题目内容

阅读理解

  Three Yale University professors agreed in a discussion that the automobile was what one of them called “Public Health Enemy No.1 in this country”.Besides polluting the air and overcrowding the cities, cars are involved in more than half the disastrous(灾难性)accidents, and they contribute to heart disease “because we don’t walk anywhere anymore”, said Dr.H.Richard Weinerman, professor of medicine and public health.

  Speaking of many of these man-made dangers to the automobile, Arthur W.Galston, professor of biology, said it was possible to make a kerosene-burning turbine car that would “lessen(减少)smog by a very large factor”.But he expressed doubt whether Americans were willing to give up moving about the countryside at 90 miles an hour in a large vehicle(车辆).“America seems wedded to the motor car-every family has to have at least two, and one has to be a convertible(敞蓬汽车)with 300 horsepower, ” professor Galston continued.“Is this the way of life that we choose because we treasure these values?”

  For Professor Sears, part of the blame lies with “a society that regards profit(赢利)as a supreme value, under the illusion(错误的观念)that anything that’s technically possible is, therefore, morally justified(正当的)”.Professor Sears also called the country’s dependence on its modern automobiles “terrible economics” because of the large horsepower used simply “moving one individual to work”.But he admitted that Americans have painted themselves into a corner by allowing the national economy to become so dependent on the automobile industry.

  “The solution”, Dr.Weinerman said, “is not to find a less dangerous fuel but a different system of inner-city transportation.Because of the increasing use of cars, public transportation has been allowed to wither(衰弱)and grow worse, so that if you can’t walk to where you want to go, you have to have a car in most cities, ” he declared.This, in turn, Dr.Weinerman contended, is responsible for the “arteriosclerosis(动脉硬化)” of public roads, for the pollution of the inner city and for the middle-class movement to the suburbs.

(1)

The main idea of the passage is that ________.

[  ]

A.

Americans are fond of their cars

B.

public transportation in America is well-developed

C.

American cars are too fast

D.

automobiles endanger health

(2)

It can be inferred from the passage that ________.

[  ]

A.

people are more interested in fast automobiles than in their health

B.

Americans feel more closely tied to their cars than to their wives

C.

Kerosene-burning engines would pollute the environment more than gasoline-burning engines do

D.

kerosene-burning cars would go faster than gasoline-powered cars

(3)

In Paragraph 3, Professor Sears implies that ________.

[  ]

A.

technology is always good for people

B.

technology is not always good for people

C.

financial profit is more important than technology advancement

D.

American people care about both environment pollution and technological development

(4)

According to Dr.Weinerman, the solution is that ________.

[  ]

A.

public transportation should be improved

B.

people should get rid of their cars and take the bus to work

C.

one family should own just one car

D.

a fuel less dangerous than gasoline must be found

答案:1.D;2.A;3.C;4.A;
解析:

(1)

主旨题。文章第一段第一句指出,三位耶鲁大学的教授一致认为汽车是“本国公共健康的头号大敌”,随后作者又指明汽车的使用会污染空气,导致交通事故,引发心脏病等,故答案为D项。

(2)

推理题。文章第二段前两句话指出人类有必要生产煤油汽车,但又提出疑问:人类是否愿意放弃在乡间以每小时90英里的速度高速行使的乐趣?可见,人们对高速行驶的兴趣大于对健康的关心,故A项为最佳答案。B项文中未提及,C、D项明显与文章第二段第一、二句话相矛盾。根据这两句话可以推断:煤油汽车对空气的污染小,但速度比汽油汽车要慢。

(3)

推断题。根据第三段Professor Sears的话可知:美国人之所以如此依赖汽车,部分原因是因为他们生活在一个以盈利为最终目的的社会。他们往往会产生这样一种幻觉:任何技术上可能的事情在道德上也是正确的。由此,可以推断:美国人把经济利益看得高于一切。因此C项符合此意。

(4)

细节理解题。文章最后一段提到:Dr.Weinermen认为:解决这一问题的关键不是寻找一种污染小的燃料,而是建立一套完全不同的市内交通体系。因为汽车的增多,公共交通已经变得越来越糟糕。除了开车,你无法走到你想去的地方,因此,解决这个问题的办法在于改善市内公共交通系统,使人们不再过多地依赖他们的汽车,因此A项正确。


练习册系列答案
相关题目

阅读理解。

  Many Americans are turning to Japan, they think, a country of high academic achievement and economic success, for possible answers.However, the answers provided by Japanese preschools are not the ones Americans expected to find.In most Japanese preschools, surprisingly little emphasis is put on academic instruction.In one survey, 300 Japanese and 210 American preschool teachers, child development specialists, and parents were asked about various aspects of early childhood education.Only 2 percent of the Japanese respondents(答问卷者)listed“to give children a good start academically”as one of their top three reasons for a society to have preschools.In contrast, over half the American respondents chose this as one of their top three choices.To prepare children for successful careers in first grade and beyond, Japanese schools do not teach reading, writing, and mathematics, but rather skills such as determination, concentration, and the ability to work as a member of a group.The huge majority of young Japanese children are taught to read at home by their parents.

