2020届二轮复习阅读理解训练(58)

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2020届二轮复习阅读理解训练(58)

阅读理解训练(58)‎ Passage 1‎ Today about 70 countries use Daylight Saving Time (DST). Daylight Saving was first introduced during World War I in Australia. During the world wars, DST was used for the late summers beginning January 1917 and 1942, and the full summers beginning September 1942 and 1943. ‎ In 1967, Tasmania experienced a drought(干旱). The State Government introduced one hour of daylight saving that summer as a way of saving power and water. Tasmanians liked the idea of daylight saving and the Tasmanian Government has declared daylight saving each summer since 1968. Persuaded by the Tasmanian Government, all states except two passed a law in 1971, for a test use of daylight saving. In 1972, New South Wales, South Australia and Victoria joined Tasmania for regular daylight saving, but Queensland did not do so until 1989.‎ Tasmania, Queensland and South Australia have had irregular plans, often changing their dates due to politics or festivals(节日). For example, in 1992, Tasmania extended(延长)daylight saving by an extra month while South Australia began extending daylight saving by two weeks for the Adelaide Festival. Special daylight saving plans were made during the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games.‎ The differences in daylight saving in Australia continue to cause serious problems in transport and many other social activities. It also reduces the number of hours in the working day that are common to all centers in the country. In particular, time differences along the east coast cause major differences, especially for the broadcasters of national radio and television. ‎ ‎1. Daylight Saving Time was introduced in Tasmania _______________. ‎ ‎ A. to stop the drought in 1967 B. to support government officials ‎ ‎ C. to pass a special law in the state D. to save water and electricity ‎2. According to the text, which state was the last to use DST?‎ ‎ A. Victoria. B. Queensland. ‎ ‎ C. South Australia. D. New South Wales. ‎ ‎3. What can we learn about DST in some Australian states?‎ ‎ A. It doesn’t have fixed dates. B. It is not used in festivals. ‎ ‎ C. Its plan was changed in 2000. D. It lasts for two weeks.‎ ‎4. What do we know about the use of DST from the last paragraph?‎ ‎ A. There exist some undesirable effects. B. It helps little to save energy.‎ ‎ C. It brings about longer working days. D. Radio and TV programs become different.‎ 答案 DBAA Passage 2‎ Some people have the feeling that nothing can be done about their poor reading ability(能力). They feel hopeless about it. Can you learn to read better, or must you agree that nothing can be done about it?‎ To be sure, people are different. You cannot to do everything as well as certain other people do. It al the students in a class tried out for basketball, some would be very good players; others would be very poor; and many would be in between. But even the very poor players can become much better players if they are guided in the right way, and with plenty of practice. It is the same with reading. Some seem to enjoy reading and to read well without any special help. Others find reading a slow and tiring job. In between, there are all degrees of reading ability.‎ Many experiments have shown that just about every poor reader can improve his reading ability. In these experiments, the poor readers were given tests of reading ability. After some of the causes of their poor reading were discovered, they were given special instruction and practice in reading. After a few months, another test of the same kind was given. In nearly all cases, these people had raised their reading scores.‎ ‎5.With the example of basketball players, the author shows ____. A. why certain people are poor readers ‎ B. that there are differences in people’s abilities C. why some people are good basketball players ‎ D. that good basketball players can be good readers ‎6.To improve their reading ability, people should ____. A. work long and hard B. take different forms of tests C. have special help and practice D. try different reading materials ‎7.The experiments mentioned in the text show that ____. A. good readers seem to enjoy reading ‎ B. almost all poor readers can make progress C. causes of poor reading are difficult to find out ‎ D. tests help people improve their reading ability 答案 BCB Passage 3‎ Most people want to know how things are made. They honestly admit, however, that they hardly know a thing when it comes to understanding how a piece of music is made. Where a composer(作曲家)begins, how he manages to keep going – in fact, how and when he learns his trade – all are covered in complete darkness. The composer, in short, is a man of mystery(神秘).