题目内容
The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries _____ the widespread use of electricity and the birth of the steam engine , leading to the development of factories and cities.![]()
| A.watched | B.observed | C.saw | D.showed |
C
解析
Experts do not really know when people began keeping fish as pets. But they say that people have been interested in fish for thousands of years. Some say the ancient Sumerians were the first civilization to keep fish in ponds more than four thousand years ago. The Chinese kept and studied carp and goldfish more than one thousand years ago. The ancient Romans kept eels as pets. And the Greek philosopher Aristotle made what is believed to be the first known study of sea life, including sharks and dolphins.
Keeping fish at home in small water tanks called aquariums is extremely popular today. And everyone seems to enjoy visiting huge public aquariums that have opened around the world.
By the middle of the eighteen hundreds, science had shown that plants, fish and other sea creatures could survive together under water. So it was no longer necessary to change the water in a tank for the fish to live there. This led to the building of the first public aquariums.
The first aquariums opened in London, England in 1853. in the next fifteen years, other aquariums opened in Europe and the United States. By 1928, there were about forty-five public aquariums.
The Monterey Bay Aquarium has been recognized as the first aquarium in the United States and it shows visitors the underwater life in the bay. The Georgia Aquarium opening in 2005 says it is the largest in the world. It has more than one hundred thousand sea animals in thirty million liters of water including two whale sharks---the world’s largest fish.
Another aquarium re-opened in 2005 in Camden, New Jersey. The Adventure Aquarium first opened in 1992. It spent about fifty million dollars expanding its building and improving its exhibits.
Aquariums provide the public with many chances to experience life under the sea. They can be found in most areas of the world. People might even want to start an aquarium at home and join the millions of people around the world who keep fish as pets.
【小题1】Which aquarium opened again after its rebuilding ?
| A.The Monterey Bay Aquarium. | B.The Adventure Aquarium. |
| C.The Georgia Aquarium. | D.The first aquarium in London. |
| A.The ancient Sumerians. | B.The ancient Romans. | C.The Chinese. | D.The ancient Indians. |
| A.People were not interested in fish until the middle of the eighteen hundreds. |
| B.The Moneterey Bay Aquarium is regarded as the best aquarium in America. |
| C.Plants, fish and other sea creatures could not survive together under sea. |
| D.People have to change the water in a tank frequently for the fish to live there. |
| A.to tell people the importance of keeping fish as pets |
| B.to explain why people want to visit aquariums |
| C.to let people know the development of the aquariums |
| D.to describe different aquariums |
| A.Exhibition centres where people can watch and enjoy different species of fish. |
| B.Small boxes made of glass, where people keep fish in, usually at home. |
| C.Places which shows visitors the underwater life in the bay. |
| D.Places which provides the public with many chances to experience life under the sea. |
Seventeenth-century houses in colonial North American were simple structures that were primarily functional, carrying over traditional designs that went back to the Middle Ages. During the first half of the eighteen century, however, houses began to show a new elegance. As wealth increased, more and more colonist built fine houses.
Since architecture was not yet a specialized profession in the colonies, the design of buildings was left either to amateur (业余) designers or to carpenters who were engaged in translating architectural handbooks imported from England. Inventories of libraries shows an astonishing number of these handbooks for builders, and the houses built during the eighteenth century show their influence. Nevertheless, most household architecture of the first-quarters of the eighteenth century displays a wide divergence of taste and freedom of application of the rules laid down in these books.
Increasing wealth and growing sophistication (文化修养) throughout the colonies resulted in houses of improved design, whether the material was wood, stone, or brick. New England still favored wood, though brick houses became common in Boston and other towns, where the danger of fire gave an impetus (推动) to the use of more durable material. A few houses in New England were built of stone, but only in Pennsylvania and areas nearby was stone widely used in buildings. An increased use of brick in houses and outbuildings is noticeable in Virginia and Maryland, but wood remained the most popular material even in houses built by wealthy landowners. In the Carolinas, even in closely packed Charleston, wooden houses were much common than brick houses.
Eighteenth-century houses showed great interior improvements over the former ones. Windows were made larger and shutters removed. Large, clear panes replaced the small leaded glass of the seventeenth century. Doorways were larger and more decorative.
Fireplaces became decorative features of rooms. Walls were made of plaster or wood. White paint began to take the place of blues, yellows, greens, and lead colors, which had been popular for walls in the earlier years. After about 1730, advertisements for wallpaper styles in scenic patterns began to appear in colonial newspapers.
1.What’s the passage mainly about?
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A.The improved design of eighteenth-century colonial houses. |
|
B.A comparison of eighteenth-century houses and modern houses. |
|
C.The decorations used in eighteenth-century houses. |
|
D.The role of carpenters in building eighteenth-century houses. |
2.What was one of the main reasons for the change in architectural style in eighteenth-century
North America?
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A.More architects arrived in the colonies. |
|
B.The colonists developed an interest in classical architecture. |
|
C.Bricks were more readily available |
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D.The colonists had more money to spend on housing. |
3.According to the passage, who was responsible for designing houses in eighteenth-century
North America?
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A.professional architects |
B.customers |
C.interior decorators |
D.carpenters |
4.The passage implies that the rules described in architectural handbooks were ____________.
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A.generally ignored |
B.broken by professional architects |
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C.not strictly stuck to |
D.only followed by older builders |
5.The underlined word “divergence”欧 is closest in meaning to ________.
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A.description |
B.developing |
C.difference |
D.interest |