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Historians say Harriet Tubman was born in the year 1820.Nobody really knows. But we do know that Harriet Tubman was one of the bravest women ever born in the United States.
From a very early age,Harriet knew how slaves suffered. At six years old,she was sent to the fields. Working outside not only made her body strong but also made her learn about the Underground Railroad,on which she helped hundreds of people escape from slavery later. She also learned many things from the other slaves,which one day would help her lead her people to freedom. She became more of a rebel (反叛者).
In 1844,at about age 24,she married a free black man named John Tubman. By now,Harriet was sure she wanted to try to escape. Suddenly,the time came. Her owner died. Though opposed by her husband,she decided to escape. With the help of the Underground Railroad,and through a variety of suffering she finally crossed the border into Pennsylvania,where slavery was banned.
Now that Harriet was free,she did not forget the hundreds of other slaves back in Maryland. Harriet traveled back and forth eighteen times,helping about 300 slaves escape into free territory. She became an expert at hiding from slave hunters. The people she helped called her Moses. At one time,anyone finding Harriet was promised $40,000 for catching her-dead or alive.
During the Civil War,Harriet Tubman went into enemy territory to spy for the North. She also served as a nurse. After four years of bloody fighting,the North won the war.
After the fighting ended,Harriet Tubman returned to Auburn,New York. She kept working. She traveled and gave speeches to raise money for better education for black children. She also worked for women’s rights and housing. Harriet Tubman died in 1913.She was about 93 years old. By that time,she was recognized as an American hero. The United States government gave a funeral with military honors for the woman known as Moses.
1.Which of the following would be the best title for the text?
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A.A History of American Black Slaves |
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B.Cruel American Civil War |
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C.Information on the Underground Railroad |
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D.A Brief Introduction to Harriet Tubman |
2.Which of the following is true of the Underground Railroad?
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A.It was a system that helped slaves escape from the South to North. |
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B.It was a special train,on which slaves couldn’t be found easily. |
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C.It was a special place where slaves could hide themselves. |
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D.It was a group of people who would like to help the blacks. |
3.The sentence “Later,she told a friend,‘I felt like I was in heaven.’” can be placed at the back of Paragragh ________.
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A.2 |
B.3 |
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C.4 |
D.5 |
4.According to the text,we know that ________.
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A.slavery was banned in all the states in America before the Civil War |
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B.Harriet Tubman raised money for better education for white children |
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C.the government gave her a funeral because she was Moses |
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D.Harriet Tubman still worked for black people after the Civil War |
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阅读理解:阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项.
ROME (AP)-Roadways buckled under the scorching sun in Germany, water levels on the Danube and other rivers dropped and wildfires forced tourists and residents to flee Wednesday as record-breaking heat, blamed for at least 37 deaths, tormented Europe.
Londoners experienced the hottest day in the city's history when the temperature hit 35.4 degrees C, beating the 35 degrees recorded in 1990.Then a British Airways Concorde was forced to make an unscheduled stop in Gander, Nfld., during a flight from London to New York to refuel.
The day's high in Paris, of 39.5 degrees fell just shy of the all-time record of 40.4 degrees set in 1947.
“One can safely say that this is one of the hottest summers of the last 50 years,” said Capt. Alessandro Fuccello, of the Italian air force's meteorology office. He was speaking about Italy, but the heat wave was the hottest in recent memory in much of Europe.
Air conditioning is uncommon in much of northern Europe because it doesn't usually get so hot and it's discouraged in the south, where temperatures are often warmer, with high energy costs.
Exhausted firefighters were battling Portugal's worst wildfires in recent memory. The discovery of two bodies in a burned forest 300 kilometres northeast of Lisbon brought the death toll in that country to at least 14.
Two people in southern Spain died of heat stroke, raising the death toll to 14 in the heat wave stifling much of the country. Among the deaths was a firefighter who had a heart attack Tuesday after battling a blaze.
Forest fires fanned by hot winds near the French Riviera last week killed four people, and a fifth person died in Corsica when he tried to put out a fire near his home.
Belgium's Royal Meteorological Institute predicted it could reach 40 degrees Thursday-the highest temperature it has ever forecast since its founding in 1833-and several rivers were declared off-limits to kayakers because of low water levels.
1.Some parts of ________ have broken their heat records so far this year.
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2.It can be inferred from the report that________.
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A.people in southern Europe are happy to use air-conditioning
B.the hotter it is, the more petrol will be needed by a plane
C.more deaths were caused by forest fires than by heat in Europe
D.forest fires will come about when there are hot winds
3.As far as the places mentioned in the passage are concerned, people would prefer to go to ________ to spend this summer.
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4.Which of the following might be the best title for the report?
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A.Europe: wildfires caused by heat
B.Europe: swept by unusual heat waves
C.Europe: deaths caused by heat
D.Europe: suffering the hottest summer
5.The meaning of the underlined word “predicted” (the last paragraph) is close to that of ________.
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