‎ One of the first things the common man wants to know about is the part inspiration(灵感)plays in a composer’s work. He finds it difficult to believe that composers are not much interested in that question. Writing music is as natural for the composer as eating or sleeping for all. Music is something that the composer happens to have been born for.‎ The composer, therefore, does not say to himself: “Do I feel inspired?” He says to himself: “Do I feel like working today?” And if he feels like working, he does. It is more or less like saying to himself: “Do I feel sleepy?” if you feel sleepy, you go to sleep. If you don’t feel sleepy, you stay up. If the composer doesn’t feel like working, he doesn’t work. It’s as simple as that.‎ ‎8.What would be the best title for the text? A. Composer: a man of mystery B. Practice makes good music C. Relation between sleeping and music D. Music: product of nature ‎9.The words “covered in complete darkness” underlined in Paragraph 1 most probably mean ____. A. difficult to be made B. without any light C. black in color D. not known ‎10.Most people seem to think that a composer ____. A. finds it difficult to write music ‎ B. considers it important to have a good rest C. should like to talk about inspiration ‎ D. never asks himself very simple quesiotns ‎11.The author will most probably agree that composers ____. A. are born with a gift for music B. are people full of mystery C. work late at night for their music D. know a lot about eating and sleeping 答案 ADCA Passage 4‎ Professor Barry Wellman of the University of Toronto in Canada has invented a term to describe the way many North Americans interact (互动) these days. The term is “networked individualism”. This concept is not easy to understand because the words seem to have opposite meanings. How can we be individuals (个体) and be networked at the same time? You need other people for networks.‎ Here is what Professor Wellman means. Before the invention of the Internet and e-mail, our social networks included live interactions with relatives, neighbors, and friends. Some of the interaction was by phone, but it was still voice to voice, person to person, in real time.‎ A recent research study by the Pew Internet and American Life Project showed that for a lot of people, electronic interaction through the computer has replaced this person-to- person interaction. However, a lot of people interviewed for the Pew study say that’s a good thing. Why?‎ In the past, many people were worried that the Internet isolated (孤立) us and caused us to spend too much time in the imaginary world of the computer. But the Pew study discovered that the opposite is true. The Internet connects us with more real people than expected — helpful people who can give advice on careers, medical problems, raising children, and choosing a school or college. About 60 million Americans told Pew that the Internet plays an important role in helping them make major life decisions.‎ Thanks to the computer, we are able to be alone and together with other people — at the same time!‎ ‎12. The underlined phrase “networked individualism” probably means that by using computers people ________.‎ ‎ A. stick to their own ways no matter what other people say ‎ B. have the rights and freedom to do things of their own interest ‎ C. do things in their own ways and express opinions different from other people ‎ D. are able to keep to themselves but at the same time reach out to other people ‎13. According to the Pew study, what do many people rely on to make major life decisions?‎ ‎ A. Networks. B. Friends. C. Phones. D. Parents.‎ ‎14. It can be inferred from the Pew study that _______.‎ ‎ A. people have been separated from each other by using computers ‎ B. the Internet makes people waste a lot of time and feel very lonely ‎ C. the Internet has become a tool for a new kind of social communication ‎ D. a lot of people regard the person-to-person communication as a good thing ‎15. Which would be the best title for this passage?‎ ‎ A. We’re Alone on the Internet.‎ ‎ B. We’re Communicating on the Internet.‎ ‎ C. We’re Alone Together on the Internet.‎ ‎ D. We’re in the Imaginary World of the Internet.