I was brought up in the British, stiff upper lip style. Strong feelings aren’t something you display in public. So, you can imagine that I was unprepared for the outpouring of public grief(悲伤) at a Chinese funeral.
My editorial team leader died recently after a short illness. He was 31. The news was so unexpected that it left us all shocked and upset. A female colleague burst into tears and cried piteously at her desk. Somehow we got through the day's work. The next day was the funeral.
Our big boss stepped forward to deliver a eulogy and was soon in tears. She carried on, in Chinese of course, but at the end said in English: "There will be no more deadlines for you in heaven." Next came a long-term colleague who also dissolved in tears but carried on with her speech despite being almost overcome by emotion. Then a close friend of the dead man paid tribute(哀悼), weeping openly as he spoke. Sorrow is spreading. Me and women were now sobbing uncontrollably. Finally, the man's mother, supported between two women, addressed her son in his coffin. At one point, the mother almost collapsed and had to be held up. We were invited to step forward to each lay a white rose on the casket. Our dead colleague looked as if he was taking a nap. At the end of the service I walked away from the funeral parlor stunned at the outpouring of emotion.
In the UK, families grieve privately and then try to hold it together and not break down at a funeral. Here in China it would seem that grieving is a public affair. It strikes me that it is more cathartic to cry your eyes out than try to keep it bottled up for fear of embarrassment, which is what many of us do in the West.
Afterwards, a Chinese colleague told me that the lamenting at the funeral had been restrained(克制) by Chinese standards. In some rural areas, she said, people used to be paid to mourn noisily. This struck me like something out of novel by Charles Dickens. But we have all seen on TV scenes of grief-stricken people in Gaza and the West Bank, in Afghanistan, Iraq and the relatives of victims of terrorist bombings around the world. Chinese grief is no different. I realized that it's the reserved British way of mourning that is out of step with the rest of the world.
It was our newspaper's production day. We were bussed back to the office to resume work. No more deadlines for our former colleague, but we had to pull together to put the newspaper to print. The boss invited the team to go out for dinner after work. We relaxed, smiled, joked. There was no mention of the funeral or our poor colleague. Enough sorrow had been shed already. We needed a break.
【小题1】The underlined words “stiff upper lip style” mean “ ”.
A.cold-blooded | B.warm-hearted |
C.self-controlled | D.light-hearted |
A.five individuals made speeches |
B.the boss’s speech was best thought of |
C.everyone was crying out loudly |
D.the writer was astonished by the scene |
A.are not willing to be sad for the dead |
B.prefer to control their sadness in public |
C.cry their eyes out at the public funeral |
D.have better way to express sadness |
A.the English might cry noisily for the dead in Dickens’ time |
B.Chinese express their sadness quite unlike other peoples |
C.victims of terrorist bombings should be greatly honored |
D.English funeral culture is more civilized than the others |
A.an editor’s death | B.bad funeral customs |
C.western ways of grief | D.cultural differences |
【小题1】C
【小题2】D
【小题3】B
【小题4】A
【小题5】D
解析试题分析:文章大意为:本文主要叙述了作者通过举了同事去世,中国人和亚洲一些国家一样总是为死去的人哭得很悲伤,而英国人不很会为死者哭得很悲伤,他们更喜欢控制他们的情绪,隐藏悲伤。
【小题1】C细节理解题:根据第一段最后一句I was unprepared for the outpouring of public grief(悲伤) at a Chinese funeral.作者说她在中国的葬礼上的悲伤倾泻而出,连她自己都没有准备。说明作者是善良的。故C正确。
【小题2】D 推理判断题:根据第三段“Our big boss stepped forward to deliver a eulogy”“ came a long-term colleague”“ Then a close friend of the dead man paid tribute(哀悼)”共有三个人made a speech 所以A排除;B项没提到;C项第三段第五行“Me and women were now sobbing uncontrollably.”可知并不是所有人都大哭;D项从第三段最后一句“At the end of the service I walked away from the funeral parlor stunned at the outpouring of emotion. ”可知作者被那场景震惊;故D正确。
【小题3】B 推理判断题根据第四段可知:西方人不是不为死者悲伤,他们会在公共场合控制自己的悲伤,因此A错;C也错;本文也没有说西方人有更好的办法去表达悲伤,说到他们会把悲伤藏在心底。故D错;根据第四段第一句“In the UK, families grieve privately and then try to hold it together and not break down at a funeral.”可知B项正确。
【小题4】A 推断题根据第五段“people used to be paid to mourn noisily. This struck me like something out of novel by Charles Dickens.”可知A项正确。
【小题5】D 主旨大意题本文主要叙述了作者通过举了同事去世,中国人和亚洲一些国家一样总是为死去的人哭得很悲伤,而英国人不很会为死者哭得很悲伤,他们更喜欢控制他们的情绪,隐藏悲伤。旨在强调文化差异。故D正确。
考点:考查对记叙文的理解。
科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Brief Introduction
(Adeline) Virginia Woolf (née Stephen; 25 January 1882 – 28 March 1941) was an English novelist and essayist, regarded as one of the foremost modernist literary figures of the twentieth century.During the interwar period, Woolf was a significant figure in London literary society and a member of the Bloomsbury Group. Her most famous works include the novels Mrs Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927) and Orlando (1928), and the book-length essay A Room of One's Own (1929), with its famous dictum, "a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction."
