题目内容

阅读理解:

    Nobody expected to find them there , outside the city walls . The broken bones of 30 or 40 bodies lay on top of the other . There was no sign of a battle. Everyone wondered why all these people died at the same moment . The men returned day after day to move the earth . They worked with great care, like detectives(侦探).

    Each day something new was discovered . Every bone was studied. Soft brushes were used so that nothing was damaged(毁坏).It took a very long time and there were many difficult questions to answer.

    Deep in the ground they found an important clue(线索). Below the bodies there was a building made of bricks .Inside it lay the body of a woman. There were many treasures in the building with her gold for head , neck and arms , and clothes covered with gold . It was clear that the woman had been a queen . This explained why the other bodies were there .The queen’s servants had killed themselves immediately after she had died. They wanted to be her servants in the next world too . This all happened 4,500 years ago in the world’s first city Ur of the Chaldees. We can learn about the past from books , but man lived for hundreds of thousands of years before any books were written , only archaeologists(考古学家)can find out something about our early history. This story is an example of how archaeologists work.

1Which of the following proves that those people died at the same time?

[    ]

AThe bodies were found outside the city walls .

BThe bodied were lying on top of one another.

CThere had been a battle there.

DThey were buried deep in the ground.

2The men were like detectives because ______ .

[    ]

Athey found new things every day

Bthey wanted to discover everything

Cthey were moving earth

Dthey made a long and careful search for the hidden treasures

3As we can learn from the passage ,the bones were ______ .

[    ]

Aa queen’s Bsome official’s

Csome servants’ Dsome soldiers’

4Which of the following was the cause of those people’s death?

[    ]

AThey were very poor.

BThey were forces to work for the queen day and night .

CThey wished to be the queen’s servants forever.

DThey had not enough food to eat .

5From this passage , we know that ______ .

[    ]

Aeven the archaeologists know little about our early history

Bonly the archaeologists can find out all about our early history

Cwe can learn everything about the past of man from books

Dwe cannot learn everything about the past of man from books

答案:B;B;C;C;D
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第三节:阅读理解(共25小题; 每小题2分, 满分50分)
It was 3:12 a. m. when nine-year-old Glenn Kreamer awoke to the smell of burning. Except for the crackling(爆裂声)of flames somewhere below there was not a sound in the two-storey house at Baldwin, Long Island.
With his father away on night duty at a local factory, Glenn was worried about the safety of his mother, his sister Karen, 14 and his 12-year-old brother Todd. He ran downstairs through the smoke filled house to push and pull at Karen and Todd until they sat up. Then he helped each one through the house to the safety of the garden. There, his sister and brother, taking short and quick breaths and coughing, collapsed on the lawn (草坪).
The nine-year-old raced back into the house and upstairs to his mother’s room. He found it impossible to woke her up. Mrs. Kreamer, a victim of the smoke, was unconscious, and there was nobody to help Glenn carry her to the garden. But the boy remained calm and, as a fireman said later, “acted with all the self-control of a trained adult.”
On the bedroom telephone, luckily still working, Glenn called his father and, leaving Mr. Kreamer to telephone the fire brigade and ambulance service, got on with the task of saving his mother.
First he filled a bucket with water from the bathroom and threw water over his mother and her bed. Then, with a wet cloth around his head he went back to the garden.
He could hear the fire engine coming up, but how would the firemen find his mother in the smoke-filled house where flames had almost swallowed up the ground floor?
Grasping firmly a ball of string from the garage, Glenn raced back into the house and dashed upstairs to his mother’s room. Tying one end of the string to her hand he ran back, laying out the string as he went, through the hall and back out into the garden.
Minutes later he was telling fire chief John Coughlan: “The string will lead you to mother.” Mrs. Kreamer was carried to safety as the flames were breaking through her bedroom floor.
1.Why did Glenn run downstairs first?
A.He wanted to find out what was happening.  
B.He was worried about his mother’s safety.
C.He wanted to save his sister and brother.    
D.He went to see if his father had come back from work.
2.How did Glenn help the firemen to save his mother?
A.By throwing water all over her and her bed.    
B.By carrying her to safety with his brother.
C.By pushing and pulling at her.              
D.By tying a string to her hand.
3.Who called the fire brigade and ambulance service?
A.Glenn.    B.Glenn’s father.     C.Glenn’s sister.    D.Glenn’s neighbor.
4.What did Glenn do to protect himself?
A.He put a wet cloth around his head.      B.He threw water all over himself.
C.He hid himself in the bathroom.         D.He rushed out to the lawn.
5.Glenn saved his family because___________.
A.his father had taught him to do so on the phone   
B.he had learned something about first aid
C.he had dealt with the emergency calmly and wisely 
D.he had followed his mother’s instruction


