题目内容

Divorces in Japan have more than doubled, according to health ministry statistics. One in three Japanese marriages now ends in divorce.
Atsuko Okano was in one of those failed marriages. Three years ago, she found herself alone in her 30s, with children to raise and a future full of question marks and social shame. But she also saw an opening, and became an advisor helping people like herself.
“My husband was cheating on me,” she recalled. ‘I did everything to bring him back to me but it didn’t work, so I dumped him.” Such frankness is a major characteristic of Japan’s recently divorced.
Divorced people – particularly woman – have long been looked down upon in Japan, where self-sacrifice and family stability are regarded as ideals. In the past, bored housewives remained bored. The security of the family unit was the most important thing. Now, young Japanese are increasingly choosing satisfaction in life over the demands of tradition, and more woman are financially independent. As a result, Japanese divorce rates are flying. Experts attribute this to the erosion of a long-standing double standard that granted divorced men respectability, but branded(gave somebody a bad name) divorced women as damaged goods.
Over the past decade, growing numbers of highly educated and successful professional women have challenged that assumption(something taken for granted) by turning their backs on unhappy marriages and paying no attention to the taboo(禁忌)of divorce. The majority of divorce behavior now is started by women.
【小题1】This passage mainly talks about the fact that nowadays Japanese women _________.

A.are granted respectability after they get divorced
B.are becoming brave enough to challenge the taboo of divorce
C.still consider the security of the family unit to be very important
D.are becoming more financially independent
【小题2】It can be inferred from Paragraph 2 that Atsuko Okano __________.
A.had some children to raise
B.was very confident with her future
C.was not greatly respected by Japanese society
D.might have found a job to help divorced people
【小题3】The underlined word “dumped” in paragraph 3 probably means _________.
A.looked down upon
B.had a quarrel with
C.hated
D.divorced
【小题4】Which of the following is NOT mentioned as the reason for rising rate of Japanese divorces?
A.Self-sacrifice and family stability are not much appreciated in Japan as before.
B.More women can support themselves financially.
C.Divorced men and women can quickly find their new partners
D.Young Japanese care more about satisfaction in life than their elders did.


【小题1】B
【小题2】D
【小题3】D
【小题4】C

解析试题分析:本文讲述的是现在的日本女性勇敢地走出失败的婚姻,追求自己的幸福,导致日本的离婚率上升的现象。同时文章还分析了这一现象出现的具体原因。
【小题1】B 主旨大意题。根据文章主体段最后一段Over the past decade, growing numbers of highly educated and successful professional women have challenged that assumption(something taken for granted) by turning their backs on unhappy marriages and paying no attention to the taboo(禁忌)of divorce. The majority of divorce behavior now is started by women.可知本文讲述的是现在的日本女性勇敢地走出失败的婚姻,追求自己的幸福。导致日本的离婚率上升的现象。故B正确。
【小题2】D 推断题。根据本段最后一句But she also saw an opening, and became an advisor helping people like herself.可知她现在是一个帮助离婚女性的advisor,她从事的是顾问,咨询者这样的一份工作。故D正确。
【小题3】D 推理题。根据本句“My husband was cheating on me,” she recalled. ‘I did everything to bring him back to me but it didn’t work, so I dumped him.”可知她努力挽回婚姻,可是她的丈夫却欺骗了她,所以她离婚了。故D正确。
【小题4】C 细节题。根据文章最后一段可知B项正确,根据文章倒数第二段可知AD项内容正确,只有C项是文章没有提及的内容。故C符合要求。
考点:考察社会现象类短文阅读
点评:本文讲述的是现在的日本女性勇敢地走出失败的婚姻,追求自己的幸福,导致日本的离婚率上升的现象。同时文章还分析了这一现象出现的具体原因。本文主旨鲜明,很容易在文中找到答案。做题时要注意文章的首段和每一段的首句或尾句,因为它们往往就是文章的主题句。阅读中要注意要点之间的关系。然后带着问题,再读全文,找出答题所需要的依据,完成阅读任务。

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相关题目

Divorces in Japan have more than doubled, according to health ministry statistics. One in three Japanese marriages now ends in divorce.

Atsuko Okano was in one of those failed marriages. Three years ago, she found herself alone in her 30s, with children to raise and a future full of question marks and social shame. But she also saw an opening, and became an advisor helping people like herself.

“My husband was cheating on me,” she recalled. ‘I did everything to bring him back to me but it didn’t work, so I dumped him.” Such frankness is a major characteristic of Japan’s recently divorced.

Divorced people – particularly woman – have long been looked down upon in Japan, where self-sacrifice and family stability are regarded as ideals. In the past, bored housewives remained bored. The security of the family unit was the most important thing. Now, young Japanese are increasingly choosing satisfaction in life over the demands of tradition, and more woman are financially independent. As a result, Japanese divorce rates are flying. Experts attribute this to the erosion of a long-standing double standard that granted divorced men respectability, but branded(gave somebody a bad name) divorced women as damaged goods.

