The people below are going to make a trip in Australia. After the description of these people, there is information about six advertisements of organized tours A-F. Decide which tour would be most suitable for the person mentioned in descriptions 61-65 and then mark the correct letter (A-F). There is one extra paragraph about one tour which you do not need to use.

_________61. Victor is fond of nature and adventure and he is making a study tour into geology in Australia. So he wants to make a whole day trip, enjoy the natural beauty and study geological phenomena as well.

_________62. Vanessa is planning a short city tour of Sydney so that she can enjoy the highlights of the city and attend an important lecture given by Professor Brown Smith at 2:00p.m at the University of Sydney.

_________63. Charlie and his friends are making their first journey in Australia. Having traveled around the city of Sydney, they plan to visit Canberra, the capital and political center of the country.

_________64. Jenny, a European woman with her children is visiting her relatives in Australia. They want to relax themselves by enjoying the sunshine on the sandy beaches along the coast and have fun with dolphins.

_________65. Mike and Susan are from Brazil. They have been traveling in Australia for a couple of days. This weekend, they would like to have a change and travel to the countryside to have some idea of Australia grape farming and wine producing instead of making city tours around.

A.    City Highlights, Manly Beach, Northern Beaches

Tour the highlights of Sydney, then cross the Sydney Harbor Bridge to Manly and the Northern Beaches. Capture the beauty and lifestyles of the harbor city form Gray Line’s specially selected points.

Departs: 8:30 a.m.  Adult: $51.00

Returns: 11:50 a.m.  Child: $25.50

B.    New Parliament House, National Museum, Australian War Memorial

The nation’s capital―a purposely built city, modern, with wonderful architecture yet a rural charm of lakeside, gardens and open spaces. This hi-tech city is the seat of Parliament and home of national monuments, museums and galleries.

Departs: 8:30 a.m.  Adult: $110.00

Returns: 9:15 p.m.  Child: $55.00

C.    Cuddle a Koala, Kangaroos, Harbour Luncheon Cruise

Observe and meet our unique native animals with a lot of opportunities to get to know the Cuddly Koala. Then enjoy lunch on beautiful Sydney Harbour. You can choose between the Matilda Cruises Sailing Catamarans, the stream-lined Captain Cook Cruisers or Magistic Cruises.

Departs: 8:40 a.m.   Adult: $115.00

Returns: 2:00 p.m.   Child: $57.50

D.    Hunter Valley wine factory, Wine Tasting, Traditional Aussie Towns

It is believed that famous Australian wines are from the vineyards of the rolling hills and valleys’ of the Hunter region. The Hunter Valley is Australian’s oldest commercial wine producing district with over 7,000 acres under vine.

Departs: 8:40 a. m    Adult: $127.00

Returns: 6:40 p.m     Child: $63.50

E.    Post Stephens, Central Coast Beaches, North Coast, Dolphin Watching

Discovering the beautiful Central Coast north of Sydney with its holiday villages, white sandy beaches and the sparkling Pacific Ocean. Ride the wave crests with the Dolphins in the blue waters. This quiet arm of the blue Pacific Ocean is home to nature’s most lovable and intelligent marine mammals.

Departs: 8:30 a. m.    Adult: $126.00

Returns: 7:00 p. m.        Child: $ 63.00

F.    Jenolan Caves, Blue Mountains, Adventure Caves

The Blue Mountains National Park is a kaleidoscope(万花筒) of contrasts and colour rich in Australian bush and wildlife. Spectacular Jenolan Caves―the brilliance and timelessness of nature are revealed.

Departs: 8:40 a. m.        Adult: $114.00

Returns: 6:40 p. m.              Child: $57.00

College students go ‘blind for a day’

A group of 18 students at the leshan Teachers’ College experienced the hardships of the vision damaged during a “blind for a day” exercise over the weekend. The college’s Department of Education organized the event, aiming to give students an understanding of the daily battle faced by the vision damaged so that they may offer their help in the future.

