题目内容

阅读理解
     London  taxis,  with their friendly drivers who actually know where they are going,  are ranked best in
the world, according to an annual taxi poll (民意调查).
     The survey by  travel   website   hotels.com  found London taxis, despite being the most expensive,
beat others across the globe to head the list for the third consecutive  (连续的) years, scoring a total of
59 percent in votes on several  categories  by  travelers.
     London taxi drivers were voted both friendly and  most  knowledgeable, Drivers in the English capital
must pass an examination called The Knowledge to earn their taxi license.
     New York's yellow  taxis came second in the list, scoring  27  percent which was  up  10 percentage
points from last year even though Manhattan's cab drivers were tied with Parisian taxi drivers as the rudest. Travelers  said  New York  had  the most available taxis.
     Cabbies in Rome were voted the worst drivers in the world with almost one in 10 travelers thinking 
the Italian capital had  the world's  worst  taxi drivers when it came to the quality of driving.
     "Traveling by taxi is one of the first experiences that many travelers have upon arrival in a new city. In
fact, the research found that cabs are by far the most popular method of traveling from the airport
to their hotel." a spokesman for hotels.com said in a statement.
     The global poll scored city taxis for theirlevels of cleanliness, value, quality of driving, knowledge of the area, friendliness, safety and availability.
     Rounding out the  top  five were Tokyo  with  total  score of 26 percent, Berlin with 17 percent, and
Bangkok famed for its scoring 14 percent.
1. Why were London taxi drivers voted the best in the world? Because ______.
A. they were the friendliest  
B. taxi' fares were the lowest there
C. London had the most available taxis    
D. they were the most hardworking
2. What was the score of New York's yellow taxis last year?
A. 17 percent      
B. 26 percent        
C. 27 percent          
D. 59 percent
3. The worst drivers in the world were from Rome because of ______.
A. being dirty                
B. irregular charges
C. the poor quality of driving        
D. lacking knowledge of the area.
4. What are the top five in the annual taxi poll?
A. London -- New York -- Rome -- Tokyo-- Berlin
B. London -- New York - Tokyo -- Berlin -- Bangkok
C. London -- New York -- Tokyo -- Paris -- Bangkok
D. London -- New York -- Tokyo -- Bangkok -- Berlin
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阅读理解

  I fell in love with England because it was quaint(古雅)—all those little houses, looking terribly old-fashioned but nice, like dolls' houses. I loved the countryside and the pubs, and I loved Lon don . I've slightly changed my mind after seventeen years because I think it's an ugly town now.

  Things have changed. For everybody, England meant gentlemen., fair play, and good manners. The fair play is going, unfortunately, and so are the gentlemanly attitudes and good manners—people shut doors heavily in your face and politeness is disappearing.

  I regret that there are so few comfortable meeting places. Your're forced to live indoors. In Paris I go out much more, to restaurants and nightclubs. To meet friends here it usually has to be in a pub, and it can be difficult to go there alone as a woman. The cafes are not terribly nice.

  As a woman, I feel unsafe here. I spend a bomb on taxis because I will not take public transport after 10 p.m. I used to use it, but now I'm afraid.

  The idea of family seems to be more or less non-existent in England. My family is well united and that's typically French. In Middlesex I had a neighbor who is 82 now. His family only lived two miles away, but I took him to France for Christmas once because he was always alone.

1.The writer doesn't like London because she ________ .

[  ]

A.is not used to the life there now

B.has lived there for seventeen years

C.prefers to live in an old-fashioned house

D.has to be polite to everyone she meets there

2.Where do people usually meet their friends in England?

[  ]

A.In a cafe.

B.In a restaurant.

C.In a nightclub.

D.In a pub.

3.The underlined part “it” (in Para. 4 )refers to ________ .

[  ]

A.a taxi

B.the money

C.a bomb

D.public transport

4.The writer took her neighbor to France for Christmas because he ________ .

[  ]

A.felt lonely in England

B.had never been to France

C.was from a typical French family

D.didn't like the British idea of family

阅读理解

Conjoined Twins Lead Separate But Active Lives

  Lori and Reba Schappell have never been alone and they want to keep it that way.

  The 40-year-old conjoined twins in Pensylvania, US have read about others locked together by an accident of birth who have been medically separated. But they insist only death can part them.“We've never imagined a life divided. ” Lori said.

  Lori and Reba are joined together at the side of their heads, facing in opposite directions. Their blood supply is partly linked, but each has a separated brain.

  Reba suffers from a disease which has left her completely dependent on her sister.

