题目列表(包括答案和解析)
Request a teacher training workshop or school visit
If you are interested in discovering new ways to supplement the materials you use in the classroom through the use of a daily newspaper, our Youth Outreach Specialist can come to your school and show you how to incorporate(将...包括在内 )the news into your curriculum. Armed with your newspapers and experience, she can conduct an activity with your class, making it fun and easy for you to bring real-world learning into your classroom.
The Outreach Specialist is also available to run workshops with staff who are also looking for new ideas on how to use the newspaper as a learning tool. Please send us an e-mail at ghiten@seattletimes.com or give us a call at 206/652-6290. Once we have received your request, we will confirm the date, time, place and activity with you. Your request will be honored of a first-come, first-served basis.
These services are FREE for current Newspapers In Education (NIE) subscribers (订户). We recently visited Ridgecrest Elementary and conducted a class workshop. An overview of our time in the classroom, and our in-class lesson, can be read online.
Schedule a tour
Follow a newspaper from start to finish ... and get your copy that has just recently been printed. See how robots move giant paper rolls, how the press is "prepared" for printing and much more. Tours of our North Creek production facility in Bothell are offered Thursdays throughout the school year at either 10 am, 11 am or 4 pm. The tour lasts one hour.
To make reservations contact:
Kate Palmer
425/489-7000
kpalmer® seattletimes.com
North Creek Facility is located at:
64. The Youth Outreach Specialist is most probably ____.
A. a daily newspaper B. an educational organization
C. a person in an educational aid project D. a learning tool
65. People who send an e-mail at ghiten@seattletimes.com earliest may ____.
A. be offered Newspapers In Education free
B. be offered latest reading materials free
C. become a good organizer in the classroom
D. get the earliest service offered by the advertiser
66. The purpose of the tour is to ____.
A. show people how a newspaper is made B. show people how a newspaper is edited
C. encourage people to visit Bothell D. encourage people to read a newspaper
67. When can people go on a trip to the North Creek production facility?
A. At any time on Thursdays.
B. On Thursday mornings during the school year.
C. On Thursdays during summer vacation.
D. At either 10 am, ll am or 4 am all the year around.
听力
第一节:听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。
1.Why can't the man get a table?
A.The woman is busy at lunch time.
B.There is no free table at the moment.
C.There is a traffic jam at the moment.
2.How will the medicine affect the woman?
A.It will make her weak.
B.It will make her sleepy.
C.It will make her hard to sleep.
3.How will the man probably go downtown?
A.He is likely to take a bus.
B.He is likely to take a taxi.
C.He is likely to take the underground.
4.What did the man suggest the woman do?
A.The man suggested that the woman stay indoors in the morning.
B.The man suggested that the woman go outdoors in the morning.
C.The man suggested that the woman stay indoors in the evening.
5.What can we do through the Internet according to the woman?
A.Help our everyday life.
B.Communicate.
C.Get information and communication.
第二节:听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。
听第6段材料,回答第6至8题。
6.What time is it now?
A.It's 10∶10 pm.
B.It's 10∶30 pm.
C.It's 9∶50 pm.
7.How long will it take the woman to get to the railway station?
A.Less than fifteen minutes.
B.More than fifteen minutes.
C.Less than fifty minutes.
8.Why did the man invite the woman to his house?
A.They had a tea party.
B.They had a dinner party.
C.They had a dancing party.
听第7段材料,回答第9至11题。
9.When will the man come back from the trip?
A.On May 13.
B.On May 16.
C.On June 2.
10.Which flights is the man going to take for his round trips?
A.Flight 220 and Flight 476.
B.Flight 444 and Flight 220.
C.Flight 220 and Flight 414.
11.How much will the man probably pay for the tickets?
A.$652.
B.$440.
C.About $326.
听第8段材料,回答第12至14题。
12.What kind of people didn't they need?
A.Those who knew no foreign language.
B.Those who wanted to work 30 hours a week.
