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Take a look at the label(标签) on almost any bottle of milk and you may see the word PASTEURIZED. What does that mean? Let’s find out by meeting Louis Pasteur.
Louis Pasteur was born in 1822 in a little town in France. As he grew up, he loved to paint. He loved to look at the world around him. When he went to college in Paris, he showed interest in looking through a microscope. A microscope makes things look a lot bigger; it lets you see things you can’t see just with your eyes. Looking through a microscope, Pasteur found a living world in a drop of water. He saw and drew pictures of the small living things -- he called them “microbes” or “germs”-- that crowded in a drop of water.
One day a winemaker came into the lab, hoping that someone could help him with his problem. “Sometimes my wine tastes delicious, but sometimes terrible,” he said to Pasteur. “Can you help me find out why?”
Pasteur put some drops of the wine under the microscope. He noticed that the terrible wine had some unusual germs. If he killed these germs, maybe he could keep the wine from turning terrible. He tried with different ways to kill the germs. In the end he found heating (加热) the wine seemed to work best. The winemaker tried it, and every bottle of wine tasted good.
Pasteur’s idea worked for other people, too. When farmers heated milk, it didn’t turn bad so quickly. When breweries heated beer, it tasted better. People called it “pasteurization” ---heating a liquid to kill bad germs. Aren’t you glad that the milk you drink has been pasteurized?
- 1.
The Chinese meaning for the word “microbes” is____.
- A.病毒
- B.真菌
- C.支原体
- D.微生物
- A.
- 2.
Which is the right order in Pasteur’s life story?
(1). He received college education in Paris.
(2) He helped to find some unusual germs in some drops of wine.
(3) A new way of killing bad germs--pasteurization was found out.
(4)He was born in 1822 in a little town in France.
(5) Microbes were found by Louis Pasteur with the help of a microscope.- A.2; 1; 3; 5; 4
- B.4; 1; 5; 2; 3
- C.4; 1; 3; 5; 2
- D.3; 1; 2; 5; 4
- A.
- 3.
What do you think Louis Pasteur was like from the passage?
- A.Clever, helpful and hard-working.
- B.Quiet, helpful and kind-hearted.
- C.Brave, careful and hard-working.
- D.Clever, serious and kind-hearted.
- A.
- 4.
Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?
- A.Germs only live in something that is bad.
- B.Louis found the way to kill the unusual germs in the wine by chance (偶然).
- C.Everybody knows what the word PASTEURIZED means.
- D.Pasteurization is used to kill bad germs in the milk we drink.
- A.
- 5.
What does the passage mainly tell us?
- A.What life Louis Pasteur lived.
- B.How to make milk clean.
- C.How pasteurization was invented.
- D.What to do with wine.
- A.
I’ve seen friends deal with it in all kinds of different ways. One strict mother insisted(坚持) that her son, right from a child, should stand up whenever anyone entered the room, open doors and shake hands like a gentleman. I saw him last week when I called round. Sprawling(四肢摊开)himself on the sofa in full length, he made no attempt to turn off the loud TV he was watching as I walked in, and his greeting was only a quick look at me. His mother was ashamed. “I don't know what to do with him these days,” she said. “He’s forgotten all the manners we taught him.”
He hasn't forgotten them. He’s just decided that he’s not going to use them. She admitted(承认)that she would like to come up behind him and throw him down from the sofa onto the floor.
Another good friend of mine let her two daughters climb all over the furniture, reach across the table, stare at me and say, “I don’t like your dress; it’s ugly.” One of the daughters has recently been driven out of school. The other has left home.
“Where did we go wrong?” her parents are now very sad. Probably nowhere much. At least, no more than the rest of that unfortunate race, parents.
小题1:This text is most probably written by ______.