  Lori wheels her everywhere they go in a specially designed chair. They both attended college, then went in different professional directions. Lori worked in a laundry room at a hospital for six years before giving that up to allow Reba to try to become a country singer.

  Her first song is called “The Fear of Being Alone” , which was inspired(启示) by Reba and Lon's desire for togetherness.

  Reba's career has taken her across the United States, Europe and parts of Asia. While the twins receive some money from the government, the earnings from Reba's concerts go to AIDS and cancer charities(慈善机构) .

  The sisters have set goals for themselves. Reba looks forward to a successful career as a country singer, while Lori said she hopes to get married and have children of her own.

  “ I'm not the only woman at age 40 not to have children . ” Lori said. “So when it comes, it comes. Meanwhile, I live wonderfully from day to day . ”

1.When Lori said “We've never imagined a life divided” , she meant that ________.

[  ]

A.they don't wish to be made separate

B.they think their case is beyond medical help

C.independent life would be too good to think of

D.they would die once separated

2.By “lead separate lives ”the title means that ________.

[  ]

A.either of the two can look after herself

B.the twins do different things

C.they face in opposite directions

D.they are no longer conjoined now

3.When Reba gives performances as a country singer, Lori ________.

[  ]

A.works in a laundry

B.continues her college education

C.brings up her children

D.looks after her sister

4.The twins lead active lives because they ________.

[  ]

A.are fed up with staying at home, doing nothing

B.need more money

C.want to prove themselves as useful citizens

D.have to earn their own bread

5.From the last paragraph we can understand that Lori ________.

[  ]

A.thinks it's too late for her to have children

B.is sure she'll get married and have children

C.prefers to have things go naturally

D.would rather rat change her way of life

阅读理解

  The pound new Library of Birmingham(LoB)will be the most visible sign of the way the city is accepting the digitalization(数字化)of everyday life.

  Set to open in 2013, the £188 m LoB is already beginning to take shape next to the Birmingham Repertory Theatre, with which it will share some equipment.

As digital media(媒介)is important to its idea, 49the project is already providing chances for some of the many small new local companies working at new technologies.

  Brian Gambles, the LoB project director, says 51.a it is about giving people the right tools for learning:“The aim is to mix the physical with the digital.51.b Providing 24-hour services which can be used through many different ways.It is important to enable us to reach more people, more effectively.”

  The digital library will, he says, be as important as the physical one, allowing the distant use of the services, making sure that it is never closed to the public.

  Even before the LoB is complete, the public has been able to go online to visit the Virtual(虚拟的)LoB, designed by Baden, the Birmingham virtual worlds specialists.50Not only have the public been able to learn about LoB, but the virtual one has also enabled those working on the LoN to understand the building and how it will work before ot even opens.

  Two other small Birmingham-based digital companies are working on the LoB projects.Substrat, a digital design company, is developing what it calls an “enlarged reality” project.It is about the use of an exciting smart phone, an important part of LoB the which is the early stages of development.And The People’s Archive is an online library of figures of the city being built content company in Cahoots, 51.d in which users will be encouraged to add to and comment on the material.

  Gambles says:“Technology will enable us to make the library’s and services open to citizens as sever before.”

(1)

The underline part “its idea” in Paragraph 3 refers to the idea of _________

[  ]

A.

the equipment

B.

the project

C.

the digital media

D.

the physical library

(2)

While visiting the Virtual LoB, the public can _________

[  ]

A.

get a general idea of the LoB

B.

meet more world-famous experts

C.

learn how to put up a library building

D.

understand how the specialists work on the project

(3)

Which of the following is true of the LoB when it opens?

[  ]

A.

a, b, d

B.

a, c, e

C.

b, c, d

D.

b, d, e

(4)

This text more probably from _________

[  ]

A.

a computer book

B.

a library guide

C.

a project handbook

D.

newspaper report

阅读理解

  A structure thought to be the world's oldest building has been discovered under the sea off the coast of Japan, and could be evidence of a previously unknown Stone Age civilization.

  The monument dates back to at least 8,000 BC; the oldest pyramid in Egypt was constructed more than 5,000 years later.

  The structure was first discovered under 75 feet of water by divers in 2000, and was believed to be a natural phenomenon.

  Professor Masaki Kimura, the first to study the site, has concluded that the structure is man-made."The object was not formed naturally.If that had been the case, we would have found pieces through erosion(腐蚀)around the site, but there is nothing there," he says.

  The discovery of a road surrounding the building is further evidence that the structure was made by humans, along with small underwater stone tombs nearby.

