题目内容

TWENTY-FIVE years ago director Stephen Spielberg captured the hearts of Western audiences with his family classic, E.T.Now his Hong Kong director Stephen Chow is trying to do the same trick in China.

Chow's latest movie CJ7, in cinemas now, is a heart-warming story about a poor migrant worker and his son.When a strange alien enters their lives, father and son learn a lesson about the value of family.

Chow hopes his movie will help to make family films more popular in China.

Family films have been the main part of the Hollywood market for the last 40 years.They have given audiences movies like E.T., Indiana Jones and Jurassic Park.However, there are few of these movies in China, where expensive history films are more popular.

A family film is not simply a children's movie.It is a film that is not only appropriate for children, but appeals to the whole family.

According to Raymond Zhou, a famous film critic, these films are rare in China because "very few families go to the cinema together".Because of this, there is little demand for movies that appeal to the whole family.

However, in the West, it is common for the family to sit down and watch a movie together.Tim Bridges, from London, says; "I love it at Christmas when I sit down and watch a movie with my family."

All family films contain similar messages about being honest; remaining positive and learning there is more to life than money.According to the American movie reviewer, Dave Johnson, this is because "When parents watch a movie, they want their children to be learning good values".

Just like when the alien in Spielberg's E.T.phones home to make contact with his family, Chow will hope Chinese audiences are tuned in and ready to receive his family movie message.

1.Which of the following movies does not belong to family films?

       A.E.T.                               B.Indiana Jones.

       C.Jurassic Park                            D.Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck

2.What is the family film according to the passage?

       A.A kind of film that is meant not only for children but also for adults.

       B.A kind of film that is only suitable for adults.

       C.A kind of film that is suitable for children rather than adults.

       D.A kind of film that is not fierce and heart-breaking.

3.What is implied in the passage?

       A.Family films are very popular in the U.S.A.

       B.Many parents don't let their children watch family films in the U.S.A.

       C.The Chinese don't like family films.

       D.The movie CJ7 has nothing in common with E.T.

4.According to Raymond Zhou's words, we can know that ____.

       A.the Chinese don't need family films because they live in harmony

       B.the number of people in families in China is so small that the family films are not suitable for them

       C.in China family members seldom see films together

       D.there is great demand for family movies in China in the future

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第三部分:阅读理解(共20题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项中,选出最佳选项。
From age eight to eleven, I attended a small school in Bath, England. It was a small school of four classes with about twenty-five children in each class according to age. For the most part, one teacher had to teach all subjects to the children in the class. However, sometimes the headmaster, Mr. Ronald Broaches, would come in and spend an hour or so, teaching some subjects in which he was especially interested. He was a large man with a very happy nature. He had a sense of humor and would delight in telling the children small stories that would make us laugh. He was a very fair man and had a great influence on many of the children. In my own case, I found that he took great interest in me and he quickly found that I enjoyed puzzles. He would often stop me as I was going to class and take a piece of paper out of his pocket, often with a puzzle already on it. The puzzles were usually mathematical or logical. As time went on, they slowly got more difficult, but I loved them. Not only that, they made me interested in math and problem solving that stays with me to this day. They also served to show me that intellectual activity was rewarding when the correct answers were found, but perhaps more importantly it was great fun. To this day, I can remember Mr. Broaches’ cheerful cry of “Well done!” whenever I got a problem right. The simple communication with a man whom I loved greatly has had a deep influence on my life. I shall forever be thankful that our paths crossed. Mr. Broaches died just two weeks after I had won the 1993 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Unluckily, I had no chance to speak to him before he died. I learnt later that he had heard of my success and I will always hope that he knew the deep influence he had made on my life.
56. There were ________ children in each class when Richard was in     the school in Bath, England.
A. 4          B. 8        C. 11              D. 25
57. From the text, we can learn that ___________.
A. the puzzles made the students laugh
B. the students were afraid of the headmaster
C. the puzzles made Richard enjoy math
D. the headmaster never taught in the school
58. The writer felt sorry because __________.
A. Mr. Broaches had passed away before he won the Nobel Prize
B. he didn’t express his thanks before Mr. Broaches died
C. he couldn’t find Mr. Broaches after he grew up
D. Mr. Broaches didn’t know his success
59. What is the best title(标题)for the text ?
A. The Story of Mr. Broaches.
B. The Story of Richard J. Roberts.
C. My Early School Life.
D. An Important Teacher in My Life.

