题目内容

—I hope the result of the exams had not been told to us.

—________,why did you come here to see our teacher?

A.If what          B.If so            C.If only           D.If not

 

【答案】

B

【解析】

试题分析:考察替代。在英语中用so代替上文出现的肯定意思的句中,用not代替否定句。If only要是…就好了,表示的是条件。句义:—我希望考试的结果还没有被告知!—如果这样,为什么你要来这里找我们的老师。本句的so 代替上文的I hope the result of the exams had not been told to us。这是一个肯定句,故使用so来代替。故B正确。

考点:考察替代

 

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Doors and windows can’t keep them out; airport immigration officers can’t stop them and the Internet is a complete reproduction soil. They seem harmless in small doses, but large imports threaten Japan’s very uniqueness, say critics. “They are foreign words and they are infecting the Japanese language”.

“Sometimes I feel like I need a translator to understand my own language, ”says Yoko Fujimura with little anger, a 5-year-old Tokyo restaurant worker.“It’s becoming incomprehensible”.

It’s not only Japan who is on the defensive. Countries around th globe are wet through their hands over the rapid spread of American English. Coca?Cola,for example, is one of the most recognized terms on Earth.

It is made worse for Japan, however, by its unique writing system. The country writes all imported utterances(言论) except Chinese?in a different script called katakana (片假名). It is the only country to keep up such a difference. Katakana takes far more space to write than kanji?the core pictograph (象形文字) characters that the Japanese borrowed from China 1,500 years ago. Because it stands out, readers complain that sentences packed with foreign words start to look like extended strings of lights. As if that weren’t enough, katakana terms tend to get puzzling.

 For example, digital camera first appears as degitaru kamera. Then they became the more ear?pleasing digi kamey. But kamey is also the Japanese word for turtle. “It’s very disappointing not knowing what young people are talking about,” says humorously Minoru Shiratori, a 53?year?old bus driver. “Sometimes I can’t tell if they’re discussing cameras or turtles.”

In a bid to stop the flood of katakana, the government has formed a Foreign Words Committee to find suitable Japanese replacements. The committee is slightly different from French?style language police, which try to support a law that forbids advertising in English. Rather, committee members and traditionalists hope a non?stop campaign of persuasion, gentle criticism and leadership by example can turn the tide.

12.According to the author, the reason why the Japanese is infectd greatly by English is .      

A.that nothing can prevent it from entering into Japan

B.that English is the most recognized language in the world

C.that the government has not set up a special administration department to control this trend   before it becomes popular in Japan

D.not clearly mentioned in this passage

13.By saying “counties around the globe are wet through their hands over the rapid spread of American English,”the author infers that        .

A.even a restaurant worker in Japan may feel the English infection on Japanese

B.the flood of katakana has covered most of countries in the world

C.Coca?Cola is the most popuar on the earth and this product covers all the global market

D.many other countries are affected greatly by American English

14.According to the author, the last paragraph mainly deals with.      

A.how French-style language police has prevented the infection of English

B.how Japanese Foreign Words Committee prevents the infection of foreign words

C.the suitable Japanese replacements

D.why committee members and traditionalists begin to declare a war against the infection of foreign words

15.Which conclusion can be drawn based on the opinions from the Japanese people (in paragraph 2 and 4 of this passage)?

A.The elders strongly advocates replacing the foreign words than young people.

B.All the people dislike speaking the foreign words, such as “digi kamey”.

C.They are so old that it is necessary to give some language assistance by a specialist.

D.People’s work determines the language they speak.

