相关习题
 0  86037  86045  86051  86055  86061  86063  86067  86073  86075  86081  86087  86091  86093  86097  86103  86105  86111  86115  86117  86121  86123  86127  86129  86131  86132  86133  86135  86136  86137  86139  86141  86145  86147  86151  86153  86157  86163  86165  86171  86175  86177  86181  86187  86193  86195  86201  86205  86207  86213  86217  86223  86231  151629 

科目: 来源:广东省深圳高级中学2012届高三第一次测试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  Nothing succeeds like confidence.When you are truly confident, it radiates from you like sunlight, and attracts success to you like a magnet(磁铁).Besides, those who are self-confident can in turn inspire confidence in others:their audience, their peers, their bosses, their customers, and their friends.And gaining the confidence of others is one of the key ways in which a self-confident person finds success.

  So how can we build a sense of self-confidence and prepare ourselves on the way to success?

  First, do what you believe to be right, even if others mock or criticize you for it.Believe in yourself and believe that you can do it under any circumstances, because if you believe you can, then you really will.The belief keeps you searching for answers, which means that pretty soon you will get them.

  Second, govern your behavior based on what other people think.What’s more important, be willing to take risks and go the extra miles to achieve better results, in which case mistakes cannot be avoided.Don’t hesitate to admit your mistakes, and learn from them.Next, work hard to settle the problems in order to cover up your mistakes before anyone notices.Building self-confidence is readily achievable, as long as you have the focus and determination to carry things through.And what’s even better is that the things you’ll do to build self-confidence will also build success -after all, your confidence will come from real, solid achievement.No one can take this away from you!

  As you sow, sow will reap.With your perseverance and improvement, you are getting closer to success.At this stage, wait for others to congratulate you on your accomplishments and compliments graciously.“Thanks, I really worked hard on that prospect.I’m pleased you recognize my efforts.” The congratulations and compliments from others will promote you to gain further success.

  Self-confidence is extremely important in almost every aspect of our lives, and it is no wonder that so many people struggle to find it.Self-confidence really can be learned and built on.Besides, whether you’re working on your own self-confidence or building the confidence of people around you, it’s well worth the effort!

(1)

Those who are truly confident _________.

[  ]

A.

succeed without effort and hard work

B.

encourage people around to become confident

C.

appear more attractive and thus become successful

D.

gain the confidence of others and feel successful

(2)

The underlined word “mock”(Para.3)is closest in meaning to _________.

[  ]

A.

praise

B.

imitate

C.

punish

D.

laugh at

(3)

When others congratulate us on our achievements, we are supposed to _________.

[  ]

A.

praise them in return

B.

gain further improvement

C.

politely accept the compliments

D.

expect them to congratulate you again

(4)

Which of the following proverbs best goes with Paragraph 4?

[  ]

A.

Look before your leap.

B.

It is no use crying over spilt milk.

C.

Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.

D.

Learn from past mistakes and avoid future ones.

(5)

The purpose of the text is to _________.

[  ]

A.

tell people how to become successful

B.

convince people to do what they believe to be right

C.

encourage people to build confidence and achieve success

D.

criticize people who lack confidence and thus fail in their career

查看答案和解析>>

科目: 来源:广东省深圳高级中学2012届高三第一次测试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  The European capital cities, Berlin and London, running the third and the fourth richest economies in the world, both produce about a metric ton of rubbish for each household per year.But when it comes to disposing of their citizens’ waste, the comfortable similarities end.

  London, and Britain as a whole, is in the middle of a waste crisis.Today, the environment secretary, Margaret Beckett, is presiding over a waste summit to try to find out why the UK is not going to reach its 25% recycling and composting(转制成堆肥)target by 2005; currently, it is managing 11%.

  By comparison, Berlin and Germany know exactly where they are going.Although Berlin has been the capital for less than a decade, and has had east and west to unite, it has already reached 40% recycling.The city has one ambition:to have no rubbish to dump or burn in 20 year’s time.So far, the city has not decided quite how, but it is developing new technologies and moving steadily in the right direction.London, by comparison, has a chaotic system.The 33 boroughs all have different recycling systems.