A few years ago, an Englishman called Roy Jones went on holiday to a small seaside town in the west of England. He was swimming in the sea one day when, as he opened his mouth, his false teeth fell out and floated away. The following year, Mr. Jones returned to the same town. As he was having dinner in a local café one evening, he mentioned the story of his lost teeth to the manager. The manager looked surprised. He explained that he had found a set of false teeth on the beach last month. Then he asked Roy Jones if he wanted to try them on. “OK”, said Mr. Jones. “I suppose it won’t do any harm.” When the manager brought him the teeth, Mr. Jones put them into his mouth, and laughed and laughed. They were his.

In 1987, an American couple called Jane and Robert Bentley went for a picnic on a beach in California. When they returned home, Mrs. Bentley realized that she had lost her wedding ring. It wasn’t a lot of money but it was valuable to Jane Bentley. The Bentleys drove straight back to the beach, and searched for the ring for three hours, but could not find it. A few months later, Mr. Bentley went fishing off the same beach. As he pulled a large crab out of the sea, he noticed that there was something attached to one of its claws. It was his wife’s wedding ring!

At the end of the 19th century, a young woman called Rose Harcourt was on her honeymoon in Barmouth, North Wales, when she lost a gold bracelet her husband had given her as a wedding gift. Feeling very upset, she went straight to the police stations and asked if anyone had found her bracelet. Unfortunately, no one had. Twenty-five years later, the Harcourts returned to Barmouth to celebrate their wedding anniversary. They were sitting on the beach one day when Mrs. Harcourt noticed something gold in the sand by the edge of the sea. She walked down to see what it was, and discovered her gold bracelet that had been missing for 25 years.

1.Roy Jones lost his false teeth __________ .

A.when he opened his mouth to have some food

B.when he opened his mouth as he was swimming

C.The moment he got into the sea to start swimming

D.when he was having his holiday at the sea side

2.Jane Bentley’s wedding ring was missing for __________ before it was found.

A.three hours        B.almost a year       C.several months     D.25 years

3.From the story of the Harcourts we may understand the underlined “to celebrate their wedding anniversary” may be close in meaning to __________ .

A.having a wedding again                   B.experiencing their honeymoon feelings again

C.having a honeymoon again                D.joining in the local celebrations

 

Researchers in the United States have developed the first wirelessly controlled device that can supply a drug directly into the body. A small chip is implanted (植入) under the skin. It contains the medicine, which it releases at preset times. The developers say the device could improve the lives of millions of people who take medicine for long-term illnesses. A company called Microchips began developing the device about fifteen years ago. Last month, the company released the results of its first successful tests in humans. The tests took place in Denmark with seven women with osteoporosis(骨质疏松症).

Osteoporosis causes bones to become weak and break easily. The disorder is common among older people especially women. Many patients have to give themselves daily injection(注射)of medicine. One type of treatment requires injections for two years. The patients stop taking the medicine because of the pain and stress of the injections. As a result, only twenty-five percent of the patients will go through the entire twenty-four months of treatment.

The microchip is a few centimeters long. It has small sections and each section holds a single dose(单次剂量)of medicine. The device has to be programmed with the times to release the drug. Doctors will be able to reprogram the device from a computer or even a cell phone.

For osteoporosis, the physician will program the device, and the device has the ability to release a dose at a given time, every single day. For other diseases, where the physician may want to change the dosing schedule, they will have the ability to wirelessly reprogram that dosing schedule.

The seven women in the study were ages of sixty-five to seventy. The researchers say the implants were just as effective as daily injections. And they say the medicine amounts were more exact than patients often give themselves.

1.The best title for the passage should be ______.

A.A New Company Called Microchips

B.A New Way to Take Medicine Every Day

C.Good News for Women with Osteoporosis

D.Taking Medicine, with Microchip under Skin

2.What does the underlined word “released” in paragraph 1 mean?

A.Announced.       B.Planned.          C.Got rid of.         D.Caught hold of.

3.We can learn from Paragraph 2 that ______.

A.older people especially men easily develop steoporosis

B.bones’ becoming weak and breaking easily causes steoporosis

C.a quarter of the patients will go through the entire two years of treatment

D.pain and stress of the injections lead all patients to stop taking medicine

4.What advantages does the microchip have?

a. effective implants  

b. less exact medicine amounts

c. purposely—changed dosing schedule

d. only one centimeter long and having small sections

e. improving the lives of millions of people

A.a, b, c            B.c, d, e            C.a, c, e            D.b, c, d

5.In which column of a newspaper could we find this passage?

