题目内容
We’ve reached a strange-some would say unusual-point.While fighting world hunger continues to be the matter of vital importance according to a recent report from the World Health Organization (WHO),more people now die from being overweight,or say,from being extremely fat,than from being underweight.It’s the good life that’s more likely to kill us these days.
Worse,nearly l8 million children under the age of five around the world are estimated to be overweight.What’s going on?
We really don’t have many excuses for our weight problems.The dangers of the problem have been drilled into us by publichealth campaigns since 2001 and the message is getting through—up to a point.
In the 1970s,Finland,for example,had the highest rate of heart disease in the world and being overweight was its main cause.Not any more.A publichealth campaign has greatly reduced the number of heart disease deaths by 80 per cent over the past three decades.
Maybe that explains why the percentage of people in Finland taking diet pills doubled between 2001 and 2005,and doctors even offer surgery of removing fat inside and change the shape of the body.That has become a sort of fashion.No wonder it ranks as the world’s most bodyconscious country.
We know what we should be doing to lose weight—but actually doing it is another matter.By far the most popular excuse is not taking enough exercise.More than half of us admit we lack willpower.
Others blame good food.They say:it’s just too inviting and it makes them overeat.Still others lay the blame on the Americans,complaining that pounds have piled on thanks to eating too much Americanstyle fast food.
Some also blame their parents-their genes.But unfortunately,the parents are wronged because they’re normal in shape,or rather slim.
It’s a similar story around the world,although people are relatively unlikely to have tried to lose weight.Parents are eager to see their kids shape up.Do as I say-not as I do.
【小题1】What is the“strange”point mentioned in the first sentence?
| A.The good life is a greater risk than the bad life. |
| B.Starvation is taking more people’s lives in the world. |
| C.WHO report shows people’s unawareness of food safety. |
| D.Overweight issue remains unresolved despite WHO’s efforts. |
| A.A lot of effective diet pills are available. |
| B.Body image has nothing to do with good food. |
| C.They have been made fully aware of its dangers. |
| D.There are too many overweight people in the world. |
| A.the cause of heart disease |
| B.the fashion of body shaping |
| C.the effectiveness of a campaign |
| D.the history of a bodyconscious country |
| A.Actions or Excuses? |
| B.Overweight or Underweight? |
| C.WHO in a Dilemma |
| D.No Longer Dying of Hunger |
【小题1】A
【小题2】C
【小题3】C
【小题4】A
解析
Many people take it for granted that black is a color of bad things while white should always mean something good. This may be because, in their opinion, black is related to darkness and white to purity. However, that is not always the case. Did you know that the same one color may mean differently in different places of the world?
In the English-speaking world, black is the color of mourning. People wear black clothes at the funeral. Red is concerned with danger or bloodshed (流血). Yellow is the word for fear. If you are afraid, you are yellow. Yet none of these sayings is true outside the English-speaking world. In China and Korea white is the color of mourning. In Russia, China and some other countries, red stands for beauty, life and excellence. In Italy and Germany, you are yellow with anger, not with fear.
Even within the English-speaking area it is not difficult to find color contradictions (矛盾). A redcap in the United States is a porter in a railway station. In Britain, however, a redcap is a military policeman. Both names are logical because both men wear red caps. Similarly, the British term for an American white collar worker is sometimes called a black-coated worker.
One does not have to cross an area to find color differences. Would you rather be red-blooded? If we go back to the origin, we find that both terms are logical as both names suggest. The expression "blueblood" comes from Spain, where some noble families proudly said that they had "blue blood". But then why "blue" blood? Because they were fairskinned, and it is only natural that their blood vessels (血管) stood out appearing blue.
【小题1】Yellow is concerned with anger in _______.
| A.Russia | B.Britain | C.Germany | D.China |
| A.pronunciation | B.climate | C.logical relationship | D.custom |
| A.black is the color of mourning |
| B.a black-coated worker is employed in an office |
| C.red stands for beauty and excellence |
| D.a redcap is a porter in a station |
| A.The Origin of Blue Blood |
| B.The Development of the Symbolic Use of Colors |
| C.Colors that Carry Bad Meanings |
| D.The Meaning Concerned With Certain Colors |
| A.they had heart trouble and their faces looked blue |
| B.they came from a noble family |
| C.they had blue blood in their vessels |
| D.they were fairskinned |
J.K. Rowling set children’s imaginations on fire. Can the creator of Harry Potter do the same for a grown-up audience? The British author will find out on September 27, when more than 2 million hardcover(精装书) copies of her first novel for adults hit bookstores in the UK and the US, along with the digital edition. Set in a little English town, The Casual Vacancy is about an election held after an unexpected death.
Michael Pietsch, Rowling’s US publisher, says the novel reminded him of Dickens “because of the humanity, the humor, the social concerns, the intensely real characters”. No magic though, apparently: “This book isn’t Harry Potter”, says Pietsch. “It is a completely different concern”. As with Harry Potter, there are no advance copies for the media, no early reviews. To date, the seven-book series has sold more than 450 million copies worldwide, and it became one of the most successful movie franchises in July 21, 2007.
