题目内容
For Lee Ann Laraway, polio(脑灰质炎) has made almost everything in life just out of reach. But what her hands can't retrieve, her assistant can. Meet Jeannie, a three-year-old help, has become Lee Ann's arms and legs.
Jeannie understands no fewer than 72 commands. To get a feel for what that means, Lee Ann takes us on a shopping trip in San Jose. First stop: The bank, where she got cash from the teller. From the bank, it's on to the drug store, where Jeannie got a candy bar for Lee Ann. Then Jeannie helped pay the cashier, and got change hack.
"When you have a really good working animal, they come and interact with you all the time," Lee Ann said. While there's no argument that Jeannie is an ordinary animal, she wasn't born that way. She was tutored and trained here at a facility that has become the final legacy of one of the Bay Area's most beloved figures.
Canine Companions for Independence sits on twelve acres of land in Santa Rosa donated by late Peanuts cartoonist Charles Shultz, Here, handlers work with specially selected labs for hours a day— but not every dog will make the cut.
The work is serious Business. In the case of hearing dogs, the animals alert their disabled owners to everything from ringing telephones to doorbells.
Other dogs will work with severely disabled patients like eight-year-old Noah Habib of Mountain View who communicates with a special computer. "I like it when new people come up to ask me about my dog," he says. "People are really interested in the dog and will come over and ask to pet her and ask to play with her, and ask about what she does, and these are people that normally might not approach us and want to talk to Noah," says his Dad.
And back in San Jose Lee Ann is arriving home with Jeannie and her groceries. With just one chore left—opening her own door. "You can train a dog to do a lot of things," said Lee Ann. "You cannot give them the heart to do the job, and that is what a good working dog has."
- 1.
Lee Ann's dog Jeannie cannot ______.
- A.get cash at the bank
- B.pay a cashier for her
- C.take on a telephone for her
- D.open the door
- A.
- 2.
Canine Companions for Independence is a place for ______.
- A.severely disabled children to have practice
- B.people to donate money or legacy
- C.ordinary dogs to be coached
- D.people to learn business
- A.
- 3.
Which of the following can replace the phrase "make the cut" (Line 3, Para 4)?
- A.become a good working dog
- B.hurt the coach
- C.become a helpful star
- D.hurt itself
- A.
- 4.
According to Lee Ann, you cannot train an ordinary dog ______.
- A.to put things on people's laps
- B.to always interact with its owner
- C.to alert deaf people
- D.to love working
- A.
1.本题问“Lee Ann的狗Jeannie不能做什么?”文章第五段第二句谈到,In the case of hearing dogs, the animals alert their disabled owners to everything from ringing telephones to doorbells,也就是说,就帮助听觉的狗来说,它们可以告知主人包括电话铃响、门铃响等任何事,但是并未说为主人接电话,故可以推断B“帮她打电话”不能做到,所以B正确。
A“从银行取现金”。由文章第二段Lee Ann Laraway展示让她的狗Jeannie完成一系列的任务,第一站在银行从出纳员那里拿到现金可知,本项是狗能办到的。
C“替她给收银员付钱”。由文章第二段可知,Jeannie和Lee Ann出了银行到杂货店,Jeannie给Lee Ann找到糖,帮助付钱给收款员,然后把找的钱拿回。因此本项小狗也能办到。
D“开门”。文中最后一段提到小狗还有最后一项任务——开门,所以本项也是狗能办到的。
