题目内容

14.-Susan,it tastes that the fish______________ bad.
-Yes,you are right.Let's tell the waiter about it.(  )
A.goesB.wentC.has goneD.had gone

分析 Susan,这鱼尝起来已经坏了.嗯,你说的没错.我们告诉服务员吧.

解答 答案:C  句意表达的是完成的动作,强调对现在造成的后果(味道不对),是现在完成时态的典型用法.故选C.

点评 现在完成时态有两种用法:表示从过去持续到现在的动作;表示过去的动作对现在造成的影响或结果.

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2.The Museum:The Charles Dickens Museum in London is the world's most important collection of material relating to the great Victorian novelist and social commentator.The only surviving London home of Dickens (from 1837 until 1839)was opened as a museum in 1925 and is still we koming visitors from all over the world.On four floors,visitors can see paintings,rare editions,manuscripts,original furniture and many items relating to the life ofir7ne of the most popular and beloved personalities of the Victorian age.       
Opening Hours
◇The Museum is open from Mondays to Saturdays 10:00-17:00; Sundays 11:00-17:00.
◇Last admission is 30 minutes before closing time.
◇Special opening times can be arranged for groups,who may wish to book a private view.
Admission Charges:Adults:£5.00; Students:£4:00; Seniors:£4.00; Children:£3.00; Families:£14.00( 2 adults & up to five children)
Group Rates:For a group of 10 or more,a special group rate of£4.00 each applies.
Children will still be admitted for£3.00 each,
Access:We are constantly working to improve access to the Museum and its collection.Our current projects involve the fitting of a wheelchair ramp for better access,a customer care kit and an audio tour for visitors with impaired (受损的) vision.Our Handling Sessions are also suitable for the visually impaired.The Museum has developed an online virtual tour through the Museum.Click here to visit all the rooms in the Museum online.
Hire the Museum:The Museum can be hired for private functions,performances soirees(社交晚会)and many other social occasions.
Find Us:The Museum may be reached by using the following buses:7,17,19,38,45,46,55,243.And by these underground services:Piccadilly Line; Central Line.For a map,please click here.The British Museum and the Foundling Museum are within walking distance.

36.The passage is probably from a(n)B.
A.book            
B.website         
C.newspaper       
D.announcement
37.Compared to going there separately,if a family with two adults and five children go to the Museum together they will saveD
A.£25.00        
B.£14.00        
C.£9:00         
D.£11.00
38.In the Charles Dickens Museum,people can not findD.
A.paintings                           
B.rare editions  
C.manuscripts     
D.cars
39.According to the passage,which of the following statements is TRUE?A
A. The Museum is not very far from the British Museum.
B. In any case people cannot visit the Museum after 17:00.
C. Visitors with poor vision cannot enjoy the Museum.
D. Anyone cannot hire the Museum for other users.
40. The passage is written toC.
A. persuade readers to visit London.
B. inform readers about the history of the Charles Dickens Museum.
C. offer readers some information about the Charles Dickens Museum.
D. tell readers how to make use of the Charles Dickens Museum.
6.To take the apple as a forbidden fruit is the most unlikely strory the Christians(基督教徒)have ever cooked up.For them,the forbidden fruit from Eden is evil(邪恶的).So when Columbus brought the tomato back from South America,a land mistakenly considered to be Eden,everyone jumped to the obvious conclusion.Wrongly taken as the apple of Eden,the tomato was shut out of the door of Europeans.
What made it particularly terrifying was its similarity to the mandrake,a plant that was thought to have come from Hell(地狱).What earned the plant its awful reputation was its roots which looked like a dried-up human body occupied by evil spirits.Tough the tomato and the mandrake were quite different except that both had bright red or yellow fruit,the general population considered them one and the same,too terrible to touch.
Cautious Europeans long ignored the tomato,and until the early 1700s most of the Westernpeople continued to drag their feet.In the 1880s,the daughter of a well-known plant expert wrote that the most interesting part of an afternoon tea at her father's house had been the"introduction of this wonderful new fruit--or is it a vegetable?"As late as the twentieth century some writers still classed tomatoes with mandrakes as an"evil fruit".
But in the end tomatoes carried the day.The hero of the tomato was an American named Robert Johnson,and when he was publicly going to eat the tomato in 1820,people journeyed for hundreds of miles to watch him drop dead."What are you afraid of?"he shouted."I'll show you fools that these things are good to eat!"Then he bit into the tomato.Some people fainted.But he survived and,according to a local story,set up a tomato-canning factory.

68.The tomato was shut out of the door of early Europeans mainly becauseD.
A.it made Christians evil
B.it was the apple of Eden
C.it came from a forbidden land
D.it was religiously unacceptable
69.What can we infer the underlined part in Paragraph 3?C
A.The process of ignoring the tomato slowed down
B.There was little progress in the study of the tomato
C.The tomato was still refused in most western countries
D.Most western people continued to get rid of the tomato
70.What is the main reason for Robert Johnson to eat the tomato publicly?B
A.To make himself a hero
B.To remove people's fear of the tomato
C.To speed up the popularity of the tomato
D.To persuade people to buy products from his factory
71.What is the main purpose of the passage?C
A.To challenge people's fixed concept of the tomato
B.To give an explanation to people's dislike of the tomato
C.To present the change of people's attitudes to the tomato
D.To show the process of freeing the tomato from religious influence.
10.Thanksgiving Day is special holiday in the United States and Canada.Families and friends gather to eat and give thanks for their blessing.
    Thanksgiving Day is really a harvest festival.This is why it is celebrated in late fall,after the corps are in.But one of the first thanksgivings in America had nothing to do with a good harvest.On December 4,1619,the Pilgrims from England landed near what is now Charles City,Virginia.They knelt down and thanked God for their safe journey across the Atlantic.
    The first New England Thanksgiving did celebrate a rich harvest.The Pilgrims landed at what is now Plymouth,Massachusetts,in 1620.They had a difficult time and the first winter was cruel.Many of the Pilgrims died.But the next year,they had a good harvest.So Governor Bradford declared a three-day feast.The Pilgrims invited Indian friends to join them for their special feast.Everyone brought food.
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43.Thanksgiving Day is celebratedC.
A.in spring     
B.in summer     
C.in autumn    
D.in winter
44.The first to celebrate thanksgiving wereA.
A.some people from England        
B.the American Indians
C.Sarah Josepha Hale              
D.Governor Bradford
45.We can infer from the passage that New England must beA.
A.in the USA              
B.in Great Britain 
C.in Canada              
D.on some island off the Atlantic
46.The passage mainly tells usB.
A.how Thanksgiving Day is celebrated in the USA
B.how Thanksgiving Day came into being and the different ways it is celebrated.
C.that Thanksgiving Day is in fact a harvest holiday
D.how the way to celebrate Thanksgiving Day changed with the time and places.

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