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(2013·高考新课标全国卷Ⅰ,B)The baby is just one d...

(2013·高考新课标全国卷B)The baby is just one day old and has not yet left hospital.She is quiet but alert (警觉)Twenty centimeters from her face researchers have placed a white card with two black spots on it.She stares at it carefully.A researcher removes the card and replaces it by anotherthis time with the spots differently spaced.As the cards change from one to the otherher gaze(凝视) starts to lose its focus—until a thirdwith three black spotsis presented.Her gaze returnsshe looks at it for twice as long as she did at the previous card.Can she tell that the number two is different from threejust 24 hours after coming into the world?

Or do newborns simply prefer more to fewer? The same experimentbut with three spots shown before twoshows the same return of interest when the number of spots changes.Perhaps it is just the newness? When slightly older babies were shown cards with pictures of objects (a comba keyan orange and so on)changing the number of objects had an effect separate from changing the objects themselves.Could it be the pattern that two things makeas opposed to three? No again.Babies paid more attention to squares moving randomly on a screen when their number changed from two to threeor three to two.The effect even crosses between senses.Babies who were repeatedly shown two spots became more excited when they then heard three drumbeats than when they heard just twolikewise (同样地) when the researchers started with drumbeats and moved to spots.

1.The experiment described in Paragraph 1 is related to the baby’s________.

Asense of hearing Bsense of sight

Csense of touch Dsense of smell

2.Babies are sensitive to the change in________.

Athe size of cards Bthe colour of pictures

Cthe shape of patterns Dthe number of objects

3.Why did the researchers test the babies with drumbeats?

ATo reduce the difficulty of the experiment.

BTo see how babies recognize sounds.

CTo carry their experiment further.

DTo keep the babies’ interest.

4.Where does this text probably come from?

AScience fiction.

BChildren’s literature.

CAn advertisement.

DA science report.

 

1.B 2.D 3.C 4.D 【解析】本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍了研究人员通过一些卡片上黑点的数量来检验婴儿对于数量变化的敏感程度,发现当数量相对多的时候,比较容易引起婴儿的注意,使他们变得更加兴奋。 1. 2.2】解析:选D。细节理解题。根据第一段中的As the cards change from one to the other,her gaze(凝视)starts to lose its focus—until a third,with three black spots,is presented.Her gaze returns...可知,随着卡片上黑点数量的变化,婴儿的注视也发生变化,表明了婴儿对于数量的变化比较敏感。A项size指卡片的大小;B项指图画的颜色;C项指结构的形状,这些与原文的信息不一致。 3.3】解析:选C。细节理解题。第二段中研究人员先是通过卡片上的黑点来测验婴儿对于数量的变化的敏感程度;根据第二段中的The effect even crosses between senses...three drumbeats than when they heard just two;likewise(同样地)when the researchers started with drumbeats and moved to spots.可知,研究人员又做了击鼓的实验,这样做的目的是更加深入地研究婴儿对于数量变化的敏感程度,故选C。A项“减少实验的难度”;B项“看看婴儿怎样辨别声音”;D项“保持婴儿的兴趣”,在文中均找不到支持信息。 4.4】解析:选D。文章出处题。本文提到了experiment和researchers等,可知是一些研究人员做了一个实验,来检验婴儿们对于数量的变化是不是敏感,所以本文属于一个科学研究报告,因此选D。A项表示“科幻小说”;B项表示“儿童文学”;C项表示“一则广告”,均与本文的内容不符。
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One might expect that the ever­growing demands of the tourist trade would bring nothing but good for the countries that receive the holiday­makers.Indeeda rosy picture is painted for the long­term future of the holiday industry.Every month sees the building of a new hotel somewhere.And every month another rock­bound Pacific island is advertised as the ‘last paradise(天堂) on earth’

Howeverthe scale and speed of this growth seem set to destroy the very things tourists want to enjoy.In those countries where there was a rush to make quick money out of sea­side holidaysover­crowded beaches and the concrete jungles of endless hotels have begun to lose their appeal.

Those countries with little experience of tourism can suffer most.In recent yearsNepal set out to attract foreign visitors to fund developments in health and education.Its forestsfull of wildlife and rare flowerswere offered to tourists as one more untouched paradise.In factthe nature all too soon felt the effects of thousands of holiday­makers traveling through the forest land.Ancient tracks became major routes for the walkerswith the consequent exploitation of  precious trees and plants.

Not only can the environment of a country suffer from the sudden growth of tourism.The people as well rapidly feel its effects.Farmland makes way for hotelsroads and airportsthe old way of life goes.The one­time farmer is now the servant of some multi­national organizationhe is no longer his own master.Once it was his back that bore the painnow it is his smile that is exploited.No doubt he wonders whether he wasn’t happier in his village working his own land.

Thankfullythe tourist industry is waking up to the responsibilities it has towards those countries that receive its customers.The protection of wildlife and the creation of national parks go hand in hand with tourist development and in fact obtain financial support from tourist companies.At the same timetourists are being encouraged to respect not only the countryside they visit but also its people.

The way tourism is handled in the next ten years will decide its fate and that of the countries we all want to visit.Their needs and problems are more important than those of the tourist companies.Increased understanding in planning world­wide tourism can preserve the market for these companies.If notin a few years’ time the very things that attract tourists now may well have been destroyed.

