In South Korean 高☆考♂资♀源?网 ☆ A. there is only one college B. there is only one top college C. there are only top universities D. there are a number of colleges 查看更多

 

题目列表(包括答案和解析)

In South Korea, children get used to the Internet at an early age. A survey last year by the Ministry of information and Communication showed that nearly half of children between the age of 3 and 5 use the internet.

“In south Korea, the Internet has become a babysitter, said Lee Kyong Ko, a professor at Duksing, Women’s University in Seoul.   

Online role-playing games, where participants make friends and band together, have a strong appeal to Koreans,“One problem with those games is that you build your online person through countless hours of battles, and you develop a huge emotional attachment to your game character,”said Chang Woo Min, a one-time online gamer.

Parents report that their children steal money and do not come home for days and even weeks, practically living in Internet Cafes, and sometimes they refuse to look for jobs and play games all night and sleep during the day.

The authorities require Internet cafes to keep their distance from schools, and they open camps for teenage addicts and distribute booklets(小册子) on the dangers of game addiction. In addition, they are training hundreds of counselors, who visit schools and Internet Cafes.

In the 28,000 Internet Cafes in South Korea, persons under 18 are banded from entry after 10 p.m.. The authorities have even discussed reducing the points of gamers who play for more than three consecutive (连续的) hours, But such talks have produced no agreement, amid concerns that such restrictions would put a high-growth industry in danger and worse the problem of teenagers stealing adult online identification numbers,“Sooner or later we will be able to announce our measures,”the minister of Information and Communication, Rho Jun Hyoung, said at a news conference in May.“Since South Korea is one of the most active and developed countries in the Internet, the world is paying great attention to What policy we will adopt on this problem.”

1.According to the passage, in order to solve the Internet problem, the authorities of South Korea took the following measures EXCEPT              

A.demanding the Internet Cafes to be far away from schools

B.telling the students about the dangers of game addiction

C.training counselors to visit schools and cafes

D.banning all the people from entering the Internet after 10 p.m.

2.We can learn that                 from the passage.

A.most children under 6 in the South Korea use the Internet

B.some parents hope their children use the Internet only at home

C.all kinds of measures are not supported by all the people

D.the authorities in the South Korea believe that it is most active and developed country in the Inter

3.In paragraph 2,the underlined sentence “the Internet has becomes a babysitter”means     .

A.children are well looked after on the Internet

B.children likes sitting in the Internet Cafes

C.children can earn money working as a babysitter in Internet Cafes

D.Internet has become a place where children are looked after while their parents are not there

4.The passage is written to tell us_________________.

A.the Internet problems in South Korea        B.the bad effects of the Internet

C.the measures of the authorities             D.teenagers like going surfing in South Korea

 

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In South Korea, children get used to the Internet at an early age. A survey last year by the Ministry of information and Communication showed that nearly half of children between the age of 3 and 5 use the internet.
“In south Korea, the Internet has become a babysitter, said Lee Kyong Ko, a professor at Duksing, Women’s University in Seoul.   
Online role-playing games, where participants make friends and band together, have a strong appeal to Koreans,“One problem with those games is that you build your online person through countless hours of battles, and you develop a huge emotional attachment to your game character,”said Chang Woo Min, a one-time online gamer.
Parents report that their children steal money and do not come home for days and even weeks, practically living in Internet Cafes, and sometimes they refuse to look for jobs and play games all night and sleep during the day.
The authorities require Internet cafes to keep their distance from schools, and they open camps for teenage addicts and distribute booklets(小册子) on the dangers of game addiction. In addition, they are training hundreds of counselors, who visit schools and Internet Cafes.
In the 28,000 Internet Cafes in South Korea, persons under 18 are banded from entry after 10 p.m.. The authorities have even discussed reducing the points of gamers who play for more than three consecutive (连续的) hours, But such talks have produced no agreement, amid concerns that such restrictions would put a high-growth industry in danger and worse the problem of teenagers stealing adult online identification numbers,“Sooner or later we will be able to announce our measures,”the minister of Information and Communication, Rho Jun Hyoung, said at a news conference in May.“Since South Korea is one of the most active and developed countries in the Internet, the world is paying great attention to What policy we will adopt on this problem.”
【小题1】According to the passage, in order to solve the Internet problem, the authorities of South Korea took the following measures EXCEPT              

