Oscar-winning director Ang Lee' s new epic "Life of Pi" reveals the relationship between a teenage Indian boy and a Bengal tiger. But in reality, the predators(食肉动物)are under increasing threat from humans. Animal rights group PETA is hoping to use the popularity of the film to focus people's attention on the real life of Bengal tigers.
With the rising demand for tiger parts from East Asia, illegal hunting remains a tremendous danger for the remaining cat population. Back in 1947, there were 40,000 tigers in India, but the number is experiencing a sharp decline t0 1,706 despite campaigns to protect the animal.
Rising man-animal conflict is also one of the leading causes of decline in tiger numbers. In one of numerous reported attacks on the endangered big cats, villagers near The Bangladesh-India border, armed with sticks and boat oars, set upon the animal suspected to have attacked a local fisherman and beat it to death earlier this month. So far this year, 58 tiger deaths have been reported in the country.
"The first instinct when a tiger is spotted is to just kill it,"grieved Gurmeet Sapal, a wildlife filmmaker. "The feeling of fear and revenge is so strong that it shuts out any other emotion. What we don' t realize is that the tiger never attacks humans until it is forced to. "'
India has been struggling to stop the tiger's decline in the face of the loss of habitat as well that encourages the animals to leave the forest for food. " The tiger's rapidly exhausted prey base causes the predator to go al! out to get its food. Consequently, livestock and human beings become easy prey, which leads inevitably to conflict," says a wildlife conservationist.
Filmmaker Sapal says it is only normal for people to think of the tiger as a dangerous animal, but its image as a human killer bears some injustice. "Tigers never kill for sport nor store meat. They kill their prey only in case of hunger. "
【小题1】How can PETA take advantage over the hot movie “ Life of Pi ”?
A.PETA can count on the movie to promote people' s awareness of tiger' s life. |
B.PETA can make enough money by encourage people to watch the movie. |
C.The movie demonstrates that humans and tigers can live in harmony. |
D.The movie offers a wonderful opportunity for movie to act in. |
A.Because it was a human killer and attempted to attack people. |
B.Because it was suspected to be a threat to local people' s lives. |
C.Because local people just followed their instinct to kill it. |
D.Because people wanted to carry out their revenge for it. |
A.When they are annoyed by people. |
B.When they have conflict with people. |
C.When they are driven to act in the movie. |
D.When they are hungry or attacked. |
A.It is easier for tigers to hunt human beings than other animal for food. |
B.Tigers are losing their habitat and forced to go out of the woods. |
C.People hold a strong belief that tigers are a born threat to their lives. |
D.Tigers can't be treated equally as other animal in the forest |
【小题1】A
【小题2】B
【小题3】D
【小题4】B
解析试题分析:本文叙述了孟加拉虎减少的原因,是由于人们的猎杀或者破坏了它们的生存的栖息地,文中提到老虎从不主动攻击人,只有当它们感到饥饿或遭到攻击时,才袭击人或牲畜。
【小题1】A 推理判断题。根据第一段中“Animal rights group PETA is hoping to use the popularity of the film to focus people's attention on the real life of Bengal tigers. 动物权益保护组织希望利用电影的流行使人们注意力聚焦于真正的孟加拉虎的生活”可以推出正确答案A项:动物权益保护组织依靠电影来提升人们对真正的孟加拉虎的生活的意识性。
【小题2】B细节理解题。根据第三段中“set upon the animal suspected to have attacked a local fisherman and beat it to death earlier this month.因为怀疑老虎攻击了渔民而把老虎给打死了”可以得到正确答案B项。
【小题3】D根据最后一句话“Tigers never kill for sport nor store meat. They kill their prey only in case of hunger. 老虎从来不杀人,只有饿的时候或遭到袭击时才把人当成它们的猎物” 可以得到正确答案D项。
【小题4】B推理判断题。根据倒数第二段的叙述我们知道“因为老虎的栖息地遭到了破坏,它们不得不走出森林去觅食,所以牲畜和人类成了它们的猎物,这样不可避免地导致了冲突”,由此我们可以推断出:老虎渐渐失去栖息地而被迫外出觅食是导致牲畜和人类成了老虎攻击的靶子的原因。故答案B正确。
考点:社会生活说明文类阅读理解
科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Nobody Benefits
NEW YORK—America has been experiencing the longest economic increase in its history.Incomes have risen, unemployment has fallen, and cities such as New York are bursting with new office buildings.
But just a short walk from Manhattan's skyscrapers, George Brown sits on the side-walk, cooking a lunch of rice and bits of fish over a can of cooking fuel.