C.Those who had no experience in office work.
13.Who will get a higher pay?
A.Those who are well educated.
B.Those who have much experience.
C.Those who can speak a second language.
14.What is the possible relationship between the two speakers?
A.Boss and Secretary.
B.Husband and wife.
C.Two bosses working in the same company.
听第9段材料,回答第15至17题。
15.How is the man speaker?
A.His back hurts.
B.He is weak.
C.He is busy.
16.Why didn't the woman ask Jim for help?
A.Because Jim was busy then.
B.Because she thought Jim hadn't been in.
C.Because the cupboard was too heavy.
17.Where does the conversation take place?
A.In the office.
B.In a shop.
C.At home.
听第10段材料,回答第18至20题。
18.Which floor was destroyed?
A.The first floor.
B.The second floor.
C.The third floor.
19.Who lived in the building?
A.Travellers.
B.Many families.
C.A few elderly.
20.What caused the fire probably?
A.The broken wires.
B.A burning cigarette.
C.An oven.
完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
Driving to a store after a busy day at work, I saw a man standing near the store holding a sign that said, “will work for food.” I knew at that moment that I was going into the store and 36 him something to eat.
As I 37 the car park, I saw in my car mirror a lady come out from a hairdresser’s and 38 the man. I thought she must be going to give him some 39 or something to help him out. In the store I was 40 to get the things I needed and also the chicken dinner and a soda that I wanted to give the man outside. I hurried out to my car and 41 that I was going to be able to hopefully help this man.
When I drove out of the car park, I couldn’t see the 42 . As I turned the corner I saw the man sitting in a 43 area away from the hairdresser’s and still 44 up the sign. I immediately 45 over and gave the man the dinner and soda and said“ 46 this will get you through today.” He looked at me and said “Thank you so much!”As I got back into my car, I looked in the 47 and saw the man swallowing the dinner as if he hadn’t eaten for days.
I was so 48 that I was able to help him and at the same time I was so sad that the woman from the hairdresser’s, 49 ,had asked the man to 50 from her shop. It’s sad to say that 51 I live in a small city where homeless is not as 52 as in larger cities, people are uncomfortable with these people in 53 . All they need to do is lend a helping hand 54 and it could make a huge 55 in their lives.
A. cook B. buy C. pay D. serve
A. turned into B. got over C. called at D. pointed out
A. interview B. comfort C. blame D. approach
A. example B. space C. money D. comfort
A. preparing B. hurrying C. hesitating D. planning
A. explained B. wondered C. agreed D. felt
A. man B. food C. lady D. sign
A. different B. strange C. famous D. comfortable.
A. making B. holding C. taking D. building
A. turned B. thought C. pulled D. looked
A. Hopefully B. Finally C. Luckily D. Naturally
A. store B. mirror C. square D. crowd
A. popular B. anxious C. pleased D. patient
A. immediately B. obviously C. carefully D. nervously
A. stop B. suffer C. move D. change
A. whether B. because C. though D. unless
A. poor B. visible C. selfish D. happy
A. danger B. action C. need D. moment
A. at times B. at the time C. at one time D. at a time
A. difference B. mistake C. decision D. living
There are still many things that Peter Cooke would like to try his hand at — paper-making and feather-work are on his list. For the moment, though, he will stick to the skill that he has been delighted to make perfect over the past ten years: making delicate and unusual objects out of shells.
As he leads me round his apartment showing me his work, he points to a pair of shell-covered ornaments(装饰品) above a fireplace. “I shan’t be at all bothered if people don’t buy them because I have got so used to them, and to me they’re lovely. I never meant to sell my work commercially. Some friends came to see me about five years ago and said, ‘You must have an exhibition — people ought to see these. We’ll talk to a man who owns an art gallery’”. The result was an exhibition in London, at which 70 per cent of the objects were sold. His second exhibition opened at the gallery yesterday. Considering the enormous prices the pieces command —around £2,000 for the ornaments — an empty space above the fireplace would seem a small sacrifice for Cooke to make.
