack。”
“Whenpeoplereturntoworkafteraweekendoff,thepaceoftheirlifechanges。Theyhaveahigherworkload,morestress,moreangerandmorephysicalactivity,”saidWillich。
52.Mondaymorningfeeling,asthispassageshows,。
A.isnotsoseriousaspeoplethought
B.isharmfultoworkingpeopleindevelopedcountries。
C.isthefirstkillerinGermanyandItaly。
D.iscreatedbyresearchersinGermanyandItaly
53.Toprotectpeoplefromsufferingfromheartattack,doctorshavepaidmuchattentionto。
A.people’sworkingtimeB.people’slivingplace
C.people’sdietandlifestyleD.people’snationalities
54.Itcanbelearnedfromthispassagethatheartattackhasnothingtodowith。
A.bloodpressureB.heartrate
C.hormonalchangesD.bloodgroup
55.IftheresearchersgiveussomeadvicetoavoidMondaymorningfeeling,whatmightitbe?
A.StopworkingonMonday
B.Greateapleasantworkingenvironment
C.GetuplateonMondaymorning
D.Gotoworkwithadoctor
N
IneveryBritishtown,largeandsmall,youwillfindshopsthatsellsecond-handgoods。Sometimessuchshopsdealmostlyinfurniture,sometimesinbooks,sometimesinornaments(装饰)andhouseholdgoods,sometimeseveninclothes。
Thefurnituremayoftenbe“antique”,anditmaywellhavechangedhandsmanytimes。Itmayalsobeveryvaluable,althoughthemostvaluablepiecewillusuallygototheLondonsalerooms,whereonepiecemightwellbesoldforhundredsofthousandsofpounds。Asyoulookaroundtheseshopsandseethepolishedwoodofchestsandtables,youcannothelpthinkingofthoselong-deadhandswhichpolishedthatwood,ofthosenow-closedeyeswhichoncelookedatthesepieceswithlove。
Thebooks,too,maybeantiqueandveryprecious;somemayberarefirstprintings。Oftenwhensomeonediesorhastomovehouse,hisbooksmayallbesold,sothatsometimesyoumayfindwholelibrariesinoneshop。OntheborderbetweenEnglandandWales,thereisatownwhichhasbecomeahugebookshopaswell。Eventhecinemaandcastlehavebeentakenover,andnowbookshavereplacedsheepasthetown’smaintrade。
Therearealsomuchmorehumbleshops,sometimessimplycalled“junkshops”,whereyoucanbuysmallhouseholdpiecesverycheaply。Sometimestheprofitsfromtheseshopsgotocharity(慈善事业)。Eventhesepieces,though,canmakeyoufeelsad;youthinkofthosepeoplewhooncetreasuredthem,butwhohavemovedon,toanothercountryortodeath。
AlthoughtheBritishdonotworshiptheirancestors,theydotreasurethepastandthethingsofthepast。Thisistrueofhousesaswell。Thesedaysnooneknocksthemdown,theyarerestoreduntiltheyareoftenbetterthannew。InBritain,peopledonotbuysomethingjustbecauseitisnew。Oldthingsaretreasuredfortheirprovenworth;newthingshavetoprovethemselvesbeforetheyareaccepted。
56.Booksfoundinsecond-handbookshopsmay。
A.becopiesoftheearliestprinting。
B.beonsaleforthefirsttime
C.neverbeworthverymuch
D.neverberare
57.WhatisthesmalltownontheborderbetweenEnglandandWalesfamousfor?
A.Itssheep。B.ItsbookshopsC.Itscinema。D.Itscastle。
58.Second-handgoodssometimesfillyouwithsadnessbecause。
A.theyaretooexpensiveforaveragebuyers
B.theyremindyouoftheoriginalowner
C.theyarenowneglectedD.theyaresoldforcharity
59.TheaverageBritishperson。
A.doesnotrespectoldthingsbecausetheyarenotfashionable
B.likestobuildnewhousessimplybecauseitisfashionabletodoso
C.likestobuynewthingsbecausetheyarefashionable
D.doesnotliketobuythingssimplybecausetheyarefashionable
60.Whatdoestheunderlinedword“them”(Paragraph4)referto?
