题目内容

Head above water?

TUVALU,a tiny country in the Pacific Ocean,has asked for help as it fears it will be swallowed up by the sea.

Storms and huge waves are a constant threat and none of Tuvalu's nine little islands is more than five metres above sea level.Salt water is already entering the country's drinking water supply,as well as damaging plants that produce fruit and vegetable. Without urgent help,the country's days are numbered.

But Tuvalu is not the first place to face sinking into the sea.Venice,a historic city in Italy best known for its canals,has sunk about 24 cm over the past 100 years.Experts say that it will have sunk another 20&50 cm by 2050.A century ago,St.Mark's Square,the lowest point in the city,flooded about nine times a year.Nowadays,it happens more than 100 times.

While Venice is slowly sinking into the mud on which it stands,Tuvalu's rising sea level is caused by global warming.

The average global temperature has increased by almost 0.5 centigrade degree over the past century; scientists expect it to rise by an extra 1&3 degrees over the next 100 years.

Warmer weather makes glaciers (冰川) melt,adding more water to the ocean.The warmer temperatures also make water expand,so it takes up more space,causing the sea level to rise.The sea level has risen about 10&25 cm in the last 100 years.

The main cause of global warming is human pollution.Through burning coal,oil and gas,people have been increasing the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere,such as CO2.This adds to the power of the greenhouse effect,making the planet even warmer.

Many scientists believe that,if the warming is not stopped,there will be huge climate changes.The sea level could rise by one meter this century.

Should this come true,millions of homes will be swallowed up by the sea and the world will be flooded with “climate refugees” looking for somewhere to live.

1.The people of Tuvalu are afraid that _________.

A.they will be in great hunger

B.salt water will cover the little country

C.without help,the country will be flooded by rain water

D.the mud under Tuvalu is going to sink 2.5 cm every year

2.What is the result as the climate goes on?

A.Venice will sink 24 cm in the following 100 years.

B.Only the glaciers can be melted.

C.It makes the seawater reduced.

D.The sea level will be raised.

3.Why is the globe becoming warmer and warmer?

A.Because that the seawater is being polluted.

B.Because a lot of terrible fires have broken out in the cities.

C.Because,with the development of industry and the living level rising,more and more coal,oil and gas are being burnt.

D.Because the greenhouse is bigger and bigger.

4.What does the underlined word“refugees”mean?

A.changes

B.sea waves

C.animals

D.people who lost their homes

答案:B;D;C;D
解析:

1. B 读完第1 2段,可知Tuvalu是太平洋上的一个小国,因面临被海水淹没的危险,正在寻求援助。只要你站在图瓦卢人的角度上,很容易看出,提供物资援助是不能帮助Tuvalu摆脱困境的,排除A项。从it will be swallowed up by the sea入手很容易地选出B项,salt watersea water
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完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项, 并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
It was no wonder I was not looking forward to entering ninth grade. High school is well-known for being a battleground, where everyone seems to be  36  through physical changes, emotional mood swings, and low self-respect. For me,  37  was my punishment.
I had always felt insecure and out of 38 as one of the  39  members of my class, standing a head above the other girls and bending at the  40  of the line to avoid sticking  41 .
I especially hate being around large groups of people, like during the social hour after services at my church.  42  the prayers were finished, I would leave as quickly as possible so I could  43  other well-meaning congratulations, "Ruthie! Look how tall you' re getting!"
My grandfather would watch me  44  increasingly uncomfortable, but he did not  45  at my self--consciousness or try to comfort me.  46 , he would remind me. "Stand straight and tall," he would say, as I unsuccessfully tried to shrink (使缩小) myself. Moreover, each time, I would embarrassedly obey. Even at age 15, I understood that his advice was about  47  than just feet and inches.
My grandfather grew up in war-torn Europe. When German soldiers  48  his hometown, he wound up joining the Soviet army to fight  49  his country's freedom. "Stand straight, stand tall," meant something else back then.
_50  the war, he boarded a boat for  51  , and on January 27, 1947, he stepped onto the dock in Manhattan. He was hungry and  52  from seasickness. All alone in a new country, he was  53  about his future. Still, he marched head-on into the streets of New York. Soon he met  54  European immigrants, each of them trying to find his or her own way. If they could do it, why couldn't he? "Stand straight, stand tall," he would remind himself. He felt his faith  55 . When he walked into the church that first time, he walked in proudly.
36. A. going                     B. getting            C. looking               D. putting
37. A. age                        B. sex                    C. height               D. face
38. A. place                    B. order              C. control              D. date
39. A. younger                    B. shorter                    C. fatter              D. taller
40. A. head                  B. bottom            C. back                D. side
41. A. to                    B. out                C. with                D. off
42. A. Until                  B. Unless             C. Once               D. Before
43. A. avoid                 B. receive               C. accept             D. refuse
44. A. change                B. grow                C. sense              D. make
45. A. look                   B. stare             C. stay                 D. laugh
46. A. Instead               B. Besides       C. However              D. Therefore
47. A. other                  B. more          C. less               D. rather
48. A. fought                 B. developed    C. occupied                D. marched
49. A. against                          B. for              C. with                D. to
50. A. Before                 B. During               C. Without              D. After
51. A. German                B. Australia             C. America             D. Canada
52. A. coming                B. learning            C. suffering             D. differing
53. A. frightened              B. excited              C. serious              D. sorrowful
54. A. few                   B. more               C. most               D. other
55. A. increasing              B. returning              C. gaining               D. disappearing

