---The humorous English teacher is famous and well received in our campus.
---Yes, _______.
A. So does Tom B. So tom is C. So it is with tom D. Tom is so
科目:高中英语 来源:北京市丰台区2010届高三下学期统一练习(二)英语 题型:阅读理解
Technology today has stolen away our voices and robbed our children of memories. I’ve been keeping count of how often people sing around the house these days. The fact is, they don’t.
My earliest memories are of my mother crooning lullabies(催眠曲) in a gentle low voice as she rocked each infant in turn. She said she “didn’t have a singing voice,” but her low, wavering alto will always mean comfort to me. Every time I have sat through the night with a feverish body or held a pre – schooler through a nightmare, the melodies returned, words appearing and disappearing like fragments of a dream but held together by the hum (低声吟唱)of love.
Today, young mothers are routinely presented with lullaby tapes at the baby shower. When baby cries, the idea goes, they will be able to switch on the high-tech audio system and the little one will drift off with the voices of strangers in his ears, perfectly on pitch. If I had my way, new parents would learn the songs themselves, throw out their stereos, and give their child the gift of their own sleepy voices through the midnight hours.
These days, when we go on a trip, my daughters take along tiny personal stereos and headphones. They are lost in their private worlds, and I can’t help wishing that at least here, in the car my girls would be forced to listen to their mother’s voice raised in lost – the – words again, sure I’m out-of-tune songs that they might then pass down to another generation. Those sophisticated earphones have robbed them of something I think every kid should carry from childhood car trips into adulthood.
I drove away from that party humming, and all the way home the good old songs kept tumbling out. Dammit (该死), I thought, why did I ever stop singing in the car and start turning on the radio instead? Why don’t I sign anymore while I’m doing the dishes? I’m going to yank those stereo wires right out of the wall when I get home. We’re going to sing grace before meals, sing coals around the piano, sing in the shower instead of switching on that waterproof radio that stol away our voices and our souls.
63.The author hates today’s technology because________
A.driving a car requires high concentration
B.children are learning pop songs from tapes
C.children have lost touch with good old songs
D.high – tech systems do not record the voices of aged people
64.The underlined sentence “the little one will drift off” in Paragraph 3 means that “________ ”.
A.the play of the high – tech system is of little use
B.the high – tech system will play on and on
C.the low voice will delight the baby
D.the baby will slowly go to sleep
65.To the author, the voices of strangers ________ .
A.are not familiar to the baby
B.lack the motherly love the baby needs
C.work better to stop the baby’s cry
D.surely sound more pleasant
66.What the author wishes to make her girls do is to________ .
A.help memorize the words while she is singing
B.take off their well – designed earphones
C.listen and learn the old songs from her
D.remember their childhood car trips
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
In 1945 there were 17 universities in Britain; by 1967 there were 45.A period of very rapid expansion took place in the middle sixties when ten new institutes were granted university status by Royal Charter.These modern universities do not in many ways resemble their older counterparts.Much more emphasis is placed on advanced studies in science and technology and the newer social science disciplines than on the arts and humanities.For the most part of the buildings the students live and work in are severely functional and there are the hum and bustle of continuous activities.The quiet gardens and enclosed quadrangles of Oxford and Cambridge belong to another world.This will certainly happen, for the universities like everything else must change and adapt themselves to meet the needs and demands of a new age.
In recent years there has been a very rapid increase in the number of young people (especially girls) seeking higher education.Between 1962 and 1975, the number of students in higher education more than doubled from 222,400 to 497,000.Part of this increase is accounted for by the creation of thirty “Polytechnics” which offer a wide range of courses leading to recognized qualifications.
For those who missed the opportunities for higher education at the age of eighteen or so, a major innovation in the academic world now provides a second chance.The Open University was found in 1971; it offers tuition to degree standards to anyone who chooses to entry.The courses are taught through radio, television programs, Internet and by correspondence with Open University tutors.By now there are over 100,000 students enrolled for Open University and there are several thousand people who are the proud holders of a B.A degree from the Open University.
