题目内容
8、1.Having seen a horrible film, the little girl, full of fear, went to bed (让灯开着).(on)
2.With their small income, hardly (下岗工人能够维持生计),so they have to live on the allowances given by the government.(end)
3.The young man (冒着被撞倒的危险)to take the child on the busy road to safety. (risk)
4.Her eyes (盯着那幅画), she thought of the beautiful days spent in the country in her childhood. (fix)
5.There are many things we need to (充分考虑)before we buy an expensive product. (consideration)
6.She is always doing everything for her son, which is (她错误所在).(go)
7.Yesterday my friend (遭遇扒手掏兜了)on her way to see her friend. (pick)
8.At the thought of (他在英语上已取得了进步), he will think of the strict and kind teacher. (progress)
9.Had I followed your advice to take with my umbrella, I (就不会淋雨), so now I am running a high fever. (catch)
10.He was admitted to a key university with honors in 2005 and ever since he (致力于学医)to be a good doctor. (devote)
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二、选择题
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试题答案
8、1.with the light on
2.can the laid-off workers make ends meet
3.risked being knocked down
4.fixed on/ upon the picture
5.take into full consideration
6.where she goes wrong
7.had her pocket picked
8.the progress(that/ which) he has made in English
9.wouldn’t have been/ got caught in the rain
10.had been devoted to medicine/has been devoting himself to medicine
二、选择题
Archaeology as a profession faces two major problems. It is the poorest of the poor. Only small sums are available for excavating(挖掘)and even less is available
for publishing the results and preserving the sites once excavated. Yet archaeologists deal with priceless objects every day. Besides, there is the problem of unlawful excavation, resulting in museum-quality pieces being sold to businessmen at the highest price..
I would like to make a suggestion that would at once provide money for archaeology and reduce the amount of diggings against law. You might say that professionals excavate to get knowledge, not money. Moreover, ancient artifacts(古器
物) are part of our global cultural heritage(遗产), which should be there for all to appreciate, not sold at the highest price. I agree. Sell nothing that has scientific value. But, you might reply, everything that comes out of the ground has scientific value. Here,
we disagree. In theory, you may be correct in saying that every artifact has hidden scientific value.
People can not help appreciate every unearthed treasure but there is not enough money even to put the finds in good order; as a result, they cannot be found again and become as inaccessible as if they had never been discovered. Indeed, with the help of the Internet, sold artifacts could be more reachable than are the pieces stored in museum basements. Before sale, each could be photographed and the list of the purchasers could be maintained on the computer. A purchaser could even be required to agree to return the piece if it should become needed for scientific purposes.
【小题1】What’s the problems that archaeology as a profession has to face?
A.Money and unlawful excavation | B.Effectively duplicates. |
C.Scientific purposes. | D.Excavation law. |
A.putting them in the museum | B.having sold artifacts returned |
C.making use of the Internet | D.solving the money problem |
A.No selling of any unearthed ancient artifacts. |
B.Some money should be raised for the purpose. |
C.Selling some unearthed ancient artifacts and having them returned when needed. |
D.Ancient artifacts, our global cultural heritage, should be evenly shared by us all. |
Professor Martin’s report says that children who attend a number of different schools,because their parents have to move around the country,probably make slow progress in their studies. There are also signs,says Professor Martin,that an unusually large number of such children are mentally affected.
The professor says,“It’s true,my personal feeling is that children should stay in one school. But our findings are based on research and not on any personal feelings. ”
Captain Thomas James,an Army lecturer for the past 20 years and himself a father of two,said,“I’ve never heard of such rubbish. Taking me for example. no harm is done to the education of my children,who change schools regularly—if they keep to the same system,as in our Army schools. In my experience—and I’ve known quite a few of them—Army children are as well adjusted as any others,if not more so. What the professor doesn’t appear to appreciate is the fact that in such situation children will adapt much better than grown-ups.”
When this reached Professor Martin,he said that at no time had his team suggested that all children were backward or mentally affected in some way,but simply that in their experience there was a clear tendency.
“Our findings show that while the very bright children can deal with regular changes without harming his or her general progress in studies,the majority of children suffer from constantly having to enter a new learning situation.”
【小题1】Professor’s Martin’s report suggests that
A.it may not be good for children to change schools too often | B.parents should not move around the country | C.changing schools is the reason of children making slow progress | D.more and more children are mentally affected |
A.is the opposite of what his report has shown | B.is in a way supported by his research | C.has played a big part in his research | D.is based on the experience of his own children |
A.have been affected by changing schools | B.go to ordinary state schools | C.can get used to the Army school education | D.discuss their education regularly with their father |
A.are generally poorly-adjusted | |
B.are usually less experienced | C.can adapt much more easily |
D.can deal with changes quickly |
In 2006, the UK government started to allow universities in England and Wales to charge British students tuition fees. More than 80 percent of students in England and Wales now take out a student loan in order to go to university. They use the loan (贷款) to pay for tuition fees, books and living expenses. Although the interest on student loans is quite low, it begins as soon as the student receives the loan. The average student in England and Wales now graduates from university with debts of around £12,000. Students of medicine usually have debts of more than £20,000. That is a lot of money. It means graduates cannot afford to buy a house for many years. They even struggle to pay rent on a flat, because they have to start paying back the student loan after graduating. If you start to earn over £15,000 a year, the government takes repayments directly from your monthly salary. Is it any surprise, therefore, that the average British person does not leave their parents’ home until they are 30 years old?
