题目内容

【题目】Some experts think the wolfs team spirit for survival is ______ is needed in today's competitive culture.

A. that B. what

C. which D. how

【答案】B

【解析】句意:一些专家认为狼为了生存的团队精神正是当今竞争文化所需要的。此题考查表语从句的连接词。此处what 在表语从句中作主语。

练习册系列答案
相关题目

【题目】Tokyo is one of those places that you can love and hate at the same time.

In Tokyo there are always too many people in the places where I want to be. Of course there are too many cars. The Japanese drive very fast, but in Tokyo they often spend a long time in traffic jams (拥挤). Tokyo is not different from London, Paris and New York in that. It is different when one wants to walk.

At certain times of the day there are a lot of people on foot in London Oxford Street. But the streets near the Ginze in Tokyo always have a lot of people on foot; and sometimes it is really difficult to walk. People are very polite; there are just too many of them.

The worst time to be in the street is at 11: 30 at night. That is when the night-clubs are closing and everybody wants to go home. There are 35,000 night-clubs in Tokyo, and you do not often see one that is empty.

During the day, most people travel to and from work by train. Tokyo people buy six million train tickets every day. At most stations, trains arrive every two or three minutes, but at certain hours there do not seem to be enough trains. Although they are usually crowded, Japanese trains are very good. They always leave and arrive on time. On a London train you would see everybody reading a newspaper. In Tokyo trains everybody in a seat seems to be asleep, whether his journey is long or short.

In Tokyo, I stood outside the station for five minutes. Three fire-engines (消防车) race past on the way to one of the many fires that Tokyo has every day. Tokyo has so many surprises that none of them can really surprise me now.

【1】Tokyo is different from London in that __________.

A. it has a larger population

B. there are more traffic jams

C. it is more difficult to go somewhere on foot

D. night clubs are sometimes empty

【2】Japanese trains __________.

A. often leave and arrive on time

B. are often crowded

C. are the main means people use to travel to and from work

D. all of the above

【3】Where can you find everybody reading a newspaper?

A. At most London train stations.

B. At most Tokyo train stations.

C. On a Tokyo train.

D. On a London train.

【4】Fires break out __________ in Tokyo according to the writer.

A. quite frequently (频繁)

B. only several times a day

C. not very often

D. very __________ seldom

【5】Which of the following is NOT true about Tokyo?

A. The streets become more crowded at 11 30 at night.

B. There are more trains than cars.

C. Fire-engines are very busy in the city.

D. Tokyo people are friendly.

【题目】Adventure is in my blood. And I had been considering how I was going to celebrate my high school graduation. I didn't just want a small in the backyard. I started thinking about doing a solo somewhere out of the ordinary. I took out and drew the 1, 500-mile route along which I would be from the northernmost point in Norway to the southernmost section of Sweden. When I my plans with my dad, he as I thought he would. Because I get my adventurous from him, he was all for it.

I had only been away from my three days now, but there was an inner going on inside of me. Part of me was homesick and doubting whether I could make it. The other part of me was ready to to myself and my family that I could do it by myself.

On the road, I met another who was quite a bit older than I was. He had started his journey by bike at the southern part of Norway and had just finished. I could tell he had a great sense of . It encouraged me not to .

As I listened to my artists on my MP4 player, I pedaled (踩踏板) with my feet. There was around me for miles. , that wasn't entirely true. There were mosquitoes一 millions of them. My arms were so dotted with that they looked like a topographical map (地形图). But, however it would be, nothing could stop my advance towards the destination. As you know, adventure is in my blood.

【1】A. meeting B. party C. conversation D. lecture

【2】A. flight B. interview C. trip D. performance

【3】A. instructions B. maps C. magazines D. newspapers

【4】A. walking B. biking C. flying D. running

【5】A. shared B. compared C. prepared D. changed

【6】A. left B. sighed C. agreed D. cried

【7】A. stories B. hobbies C. skills D. spirits

【8】A. home B. school C. hotel D. office

【9】A. request B. activity C. battle D. discussion

【10】A. certainly B. reasonably C. usually D. really

【11】A. turn B. reply C. prove D. adapt

【12】A. driver B. jogger C. bicyclis D. pilot

【13】A. slowly B. alone C. patiently D. worriedly

【14】A. humour B. direction C. satisfaction D. balance

【15】A. calm down B. break down C. speed up D. give up

【16】A. personal B. favourite C. professional D. successful

【17】A. nobody B. everybody C. anything D. everything

【18】A. Firstly B. Eventually C. Actually D. Fortunately

【19】A. wounds B. cuts C. dots D. bites

【20】A. boring B. difficult C. complex D. confusing

【题目】Tiny transmitters(发射机) fixed on the backs of the blue-green bees have allowed scientists to follow the insects as they fly for miles in search of rare flowers.

Working in Panama, scientists caught 17 bees of the common species and fixed a 300 milligram radio light onto the back of each. The signals they sent out were used to follow their movements in and around the forest where they lived.

Professor Martin, from Princeton University, US, and the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Germany, said, “By following the radio signals, we discovered that male bees spent most of their time in small centre areas, but could take off and visit areas farther away. One male even crossed over the shipping lanes in the Panama Canal, flying at least 5km, and returned a few days later.”

Researchers have struggled to follow the movements of bees before, following bees marked with paint or using radar which doesn’t work well in forests.

“Carrying the transmitter could reduce the distance that the bees travel, but even if the flight distances we record are the shortest distances that these bees can fly, they are impressive, long-distance movements,” said Dr. Roland Kays, from New York State Museum, a co-author of the research published today in the on-line journal. “This result helps to explain how these bees’ pollination(授粉) can be so rare.” Pollination by bees and other insects is the key to the diversity and continued growth of flowers and trees in some forests.

The new study is the first to use radio transmitters to follow bees in a forest. Similar research may now be carried in temperate forests, where bees also play a vital role.

【1The main purpose of the passage is to___

A.call on people to protect the bees for the environment

B.explain why the bees fly far away in search of flowers

C.introduce a modern way to follow the bees to readers

D.encourage the public to support the scientists’ research

【2】What was the problem when researchers tried to follow the bees in the past?

A. It was quite difficult to mark the bees

B. The radar itself didn’t work very well

C. The bees weren’t easy to be recognized

D. Environmental limits were hard to solve

【3】What Dr. Roland Kays said implied that____

A.he didn’t expect bees could fly so long a distance

B.The transmitter didn’t have any effects on bees at all

C.He wanted to know how far bees could travel badly

D.The record was in fact as exact as he had thought

【4】Researchers follow the movements of bees mainly to___

A.learn how far they can fly at most

B.discover how they affect the plants

C.correct some wrong ideas about bees

D.get to know where they enjoy living

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