A.junkshopsB.profitsfromshops
C.oldthingsD.oldhouses
O
OnNov。18,1995,ItzhakPerlman,theviolinist,cameonstagetogiveaconcertatAveryFisherHallatLincolnCenterinNewYorkCity。
IfyouhaveeverbeentoaPerlmanconcert,youknowthatgettingonstageisnosmallachievementforhim。Hewasstrickenwithpolio(小儿麻痹症)asachild,andsohehasbraces(支架)onbothlegsandwalkswiththeaidoftwocrutches(双拐)。
Hewalkspainfully,yetmajestically,untilhereacheshischair。Thenhesitsdown,slowly,putshiscrutchesonthefloor,undoestheclaspsonhislegs,tucksonefootbackandextendstheotherfootforward。Thenhebendsdownandpicksuptheviolin,putsitunderhischin,nodstotheconductorandproceedstoplay。
Butthistime,somethingwentwrong。Justashefinishedthefirstfewbars(小节),oneofthestringsonhisviolinbroke。Youcouldhearitsnap(嘣断)——itwentofflikegunfireacrosstheroom。Therewasnomistakingwhatthatmeant。Therewasnomistakingwhathehadtodo。
Wefiguredthathewouldhavetogetup,putontheclaspsagain,pickupthecrutchesandlimphiswayoffstage——toeitherfindanotherviolinorelsefindanotherstringforthisone。Buthedidn’t。Instead,hewaitedamoment,closedhiseyesandthensignaledtheconductortobeginagain。
Theorchestrabegan,andheplayedfromwherehehadleftoff。Andheplayedwithsuchpassionandsuchpowerandsuchpurityastheyhadneverheardbefore。
Whenhefinished,therewasanawesomesilenceintheroom。Andthenpeopleroseandcheered。Hesmiled,wipedthesweatfromthisbrow,raisedhisbowtoquietus,andthenhesaidinaquiettone,“Youknow,sometimesitistheartist’stasktofindouthowmuchmusicyoucanstillmakewithwhatyouhaveleft。”
61.Bysaying“gettingonstageisnosmallachievementforhim”,theauthorreallymeans______。
A.it’sverydifficultforItzhakPerlmantoplaytheviolinwiththreestrings
B.it’snoteasyforItzhakPerlmantogetonthestagebecauseheisdisabled
C.it’snoteasyforItzhakPerlmantofacesuchalargeaudience
D.it’sreallygreatachievementsforItzhakPerlmantoplaytheviolinwiththreestrings
62.Whenoneofthestringsbroke,peoplethoughtItzhakPerlmanwould__________。
A.goonplayingwiththeremainingthreestrings
B.giveupplaying
C.changeorrepairhisviolin
D.getoffthestagewithshame
63.ItzhakPerlman___________whenoneofthestringsoftheviolinbroke。
A.gaveupplaying
B.didn’tknowwhattodo
C.wentonplayingthesamepieceofmusic
D.wentonplayingadifferentpieceofmusic
64.WhatdidtheaudiencefeelwhenItzhakPerlmanfinishedplaying?
A.SurprisedB.DisappointedC.MovedD.Satisfied
65.ItzhakPerlmancanbebestdescribedasamanwhois____________。
A.cleverB.strongwilledC.humourousD.quiteskilled
P
Comerainorcomeshine,it’simportanttoknowhowtochecktheweatherforecastwhenyouliveabroad。
Aquicklookatthenewspapercantellwhetheryoushouldcarryanumbrella,sunscreenorawarmcoatwhenyougoouttofacetheworld。
Aweatherreportusuallycomeswiththeheading“WeatherOutlook”orjustsimply“Weather”。Toputasmuchinformationaspossibleintoasmallspace,aweatherreporthassomeunusuallanguage。Wordsarechosennotfortheirattractiveness,butfortheirsimplicityanddirectness。
Aweatherreporthasthesesections:ageneralforecast,adetailedforecast,thepreviousday’sreading,worldweather,pollutionlevels,andtimesandtides。
Mostforecastsbeginwitha“generalsituation”reportwithgeneralcharacteristics(特点)ofthatday’sweather。Forecastsdonotgenerallyusenormalsentences,butmakeuseofverbs,adjectivesandadverbsinstead。Forexample,“Briefsunnyperiodsandheavythundershowerslater。”Peoplescanaweatherpageratherthanspendingalongtimeonit,sowritersdonotneedfullsentences。
Followingthegeneralforecastismoredetailedinformation。InBritain,whichisasmallcountry,andtheUS,whichislarge,therearegeographicalseparationslikeNorthern,Eastcoast,andsoon。Thefocusisnotonattractivesentences,butimmediacy。
Thereareofcoursetemperatureforecasts。Dependingonwhereyouare,theywillbeinCelsiusorFahrenheit。InBritain,temperaturesaregiveninboth。IntheUS,onlyFahrenheitisused。TogofromFahrenheittoCelsius,takeaway32fromthetemperatureanddivideby1。8。
Mostnewspapersalsohaveabrieflistofweatherconditionsinmajorcitiesaroundtheworld。