There are 86 pieces in the exhibition, with prices starting at£225 for a shell-flower in a crystal vase. Cooke insists that he has nothing to do with the prices and is cheerily open about their level: he claims there is nobody else in the world who produces work like his, and, as the gallery-owner told him, “Well, you’re going to stop one day and everybody will want your pieces because there won’t be any more.”
“I do wish, though,” says Cooke, “that I’d taken this up a lot earlier, because then I would have been able to produce really wonderful things — at least the potential would have been there. Although the ideas are still there and I’m doing the best I can now, I’m more limited physically than I was when I started.” Still, the work that he has managed to produce is a long way from the common shell constructions that can be found in seaside shops. “I have a miniature(微型的) mind,” he says, and this has resulted in boxes covered in thousands of tiny shells, little shaded pictures made from shells and baskets of astonishingly realistic flowers.?
Cooke’s quest(追求) for beautiful, and especially tiny, shells has taken him further than his Norfolk shore: to France, Thailand, Mexico, South Africa and the Philippines, to name but a few of the beaches where he has lain on his stomach and looked for beauties to bring home. He is insistent that he only collects dead shells and defends himself against people who write him letters accusing him of stripping the world’s beaches. “When I am collecting shells, I hear people’s great fat feet crunching(嘎吱嘎吱地踩) them up far faster than I can collect them; and the ones that are left, the sea breaks up. I would not dream of collecting shells with living creatures in them or diving for them, but once their occupants have left, why should I not collect them?” If one bases this argument on the amount of luggage that can be carried home by one man, the beauty of whose work is often greater than its natural parts, it becomes very convincing indeed.
What does the reader learn about Peter Cooke in the first paragraph?
A. He has produced hand-made objects in different materials.?
B. He hopes to work with other materials in the future.?
C. He has written about his love of making shell objects.?
D. He was praised for his shell objects many years ago.
When mentioning the cost of his shell objects, Cooke ____.
A. cleverly changes the subject.
B. defends the prices charged for his work.
C. says he has no idea why the level is so high.
D. notes that his work will not always be so popular.
The “small sacrifice” in Paragraph 2 refers to _________.?
A. the loss of Cooke’s ornaments? B. the display of Cooke’s ornaments?
C. the cost of keeping Cooke’s ornaments D. the space required to store Cooke’s ornaments
What does Cooke regret about his work?
A. He is not as famous as he should have been.?B. He makes less money than he should make.
C. He is less imaginative than he used to be.? D. He is not as skillful as he used to be. ?
What does the reader learn about Cooke's shell-collecting activities?
A. Not everyone approves of what he does.
B. Other methods might make his work easier.
C. Other tourists get in the way of his collecting.
D. Not all shells are the right size and shape for his work
Annealing
Annealing is a way of making metal softer by heating it and then letting it cool very slowly, if metal is heated and then cooled very quickly, for example by dipping(浸) it in water, it will be very hard but also very brittle(脆)—that is, it will break easily. Metal that has been annealed is soft but does not breaks as easily. It is possible to make metal as hard or as soft as is wished, by annealing it. The metal is heated, and allowed to cool slowly for a certain length of time. The longer the heated metal takes to cool slowly, the softer it becomes. Annealing can also be used on other material, such as glass.
1. Annealing can make metal ____
A. hard and tough(韧) B. hard but brittle C. soft but tough D. soft and brittle
2. Why do people put hot metal in water?
A. To make it hard. B. To make it soft. C. To make it cool. D. To make it brittle
3. In annealing, the required hardness of a metal depends on ______
A. the quantity of water used B. the temperature of the metal
C. the softness of the metal D. the timing of the operation
4. As suggested by the text, how can glass be made less brittle?
A. It can be heated and then cooled quickly.
B. It can be cooled and then heated slowly.
C. It can be heated and then cooled slowly.
D. It can be cooled and then heated quickly.
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