  Ken Livingstone, who since taking office as mayor has published a brand-new waste management strategy for the capital, is responsible for sorting out this hotch potch(杂乱的一堆东西).One of the most contentious issues both for London and Berlin is incineration(焚烧), with both cities burning a large proportion of their waste-London 20% and Berlin 32%.

  Here again Berlin has made decisions and London is uncertain.Berlin has a state of the art incinerator in the 1970s and upgraded constantly until in the 1990s it is impossible to detect any emissions but warm gases.The city has abandoned plans to build another and instead wants to make the existing one redundant by reducing the waste so there is none to burn.

  London boroughs have plans to increase the size of the incinerator at Edmonton and there are plans to build more elsewhere.But Livingstone is resisting and the government is already rethinking its current energy from waste policy.

  Samantha Heath, the chair of Greater London Authority’s environment committee, wants to invest in the market for recycled goods so there is somewhere for the material to go and a prospect of selling it, or at least disposing of it for less than the price of incineration or landfill

  Ingolf Rank, spokesman for Berlin’s City Cleaning company has some advice:“The first task is to get the public on your side.” Each household has to pay 40 pounds every three months to dispose of its rubbish.In future, the less they create, the more they recycle and compost, the less they will have to pay, he says.

  Each house in Berlin has a series of different coloured bins for refuse so glass, paper and plastics can be separated for recycling.This allows 800 000 tonnes of rubbish a year to be turned back into useful items.

  But Berlin has ideas that have not ever been heard of in London.For example, at this time of year, thousands of trees that line Berlin’s streets shed their leaves.Rather than put these leaves into general rubbish and add to the problems of disposal, they are collected up in large vacuum cleaners and turned into garden compost.Most of London has no composting service at all.

  Another system that stops material even being called rubbish is a collection service for second-hand furniture and electrical goods less than seven years old.Each offering is inspected, taken to a central shop, and sold at low cost to poorer people.It saves a lot of material being dumped.

  Not all goes according to plan in Berlin, however.Rank says that people dump waste in the streets, like mattresses, old furniture or just general rubbish cost the city 2.8 million pounds a year.

  One problem the city has tried to solve but failed, is the excreta of 150 000 dogs.Rank says it is the owners’ responsibility to clean up after their pets but police who tried enforce the law were “sometimes bitten(by the dogs), insulted by the owners and even beaten up.As a result we still have to clean up 40 tonnes of droppings every day.Nobody is happy about that.”

(1)

Which of the following is correct? _________

[  ]

A.

By 2005, UK is going to reach its 25% recycling and composting target.

B.

UK has survived a waste crisis already.

C.

Berlin has 33 boroughs with different recycling systems.

D.

Germans are ambitious to have no rubbish to dump or burn in 20 years’ time.

(2)

Which is the main way for the two countries to deal with rubbish?

[  ]

A.

To bury.

B.

To incinerate.

C.

To sell

D.

To compost.

(3)

Inferring from the passage, which of the following is the main factor for Germans’ abandoning the incineration system?

[  ]

A.

Citizens’ protest.

B.

High opportunity cost.

C.

Air pollution.

D.

Less produced rubbish.

(4)

What do people in Berlin do with the fallen leaves?

[  ]

A.

Landfill.

B.

Burning.

C.

Putting then into the dustbin.

D.

Turning them to fertilizer.

(5)

The writer uses the _________ as a figure of speech.

[  ]

A.

Simile

B.

Metaphor

C.

contrast

D.

personification(拟人)

查看答案和解析>>

科目: 来源:广东省深圳高级中学2012届高三第一次测试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  Ten years ago, Pierre Omidyar, a software engineer working in California’s Silicon Valley, began thinking about how to use the internet for a trading system in which buyers and sellers could establish a genuine market price.Over a long holiday weekend he wrote the computer code.At first, a trickle of users arrived at his website-including his girlfriend, who traded PEZ candy dispensers.By the end of 1995, several thousand auctions had been completed and interest in eBay was growing.And it grew and grew.From this modest beginning, eBay has become a global giant, with around 150m registered users worldwide who are set to buy and sell goods worth more than $40 billion this year.

