题目内容
For many Chinese college students, graduation is the moment to part company with both their campus and their lovers. There are many factors in the split: parents are calling the kids back to their hometowns; graduates need to find jobs in different cities.
In Australia, however, university students generally stay and study in their home city, so the likelihood of breaking up with their college sweethearts is low.
Those who leave their rural hometowns to study in big cities tend to continue living in the big university cities where the chance of employment is higher. In fact, the unemployment rate across Australia is steady, standing at less than 5 percent in April, as announced by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Also, there's no family pressure urging these students to go back home. While some Aussie graduates have concerns about finding jobs in the same city or country as their partners, most are idealistic and believe that love conquers all.
Michelle Wu, 22, experienced the problem of finding a job in the same country as her boyfriend, who lives in the US. When she graduated in 2010, Wu had the choice of committing to a competitive graduate position with a major bank in Sydney or relocating to New York with no job prospects.
Wu chose to stay in Sydney to pursue her career, but she is still dating her boyfriend. Relying on e-mails and Skype for communication, Wu doesn't let the long distance get in the way of her relationship. "The relationship takes center stage and you need to prioritize( 优先考虑) that to make it work." Wu said.
It's a common problem in both China and Australia that career aspirations are taking campus couples to separate parts of the world. But it seems that Aussies are dealing with it better.
63. The underlined word "split" means "__________".
A. separation B. decision C. career D. unemployment
64. Which is true about Michelle Wu?
A. She lives in the same city as her boyfriend.
B. She broke up with her boyfriend after graduation.
C. She moved to New York for a better job.
D. She keeps in touch with her boyfriend through the Internet.
65. The possibility of breaking up with college sweethearts in Australia is lower than in China
because ____________..
A. the unemployment rate across Australia is low and steady
B. Aussie graduates don't care living in separate cities
C. most university students in Australia stay and study in their home city
D. the colleges in Australia are in favor of college dating
66. The best title of the passage should be _________.
A. University Students in Australia B. Distance Tests Couples
C. Australian College Sweethearts D. Graduation -- the Moment to Break up
ADCB
It’s always great to hear news about wildlife returning to where they once lived. For the first time in 8 years the small blue --- British’s smallest butterfly--- has been seen back at a nature reserve in Hertfordshire.
This nature reserve has had a lot of work done recently in order to help butterflies. Management of the land has included bringing in sheep to keep the grass under control in a more natural way and planting wild flowers for butterfly species. The nature reserve is home to a number of butterfly species. In fact the way that this reserve has been managed means that it is probably the best reserve in Hertfordshire to see butterflies with at least 25 species now living in the area.
There are a number of threats to British butterflies and the greatest threat is the loss of their habitat. Changing farming practice has affected British native butterfly species greatly with many more now being at risk. Butterflies are such an excellent species that they can clearly tell the situation of local environment because they are easily influenced by environmental changes, A wide species of butterflies will generally mean a healthy environment.
The type of land management at the nature reserve in Hertfordshire offers a hope for many species of butterfly to live as usual. Butterflies need all the help they can get at the moment. Although the number of butterflies is beginning to increase, many are still at risk.
【小题1】What has the nature reserve done to help butterflies return ?
a. changing the reserve place b. bringing in sheep
c. planting wild flowers d. changing farming practice
A.a.b | B.c,d | C.a,d | D.b,c |
A.The weather is changing | B.The flowers have died out |
C.Their habitat has been lost. | D.The environment has changed |
A.The environment has changed healthier a lot than before. |
B.All the butterflies have returned to the reserve. |
C.There is no threat to the British butterflies. |
D.Over 25 species is living in the reserve now. |
A.The butterflies changed as the environment changed. |
B.Butterflies are very beautiful. |
C.Butterflies are sensitive to the environment the live. |
D.Butterflies can tell us what is happening. |
For Americans, a mosquito bite is an itchy bother. But for many in Africa, a tiny bite can be deadly. One million people die each year of malaria, a disease spread by infected mosquitoes. Most of these people live in Africa, and are under age 5.
Malaria can be prevented and treated. However, many African nations don't have the funds to fight it. Nothing but Nets (NBN) hopes to change that. The United Nations Foundation created the campaign in 2006. The aim is to prevent malaria by covering sleeping areas with nets. Hanging bed nets treated with insecticide(杀虫剂) is the simplest way to stop mosquitoes from biting at night. The chemicals last four to five years. For $10, anyone can send a net to Africa and help save a life.