You might think that a British person with a degree will find it easy to get a well-paid job. However, most people in white-collar jobs seem to have a degree these days, so there is a lot of competition. Also, British companies tend to value work experience over a piece of paper. Like everyone else, graduates usually have to start at the bottom and work their way up. That can be very frustrating for them, since they are often over-qualified for the work they are doing. While at university, they have dreams of getting an exciting, challenging job. Therefore, life after university ends up being quite disappointing for a lot of graduates.
All of the above is beginning to make British people question whether a university degree is really worth the money.
【小题1】What's the best title of this passage?
A.What's a University Education worth in the UK? |
B.There is a lot of competition in the UK |
C.There won't be any University Place left for British students |
D.It doesn't cost students more and more to attend university |
A.University Education is really worth the money in England |
B.University Education is worth all over the world except in England |
C.British education is becoming more expensive for a majority of British students |
D.British students don't like to go to university |
A.The average British person didn't leave their parents' home until they are 35 years old |
B.Having a degree doesn't get aBritish person a good job |
C.Students are graduating without larger and larger debts. |
D.things are easier for students from other countries coming to study |
【小题4】The word "interest" in paragraph2 means_______
A. money paid for a week's work |
B. money borrowed from a band |
C. a regular monthly salary |
D. extra money paid on a loan or bank savings |
London, April 28---The Man Group, a British hedge fund, is betting that investors will want to read more than the latest how-to- get –rich-quick business book.
In a five-year deal worth roughly $3.6 million announced last week, Man has agreed to sponsor(主办)the Booker Prize for Fiction, which will be renamed the Man Booker Prize. Since creating the award in 1969, Booker P.L.G., a British food group, in June 2000, executives began considering attracting outside sponsors. Man will be the first of these. Bill Grimsey, the chief of the Big Food Group, saw little business sense in a link between a food supplier and a literary prize, explained Dotti Irving, a spokeswoman for the Booker Prize foundation.
Such dissimilarities (差异) have not reduced Man’s enthusiasm for the prize which is expected to be open for the first time to American authors. David Browne, a spokesman for Man, said most of the firm’s investors are high-net-worth individuals who appreciate literature. “The people who buy hedge funds,” Mr. Browne said, “also read.”
Under the new agreement, authors will get more money. The winner of the annual prize, to be awarded in October, will receive $73,000 , up from $30,000 the Australian writer Peter Carey won last year for his novel “True History of the Kelley Gang.”
The six short-listed authors will each receive $3,600, up from $1,500. Having a hedge fund as a backer apparently has its perks.(福利).
【小题1】The article is mainly about ____.
A.the disagreement between two groups | B.the Booker Prize Foundation |
C.the Big Food Group | D.The new development of Booker Prize |
A.best-selling book | B.magazine | C.newspaper | D.advertisement |
A.Bill Grimsey decided to open the prize for American authors |
B.“How-to-get-rich-quick” business was written by Peter Carey. |
C.Under the agreement, the Booker Prize will be sponsored only by Man. |
D.If you win the prize, you will get $73,000 next October |
A.David Browne | B.Peter Carey | C.Bill Grimsey | D.Dotti Irving |
Having just quit a highly moneymaking job with tech giant Microsoft in the United States,where he’d made millions working as a program manager,Patrick Awuah would wake up once in a while wondering if he’d done the right thing.
What Awuah wanted was to create a university in his native Ghana.a state-of-the-art education centre that would help educate the country’s next generation of leaders.Awuah moved with his family back to Ghana.There,he invested his own money and with the help of other donors he founded Ashesi University.
“Africa needs to have a renaissance(复兴),” says Awuah as he explained what drove him to take the risky decision.“The world needs to change in this way and I strongly believe that people like me need to be part of the solution;I need to be really actively involved in helping to drive this change in Africa‘‘
Located about an hour's drive from the capital Accra,Ashesi,which appropriately translates to “beginning,” is the first Ghanaian university to combine technical majors with a liberal arts approach.Its campus,set on 100 acres in a town called Berekuso,was designed to be inspiring for the more than 500 young Ghanaians studying there.
“So when I look at universities I see Africa fast—forward 30 years.When this 20-year-old is now in his or her 50s,that person is going to be a leader.”
Today Ashesi,which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year,offers degrees in business,information systems and computer science.There are plans to offer engineering and economics majors in the near future.The school’s graduation rate is between 70%and 90%,according to Awuah.
In our last freshman class,50% of the students paid full tuition(学费),25%were on full scholarships and 25%on partial scholarships ,”he said.“The reason why variety is so important is that the most important conversation on campus is a conversation about the good society—what is the good society we would like to see in Africa? That conversation is a lot more interesting if you have variety in the classroom,”adds Awuah.
1.In Awuah’s opinion,Africa should be changed by
A.investing more money for development
B.developing computer science
C.training future leaders for development
D.founding more universities
2.The underlined sentence in the first paragraph infers that “_____”.
A.Awuah regretted that he had once worked with Microsoft
B.Awuah would doubt if he should resign from Microsoft
C.Awuah wondered whether it was right to invest for a university
D.Awuah felt it wrong that he had refused a job with a large salary
3.The university founded by Awuah_____.
A.came into being 10 years ago B.was named with “beginning”
C.is located in the capital of Ghan D.will be run for 30 years
4.Which of the following is TRUE according to the text?
A.Ashesi has offered five degrees since it was founded.
B.Awuah had earned millions of dollars before he left Microsoft.
C.50% of the new students in Ashesi receive education for free.
D.Awuah was the only investor in setting up Ashesi University.
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