  The remarkable tale of eBay’s growth points to some important lessons for any business trying to operate online-and today that includes, one way or another, most firms.The commercial opportunities presented by an expanding global web seem almost limitless.But the pace of change is rapid, and so is the ferocity of competition.To succeed, firms need agility, an open mind and the ability to reinvent themselves repeatedly.Most of all, they need to listen carefully to their customers, paying close attention to what they do and don’t want.

  Such qualities, of course, would be valuable in any kind of business.Yet for online firms they are not a luxury, but necessary for mere survival.This is true for a variety of reasons.The internet is not only growing, but changing rapidly-which, in turn, changes the rules of the game for any business relying on it.The barriers to entry are still low compared with those for most offline businesses, which means that just keeping track of your existing rivals is not enough.These may not represent the greatest competitive threat tomorrow or the next day.That could come from a number of directions-a firm in a different type of online business; one that does not yet exist; or even from one of your own customers.On top of all this, the behavior of many consumers is constantly changing as well, as individuals discover new ways to shop and interact with each other via the web.

  All these factors make the internet a dangerous place to do business, as well as one full of promise.eBay’s history demonstrates both of those things.It is probably safe to say that nothing like eBay could have existed without the internet-or could have grown so fast.Even though there have been signs of the firm’s blistering pace slowing a bit in America, its most “mature” market, there remain vast opportunities overseas, particularly, some argue, in China.Meg Whitman, eBay’s chief executive, believes the company is still only at the beginning of what it could achieve.

(1)

What is the purpose of the first paragraph?

[  ]

A.

To introduce the founder of eBay and his girlfriend.

B.

To demonstrate how clever the founder of eBay is.

C.

To show how eBay started and has grown.

D.

To introduce eBay to people.

(2)

Which of the following best summarizes Pierre Omidyar’s intention with regard to eBay?

[  ]

A.

To set up a global internet business.

B.

To allow people to freely buy and sell on the internet at acceptable prices.

C.

To set up a mechanism on the internet to allow people to trade at true market prices.

D.

To se up a business mechanism for his girlfriend.

(3)

Which of these is it NOT necessary for a company selling on the internet to do?

[  ]

A.

Have the most competitive price for each of their online products.

B.

Be able to change to suit the prevailing market conditions.

C.

Be prepared to consider all options and alternatives.

D.

Have a good idea of what their customers do not want.

(4)

What does “barriers to entry are still low compared with those for most offline businesses” in paragraph 3 mean?

[  ]

A.

It is easier to set up an internet business than a conventional one.

B.

Internet trade is growing faster than traditional business sector.

C.

It is cheaper to set up an internet business than a traditional one.

D.

Companies generally prefer to do business online rather than offline.

(5)

Why does the article conclude that the internet “is a dangerous place to do business”?

[  ]

A.

Because companies that sell online may be unreliable.

B.

Because there are no controls on doing business on the internet.

C.

Because doing business online is unpredictable.

D.

Because even companies like eBay have problems doing business online.

查看答案和解析>>

科目: 来源:广东省深圳高级中学2012届高三第一次测试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  Each year, 1,400 high-school students from more than 40 countries are invited to compete in the prestigious Intel International Science and Engineering Fair(Intel ISEF), the world’s largest precollege science contest.The select group of young scientists is chosen from the several million students who compete in local and regional science fairs throughout the year.Participants compete for $3 million in scholarships and prizes, presenting projects in 15 categories like medicine, biochemistry, computer science and zoology.Earning top honors isn’t the only goal for contestants.Nineteen percent(or 274)of the finalists at the 2005 competition held last month have already begun the process to patent their projects.