完形填空
     In 1982, Steven Callahan was crossing the Atlantic alone in his sailboat when it struck something and
sank. He got into a lifeboat, but his supplies were __1__. His chances of surviving were small. __2__
when three fishermen found him 76days later, he was alive-much __3__ than he was when he started, but
alive.
     His __4__ of how he survived is fascinating. His cleverness-how he __5__ to catch fish, how he
evaporated(使蒸发) sea water to __6__ fresh water- is very interesting.
     But the thing that __7__ my eye was how he managed to keep himself going when all hope seemed
lost, and there seemed no __8__ in continuing the struggle. He was starved and __9   exhausted. Giving
up would have seemed the only possible choice.
     When people __10   these kinds of circumstances, they do something with their minds, which gives
them the courage to keep going. Many people in __11   desperate circumstances __12   in or go mad.
Something the survivors do with their thoughts helps them find the courage to carry on __13   difficulties.
     "I tell myself I can __14   it," wrote Callahan in his book. "Compared to what others have been
through, I'm fortunate, I tell myself these things over and over, __15   up courage…
     I wrote that down after I read it. It __16   me as something important. And I've told myself the same thing when my own goals seemed __17   off or when my problems seemed too terrible. And every time I've said it, I've always come back to my __18  .
     The truth is, our circumstances are only bad __19   to something better. But others have been through the much worse, that is, in comparison with what others have been through, you're fortunate. Tell this to yourself over and over again, and it will help you __20   through the rough situation with a little more courage.
(     )  1:  A. full           
(     )  2:  A. And            
(     )  3: A. th inner       
(     )  4:  A. attitude      
(     )  5: A. helped        
(     )  6: A. make          
(     )  7: A. attacked      
(     )  8: A. operation      
(     )  9: A. partly        
(     )10: A. deal          
(     )11. A. similarly      
(     )12: A. bring          
(     )13: A. for the lack of
(     )14: A. make          
(     )15: A. rolling        
(     )16: A. defeated      
(     )17: A. far            
(     )18: A. feelings      
(     )19: A. related        
(     )20: A. see            
B. rich          
B. Yet            
B. stronger      
B. decision      
B. pretended      
B. absorb        
B. caught        
B. taste          
B. completely    
B. defend        
B. differently    
B. take          
B. in the face of
B. carry          
B. using          
B. told          
B. long          
B. senses        
B. measured      
B. cut            
C. few            
C. Still          
C. worse          
C. instruction    
C. managed        
C. choose          
C. froze          
C. message        
C. hardly          
C. survive        
C. gradually      
C. break          
C. in exchange for
C. follow          
C. building        
C. introduced      
C. ever            
C. ideas          
C. contributed    
C. get            
D. enough        
D. Thus          
D. healthier      
D. account        
D. intended      
D. replace        
D. cheated        
D. point          
D. generally      
D. observe        
D. commonly      
D. give          
D. as a result of
D. respect        
D. making        
D. struck        
D. even          
D. influences    
D. compared      
D. think          

第三节 完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)

    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,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

As I sat beside the window that afternoon, my heart began to sink further with each passing car. This was a day I’d looked forward to for weeks: Miss Pace’s end-of-the-year party. I had   21   volunteered my mother when Miss Pace

requested  22   volunteers. By two o’clock other mother had come with their offerings, but there was no   23  of her. As the noisy party went on, I wouldn’t  24    the window, watching outside and holding out hope that Mum would come soon. The three o’clock bell soon woke me from my thoughts and I took my book bag and  25    out of the door for home.

On the walk home, I planned my revenge(报复). I would shut the front door angrily upon entering,  26   to return her hug when she rushed over to me, and vow(发誓)   27   to speak to her again. The house was    28  when I arrived. I was lying face-down on my bed, shaking with a mixture of heartbreak and 29  .

When she returned, entered my room and sat beside me, I didn’t   30   but instead

stared into my pilliow refusing to accept her presence. “I’m so sorry, honey,” she said. “I just   31  . I got busy and forgot.” I still didn't move. “Don't    32  her,”I told myself. “She forgot you. Make her   33  .” Then my mother did something completely   34  . She began to laugh. I rolled over and faced her,   35  to let her see the anger and disappointment in my   36  . But soon I found my mother wasn’t laughing at all, actually. “I’m so sorry,” she said, in tears, “I let my little boy   37  .” she sank down on the bed and began to cry like a little girl. I was shocked   38   I had never seen my mother cry . To my understanding, mothers weren’t supposed to. “It’s okay, Mom,” I said, “we didn’t even   39  those cookies. Don’t cry. It’s all right. Really.” My words made my mother sit up. She    40  her  eyes,and a slight smile appeared. I smiled back awkwardly(局促不安), and she pulled me th her.