  Like in America, there is diversity(多样性)in Japanese early childhood education.Some Japanese kindergartens have specific aims, such as early musical training or potential development.In large cities, some kindergartens are attached to universities that have elementary and secondary schools.Some Japanese parents believe that if their young children attend a university-based program, it will increase the children's chances of eventually being admitted to top-rated schools and universities.Several more progressive programs have introduced free play as a way out for the heavy intellectualizing in some Japanese kindergartens.

(1)

We learn from the first paragraph that many Americans believe ________.

[  ]

A.

Japanese parents are more involved in preschool education than American parents

B.

Japan's economic success is a result of its scientific achievements

C.

Japanese preschool education emphasizes academic instruction

D.

Japan's higher education is superior to theirs

(2)

In Japan's preschool education, the focus is on ________.

[  ]

A.

preparing children academically

B.

developing children's artistic interests

C.

developing children's potential

D.

shaping children's character

(3)

Why do some Japanese parents send their children to university-based kindergartens?

[  ]

A.

They can have better chances of getting a first-rate education.

B.

They can make more group experience grow there.

C.

They can be individually oriented when they grow up.

D.

They can do better in their future studies.

(4)

Free play has been introduced in some Japanese kindergartens in order to ________.

[  ]

A.

broaden children's knowledge

B.

lighten children's study load

C.

train children's creativity

D.

enrich children's experience

(5)

Which of the following statements is true?

[  ]

A.

Most of the Japanese preschools pay much attention to academic instructions.

B.

Very few Japanese respondents don't agree to give children a start academically.

C.

In Japan it is common for parents to teach their children at home.

D.

American respondents don't agree to give children a start academically.

阅读理解。

  One of the largest countries in Texas is named for Captain Erastus“Deaf”Smith-a deaf man.Captain Smith was the leader of General Sam Houston's scouts during the Texas Revolution, the war in which Texas won its freedom from Mexico.The county named in his honor is called Deaf Smith County.

  A scout in the days of the Texas Revolution was much like what a spy is today.Captain“Deaf”Smith would find out where enemy troops were camped and how many men the enemy had, and he would report to Sam Houston.Even when other people could not see or hear any sign of people or animals, Captain Smith would know where they were.Sometimes he would guide Texas troops through enemy territory without the enemy even knowing they were there.

  Erastus Smith was born in New York on April 19,1787; but went to live:in Mississippi when he was 11 years old.He went to Texas for a short time in 1817, and four years later returned to Texas to stay; He wandered over Texas as a surveyor(测量员)before he volunteered for army service after the start of the Texas Revolution.

  Smith married a Mexican woman, and they had four children-three girls and one boy.He spent a lot of time learning the customs, manners, and language of the Mexican settlers.When the Texas Revolution began in 1835, Smith at first refused to take part in it out of respect for his family's heritage(传统).However, after Mexican troops tried to stop him from going to San Antonio to visit his family, he volunteered for service with the Texans.He was made a captain.

(1)

At first, Smith refused to take part in the Texas Revolution because ________.

[  ]

A.

he was a peace-loving person and hated fighting

B.

Mexican soldiers stopped him from going to San Antonio

C.

the Texans were not very good to him and his family

D.

his wife was Mexican and he didn't want to fight against her people

(2)

How old was Smith when he settled in Texas?

[  ]

A.

Thirty-four.

B.

Eleven.

C.

Thirty.

D.

Twenty-seven.

(3)

Which of the following is the correct order of the events?

a.A county in Texas was named after Smith.

b.Smith got married to a Mexican woman.

c.Smith volunteered for service with the Texans.

d.Mexican troops tried to stop him from seeing his family.

e.Smith went to live in Mississippi.

f.The Texas Revolution started.

[  ]

A.

a-b-c-d-e-f

B.

e-b-d-c-a-f

C.

b-e-f-d-c-a

D.

e-b-f-d-c-a

(4)

Which of the following was a great help in Smith's work as a scout?

[  ]

A.

His family's heritage.

B.

His experience as a surveyor.

C.

His deafness.

D.

His good eyesight.

(5)

Which of the following is the best title for the passage?

[  ]

A.

Deaf Smith County

B.

The Texas Revolution

C.

The Mexicans and the Texans

D.

Captain“Deaf”Smith

阅读理解

In 1752, three years after two Scotsmen, Alexander Wilson and Thomas Melville, fastened thermometers to kites to record the temperature of clouds, Benjamin Franklin made his famous experiment with a kite, a string, and a key.Franklin hoped to show that nature’s tremendous displays of electricity in lightning were the same thing as the feeble electric sparks scientists of the day were producing in their laboratories.He built a square kite to which he attached an iron wire.He flew the kite with a hemp string(麻线), and near the base of the string he tied a large brass key.The kite rose into a dark thundercloud, where the iron wire picked up electrical charges.Franklin noticed that the strands of the string(绳串)were beginning to stand up with electricity.As rain wet the string, it conducted more electricity.Standing in the shelter of a shed, Franklin cautiously reached out his finger to touch the brass key.A series of sparks jumped from the key to his finger.He thus proved that lightning and electricity are the same.We now know that this experiment was a dangerous one, for Franklin might have been killed by a bolt of lighting.