Taiyuan forbids taking pets into its parks

The local government of Taiyuan has banned pets from being taken into the city’s parks. The regulation, which came into effect on Saturday, states that anyone who takes pets into parks will be fined from 10 yuan (US$1.27) to 200(US$25). The local government said it introduced the rule because pets may cause harm to other park visitors and their waste pollutes the environment.

Enormous pumpkin steals the show

A 240-kilogram pumpkin worth over 2,300 yuan (US$293) was the star attraction at an agricultural show in Foshan’s Shunde District over the weekend. Visitors all wanted to have their pictures taken with the huge pumpkin at the first Guangdong Agricultural Products Fair. The pumpkin was planted by the Zhuhai Academy of Agriculture Science.

More than 1,000 seagulls die on beach of Shandong

More than 1,000 seagulls died on the beach in Jimo, Shandong Province, last week. Experts investigating the case stressed that the cause of death was not bird flu. They said the seagulls died from a disease, but they are still testing samples to determine which one.

 

57. The aim of the event “blind for a day” is to _________.

       A. give the students a lesson about the hardships of the vision damaged

       B. entertain the students after regular lessons

       C. urge the students to take part in the social activity

       D. make the students understand the blind people and offer help in the future

58. Taiyuan government banned pets from getting into parks because _________.Which of the following is wrong?

A.      Pets may cause harm to other park visitors

B.      Pets’ waste pollutes the environment

C.      A person who takes pets into park will be fined US$ 1.

D.     The government wants to protect the environment

59.Why did the pumpkin become the star attraction?

A.        Because it was worth over 2,300 yuan.

B.        Because a lot of people want to take pictures with it.

C.        Because it is a new product planted by the Zhuhai Academy of Agriculture Science.

D.       Because it weighed 240-kilogram

60. The cause of the seagull death in Shandong Province is ____________.

       A. bird flu       B. an unkown deadly disease  C. air pollution    D. cold weather

A WOMAN walks into a small stall and eats a cheap bowl of instant noodles, paying 1,500 won. Then she moves into a Starbucks coffee shop, where she drinks a cup of mocha, paying 4,300 won.

Surprised? This is the typical behaviour of South Korean young women. They are called "denjang girls". The term "denjang girls" referred to female shoppers who would eat cheaply and then splash out to be seen drinking a cup of expensive coffee. Now it has grown to a new army of women in their 20s who look smart, rich but are actually buying luxuries they probably can't afford.

Internet users created the term when debating the popularity of Starbucks coffee among South Korean women. In South Korea, the coffee costs, on average, over a dollar more than in Japan and the US. Despite the higher price, Starbucks sales in South Korea increased from 72.1 billion won in 2004 to 91.2 billion won in 2005.

Ahn Ji-Yoon, a student at Yonsei University in Seoul, says she can spend two hours surfing the web for discounts on skin cream and dinner. Yet she would think nothing of spending US$550 on a Gucci bag. Girls like Ahn live by extremes - hunting for bargain items while spending heavily on "necessary luxuries".

 

53. The underlined part in paragraph 2 means _____________.

       A. give away                               B. use…in a carefree way

       C. make good use of                    D. use up

54. What does the term “denjang girls” refer to?

       A. It refers to female shoppers who eat cheaply.

       B. It refers to female shoppers who drink expensive coffee.

       C. It refers to female shoppers who eat cheaply and spend little in drinking a cup of cheap coffee.

       D. It refers to female shoppers who eat cheaply but spend a lot in drinking a cup of expensive coffee.

55. According to the passage , which one is correct?

       A. In South Korea, the coffee costs more than in Japan and the US.

       B. In South Korea, the coffee costs less than in Japan and the US.

       C. In Japan, the coffee costs a little more than in South Korea and the US.

       D. In the US, the coffee costs a little more than in South Korea and Japan.

56. The purpose of the writer is to _________.

       A. criticize the manners of “denjang girls”

       B. call on female shoppers to act like “denjang girls”

       C. warn “denjang girls” not to waste money on expensive coffee.

       D. introduce new female shoppers “denjang girls” in South Korea.

LAST week's decision by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) to strip Pluto(冥王星) of its planetary status, held since its discovery in 1930, has made a lot of people sad. "Pluto," American science writer Dava Sobel writes in her book “The Planets”, “still has an emotional hold on planethood. People love Pluto. Children identify with its smallness. Adults felt it hard to accept its isolated existence.”