Withpollutionbecomingaglobalproblem,manyforecastsgivetheday’spollutionlevels。Thismaybeimportantforasthmasufferersandpeoplewhoareaffectedbyairqualitylevels。Inthesummer,pollenlevels(flowerseedsintheair)aresometimeslistedtohelphayfeversufferers。
Thereisusuallyinformationalsoonwhenthesunwillriseandset。Thisisusefulforfarmersandotherearlyrisers。
66.IfthehighesttemperatureinLondonis68F,thenitis_________intheCelsiusscale。
A.30B.20C.10D.40
67.Ifyouareaskedtowriteaweatherreport,youmustmakesurethelanguageyouuseis______。
A.interestingB.simpleanddirectC.unusualD.briefandattractive
68.Thewriterofthispassagemainlywantstotellus_________whenweliveabroad。
A.howtowriteaweatherforecast
B.wheretofindaweatherforecast
C.whenwemostneedaweatherforecast
D.whatinformationwecangetfromaweatherforecast
69.Ifyouhaveahayfeverwhenyouareoutonasummer,youwillpayspecialattentionto_____。
A.pollutionlevelB.thechangesoftemperature
C.thetimethesunrisesandsetsD.pollenlevels
Q
AtTurkishAirlines,it’sbeenoneyearsinceourfirstvoyageinChina。Atimespentonprovidingnothingshortofthefinest,friendliestandmostreliableairtravelservicearound。Aservicewhichoffersflyerssimplebooking,easycheck-in,nottomentionexcellentin-flightservicesandentertainment。
Itiswithgreatpleasurethenthatweannouncetheintroductionofthe3rdflightinourweeklyservice。FromBeijingandShanghai,wetakeyouthroughbothhistoryandtime。FlyingovertheSilkRoadyouarriveintheancientcapitalofIstanbulatsunrise—anunforgettableexperience—andfromthereweconnectyoutoafurther100destinationsworldwide。
Socomeexperiencewhatitistotravelacrossoneoftheworld’sancienttradingroutesintruestyleandcomfort。
Offervalid(有效)fromJune7toJuly13。Fortermsandconditions,pleasecontactyourlocaltravelagentattheTurkishAirlinesBeijingandShanghaioffices:
BeijingTel:(010)/68/69/70Fax:(010)
E-mail:thybjs@public3。bta。net。cn
ShanghaiTel:(021)Fax:(021)
E-mail:thysha@uninet。com。cn
70.Thepurposeofthispassageis__________。
A.tointroduceanewflightservicebyTurkishAirlines
B.toshowTurkishAirlinesoffersthebestserviceintheworld
C.toinviteyoutovisitIstanbulfromChina
D.toannouncethecheapestflightfromBeijingtoIstanbul
71.Ifyoubuya3rd–flightticket,whichistherightrouteofflight?
A.Shanghai→NorthAfrica→Istanbul
B.Beijing→Istanbul→MiddleEast
C.Shanghai→Europe→MiddleEast
D.Beijing→Istanbul→Shanghai
72.IfyouwanttogotoNorthAfricatomorrow(July20)withTurkishAirlines,howmuchwillyouhavetopayfortheflight?
A.Morethan5000yuanB.Asmuchas7500yuan
C.Nomorethan7500yuanD.Lessthan5000yuan
R
Inearly1977,theauthorities(当局)announcedthattheendofmanuallaborandarrangedsometypeofworkofustodointhecourtyard。ThefreetimealsoallowedmetohuntwhatbecametwoofmyfavoritehobbiesonRobbenIsland;gardeningandtennis。
Tosurviveinprison,onemustdevelopwaystotakesatisfactioninone’sdailylife。Onecanfeelfulfilledbywashingone’sclothessothattheyareparticularlyclean。Justasonetakesprideinimportanttasksoutsideofprison,onecanfindthesameprideindoingsmallthingsinsideprison。
AlmostfromthebeginningofmysentenceonRobbenIsland,Iaskedtheauthoritiesforpermissiontostartagardeninthecourtyard。Foryears,theyrefusedwithoutofferingareason。Butfinallytheygavein,andwewereabletocutoutasmallgardenonanarrowpatchofearthagainstthefarwall。
Thesoilinthecourtyardwasdryandrocky。Inordertostartmygarden,Ihadtoremoveagreatmanyrockstoallowtheplantsroomtogrow。
Theauthoritiessuppliedmewithseeds。Iatfirstplantedtomatoes,chilies,andonions——hardyplantsthatdidnotrequirerichearthorconstantcare。Theearlyharvestswerepoor,buttheysoonimproved。
Ibegantoorderbooksongardening。Istudieddifferentgardeningtechniquesandtypesoffertilizers。Ididnothavemanyofthematerialsthatthebookdiscussed,butIlearnedthroughtrialanderror。Foratime,Iattemptedtogrowpeanuts(花生),anduseddifferentsoilsandfertilizers,butfinallyIgaveup。Itwasoneofmyfewfailures。
Agardenwasoneofthefewthingsinprisonthatonecouldcontrol。Toplantaseed,watchitgrow,totenditandharvestit,offeredasimplebutlong-lastingsatisfaction。Thesenseofbeingtheownerofthesmallpatchofearthofferedatasteoffreedom。
73.Whichofthefollowingistrueaccordingtothepassage?
