题目内容

THREE READING COMPREHENSION

  Next time you find yourself drenched(湿透)in an unexpected heavy rain, look on the bright side-it will be a memorable experience.While wet weather may make us feel gloomy, it sharpens the memory and improves our recall.But those who feel in a good mood because it’s a sunny day are able to remember less well, according to memory tests carried by Australian researchers.

  Professor Joe Forgas, who led the research, said:“It seems strange but a little bit of sadness is a good thing.People performed much better on our memory test when the weather was unpleasant and they wee in a slightly negative mood.On bright sunny days, when they were more likely to be happy, the flunked it.”

  The tests were carried out on shoppers at a store in Sydney, where researchers randomly placed ten small objects on the check-out counter.On rainy days, sad music was played in the store.When it was bright and sunny, customers heard cheery music.This was done to further influence them towards negative or positive moods.After shopping, customers were asked how many of the objects they could remember.Their scores were three times higher when the weather was had and they were feeling angry, compared with those tested on sunny days.The results were published in Journal of Experimental Psychology.A report on the findings said:“They point to a growing body of evidence that the way people think, the quality of their judgments and the accuracy of their memory are all significantly influenced by positive and negative moods.”

  Professor Forgas said,“We found that weather-inducted negative mood improved memory accuracy.Shoppers in a negative mood showed better memory and higher discrimination ability.”

  A worse mood helped to focus people’s attention on their surroundings and led to a more thorough and careful thinking style, while happiness increased confidence and forgetfulness.

  Being happy tends to promote a thinking style that is less focused on our surroundings.In a positive mood we are less likely to make more snap(匆忙的)judgments about people we meet.Mild negative mood, in turn, tends to increase attention to our surroundings and produce a more careful, thorough thinking style.

  Accurately remembering everyday scenes is a difficult task, yet such memories can be on importance in everyday life.Surprisingly, the influence of mood states on the accuracy of real-life memories is still poorly understood.

(1)

What’s the major function of Paragraph 1?

[  ]

A.

To attract readers’ interest.

B.

To introduce the theme of the whole passage.

C.

To generalize the whole passage.

D.

To describe a memorable experience.

(2)

The underlined word“flunked”in Paragraph2 may mean“________”.

[  ]

A.

conducted

B.

failed

C.

passed

D.

understood

(3)

In the research, researchers play different music to ________.

[  ]

A.

make customers become sadder or happier

B.

help customers choose what they want

C.

promote customers to buy more goods

D.

get customers to make a quick choice

(4)

According to Joe Forgas, on sunny days, people ________.

[  ]

A.

will make careful judgments on others

B.

tend to pay more attention to their surroundings

C.

will have more confidence

D.

will have a better recall

(5)

What can we know from the research?

[  ]

A.

Forgetfulness is rather troublesome.

B.

It’s important to feel in a good mood.

C.

It’s memorable to experience a rainy day.

D.

Gloomy days are good for memorizing things.

答案:1.B;2.B;3.A;4.C;5.D;
练习册系列答案
相关题目

阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并从答题卡上将该选项涂黑。

I sat in the all-too-quiet waiting room of the cancer center, counting the minutes until my treatment. I thought I'd  36  it two years ago, but it was back. After my   37    diagnosis, Nom and Dad had driven more than l,200 miles from their home to be with me for three  38  while I was getting over from   39   and chemotherapy(化疗). When the cancer returned last, they, once again,   40    it here , too. They waited for hours while I received my treatments------Dad with his   41   and Mom with a magazine.

But now, they were   42   in Westlake.

My children are  43   and my four brothers live far from my home outside Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania.  I knew    44  of them would come if  asked, but I didn't want to  45   them,even with the intense    46  I felt.

I   47   picked one of the magazines on the end table beside me and couldn't help  wishing my  48   were there inside. One publication caught my   49  , a magazine I liked best and had   50    to ages ago. I couldn't tell you the last time when I'd read an issue. I   51   it up and I started right in with the letters to the   52  .

"I love  53   my copy every month," the first letter began. The author mentioned a daughter who  54    in Clinton, Pennsylvania. Huh, that's funny. I thought. That's my town! I read the letter to the end, where my    55   fell upon the author's signature:

"Thank you, Margie and Tom Parrish, Westlake, Louisiana"

Alone? Hardly. Margie and Tom-or as I call them, Mom and Dad-were right beside me,even now.