Over the past decade, growing numbers of highly educated and successful professional women have challenged that assumption(something taken for granted) by turning their backs on unhappy marriages and paying no attention to the taboo(禁忌)of divorce. The majority of divorce behavior now is started by women.

1.This passage mainly talks about the fact that nowadays Japanese women _________.

A.are granted respectability after they get divorced

B.are becoming brave enough to challenge the taboo of divorce

C.still consider the security of the family unit to be very important

D.are becoming more financially independent

2.It can be inferred from Paragraph 2 that Atsuko Okano __________.

A.had some children to raise

B.was very confident with her future

C.was not greatly respected by Japanese society

D.might have found a job to help divorced people

3.The underlined word “dumped” in paragraph 3 probably means _________.

A.looked down upon

B.had a quarrel with

C.hated

D.divorced

4.Which of the following is NOT mentioned as the reason for rising rate of Japanese divorces?

A.Self-sacrifice and family stability are not much appreciated in Japan as before.

B.More women can support themselves financially.

C.Divorced men and women can quickly find their new partners

D.Young Japanese care more about satisfaction in life than their elders did.

 

阅读理解。
     After being laid off from her job, Ann Bauer struggled financially. She worked at several lower-paid jobs,
relocated to a new city and even declared bankruptcy. Then in December, she finally moved back into her
parents' home at age 52. "I'm back living in the bedroom that I grew up in," she said.
     Taking shelter with parents isn't uncommon for young people, especially when the job market is poor.
But now the declining economy is forcing some children to do so later in life-even at middle age.
     Financial planners report receiving many calls from parents seeking advice about taking in their grown
children after divorces and lay-offs. Kim Erickson, a financial planner in California, said she has never seen
older children, even those at 50, depending so much on their parents as in the last six months."These are
40-and-50-year-old children of my clients that they're helping out. We have a hard time saying no as a culture
to our children, and they keep asking for more," she said.
     Bauer's parents won't take rent money. She's trying to save several hundred dollars a month for a house
while working as a meeting coordinator. Bauer would prefer to live on her own, but without her parents' help,
she would "probably be renting again," she said."Buying groceries for another person isn't stretching my
budget too much," said her mother, Shirley Smith, aged 80.
     Parents usually feel guilty if they don't offer help. But a large number of well-meaning parents must delay
retirement or scale back their dreams because they have to help their children, Erickson said. And the sliding
economy might threaten their jobs.
     "I almost have to act like a financial therapist," she said to Shirley. "Here is the line I'm drawing for you.
That's fine. You can do up to this point, but at this point, now you're starting to erode ( 损害 ) your own
wealth."
1. From the passage, we can learn that _____.
A. middle-aged people even have fewer job opportunities than young people
B. few of American young people live with their parents
C. the rate of divorce in America is obviously on the increase
D. many parents are at a loss on dealing with grown children
2. How did Ann Bauer's parents act after learning about her situation?
A. They at first refused but finally allowed her to move back.
B. They didn't hesitate to invite her back home.
C. They allowed her back on condition that she bought groceries.
D. They preferred her to love on her own because of their tight budget.
3. What attitude does Erickson have towards aged parents helping their grown children?
A. She thinks it unnecessary.
B. She is in favor of it.
C. She thinks parents should be more careful with their savings.
D. Parents shouldn't feel guilty when failing to help their children.
4. What is the main idea of the passage?
A. American culture has an effect on the relationship between parents and children.
B. Children's dependence on their parents is increasing.
C. Sliding economy forces grown-ups to move to their parents' home.
D. Supporting grown children may put their parents' financial freedom at risk.

The Yuhang District People’s Court in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, recently handled the divorce case of a young couple. The reason for their divorce was pretty simple: the couple couldn’t agree on whose surname should their daughter take, the Economic Information Daily reported.

       According to Chinese marriage law, children can take their surname either from the mother side or from the father side. However, in China, it has become a tradition that a child is usually given the father’s surname.

       At present, the single-child generation, who were born during the 1980s, are at their marriageable age now. Since most of them are the only child in their families, their babies now face a new problem: whose surname should these babies take, the father’s or the mother’s? This might not seem like a big problem; however, the problem does bother many young couples.

       Should China change its tradition of following father’s surname? In a survey, the reporter found that most fathers were usually conservative on this matter. They said that their children should take their surnames.

       Ms. Zhou is a public servant. In her mind, women and men have a fair chance on this matter. “In China, women go out to earn money, just like men do. If this is the case, why shouldn’t women have the same rights as men? On the whole, people who have the same obligations should also enjoy the same rights. Otherwise, it wouldn’t be fair. I think the old tradition should be changed now,” she said, adding that when she plans to marry, she will first raise this question to her future husband.