‎ 答案 DACC ‎ Passage 5‎ Throughout the history of the arts, the nature of creativity has remained constant to artists. No matter what objects they select, artists are to bring forth new forces and forms that cause change-to find poetry where no one has ever seen or experienced it before. ‎ Landscape(风景) is another unchanging element of art. It can be found from ancient times through the 17th-century Dutch painters to the 19th-century romanticists and impressionists. In the 1970s Alfred Leslie, one of the new American realists, continued this practice. Leslie sought out the same place where Thomas Cole, a romanticist, had produced paintings of the same scene a century and a half before. Unlike Cole who insists on a feeling of loneliness and the idea of finding peace in nature, Leslie paints what he actually sees. In his paintings, there is no particular change in emotion, and he includes ordinary things like the highway in the background. He also takes advantage of the latest developments of color photography(摄影术) to help both the eye and the memory when he improves his painting back in his workroom. ‎ Besides, all art begs the age-old question: What is real? Each generation of artists has shown their understanding of reality in one form or another. The impressionists saw reality in brief emotional effects, the realists in everyday subjects and in forest scenes, and the Cro-Magnon cave people in their naturalistic drawings of the animals in the ancient forests. To sum up, understanding reality is a necessary struggle for artists of all periods. ‎ Over thousands of years the function of the arts has remained relatively constant. Past or ‎ present, Eastern or Western, the arts are a basic part of our immediate experience. Many and different are the faces of art, and together they express the basic need and hope of human beings. ‎ ‎16. The underlined word “poetry” most probably means __________. ‎ A. an object for artistic creation B. a collection of poems ‎ C. an unusual quality D. a natural scene ‎ ‎17. Leslie's paintings are extraordinary because . ‎ A. they are close in style to works in ancient times ‎ B. they look like works by 19th-century painters ‎ C. they draw attention to common things in life ‎ D. they depend heavily on color photography ‎ ‎18. What is the author's opinion of artistic reality? ‎ A. It will not be found in future works of art. ‎ B. It does not have a long-lasting standard. ‎ C. It is expressed in a fixed artistic form. ‎ D. It is lacking in modern works of art. ‎ ‎19. What does the author suggest about the arts in the last paragraph? ‎ A. They express people's curiosity about the past. ‎ B. They make people interested in everyday experience. ‎ C. They are considered important for variety in form. ‎ D. They are regarded as a mirror of the human situation. ‎ ‎20. Which of the following is the main topic of the passage? ‎ A. History of the arts. B. Basic questions of the arts. ‎ C. New developments in the arts. D. Use of modern technology in the arts. ‎ 答案 CCBDB ‎ Passage 6‎ It may help you to know that there is no such thing as a perfect speech. At some point in every speech, every speaker says something that is not understood exactly as he has planned. Fortunately, the moments are usually not obvious(明显的)to the listeners. Why? Because the listeners do not know what the speaker plans to say. They hear only what the speaker does say. If you Lose your place for a moment, wrongly change the order of a couple of sentences, or forget to pause at a certain point, no one will be any the wiser. When such moments occur, don’t worry about them. Just continue as if nothing happened.‎ Even if you do make an obvious mistake during a speech, that don’ t really matter. If you have ever listen to Martin Luther King’ s famous speech—“I Have a dream ”, you may notice that he stumbles(结巴) his words twice during the speech, Most likely. however. you don’t remember. Why? Because you were fixing your attention on his message rather than on his way of speech-making. ‎ People care a lot about makings mistake in a speech because they regard speechmaking as a ‎ kind of performance rather than as an act of communication(交流). They feel the listeners are like judges in an ice-skating competition. But, in (act • the listeners are not looking for a period performance. They are looking for a well-thought-out speech that expresses the speaker’s ideas clearly and directly. Sometimes a mistake or he can actually increase a speaker’s attractiveness by making him more human.‎ As you work on your speech, don’t worry about being perfect. Once you free your mind of this, you will find it much easier to give your speech freely.