1.The underlined word “counterparts” in the first paragraph has the closest meaning with “______.”
A.enemies B.leaders C.similarities D.strangers
2.Who can go to the Open Universities in Britain?
A.The British young people only.
B.Anyone who missed the chance to go to college.
C.Girls who missed the chance to enter a college.
D.Those who are interested in science and technology.
3.How can a student get taught in the Open University?
A.Study in the open air of Oxford and Cambridge Universities.
B.Through the modern communication methods.
C.By self-study with the help of polytechnics.
D.By attending to the top ten institutes in Britain.
4.Which of the following might serve as the best title of the above passage?
A.Life in the Open Universities. B.Free Degrees in Open Universities.
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Technology today has stolen away our voices and robbed our children of memories. I’ve been keeping count of how often people sing around the house these days. The fact is, they don’t.
My earliest memories are of my mother crooning lullabies(催眠曲) in a gentle low voice as she rocked each infant in turn. She said she “didn’t have a singing voice,” but her low, wavering alto will always mean comfort to me. Every time I have sat through the night with a feverish body or held a pre – schooler through a nightmare, the melodies returned, words appearing and disappearing like fragments of a dream but held together by the hum (低声吟唱)of love.
Today, young mothers are routinely presented with lullaby tapes at the baby shower. When baby cries, the idea goes, they will be able to switch on the high-tech audio system and the little one will drift off with the voices of strangers in his ears, perfectly on pitch. If I had my way, new parents would learn the songs themselves, throw out their stereos, and give their child the gift of their own sleepy voices through the midnight hours.
These days, when we go on a trip, my daughters take along tiny personal stereos and headphones. They are lost in their private worlds, and I can’t help wishing that at least here, in the car my girls would be forced to listen to their mother’s voice raised in lost – the – words again, sure I’m out-of-tune songs that they might then pass down to another generation. Those sophisticated earphones have robbed them of something I think every kid should carry from childhood car trips into adulthood.
I drove away from that party humming, and all the way home the good old songs kept tumbling out. Dammit (该死), I thought, why did I ever stop singing in the car and start turning on the radio instead? Why don’t I sign anymore while I’m doing the dishes? I’m going to yank those stereo wires right out of the wall when I get home. We’re going to sing grace before meals, sing coals around the piano, sing in the shower instead of switching on that waterproof radio that stol away our voices and our souls.
63.The author hates today’s technology because________
A.driving a car requires high concentration
B.children are learning pop songs from tapes
C.children have lost touch with good old songs
D.high – tech systems do not record the voices of aged people
64.The underlined sentence “the little one will drift off” in Paragraph 3 means that “________ ”.
A.the play of the high – tech system is of little use
B.the high – tech system will play on and on
C.the low voice will delight the baby
D.the baby will slowly go to sleep
65.To the author, the voices of strangers ________ .
A.are not familiar to the baby
B.lack the motherly love the baby needs
C.work better to stop the baby’s cry
D.surely sound more pleasant
66.What the author wishes to make her girls do is to________ .
A.help memorize the words while she is singing
B.take off their well – designed earphones
C.listen and learn the old songs from her
D.remember their childhood car trips
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Technology today has stolen away our voices and robbed our children of memories. I’ve been keeping count of how often people sing around the house these days. The fact is, they don’t.
My earliest memories are of my mother crooning lullabies(催眠曲) in a gentle low voice as she rocked each infant in turn. She said she “didn’t have a singing voice,” but her low, wavering alto will always mean comfort to me. Every time I have sat through the night with a feverish body or held a pre – schooler through a nightmare, the melodies returned, words appearing and disappearing like fragments of a dream but held together by the hum (低声吟唱)of love.
Today, young mothers are routinely presented with lullaby tapes at the baby shower. When baby cries, the idea goes, they will be able to switch on the high-tech audio system and the little one will drift off with the voices of strangers in his ears, perfectly on pitch. If I had my way, new parents would learn the songs themselves, throw out their stereos, and give their child the gift of their own sleepy voices through the midnight hours.