A.Inordertokeepaliveinprison,onemustbeinterestedindoingsmallthings。
B.Onefactorthatthewriterformedhistwofavoritefavoritehobbieswashismanuallabor。
C.Thewriteraskedtobepermittedtostartagarden,butwasrefusedwithaclearreason。
D.Theconditionofthewriter’sgardenwasfairlygood。
74.Whydidthewriterdevotehimselftoattendingagarden?
A.Tokillhissparetimeandforgethissufferings。
B.Toharvestvegetablesandprovidehimselfwithfood。
C.Togainsatisfactionandsensethefreedomasahumanbeing。
D.Tohidehispoliticalopinionsbyworkinghardinthegarden。
75.Theunderlinedword“It”inthispassagerefersto_____________。
A.learningthroughtrialanderror
B.attemptingtogrowpeanuts
C.usingdifferentsoilsandfertilizers
D.studyingdifferentgardeningtechniques
76.What’sthemaintopicthatisstatedinthepassage?
A.It’shardtoattendagarden。B.Howtoplantvegetablesinprison。
C.Owninggardenisagreatpleasure。D.Madela’sgardeninprison
S
TheColosseum(圆形大剧场)andTreviFountain(许愿泉)aren’tevenmentionedinahot-off–the–pressguidetoRome。Instead,thepocketbookprovidesaguidetosurvivalforhomelesspeopleintheEternal(不朽)City。Some5,000peoplearehomelessinItaly’scapitalandupto50,000peoplearedependentonothersforhelp——especiallytheelderlyandthedisabled,accordingtotheSant’Egidioreligiouscharitywhichdrewupthebook。
The2003editionof“WheretoEat,SleepandWash”,whichhasbeencalledthe“Poor-Man’sMichelinGuide(《米其林指南》)toRome,”tellstheneedyandhomelesswheretofindshelters,soupkitchens,publicbathsandhealthservices。Demandforthebookhasskyrocketedsinceitwasfirstpublishedin1990。Thegroupprinted2,000copiesofthefirsteditionbutthisyear13,000copiesofthe148-page“Bible”wereprinted,highlighting760locations(场所)thatprovideservicesfortheneedy。
“ItcontainsthesecretstosurvivalinRome,”saidMarioMarazziti,aspokesmanfortheSant’Egidiocommunity。“ThisisadifferentfaceofRome,andtheguidetellsushowtodealwithitsproblems。”“Becauseoftheeconomiccrisis,moreandmorepeoplearefallingbelowthepovertyline,”Marazzitiadded。
Indeed,itwasthedeathofabeggarin1983afterambulanceworkersrefusedtopickhimupthatinspiredSant’Egidiotostartpublishingitspocket-sizedguidestoRome。Forthefirsttime,San’tEgidioalsoincludedafold-outplastic-coatedmapwithsymbolsrepresentingalloftheeating,sleepingandwashinghotspotsacrossthecity。AlthoughtheGolosseumisnotmarkedintheguide,itappearsonthismap。“Butit’sjustareference,”Marazzitisaid。“ThenormalRomethattouristslookatisabackgroundforus。”
77.SomefamousplacesinRomearenotmentionedintheguidebecause____________。
A.thehomelesspeopleinthecitycan’taffordtovisitthem
B.thepoorinthecityareforbiddentogothere
C.theyarenotsoimportanttothehomelesspeopleinthecity
D.beggarsinthecitynevergothere
78.Theunderlinedword“skyrocket”inthesecondparagraphprobablymeans_________。
A.increasesharplyB.flyinthesky
C.needbadlyD.attractgreatly
79.Whichofthefollowingistrueaccordingtothepassage?
A.ThebookcontainsthesecretstogetmoneyinRome。
B.ThefactthatabeggardiedmadeSan’tEgidiopublishtheguide。
C.TheauthorsingshighpraiseforRome。1
D.TheColosseumisnotmarkedintheguidebecauseitiswellknown。
80.Theguideiscalled“Bible”because_________。
A.itisasusefulastheBible
B.thepooruseitasabible
C.itisaspopularastheBible
D.itisofgreatvaluetothehomelesspeople
Thekeytoanswers:
1—5CDABB6—10CDADC11—15ABCDA16—20BBCAD21—25ADABC
26—30CBCBC31—35CACDA36—40BADBD41—45DACAC46—50BDACA
51—55DBCDB56—60ABBDC61—65BCCCB66—70BBDDA71—75BAACB
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