‎ ‎21. The underlined part and the first paragraph means that no one will ______ ‎ A. be smarter than you ‎ B. notice your mistakes C. do better than you ‎ D. know what you are talking about ‎22. You don’t remember obvious mistakes in a speech because_____‎ A. your attention is on the content B. you don’t fully understand the speech C. you don’t know what the speaker plans to say D. you find the way of speech-making more important ‎23. It can be inferred from the passage that_____‎ A. giving a speech is like giving a performance B. one or two mistakes in a speech may not be bad C. the listeners should pay more attention to how a speech is made D. the more mistakes a speaker makes, the more attractive he will be ‎24. What would be the best title for the passage?‎ A. How to Be a Perfect Speaker B. How to Make a Perfect Speech C. Don’ I Expect a Perfect Speech D. Don’t Expect Mistakes in a Speech 答案 BABC ‎ Passage 7‎ Tell a story and tell it well, and you may open wide the eyes of a child, open up lines of communication in a business, or even open people’s mind to another culture or race.‎ People in many places are digging up the old folk stories and the messages in them. For example, most American storytellers get their tales from a wide variety of sources, cultures, and times. They regard storytelling not only as a useful tool in child education, but also as a meaningful activity that helps adults understand themselves as well as those whose culture may be very different from their own.‎ ‎“ Most local stories are based on a larger theme,” American storyteller Opalanga Pugh says, “ Cinderella(灰姑娘), or the central idea of a good child protected by her goodness, appears in ‎ various forms in almost every culture of the world.”‎ Working with students in schools, Pugh helps them understand their own cultures and the general messages of the stories. She works with prisoner too, helping them knowing who they are by telling stories that her listeners can write, direct, and act in their own lives. If they don’t like the story they are living, they can rewrite the story. Pugh also works to help open up lines of communication between managers and workers. “For every advance in business,” she says, “ there is a greater need for communication.” Storytelling can have a great effect on either side of the manager-worker relationship, she says.‎ Pugh spent several years in Nigeria, where she learned how closely storytelling was linked to the everyday life of the people there. The benefits of storytelling are found everywhere, she says.‎ ‎“I learned how people used stories to spread their culture,” she says, “ What I do is to focus on the value of the stories that people can translate into their own daily world of affairs. We are all storytellers. We all have a story to tell. We tell everybody’s story.”‎ ‎25. What do we learn about American storyteller from Paragraph 2?‎ ‎ A. They share the same way of storytelling.‎ ‎ B. They prefer to tell the stories from other cultures.‎ ‎ C. They learn their stories from the American natives.‎ ‎ D. They find storytelling useful for both children and adults.‎ ‎26. The underlined sentence (Paragraph 4) suggests that prisoners can _____.‎ ‎ A. start a new life B. settle down in another place ‎ ‎ C. direct films D. become good actors ‎27. Pugh has practised storytelling with _____ groups of people.‎ ‎ A. 2 B. ‎3 C. 4 D. 5‎ ‎28. What is the main idea of the text?‎ ‎ A. Storytelling can influence the way people think.‎ ‎ B. Storytelling is vital to the growth of business.‎ ‎ C. Storytelling is the best way to educate children in school.‎ ‎ D. Storytelling helps people understand themselves and others.‎ 答案 DABD Passage 8‎ Photos that you might have found down the back of your sofa are now big business!‎ ‎ In 2005, the American artist Richard Prince’s photograph of a photograph, Untitled (Cowboy), was sold for $ 1, 248, 000. ‎ ‎ Prince is certainly not the only contemporary artist to have worked with so-called “found photographs”—a loose term given to everything from discarded(丢弃的) prints discovered in a junk shop to old advertisements or amateur photographs from a stranger’s family album. The German artist Joachim Schmid, who believes “basically everything is worth looking at”, has gathered discarded photographs, postcards and newspaper images since 1982. In his on-going ‎ project, Archiv, he groups photographs of family life according to themes: people with dogs; teams; new cars; dinner with the family; and so on.