题目内容
Known to all, exercise is important for health, but it be regular exercise.
A.will B.must C.need D.shall
B
解析:
略
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Most of my earliest childhood memories are of the beach — in the hot sun, building sandcastles, burying Dad in the sand.
Now the coast has a pleasant and relaxing attraction beyond words. I look forward to a windy cliff-top walk or a rainy day rock-picking just as much as those rare moments when I get to a short sleep in the sun. But there’s nothing more pleasurable than turning up at a beach to find it deserted.
These are my favourite secret beaches — ones either not well known or take a bit of effort to get to. Most of those listed scored highly in the Marine Conservation Society Good Beach Guide 2009; the others are too secret even for them.
Sennen Clove is just a mile northeast of Land’s End, the westernmost point of mainland England. It’s a beautiful spot, with white sands, deep green sea and amazing sunsets over the Isles (群岛) of Scilly, 28 miles away.
The west-facing beach is popular with surfers, with bigger waves and winds often found at the Gwenver end. There’s a beach restaurant with good views of the bay and the sunsets.
The smallest of Isles of Scilly, Bryher is a mile long, half a mile wide — and a natural wilderness of unbelievable scenery. Walk along the narrow sandy roads to the eastern seaboard and you come to two quiet beaches.
Green Bay has views over to the palm trees of Tresco’s Abbey Gardens, and a little further south is Rushy Bay, a beautiful beach facing the deserted island of Samson.
On Bryher, farm shops sell locally grown produce, and they trust you to leave the money in the pot. It’s that kind of place.
【小题1】The best title for this passage is ________.
| A.The Beautiful British Isles |
| B.Secret Beaches on the British Isles |
| C.The Most Pleasurable Place in Britain |
| D.My Experience of Searching Beaches |
| A.The author is a tourist guide in a tourist agency. |
| B.The author likes walking on a rainy cliff-top most. |
| C.The author wrote the article to advertise for the beaches. |
| D.The author loves beaches that are not known to most people. |
(LE="Land’s" End SC="Sennen" Cove IS="the" Isles of Scilly)
【小题4】In the author’s view, farmers on Bryher are ________.
| A.sincere | B.selfish | C.courageous | D.mean |
Life on earth depends on water, and there is no substitute for it. The current assumption is that our basic needs for water — whether for drinking, agriculture, industry or the raising of fish will always have to be met . Given that premise (前提), there are two basic routes we can go: more equal access to water or better engineering solutions.
Looking at the engineering solution first, a lot of my research concentrates on what happens to wetlands when you build dams in river basins, particularly in Africa. The ecology of such areas is almost entirely driven by the seasonal changes of the river — the pulse of the water. And the fact is that if you build a dam, you generally spoil the downstream ecology. In the past, such problems have been hidden by a lack of information. But in the near future, governments will have no excuse for their ignorance.
The engineers’ ability to control water flows has created new kinds of unpredictability, too. Dams in Africa have meant fewer fish, less grazing and less floodplain (洪泛区) agriculture — none of which were expected. And their average economic life is assumed to be thirty years. Dams don’t exist forever, but what will replace them is not clear.
The challenge for the future is to find new means of controlling water. Although GM technology (转基因) will allow us to breed better dry-land crops, there is no market for companies to develop crops suitable for the micro-climates of the Sahel and elsewhere in Africa. Who is going to pay for research on locally appropriate crops in the Third World?
【小题1】What’s the main idea of this passage?
| A.The engineering solutions to water resource and their limitation. |
| B.The challenge for the future. |
| C.The basic means of controlling water. |
| D.The challenge for developing crops. |
| A.Water resource should be used more reasonably. |
| B.More dams should be built in river basins. |
| C.More wetlands should be protected from destruction. |
| D.More dry-land crops could be developed in Africa. |
| A.The ecological destruction will be known to the public by researchers |
| B.The ecological destruction will no longer be a problem in the future |
| C.The future is an information age |
| D.Governments will face greater challenge in the future |
| A.fewer fish | B.less grazing land |
| C.less floodplain agriculture | D.less farming land |
| A.No one will invest in developing locally appropriate crops in Africa |
| B.Researchers have no interest in developing dry-land crops |
| C.Research on locally appropriate crops in the Third World may be profitable |
| D.There is less water resource in the Third Worldk*s*5u |
Visitors to Britain may find the best place to sample local culture is in a traditional pub.But these friendly pubs can be dangerous places of potential gaffes(失礼)for the newcomers.