  Ammem Abdulrasool, a senior at the Illinois Junior Academy of Science, won top honors at this year’s Intel ISEF for his project, “Prototype for Autonomy:Pathway for the Blind.” He walked away with $70,000 in prize money and a free trip to October’s Nobel Prize ceremony.Abdulrasool developed technology that allows visually impaired individuals to navigate themselves from one location to another by using the Global Positioning System.Individuals wear a half-kilo Walkman-size device, a bracelet on each arm and a pair of earphones.After entering a starting and ending location into a personal digital assistant(PDA), they are guided with verbal commands that tell them when and in what direction to turn.Simultaneously, a bracelet vibrates signaling the correct direction.To test his device, Abdulrasool recruited 36 blind adults and asked them to visit five landmarks in his neighborhood.The navigational tool saved people an average of 26 minutes in travel time and reduced the number of errors(wrong turns and missed locations).“Looking at how hard it was for them to travel and how they were dependent on everyone else motivated me to do something,” he said.Abdulrasool hopes are applying for a patent and then plan to market the product commercially.

  In the fair’s 56-year history, a number of projects have been implemented for commercial use.Michael Nyberg, a 2001 competitor, hoped to reduce the number of West Nile virus infections through acoustics.With a bucket of mosquito larvae and a sound generator, Nyberg discovered that a 24 kHz frequency resonated with the natural frequency of mosquitoes’ internal organs:larvae that absorbed the acoustic energy would explode.His sound-emitting device, Larvasonic, is now sold online(www.larvasonic.com).Tiffany Clark, a 1999 competitor, found evidence that bacteria produced the methane gas found inside coal seams in Wyoming’s Powder River Basin.This suggested that injecting nutrients into coal seams might provide an unlimited supply of natural gas.A Denver-based technology firm is now continuing Clark’s high-school research.And someday soon, blind people around the world may be wearing bracelets that issue GPS commands.

(1)

How are young people selected to participate in Intel ISEF?

[  ]

A.

They are pre-university students.

B.

They must win science competitions in their home countries.

C.

They must patent or be about to patent an invention.

D.

They are chosen from young people who take part in science competitions.

(2)

Which of these is NOT mentioned as an advantage of Abdulrasool’s device?

[  ]

A.

It enables blind people to get from A to B faster.

B.

It helps them avoid obstacles.

C.

It gives information to blind people in more than one way.

D.

It is extremely light.

(3)

How are Abdulrasool’s invention and those of Michael Nyberg and Tiffany Clark similar?

[  ]

A.

Their inventions all have organic components.

B.

They all won the Intel ISEF competition, though in different years.

C.

They all have, or could have, profitable applications.

D.

None of them have patents yet.

(4)

How does Tiffany Clark’s idea work?

[  ]

A.

She feeds underground bacteria and they produce natural gas.

B.

Bacteria eat coal and produce natural gas.

C.

Bacteria are injected with coal molecules and produce natural gas.

D.

Bacteria extract natural gas from coal and are then harvested.

(5)

Which of the following statements about the Intel ISEF competition is true?

[  ]

A.

It began in the 1960’s.

B.

The biggest prize this year was $3 million.

C.

There are 15 prizes in a variety of categories.

D.

Many participants have patented ideas and inventions.

查看答案和解析>>

科目: 来源:广东省梅山县东山中学2010-2011学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  Shay asked, “Do you think they’ll let me play?” Shay’s father knew that most of the boys would not want someone like Shay on their team, but the father also understood that if his son, mentally and physically disabled, were allowed to play, it would give him a much-needed sense of belonging and some confidence.

  Shay’s father approached one of the boys on the field and asked if Shay could play, not expecting much.The boy looked around and said, “We’re losing by six runs(分)and the game is in the eighth inning(局).I guess he can be on our team and we’ll try to put him in to bat in the final inning.

  Shay struggled over to the team’s bench and put on a team shirt with a broad smile and his father had a small tear in his eye and warmth in heart.The boys saw the father’s joy at his son being accepted.