2.C本题问“独立生活犬伴侣是一个什么样的地方?”文中第三段提到Jeannie “wasn't born that way.She was tutored and trained here”,接着就开始对Canine Companions for Independence的介绍,也就是说,“独立生活犬伴侣”就是Jeannie得到训练的地方。故C“普通狗接受训练的地方”正确。
A“严重残疾的儿童获得练习的地方”。这个地方是为狗得到训练后为残疾儿童服务而设置的,而不是为残疾儿童没置的。
B“人们捐钱或捐赠遗产的地方”。第四段第一句说“独立生活犬伴侣”位于Santa Rosa,占地十二英亩,由已故小人物漫画家Charles Shultz捐资建成。这是说明该组织的建立方式而不是运营方式,这里并不是所有人捐款的地方。
D“人们学习经商的地方”。第五段第一句提到,“这工作是个严肃的活”,这里business的意思是“工作”而不是“经商”,本项考查考生对business多项含义的把握。
3.A 本题问“下列哪一项能够替换词组‘make the cut’?”这是一道语义题。文章第三段讲到好的工作犬并非生来如此,而是经过训练而成的。接着在第四段第二句说“Here,handlers work with specially selected labs for hours a day—but not every dog will make the cut.”前半句说训犬师每天花好几个小时训练经精心挑选的lasb(即 Labrador retrievers的缩写,一种杂交犬,有叨物归主的习性),后半句是转折的内容,说不是每只狗都能经过训练达到目的,也就是说成为好的工作犬。故A“成为好的工作犬”正确。
B“成为有益的明星”。本文讲的是训练狗为残疾人服务而不是以表演为目的,所以不应该推断出明星的意思。
C“伤害教练”。
D“伤害自己”。文中要说的是狗训练成功不容易,并没有说训练过程中发生的事。这是对cut一词的歪曲。
4.本题问“根据Lee Ann所悦,你无法训练狗做到的事是什么?”文章最后一句“You can train a dog to do a lot of things,”said Lee Ann.“You cannot give them the heart to do the job, and that is what a good working dog has.”也就是说,你可以训练狗做许多事情,但是你不能教它有工作的热心,而只有优秀的工作犬才具备这样的素质。故D“热爱工作”正确。
A“把东西放在人们腿上”。
B“提醒听不见声音的残疾人”。文章第五段第二句说就帮助听觉的狗来说,它们可以告知主人包括电话铃响、门铃响等任何事,可见这是可以被训练出来的。
C“总是和主人交流”。虽然文中没有提到是否可以训练狗这样做,但是题干问的是“根据Lee Ann所说”,所以均非正确选项。
These days everyone is worried about the size of their carbon footprint. In order to reduce global warming we need to make our carbon footprints smaller. But how much CO2 are we responsible for?
A new book by Mike Berners Lee, an expert, might be able to help. The carbon footprint looks at the different things we do and buy, and calculates the amount of CO2 all of the following created: the ingredients, the electricity, the equipment, the travel and commuting of the beer, and the packaging. It’s amazing how many different things need to be included in each calculation. And it’s frightening how much carbon dioxide everything produces.
This can help us decide which beer to drink. From Berners Lee’s calculations, it’s clear that a pint (568ml) of locally brewed beer has a smaller carbon footprint than a bottle of imported beer. This is because the imported beer has been transported from far away, and it uses more packaging. The local beer only produces 300g of CO2, but the imported beer produces 900g! So, one pint of local beer is better for the environment.
Berners Lee has even calculated the carbon footprint of cycling to work. Nothing is more environmentally friendly than riding a bike, surely? Well, it depends on what you’ve had to eat before. To ride a bike we need energy and for energy we need food. So if we eat a banana and then ride a kilometer, our footprint is 65g of CO2. However, if we eat bacon before the ride, it’s 200g. In fact, bananas are good because they don’t need packaging, they can be transported by boat and they grow in natural sunlight.
So, does this mean that cycling is bad for the environment? Absolutely not, for a start, if you cycle, you don’t use your car, and the fewer cars on the road, the fewer traffic jams. And cars in traffic jams produce three times more CO2 than cars traveling at speed. Cycling also makes you healthy and less likely to go to hospital. So maybe it’s time for us all to start making some changes. Pass me a banana and a pint of local beer, please.
【小题1】Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?