1.A. treated           B. beaten         C. infected              D. operated

2.A. first             B. terrible        C. invisible               D. last

3.A. days             B. months        C. years                 D. hours

4.A. illness            B. hospital       C. work                 D. surgery

5. A. made             B. put           C. hoped               D. arrived

6.A. pen               B. glasses        C.Bible                D. smile

7. A. in hospital        B. back home     C. at work              D. in town

8.A. youn             B. caring         C. struggling            D. full-grown

9.A. any              B. some          C. none                 D. both

10.A. scare             B. disappoint      C. surprise              D. trouble

11.A. loneliness         B. pride          C. happiness             D. anger

12.A. half-heartedly      B. carefully       C. seriously             D. anxiously

13.A. brothers           B. children       C. friends               D. parents

14.A. thought           B. mind          C. eye                  D. hand

15.A. referred           B. subscribed      C. turned               D. contributed

16.A.put                B.picked         C.set                   D.broke

17.A. editor             B. writer         C. producer              D. reader

18.A. editing            B. sending        C. receiving             D. organizing

19. A. studied            B. worked        C. died                 D. lived

20.A.gaze               B.touch          C.thought               D.sense

 

Edward Sims was born in 1892. He was the fifth child and only son of Herbert and Dora Sims. Herbert was a blacksmith(铁匠), and had a thriving trade making horseshoes. He was determined that his first-born son would follow him into the blacksmith. For this reason, Edward had to leave school at the age of 12,and worked with his father.

However, Edward was not cut out to be a blacksmith. Although he has an athletic body, he didn't have strong arms like his father, and he felt dizzy in the heat of the smithy.  When he tried to find alternative employment, he found it difficult because he had never learnt to read or write.

One day, he went for an interview at a solictior’s office. The job was a runner, taking documents from the office to other offices in the city. The solicitor was pleased to see that Edward was physically fit, but when he discovered that the young man couldn't read or write, he decided against employing him. "How can you deliver documents to other offices," he asked, "if you can't read the addresses on them?"

Bitterly disappointed, Edward left the building and went to wait for a tram to take him back to the suburb where his father’s smithy was. Next to the bus stop, a man was selling newspapers from a stand .

"Excuse me, son?" he said. "Would you look after my stand for a moment?"

For the next 20 minutes, Edward sold newspapers, lots of them. When the man came back, he was so delighted with his new assistant's honesty, that he offered him a job. Edward took it immediately.

In the next few months, the two men progressed from working on newspaper stands to selling newspapers, tobacco,confectionery(糖果点心)and other goods in a shop. Then they opened a second shop, and a third. Eventually, they had a chain of 25 shops in three cities.

Edward became very rich, so he employed a tutor to teach him to read and write. The tutor  was amazed at what Edward had achieved. "Imagine what you could do if you’d been able to read and write when you were younger!" he said.

“Yes!” said Edward. “I could have run myself to exhaustion delivering documents for a solicitor!”

1.What would be the best title for the text?

A.Success of illiterate newsboy

B.Local blacksmith becomes famous

C.The thriving trade of the blacksmith

D.Reading and writing-the road to success

2.What can you infer from the underlined expression “not cut out to be” in the second paragraph?

A.Edward Sims did not like being a blacksmith.

B.Edward Sims did not like working with his father.

C.Edward Sims was not strong enough and it made him feel ill.

D.Edward Sims was good at it but wanted to do another job.

3.When Edward applied for the job as a runner for a solicitor,        .

A.the solicitor turned him down because he wasn’t intelligent enough

B.the solicitor offered him the job because he was so fit

C.the solicitor gave him the job but told him he had to learn to read

D.the solicitor didn’t offer him the job because he couldn’t read

4.Which of the following is NOT ture about Edward Sims?

A.He was such a good salesman that he went on to own 25 newsagent shops with another man.

B.The newspaperman liked him so much he gave him a job.

C.He ran himself into exhaustion delivering papers.

D.He learnt to read and write.

 

I went through a training program and became a literacy volunteer last surnmen The training

I received, though excellent, did not tell me how it was to work with a real student, however. When I began to discover what other people's lives were like because they could not read, I realized the true importance of reading.

My first student Marie was a 44-year-old single mother of three. In the first lesson, I found out she walked two miles to the nearest supermarket twice a week because she didn't know which bus to take. When I told her I would get her a bus schedule, she told me it would not help because she could not  read it. She said she also had difficulty once she got to the supermarket,because she couldn't always remember what she needed. Since she did not know words, she could not write out a shopping list. Also, she could only recognize items by sight, so if the product had a different label, she would not recognize it as the product she wanted.

As we worked together, learning how to read built Marie's self-confidence,which encouraged her to continue her studies. She began to make rapid progress and was even able to take the bus to the supermarketelt. After this successful trip, she reported how self-confident she felt. At the end of the program, she began helping her youngest son,Tony, a shy first grader with his reading. She sat with him before he went to sleep and together they would read bedtime stories. When his eyes became wide with excitement as she read, pride was written all over her face. As she described this experience, I was proud of myself as well. I found that helping Marie to build her self-confidence was more rewarding than anything I had ever done before.