These days, when we go on a trip, my daughters take along tiny personal stereos and headphones. They are lost in their private worlds, and I can’t help wishing that at least here, in the car my girls would be forced to listen to their mother’s voice raised in lost – the – words again, sure I’m out-of-tune songs that they might then pass down to another generation. Those sophisticated earphones have robbed them of something I think every kid should carry from childhood car trips into adulthood.
I drove away from that party humming, and all the way home the good old songs kept tumbling out. Dammit (该死), I thought, why did I ever stop singing in the car and start turning on the radio instead? Why don’t I sign anymore while I’m doing the dishes? I’m going to yank those stereo wires right out of the wall when I get home. We’re going to sing grace before meals, sing coals around the piano, sing in the shower instead of switching on that waterproof radio that stol away our voices and our souls.
63.The author hates today’s technology because .
A.driving a car requires high concentration
B.children are learning pop songs from tapes
C.children have lost touch with good old songs
D.high – tech systems do not record the voices of aged people
64.The underlined sentence “the little one will drift off” in Paragraph 3 means that “ ”.
A.the play of the high – tech system is of little use
B.the high – tech system will play on and on
C.the low voice will delight the baby
D.the baby will slowly go to sleep
65.To the author, the voices of strangers .
A.are not familiar to the baby B.lack the motherly love the baby needs
C.work better to stop the baby’s cry D.surely sound more pleasant
66.What the author wishes to make her girls do is to .
A.help memorize the words while she is singing
B.take off their well – designed earphones
C.listen and learn the old songs from her
D.remember their childhood car trips
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Julie Zingeser texts at home,at school,in the car while her mother is driving.She texts during homework, after pompon(舞绣球)practice and as she walks the family dog.She takes her cellphone with her to bed.Every so often,the hum(嗡嗡声)of a new message wakes the Rockville teen from sleep.“I would die without it,”Julie,15,says of her text life.
This does not surprise her mother, Pam, who on one recent afternoon scanned the phone bill and found her youngest daughter, in one busy month,had sent and received 6,473 text messages.For Pam Zingeser, the key problem is not cost—it's$30 a month for the family’s unlimited texting plan—but the effects of so much messaging.Pam wonders:What will this generation learn and what will they lose in the endless stream of sentence fragments(碎片),abbreviations and emoticons?
Parents, educators, and researchers are sharing similar concerns as text messaging has exploded across the formative years of the nation's youngest generation. Teens now do more texting on their cellphones than calling. Nationally, more than 75 billion text messages are sent a month, and the craziest texters are 13 to 17. Teens with cellphones average 2,272 text messages a month, compared with 203 calls, according to the Nielsen Co.
The tap,tap,tap of connectivity can benefit teenagers at a time in life when they cannot always get together in art unscheduled way.Texters are “sharing a sense of (69题) ,”said Mimi Ito of the University of California at Irvine.For families, the text world call bring convenience as never before in arranging tides,doing errands(差事),letting parents know of changing plans.
But some experts say there are downsides,starting with declines in spelling,word choice and writing complexity.Some suggest too much texting is related to an inability to focus.
1.The first paragraph mainly tells us that Julie Zingeser __________
A.joins in all kinds of activities
B.sends and receives texts all the time
C.does nothing besides texting
D.does everything by texting
2.Pare disapproves of her daughter's texting because she worries that it may be ________
A.a waste of money
B.a waste of time
C.harmful in every way
D.bad for language learning
3.The underlined phrase "the formative years" in the 3rd paragraph refers to the period when ________
A.someone's character develops
B.someone experiments with new things
C.someone learns to speak
D.someone grows from baby into adult
4.The word missing in the blank in the 4th paragraph must be _______
A.independence B.overexcitement
C.co-presence D.non-attendance
5.The original title of the article should be: “6,473 Texts a Month, But _______”.
A.at What Cost? B.What for?
C.Who Cares? D.How Could lt Be?
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