Brown is homeless — one of the 2.3 million people in the US who end up on the street.
During the day, Brown collects aluminium cans and sells them for five cents a piece.At night, he sleeps on the street.
"I have been on the street about eight or nine years, something like that," said the 62-year-old former construction worker.
Brown admits he's had problems with alcohol and has smoked cocaine.But he said he still wants a more stable housing arrangement.He could afford it just with the money he earns by collecting cans and small pieces of metal, if only truly low-income housing were available.
However, he sees no hope of finding affordable housing in New York.
With the strong economy and unemployment down, beautiful housing is being built to meet demand.
A US report shows rents in New York city rose more than 27 percent between 1984 and 1999, from US $549 to US $700 a month.
One of the side effects of the strong economy is that rents have been going up.
The majority of people who experience homelessness really just need some affordable housing help.
But few housing companies have been built for the poor.Many small apartments in the city now rent for US $1,500 a month or more.
Brown, the homeless New Yorker, said he has a daughter who lives in the city but he rarely sees her.She is angry about his drinking and won't allow it in her house.
Smiling, he said he also has seven grandchildren whom he'd like to see more often.
"All I've got to do is clean up my act," he said.
【小题1】What kind of life does George Brown lead?
A.Homeless and dangerous |
B.Homeless and childish |
C.Homeless and miserable (痛苦的) |
D.Homeless and sleepless |
A.old Americans lead a hard life |
B.old Americans want to live alone |
C.American cities are crowded with poor people |
D.bad habits play a role in some poor people's Life |
A.America is short of housing companies |
B.the poor can't benefit from the increasing economy |
C.poor people in America will become rich |
D.housing companies will build more houses for the poor |
A.Society. | B.Science. | C.Economy. | D.Business |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
On Sept. 11, an unseen enemy launched an attack on economic, military and governmental
Landmarks(标志) of the United States.
Beyond the tremendous(巨大的) loss of innocent lives and physical property, the attack was clearly aimed at the ideals of America—our values and the economic system that has made the U.S. economy the envy of the world.
Those responsible for these acts portray(描绘)the United States as the embodiment(化身)of all that is evil
With globalization and the worldwide economy it has spawned. They use the failures of globalization as an excuse to exploit their millions of constituents in the underdeveloped world.
Sometime soon, the U.S. military will strike back against those who it is determined have committed these acts. A military response is appropriate – some would say overdue(期待已久). But even if the military objective is achieved, that alone will not get to the heart of the matter.
It is crucial that the U.S. economy return to full speed ahead and continue to be the driving force behind expansion of the global economy.
Globalization, or at least the present phase of it, generally is viewed as having started with the end of the Cold War in 1989. And for all its shortcomings, the free flow of goods, services, capital and labor across the borders of the world’s trading nations — the process that has come to be called globalization—still offers the best chance to fulfill the dreams of so many of the world’s poor.
【小题1】The attack on Sept. 11 caused _____.
A.loss to both the military forces and the ordinary citizens in the U.S. |
B.a large variety of losses among the American people |
C.greater loss to the American government than the citizens |
D.less loss in the economy of the U.S. than the American ideals |
A.some people were jealous of the richness of the United States |
B.the development of globalization frightened those who were conservative |
C.everything evil might be thought to have something to do with the U.S. |
D.the United States was considered the most evil country all over the world |
A.will be successful very soon |
B.cannot make any sense to the matter |
C.is really hard to some extent |
D.will prove justifiable and necessary |
A.It will bring the expansion of the world’s economy. |
B.The poor will become rich overnight if it is realized. |
C.Nations will be too friendly to start a war against each other. |
D.The borders between the nations will be abandoned soon. |
A.Economical factors are of great importance in international affairs. |
B.The event on Sept. 11 has slowed down the process of globalization. |
C.Military forces are necessary in the course of the development of economy. |
D.The progress of globalization depends on the recovery of American economy. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
“When I grow up, I want to be...”
Almost all of us have thought about, or been asked to think about, our future careers. Our answers may differ greatly. Even now your aspirations may have changed from when you were in primary school.
However, it seems career options aren’t only based on personal taste. In a survey carried out by Teens, doctors, lawyers, and bankers were some of most popular careers that people said they hoped to follow. This is in line with a similar survey carried out in the UK in May 2011 by job website monster. Co.uk, in which medicine was the top choice among UK teenagers aged between 13 and 17.