Main body
My dear,
'Dearest, I feel certain I am going mad again. I feel we can't go through another of those terrible times. And I shan't recover this time. I begin to hear voices, and I can't concentrate. So I am doing what seems the best thing to do. You have given me the greatest possible happiness. You have been in every way all that anyone could be. I don't think two people could have been happier till this terrible disease came. I can't fight any longer. I know that I am spoiling your life, that without me you could work. And you will I know. You see I can't even write this properly. I can't read. What I want to say is I owe all the happiness of my life to you. You have been entirely patient with me and incredibly good. I want to say that - everybody knows it. If anybody could have saved me it would have been you. Everything has gone from me but the certainty of your goodness. I can't go on spoiling your life any longer.
I don't think two people could have been happier than we have been...........................from the last letter of virginia woolf
【小题1】According to the first paragraph we can infer that
A.During the interwar period,virginia woolf was important for London people. |
B.She has been living for 55 years |
C.Her first the novels Mrs Dalloway in 1925 |
D.She regarded as one of the foremost romanticism literary figures of the twentieth century |
A.letter of resignation | B.Letter of condolence |
C.Letter of suicide | D.Letters of Apologies ; |
A.newspaper | B.biography |
C.German Literature | D.television |
A.She can't go on spoiling your life any longer |
B.I feel certain I am going mad again |
C.She cannot bear her husband's interference |
D.The approach of war makes her psychological problems aggravated |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Fourteen – year – old Richie Hawley had spent five years studying violin at the Community School of Performing Arts in Los Angeles when he took part in a violin contest. Ninety two young people were invited to the contest and Hawley came out first.
The contest could have been the perfect setup for fear, worrying about mistakes, and trying to impress the judges. But Hawley says he did pretty well in staying calm. “I couldn’t be thinking about how many mistakes I’d make — it would distract me from playing,” he says. “I didn’t even remember trying to impress people while I played. It’s almost as if they weren’t there. I just wanted to make music.”
Hawley is a winner. But he didn’t become a winner by concentrating on winning. He did it by concentrating on playing well.
“The important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part,” said the founder of the modern Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin. “The important thing in life is not the triumph (胜利) but the struggle. The essential thing is not to have conquered but to have fought well.”
A characteristic of high performers is their intense, pleasurable concentration on work, rather than on their competitors or future glory or money, says Dr. Charles Garfield, who has studied 1,500 achievers in business, science, sports, the arts, and professions. “They are interested in winning, but they are most interested in self - development, testing their limits.”
One of the most surprising things about top performers is how many losses they’ve had and how much they’ve learned from each. “Not one of the 1,500 I studied defined losing as failing,” Garfield says. “They kept calling their losses ‘setbacks’.”
A healthy attitude toward setbacks is essential to winning, experts agree.
“The worst thing you can do if you’ve had a setback is to let yourself get stuck in a long depression. You should analyze carefully what went wrong, identify specific things you did right and give yourself credit for them.” Garfield believes that most people don’t give themselves enough praise. He even suggests keeping a diary of all the positive things you’ve done on the way to a goal.
【小题1】Hawley won the contest because ________.
A.he put all his mind to his performance |
B.he cared much about the judges’ feelings |
C.he tried his best to avoid making mistakes |
D.he paid close attention to the people around |
A.challenging their own limits | B.learning from others |
C.defeating their opponents | D.avoiding setbacks |
A.helps people deal with their disappointment |
B.makes people forget their setbacks |
C.makes people regret about their past |
D.helps people analyze what went wrong |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
I entered high school having read hundreds of books. But I was not a good reader. Merely bookish, I lacked a point of view when I read. Rather, I read in order to get a point of view. I searched books for good expressions and sayings, pieces of information, ideas, themes—anything to enrich my thought and make me feel educated. When one of my teachers suggested to his sleepy tenth-grade English class that a person could not have a "complicated idea" until he had read at least two thousand books, I heard the words without recognizing either its irony (嘲讽) or its very complicated truth. I merely determined to make a list of all the books I had ever read. Strict with myself, I included only once a title I might have read several times. (How, after all, could one read a book more than once?) And I included only those books over a hundred pages in length. (Could anything shorter be a book?)