A.a specialist in teenager studies |
B.a headmaster of a middle school |
C.a parent with teenage children |
D.a doctor for mental health problems |
A.the change from good to bad that’s seen in a child |
B.the way that parents often complained about themselves |
C.the opinion that a child has of his parents |
D.the advice that parents want their children to follow |
A.clever | B.quiet | C.unusual | D.rude |
A.pay no attention to them |
B.are too busy to look after them |
C.have come to hate them |
D.feel helpless to do much about them |
A.Parents have no choice but to try to accept it. |
B.Parents should pay still more attention to the change. |
C.Parents should work more closely with school teachers. |
D.Parents cause the change in their children. |
I’ve seen friends deal with it in all kinds of different ways. One strict mother insisted that her son, right from a child, should stand up whenever anyone entered the room, open doors and shake hands like a gentleman. I saw him last week when I called round. Sprawling himself on the sofa in full length, he made no attempt to turn off the loud TV he was watching as I walked in, and his greeting was no more than a quick glance at me. His mother was ashamed. “I don’t know what to do with him these days,” she said. “He’s forgotten all the manners we taught him.” He hasn’t forgotten them. He’s just decided that he’s not going to use them. She confessed(坦白) that she would like to come up behind him and throw him down from the sofa onto the floor.
Another good friend of mine let her two daughters climb all over the furniture, reach across the table, stare at me and say, “I don’t like your dress; it’s ugly.” One of the daughters has recently been driven out of school. The other has left home.
“Where did we go wrong?” her parents are now very sad. Probably nowhere much. At least, no more than the rest of that unfortunate race, parents.
小题1: This text is most probably written by ______.
A.A specialist in teenager studies. |
B.a headmaster of a middle school |
C.a parent with teenage children |
D.a doctor for mental health problems |
A.the change from good to bad that’s seen in a child |
B.the way that parents often blame themselves |
C.the opinion that a child has of his parents |
D.the advice that parents want their children to follow |
A.lazy | B.quiet | C.unusual | D.rude |
A.pay no attention to them |
B.are too busy to look after them |
C.have come to hate them |
D.feel helpless to do much about them |
A.Parents have no choice but to try to accept it. |
B.Parents should pay still more attention to the change. |
C.Parents should work more closely with school teachers. |
D.Parents are a fault for the change in their children. |
完形填空。 | ||||
It is common in English to ask people about their holiday. In the West, many 1 go away on holiday during the summer months, 2 so it is very usual to 3 about this. If the holiday has not 4 taken place, then their holiday plans 5 be talked about. And if it is already 6 , then where they went, whether they 7 it and so on can be discussed. Similar questions are asked 8 some public holidays. 9 living and working in China often 10 opportunities (机会) for travel, either at weekends or during 11 holidays, so such kind of 12 lead to fruitful discussions. They may be 13 to know if they have chosen the 14 places, especially those a little less 15 ones. | ||||
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Parents should stop blaming themselves because there’s not a lot they can do about it. I mean the teenager problem. Whatever you do or however you choose to deal with it, at certain times a wonderful, reasonable and helpful child will turn into a terrible animal.
I’ve seen friends deal with it in all kinds of different ways. One strict mother insisted that her son, right from a child, should stand up whenever anyone entered the room, open doors and shake hands like a gentleman. I saw him last week when I called round. Sprawling himself on the sofa in full length, he made no attempt to turn off the loud TV he was watching as I walked in, and his greeting was no more than a quick glance at me. His mother was ashamed. “I don’t know what to do with him these days,” she said. “He’s forgotten all the manners we taught him.” He hasn’t forgotten them. He’s just decided that he’s not going to use them. She confessed(坦白) that she would like to come up behind him and throw him down from the sofa onto the floor.
Another good friend of mine let her two daughters climb all over the furniture, reach across the table, stare at me and say, “I don’t like your dress; it’s ugly.” One of the daughters has recently been driven out of school. The other has left home.
“Where did we go wrong?” her parents are now very sad. Probably nowhere much. At least, no more than the rest of that unfortunate race, parents.
【小题1】 This text is most probably written by ______.
A.A specialist in teenager studies. |
B.a headmaster of a middle school |
C.a parent with teenage children |
D.a doctor for mental health problems |
A.the change from good to bad that’s seen in a child |
B.the way that parents often blame themselves |
C.the opinion that a child has of his parents |
D.the advice that parents want their children to follow |
A.lazy | B.quiet | C.unusual | D.rude |
A.pay no attention to them |
B.are too busy to look after them |
C.have come to hate them |
D.feel helpless to do much about them |
A.Parents have no choice but to try to accept it. |
B.Parents should pay still more attention to the change. |
C.Parents should work more closely with school teachers. |
D.Parents are a fault for the change in their children. |