第三部分 阅读理解(共20小题;每小题2分,满分40分)
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,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
A
Aren’t they all our children?
There are few things in this life more difficult to experience than the loss of one’s child. Jim Wallis, in WHO SPEAKS FOR GOD, tells a story that happened during the war in Sarajevo. A reporter who was covering the violence in the middle of the city saw a little girl shot by a gunman.
The reporter rushed to the aid of a man who was now holding the child. He helped them both into his car and sped off to a hospital.  
“Hurry, my friend,” the man urged, “my child is still alive.” A moment or two later he pleaded, “Hurry, my friend, my child is still breathing.” A little later he said, “Hurry, my friend, my child is still warm.”
When they got to the hospital, the young girl was gone. “This is a terrible task for me,” the distraught man said to the reporter. “I must go and tell her father that his child is dead.”
He looked at the man in surprise and said, “I thought she was your child.”
The man replied, “No, but aren't they all our children?”
I think that is one of the great questions of our age that deserves an answer.
Aren’t they all our children? Those on our side of the border as well as those on the other side? Those of our nation no more or less than those of another?
Aren’t they all our children? The well-educated and the under-educated? The well-fed and the under-fed? Those who are secure and those who are at risk?
Aren’t they all our children? if we say yes, can we ever again pit them against each other? “If we have no peace,” said Mother Teresa, “it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other.”
There may be no greater question for our generation. And how we answer that question will determine the shape of our world for years to come.
51. What was the reporter doing when the shooting took place?
A. Telling a story.              B. Having a meeting. 
C. Reporting an event.          D. Helping the wounded.
52. From the text we know the girl died        .
A. in the hospital         B. with nobody in front 
C. soon after the shooting   D. far away from her home
53. How many people experienced the sad story?
A. Three.              B. Four.       C. Five.         D. Six.
54. Which can best express the point of a yes to the question “Aren’t they all our children?”
A. Health.       B. Love.  C. Wealth.     D. Peace.

阅读理解。
     Nobody knows for absolute certainty all the details of the life of Aesop. However, scholars have
been working to established some facts and this is the brief story of Aesop as it is accepted today.
     Aesop was born a slave around the year 620 B.C. In Ancient Greece , it was a privilege and
tradition of freedmen to be interested in public affairs, so Aesop worked hard to raise himself from a
servile slave's position to a high position of renown. He was a thinker and philosopher and eventually
became widely admired.
     Aesop was a smart man and a good speaker. He liked to learn and to also teach people, so he
traveled through many countries. He came to Sardis, the capital of the famous king Croesus of Lydia
who was a patron of learning and learned men.
     Croesus was so impressed by Aesop that he invited Aesop to permanently reside at Sardis. The
king hired Aesop to do diplomatic government work such as trying to establish peace between the
various republics of Greece. Aesop reconciled the inhabitants of these cities by telling his wise fables.
     It was on one of these ambassadorial missions that Aesop was killed. Croesus had sent him to
Delphi with lots of gold which was to be distributed among the citizens. After talking with the people
of Delphi, Aesop got so mad at the citizens because of their covetousness. He refused to divide the
money and instead sent it back to his master. The Delphians were so mad they executed Aesop as a
public criminal.
     As it often happens in Greek history, the Delphians were visited by a series of calamities as a sort
of retribution for Aesop's death. This is where the phrase "the blood of Aesop" originated. The saying
means "wrongful deeds will not go unpunished".
     In memory of Aesop, a statue was erected in Athens. The statue was created by the famous Greek
sculptor, Lysippus.
1. Why did Aesop work so hard?
A. Because he wanted to be an official.  
B. Because he desired to join in public affairs.
C. Because he wanted to make more money.  
D. Because he wanted to write wise fables.
2. According to Paragraph 3, Aesop traveled through many countries to __________.
A. spread knowledge  
B. seek help    
C. admire the scenery  
D. collect facts
3. Croesus hired Aesop to _________.
A. establish relations with other republics    
B. handle interal affairs of Lydia
C. be in charge of his wealth            
D. publish the neighboring republics of Greece
4. Which of the following word can best describe Croesus?
A. Strong-willed.    
B. Generous.      
C. Adventurous.      
D. Knowledgeable.
5. The phrase "the blood of Aesop" probably means "__________".
A. No pains, no gains.                  
B. Well begun is half done.
C. It's no use crying over spilt milk.        
D. Wrongful deeds will not go unpunished.

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