题目内容

Now young people like to go to the fast-food restaurant,____ ,as the name says,eating doesn’t take much time.

A.which            B.that              C.what             D.where

 

【答案】

D

【解析】

试题分析:考查定语从句。先行词为restaurant, 在从句中作地点状语,因此用where, 相当于in which。句中as the name says 是一个插入语。句意:现在年轻人喜欢去快餐店,就像名字表明的,在那里吃东西不用花太多时间。选D。

考点:考查定语从句

点评:定语从句的考查要从句子成分的分析开始,如果句子很完整就使用关系副词;如果句子中缺少主语,宾语,表语或者定语的时候,使用关系代词.这道题要注意 as the name says是插入语,应该先去掉不看,结构就清晰了。

 

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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.
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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.
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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 __________.
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C.was not greatly respected by Japanese society
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【小题3】The underlined word “dumped” in paragraph 3 probably means _________.
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B.had a quarrel with
C.hated
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【小题4】Which of the following is NOT mentioned as the reason for rising rate of Japanese divorces?
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B.More women can support themselves financially.
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2.A. when             B. then             C. after           D. before

3.A. settled             B. took             C. made          D. gave

4.A. pushed            B. pulled           C. left            D. started

5.A. around             B. about            C. up            D. down

6.A. exciting           B. interesting        C. strange         D. right

7.A. familiar           B. beautiful         C. nice            D. alike

8.A. walked             B. gone            C. followed        D. traveled

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10.A. money            B. ticket            C. book           D. name

11.A. put              B. shook            C. raised          D. nodded

12.A. wrong            B. used            C. only            D. right

13.A. would             B. must            C. should          D. could

14.A. joined            B. turned           C. connected       D. separated

15.A. hurry             B. trouble          C. worry           D. difficulty

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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.

 

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