  Kimura says it is too early to know who built it or its purpose."It might be an ancient religious shrine(神社), possibly celebrating an ancient god.And it could be evidence of a new culture, since there are no records of a people intelligent enough to have built such a monument 10,000 years ago; it could only have been done by people with a high degree of technology, probably coming from the Asian continent, where the oldest civilizations originated."

  Teruaki Ishii, a professor at Tokyo University, said the structure could be natural, but that part of it may have been made by humans.

  The first signs of civilization in Japan date back to around 9,000 BC, but nothing in the archeological record suggests the presence of a culture advanced enough to have built such a structure.

  Jim Mower, an archeologist at University College Lon-don, says, "If it's proved that the site is as old as 10,000 years and is man-made, then it's going to change an awful lot of the previous thinking on southeast Asian history.It would put the people who made the monument on equal terms with the ancient civilization of Mesopotamia(An an-cient region of southwest Asia)."

(1)

Professor Masaki Kimura believes that the monument is man-made because ________.

no pieces through erosion were found around it

underwater stone tombs are nearby it

a road surrounds it

a shrine was built on it

[  ]

A.

①②④

B.

②③④

C.

①③④

D.

①②③

(2)

Which of the following is NOT true, according to the text?

[  ]

A.

The Japanese mastered advanced construction techniques 10,000 years ago.

B.

Professor Masaki Kimura was the first to study the monument.

C.

The purpose of the monument is still uncertain.

D.

The world抯 oldest civilizations originated in Asia.

(3)

What does the underlined word "that" in the fourth paragraph refer to?

[  ]

A.

The structure being man-made.

B.

The structure being a natural phenomenon.

C.

The structure having first been found ten years ago.

D.

The structure dating back to 8,000 BC.

(4)

What do we learn about the monument from the text?

[  ]

A.

It was made at least 5,000 years earlier than the oldest pyramid of Egypt.

B.

It was built by people from Europe.

C.

It抯 the first evidence of the ancient civilization of Mesopotamia.

D.

It has changed the history of human civilization.

(5)

The author wrote the text to ________.

[  ]

A.

introduce a mysterious structure

B.

tell people how scientists study monuments

C.

advise people to protect the monument

D.

explain how the monument was built

阅读理解。
     Jane Austen,a famous English writer,was born at Stevention,Hampshire,on December 
16,1775,and died on July 18,1817.She began writing early in life,although the prejudices 
of her times forced her to have her books published anonymously(匿名地).?
     But Jane Austen is perhaps the best known and best loved of Bath's many famous local 
people and visitors.She paid two long visits here during the last five years of the eighteenth 
century and from 1801 to 1806,Bath was her home.Her deep knowledge of the city is fully 
seen in two of her novels,Northanger Abbey and Persuasion,which are largely set in Bath.
The city is still very much as Jane Austen knew it,keeping in its streets and public buildings 
the well-ordered world that she described so well in her novels.Now the pleasure of learning
 Jane Austen's Bath can be enhanced(增强)by visiting the Jane Austen Center in Gay Street.
Here,in a Georgian town house in the heart of the city,you can find out more about Bath in 
Jane Austen's time and the importance of Bath in her life and work.
     The Center has been set up with the help and guidance of members of the Jane Austen 
Society.After your visit to the Center,you can look round the attractive shop,which offers a
 huge collection of Jane Austen related books,cards and many specially designed gifts.Jane 
Austen quizzes are offered to keep the children busy.?
     You can also have walking tours of Jane Austen's Bath,which is a great way to find out 
more about Jane Austen and discover the wonderful Georgian city of Bath.The tour lasts 
about one and a half hours.The experienced guides will take you to the places where Jane 
lived,walked and shopped.?
1.Jane Austen paid two lon g visits to Bath ________.   
A.in her early twenties?
B.in her early teens?
C.in her late twenties?
D.on her late teens?
2.What can we learn about Bath from the passage?______.
A.Bath has greatly changed since Jane Austen's death.?
B.The city has changed as much as Jane Austen knew it.?
C.Bath remains almost the same as in Jane Austen's time.?
D.No changes have taken place in Bath since Jane Austen's time.?
3.The author writes this passage in order to  _______.?
A.attract readers to visit the city of Bath?
B.ask readers to buy Austen's books?
C.tell readers about Jane Austen's experience?
D.give a brief introduction to the Jane Austen Society?
4.It takes you about one and a half hours _______.?
A.to get to the Jane Austen Center in Gay Street?
B.to buy Jane Austen related books,cards and gifts?
C.to find a guide to take you to the Center?
D.to look around the city of Bath on foot?

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