‎ ‎ Like Schmid, the editors of several self-published art magazines also champion (捍卫) found photographs. One of them, called simply Found, was born one snowy night in Chicago, when Davy Rothbard returned to his car to find under his wiper(雨刷) an angry note intended for some else: “Why’s your car HERE at HER place?” The note became the starting point for Rothbard’s addictive publication, which features found photographs sent in by readers, such a poster discovered in our drawer. ‎ ‎ The whole found-photograph phenomenon has raised some questions. Perhaps one of the most difficult is: can these images really be considered as art? And if so, whose art? Yet found photographs produced by artists, such Richard Prince, may riding his horse hurriedly to meet someone? Or how did Prince create this photograph? It’s anyone’s guess. In addition, as we imagine the back-story to the people in the found photographs artists, like Schmid, have collated (整理), we also turn toward our own photographic albums. Why is memory so important to us? Why do we all seek to freeze in time the faces of our children, our parents, our lovers, and ourselves? Will they mean anything to anyone after we’ve gone?‎ ‎29. The first paragraph of the passage is used to _________. ‎ ‎ A. remind readers of found photographs ‎ B. advise reader to start a new kind of business ‎ ‎ C. ask readers to find photographs behind sofa ‎ D. show readers the value of found photographs ‎ ‎30. According to the passage, Joachim Schmid _________. ‎ ‎ A. is fond of collecting family life photographs ‎ B. found a complaining not under his car wiper ‎ C. is working for several self-published magazines ‎ ‎ D. wondered at the artistic nature of found photographs ‎31. The underlined word “them” in Para 4 refers to __________. ‎ ‎ A. the readers ‎ B. the editors ‎ C. the found photographs ‎ ‎ D. the self-published magazines ‎ ‎32. By asking a series of questions in Para 5, the author mainly intends to indicate that ________. ‎ ‎ A. memory of the past is very important to people ‎ B. found photographs allow people to think freely ‎ ‎ C. the back-story of found photographs is puzzling ‎ D. the real value of found photographs is questionable ‎ ‎33. The author’s attitude towards found photographs can be described as _________. ‎ ‎ A. critical B. doubtful C. optimistic D. satisfied ‎ 答案 DADBC Passage 9‎ The summer I was ten, my mother decided to bring us to the world of art. My brother and I were not very excited when we realized what my mother meant. What she meant was not that we could take drawing classes or painting classes but that we would have to spend one afternoon a week with her at the Fine Arts Museum. Before each visit to the museum, she made us read about artists and painting styles(风格). It was almost as bad as being in school. Who wants to spend the summer thinking about artists when you could be with your friends at the swimming pool?‎ ‎ First we had to read about ancient Egyptians(古埃及人) and their strange way of painting faces and then go to look at them at the museum. My 12-year-old brother thought this was so funny, but I was not interested. Later we had to learn about artists in the Middle Ages who painted people wearing strange long clothing. We had to look at pictures of fat babies with wings and curly (鬈曲的) hair and with no clothes on flying around the edges of paintings. I certainly couldn't see what was so great about art.‎ ‎ On our last visit to the museum, something happened when I saw a painting by a woman called Mary. In it, a woman was reading to a child. The colors were soft and gentle, and you could tell by the mother' s expression how happy she was just to be with the child. I couldn't stop looking at this painting ! I wanted to see every painting Mary had ever made! It was really worth looking at so many paintings to find a painter who could interest me so much.‎ ‎34. The aim of the mother' s plan was to _________.‎ ‎ A. take them to visit the museum B. introduce them to the world of art ‎ C. ask them to read about artists D. show them different painting styles ‎35. What was the writer' s experience in the museum before the last visit?‎ ‎ A. She came to feel her mother' s love. ‎ B. She liked many paintings.‎ ‎ C. She hardly enjoyed herself. ‎ D. She could understand the pictures of fat babies.‎ ‎36. What made the writer go through a change that summer?‎ ‎ A. One of Mary's paintings. B. A strange way of painting.‎ ‎ C. Artists in the Middle Ages. D. Her mother' s instruction.‎ ‎37. From the text, we can see _________.