So far, NBN has raised $19 million and delivered 700,000 nets to seven countries. Families are taught how to use the nets. Kids also get vaccines (疫苗)and vitamins. "Women line up for miles to get the medicine for their kids," says NBN director Elizabeth McKee Gore. "They understand the importance."
So do kids in this country. "They get so excited thinking of ways to raise money," says NBN spokesperson and basketball star Ruth Riley.
NBN's biggest fund-raiser is Katherine Commale, 7. She's been spreading the information about bed nets for the past two years. To show how they work, she and her brother made a video. "We teach that bed nets can save lives," she said.
Katherine has raised $42,000 for NBN. "She just wants those who need a net to have one," says her mom, Lynda. "It's pretty simple to her." To find out how you can help, visit nothingbutnets.net.
【小题1】We know from the passage that NBN is in fact _________.
A.a deadly disease | B.an organization |
C.a piece of equipment | D.a game |
A.to list the sufferings of the African people |
B.to introduce new ways to avoid mosquito bites |
C.to call on people to offer their help to Africans |
D.to tell people how to buy nets in Africa |
A.know the importance of the bed nets |
B.know how to protect themselves |
C.lack nets to protect themselves |
D.suffer from malaria |
A.She set up the website nothingbutnets.net. |
B.She is the youngest money-raiser for NBN. |
C.She raised money by making and selling videos. |
D.She started working for NBN at the age of 5. |
Lucky is the man who has no “skeleton in his closet.” When a man has done something in his life that he is ashamed of, that he wants to hide, he is said to have a “skeleton in his closet.” Some people may have more than one skeleton.
As we have noted many times, it is hard to find out how these expressions begin. Sometimes, we get some hard facts. But more often we have to depend on guesswork. And that is true of this phrase, which came from England.
Before 1832, English law did not permit a doctor to cut open a dead human body for scientific examination, unless it was the corpse(尸体) of an executed(处决) criminal.
But when it became legal, more and more doctors demanded skeletons for a more scientific study of medicine. It was helping in the advance of modern medicine. The demand had become so strong that men began to rob tombs and sell skeletons to doctors at high prices.
We are told that a doctor would usually buy just one skeleton for scientific study. It became very important in his work. But he had to keep it hidden because most people objected to keeping such a thing. As a rule, the doctor keep his skeleton in some dark corner where it could not be seen, or hide it in a closet.
After a time, people began to suspect every doctor of hiding a skeleton in the closet. From this suspicion, the phrase“a skeleton in the closet”took on a broader, more general meaning: to describe anything that a man wanted to keep others from discovering. It could be proof of a criminal act, or something much less serious. Well, that is one theory.
One writer, however, believes that the phrase might have come from something that really happened. It is his guess that a hidden closet in some old English country home may have turned up a real skeleton, clear proof of some old family shame or crime. Well, one man's guess is as good as another. But this sounds like a story by the great French novelist, Balzac.
Balzac tells us of a man who suspected his wife of having a lover. The husband comes home by surprise. But she hears him and quickly hides her lover in the closet of her bedroom. He enters her room and asks her if she is hiding her lover. He says he will not open the door to the closet if she promises him there is no one there; He will believe her. She answers firmly that she is not hiding anyone in the closet.
The husband then begins to build a solid brick wall against the closet. His wife watches, knowing that her lover will never come out alive. But she will not change her story and admit her guilt.
【小题1】Which of the following situations is now suitable for using the phrase “skeleton in the closet”?
A.You have stolen something precious and hide them in the closet. |
B.You are a doctor and have to keep a skeleton for research. |
C.If you have cut open a dead human body for scientific examination you should keep the skeleton secret. |
D.You have done a crime or done something foolish, but you want to keep others from |
【小题2】Which of the following is right according to the text?
A.In the 19th century, doctors realized the importance of anatomy (解剖) in the development of medicine. |
B.The doctors of the ancient times liked to collect as many skeletons as possible |
C.The thieves stole skeletons from tombs in order to help the doctors. |
D.It is legal that corpses of anybody are cut open for scientific examination in history. |
A.a corpse | B.a phrase | C.a skeleton | D.a story |