题目内容

TV-Turnoff Week, _______ millions of people around the world participate every year, tries to encourage people to turn on life.

       A.in which   B.on which  C.which              D.when

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完型填空

  What would life be like without television?Would you spend more time   1  , reading, or studying?Well, now it's your chance to turn off your TV and   2  !TV-Turnoff Week is here.

  The goal of TV-Turnoff Week is to let people leave their TV sets   3   and participate in activities   4   drawing to biking.The event was founded by TV-Turnoff Network, a non-profit organization which started the event in 1995.In the   5  , only a few thousand people took part.Last year more than 7.6 million people participated,   6   people in every state in America and in more than 12 other countries!This is the 11th year in which   7   are asking people to “turn off the TV and turn on   8  .”

  According to the TV-Turnoff Network, the average   9   in the US spend   10   time in front of the TV(about 1,023 hours per year)than they do in school(about 900 hours per year).Too much TV   11   has made many kids grow fat.  12  , in 2001's TV-Turnoff Week, US Surgeon General David Satcher said, “We are raising the most   13   generation of youngsters in American history.This week is about saving lives.”

  Over the years, studies have shown that watching a lot of TV   14   poor eating habits, too little exercise, and violence.Frank Vespe of the TV-Turnoff Network said that turning off the TV “is or   15  , part of a healthy lifestyle”.

  “One of the great lessons of   16   TV-Turnoff Week is the realization that   17   I turn on the TV, I'm deciding not to do something else,” Vespe said.

  TV-Turnoff Week seems to be making a   18  .Recent US Census(人口普查)data   19   that about 72 percent of kids under 12 have a limit on their TV time.That's   20   about 63 percent ten years ago.

(1)

[  ]

A.

drinking

B.

sleeping

C.

washing

D.

playing outside

(2)

[  ]

A.

find out

B.

go out

C.

look out

D.

keep out

(3)

[  ]

A.

away

B.

alone

C.

on

D.

beside

(4)

[  ]

A.

like

B.

as

C.

from

D.

such as

(5)

[  ]

A.

end

B.

event

C.

beginning

D.

total

(6)

[  ]

A.

besides

B.

except for

C.

including

D.

except

(7)

[  ]

A.

governments

B.

parents

C.

organizers

D.

businessmen

(8)

[  ]

A.

the light

B.

the radio

C.

life

D.

the Internet

(9)

[  ]

A.

grown-ups

B.

kids

C.

clerks

D.

parents

(10)

[  ]

A.

less

B.

enough

C.

little

D.

more

(11)

[  ]

A.

programmes

B.

screen

C.

hours

D.

watching

(12)

[  ]

A.

However

B.

On the contrary

C.

In fact

D.

As a result

(13)

[  ]

A.

overweight

B.

overeaten

C.

overgrown

D.

overseeing

(14)

[  ]

A.

leads to

B.

results from

C.

develops

D.

keeps away

(15)

[  ]

A.

will be

B.

should be

C.

may be

D.

could be

(16)

[  ]

A.

organizing

B.

taking part in

C.

participating

D.

asking for

(17)

[  ]

A.

wherever

B.

every day

C.

every time

D.

this time

(18)

[  ]

A.

living

B.

choice

C.

difference

D.

sense

(19)

[  ]

A.

shows

B.

says

C.

reads

D.

writes

(20)

[  ]

A.

rising

B.

down from

C.

up to

D.

up from

阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。

What would life be like without television? Would you spend more time  36  , reading, or studying? Well, now it’s your chance to turn off your TV and  37  ! TV-Turnoff Week is here.

  The goal of TV-Turnoff Week is to let people leave their TV sets  38   and participate in activities  39   drawing to biking. The event was founded by TV-Turnoff Network, a non-profit organization which started the event in 1995. In the  40  , only a few thousand people took part. Last year more than 7.6 million people participated,  41   people in every state in America and in more than 12 other countries! This is the 11th year in which  42   are asking people to “turn off the TV and turn on  43  .” .w.^w.k.&s.5*u.c.#om.

  According to the TV-Turnoff Network, the average  44   in the US spend  45   time in front of the TV (about 1,023 hours per year) than they do in school (about 900 hours per year). Too much TV  46   has made many kids grow fat.  47  , in 2001’s TV-Turnoff Week, US Surgeon General David Satcher said, “We are raising the most  48   generation of youngsters in American history. This week is about saving lives.”

  Over the years, studies have shown that watching a lot of TV  49   poor eating habits, too little exercise, and violence. Frank Vespe of the TV-Turnoff Network said that turning off the TV “is or  50  , part of a healthy lifestyle”. .w.^w.k.&s.5*u.c.#om.

  “One of the great lessons of  51   TV-Turnoff Week is the realization that  52   I turn on the TV, I’m deciding not to do something else,” Vespe said.

  TV-Turnoff Week seems to be making a  53   . Recent US Census(人口普查)data  54   that about 72 percent of kids under 12 have a limit on their TV time. That’s  55   about 63 percent ten years ago. .w.^w.k.&s.5*u.c.#om.