As a literacy volunteer, I learned a great deal about teaching and helping others. In fact, I may have learned more from the experience than Marie did.

1.What did the author do last summer?

A.She worked in the supermarket

B.She helped someone to learn to read

C.She gave single mothers the help they needed

D.She went to a training program to help a literacy volunteer

2.Why didn’t Marie go to the supermarket by bus at first?

A.Because she liked to walk to the supermarket

B.Because she lived far away from the bus stop

C.Because she couldn’t afford the bus ticket

D.Because she couldn’t find the right bus

3.How did Marie use to find the goods she wanted in the supermarket?

A.She knew where the goods were in the supermarket

B.She asked others to take her to the right place

C.She managed to find the goods by their looks

D.She remembered the names of the goods

4.What did the writer think of her work as a literacy volunteer?

A.Interesting                            B.Meaningful

C.Tiring                                D.Touching

 

Driving to a friend’s house on a recent evening, I was attracted by the sight of the full moon rising just above my friend’s rooftop. I stopped to watch it for a few moments, thinking about what a pity it is that most city people --- myself included --- usually miss sights like this because we spend most of our lives indoors.

My friend had also seen it. He grew up living in a forest in Europe, and the moon meant a lot to him then. It had touched much of his life.

I know the feeling. Last December I took my seven-year-old daughter to the mountainous jungle of northern India with some friends. We stayed in a forest rest house with no electricity or running hot water. Our group had campfires outside every night, and indoors when it was too cold outside. The moon grew to its fullest during our trip. Between me and the high mountains lay three or four valleys. Not a light shone in them and not a sound could be heard. It was one of the quietest places I have ever known, a bottomless well of silence. And above me was the full moon, which struck me deeply.

Today our lives are filled with glass, metal, plastic and fiber-glass. We have television,

cell phones, pagers, electricity, heaters and ovens and air-conditioners, cars, computers.

Struggling through traffic that evening at the end of a tiring day, most of it spent indoors, I thought, “Before long, I would like to live in a small cottage. There I will grow vegetables and read books and walk in the mountains. And perhaps write, but not in anger. I may become an old man there, and wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled and measure out my life in coffee spoons. But I will be able to walk outside on a cold silent night and touched the moon.”

1.The best title for the passage would be _________.

A.Touched by the Moon                    B.The Pleasures of Modern Life

C.A Bottomless well of Silence               D.Break away from Modern life

2.The writer felt sorry for himself because __________.

A.there was too much pollution.

B.he failed to see the fullest moon.

C.he didn’t adapt to modern inventions

D.there were too many accidents on the road.

3.What impressed the writer most in the mountainous jungle of northern India?

A.No modern equipment.                   B.Complete silence.

C.The nice moon.                         D.The high mountain.

4.Modern things are mentioned mainly to ___________.

A.show that the writer likes city life very much.

B.tell us that people greatly benefit from modern life.

C.explain that people have less chances to enjoy nature.

D.show that we can also enjoy nature at home through them.

5.The author wrote the passage to __________.

A.express the feeling of returning to nature.

B.show the love for the moonlight.

C.advise modern people to learn to live.

D.want to communicate longing for modern life.

 

Selina, Michael, Tony and Sam enjoy listening to the radio. Read the following description and help them make proper choices.

57. ________ Tony, a sports lover, always cares much about sports events. He dreams to be a sports reporter after graduation.

58. ________ Michael is a university student. He likes music very much, especially rock and pop music.

59. ________ Sam is a teacher. He is one of the most popular teachers, because he always likes to tell his students what is going on world widely. So he needs to know global events of all kinds.

60. ________ Selina has three children. They are very lovely. They are interested in drama, reading and watching TV as well.

A. BBC Radio 3

BBC 3 broadcasts radio entertainment all day, every day. Hear the original radio comedies which became TV hits and the all-time comedy greats. There’s drama as well as reading of favourite books and a daily show just for kids.

B. BBC Radio 2

BBC Radio 2 Music celebrates the very best in music. It’s a station for people who are passionate about rock and pop music. The station plays a rich mix of modern and classic artists and is devoted to the success of new rising bands.

C. BBC Radio 1

Devoted to giving you comments on news and sports events. Special rights on all the major sports events including up to the minute news and debates.

D. BBC World Service

World Service gets to the heart of global events. Programmes cover news to science and the environment to arts, religion and music of all kinds.

 

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