第二节(共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)

根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中的两项为多途选项。

Expressions about water are almost as common as water. _____71____.

The expression “to be in hot water” is one of them. It is a very old expression. “Hot water” was used five hundred years ago to mean being in trouble. One story says it got that meaning from the custom of extremely throwing hot water down on enemies attacking a castle.

When we are in “hot water”, we are in trouble.___72____. A young boy can be in hot water with his mother, if he comes into the house with dirty shoes.

“To keep your head above water” is a colorful expression that means staying out of debt. A company seeks to keep its head above water during economic hard times. A man who loses his job tries to keep his head above water until he finds a new job.

Another common expression, “to hold water”, is about the strength or weakness of an idea or opinion that you may be arguing about. If is can hold water, it is strong and has no holes in it. If your argument can hold water, ___73____.If it does not hold water, ____74____.

“Throwing cold water” also is an expression that deals with ideas or proposals. ____75___.For example, you want to buy a new car because the old one has some problems. But your wife “throws cold water” on the idea, because she says a new car costs too much.

A.But many of the expressions using water have unpleasant meanings.

B.You are in a difficult position

C.A person who breaks a law can be in hot water with the police.

D.It means disliking an idea.

E.It is strong and does not have any holes.

F.A man who loses his job tries to keep his head above water until he finds a new job.

G.Then it is weak and not worth debating.

 

完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)

阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项, 并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

It was no wonder I was not looking forward to entering ninth grade. High school is well-known for being a battleground, where everyone seems to be  36  through physical changes, emotional mood swings, and low self-respect. For me,  37  was my punishment.

I had always felt insecure and out of 38 as one of the  39  members of my class, standing a head above the other girls and bending at the  40  of the line to avoid sticking  41 .

I especially hate being around large groups of people, like during the social hour after services at my church.  42  the prayers were finished, I would leave as quickly as possible so I could  43  other well-meaning congratulations, "Ruthie! Look how tall you' re getting!"

My grandfather would watch me  44  increasingly uncomfortable, but he did not  45  at my self--consciousness or try to comfort me.  46 , he would remind me. "Stand straight and tall," he would say, as I unsuccessfully tried to shrink (使缩小) myself. Moreover, each time, I would embarrassedly obey. Even at age 15, I understood that his advice was about  47  than just feet and inches.

My grandfather grew up in war-torn Europe. When German soldiers  48  his hometown, he wound up joining the Soviet army to fight  49  his country's freedom. "Stand straight, stand tall," meant something else back then.

_50  the war, he boarded a boat for  51  , and on January 27, 1947, he stepped onto the dock in Manhattan. He was hungry and  52  from seasickness. All alone in a new country, he was  53  about his future. Still, he marched head-on into the streets of New York. Soon he met  54  European immigrants, each of them trying to find his or her own way. If they could do it, why couldn't he? "Stand straight, stand tall," he would remind himself. He felt his faith  55 . When he walked into the church that first time, he walked in proudly.

36. A. going                     B. getting            C. looking               D. putting

37. A. age                        B. sex                    C. height               D. face

38. A. place                    B. order              C. control              D. date

39. A. younger                    B. shorter                    C. fatter              D. taller

40. A. head                  B. bottom            C. back                D. side

41. A. to                    B. out                C. with                D. off

42. A. Until                  B. Unless             C. Once               D. Before

43. A. avoid                 B. receive               C. accept             D. refuse

44. A. change                B. grow                C. sense              D. make

45. A. look                   B. stare             C. stay                 D. laugh

46. A. Instead               B. Besides       C. However              D. Therefore

47. A. other                  B. more          C. less               D. rather

48. A. fought                 B. developed    C. occupied                D. marched

49. A. against                          B. for              C. with                D. to

50. A. Before                 B. During               C. Without              D. After

51. A. German                B. Australia             C. America             D. Canada

52. A. coming                B. learning            C. suffering             D. differing

53. A. frightened              B. excited              C. serious              D. sorrowful

54. A. few                   B. more               C. most               D. other

55. A. increasing              B. returning              C. gaining               D. disappearing

 

Expressions about water are almost as common as water itself. But many of the expressions using water have unpleasant meanings.