Back then, fans could buy books at midnight parties hosted by bookstores. But recent years have seen a great challenge for brick-and-mortar(实体的) bookstores. People are still buying books, indeed more books than in 2007, according to figures released by the Association of American Publishers. But they are reading them in a new format(样式)—the e-book. The Harry Potter series just became available digitally for the first time in April. It will be different for The Casual Vacancy, with the publisher simultaneously releasing an e-book. For Rowling fans who once queued up for Harry Potter, this means that instant satisfaction is now only a click away.
Moving from children’s books to adult literature is a big transition. Will Rowling’s new book be successful? Arthur Levine, the US co-editor of the Harry Potter books, seems confident: “If you read or re-read the Harry Potter books, you can see that Rowling has all the strengths she needs for great success as a fiction writer –you have great characters, an involving plot, a sense of humor and great empathy”.
【小题1】In Paragraph 2, what Michael Pietsch says means that_____.
| A.Dickens’ works are too impressive to forget. |
| B.J.K. Rowling has all the strengths of Dickens. |
| C.The new book is similar to Dickens’ works in some way. |
| D.The new book is quite different from the works of Dickens. |
| A.willingly | B.meanwhile | C.especially | D.eventually |
| A.To explain why the new book will have a digital edition. |
| B.To show the Harry Potter series are popular with readers. |
| C.To compare J.K. Rowling’s old books and her new book. |
| D.To clarify the great challenges for brick-and-mortar bookstores. |
| A.They are both intended for children. |
| B.They both show the author’s great talent. |
| C.Their characters both have magical power. |
| D.Both of them won’t be read on the Internet. |
(2013·高考辽宁卷,D)“Indeed,”George Washington wrote in his diary in 1785,“some kind of fly,or bug,had begun to eat the leaves before I left home.”But the father of America was not the father of bug.When Washington wrote that,Englishmen had been referring to insects as bugs for more than a century,and Americans had already created lightningbug(萤火虫).But the English were soon to stop using the bugs in their language,leaving it to the Americans to call a bug a bug in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
The American bug could also be a person,referring to someone who was crazy about a particular activity.Although fan became the usual term,sports fans used to be called racing bugs,baseball bugs,and the like.
Or the bug could be a small machine or object,for example,a bugshaped car.The bug could also be a burglar alarm,from which comes the expression to bug,that is,“to install (安装) an alarm”.Now it means a small piece of equipment that people use for listening secretly to others’ conversations.Since the 1840s,to bug has long meant“to cheat”,and since the 1940s it has been annoying.
We also know the bug as a flaw in a computer program or other design.That meaning dates back to the time of Thomas Edison.In 1878 he explained bugs as“little problems and difficulties”that required months of study and labor to overcome in developing a successful product.In 1889 it was recorded that Edison“had been up the two previous nights discovering ‘a bug’ in his invented record player.”
【小题1】We learn from Paragraph 1 that ________.
| A.Americans had difficulty in learning to use the word bug |
| B.George Washington was the first person to call an insect a bug |
| C.the word bug was still popularly used in England in the nineteenth century |
| D.both Englishmen and Americans used the word bug in the eighteenth century |
| A.Explanation. | B.Finding. |
| C.Origin. | D.Fault. |
| A.the misunderstanding of the word bug |
| B.the development of the word bug |
| C.the public views of the word bug |
| D.the special characteristics of the word bug |
A week ago, I had the great pleasure of reading an e-book, When Money Talks, Listen! by Rich Ezzo. It took only about an hour to read.
When I first received a copy, I thought it was a Get Rich Quick type of publication. Nothing is wrong with Get Rich Quick, but my mind just doesn’t run after dreams of wealth. I think that if God ever wants me to be rich, he knows where to find my purse.
When I began reading When Money Talks, Listen!, I was overjoyed to find that Rich Ezzo isn’t money hungry either. He, too, is hungry for more important than money.
Since I love this e-book so much, why wait a week to write the review? Simple. I wanted to see if the effect it had on me was a keeper. After reading the last word of the e-book, I totally agreed with the subtitle (副标题) which promised to forever change the way we thought about money. I had so many thoughts running around my mind that I had to install (安装) a stoplight to stop some while others made their way into the picture, then I yielded (让路) them as a few ones arrived in town. I had a mental traffic jam, which only goes to show how slow the traffic usually is.
It has been a week and the effect is the same. I truly do look at money differently and have even done a few things differently this week. This is an e-book you ‘ll want to read, I promise. I often recommend books to my daughter, and this is one that I didn’t just ”suggest”----I left it open at the bottom of the compute and told each one ,”Read it, you’ll love it “.
