题目内容
This is no ordinary button. One click and I have the power to erase a person from my life.
In late fall, I had around 400 friends on Facebook. Today, I have 134.
Click. Make that 133.
When Facebook first entered my life in 2005, I panicked(恐慌、担心) that my friend count was too low. If I wasn’t properly connected, how would anyone see my clever quote(引语)? Who would wish me a happy birthday? I accepted and sent out friend requests without a second thought and soon accumulated 391 friends.
There is an appeal to being able to communicate with someone or just “thumbs(拨动手指) up” a photo rather than make real conversation.
“It’s comforting and it’s easy,” said Larry Rosen, a psychology professor at California State University, who studies the way people communicate online.” There’s a sense of belonging in it. It’s a sense of community in a generation where community has sort of (有点)disappeared.”
However, I don’t talk to half of these people in the online community. There are some I would avoid if I met them on the street.
Click. 132.
I decided to rid my account of any “friend” that…well, wasn’t. Sound easy? You try it.
Look at who you’re dealing with: family, friends, classmates, crushes(爱恋的对象), acquaintances…
With every click of the “Remove from friends” button, you risk burning a bridge, losing a contact and missing an opportunity. So every time I go to click the button, my heart hurts.
However, I’m not the only one who has experienced a Faceboook friend refreshing. The New Oxford American Dictionary announces its “Word of the Year” each year, and last year, “unfriend” made the cut (入围) (though I’ll still stick with “defriend”).
When I started my mission(任务), a few friends joined. Most were surprised by how easily they could cut hundreds of connections without thinking twice.
“Oh my God, I defriended like 600 people today. I feel so good!” my friend Sarah messaged.
Dana, a close friend from high school, and I battled it out to see who could get our counts lower. She wins at 123.
To some, it’s poor “netiquette(网络礼仪)” to defriend. But to me, it’s the stage of life when we hold onto the people who count, the people who impact you.
- 1.
According to the article, what happens when you click the “Remove form friends” button?
- A.A message is sent out to your online friends.
- B.You accept someone as your online friend.
- C.You send out a friend request to people.
- D.The number of your online friends is reduced.
- A.
- 2.
The writer worried about her friend count in 2005 because ______.
- A.no one would wish her a happy birthday
- B.it was the first time she had made friends online
- C.she had only 391 online friends at that time
- D.she was eager to make connections
- A.
- 3.
What is Larry Rosen’s opinion?
- A.People living in the same area are closely connected in everyday life.
- B.Communication online helps people feel they are members of a group.
- C.It’s easy for people to make and break new friendships online.
- D.Today’s young people spend nearly all their time communicating online.
- A.
- 4.
Which of the following is the best description of the underlined sentence?
- A.I made new friends online while I removed some old ones.
- B.Some friends cut the number of their online friends just like I did.
- C.We competed to see who could remove the most online friends.
- D.When someone removed me from a friends’ list, I removed him/her.
- A.
文章讨论了减少Facebook朋友数量的问题。
1.推理题。根据第四行Click. Make that 133.可知这个按钮是减少朋友的数量的。
2.细节题。根据5,6行I panicked(恐慌、担心) that my friend count was too low. If I wasn’t properly connected, how would anyone see my clever quote(引语)?可知我担心朋友的数量太少是因为我想躲与别人联系。
3.推理题。根据第7段There’s a sense of belonging in it. It’s a sense of community in a generation where community has sort of (有点)disappeared.”可知在网络上与别人交流可以增加人们的归属感,让他们感觉是团体的成员。
4.猜测词义题。根据后一句Most were surprised by how easily they could cut hundreds of connections without thinking twice.可知有很多朋友和我一样减少了Facebook上朋友的数量。
When you’re lying on the white sands of the Mexican Rivera, the stresses (压力) of the world seem a million miles away. Hey, stop! This is no vacation—you have to finish something.
Here lies the problem for travel writer and food critic (评论家) Edie Jarolim. “I always loved traveling and always liked to eat, but it never occurred to me that I could make money doing both of those things,” Jarolim said. Now you can read her travel advice everywhere--- in Arts and Antiques, in Brides, or in one of her three books, The Complete Idiot Travel Guide to Mexican Beach Resorts.
Her job in travel writing began some eight years ago. After getting a PhD in English in Canada, she took a test for Frommer’s travel guides, passed it, and got the job. After working at Frommer’s, Jarolim worked for a while at Rough Guides in London, then Fodor’s where she fell so in love with a description of the Southwest of the U.S. that she moved there.
Now as a travel writer, she spends one-third of her year on the road. The rest of the time is spent completing her tasks and writing reviews of restaurants at home in Tucson, Arizona.
As adventurous as the job sounds, the hard part is fact-checking all the information. Sure, it’s great to write about a tourist attraction, but you’d better get the local museum hours correct or you could really ruin someone’s vacation.
1.What is most difficult for Jarolim?
A.Working in different places to collect information. |
B.Checking all the facts to be written in the guides. |
C.Finishing her work as soon as possible. |
D.Passing a test to write travel guides. |
2.What do we know about Jarolim from the text?
A.She is successful in her job. |
B.She finds her life full of stresses. |
C.She spends half of her time traveling. |
D.She is especially interested in museums. |
3.What would be the best title for the text?
A.Adventures in Travel Writing |
B.Working as a Food Critic |
C.Travel Guides on the Market |
D.Vacationing for a Living |