Many people felt sorry about Pluto's demotion(降级). “I just cannot accept this at this time,” says Liu Ming, 29, who runs a small company in Shanghai. “I was taught that 'the Nine Great Planets’ formed our solar system since primary school. And now they suddenly decrease the planets to eight. This will take some time for most of us to absorb it,” says Liu.

Ordinary people are simply not used to it, but for some professionals, especially the persons in charge of planetariums(天文馆) and educators, the change has become a real headache. The “eight instead of nine” change will affect thousands of planetariums around the world. Schools will also be greatly affected.
      In China, teachers are anxious as outdated textbooks are printed and given out to the remotest corner of the country for school children ready to start a new term soon. According to the Ministry of Education, new textbooks with changed contents will not be available until next year.

Zhao Zhiheng, a member of the Astronomy Association from Tianjin, suggested that primary and middle school teachers be trained in the improved knowledge, and that the media carry more stories to let people know about the change as soon as possible.

 

45.   The underlined phrase “strip…of” in paragraph1 means “__________”.

A. take…away from                  B. mark…with

C. get…ready for                     D. push…into

50. What’s the feeling of ordinary people to the change?

       A. They thought it necessary to have a change.

       B. They accepted it without hesitation.

       C. They felt a little sad and not used to it.

       D. They were strongly against the change.

51. Why did the change affect schools greatly?

       A. Teachers disagreed with the change and refused to accept it.

       B. Schools had to spend a lot of money on books.

       C. Students do not like the change of it.

       D. New textbooks will not be ready so soon.

52. In the following suggestions, which one is made by Zhao Zhiheng?

       A. Planetariums around the world should adapt to the change quickly.

       B. The media should make it known to people as soon as possible.

C. Teachers needn’t be trained in improved knowledge as soon as possible.

       D. Schoolchildren should be ready for the new knowledge.

       This is a doubtful age, but although our faith in many of the things has weakened, our confidence in the curative (治疗,药物) properties of the bottle medicine remains the same. This modern faith in medicine is proved by the fact that the annual drug bill of the Health Services is increasing to huge figures and shows no signs at present of stopping to rise. The majority of the patients attending the medical out-patients(门诊病人) departments of our hospitals feel that they have not received enough treatment unless they are able to carry home with them some tangible(有形的) curative in the shape of a bottle of medicine, a box of pills, or a small jar of ointment(软膏), and the doctor in charge of the department is only too ready to provide them with these requirements. There is no quicker method of treating of patients than by giving them what they are asking for, and since most doctors in the Health Services are overworked and have little time for offering time-consuming and little-appreciated advice on such subjects as diet, right living, and the need for abandoning bad habits etc.

Nor is it only the ignorant and ill-educated person who has such faith in the bottle of medicine. It is said that Thomas Carlyle (a famous Scottish writer), when he heard of the illness of his friend, went off immediately to visit him carrying with him in his pocket what remained of a bottle of medicine formerly used for a slight illness of Mrs. Carlyle’s. Carlyle was entirely ignorant of what the bottle in his pocket contained or the nature of the illness from which his friend was suffering, but a medicine that had worked so well in one form of illness would surely be of equal benefit in another, and comforted by the thought of the help he was bringing to his friend, he rushed to Henry Taylor’s house. History does not relate whether his friend accepted his medical help, but probably he did.