    The expression “to be in hot water” is one of them. It is a very old expression. “Hot water” was used five hundred years ago to mean being in trouble. One story says it got that meaning from the custom of throwing extremely hot water down on enemies attacking a castle.

    That no longer happens. But we still get in “hot water”. When we are in “hot water”, we are in trouble. It can be any kind of trouble---serious, and not so serious. A person who breaks a law can be in hot water with the police. A young boy can be in hot water with his mother, if he comes into the house with dirty shoes.

    Being in “deep water” is almost the same as being in hot water. When you are in “deep water”, you are in a difficult position. Imagine a person who cannot swim being thrown into water over his head.

     You are in deep water when you are facing a problem that you do not have the ability to solve. You can be in deep water, for example, if you invest(投资) in stocks(股票) without knowing anything about the stock market.

     “To keep your head above water” is a colorful expression that means staying out of debt. A company seeks to keep its head above water during economic hard times. A man who loses his job tries to keep his head above water until he finds a new job.

     “Water over the dam” is another expression about a past event. It is something that is finished. It cannot be changed. The expression comes from the idea that water which has flowed over a dam cannot be brought back again.

53. 1.The passage mainly tells us _______ .

A. the importance of water in our life    B. some expressions about water   

C. some sad stories about water         D. some lessons about daily life

54. 2. When a friend is troubled by a mistake she has made, you might tell her to forget about it. You say “ _______”.

A. You are in hot water                          B. You are in deep water

C. Keep your head above water               D. It is water over the dam

55.3.Two of the phrases “to be in hot water” “to be in deep water” mentioned in the passage have the same meaning of “ _______ ”.

A. to be in debt                          B. to be in difficulty

C. to be useless                           D. to be out of water

56. 4.Which of the following expressions is a bit different from the others in meaning?

A. To be in hot water.                B. To be in deep water.

C. To keep your head above water.      D. Water over the dam.

 

There was once a blind man, who did a lot of traveling alone. He was making his first trip to Texas and happened to be seated next to a Texan on the flight.

The Texan spent a lot of time telling him how everything was bigger and better in Texas. After the blind man reached his destination, a large resort (度假) hotel, he was very excited about being in Texas.

The long trip had worn him out a little so he decided to stop at the bar for a small soda and a light snack before going up to his room to sleep.

When the waitress set down his drink, it was in a huge cup. “Wow, I had heard everything in Texas is bigger,” he told her.

“That’s right,” she replied. The blind man ate his snack and finished his drink. After drinking such a large amount, it was natural that his next stop was to be the restroom. He asked the waitress for directions. She told him to turn left at the corner, and then take the second door on the right.

He reached the first door and continued. A few steps later he stumbled (绊倒) slightly and missed the second door and ended up going through the third door instead. Not realizing he had entered the swimming area he walked forward and immediately fell into the swimming pool.

Remembering that everything was bigger in Texas, he had his head above water and started shouting “Don’t flush(冲洗)! Don’t flush!”

1.Why was the blind man excited about being in Texas?

A.It was the first time that he had travelled abroad.

B.People from Texas were very friendly than he expected.

C.He heard that everything was bigger and better in Texas.

D.The service staff in the large resort hotel was very humorous.

2. Why did the blind man enter the swimming area?

A.He wanted to go swimming.

B.He wanted to have a bath.

C.He stumbled and missed the restroom door.

D.The waitress gave him wrong directions.

3. Why did the blind man go to the bar?

A.To go through it on his way to his room.

B.To have a short rest after a long walk.

C.To have something to eat there.

D.To ask a waitress for directions.

4. Why did the blind man shout out “Don’t flush! Don’t flush!”?

A.He thought he was caught in a big toilet and someone was cleaning it.

B.He didn’t want anyone to clean the toilet at that time.

C.He didn’t want anyone to clean the swimming pool at that time.

D.He thought it was such a big swimming pool that making it clean was no use.

5.If the passage is taken from a website, which part of the website does it belong to?

A.Travel services.

B.Hotel services.

C.Funny stories.

D.Health problems.

 

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