I travel a lot, and I find out different “style” of directions every time I ask “How can I get to the post office?”
Foreign tourists are often puzzled in Japan because most streets there don’t have names; in Japan, people use landmarks (地标) in their directions instead of street names. For examples, the Japanese will say to travelers, “Go straight down to the corner. Turn left at the big hotel and go past a fruit market. The post office is across from the bus stop.”
In the countryside of the American Midwest, there are not usually many landmarks. There are no mountains, so the land is very flat; in many places there are no towns or buildings within miles. Instead of landmarks, people will tell you directions and distances. In Kansas or Iowa, for example, people will say, “Go north two miles. Turn east, and then go another mile.”
People in Los Angeles, California, have no idea of distance on the map; they measure (估量) distance in time, not miles. “How far away is the post office?” you ask. “Oh,” they answer, “it’s about five minutes from here.” You say, “Yes, but how many miles away is it?” They don’t know.
It’s true that a person doesn’t know the answer to your question sometimes. What happens in such a situation? A New Yorker might say, “Sorry, I have no idea.” but in Yucatan, Mexico, no one answers “I don’t know.” people in Yucatan believe that “I don’t know” is impolite. They usually give an answer, often a wrong one. A tourist can get very, very lost in Yucatan!
1.When a tourist asks the Japanese the way to a place, they usually _________.
A. tell him the names of the streets
B. show him a map of the place
C. describe the place carefully
D. refer to (意指)clear buildings and places
2.What is the place where people show distance in time?
A. New York. B. Los Angeles. C. Kansas. D. Iowa.
3.Usually, People in Yucatan give a tourist a wrong answer _________ instead of saying “I don’t know”.
A. to save time B. as a test
C. to be polite D. for fun
4.What can we learn from the text?
A. It’s important for travelers to understand cultural differences.
B. It’s useful for travelers to know how to ask the way properly.
C. People have similar understandings of politeness.
D. New Yorkers are generally friendly to visitors.
An excerpt (节选) from The Card
Edward Henry Machin first saw daylight on the 27th of May, 1867, in Brougham Street in Bursley, the oldest of the Five Towns. Brougham Street goes down a hill to the canal (运河).The rent (租金) for one of these houses was not high — only about twenty-two pence (便士) a week.
Edward Henry’s mother (his father was dead) lived by making and washing clothes for fine ladies. She did not often laugh. She was a woman of few words, and saved time every day by calling her son Denry, instead of Edward Henry.
Denry did not work hard at school, and boys who were lazy and not very clever usually just found jobs in the potbanks. Luckily, at the age of twelve, he won a place at the best school in Bursley. It happened like this. On the second day of the examination, Denry arrived a little early. As he walked around the examination room, he came to the teacher’s desk, where he saw a list of names with marks for the first day of the examination. The highest possible mark was 30, but next to his name he saw the number 7. The numbers were written in pencil, and the pencil was on the desk. He picked it up, looked around the empty room, and at the door, and them wrote a 2 in front of the 7. Of course, this was not honest, but how many truly honest schoolboys are there? Denry was no worse than most of them.
1.What was Edward Henry’s mother like?
A.Patient. B. Dishonest.
C. Hard-working. D. Kind.
2.What was the mark Edward Henry got in the end?
A. 30. B. 7 C. 2 D. 27
Are you always unwilling to do housework and cleaning for no reason? Well, you will be happy today. Today is No Housework Day. It’s time to forget about housework and be relaxed.
No Housework Day is always on April 7th. It is your chance to do anything, except housework. Better still, have someone else do housework for a day. Housework is a daily and endless job and most people think it’s boring to do housework. I have many friends and their wish is to stay away from housework. In fact, their wish can never come true.
Do you know how to celebrate No Housework Day? Well , there are two different ways.
If you usually do the housework around the house, forget it on this day. Instead, kick back and enjoy the day. Relax and do anything, except housework.
If you never do housework, you can do it for your family. It gives your parents a break from the housework. And, you just might get a chance to know how much housework your parents need to do every day.
1.The writer has many friends and their wish is _________.
A. not to do any housework any more
B. to ask others to do their housework
C. to celebrate No Housework Day
D. to ask all the family members to do housework
2.If Lisa never does housework, the writer thinks she can _________ on No Housework Day.
A. forget housework B. do housework
C. feel relaxed D. do anything except housework
3.What’s the main idea of the passage?
A. It’s about the daily housework.
B. It’s about our duty and right.
C. It’s about No Housework Day.
D. It’s about some national holiday.
完形填空 先通读下面的短文,掌握其大意, 然后从下面四个答案中选择可以填入相应空白处的最佳答案。
Malala Yousafzai Brave, a 19-year-old girl, has been thought to be clever and determined(坚定的)since October 9, 2012 when Taliban gunmen entered her school bus and shot (枪击) her head.
Before this day, Malala had been speaking out for girls’ education in her country of Pakistan. The doctors, who treated Malala after she was shot, didn’t that she would live but she did so much more than just live-she .
Malala has recently a book named “I am Malala”. She has joined talk shows and has had the chance to meet with the US President Barack Obama.
On July 12th, her sixteenth birthday, Malala made her first public appearance after she was shot. She spoke in the United Nations students, teachers, and some important guests.
In her speech, Malala made it that the Taliban did not reach their goal of stopping her strong . Nothing changed in her life, Malala said-except that: weakness, and hopelessness died; strength, power and courage were born. Malala told her listeners that she would continue to fight for education in her country and all over the world.
Through her speech, Malala is trying to help us that a gun may hit her body but not her heart. She won Nobel Peace Prize in 2014.
1.A. sad B. happy C. rainy D. snowy
2.A. know B. expect C. find D. wish
3.A. died B. lived C. improved D. lost
4.A. read B. borrowed C. found D. written
5.A. across from B. in front of C. next to D. behind
6.A. happy B. lucky C. clear D. right
7.A. voice B. health C. sound D. words
8.A. happiness B. care C. interest D. fear
9.A. better B. worse C. harder D. easier
10.A. wonder B. guess C. know D. understand
— I heard you have a chance to enter that top university in the world?
— .
A. Don’t mention it. B. That’s not the case.
C. What’s up? D. Is that so?
Our teachers often tell us we can’t be because no mistake is too small for us.
A. very careful B. careful
C. so careful D. too careless