‎ ‎ A. the importance of curiosity B. the effect of art ‎ C. the value of learning D. the power of family education 答案 BCAB ‎ Passage 10‎ Meeting people from another culture can be difficult. From the beginning, people may send the wrong signal (信号). Or they may pay no attention to signals from another person who is ‎ trying to develop a relationship.‎ Different cultures emphasize (强调) the importance of relationship building to a greater or lesser degree. For example, business in some countries is not possible until there is a relationship of trust. Even with people at work, it is necessary to spend a lot of time in "small talk", usually over a glass of tea, before they do any job. In many European countries -- like the UK or France -- people find it easier to build up a lasting working relationship at restaurants or caf6s rather than at the office.‎ Talk and silence may also be different in some cultures. I once made a speech in Thailand. I had expected my speech to be a success and start a lively discussion; instead there was an uncomfortable silence. The people present just stared at me and smiled. After getting to know their ways better, I realized that they thought I was talking too much. In my own culture, we express meaning mainly through words, but people there sometimes feel too many words are unnecessary.‎ Even within Northern Europe, cultural differences can cause serious problems. Certainly, English and German cultures share similar values; however, Germans prefer to get down to business more quickly. We think that they are rude. In fact, this is just because one culture starts discussions and makes decisions more quickly.‎ People from different parts of the world have different values, and sometimes these values are quite against each other. However, if we can understand them better, a multicultural environment (多元文化环境) will offer a wonderful chance for us to learn from each other.‎ ‎38. In some countries, eating together at restaurants may make it easier for people to _______.‎ ‎ A. develop closer relations ‎ B. share the same culture ‎ C. get to know each other ‎ D. keep each other company ‎39. The author mentions his experience in Thailand to show that _________.‎ ‎ A. the English prefer to make long speeches ‎ B. too many words are of no use ‎ C. people from Thailand are quiet and shy by nature ‎ D. even talk and silence can be culturally different ‎40. According to the text, how can people from different cultures understand each other better?‎ ‎ A. By sharing different ways of life. ‎ B. By accepting different habits.‎ ‎ C. By recognizing different values. ‎ D. By speaking each other' s languages.‎ ‎41. What would be the best title for the text?‎ ‎ A. Multicultural Environment. ‎ B. Cross-Cultural Differences.‎ ‎ C. How to Understand Each Other. ‎ D. How to Build Up a Relationship.‎ 答案 DDCB Passage 11‎ The literal meaning of philosophy is “love of wisdom”. But this meaning does not tell us very much . Unlike the other discilines(学科),philosopjy cannot e defined by what you study ,because it si actually unlimited. Anything can be the subject matter of philosophy:are, history, law, language, literature, mathematics, and in fact, the other academic disciplines are directly related to philosopkhy. For this reason you get a Doctorate(博士学位)of Philosoophy (Ph. D.) in biochemisty, or computer science, or psychology.‎ ‎ Two broad sub-fields of philosophy are logic and the history of philosophy. Logic is the science of argument and eritical thinkging . It provides sound methods for distinguishing good from bad reasonign .The history of philosopjy involives the study of major philosophers and perrsiad in the development of philosophy.‎ ‎ Of what use is philosophy? First it is useful in educational advancemet . It is necessary for undesrtanding other disciplines. Only philosopjy questiong the nature of the concepts used in a discipline, and its relatin to other disco[;omes. And throught the stdy of philosophy, one develops sound methods of research and analysis that can be applied to any field.‎ ‎ There are a number of gengral uses of philosophy. It strengthens one’s ability to solve problesm, to communieate, to organize ideas and issues, to presuade, and to takewhat is the most important form a large quamity of data. These general uses are of great benefit in the career firld, not necessarily ofr boutaining onej’s first job after graduation ,but for preparing for posttions of responsibility, managemetn and leadershin later on. It is very shor sihte after all, to take a course of studies only for the purpose of getting one’s first job. The useful skills developed throught the study of philosophy hav significang long-term benefits in canreer advancement. No other discipline systematically follows the ideals of wisdom, leadership, and capacity to reasolve human conflict.