I would never point someone in a direction I wouldn’t go myself. I strongly advise you to visit the author’s website, Myster Money, and to download the e-book. You won’t regret it.
【小题1】The author wrote this passage to _________.
| A.strongly recommend an e-book |
| B.show the author’s attitude to money |
| C.introduce the general idea of an e-book |
| D.point out Rich Ezzo isn’t money hungry |
| A.is more popular than e-books |
| B.deals with how to make money |
| C.is what the author really cares for |
| D.is also an e-book written by Rich Ezzo |
| A.Because he was not sure whether he did well. |
| B.Because he was too excited to write anything. |
| C.Because he had to wait for Rich Ezzo’s permission. |
| D.Because he wondered if it would have a long influence on him. |
American parents usually think that their child should not have more pocket money than the children with whom he regularly connects no matter they are wealthier or not than he.
Whatever the pocket money is, its entire use is not controlled by the parents, because a child learns to use money correctly only through dealing with it himself. If a seven-year-old child gets a quarter as a week pocket money and is made to put it all in his piggy bank to save it up, he gets no idea what the real use for the money is. He gets the shiny coins and they soon disappear. The idea of a bank account(在银行开户) is too early for so small a child, although he can be made understand and enjoy saving his coins-not all of them, only a part of what he receives-to buy something he especially wants. By the time he is eight, he is old enough to take part in the opening of his own savings account, parents may take him to the bank, open a saving account for him, and encourage him to put a certain quantity(数量) of money he receives as gifts into the bank and watch his bank saving grow as entry by entry(存入)is made. He will be saving, earning, and spending suitable quantities all along in order to learn how to manage money and to keep him in a favorable position with his friends. The boy is a sorry child who can't join his fellows in a sweet shop once in a while because he has to save every cent he gets or earns for some big unknown projects his parents have chosen for him.
【小题1】What does the underlined word "piggy bank" refer to?
| A.Something in the shape of a pig for saving coins. |
| B.A kind of bank run by the children. |
| C.A bank whose building looks like a pig. |
| D.A bank for children's saving. |
| A.Whatever the pocket money is, its entire use is not controlled by American parents. |
| B.If an eight-year-old child receive 10 dollars as his birthday gift, he probably have most of it saved in the bank. |
| C.American parents never interfere(干涉) with their children's use of their pocket money. |
| D.American parents don't usually give their children much pocket money. |
| A.Because he can not manage his money and it keeps him in an unfavorable position. |
| B.Because he can not learn the use of money through spending it himself. |
| C.Because he can not have any other choice but to save, earn or spend money. |
| D.Because he can not join the fellow in a sweet shop once in while. |
The host: Now it's time for our You Must Read This program. Today we'll hear from Lauren Groff. She came across a book when she was going to have her first child and was worried about the future.
Lauren Groff: Staring into darkness, I wanted to read about happiness.1n fact, books full of joy are hard to find because happiness is nearly impossible to write about. So, when I found Elizabeth and Her German Garden, by Elizabeth Von Arnim, I felt as if someone suddenly opened a curtain and revealed a window where I had thought there was a wall.
Elizabeth and Her German Garden feels as if it rose out of Von Arnim's deep unhappiness in the way she was supposed to fit into her world Still, what a cool drink this novel is. It has a few characters: the narrator, a countess (女伯爵) named Elizabeth, her husband, her three tiny daughters, various servants and some visitors. There is also Elizabeth's garden. whick we see in all its seasonal richness.
That is only the book's surface, however. There are great things hidden in the book. Eliza- beth is always comparing herself and the women around her and finding their fixed social roles disappointing. Her happiness, when it comes, arrives as an act of will. She has fought hard to achieve delight and I think it is more valuable for her struggle.
I appreciate Elizabeth for showing me a way through my darkest time, by revealing that an act of focused attention can lift a person out of a long, dark period in their lives. Anyone can get a little happiness from living, even by reading a few pages of a book.
The host : That's Lauren Groff. Her latest novel is Arcadia. The book she recommended(推荐) is Elizabeth and Her German Garden.
【小题1】What can we learn from the second paragraph?
| A. Lauren Groff likes reading about happiness at night. |
| B.Elizabeth Von Arnim wrote Elizabeth and Her German Garden. |
| C.There are a few books about joy that Lauren Groff likes reading. |
| D.Someone opened a curtain when Lauren Groff found her favorite book. |
| A. Lauren's delight | B. Lauren's struggle |
| C. Elizabeth's struggle | D. Elizabeth's happiness |
| A. is full of joy and laughter | B. shows a way to happiness |
| C.is a perfect way to kill time | D.describes a beautiful garden |
| A.It is the next novel to be recommended. |
| B.It is a novel written by Lauren Groff. |
| C.It is Elizabeth Von Arnim's latest novel. |
| D.It is recommended in the last program. |
| A.In an interview about gardening. |
| B.In a report about how to be happy. |
| C.In a radio program about books. |
| D.In a documentary about famous writers. |