  In the bottom of the eighth inning, Shay’s team scored a few runs but was still behind by three.In the top of the final inning, Shay put on a glove and played in the field.Even though no hits came his way, he was obviously joyful just to be in the game and on the field.In the bottom of the final inning, Shay’s team scored again.Now, Shay was scheduled to be next at bat.Would they let Shay bat and give away their chance to win the game?

  Surprisingly, Shay was given the bat.Everyone knew that a hit was almost impossible.The first pitch(投)came and Shay missed.The pitcher again took a few steps forward to throw the ball softly towards Shay.As the pitch came in, Shay swung at the ball and hit a slow ground ball right back to the pitcher.

  The pitcher could have easily thrown the ball to the first baseman and Shay would have been out and that would have been the end of the game.Instead, the pitcher threw the ball right over the head of the first baseman, beyond the reach of all teammates, The audience and the players from both teams started screaming, “Shay, run to first! ” Never in his life had Shay ever run that far but made it to first base, wide-eyed and shocked.

  Everyone should, “Run to second!” Catching his breath, Shay awkwardly ran towards second.By the time Shay rounded towards second base, the smallest guy on their team, who had a chance to be the hero for his team for the first time, could have thrown the ball to the second baseman, but he understood the pitcher’s intentions and he too intentionally threw the ball high and far over the third baseman’s head.

  All were screaming,“Shay,Shay,Shay,all the way Shay.” Shay reached third base when one opposing player ran to help him and shouted, “Shay, run to third.” As Shay rounded third, all were on their feet, crying, “Shay, run home!”Shay ran to home, stepped on the home base and was cheered as the hero who the who won the game for his team.

  That day, the boys from both teams helped bring a piece true love and humanity into this world.Shay didn’t make it to another summer and died that winter, having never forgotten being the hero and making his father so happy and coming home and seeing his mother tearfully hug her little hero of the day!

(1)

Not expecting much, Shay’s father still asked the boy if Shay could play, mainly because the father ________.

[  ]

A.

noticed some of the boys on the field were tired

B.

guessed his presence would affect the boy’s decision

C.

learned some of the boys on the field knew Shay well

D.

understood Shay did need a feeling of being accepted

(2)

In the bottom of the final inning Shay was given the bat because the boys ________.

[  ]

A.

believed they were sure to win the game

B.

would like to help Shay enjoy the game

C.

found Shay was so eager to be a winner

D.

fell forced to give Shay another chance

(3)

The smallest boy threw the ball high and far over the third baseman’s head, probably because that boy ________.

[  ]

A.

was obviously aware of the pitcher’s purpose

B.

looked forward to winning the game for his team

C.

failed to throw the ball to the second baseman

D.

saw that Shay already reached second base

(4)

Which of the following has nothing to do with Shay’s becoming the hero for his team?

[  ]

A.

The pitcher did not throw the ball to the first baseman.

B.

The audience and the players from both teams cheered for him.

C.

The opposing players failed to stop his running to home.

D.

One of the opposing players ran to help him.

(5)

What to you think is the theme of the story?

[  ]

A.

True human nature could be realized in the way we treat each other.

B.

Everyone has his own strength even if mentally or physically disabled.

C.

Everyone can develop his team spirit in sports and please his parents.

D.

The results of the game should not be the only concern of the players.

查看答案和解析>>

科目: 来源:广东省梅山县东山中学2010-2011学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  In the fall of 1985.I was a bright-eyed girl heading off to Howard University, aiming at a legal career and dreaming of sitting on a Supreme Court bench somewhere.Twenty-one years later, I am still a bright-eyed dreamer and one with quite a different tale to tell.

  My grandma, an amazing woman, graduated from college an the age of 65.She was the first in our family to reach that goal.But one year after I started college, she developed cancer.I made the choice to withdraw from college to care for her.It meant that school and my personal dream would have to wait.

  Then I got married with another dream:building my family with a combination of adopt(收养)and biological children.In 1999, we adopted our first son.To lay eyes on him was fantastic-and very emotional.A year later came our second adopted boy.Then followed son No.3.In 2003, I gave birth to another boy.