(1)

The best title for this passage is ________.

[  ]

A.

The Discover of Electricity

B.

The kite and Science

C.

Franklin’s Experiment with Lightning

D.

Franklin, a Great Scientist

(2)

According to the passage, Benjamin Franklin ________.

[  ]

A.

recorded the temperature of clouds

B.

was killed by a bolt of lightning

C.

proved that lightning can be controlled by man

D.

proved that lightning and electricity have the same essential nature

(3)

Two Scotsmen experimented with kites in ________.

[  ]

A.

1752

B.

1746

C.

1755

D.

1749

(4)

The fact that Franklin was not injured was apparently due to ________.

[  ]

A.

luck

B.

wisdom

C.

the materials

D.

the shed’s protection

阅读理解:

  By LOS ANGELES TIMES

  Publishedon 2002-02-10

  Postedon 2002-01-18 10∶59∶14

  Nervousuncertainty surrounds the fate(命运)of US journalist Daniel Pearl, with no clear communication from his kidnappers(绑匪)and no sign of his whereabouts after three separate police searches for his body in the troublesome port city Karachi, Pakistan.

  Pearl, a 38-year-old Wall Street Journal reporter, disappeared two weeks ago on his way to an interview in Karachi.An e-mail allegedly from his kidnappers contained four photos of him and a variety of demands, including one for there lease of Pakistani prisoners being held at the US naval base in Cuba.

  The searches were started last Friday night by an email claiming that Pearl had been killed and his body thrown“in the graveyards of Karachi.

  Pearl has worked for The Wall Street Journal for 12 years and is now their South Asiabureau chief.He was born in Princeton, New Jersey and graduated from Stanford University with a bachelor’s degree in communications.

  He joined The Wall Street Journal in November 1990, first as a reporter in the Atlanta bureau.In 1993 he moved to the Washington office to cover transportation before beginning a series of overseas postings.

  The members of a radical(激进的)Islamic group in Pakistan who admit having kidnapped him say Pearl is a member of the Israeli intelligence service, Mossad.But Pearls employers have angrily denied(否认)that he is the agent(代理)of any government.

  Pearl’s French wife, Marianne, is six months pregnant with their first child.

  For the past few weeks the couple have been living in Karachi while Pearl tried to arrange an interview with Mubarak Ali Shah Gilani, head of the small militant Islamic group Tanzeemul-Fuqra.

(1)

We can see from the text that ________.

[  ]

A.

Pearl has been murdered

B.

Pearl has escaped from his kidnappers

C.

Pearl is in danger

D.

Pearl’s fate still remains in question

(2)

Accordingto the text, Pearl most probably disappeared ________.

[  ]

A.

on January 24, 2002

B.

on January 26, 2002

C.

on January 4, 2002

D.

on January 11, 2002

(3)

Pearl’s disappearance has something to do with ________.

[  ]

A.

Tanzeemul-Fuqra

B.

a radical Islamic group in Pakistan

C.

the US naval base in Cuba

D.

the Israeli intelligence service

  阅读理解

I

  The opening ceremony of this famous yearly competition will begin at 11:30 a.m. There will be music groups, rappers and children’s chorus. 12:25 p.m. sees the introduction of the eaters who come from all over the world. At 12:40 p.m. the historic 12-minute all-you-can-eat competition will begin. The world record stands at over 50 hot dogs and buns in 12 minutes. Will anyone beat the record this year?

  Viewing is available on a first-come-first- served basis. Television crews are invited to use a two-tiered stage three meters from the main stage. The area in front of the main stage is kept for photographers and television cameras without tripods (三脚架).

II

  Few periods in history are as exciting as the time when the Vikings (北欧海盗) were known --- and sometimes feared --- throughout Scandinavia, the British Isles. Russia,all the Mediterranean, Africa and even America.

  Frojel is a family-based society, which aims to relive and describe the Vikings from a harbor---Frojel , on the Swedish island of Gotland. Frojel was one of the richest trading centers in the Viking world.

  The members of the society aim to recreate the clothing, weapons, tools, jewellery, games, food and furniture of the long-gone period. They want to enjoy an escape to a simpler , more relaxed time, with like-minded people. They will also use the items they have made to relive that age at various public entertainments.

(1)

According to Advertisement 1, the famous yearly competition is ________.

[  ]

A.

a music competition

B.

an eating competition

C.

a cooking competition

D.

a pleasure-taking competition

(2)

People who come to watch the competition earliest may ________.

[  ]

A.

get the best watching position

B.

get the best food.

C.

watch whatever they want to

D.

take good pictures

(3)

The best title for Advertisement 2 would be ________.

[  ]

A.

The Vikings

B.

Reliving of the Vikings

C Frojel

C.

a European island

D.

A Viking Reliving Society

(4)

From the advertisement we know that Frojel used to be ________.

[  ]

A.

a Viking club.

B.

a family-based society

C.

a European island

D.

a trading center

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