A.demanding the Internet Cafes to be far away from schools
B.telling the students about the dangers of game addiction
C.training counselors to visit schools and cafes
D.banning all the people from entering the Internet after 10 p.m.
【小题2】We can learn that                 from the passage.
A.most children under 6 in the South Korea use the Internet
B.some parents hope their children use the Internet only at home
C.all kinds of measures are not supported by all the people
D.the authorities in the South Korea believe that it is most active and developed country in the Inter
【小题3】In paragraph 2,the underlined sentence “the Internet has becomes a babysitter”means     .
A.children are well looked after on the Internet
B.children likes sitting in the Internet Cafes
C.children can earn money working as a babysitter in Internet Cafes
D.Internet has become a place where children are looked after while their parents are not there
【小题4】The passage is written to tell us_________________.
A.the Internet problems in South KoreaB.the bad effects of the Internet
C.the measures of the authoritiesD.teenagers like going surfing in South Korea

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In South Korea, children get used to the Internet at an early age. A survey last year by the Ministry of information and Communication showed that nearly half of children between the age of 3 and 5 use the internet.
“In south Korea, the Internet has become a babysitter, said Lee Kyong Ko, a professor at Duksing, Women’s University in Seoul.   
Online role-playing games, where participants make friends and band together, have a strong appeal to Koreans,“One problem with those games is that you build your online person through countless hours of battles, and you develop a huge emotional attachment to your game character,”said Chang Woo Min, a one-time online gamer.
Parents report that their children steal money and do not come home for days and even weeks, practically living in Internet Cafes, and sometimes they refuse to look for jobs and play games all night and sleep during the day.
The authorities require Internet cafes to keep their distance from schools, and they open camps for teenage addicts and distribute booklets(小册子) on the dangers of game addiction. In addition, they are training hundreds of counselors, who visit schools and Internet Cafes.
In the 28,000 Internet Cafes in South Korea, persons under 18 are banded from entry after 10 p.m.. The authorities have even discussed reducing the points of gamers who play for more than three consecutive (连续的) hours, But such talks have produced no agreement, amid concerns that such restrictions would put a high-growth industry in danger and worse the problem of teenagers stealing adult online identification numbers,“Sooner or later we will be able to announce our measures,”the minister of Information and Communication, Rho Jun Hyoung, said at a news conference in May.“Since South Korea is one of the most active and developed countries in the Internet, the world is paying great attention to What policy we will adopt on this problem.”

  1. 1.

    According to the passage, in order to solve the Internet problem, the authorities of South Korea took the following measures EXCEPT              

    1. A.
      demanding the Internet Cafes to be far away from schools
    2. B.
      telling the students about the dangers of game addiction
    3. C.
      training counselors to visit schools and cafes
    4. D.
      banning all the people from entering the Internet after 10 p.m
  2. 2.

    We can learn that                 from the passage

    1. A.
      most children under 6 in the South Korea use the Internet
    2. B.
      some parents hope their children use the Internet only at home
    3. C.
      all kinds of measures are not supported by all the people
    4. D.
      the authorities in the South Korea believe that it is most active and developed country in the Inter
  3. 3.

    In paragraph 2,the underlined sentence “the Internet has becomes a babysitter”means     

    1. A.
      children are well looked after on the Internet
    2. B.
      children likes sitting in the Internet Cafes
    3. C.
      children can earn money working as a babysitter in Internet Cafes
    4. D.
      Internet has become a place where children are looked after while their parents are not there
  4. 4.

    The passage is written to tell us_________________

    1. A.
      the Internet problems in South Korea
    2. B.
      the bad effects of the Internet
    3. C.
      the measures of the authorities
    4. D.
      teenagers like going surfing in South Korea

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D

His first fight was for the equal rights of black people in South Africa. Then, as the first black president he fought to unite the country and organize the government. Now Nelson Mandela has set his sights on a new enemy, AIDS.