Medicine and law are two of the oldest and best known professions. Their prestige (威望) may come from the fact that doctors and lawyers are some of the most esteemed members of society, and they make good money. Joining these high-profile professions is often seen as a sign of upward social mobility.
It is equally unsurprising that banking is now one of the most common career choices. Youngsters worldwide think of banking and see the money rolling in. Wealth is increasingly becoming one of the most important indicators of a successful career. British young men list the UK tycoon Alan Sugar, Microsoft founder Bill Gates and Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg as their top role models “for their wealth”. Just as Chinese teenagers see being a banker as a good and fun pathway to “wealth”.
However, not every child has the makings of doctor, lawyer, or banker. They are those who see fulfillment and happiness in other areas, and many teenagers dare to ink more individuality into their career options. As the Teens’ survey discovered, a variety of unconventional jobs---coffee shop owner, gourmet(美食家),waiter at a fast food restaurant---are among teenagers’ career choices. They can be equally interesting and rewarding jobs.
With every choice comes responsibility and challenge, and all career paths require specific education and training, you have to learn to balance optimism and confidence with being realistic about your particular talents and skills.
【小题1】What is the passage mainly about?
A.Careers in teenagers’ mind. |
B.Choosing a good job is very important. |
C.Teenagers in the UK like doctors. |
D.The choice of career needs challenge. |
A.Medicine | B.Law | C.Bank | D.Education |
A.respect from others | B.the oldest profession |
C.high pay | D.upward social mobility. |
A.Prestige | B.Fulfillment | C.Happiness | D.Wealth |
A.According to your particular talents and skills, you can choose your favorite career. |
B.Specific education and training can help get a good job. |
C.Whatever career you choose, you should balance optimism and confidence with being realistic about your particular talents and skills. |
D.Responsibility is the most important when you choose a good job. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
In ancient Egypt, the pharaoh(法老)treated the poor message runner like a prince when he arrived at the palace, if he brought good news. However, if the exhausted runner had the misfortune to bring the pharaoh unhappy news, his head was cut off.
Shades of that spirit spread over today’s conversations. Once a friend and I packed up some peanut butter and sandwiches for an outing. As we walked light-heartedly out the door, picnic basket in hand, a smiling neighbor looked up at the sky and said, ”Oh boy, bad day for a picnic. The weatherman says it’s going to rain.”I wanted to strike him on the face with the peanut butter and sandwiches. Not for his stupid weather report, for his smile.
Several months ago I was racing to catch a him As I breathlessly put my handful of cash across the Grey hound counter, the sales agent said with a broad smile ,”Oh that bus left five minutes ago.”Dreams of head-cutting!
It’s not the news that makes someone angry. It’s the unsympathetic attitude with which it’s the unsympathetic attitude with which it’s delivered. Everyone must give bad news from time to time, and winning professionals do it with the proper attitude. A doctor advising a patient that she needs an operation does it in a caring way. A boss informing an employee he didn’t get the job takes on a sympathetic tone. Big winners know, when delivering any bad news, they should share the feeling of the receiver.
Unfortunately, many people are not aware of this. When you’re tired from a long flight, has a hotel clerk cheerfully said that your room isn’t ready yet? When you had your heart set on the toast beef, has your waiter mainly told you that he just served the last piece? It makes you as traveler or diner want to land your fist right on their unsympathetic faces.
Had my neighbor told me of the upcoming rainstorm with sympathy, I would have appreciated his warming .Had the Greyhound salesclerk sympathetically informed me that my bus had already left, I probably would have said, ” Oh, that’s all right I’ll catch the next one.” Big winners, when they bear bad news ,deliver bombs with the emotion the bombarded(被轰炸的)person is sure to have.
【小题1】In Paragraph 1,the writer tells the story of the pharaoh to ____.
A.make a comparison | B.describe a scene |
C.introduce a topic | D.offer an argument |
A.was mad at the sales agent |
B.was reminded of the cruel pharaoh |
C.wished that the sales agent would have had dreams |
D.dreamed of cutting the sales agent’s head that night. |
A.Learning ancient traditions can be useful. |
B.Receiving bad news requires great courage. |
C.Helping others sincerely is the key to business success. |
D.Delivering bad news properly is important in communication. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
A little under one-third of U.S. families have no Internet access and do not plan to get it, with most of the holdouts seeing little use for it in their lives, according to a survey released on Friday.