‎ ‎42.Accprdomg to Paragraph 1. philosophy can best be described as the study of .‎ A.social sciences ‎ B.natural sciences C.both social and natural sciences ‎ D.the subject matter of politics ‎43.With the study of philosophy, you can .‎ A.become a great leader B.succeed in everything C.find a good job soon after graduation D.make progress in your career development ‎44.According to the passage, which of the follwing statements is TRUE?‎ ‎ A.Philosophy is an independent discipline.‎ B.Logic helps you to become a better thinker.‎ C.The study of philosophy brings you immediate benefits.‎ D.The meaning of philosophy is too limited to define.‎ ‎45.From the passage, we can conclude ‎ ‎ A.not all the subjects have to do with philosophy B.a person will get a Ph. D. if he/she studies philosophy C.philosophy can be helpful for the study of any other subjects D.philosophy is the only solution to all the probleras in the world 答案 42.C 43.D 44.B 45.C Passage 12‎ I believe that my country, Poland, is a perfect example for a place where food is particularly important. When we were little children, we began to understand how much a loaf of bread meant to our parents—to some it might sound silly but for me the custom of kissing bread before you started cutting it was simply amazing. It's not so common nowadays to treat food that way, since you hardly ever bake your own bread. Besides, everyone would call you crazy if you tried to kiss every bread roll before you ate them! But though we no longer make our food from scratch (起点), some customs have been kept--that's why I feel so sorry every time I have to throw any food away—even though I no longer live with my parents and nobody would blame me for this anymore!‎ Many people of our nation are still working as farmers, eating what they grow and harvest and therefore enjoying everything more. It's widely known that you value more anything that needs your effort in the first place. In most homes in Poland, especially those of farmers, the whole family would try and have their meals together--extremely difficult now, but so rewarding (值得) ! You can share other members' troubles and successes, give your children some attention, or just sit down for a moment instead of rushing through life aimlessly. Furthermore, your body, and stomach in particular will be very grateful (感激) for such a time! ‎ In Poland, a wedding, Christmas or even a birthday is celebrated with a great meal. Women in the house get together and cook, sometimes for a few days before the event, and the extremely good or unusual food will be remembered and widely talked about.‎ You cannot over-value the importance of food in the country. What's more, almost everyone in Poland will be as interested in the topic as I am.‎ ‎46. When the writer was a child, he / she ________. ‎ ‎ A. found people were crazy about bread ‎ B. began to realize the importance of food C. thought that cutting bread was amazing ‎ D. learned people hardly baked their own bread ‎47. The writer feels very sorry when he/she has to throw away any food because ‎ A. he/she makes food from scratch ‎ B. his/her parents would blame him/her ‎ C. some customs still have effect on him/her ‎ D. many people are still working hard as farmers ‎48. From the text, we can learn that, in Poland, ________. ‎ ‎ A. most meals can be interesting topics for a long time ‎ B. the whole family often have meals together nowadays ‎ C. it's common for women to get together to cook for a few days ‎ D. family members can know more. about each other by having meals together 答案 46.B 47.C 48.D Passage 13‎ When former American President Bill Clinton traveled to South Korea to visit President Kim Young Sam, be rcpeatedly referred to the Korean president’s wife as Mrs. Kim. By mistake, Prcsident Chnton’s advisers thought that Koreans have the same naming customs as the Japanese. Clinton had not been told that, in Korea, wives keep their family names. President Kim Young Sam’s wife was named Sohm Myong Suk.Thercfore, she should be addressed (称谓)as Mrs. Sohn.‎ ‎ President Cuntot arrived in Korea directly after leaving Japan and had not changed his culture gears. His failare to follow Korean customs gave the imprassion that Korea was not as important to him as Japan.‎ ‎ In addition to Koreans. Some Asian husbands and wives do not share the same family names. This practice often puzzles(使困惑) English-speaking teachers when talking with a pupil’s parents. They become puzzled about the student’s correct last name. Placing the family name first is common among a number of Asian cultures.