       As the single-child generation now start to give birth to babies, they will soon meet some problems that their parents have never met before. This only shows that the old tradition, which has existed in China for thousands of years with the male taking a most important role in the family, is now being challenged in a changing society, some experts said.

1.The couple referred to in the news got divorced because       .

      A.they couldn’t agree on some of their family affairs

       B.their daughter refused to take her father’s surname

       C.their family were facing problems in economy

       D.they couldn’t agree with each other on the right of baby’s surname

2.We can learn from the passage that       .

       A.Chinese law provides that children should take their fathers’ surnames

       B.it is easily accepted in China that children take their mothers’ surnames

       C.Chinese tradition gives people equal rights to take their surnames.

       D.there is a long way for Chinese to take their surnames freely

3.The underlined word “obligations” in paragraph 5 probably means       .

       A.positions                 B.duties                     C.abilities                   D.salaries

4.We can conclude from the passage that       .

      A.more couples will divorce because of the surname problems

       B.men will have a lower position than women in the near future

       C.there will be more children who take their mothers’ surnames

       D.the old Chinese tradition will be get rid of completely

5.The best title for this passage should be       .

       A.Surname problem for single-child families

       B.Chinese traditions are being challenged

       C.More divorces appear in China

       D.Problems for the new generation

Many people would interpret “The American dream” as “living like an American”—a two-story house with a white picket fence; a family with two cars; and two children.

However, the economic situation is now affecting the American way of life for 4.4 million people living in the US, according to new census (人口普查) data. “It’s going to have a long-term impact and to say it’s going to end is optimistic, ” says Cheryl Russell, former editor-in- chief of American Demographics magazine. “I’m more pessimistic that this is the new normal.”

So what is the new normal?

*Marrying later. The average age of the first marriage has increased to 28.7 for men and 26.7 for women, up from 27.5 and 25.9 respectively in 2006. At the same time, fewer people are getting married. If the marriage rate had stayed the same as in 2006, there would have been about 4 million more married people in 2010.

 *Fewer babies. There were 200,000 fewer births among women aged 20 to 34 in 2010 compared with two years before. This was despite the fact that the number of women of childbearing age had gone up by more than 1 million. “The recession(衰退) is the likely cause ,” says Kenneth Johnson, demographer at the University of New Hampshire’s Carsey Institue, “Economic fertility (生育能力)” because women delay …in uncertain times.

*Breaking up is harder. The number of divorces has been falling for 25 years as people wait longer or choose to live together before they get married. There were about 65,000 fewer divorces in 2010 than in 2008, a 7 percent decrease.

*Crowd living. Unemployment is forcing more people to live together. The number of households where people lived with “other relatives” climbed from 6.7 percent in 2006 to 7.2 percent in 2010.

*Going public. Private school enrollment decreased from 13.6 percent in 2006 to 12.8 percent in 2010.

*Fewer cars. The percent age of households without a car rose to 9.1 percent against 8.8 percent in 2006. The percent-age of households with two or more cars fell from 58 percent to 57.1 percent.

*Driving solo. When people are not working, they don’t carpool. The proportion of people aged 16 to 64 in employment dropped greatly in all but one of the 50 largest metropolitan (大城市的) areas. That has helped push the share of people driving to work alone from 76 percent in 2006 to 76.6 percent in 2010. Ride-sharing is down a full percentage point, to 9.7 percent.

61. What is the article mainly about?

A. The interpretation of “the American dream”.

B. The significance of the current economic crisis.       

C. Changes to the American lifestyle.

D. The traditional American way of life.

62. What might Cheryl Russell agree with according to the article?

A. A traditional lifestyle is much better and healthier.

B. The new study based on the members’ financial reports.

C. The spirit of American dream will inspire Americans to get through the economic recession.

D. American lifestyles are being reshaped and will continue to change

63. What are the characteristics of the future American lifestyle?

a. Delayed marriage.

b. A lower divorce rate

c. Increased car ownership.

d. An increase in private school enrollment.

e. Having children later

A. abe           B. ace          C. bde          D. bce  

64. Which of the following statements is TRUE?

A. The typical US family is expected to have three-story house with a big yard and two children.

B. The US birth rate rose slightly in 2010 compared with two years before.

C. A growing number of people are forced to share their homes with other relatives in the US.

D. US students prefer to go to private schools rather than pubic schools.

65. Why do more and more Americans drive solo to work in recent years, according to the passage ?

A. Because they don’t like carpool.           

B. Because more and more people are out of work.         

C. Because the share of people driving to work alone is increasing.      

D. Because the proportion of people aged 16-64 in unemployment dropped greatly.

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