A team of researchers have discovered some of the unknown customs of British pubs - starting with the difficulty of getting a drink.Most pubs have no waiters - you have to go to the bar to buy drinks.A group of Italian youths waiting 45 minutes before they realized they would have to fetch their own.This may sound inconvenient, but there is a hidden purpose.
Pub culture is designed to promote sociability(社交)in a society known for its reserve.Standing at the bar for service allows you to chat with others waiting to be served.The bar counter is possibly the only site in the British Isles in which friendly conversation with strangers is considered entirely suitable and really quite normal behavior.“If you haven’t been to a pub, you haven’t been to Britain.” This tip can be found in a booklet, Passport to the Pub: The Tourists’ Guide to Pub Etiquette, a customers’ rule of conduct for those wanting to sample “a central part of British life and culture”.
The trouble is that if you do not follow the local rules, the experience may fall flat.For example, if you are in a big group, it is best if only one or two people go to buy the drinks.Nothing annoys the regular customers and bar staff more than a group of strangers blocking all access to the bar while they chat and hesitate about what to order.
【小题1】The underlined word “sample” in the first paragraph probably means “________”.
| A.taste | B.experience |
| C.test | D.record |
| A.encourage people to communicate with each other |
| B.encourage more people to consume drinks |
| C.attract more tourists to the pubs |
| D.form its own character of culture |
| A.you won’t buy good local drinks |
| B.you may annoy the regular customers and bar staff |
| C.you may fail to feel the local culture |
| D.you might get into a dangerous place |
| A.Self-service Pubs in Britain |
| B.British Local Pubs: Special Chat Places |
| C.Local Pub Culture in Britain |
| D.Manners in British Local Pubs |
In the late nineteenth century, ^5,000 pianos were sold in the United States each year and, with over half a million youths learning to play the instrument, there was a huge demand for sheet music (活页乐谱).Indeed the demand was so huge that publishers rushed to enter the profitable market.During the last fifteen years of the century, many publishers began to set up shops in New York, the center for the production of the musical arts
By the turn of the nineteenth century many important publishers had their offices on 28th Street between Broadway and 5th Avenue, and this Is the area that became known as Tin Pan Alley.It was here that publishers adopted new, aggressive business practices and marketing techniques to achieve great sales.
How it became to be known by that name is unclear, but the general opinion is that it is down to a visiting journalist by the name of Monroe Rosenfeld.He described the area as being drowned in the noise coming from the producers' offices, sounding as though hundreds of people were hitting tin pans(锡锅).He used it several times in his newspaper articles in the early twentieth century and the term stuck.With time this name was popularly embraced and many years later it came to describe the U.S.music publishing industry in general.
The start of Tin Pan Alley is usually dated to about 1885,.but the end of Tin Pan Alley is less clear-cut .Some date it to the start of the Great.Depression in the 1930s when the phonograph(留声机) and radio replaced sheet music, as the driving force of American popular music, while others consider Tin Pan Alley to have continued into thel950s when earlier styles of American popular music were upstaged (抢风头) by the rise of rock & roll.
There's a plaque(纪念匾牌)on the sidewalk on 28th Street in honor of the influence of Tin Pan Alley on American popular culture, but the buildings that were home to the legendary Tin Pan Alley publishers and songwriters are up for sale and may be torn down to make room for modern high-rise buildings.
【小题1】What.is the passage mainly about ?
| A.American popular music. |
| B.Tin Pan Alley's future。 |
| C.American music Industry. |
| D.The history of Tin Pan Alley. |
| A.the American popular culture. | B.the American printing media |
| C.the American rock-music center | D.the American music publishing industry. |
| A.rock & roll | B.sheet music |
| C.country music | D.phonographs and radios |
| A.very noisy | B.very quiet | C.wide | D.narrow |
| A.the term " Tin Pan Alley" was perhaps first used by Rosenfeld. |
| B.the old shops of Tin Pan Alley will be well protected. |
| C.Tin Pan Alley got its name in the early nineteenth century. |
| D.there were once some factories in Tin Pan Alley |