‎ ‎ Mexican naming customs are different as well. When a woman marries,she keeps her family name and adds her husband’s name after the word de (of). This affects (影响)how they fill in forms in the United States. When requested to fill in a middle name, they generally write the father’s family name. But Mexicans are addressed by the family name of the mother. This often causes puzziement.‎ ‎ Here are a few ways to deal with such difficult situations:don’t always think that a married woman uses her husband’s last name. Remember that in may Asian cultures,the order of first and last names is reversed (颠倒),Ask which name a person would prefer to use. If the name is difficult to pronounce,admit it, and ask the person to help you say it conectiy.‎ ‎49.The story of Bill Clinton is used to . ‎ ‎ A.improve US Kotean relations ‎ B.introduce the topic of the text ‎ C.describe his visit to ‎Korea ‎ D.tell us how to address a person ‎50.The word “gears”in paragraph 2 is closest in meaning to . ‎ ‎ A.action plans B.naming customs C.travel maps D.thinking patterns ‎51.When a woman marries in Kores, she . ‎ ‎ A.continues to use her family name B.uses her husband’s given name C.shares her busband’s family name D.adds her husband’s given name to hers ‎52.To address a married woman properly, you’d better . ‎ ‎ A.are her middle name B.use her husband’s first name ‎ C.ask her which name she likes D.change the order of her names 答案 49.B 50.D 51.A 52C Passage 14‎ The flag, the most common symbol(象征)of a nation in the modern world, is also one of the most ancient. With a clear symbolic meaning. the flag in the traditional form is still used today to mark buildings, ships and other vehicles related to a country.‎ The national flag as we know it today is in no way a primitive(原始的)artifact. It is , rather, the product of thousands of years’ development. Historians believe that it had two major ancestors, of which the earlier served to show wind direction.‎ Early human beings used very fragile houses and boats. Often strong winds would tear roofs from houses or cause high waves that endangered travelers. People’s food supplies were similarly vulnerable. Even after they had learned how to plant grains, they still needed help from nature to ensure good harvests. Therefore they feared and depended on the power of the wind, which could bring warmth from one direction and cold from another.‎ Using a simple piece of cloth tied to the top of a post to tell the direction of the wind was more dependable than earlier methods, such as watching the rising of smoke from a fire. The connection of the flag with heavenly power was therefore reasonable. Early human societies began to fix long pieces of cloth to the tops of totems(图腾) before carrying them into battle. They believed that the power of the wind would be added to the good wishes of the gods and ancestors represented by the totems themselves.‎ These flags developed very slowly into modern flags. The first known flag of a nation or a ruler was unmarked: The king of China around 1000 B.C. was known to have a white flag carried ahead of him. This practice might have been learned from Egyptians even further in the past, but it was from China that it spread over trade routs through India, then across Arab lands, and finally to Europe, where it met up with the other ancestor of the national flag.‎ ‎53.The best title for the passage would be .‎ ‎ A.Development of the National Flag.‎ ‎ B.Power of the National Flag.‎ ‎ C.Types of Flags ‎ D.Uses of Flags ‎54.The underlined word “vulnerable” in Paragraph 3 means .‎ ‎ A.impossible to make sure of ‎ B.likely to be protected ‎ C.easy to damage ‎ D.difficult to find ‎55.The earliest flags were connected with heavenly power because .‎ ‎ A.they could tell wind direction ‎ B.they could bring good luck to fighters ‎ C.they were handed down by the ancestors ‎ D.they were believed to stand for natural forces ‎56.What does the author know of the first national flag?‎ ‎ A.He knows when it was sent to Europe.‎ ‎ B.He believes it was made in Egypt.‎ ‎ C.He thinks it came from China.‎ ‎ D.He doubts where it started.‎ ‎57.What will the author most probably talk about next?‎ ‎ A.The role of China in the spread of the national flag.‎ ‎ B.The second ancestor of the national flag ‎ C.The use of modern flags in Europe.‎ D.The importance of modern flags.‎ 答案 ACDDB ‎
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