A. drinking               B. sleeping                   C. washing            D. playing outside

A. find out          B. go out                   C. look out            D. keep out

A. away              B. alone                       C. on                    D. beside

A. like                B. as                            C. from                 D. such as

A. end                B. event                       C. beginning          D. total

A. besides           B. except for                 C. including           D. except

A. governments   B. parents                     C. organizers      D. businessmen

A. the light         B. the radio                  C. life                   D. the Internet

A. grown-ups      B. kids                         C. clerks          D. parents

A. less                     B. enough                     C. little                 D. more

A. programmes  B. screen                   C. hours                D. watching

A. However       B. On the contrary      C. In fact            D. As a result

A. overweight  B. overeaten                 C. overgrown     D. overseeing

A. leads to         B. results from                  C. develops            D. keeps away

A. will be          B. should be                 C. may be              D. could be

A. organizing    B. taking part in            C. participating      D. asking for

A. wherever      B. every day                 C. every time     D. this time

A. living           B. choice                   C. difference          D. sense

A. shows           B. says                         C. reads                 D. writes

A. rising           B. down from            C. up to                 D. up from           


完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
What would life be like without television? Would you spend more time 26  , reading, or studying? Well, now it’s your chance to turn off your TV and  27  ! TV-Turnoff Week is here.
The goal of TV-Turnoff Week is to let people leave their TV sets  28   and participate in activities  29   drawing to biking. The event was founded by TV-Turnoff Network, a non-profit organization which started the event in 1995. In the 30  , only a few thousand people took part. Last year more than 7.6 million people participated,  31   people in every state in America and in more than 12 other countries! This is the 11th year in which  32   are asking people to “turn off the TV and turn on  33  .”
According to the TV-Turnoff Network, the average  34   in the US spend  35  time in front of the TV (about 1,023 hours per year) than they do in school (about 900 hours per year). Too much TV  36   has made many kids grow fat.  37  , in 2001’s TV-Turnoff Week, US Surgeon General David Satcher said, “We are raising the most  38   generation of youngsters in American history. This week is about saving lives.”
Over the years, studies have shown that watching a lot of TV  39   poor eating habits, too little exercise, and violence. Frank Vespe of the TV-Turnoff Network said that turning off the TV “is or  40  , part of a healthy lifestyle”.
“One of the great lessons of  41   TV-Turnoff Week is the realization that  42   I turn on the TV, I’m deciding not to do something else,” Vespe said.
TV-Turnoff Week seems to be making a  43  . Recent US Census(人口普查)data  44   that about 72 percent of kids under 12 have a limit on their TV time. That’s  45   about 63 percent ten years ago.
26. A. drinking         B. sleeping        C. washing               D.playing outside
27. A. find out              B. go out           C. look out               D. keep out
28. A. away              B. off                C. on                           D. beside
29. A. like                    B. as                     C. from                    D. such as
30. A. end                    B. event            C. beginning             D. total
31. A. besides           B. except for      C. including              D. except
32. A.governments     B. parents              C. organizers            D. businessmen
33. A. the light              B. the radio       C. life                          D. the Internet
34. A. grown-ups      B. kids                  C. clerks                   D. parents
35. A. less                    B. enough              C. little                    D. more
36. A.programmes    B. screen           C. hours                   D. watching
37. A. However             B. On the contrary  C. In fact                      D. As a result
38. A. overweight      B. overeaten      C. overgrown            D. overseeing
39. A. leads to           B.results from     C. develops               D. keeps away
40. A. will be            B. should be      C. may be                     D. could be
41. A. organizing          B. taking part in     C. participating             D. asking for
42. A. wherever        B. every day      C. every time            D. this time
43. A. living             B. choice           C. difference             D. sense
44. A. shows             B. says              C. reads                    D. writes
45. A. rising             B. down from     C. up to                    D. up from

