网址:http://m.1010jiajiao.com/timu3_id_3004665[举报]
(江西省抚州一中2009届高三第四次模拟考试C篇)
Hotel Reservations
Welcome to the Kampala Beach Hotel Reservations(预定)System. You can reserve a room or package one of three ways: (a) online, (b) by phone, and(c)by email.
Did you know? You can take advantage of special savings by booking direct with us online.
A.Online Reservations
Enter your travel dates and the number of guests below to book your room online now.
Click here to check on an existing online reservation.
If you are searching for a specific package, please make sure your check-in and check-out dates allowing for the minimum number of nights in the package.
You may make reservations for a maximum of 4 guests per room. For requests of 10 rooms or more, please refer to Group Accommodations.
B.Reservations By Phone
If you prefer to reserve by phone, please call:
Toll Free from the USA, Canada, and Hawaii: +1-800-262-8450
Worldwide Direct: +1-808-661-0011
Hours (Hawaii Standard Time):
Monday to Friday: 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday: 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday: 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.
C. Reservations By E-mail
If you prefer to submit(提交) an e-mail reservations request, click here.
Submitting an e-mail request does not guarantee a reservation. For immediate confirmation and booking, please use online reservations engine above.
64. What is the purpose of writing the passage?
A.To attract more tourists to the hotel.
B.To introduce a new hotel.
C.To show the importance of science.
D.To make the trip for tourists easier.
65. If you want an immediate booking, you’d better use“ ”.
A.Online Reservations B.Reservations By Phone
C.Reservations By E-mail D.Did you know?
66. From the passage we may infer the hotel is in __________ .
A.Canada B.mainland America
C.French D.Hawaii
67. If you want to book a package you have to __________ . .
A.submit an e-mail reservations request
B.make sure of your check-in and check-out dates
C.refer to Group Accommodations
D.wait for further notice
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Every day from the time we wake up until the time we go to bed, we are bombarded with information from all sides, from TV, radio, newspapers and books; from family, friends, and colleagues. As a new cable television subscriber, I am absolutely amazed at the quantity and varying levels of information quality on cable television. Including the networks, there are eight TV "news" organizations vying to provide us with all the information we can possibly absorb. Newspaper, magazines, books, radio, the Internet, email, snail mail, and the telephone all compete for our attention and our minds. At the office conversations around the water cooler and coffee maker serve to spread even more items of information.
There is valuable information out there about the world we live in, on topics as varied as health, safety, traffic, nutrition, business, finance, philosophy, nature, science, weather, history and the human condition. There is also a large amount of misleading and outright false information, not just on controversial subjects such as politics and religion but on any topic one can think of, including all of the topics mentioned above.
With all this information coming at us from all directions, how does one sift through it all to sort out the facts from the fiction, the truth from the lies, the more important from the less important? Should we turn off the TV, cancel our newspaper subscriptions, disconnect our phones and modems to become information "hermits"? Probably not.
A better method of sifting through the information wave without being overwhelmed and confused is to become a skeptical inquirer-or skeptic-with regard to the surrounding world. By "skeptic"-I do not mean a cynic-a person who rejects new ideas simply because they are new. A skeptic is one who questions the validity of a particular claim by calling for evidence to prove or disprove it. Skepticism is a method, not a position. It is a provisional approach to all factual claims. In terms of processing information, a skeptic needs to be able to grasp reality and acquire knowledge about the environment that agrees with reason, logic, and evidence. In other words, as skeptics, when we hear a claim that may or may not be fantastic, we should say, "That's nice, prove it."
72.The writer implies that if we want to make some judgments about some information, the first thing that we should do is to .
A. ask for the information B. cut off all channels of information
C. receive and go through the information D. become information "hermits"
73. What does the author say is the more reasonable approach to processing the information wave?
A. A skeptical approach. B. A subjective approach.
C. A cynical approach. D. A philosophical approach.
74. What can we conclude from the difference between a skeptic and a cynic?
A. Skeptics are reasonable but cynics are too optimistic.
B. Skeptics are reasonable but cynics are too pessimistic(opposite of optimistic).
C. Skeptics take a position but cynics are extreme in their attitude.
D. Skeptics reject all new ideas but cynics only reject some of them.
75. When faced with an incredible or fantastic claim, what shall we do according to the author?
A. Ask questions and look for proof. B. Ignore the information and its source.
C. Change the subject immediately.
D. Try to consult an expert who knows the truth.
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Each of us fails from time to time. If we are wise, we accept these failures as a 36 part of the learning process. But all too often as parents and teachers we disallow this 37 right to our children.
When I see a child 38 to this kind of pressure, I think of Donnie.
Donnie was my youngest third grader. His 39 of failure kept him from classroom games that other children enjoyed. He 40 answered questions—he might be wrong.
I tried my best to build his 41 . But nothing changed until midterm, when Mary Anne, a student teacher, was assigned(安排) to our classroom.
She was young and pretty, and she loved children. My pupils, Donnie included, 42 her.
One morning, we were working math problems at the chalkboard. Donnie had 43 the problems with painstaking neatness. Pleased with his progress, I 44 the children with Mary Anne and went for art materials. When I returned, Donnie was in 45 . He'd missed the third problem.
My student teacher looked at me in despair. Suddenly her face 46 . From the desk we shared, she got a container filled with pencils.
“Look, Donnie,” she said, kneeling beside him and gently 47 the tearstained face from his arms. “I've got something to 48 you.” She removed the pencils, one at a time, and placed them on his desk.
“See these 49 , Donnie,” she continued. “They belong to Mrs Lindstrom and me. See how the erasers are 50 ? That's because we make mistakes too. But we erase the mistakes and try again. That's what you 51 learn to do, too.”
She kissed him and stood up. “Here,” she said, “I'll leave one of these pencils on 52 desk so you'll remember that everybody makes mistakes, 53 teachers.” Donnie looked up with love in his eyes and a smile.
The pencil became Donnie's 54 possession. That, together with Mary Anne's frequent encouragement, gradually 55 him that it's all right to make mistakes—as long as you erase them and try again.
36.A.small B. basic C. necessary D. large
37.A.correct B. same C. important D. natural
38.A.suffering B. object C. fall D. subject
39.A.fear B. lesson C. chance D. sense
40.A.always B. often C. never D. seldom
41.A.selfprotection B. selfimprovement C. selfconfidence D. selflearning
42.A.respected B. disliked C. avoided D. mined
43.A.worked out B. copied C. gone over D. leaned
44.A.left B. offered C. missed D. parted
45.A.surprise B. astonishment C. anger D. tears
46.A.darkened B. brightened C. pulled D. loosened
47.A.lifting B. picking C. holding D. pushing
48.A.help B. show C. reward D. promise
49.A.pencils B. mistakes C. marks D. containers
50.A.used B. built C. worn D. damaged
51.A.may B. must C. will D. can
52.A.my B. someone's C. the teacher's D. your
53.A.still B. also C. even D. not
54.A.prized B. own C. kept D. expected
55.A.warned B. informed C. persuaded D. reminded
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