A.Everything produces carbon dioxide equally. |
B.The imported beer is much better than the local beer in quality. |
C.Actually bananas are good in general because they produce less CO2. |
D.To make our carbon footprints smaller, we should often drink more beer. |
A.make | B.put | C.look after | D.take place |
A.To tell the differences among bikes, beer and bananas. |
B.To call on us to take action to make carbon footprint smaller. |
C.To introduce what CO2 really is in our life. |
D.To remind us to start healthy eating habits. |
A.In a science fiction story. | B.In a newspaper advertisement. |
C.In a science research report. | D.In a travel magazine. |
PART FOUR WRITING
Section A
Directions: Read the following passage. Complete the diagram by using the information for the passage. Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
Losing weight is difficult, and keeping it off may be even harder. So Harvard researchers set out to determine exactly how much physical activity women need in midlife to avoid gaining weight as they age.
The researchers found that an hour of moderate activity a day — including such recreational activities as brisk walking, leisurely bicycling, ballroom dancing and playing with children — prevented women of normal weight from gaining more than five pounds over any three-year period. Half that amount of vigorous activity, like running, jogging or fast biking, will do the trick as well, they said.
Women who got the same amount of exercise but were heavier to start with were not able to avoid gaining weight, however. Neither were women of normal weight who got less than seven hours a week of moderate activity, according to the study, published in the March 24 issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association.
The average weight gain over the course of the 15-year study, which followed 34,079 healthy women with an average age of 54 at the beginning, was just over five pounds. The researchers did not take diet into account.
“It’s so hard to lose weight and maintain the loss, so whatever weight you are, you should try to stay that weight — that is a success,” said the paper’s lead author, Dr. I-Min Lee, an associate professor of epidemiology at Harvard School of Public Health.
But any amount of exercise is beneficial, she emphasized. “People shouldn’t just throw up their hands and say, ‘Sixty minutes? I can’t do that,’ and give up. Health is more than weight.”
Title: A research on how to 71
72 | To determine how much physical activity women need in midlife to avoid gaining weight as they age | |||
73 | Research objects | 74 | Types of exercise[来 | Weight gain |
Women 75 | An hour of moderate activity a day | ● Brisk walking ● Leisurely bicycling ● 76 ● Playing with children | 77 five pounds over a three-year period | |
Half an hour of vigorous activity a day | ● Running ● Jogging ● 78 | |||
Less than 79 a week of moderate activity | Not being avoided | |||
Heavier women | The same as the above | |||
Suggestions | ● Staying your weight ● 80 |
PART FOUR WRITING
Section A
Directions: Read the following passage. Complete the diagram by using the information for the passage. Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer.
Losing weight is difficult, and keeping it off may be even harder. So Harvard researchers set out to determine exactly how much physical activity women need in midlife to avoid gaining weight as they age.
The researchers found that an hour of moderate activity a day — including such recreational activities as brisk walking, leisurely bicycling, ballroom dancing and playing with children — prevented women of normal weight from gaining more than five pounds over any three-year period. Half that amount of vigorous activity, like running, jogging or fast biking, will do the trick as well, they said.
Women who got the same amount of exercise but were heavier to start with were not able to avoid gaining weight, however. Neither were women of normal weight who got less than seven hours a week of moderate activity, according to the study, published in the March 24 issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association.
The average weight gain over the course of the 15-year study, which followed 34,079 healthy women with an average age of 54 at the beginning, was just over five pounds. The researchers did not take diet into account.
“It’s so hard to lose weight and maintain the loss, so whatever weight you are, you should try to stay that weight — that is a success,” said the paper’s lead author, Dr. I-Min Lee, an associate professor of epidemiology at Harvard School of Public Health.
But any amount of exercise is beneficial, she emphasized. “People shouldn’t just throw up their hands and say, ‘Sixty minutes? I can’t do that,’ and give up. Health is more than weight.”
Title: A research on how to 71
72 | To determine how much physical activity women need in midlife to avoid gaining weight as they age | |||
73 | Research objects | 74 | Types of exercise | Weight gain |
Women 75 | An hour of moderate activity a day | ● Brisk walking ● Leisurely bicycling ● 76 ● Playing with children | 77 five pounds over a three-year period | |
Half an hour of vigorous activity a day | ● Running ● Jogging ● 78 | |||
Less than 79 a week of moderate activity | Not being avoided | |||
Heavier women | The same as the above | |||
Suggestions | ● Staying your weight ● 80 |