摘要:12.How could people in the past only go there?A.By air. B.By bus. C.By boat.

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阅读理解。
     Huihua, a Chinese girl, and Mary, an American student who was studying Chinese in China, were on their
way to a bookstore. As they got to the bookstore, they saw a young man walking down the stairs. In his hurry,
he missed the last two steps, and fell to the ground. He tried hard to get back to his feet while people around
him laughed. Luckily, he seemed to be OK.
     Mary was worried. She found Huihua smiling a little and was not comfortable about it. "Tell me, Huihua,
how could people laugh when someone felllike that? Do they care at all? Shouldn't they go up and ask the
young man whether he was hurt?"
     "They knew he wasn't hurt too much." Huihua said.
     "But I still don't understand. A fall is a fall. In my culture, people would do anything but laugh!"
     Chinese Perspective (观点)
     This is an example in which the Chinese and the westemers explain a smile differently. Very often, the
Chinese people would also laugh or make a joke to ease the embarrassment (缓解尴尬) when they are caught
in the embarrassing situation. However, if someone gets hurt seriously, it will not be a laughing matter any
more. People will help him instead.
     North American Perspective A westemer would explain laughter in such a situation as a sign of either
insensitivity (不关心) or, worse, pleasure that the person falling had hurt himself because that person was
disliked. A westemer's reaction would have been to rush over, help the person up, and to ask him," Are you
OK'?" If a westemer fell, he, like a Chinese person, might probably make a joke out of the incident (事件)
if he was not hurt. If two close friends are walking together, and one trips but clearly isn't hurt, a common
joke is to say "Have a nice trip". However, this joke would be made only between two people who knew each
other well.
1. Did Huihua help the young man after he fell down in the bookstore? 
    ________________________________________________________
2. How did Mary feel about Huihua's attitude towards the young man? 
    ________________________________________________________
3. In a westemer's opinion, what does the laughter in an embarrassing situation show? 
    ________________________________________________________
4. What does the underlined word "trip" mean? 
    ________________________________________________________
5. What is the main idea of the passage? 
    ________________________________________________________
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Wang Fei,a Chinese student,and Mary,an American student studying Chinese in China,were in a supermarket.They saw a young man walking down the stairs.In his hurry,he missed the last two steps and fell onto the ground.He tried to stand up while people around him laughed.Luckily,he seemed to be OK.

Mary found Wang Fei smiling a little and was not happy about it.“Tell me,Fei,how could people laugh when someone fell like that? Why didn’t they go up and ask him if he was hurt?’’

Wang Fei said,“Because they knew he wasn’t hurt too much.”

“But I still don’t understand.A fall is a fall.In my culture.people would never laugh!”

This is an example.The Chinese and the westerner will think and act differently when seeing such a thing.Chinese people are used to laughing or smiling.Very often the person who is in embarrassing(困窘的)situation would also laugh or smile to get out of it.However,if someone gets hurt seriously,it will not be a laughing matter any more.People will help him or her instead.

But,in that case,a westerner will rush over and help the person get up.If a westerner falls,he or she,like a Chinese person,may try to make a joke if he or she is not hurt.If two close friends are walking together,and one falls but clearly isn't hurt,a common joke is to say “Have a nice trip”.

So different people have different habits and different countries have different cultures.

1.Will Wang Fei and Mary think and act in the same way if they see a young man falling down?

2.Why didn't people go up and ask the young man if he was hurt?

3.What do Chinese people often do when they find themselves in embarrassing situation?

4.What is a westerner likely to do when he or she sees someone fall down?

5.What might Mary say to Wang Fei if he fell but clearly was not hurt?

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One summer evening as I was cooking dinner, there was a knock at the door. I opened it and saw an old man. But his voice was pleasant as he said, “Good evening. I come to see if you have a room for just one night. I live far away from here, and there's no bus till next morning. ”

I told him we would find him a bed, but it was not comfortable. I went inside and cooked dinner. When we were ready, I asked him if he would like to join us. “No, thank you. I have plenty.” When I had finished the dinner, I went out to talk with him. He told me he fished for a living to help his daughter, her five children, and her husband, who was ill and too weak to do anything.