  You can imagine how fully occupied I became, raising four boys under the age of 8.Our home was a complete zoo-a joyous zoo.Not surprising, I never did make it back to college full-time.But I never gave up on the dream either.I had only one choice:to find a way.That meant taking as few as one class each semester.

  The hardest part was feeling guilty about the time I spent away from the boys.They often wanted me to stay home with them.There certainly were times I wanted to quit, But I knew I should set an example for them to follow through the rest of their lives.

  In 2007, I graduated from the University of North Carolina.It took me over 21 years to get my college degree!

  I am not special, just single-minded.It always struck me that when you’re looking at a big challenge from the outside it looks huge, but when you’re in the midst of it, it just seems normal.Everything you want won’t arrive in your life on one day.It’s a process.Remember;little steps add up to big dreams.

(1)

When the author went to Howard University, her dream was to be ________

[  ]

A.

a writer

B.

a teacher

C.

a judge

D.

a doctor

(2)

Why did the author quit school in her second year of college?

[  ]

A.

She wanted to study by herself.

B.

She fell in love and got married.

C.

She suffered from a serious illness.

D.

She decided to look after her grandma.

(3)

What can we learn about the author from Paragraphs 4 and 5?

[  ]

A.

She was busy yet happy with her family life.

B.

She ignored her guilty feeling for her sons.

C.

She wanted to remain a full-time housewife.

D.

She was too confused to make a correct choice.

(4)

What doses the author mostly want to tell us in the last paragraph?

[  ]

A.

Failure is the mother of success.

B.

Little by little, one goes far.

C.

Every coin has two sides.

D.

Well begun, half done.

(5)

Which of the following can best describe the author?

[  ]

A.

Caring and determine.

B.

Honest and responsible.

C.

Ambitious and sensitive.

D.

Innocent and single-minded.

查看答案和解析>>

科目: 来源:广东省梅山县东山中学2010-2011学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  There were smiling children all the way.Charily they knew at what time the train passed their homes and they made it their business to stand along the railway, wave to complete strangers and cheer them up as they rushed towards Penang.Often whole families stood outside their homes and waved and smiled as if those on the trains were their favorite relatives.This is the simple village people of Malaysia.I was moved.

  I had always traveled to Malaysia by plane or car, so this was the first time I was on a train.I did not particularly relish the long train journey and had brought along a dozen magazines to read and reread.I looked about the train.There was not one familiar face.I sighed and sat down to read my Economics.

  It was not long before the train was across the Causeway and in Malaysia.Johore Baru was just another city like Singapore, so I was tired of looking at the crowds of people as they hurried past.As we went beyond the city, I watched the straight rows of rubber trees and miles and miles of green.Then the first village came into sight, Immediately I came alive; I decided to wave hack.

  From then on my journey became interesting.I threw my magazines into the waste basket and decided to join in Malaysian life.Then everything came alive.The mountains seemed to speak to me.Even the trees were smiling.I stared at everything as if I was looking at it for the first time.

  The day passed fast and I even forgot to have my lunch until I felt hungry.I looked at my watch and was surprised that it was 3:00 pm.Soon the train pulled up at Butterworth.I looked at the people all around me.They all looked beautiful.When my uncle arrived with a smile, I threw my arms around him to give him a warm hug(拥抱).I had never done this before.He seemed surprised and then his weather-beaten face warmed up with a huge smile.We walked arm in arm to his car.

  I looked forward to the return journey.

(1)

The author expected the train trip to be ________

[  ]

A.

adventurous

B.

pleasant

C.

exciting

D.

dull

(2)

What did the author remember most fondly of her train trip?

[  ]

A.

The friendly country people.

B.

The mountains along the way.

C.

The crowds of people in the streets.

D.

The simple lunch served on the train.

(3)

Which of the following words can best take the place of the word “relish” in the second paragraph?

[  ]

A.

choose

B.

enjoy

C.

prepare for

D.

carry on

(4)

Where was the writer going?