 

45.   According to the author, patients feel that they have been properly treated only if they _____.

A.      can take home some medicine doctors give them

B.      have confidence in the curative properties of a bottle of medicine

C.      are given careful check-ups by doctor

D.     are offered advice on diet and living by the doctor

46.   It can be learned from the passage that most doctors ________.

A.        feel morally bound(有义务的) to give patients advice about diet and right living

B.        are reluctant to provide patients with their requirements

C.        are confident in the curative properties of the bottle of medicine

D.       tend to satisfy patients’ demand for tangible medicine

47.   The story about Thomas Carlyle is used to illustrate that _________.

A.        a medicine that will cure one illness is not necessarily good for another

B.        Thomas Carlyle was ignorant

C.        Even educated people can be misled into believing that one can’t be cured by medicine

D.       Educated people may also have confidence in the bottle of medicine

48.   The passage mainly tells us that _________.

A.        we are in a skeptical age

B.        people’s faith in the bottle of medicine has not weakened in the modern age

C.        there are some problems in modern medical service

D.       patients have a tendency to put their own will on doctors

 

                      Friendlies abandoned as name for mascots(吉祥物)

The name "Friendlies" has been abandoned as the organization committee for the 2008 Beijing Olympics silently changed the English name of the Games' five mascot dolls last week. The organization committee decided to adopt the name "Fuwa", which is a pinyin translation of its Chinese name and is more frequently used in China.

However, the organization committee replaced all Friendlies to Fuwa on its official site, but without giving a formal announcement to inform the public of the change. It is said that they received an inside notice about the change last week but don't want to emphasize it for fear of affecting the sales of Olympic goods. 

Li Yanjun, a Legal Affairs Department official, said the decision was made considering a variety of reasons but did not want to comment on them. "You may know about the background and many unfavorable comments concerning the mascots' former name across the web, but I won't comment on them," Li said. "I'm not in the position to make it clear if the change was caused by this."

A report published last week on China Radio International (CRI)made the name change known and listed the reasons why the Friendlies name should be changed. "Firstly, Friendly is somewhat an unclear name, which could refer both to friendly people and friendly matches,"a Dr. Li from Lanzhou University was quoted as saying on the site. "Secondly, the term Friendlies has a similar pronunciation to 'friendless' and thirdly, the spelling of Friendlies could be split as 'friend lies'."

Laura Fitch, a Canadian who works in China as news editor, welcomed the change, saying the name Friendlies sounds a "a little bit childish" and "doesn't really have a meaning."

 

41. why did the organization committee change the name “Friendlies” into “Fuwa” without giving  a formal announcement?

A. Because it is not important to make it known.

B. Because everybody will know it by surfing the internet.

C. Because it will perhaps affect the sales of Olympic products.

D. Because all the people will criticize them for changing its name.

42. Which of the following is not true as the reasons for changing the name?

    A. Friendly is a name with more than one meaning.

    B. It is very easy for people to pronounce the name in a wrong way.

    C. People are likely to split it as “Friend lies”.

    D. “Friendly” is not a suitable name for Olympic goods.

43. What can be inferred from what Li Yanjun said in Para.3?

       A. He liked the name while others didn’t.

       B. He didn’t know how to comment on unfavourable comments.

       C. It is likely that the change of the name was caused by the unfavourable comments.

       D. People would not make unfavourable comments on “Friendlies” if they knew about the background.

44. What’s the people’s reaction to the change of the name according to the last paragraph?

       A. approving          B. exciting             C. dislike              D. not mentioned

 

 0  31807  31815  31821  31825  31831  31833  31837  31843  31845  31851  31857  31861  31863  31867  31873  31875  31881  31885  31887  31891  31893  31897  31899  31901  31902  31903  31905  31906  31907  31909  31911  31915  31917  31921  31923  31927  31933  31935  31941  31945  31947  31951  31957  31963  31965  31971  31975  31977  31983  31987  31993  32001  151629 

违法和不良信息举报电话:027-86699610 举报邮箱:58377363@163.com

精英家教网