21.A.happily     B.patiently   C.worriedly  D.crazily

22.A.bread       B.cake  C.cookie      D.sandwich

23.A.message    B.sign   C.mark D.information

24.A.fix    B.open  C.leave D.clean

25.A.stepped     B.looked      C.knocked    D.rused

26.A.decide      B.refuse       C.attempt     D.manage

27.A.never       B.ever  C.seldom     D.always

28.A.tidy   B.dark  C.empty       D.warm

29.A.delight     B.loneliness  C.pride D.anger

30.A.hear  B.move C.notice       D.rise

31.A.waited      B.cared C.forgot       D.regretted

32.A.forgive     B.comfort    C.pity   D.accept

33.A.worry       B.pay   C.remember D.fear

34.A.unexpected      B.unknown  C.unimportant     D.unnecessary

35.A.Ready'      B.glad  C.afraid       D.unwilling

36.A.words       B.room C.mind D.eyes

37.A.in     B.down C.out    D.up

38.A.or     B.so     C.but    D.for

39.A.pack  B.buy   C.serve D.need

40.A.closed      B.lifted C.wiped       D.lowered

 

    Dr Wiseman started “the laugh lab” project in September 2001. It is the largest study of humour. Participants are invited to log on  to the laugh lab website, give a few personal details , tell their favorite jokes and judge the jokes told by other people.

    The project will last for a year, and the organizers hope to finally discover the world’s funniest joke. But there is also a serious purpose, the researches want to know what people from different nations and cultures find funny. And they want to find out the differences between the male and female sense of humor. The idea is that if we want to understand each other, we have to find out what makes us laugh.

This is a subject that has long interested psychologists and philosophers. Most of the time, people are not completely honest. We do things that society expects us to and say things that help us get what we want. But laughing cannot be controlled. When we laugh, we tell the truth about ourselves.

By December 2001 over 10,000 jokes had been submitted(提交). This gave the scientists enough evidence to make early conclusions. It seems that men and women do have different senses of humor, for instance.

“Our findings show the major differences in the ways in which males and females use humor,” said Dr Wiseman. “Males use humor to appear superior(优越的) to others, while women are more skilled in languages and prefer word play.”

Researchers also found that there really is such a thing as a national sense of humor. The British enjoy what is usually called “toilet humor”. But the French like their jokes short and sharp: “You’re a high priced lawyer. Will you answer two questions for $500?” “Yes. What’s the second question?”

The Germans are famous for not having a sense of humor. But the survey found that German participants were more likely to find submitted jokes funny than any other nationality. Perhaps that proves the point. Is this joke funny? I don’t know, but let’s say yes, just to be safe.

Dr Wiseman and his workmates also submitted jokes created by computer. But none of those who took part in the survey found any of them amusing. Perhaps this is relief. Computers already seem like they can do everything. At least they should leave the funny stuff to us.

1.Scientist started “the laugh lab” project ____________

   A.to find the funniest joke in European countries

   B.to know what funny people are from different nations and cultures

   C.to find out the differences between the male and female sense of humor

   D.to get more personal details about participants

2.What is the main idea of the 4 th and 5 th paragraph?

    A.Man and woman have different senses of humour.

    B.Male and female have similar senses of humour.

    C.About 10,000 jokes have been submitted from September 2001 to December 2001.

    D.Scientists have collected enough evidence to make conclusions.

3.The writer gave the examples of the British, the French and the Germans        .

    A.to show that French people have a better sense of humour

    B.to prove the British people have a sense of “toilet humour”

    C.to show people from different nations have different senses of humour

    D.to prove that the Germans have no sense of humour

4.Which statement is TRUE according to the passage?

   A.The jokes by computer are less funny than those by humans

   B.The Germans cannot find the submitted jokes amusing

   C.Males are better at word play compared with women

   D.Females like to use humor to show that they are superior

 

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