A.Arts.             B.Jobs.             C.Sports.            D.Medicine.

 

When I was in college twenty-five years ago, I spent four summers working as a maid in housekeeping at a grand hotel in downtown Chicago. I did not enter the world of housekeeping enthusiastically. I had been hoping to get a job as an office assistant. When that failed, I had no choice but to work as a maid.

It was tiring work, cleaning up to eighteen rooms a day. My poor attitude reflected my disdain(蔑视) for cleaning toilets, changing bed sheets, dusting, and vacuuming eight hours a day for the comfort of total strangers who rarely left a tip. My maid work was just so-so until the day I was assigned to the eighteenth floor.

That was Lorena’s regular floor. The only time another maid set foot on it was on Lorena’s day off. If you left a little rubbish on the floor, a small tissue under the bed, or a pillow uncleaned, Lorena would hunt you down when she returned. She’d ended her lecture to me with, “Take some pride in your work.”

She did. And so did Rosalie, Helen, Annette, Pearlie, Earline, and all the other career maids with more than one hundred years of experience among them. Their commitment to doing a good job and their belief that their work was a reflection of their character stuck with me throughout my professional career. I learned a lot from them those four summers.

【写作内容】

   1、以约30词概括上文的主要内容。

   2、以约120词谈谈暑假生活,内容包括:

    (1) 你是否做过暑期工;

(2) 你打算如何度过高考后的暑假;

(3) 你认为怎样过暑假才有意义。

【写作要求】

    1作文中可以使用亲身经历或虚构的故事.也可以参照阅读材料的内容,但不得直接引用原文中的句子。

    2作文中不能出现真实姓名和学校名称。

【评分标准】

   概括准确,语言规范,内容合适,语篇连贯。  

 

Here is the Nine O’clock News:

    1. President Absul Krim of Syria says that the danger of war in the Middle East is greater now than for the past two years. His country does not want war,he says,but the Syrian people have waited too long for an end to the troubles with their neighbors. If war comes,says Mr. Krim, Syria will be ready.

    2. Ben Kitson,a writer of stories and plays for children,has died at his home in California. Mr. Kitson was 82. His most famous book of stories,“The Gentleman‘s House” sells all over the world,in more than twenty-five languages.

    3. Policemen in New York have gone on strike. Their leader Mr. Paul Angeli says that they will return to work only when they receive more money for working long hours and doing what Mr. Angeli calls “the most dangerous job in the city”。

    4. It has been a good year on the farm. The warm, wet spring and the fine summer have been very good for all kinds of food plants. This means that fruits and vegetables will cost less in the shops this year.

5. MORE than 1,100 people committed suicide(自杀)in Beijing last year, and experts have been encouraging the capital to set up a mental health care system as soon as possible,local media reported last week. About 20 per cent of the people of Beijing live in unhealthy conditions,with 3 per cent of these suffering from affective disorder and 5 per cent reporting symptoms(症状)of depression,according to the Beijing Mental Health Service Centre.

1.The Syrian people _______.

A. are ready and waiting for war

B. are ready to wait another two years for war

C. do not want war,but will be ready if it comes

D. are a great danger of peace in the Middle East

2. Mr. Kitson wrote _______.

A. plays and stories for children

B. 82 stories about his home in California

C. in more than twenty-five languages

D. books,and then sold them all over the world

3. It can be inferred from the third piece of news that _________.

A. policemen in New York hate their dangerous jobs

B. policemen in New York love their important jobs

C. the government will refuse to raise the policemen‘s salary and the policemen will never return to work

D. the government will be forced to raise the policemen‘s salary and the policemen will return to work

4.As food plants have grown well, _______.

A. fruit and vegetables will be cheaper this year

B. there will be a warm,wet spring and a fine summer

C. food will be cheaper than it was in the spring

D. plants will be cheaper in the shops this year

5. What is the best title for the last pieces of news?

A. MORE than 1,100 people committed suicide(自杀)in Beijing last year.

B. About 20 per cent of the people of Beijing live in unhealthy conditions.

C. Beijing needs mental health care

D. People living in Beijing suffer a lot.

 

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