Park Associates, a Dallas-based technology market research firm, said 29 percent of U.S. families, or 31 million homes, do not have Internet access and do not intend to subscribe(预订) to an Internet service over the next 12 months. The second annual National Technology Scan conducted by Park found that the main reason why potential customers say they do not subscribe to the Internet is because of the low value to their daily lives rather than concerns over cost.
Forty-four percent of these families say they are not interested in anything on the Internet, versus just 22 percent who say they cannot afford a computer or the cost of Internet service, the survey showed. The answer "I'm not sure how to use the Internet" came from 17 percent of participants who do not subscribe. The response "I do all my e-commerce shopping and YouTube-watching at work" was cited by 14 percent of Internet-access refuseniks. Three percent said the Internet doesn't reach their homes.
The study found U.S. broadband adoption grew to 52 percent over 2006, up from 42 percent in 2005. Roughly half of new subscribers converted(转变) from slower-speed, dial-up Internet access while the other half of families had no prior access.
"The industry continues to chip (击破)away at the core of non-subscribers, but has a long way to go," said John Barrett, director of research at Parks Associates. "Entertainment applications will be the key. If anything will pull in the holdouts, it's going to be applications that make the Internet more similar to pay-TV," he predicted.
【小题1】What does the underlined word “holdouts” in the first paragraph most probably mean?
A.some American families |
B.those who hold out one’s opinions |
C.those who have been surveyed |
D.those who still haven’t access to the Internet currently |
A.they show too much concern about the cost |
B.they can find little value of it |
C.they do most YouTube-watching at work |
D.the Internet doesn’t reach their homes |
A.It is not an easy job to transform those holdouts into the Internet users |
B.people will adopt dial-up Internet access no more |
C.many Americans enjoy doing e-commerce shopping at home |
D.more than half of the population are using the Internet in 2005 |
A.making the Internet look more similar to TV set |
B.applying the Internet more to entertainment |
C.providing more pay-TV programs |
D.chipping away at the core of non-subscribers |
A.Web develops with technology |
B.The present situation of web |
C.Many Americans see little point to web |
D.It is urgent to promote web service |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
How do you design a pay plan that motivates people to do their best work? A new study by three Harvard researchers suggests a novel answer: Shortly after you hire new workers, give them a raise.
"Previous research has shown that paying people more than they expect may elicit reciprocity(相互作用) in the form of greater productivity," notes Deepak Malhotra, a Harvard business-administration professor who worked on the study. What he and his colleagues found, however, was that the connection between more pay and extra effort depends on presenting the increase "as a gift—that is, as something you've chosen to do purely as a nice gesture, with no strings attached."
Malhotra and his team studied 267 people hired by oDesk, a global online network of freelancers, to do a one-time data-entry project for four hours. All of the new hires were people in developing countries, for whom hourly wages of $3 and $4 were higher than what they had been making in previous jobs.
The researchers split the group up into three equal parts. One group was told they would earn $3 an hour. A second group was initially hired at $3 an hour but, before they started working, they got a surprise: The budget for the project had expanded unexpectedly, they were told, and they would now be paid $4 an hour. The third group was offered $4 an hour from the start and given no increase.
Even though the second and third groups were eventually paid the same amount, the second group worked harder and produced more—about 20% more—than either of the other two. People in the second group also showed the most stamina, maintaining their focus all the way through the assigned task and performing especially well toward the end of the four hours. Interestingly, the more experienced employees in the high-performing group were the most productive of all, apparently because their previous work experience led them to appreciate the rarity of an unexpected raise.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, Malhotra points out that higher pay, in and of itself, didn't promote productivity: People who made $4 an hour from the beginning worked no harder than those who were hired at $3 and were then paid $3.
To get the most impact from their pay plans, he adds, companies might consider not only what to pay new hires, but when to pay it.
"The key thing is how you present [the reason for an increase]," he says. Doling out extra money could promote productivity most "if you make it clear that the pay raise is something you're choosing to do just because you can. Our theory is that people will reciprocate. If you do something nice, they'll do something nice back."
【小题1】What does the underlined word “stamina” most probably mean?
A.The quality of being intelligent or clever. |
B.The quality of doing something difficult or dangerous. |
C.The physical or mental energy needed to do a tiring activity for a long time. |
D.A particular method of doing an activity, usually involving practical skills. |
A.Because they thought they were better paid than the other groups. |
B.Because they were experienced employees from developing countries. |
C.Because an unexpected raise reminded them of their previous work. |
D.Because they felt they were nicely treated and tried best to repay it. |
A.No pains, no gains. |
B.It matters not what we give but how. |
C.Honesty is the best policy. |
D.Actions speak louder than words. |
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