There was yet another high school list I made. One day I came across a newspaper article about an English professor at a nearby state college. The article had a list of the "hundred most important books of Western Civilization." "More than anything else in my life," the professor told the reporter with finality , " these books have made me all that I am ." That was the kind of words I couldn’t ignore. I kept the list for the several months it took me to read all of the titles. Most books, of course, I hardly understood. While reading Plato's The Republic, for example, I needed to keep looking at the introduction of the book to remind myself what the text was about. However, with the special patience and superstition (迷信) of a schoolboy, I looked at every word of the text. And by the time I reached the last word, pleased, I persuaded myself that I had read The Republic, and seriously crossed Plato off my list.
【小题1】Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?
A.The writer thought it was impossible for one to read two thousand books. |
B.While at high school, the writer had plans for reading. |
C.The writer only read books no more than 100 pages. |
D.The writer thought the teacher was not being serious about the suggestion of reading. |
A.firmly | B.immediately | C.simply | D.pleasantly |
A.explain why it was included in the list |
B.describe why he seriously crossed it off the list |
C.show that he read the books blindly though they were hard to understand |
D.prove that he understood most of it because he had looked at every word |
A.show how he developed his point of view |
B.tell his reading experience at high school |
C.introduce the two persons' reading methods |
D.explain that he read many books at high school |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
My l4-year-old son, John, and I spotted the coat at the same time in a second-hand clothing store. It stood out among big and old coats. It had beautiful tailoring and an unbelievable price: $28. I looked at my son and we both said nothing, but John’s eyes shone. Dark, woolen topcoats were popular with teenage boys, but they could cost several hundred dollars new. This coat was even better. John tried it on and turned from side to side, eyeing himself in the mirror. The fit was perfect.
John wore the coat to school the next day and came home with a big grin. “Did the kids like your coat?” I asked. “They loved it,” he said.
Over the next few weeks, John changed. He was polite, less argumentative, more thoughtful, and on the whole much happier. “Good dinner, mom,” he would say every evening. Without a word of objection he would carry in wood for the stove. One day when I suggested that he might start on his homework before dinner, John, who always put things off, said: “You’re right. I guess I will.” When I mentioned this incident to one of his teachers, she joked that the coat must have changed him.
John and I both know we should never mistake a person’s clothes for the real person within them. But there is something to be said for wearing a standard of excellence for the world to see, for practicing standards of excellence in thought, speech, and behavior, and for matching what is on the inside to what is on the outside.
【小题1】What does the author try to express in the first paragraph?
A.The coat looked like a magical coat. |
B.They were good at shopping. |
C.The coat was a real bargain. |
D.They had the same taste in clothes. |
A.A wide smile. | B.A worried look. |
C.A jealous spirit. | D.A joking tone. |
A.a, b, c | B.a, c, e | C.b, d, e | D.c, d, e |
A.We should not judge people by their appearance. |
B.Life is full of possibilities when we are young. |
C.It’s beneficial to try different things in our lives. |
D.What we wear could help shape who we are inside. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Chinese writer Mo Yan has won the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature, announced the Swedish Academy in Stockholm on Thursday.The win makes Mo Yan the first Chinese citizen to win the Nobel in its 111-year history.Informed of his win today, the author, who was having dinner at home, was “overjoyed and scared".
Born in 1955 to parents who were farmers, Mo Yan-a pen name for Guan Moye, grew up in Gaomi in Shandong province in eastern China. At the age of 12, he left school to work, first in agriculture, later in a factory. In 1976, he joined the army and during this time began to study literature and writing.
He published his first book in 1981, but found literary success in 1987 with Hong Gaoliang Jiazu, which was successfully filmed in the same year, directed by famous Chinese director Zhang Yimou. In his writing, Mo Yan draws on his youthful experiences and on settings in the province of his birth and his works show the life of Chinese people as well as the country's unique culture and folk customs.Mo Yan is known as a prolific(多产的)writer.In addition to his novels, he has published many short stories and essays on various topics. Despite his social criticism, he is seen in his homeland as one of the most famous contemporary authors.Dozens of his works have been translated into English, French, Japanese and many other languages.
The awarding ceremony will be held on December 10.The winner will win a medal, a personal diploma and a cash award of about $l million.
【小题1】Mo Yan developed his ability for writing when he was _ .
A.on a farm | B.in a factory | C.in the army | D.in a school |
A.explains difficult matters in simple words |
B.focuses on social problems in the country |
C.describes his characters in a unique way |
D.writes about topics he is familiar with |
A.How Mo Yan Gets Nobel Prize |
B.Mo Yan Wins Nobel Prize in Literature |
C.An Introduction to Nobel Prize |
D.A World Famous Writer, Mo Yan |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Parents are a child’s first teachers. But some parents never learned from good examples. In New York City, a nonprofit agency called Covenant House tries to help homeless young mothers become good parents.
