题目内容

【题目】Now one knows 1(exact) how many disabled people there are in the world, but estimates suggest2 figure is over 450 million. The number of disabled people in India alone is probable larger than the total population of Canada.

In the United Kingdom, about one 3ten people have some disability. Disability is not just something that happens to other people; as we get older, many of us will become less mobile, hard to hear or have4 (fail) eyesight.

Disablement can take many forms and occur at any time of life. Some people are born with disabilities. Many others become disabled as they get older. There are many progressive(逐渐的)disabling 5(disease). The longer time goes on, the 6(bad) they become.

Disabled people face many physical barriers. But there are other barriers: prejudice can be even harder 7 (break) down and ignorance represents the greatest barrier of all. It is almost 8 (possible) for the able-bodied to fully appreciate 9the severely disabled go though. So it is important to draw attention to these barriers and show that it 10(be) the individual person’s ability, not their disability, that counts.

【答案】

1exactly

2the

3in

4failing

5diseases

6worse

7to break

8impossible

9what

10is

【解析】本文主要讲了残疾不只是发生在其他人身上当我们变老时,我们许多人会变的不易行动,听力困难或视力下降。残疾可以以任何形式发生在生命中的任一时期。我们应该关注他们的个人能力,而不是他们的残疾。

1考查副词。修饰动词knows,用副词,所以填exactly

2考查冠词。特指这个数字,用定冠词,所以填the

3考查介词。在英国,每十个人之内,就有一个人有些残疾。表示“……之内”,所以填in。

4考查v+ing。v+ed修饰人,而v+ing修饰物,这里修饰eyesight,所以填failing

5考查名词单复数。被many修饰,所以用名词复数,填diseases

6考查固定用法。The + 比较级,the + 比较级,越……,越……,是固定用法,所以填worse

7考查不定式。偏见很难被打破。这里不定式作结果状语,所以填to break

8考查形容词。让健全的人完全领会残疾人所经历的痛苦几乎是不可能的。作is后的表语,用形容词,所以填impossible

9考查宾语从句。___9___the severely disabled go though.是一个宾语从句,引导词在从句中作宾语,所以填what

10考查强调句。it ___10___(be) the individual person’s ability, not their disability, that counts.是一个强调句,强调句的基本结构是it is/ was + 被强调部分+ that + 句子其他成分,所以填is。

练习册系列答案
相关题目

【题目】For hundreds of years, people have been wondering about the strange places that they seem to visit in their sleep. 1 However, they have been valued as necessary to a person's health and happiness. Historically people thought dreams contained messages from God. It was only in the twentieth century that people started to study dreams scientifically believing that they tell about a person’s character.2 He believed that dreams allow a person to express fantasies or fears, which would be socially unacceptable in real life.

The second theory to become popular was Carl Jung’s compensation theory Jung, a former student of Freud, said that the purpose of a dream is not to hide something, but rather to communicate it to the dreamer.3 Thus, people who think too highly of themselves may dream about falling; those who think too little of themselves dream of being heroes.

Using more recent research, William Domhoff from the University of California found that dreaming is a mental skill that needs time to develop in humans.4 Until they reach age five, they cannot express very well what their dreams are about. Once people become adults, there is little or no change in their dreams. The dreams of men and women differ. For instance, the characters that appear in the dreams of men are often other men, and often involve physical aggression.

The meaning of dreams continues to be difficult to understand. 5 If you dream that a loved one is going to die, do not panic The dream may have meaning, but it does not mean that your loved one is going to die.

A. Dreams make up for what is lacking in waking life.

B. However, people should not take their dreams as reality.

C. They have been considered as meaningless nighttime journeys.

D. It gives scientists chances to better understand human mind.

E. Children do not dream as much as adults.

F. They think their mind is trying to tell them something.

G. First, there was Sigmund Freud’s theory.

【题目】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。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Two hundred years after Charles Darwin's birth, studies have found new details of his life at the University of Cambridge. Six leather-bound ledgers (皮革账本) discovered in the university show this.
He lived in the most expensive rooms provided for a rich student at his time.He had someone to clean his room, make his bed and take care of the fire in his bright rooms. He hired a dishwasher, a clothes washer and a man who cleaned his shoes. A tailor (裁缝), hatter and barber made sure he was well presented. A chimney cleaner and a coalman kept his fire going. Christ's College's basic food was meat and beer.
Darwin's bill topped 636 pounds during his three years of study at Cambridge. Later he described this time as the most joyful of his happy life. That large sum (金额) would have been fairly common for a student at Cambridge in the 19th century.

In those days Cambridge was full of rich students living a pretty good life and Darwin was just one of them.And thus he had plenty of time for socializing or private study. He would be out shooting, collecting beetles, doing his scientific hobbies or visiting friends. He played cards and drank wine at night, just like students always have.
A. Thanks to the richness, he was able to hire servants to help with the daily life.
B. The findings were published on the Internet.
C. So he paid five and a half pence extra each day to have vegetables.
D. He enjoyed the kind of comfortable university life that most of today's students can only dream about.
E. He had several people to help him to deal with the daily housework.
F. When you look at the ledgers, you can find there were many rich students in Cambridge.
G. The bills were paid by his wealthy father, Robert Darwin, a doctor.

【题目】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
Different people use different languages. We Chinese speak Chinese, and, most of us are learning a foreign language. But there is another kind of language we need to know — the language of the body.
All over the world, people “talk with their hand, with their heads and with their eyes.” When Japanese people meet, they bow. When Indians meet, they put their hands together. What do American and British do? Americans are more informal (不拘小节的) than the British. They like to be friendly. They use first names, they ask questions and they talk easily about themselves. When they sit down, they like to relax in their chairs and make themselves comfortable. British people are more reserved (保守的). They take more time to make friends. They like to know you before they ask your name.
When British or American people meet someone for the first time, they shake hands. They do not usually shake hands with people they know well. Women sometimes kiss their women friends, and men kiss women friends (on one cheek only). When a man meets a man, he just smiles, and says, “Hello.” Men do not kiss each other, or hold hands. Even fathers and sons do not often kiss each other.
(1)In the passage, the writer thinks that body language is ________.
A.useless
B.difficult
C.quite easy
D.important
(2)Which of the following is right?
A.Different countries have the same body language.
B.Different countries have different body languages.
C.People in Asia share the same body language.
D.Many people only use their body language.
(3)If an American friend visits you, he probably ________.
A.sit straight
B.never sits down
C.makes fun of you
D.sits freely
(4)If you want to make a British friend, you may feel it ________.
A.impossible
B.too easy
C.too difficult
D.slow

违法和不良信息举报电话:027-86699610 举报邮箱:58377363@163.com

精英家教网