题目内容

13.His puzzling expression suggested that he didn't understand what they said at the meeting.

分析 他令人迷惑的表情表明他根本不明白他们在会议上所讲的一切.

解答 答案:puzzling-puzzled-ed形容词常用来修饰人,少数与人密切相关的物,比如:voice   expression  look等,应使用-ed形容词修饰

点评 考生在做题时需理清文章的逻辑关系,抓住文章中心思想,连续上下文内容进行推测,同时注意词性、语态、时态的转换,分析句子结构.

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3.Herds of zebra,impala and giraffe from South Africa's Kruger Park found a new home as part of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park (GLTP) wildlife relocation project.
About 1,000animals,from the large blue wildebeest to the stocky warthog,have been relocated to the park straddling South African,Mozambican and Zimbabwean territory.
The game from South Africa arrived in the Massingir area of Mozambique's southern Maputo province after a one-and-a-half-hour trip by truck.
South African National Parks chief executive Mavuso Msimang and the Peace Parks Foundation officially handed over the animals to Mozambican representatives.
"This project is not only about the management of an ecosystem,but also about community empowerment and tourism,"Msimang said.
Border fences are coming down with the establishment of the park,which will be the world's biggest game reserve,to allow elephants and other herds to follow ancient migration routes.
The park,due to be officially opened next year,will be bigger than the Netherlands,covering some 38,600square kilometers (15,440square miles).
Under a three-year plan,about 6,000animals are to be moved into the area,where wildlife was decimated(大批杀害)during Mozambique's 25-year civil war.
African Wildlife Foundation community development officer Jeremiah Machavi said 62communities living in the area would be affected by the establishment of Transfrontier Park.Tourists will be able to travel across international boundaries in the park without having to show their passports.
The relocation process started in October last year when about 30elephants were released into the park.