Kalle Lasn was in a supermarket parking lot one afternoon when he had an experience that changed his life.In order to shop at the store, he needed to put money into the shopping cart to use it.Annoyed that he had to "pay to shop," Lasn jammed the coin into the cart so that it wouldn't work.It was an act of rebellion—the first of many—for Lasn.
Born in Estonia, Kalle Lasn moved to Australia as a young man and then later to Japan, where he founded a marketing research firm in Tokyo.Eventually, Lasn moved to Canada and for several years produced documentaries (纪录片) for public television.In the late 1980s, Lasn made an advertisement that spoke out against the logging industry and the deforestation going on in the Pacific Northwest.When he tried to show his ad on TV, though, no station in this area would give him airtime.In response, Lasn and a colleague founded Adbusters Media Foundation, a company for the "Human right to communicate.
Adbusters produces magazine, newspaper, and TV ads with a social message.Many use humor and irony to make their points: In one, for example, a man chain smokes a brand of cigarettes called "Hope".In another, a child is dressed in an outfit used in fast-food ads.Next to the child is a note from its mother telling the restaurant to leave her child alone.
Adbusters also has a magazine and a web site, the Culture Jammers Network, whose members include students, artists, and activists as well as educators and businesspeople interested in social change.Many of these "culture jammers" are working to raise awareness about different social issues by hosting events like "Buy Nothing Day" , " No Car Day" and "TV Turnoff Week" .Lasn and his partners hope these events will encourage people to think about questions such as;
·What kinds of things are we being encouraged to buy by the media?
·Should cars be our primary means of transportation?
·How are television and radio being used now? How could we be using them?
Some culture jammers are using other methods to challenge how people think.Some pretend to be shoppers.They move items in stores from one shelf to another making it difficult for people to find things easily.Other culture jammers break into large company well sites and jam them so that they become unusable.The goal in both cases ia to prevent "Business as usual" and to gel people to ask themselves questions such as "Why am I shopping here?" or "Why should I buy this product?"
Lasn and members of the Culture Jammers Network want to make people aware of social issues, but they also believe it's important to think of solutions, too."A lot of people tell you everything that's wrong but they never say much about how to fix these problems," says Lasn."But there is plenty we can do.If you start despairing, you have lost everything."
Though many TV stations still won't show Adbusters' " uncommercials" , some cable TV stations have started to.People all over the world have joined the Culture Jammers Network and are doing their part to promote social change.
【小题1】What does the underlined word "rebellion" in Paragraph 1 most probably mean?

A.argumentB.violence
C.oppositionD.protection
【小题2】What's the main point of the ad for "Hope" cigarettes?
A.Smoking can help to remove your worries and make you hopeful.
B.Hopefully, the bad taste of the cigarette can help you to quit smoking.
C.You are hopeless at abandoning the habit of smoking.
D.Smoking can ruin you if you are hopelessly addicted to it.
【小题3】Some culture jammers break into websites in order to ________.
A.ask people to be thoughtful consumers.
B.help make the companies better known.
C.encourage people to think less and buy less
D.challenge how people react to sudden changes
【小题4】It can be inferred from the passage ________.
A.Adbusters Media Foundation was founded to fight against deforestation
B.More and more people will know about and even become culture jammers
C.The Culture Jammers Network is made up of annoying trouble makers
D.People can see some of Adbusters ads on TV stations
【小题5】Which of the following best describes what Lasn has done?
A.One step at a time.
B.We can and must change the world.
C.Accept what you can't change.
D.Everyone deserves a second chance.

阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。

What would life be like without television? Would you spend more time  36  , reading, or studying? Well, now it’s your chance to turn off your TV and  37  ! TV-Turnoff Week is here.

  The goal of TV-Turnoff Week is to let people leave their TV sets  38   and participate in activities  39   drawing to biking. The event was founded by TV-Turnoff Network, a non-profit organization which started the event in 1995. In the  40  , only a few thousand people took part. Last year more than 7.6 million people participated,  41   people in every state in America and in more than 12 other countries! This is the 11th year in which  42   are asking people to “turn off the TV and turn on  43  .”

  According to the TV-Turnoff Network, the average  44   in the US spend  45   time in front of the TV (about 1,023 hours per year) than they do in school (about 900 hours per year). Too much TV  46   has made many kids grow fat.  47  , in 2001’s TV-Turnoff Week, US Surgeon General David Satcher said, “We are raising the most  48   generation of youngsters in American history. This week is about saving lives.”

  Over the years, studies have shown that watching a lot of TV  49   poor eating habits, too little exercise, and violence. Frank Vespe of the TV-Turnoff Network said that turning off the TV “is or  50  , part of a healthy lifestyle”.

  “One of the great lessons of  51   TV-Turnoff Week is the realization that  52   I turn on the TV, I’m deciding not to do something else,” Vespe said.

  TV-Turnoff Week seems to be making a  53   . Recent US Census(人口普查)data  54   that about 72 percent of kids under 12 have a limit on their TV time. That’s  55   about 63 percent ten years ago.

1.A. drinking            B. sleeping                          C. washing                 D. playing outside

2.A. find out              B. go out                        C. look out                 D. keep out

3.A. away                   B. alone                               C. on                            D. beside

4.A. like                      B. as                                     C. from                       D. such as

5.A. end                      B. event                               C. beginning              D. total

6.A. besides              B. except for                       C. including                D. except

7.A. governments    B. parents                           C. organizers       D. businessmen

8.A. the light             B. the radio                         C. life                           D. the Internet

9.A. grown-ups         B. kids                                  C. clerks           D. parents

10.A. less                            B. enough                            C. little                        D. more

11.A. programmes  B. screen                        C. hours                      D. watching

12.A. However         B. On the contrary       C. In fact               D. As a result

13.A. overweight  B. overeaten                       C. overgrown     D. overseeing

14.A. leads to           B. results from                       C. develops                D. keeps away

15.A. will be              B. should be                        C. may be                   D. could be

16.A. organizing       B. taking part in                 C. participating        D. asking for

17.A. wherever        B. every day                        C. every time     D. this time

18.A. living                 B. choice                        C. difference             D. sense

19.A. shows              B. says                                 C. reads                      D. writes

20.A. rising                B. down from                C. up to                       D. up from                

 

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