At bedtime, we put a bed in the children's room for him. On his next trip, as a gift, he brought a big fish and some fresh vegetables. In the years he came to stay overnight with us, and there was never a time he did not bring us some fish or vegetables from his garden.

 I know it was thankful for our family to know him, from whom we learn what was to accept the bad without a complaint(抱怨) and the good with thanks.

1Why did the old man go to the writer's house?

A. To give a fish to the writer.                   B. To stay for the night.

C. To sell some fish.                             D. To ask for some money.

2 How many people were there in the old man's daughter's family?

A. Two.           B. Four.                 C. Six.           D. Seven.

3 Which of the following is true?

 A. The old man stayed for the night with the writer only once.

 B. The old man came to the writer's house to ask for some food.

 C. The old man came to stay with the writer for the night many times.

 D. The old man felt lonely because he had no son or daughter.

British people are famous for drinking tea. But brother and sister, Sarah and Bobby Green, became young millionaires(百万富翁) when they opened a chain of American-style coffee shops in the UK.

Having the idea: It started when Sarah took a weekend trip to New York to visit her brother Bobby. One evening, in a Thai restaurant, Sarah told Bobby how much she wished she could buy American-style coffee in London. Bobby suggested they started their own coffee shop. Sarah fell in love with the idea.

Doing the research: Back in London, she spent a whole day on the London subway, getting off the train at different stations to taste the coffee. “It was terrible, and I knew there was a gap (空缺) in the market.” In 1995, they opened their first Coffee Republic shop in the center of London.

Making it work: The first year was very difficult. British people were not used to the names of American coffees, like latte and macchiato. But being successful was their dream and they were not going to give up. Today, there are over 100 Coffee Republic shops all over the country and the company has £30 million a year.

Advice for others: Sarah has now written a best-selling book about their experience, called Anyone Can Do It! She hopes it will help other young people to start their own businesses. She says, “If you think you have the energy, then get out and follow your dream.”

4What kind of company do they run?

A. A fast-food restaurant.                                B. A tea shop.   

C. A coffee shop.                       D. A big hotel.

5 Where are their Coffee Republic shops?

A. All over the UK.                        B. All over the US.

C. In the center of London.                D. In New York.

6Which information is mentioned in the passage?

A. Sarah was not interested in Bobby’s idea.

 B. British people never drank coffee before 1995.

 C. Sarah’s best-selling book is about how to make coffee.

 D. Sarah found a business chance while doing the research.

Most people around the world are right-handed. This also seems to be true in history. In 1799, scientists studied works of art made at different times from 1,500 B. C. to the 1950s. Most of the people shown in these works are right-handed, so the scientists guessed that right-handedness has always been common through history. Today, only about 10% to 15% of the world's population is left-handed.

  Why are there more right-handed people than left-handed ones? Scientists now know that a person's two hands each have their own jobs. For most people, the hand is used to find things or hold things. The right hand is used to work with things. This is because of the different work of the two sides of the brain(脑). The right side of the brain, which makes a person's hands and eyes work together, controls(控制) the left hand. The left-side of the brain, which controls the right hand, is the centre for thinking and doing problems. These findings show that more artists should be left-handed, and studies have found that left-handedness is twice as common among artists as among people in other jobs.

No one really knows what makes a person become right-handed instead of left-handed. Scientists have found that almost 40% of the people become left-handed because their main brain is damaged(伤害) when they are born. However, this doesn't happen to everyone, so scientists guess there must be another reason why people become left-handed. One idea is that people usually get right-handed from their parents. If a person does not receive the gene(基因)for right-handedness, he/she may become either right-handed or left-handed according (根据)to the chance and the people they work or live with.

  Though right-handedness is more common than left-handedness, people no longer think left-handed people are strange or unusual. A long time ago, left-handed children were made to use their right hands like other children, but today they don't have to.

7 After studying works of art made at different times in history, the scientists

found ____________.