[  ]

A.

Johore Baru.

B.

The Causeway.

C.

Butterworth.

D.

Singapore.

(5)

What can we learn from the story?

[  ]

A.

Comfort in traveling by train.

B.

Pleasure of living in the country.

C.

Reading gives people delight.

D.

Smiles brighten people up.

查看答案和解析>>

科目: 来源:广东省梅山县东山中学2010-2011学年高一下学期期末考试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  “I Went Skydiving at 84!”

  As a young girl growing up in the 1930s, I always wanted to fly a plane, but back then it was almost unheard of for a woman to do that.I got a taste of that dream in 2001,when my husband arranged for me to ride in a hot air balloon for my birthday.But the experience turned out to be very dull.Around that time, I told my husband that I wanted to skydive.So when our retirement community(社区)announced that they were having an essay competition and the topic was an experience of a lifetime that you wanted to have, I decided to write about my dream.

  In the essay, I wrote about my desire to skydive, stating George Brush Sr.did it at age 80.Why not me? I was just 84 and in pretty good health.A year went by and I heard nothing.But then at a community party in late April 2009, they announced that I was one of the winners.I just couldn’t believe it.Inspired by this, I decided to realize my dream, even though some of my family members and my doctor were against it.

  On June 11, 2009, nearly 40 of my family and friends gathered in the area close to where I would land while I headed up in the airplane.My instructor, Jay, guided me through the experience.The plane was the noisiest one I had ever been in, but I wasn’t frightened-I was really just looking forward to the experience.When we reached 13,000 feet, Jay instructed me to throw myself out of the plane.When we first hit the air, the wind was so strong that I could hardly breathe.For a second I thought, “What have I gotten myself into?” But then everything got calmer.We were in a free fall for about a minute before Jay opened the parachute(降落伞), then we just floated downward for about five minutes.Being up in the clouds and looking at the view below was unlike anything I have ever felt-much better than the hot air balloon.I was just enjoying it.

  Skydiving was really one of the greatest experiences of my life.I hope other people will look at me and realize that you don’t stop living just because you are 84 years old.If there’s something you want to experience, look into it.If it’s something that is possible, make it happen.

(1)

What happened to the author in 2001?

[  ]

A.

She flew an airplane

B.

She entered a competition

C.

She went on a hot air balloon ride

D.

She moved into a retirement community

(2)

The author mentioned George Bush Sr.in her essay to _________

[  ]

A.

build up her own reputation

B.

show her admiration for him

C.

compare their health condition

D.

make her argument persuasive

(3)

How did the author feel immediately after she jumped out of the plane?

[  ]

A.

Excited

B.

Scared

C.

Nervous

D.

Regretful

(4)

What did the author enjoy most when she was skydiving?

[  ]

A.

The beautiful clouds

B.

The wonderful view

C.

The company of Jay

D.

The one-minute free fall

(5)

Which word could be used to replace the word “instructor,” in Paragraph 3?

[  ]

A.

doctor

B.

conductor

C.

pilot

D.

trainer

查看答案和解析>>

科目: 来源:山东省实验中学2012届高三第一次诊断性考试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  This school year the patchwork system will finally change, replaced by a new sex education requirement for all students in public middle and high school.

  The sex education push is part of an initiative by Mayor Michael Bloomberg to address the needs of young black and Latino men in the city.Dennis Walcott, the schools chancellor, said on Wednesday that new statistics helped to convince him and other officials that better sex education classes were necessary, especially in minority neighborhoods.Teenage pregnancy rates in those areas are far higher than in other parts of the city.And more than half of new H.I.V.cases in the city are in black and Hispanic men, Mr.Walcott said.Black and Hispanic youths have more sexual partners and are more susceptible to sexually transmitted diseases.

  Parents will have the option to refuse to allow their children to attend classes on birth control.But school officials should make certain that most of the new curriculum is available to all students.Some youngsters are having sex at age 11.To protect their health and futures, as Mr.Walcott said, “we cannot stick our heads in the sand.