The twelve or so teenagers who live at the shelter attend parenting classes four days a week. The class is called Mommy and Me. Teacher Delores Clemens is a mother of five and a grandmother. She teaches basic skills, like how to give a baby a bath and how to dress a baby depending on the season.
She remembers one student who learned from her mother not to pick up a crying baby. The mother said that would only make the child needy and overly demanding. Delores Clemens says, “that's not true. You have to hold your baby! He is crying for a reason. If you never pick him up, he's going to keep crying. Pick your baby up. Cuddle your baby. Hug him! And she started to do that. They just want a little cuddling and a little love. And it works!”
Delores Clemens says her students also learn how to be good mothers by letting themselves be mothered. Around three hundred fifty teenage mothers graduate from Covenant House's Mommy and Me class every year.
In class, with her baby son is Natasha. She lived on the streets. She is glad not only for the warmth and shelter of Covenant House. As she told reporter Adam Phillips, she is also glad for the help they offer in seeking a more secure life.
The World Health Organization says the United States has forty-one births for every one thousand girls age fifteen to nineteen. That is higher than other developed countries, as well as some developing ones. By comparison, northern neighbor Canada has fourteen births and southern neighbor Mexico has eighty-two.
【小题1】What is the text mainly about?
A.Parents who are a child’s first teachers. |
B.A class where teens learn mothering and are mothered. |
C.A nonprofit agency that offers a more secure life. |
D.A kind teacher who help homeless young mothers. |
A.help homeless young mothers become good parents |
B.provide homeless young mothers with a warm shelter |
C.help mothers in New York be good parents |
D.teach some parents how to love their children |
A.She has a mother of five and a grandmother. |
B.She thinks a crying baby should be picked up and hugged. |
C.She teaches advanced skills on how to be good mothers. |
D.She is very glad for the warmth and shelter of Covenant House. |
A.Canada | B.the United States of America |
C.Mexico | D.Britain |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Common phrases like “ no pains, no gains” give the impression that we ought to be suffering while we study. It’s almost as though the only way to know if we’re putting in enough work is the sense of hardship we bear.
When we haven’t taken the time to come up with another idea, all we know how to do is shut ourselves in a room with a book. It’s no surprise that we find revision boring and difficult. Just as children learn from playing, we can learn from doing, or at least from study techniques that interest us, rather than make us switch off.
Shutting yourself away can make you learn to hate studying. This leads to a situation where instead of being able to concentrate on your work, you are troubled by how unfair it is that you must study.
When you hate your work it’s very difficult to make yourself star, or approach it with any kind of structure or enthusiasm. This can be part of a vicious cycle(恶性循环) that traps you into ineffective revision, your poor progress fuelling further annoyance.
Just being around other people really helps fight against feelings of loneliness and, thankfully, it’s perfectly possible to work in the company of other people. We just need to learn how to deal with distractions(使人分心的事物).
It’s not necessary to avoid all company, just idle(懒散的) company. Studying in the same room as someone who is ironing or working out is perfectly possible. People who are bored and looking to be distracted, however, are terrible to work around. They constantly try to keep others in conversation.
It’s also a good idea to avoid the company of people involved in activities that you would rather be doing than studying. Working while sitting next to someone playing video games is much more likely to end with a new high score than a productive few hours of revision.
If being around others means working in a noisy environment, a pair of headphones and some background music can block out even noisy children. They also act as a psychological barrier, so that people think twice before interrupting you.
When you’re studying for a big exam, it seems like your whole life is taken up with study. Friends and family can lessen feelings of isolation(孤立). And connecting with other people makes us happy, so it’s important not to give that up and to make sure that we take the time to socialize.
【小题1】The author might believe that the phrase “no pains, no gains” ______.
A.best describes how to study well |
B.makes people treat study as a habit |
C.encourages people to learn step by step |
D.is not a good inspirational phrase for study |
A.There is no royal road to learning. |
B.It’s better to work behind closed door. |
C.A positive motivation leads to good study results. |
D.He who is ashamed of asking is ashamed of learning. |
A.A correct goal. | B.A good teacher. |
C.A favorable interest. | D.A hard task. |
A.playing video games is helpful for an effective study |
B.one shouldn’t let a video player to be his / her company |
C.one should study from certain activities that he / she is interested in |
D.the more time one spends in playing games, the higher marks he / she will get |
A.give indication of not wanting to be interrupted |
B.give up others’ company at one |
C.think twice before taking any action |
D.force yourself to be accustomed to the environment |
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