On March 19 the 82-year-old, former president, hosted his second AIDS-awareness concert. He warned that 25 million people in Africa were already infected with the fatal disease.

Mandela was born in a small village in South Africa in 1918. He was adopted (收养) by the chief of his tribe (部族) and could have been a chief himself and lived a happy country life.

But he refused to be a chief when his people lived under racial discrimination ( 种族歧视). He decided to fight for equal rights for all the people in South Africa. Before 1990, under the country’s Racial Segregation Law (种族隔离法), colored and white people lived separately. Black people were treated unfairly even when taking a bus. Blacks had to stand at the back of the bus to make room for white people even when there were only a few of them on board.

For his opposition (反对) to the system Mandela was arrested (被捕) and spent 27 years in prison. He was freed in 1990 and become the president of the country after the first elections were held in which everyone could vote.

Mandela was not only a political fighter who attacked with speeches. He was also a trained boxer (拳击手) and fought in the ring when he was young.

“ Although I did not enjoy the violence of boxing, I was interested in how one moved one’s body to protect oneself, how one used a strategy both to attack and retreat (撤退),” he wrote in his autobiography.

As a skillful fighter, he chose music as his weapon against AIDS. He hopes to win another victory against AIDS.

52.Nelson Mandela succeeded in doing the following except _____.

A. winning the equal rights for the black people in South Africa

B. uniting South Africa

C. organizing a government in South Africa

D. controlling the spread of AIDS

53.If Nelson Mandela hadn’t fought against racial discrimination, he _____.

A. could easily have been the president of South Africa

B. could still have lived a happy life

C. could have been in a difficult situation

D. would have been an excellent boxer

54.It can be inferred that Nelson Mandela _____.

A. continues to help the black people with the political struggle

B. is taking a position in a music group

C. is taking on the world’s greatest fight against AIDS

D. is preparing for the next election of president

55.Which statement can best describe the life of Nelson Mandela?

A. Struggle is his life.          B. Sports make his fame.

C. Fight for equal rights.        D. Great fighter against government.

 

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       The Migration of Birds

   Here is a scientific experiment on the homing of birds, the fact of which are quite certain. A few years ago seven swallows were caught near their nests at Bremen in Germany. They were marked with a red dye on some of their white feathers, so that they could easily been seen. Then they were taken by plane to Croydon, near London. This is a distance of 400 miles.

   Then the seven swallows were set free at Croydon. Five of them flew back to their nests at Bremen. How did the birds find their way on that long journey, which they had never made before? That is the great puzzle. It is no good saying that the swallows have a sense of direction. These are just words and explain nothing. We want to know exactly what senses the animals use to find their way, how they know in which direction to go until they can see familiar landmarks. Unfortunately practically no scientific experiments have yet been made on this question.

   Perhaps migrating birds are the greatest mystery of all. Swallows leave England in August and September, and they fly to Africa, where they stay during our winter. The swallows return to England in the late summer for the south. A lot has been found about the journeys of migrating birds by marking the birds with aluminum rings put on one leg. An address and a number is put on the ring.

   Swallows from England go as far as South Africa and as many as fourteen birds, marked with rings in England, have been caught again in South Africa. From England to South Africa is a journey of 6,000 miles. And the birds not only return from Africa to England next spring, but often they come back to the nests in the very same house where they nested the year before.

17.The seven swallows were marked on some of their feathers because       .

A.they would be taken away by plane

B.they would be free in London

C.Croydon was 400 miles away

D.they could easily be seen for the red colour

18.Which of the following is true?       .

A.Seientists have found why the animals can see their nests.

B.No one knows why the swallows can fly back to their familiar landmarks.

C.It’s very simple that the birds use sense of direction.

D.Many experiments have been made on how birds can fly their way home

19.Swallows like to spend ”our winter” in        .

A.England      B.London        C.Africa       D.Germany

20.When do the birds return from South Africa to England every year?

A.summer        B.spring        C.winter         D.Both A and B

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