  For nearly 20 years, New York City failed to require sex education in all public schools.Individual schools decided whether students were provided vital programs that could help them avoid disease and teenage pregnancy.

(1)

Where is the text probably taken from?

[  ]

A.

An advertisement.

B.

A magazine.

C.

A text book.

D.

A newspaper.

(2)

According to the passage, which is NOT the reason for the sex education push?

[  ]

A.

HIV is an incurable disease once it is affected.

B.

There is more teenage pregnancy in recent years.

C.

There are more HIV cases among the youths in the past few decades.

D.

Not enough attention has been paid to the youth sexual problems before.

(3)

What is the aim of the new sex education?

[  ]

A.

To enrich the student’s knowledge.

B.

To ensure the student’s health and future.

C.

To ban the teenagers from having sexual behaviors.

D.

To enable the youngsters to be responsible for their behaviors.

(4)

Which of the following of birth control classes is true?

[  ]

A.

They are intended for the parents.

B.

They are required to all the students.

C.

They are optional for all the students.

D.

They are intended for pregnant girls.

(5)

Which sentence is closest in meaning with the underlined sentence in the third paragraph?

[  ]

A.

We can’t get involved in it.

B.

We can’t neglect it.

C.

We can’t take it seriously.

D.

We can’t believe in it.

查看答案和解析>>

科目: 来源:山东省实验中学2012届高三第一次诊断性考试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  Researchers found that people become happier and experience less worry after they reach the age of fifty.In fact, they say by the age of eighty – five, people are happier with their life than they were when they were eighteen years old.

  The findings came from a survey of more than three hundred forty thousand adults in the United States.The Gallup(民意调查)Organization questioned them by telephone in two thousand eight.At that time, the people were between the ages of eighteen and eighty-five.

  The researchers asked questions about emotions like happiness, sadness and worry.They also asked about mental or emotional stress.

  Arthur Stone in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science at Stony Brook University in New York led the study.His team found that levels of stress were highest among adults between the ages of twenty-two and twenty-five.

  The findings showed that stress levels dropped sharply after people reached their fifties.

  Happiness was highest among the youngest adults and those in their early seventies.The people least likely to report feeling negative emotions were those in their seventies and eighties.

  The findings appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

  Researchers say they do not know why happiness increases as people get older.One theory is that, as people grow older, they grow more thankful for what they have and have better control of their emotions.They also spend less time thinking about bad experiences.

  Professor Stone says the emotional patterns could be linked to changes in how people see the world, or maybe even changes in brain chemistry.

  The researchers also considered possible influences like having young children, being unemployed or being single.But they found that influences like these did not affect the levels of happiness and well-being related to age.

  The study also showed that men and women have similar emotional patterns as they grow older.However, women at all ages reported more sadness, stress and worry than men.

(1)

What is the best title of the passage?

[  ]

A.

The older a person is, the happier he grows.

B.

The more lighthearted a person is, the happier he is.

C.

The older a person is, the more clever he grows.

D.

The older a person is, the more stressed he feels.

(2)

We can learn from the research that ________.

[  ]

A.

only when people get older, will they feel happier

B.

older people usually have no worries in their life

C.

older people are more likely to be thankful in life

D.

stress levels among the youngest are the highest of all

(3)

According to the researchers, what is probably the reason why people grow happier when they get older?

[  ]

A.

When people get older, they can’t remember bad experiences.

B.

When people get older, they have no young children to care about.

C.

When people get older, they don’t care about their feelings.

D.

When people get older, they learn to adjust their feelings.

(4)

What would the writer probably deal with in next paragraph?

[  ]

A.

Advice to the young people on how to keep happy.

B.

Why women at all ages are more sad, stressed and worried.

C.

Advice to the old people on how to live longer.

D.

Why people will grow happier with their ages.

(5)

What do you think the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences is?

[  ]

A.

A Gallup organization.

B.

A University in New York.

C.

A popular science magazine.

D.

A research institution.

查看答案和解析>>

同步练习册答案