A. the art began from 1,500 B. C.

B. the works of art ended in the 1950s

C. most people shown in the works of art are right-handed

D. most people shown in the works of art are left-handed

8 How many people in the world are left-handed now?

A. Less than one sixth.                 B. More than a half.

C. About 40%.                             D. The passage doesn't tell us.

9 According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?

A. No one really knows what makes a person become right-handed.

B. Scientists think there must be some reason why people become left-handed.

C. Today children are not made to use their right hands only.

D. Left-handedness is cleverer than right-handedness.

10 What is the best title for this passage?

A. Left-handed People                           B. Scientists' New Inventions

 C. Which Hand                         D. Different Brains, Different Hands

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阅读理解。
     Today Newtown is a very clean place. Many years ago, however, there were millions of rats (老鼠) in
 Newtown. They attacked the cats and dogs.
     Sometimes a great number of them knocked down a man or woman walking home at night. The rats
 were very large and they harmed many people.
     The Government ( 政府) ordered everybody to kill rats. Most people were very lazy, so they did not
 kill them. Then the Government promised to pay some money for each clead rat. That made people very
 happy. A Government officer put all the dead rats in a big pile. Sometimes a man brought hundreds in a
 day.
     After two weeks there were not many rats in the city, but people still brought rats to the Government
 officer.  The Government officer thought that people were stealing dead rats from the pile. He ordered his
  men to dig a deep hole and put the rats in it. Soon there were no more rats, and the Government did not 
 pay any more money.
1. The underlined phrase "a great number of" means
    A. a great deal      
    B. a good many of
    C. a great amount of
    D. a good much of
2. According to (根据) the passage, which of the following is TRUE?
    A. In Newtown, anyone who was riding home at night could be knocked down by rats.
    B. In Newtown, anyone who was at home at night could be knocked down by rats.
    C. In Newtown, anyone who was going home on foot at night could be knocked down by rats.
    D. No matter when the people in Newtown were walking home, they could be knocked down
        by rats.
3. Why were the people stealing the rats from the pile'?
    A. Because they thought the dead rats should be put in a deep hole.
    B. Because they thought it was a good way to get more money from the Government.
    C. Because they thought they were not lazy.
    D. Because they thought they were all poor and were forced to do so.
4.  Which of the following is TRUE?
    A. The officer ordered his men to dig a deep hole and put the dead rats in it just only to save money for 
          the Government.
    B. Soon the Government did not pay any more money, and there were no more rats.
    C. The officer wanted to teach the lazy people a lesson, so he ordered his men to put the dead rats in a
         deep hole.
    D. The officer and his men put the dead rats in a deep hole in order to prevent the dead rats from being
          stolen and get rid of all the rats in the city.
5. The best title for this passage should be_____.
    A. How Newtown Became a Very Clean Place
    B. How the People in Newtown Became Rich
    C. How to Kill Rats in a City
    D. Newtown-A Rat City
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认真阅读下面的短文,根据短文内短文后的各个问题 。
     Wang Fei, a Chinese student, and Mary, an American student studying Chinese in China, were in
supermarket. They saw a young man walking down the stairs. In his hurry, he missed the last two steps
and onto the ground. He tried to stand up while people around him laughed. Luckily, he seemed to be
OK.
     Mary found Wang Fei smiling a little and was not happy about it. "Tell me, Fei, how could people
laugh when someone fell like that? Why didn't they go up and ask him if he was hurt?"
     Wang Fei said, "Because they knew he wasn't hurt too much. "
     "But I still don't understand. A fall is a fall. In my culture, people would never laugh! "
     This is an example. The Chinese and the westener will think and act differently when seeing such a
thing. Chinese people are used to laughing or smiling. Very often the person who is in embarrassing
(困窘的) situation would also laugh or smile to get out of it. However, if someone gets hurt seriously, it
will not laughing matter any more. People will help him or her instead.
     But, in that case, a westerner will rush over and help the person get up. If a westener falls, he or like
a Chinese person, may try to make a joke if he or she is not hurt. If two close friends are walking
together, and one falls but clearly isn't hurt, a common joke is to say "Have a nice trip".
     So different people have different habits and different countries have different cultures.
1. Will Wang Fei and Mary think and act in the same way if they see a young man falling down?
    ________________________________________________
2. Why didn't people go up and ask the young man if he was hurt?
    ________________________________________________
3. What do Chinese people often do when they find themselves in embarrassing situation?
    ________________________________________________
4. What is a westener likely to do when he or she sees someone fall down?
    ________________________________________________
5.What might Mary say to Wang Fei if he fell but clearly was not hurt?
    ________________________________________________
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