题目内容

     While parents, particularly mothers, have always been attached to their infants (婴儿), societal conditions frequently made this attachment difficult to maintain (保持). First of all, the high infant death rate in the premodern times meant that such attachments often ended in hopelessness. Perhaps to prevent the sadness that infant death caused, a number of societal practices developed which worked against early attachment of mother and child.

    One of these premodern attachment-discouraging practices was to leave infants unnamed until they had survived into the second year. Another practice that discouraged maternal (母亲的) attachment was tightly wrapping (包裹) infants. Wrapping effectively prevented the close physical interactions like stroking (抚摸) and kissing that are so much a part of modern mothers' and fathers' affection for their infants.

    A third practice which had the same distancing effect was wet-nursing. Breast-feeding (母乳哺育) was not popular among the well-to-do in the early modern times; infants were often fed by wet nurses hired for the purpose. In some places, such as nineteenth-century France, city infants were sent to wet nurses in the country. Often a wet nurse would feed her own child first, leaving little milk for the city infant—who, in many cases, died. In Rouen, the death rate for children sent to a wet nurse was 35 percent.

68. Babies were unnamed until they were two so that _______.

    A. an old social custom could be kept up        B. maternal attachment could be maintained

    C. they could have better chances to survive   D. their parents would not be too sad if they died

69. Why were babies wrapped?

    A. To protect them from the cold.          B. To distance their mothers from them.

    C. To make them feel more comfortable. D. To make it easy for their mothers to hold them.

70. Wet nurses were women who________.

    A. babysat city infants                           B. fed babies of other families

    C. sent their babies to the country           D. failed to look after their babies

71. Which is the best title for the passage?

    A. Societal Conditions in Premodern Times

    B. Practices of Reducing Maternal Attachment

    C. Poor Health Service and High Infant Death Rate

    D. Differences between Modem and Premodern Parents

68---71    DBBB  


解析:

68.解析:这是一道判断题。从第一段“Perhaps to prevent the sadness that infant death caused”,可知答案是D。

69.解析:这是一道细节推断题。从第二段“Another practice that discouraged maternal attachment was tightly wrapping infants.”可知,wrapping的目的是减少母亲的接触,让母亲远离孩子一些。因此选B。

70.解析:这是一道细节推断题。从最后一段“infants were fed by wet nurses hired”可知,wet nurses是喂养别人的婴儿的女人。

71.解析:这是一道主旨题。文中讲了各种pre-modern attachment-discouraging practices的方法,因此,title应是B。

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  Wouldn’t it be great to get paid not to work? This isn’t just a dream at companies that offer sabbaticals(休假).Employers say they’re a valuable way to give their workers a change of scenery and prevent them from being tired out.Unfortunately, only 3% of companies offer paid sabbaticals(带薪休假)(12% offer unpaid), according to the Society for Human Resource Management(SHRM).But even if you’re not lucky enough to work for one of them, you can still enjoy a break.Three choices:

  Chunk of Time.To get a longer break than normal, save long weekends for vacation time, delay your days off till need year, borrow some time from next year to use now, or use extra time off for overtime hours, suggests Bonnie Michaels, president of the Society.

  Unpaid Time.If your family has no money problem, ask for a longer leave without pay.“But do your homework first, ” says Michaels.Research the costs for your break, plan your break at a time during which your company is not operating if possible, then be business-like and present your leave proposal so that your manager will believe that you’ll work better if you are more energetic after the leave.

  No Time.Just can’t get away? Read How to Take a Sabbatical Without Taking More than a Week Off(Simon & Schuster), by Pare Ammondson, which shows an eight-week program to renew your energy and reduce your stress even while you’re working.

(1)

The underlined words “one of them” in the first paragraph refer to _________.

[  ]

A.

12% of companies that offer unpaid sabbaticals

B.

one of the three choices

C.

a company that offers paid sabbaticals

D.

SHRM

(2)

The writer describes the third choice to make the point that _________.

[  ]

A.

busy employees can also enjoy longer holidays

B.

it is the employees’ right to have a paid holiday every year

C.

an eight-week program to renew your energy is the best choice for busy employees

D.

employees should persuade their managers to give them sabbaticals

(3)

When Michaels says that you should do your homework first, he means before asking for leave _________.

[  ]

A.

you should work hard to satisfy your manager

B.

you should finish all the work that is required of you

C.

you should talk to your manager about the cost for your break

D.

you should find out the basic information and facts about your break

(4)

Which of the following information can you probably find in the book by Ammondson?

[  ]

A.

Advice on planning a paid leave.

B.

Advice on managing your travelling cost.

C.

Ways of making the best use of your week-end breaks.

D.

Ways of persuading your manager to give you a sabbatical.

Julie Zingeser texts at home,at school,in the car while her mother is driving.She texts during homework, after pompon(舞绣球)practice and as she walks the family dog.She takes her cellphone with her to bed.Every so often,the hum(嗡嗡声)of a new message wakes the Rockville teen from sleep.“I would die without it,”Julie,15,says of her text life.

This does not surprise her mother, Pam, who on one recent afternoon scanned the phone bill and found her youngest daughter, in one busy month,had sent and received 6,473 text messages.For Pam Zingeser, the key problem is not cost—it's$30 a month for the family’s unlimited texting plan—but the effects of so much messaging.Pam wonders:What will this generation learn and what will they lose in the endless stream of sentence fragments(碎片),abbreviations and emoticons?

     Parents, educators, and researchers are sharing similar concerns as text messaging has exploded across the formative years of the nation's youngest generation. Teens now do more texting on their cellphones than calling. Nationally, more than 75 billion text messages are sent a month, and the craziest texters are 13 to 17. Teens with cellphones average 2,272 text messages a month, compared with 203 calls, according to the Nielsen Co.

    The tap,tap,tap of connectivity can benefit teenagers at a time in life when they cannot always get together in art unscheduled way.Texters are “sharing a sense of  69  ,”said Mimi Ito of the University of California at Irvine.For families, the text world call bring convenience as never before in arranging tides,doing errands(差事),letting parents know of changing plans.

    But some experts say there are downsides,starting with declines in spelling,word choice and writing complexity.Some suggest too much texting is related to an inability to focus.

1.The first paragraph mainly tells us that Julie Zingeser __________

    A.joins in all kinds of activities

    B.sends and receives texts all the time

C.does nothing besides texting

D.does everything by texting

2.Pare disapproves of her daughter's texting because she worries that it may be ________

    A.a waste of money

    B.a waste of time

    C.harmful in every way

D.bad for language learning

3.The underlined phrase "the formative years" in the 3rd paragraph refers to the period when ________

A.someone's character develops

B.someone experiments with new things

C.someone learns to speak

D.someone grows from baby into adult

4.The word missing in the blank in the 4th paragraph must be _______

A.independence                            B.overexcitement

C.co-presence                             D.non-attendance

5.The original title of the article should be: “6,473 Texts a Month, But _______”.

A.at What Cost?                             B.What for?

C.Who Cares?                                D.How Could lt Be?

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