55.B is being established to relocate some African animals.
A.Kruger Park    
B.GLTP
C.South African National Park
D.African wildlife Foundation
56.How many more animals will be taken t Transfrontier Park?C
A.about 1,000
B.about 6,000
C.about 5,000
D.about 7,000
57.What will not be affected by the establishment of GLTP?C
A.the ecosystem and tourism    
B.tourism and communities
C.international boundaries
D.African wildlife
58.From the passage we can conclude thatC.
A.the herds of animals mentioned in the first paragraph were the first to be taken to the park
B.the Great Limpopo Transfrontier is located in Mozambique
C.no border fences will be seen inside the park so that animals can migrate
D.the Netherlands is the second largest reserve.
18.Mark Twain was a great writer.He was from the USA.He was born in 1835.He was also a famous speaker.He was famous for his sense of humor.Many people liked to listen to him talk because he liked to tell some interesting stories to make people laugh all the time.
  One day Mark Twain was going to a small town because of his writing.Before he was going to leave,one of his friends said to him that there were always a lot of mosquitoes  in the town and told him that he'd better not go there.Mark Twain waved (摇动) his hand and said,"It doesn't matter.The mosquitoes are no relatives of mine.I don't think they will come to visit me."
    After he arrived at the town,Mark Twain stayed in a small hotel near the station.He went into his room,but when he was just about to have a rest,quite a few mosquitoes flew about him.The waiters felt very sorry about that."I'm very sorry,Mr Mark Twain.There are too many mosquitoes in our town."One of them said to him.
    Mark Twain,however,made a joke,saying to the waiter,"The mosquitoes are very clever.They know my room number.They didn't come into the wrong room."What he said made all the people present laugh heartily.
 But that night Mark Twain slept well.Do you know why?That was because all the waiters in the hotel were driving the mosquitoes away for him during the whole night.
1.That day Mark Twain went to the townC.
A.to see one of his friends     
B.because he was told there were a lot of mosquitoes there
C.because he wanted to d o something there for his writing
D.to see one of his relatives
2.The waiters felt sorry becauseD.
A.they did something wrong to Mark Twain       
B.their hotel was too small
C.the room was not very clean   
D.there were quite a few mosquitoes in Mark Twain's room
3.All the people present laughed heartily becauseC.
A.the mosquitoes were very clever and they didn't come into the wrong room
B.the mosquitoes knew Mark Twain's room number
C.Mark Twain made a joke        
D.Mark Twain gave the waiters some nice presents
4.From the story we knowA.
A.no mosquitoes troubled Mark Twain in the night
B.the owner of the hotel told the waiters to look after Mark Twain well at night
C.Mark Twain didn't have a good rest that night
D.there were not mosquitoes in the hotel any longer.
3.Ernest Hemingway was not only a commanding figure in 20th-century literature,but was also a pack rat.He saved even his old passports and used bullfight tickets,leaving behind one of the longest paper trails of any author.
"Ernest Hemingway:Between Two Wars,"which opens on Friday at the Morgan Library & Museum,is the first major museum exhibition devoted to Hemingway and his work.The largest and most interesting section focuses on the'20s,Hemingway's Paris years,and reveals a writer we might have been in danger of forgetting:Hemingway before he became Hemingway.
The exhibition does not fail to include pictures of the bearded,manly,Hem.He's shown posing with some kudu he has just shot in Africa and on the bridge of his beloved fishing boat,the Pilar,with Carlos Gutiérrez,the fisherman who became the model for"The Old Man and the Sea."But the first photo the viewer sees is a big blowup of a handsome,clean-shaven,19-year-old standing on crutches.This is from the summer of 1918,when Hemingway was recovering from wounds at the Red Cross hospital in Milan and trying to turn his wartime experiences into fiction.
The evidence at this exhibition suggests that,in the early days,he often wrote in pencil,mostly in cheap notebooks but sometimes on whatever paper came to hand.The first draft of the short story"Soldier's Home"was written on sheets he appeared to have snatched from a telegraph office.The impression you get is of a young writer seized by inspiration and sometimes barreling ahead without an entirely clear sense of where he is going.
F.Scott Fitzgerald (some of whose letters with Hemingway is also on view) famously urged him to cut the first two chapters of"The Sun Also Rises,"complaining about the"elephantine facetiousness"of the beginning,and Hemingway obliged,getting rid of a clunky opening that now seems almost"meta".In 1929,in a nine-page penciled critique,Fitzgerald also suggested numerous revisions for"A Farewell to Arms."Hemingway took some of these,but less graciously,and soon afterward his friendship with Fitzgerald came to an end.
The papers at the Morgan show a Hemingway who is not always sure of himself.There are running lists of stories he kept fiddling with,and there are lists and lists of possible titles,including the 45he considered for"Farewell"and 47different endings for the novel.
In display case after display case,you see Hemingway during his Paris years inventing and reinventing himself,discovering as he goes along just what kind of writer he wants to be.In a moving 1925letter to his parents,who refused to read"In Our Time,"his second story collection,he writes:"You see I'm trying in all my stories to get the feeling of the actual life across-not just to describe life-or criticize it-but to actually make it alive.So that when you have read something by me you actually experience the thing.You can't do this without putting in the bad and the ugly as well as what is beautiful."
By the time the Second World War broke out,Hemingway had solidified into the iconic figure we now remember:Papa.Even J.D.Salinger calls him this.And a blustery,cranky Hemingway appears in 1949when aboard the Pilar he grabs an old fishing diary and begins scrawling an angry letter to Harold Ross,the editor of The New Yorker,complaining about Alfred Kazin's review of"Across the River and Into the Trees,"not,in truth,a very good book.But,Hemingway,often drinking and depressed,didn't know it,his best work was behind him by then.
66.Which of the following is closest in meaning to the underlined words"a pack rat"(para.1)?D
A.a person who enjoys collecting things
B.a person who cannot be relied on
C.a person who likes to collect rubbish
D.a person who doesn't waste anything
67.How many of Hemingway's works are mentioned in this passage?C
A.4             B.5            C.7         D.6
68.We can conclude from the Morgan show that sometimes Hemingway was a personA
A.stubborn but full of enthusiasm about love
B.unconfident but full of inspirations
C.casual but full of heroism
D.bad-tempered but full of strange habits
69.What does the writer truly mean by saying"Hemingway before he became Hemingway"?D
A.Hemingway wrote many masterpieces before he killed himself.
B.Hemingway was once a war correspondent before he became a famous writer.
C.Hemingway devoted all his strengths to writing before he won the Nobel Prize.
D.Hemingway kept exploring the world and adjusting himself before he became a commanding figure in literature.
70.According to the Morgan show,readers are likely to seeAin Hemingway's works.
①tough men who can't be defeated
②anti-war fighters
③the dark side of the world as well as its beauty
④love affairs between a man and a woman
⑤the story of a family business
A.①⑤B.②④C.①③D.③⑤

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