1.What does the author indicate in the last sentence of Paragraph 1?

AThe Pacific island is a paradise.

BThe Pacific island is worth visiting.

CThe advertisement is not convincing.

DThe advertisement is not impressive.

2.The example of Nepal is used to suggest________.

Aits natural resources are untouched

Bits forests are exploited for farmland

Cit develops well in health and education

Dit suffers from the heavy flow of tourists

3.What can we learn about the farmers from Paragraph 4?

AThey are happy to work their own lands.

BThey have to please the tourists for a living.

CThey have to struggle for their independence.

DThey are proud of working in multi­national organizations.

4.Which of the following determines the future of tourism ?

AThe number of tourists.

BThe improvement of services.

CThe promotion of new products.

DThe management of tourism.

5.The author’s attitude towards the development of the tourist industry is________.

Aoptimistic  Bdoubtful

Cobjective  Dnegative

 

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Home to me means a sense of familiarity and nostalgia(怀旧)It’s fun to come home.It looks the same.It smells the same.You’ll realize what’s changed is you.Home is where we can remember painloveand some other experiencesWe parted hereMy parents met hereI won three championships here.

If I close my eyesI can still have a clear picture in mind of my first home.I walk in the door and see a brown sofa surrounding a low glass­top wooden table.To the right of the living room is my first bedroom.It’s emptybut it’s where my earliest memories are.

There is the dining room table where I celebrated birthdaysand where I cried on Halloweenwhen I didn’t want to wear the skirt my mother made for me.I always liked standing on that table because it made me feel tall and strong.If I sit at this tableI can see my favorite room in the housemy parents’ room.It is simplea brown wooden dresser lines the right side of the wall next to a television and a couple of photos of my grandparents on each side.Their bed is my safe zone.I can jump on it anytimewaking up my parents if I am scared or if I have an important announcement that cannot wait until the morning.

I’m lucky because I know my first home still exists.It exists in my mind and hearton a physical property(住宅) on West 64th street on the western edge of Los Angeles.It is proof I livedI grewand I learned.

Sometimes when I feel lostI lie down and shut my eyesand I go home.I know it’s where I’ll find my familymy dogsand my belongings.I purposely leave the window open at night because I know I’ll be blamed by Mom.But I don’t mindbecause I want to hear her say my namewhich reminds me I’m home.

1.Why does the author call her parents’ bed her “safe zone”(Paragraph 3)?

AIt is her favorite place to play.

BHer needs can be satisfied there.

CHer grandparents’ photos are lined on each side.

DHer parents always play together with her there.

2.What can be learned from the passage?

AThe old furniture is still in the author’s first bedroom.

BThe author can still visit her first physical home in Los Angeles.

CThe author’s favorite room in her first home is the dining room.

DMany people of the author’s age can still find their first physical homes.

3.Sometimes when she feels lostthe author will________.

Aopen the window at night

Blie down in bed to have a dream

Ctry to bring back a sense of home

Dgo to Los Angeles to visit her mom

4.What is the author’s purpose of writing this passage?

ATo express how much she is attached to her home.

BTo declare how much she loves her first house.

CTo describe the state of her family.

DTo look back on her childhood.

 

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“People are ruder today because they are rushed and more ‘time poor’ than ever before”says Patsy RoweManners_have_fallen_off_the_radar(雷达)”Due to our strong attraction to electronic equipment it is a wonder more people don’t wake up each morning and greet the singing birds with a complaint(抱怨)about the noise.Here are some examples of rudeness.

Some people prefer to do almost everything over the internet.To themdealing with an actual human is like an evolutionary step backward.It feels very slow because humans don’t work at 4G speeds.When you have dinner with friendsyou will often notice someone paying more attention to his mobile phone.We have programmed ourselves to think that every new message brings life­changing newsso taking calls and checking our texts are more important than talking to the people we are with.What is worsesome people even tend to send anonymous(匿名的) rude messages by email.

Howeverrudeness is never acceptable.Don’t assume it is OK to be rude if the person you’re in touch with won’t recognize you.If you have something awful to sayhave the courage to face the person and say itwrite a letter or email and sign itor forget it.Upsetting people with unsigned messages is cruel and disgusting.

We shouldn’t blame technology for our shortcomings.Technology is here to help usbut we should not allow it to take over our lives.An important step ia acknowledging our shortcomings.People spend a lot of time pointing out bad manners but it would be even more helpful if we’d publicly acknowledge good manners when we see them.

1.What can be inferred from the underlined sentence in Paragraph 1?

APeople can tell good from bad behavior.

BRadar is able to observe human behavior.

CPeople care little about their behavior.

DRadar can be used to predict human behavior.

2.Some people are less willing to deal with humans because________.

Athey are becoming less patient

Bthey are growing too independent

Cthey have to handle many important messages

Dthey have to follow an evolutionary step backward.

3.The author thinks sending unsigned awful messages is________.

Aridiculous      Bdisgusting

Cacceptable   Dreasonable

4.What can we learn from the last paragraph?

AWe should applaud good behavior.

BTechnology can never be blamed.

CWe should keep pointing out mistakes.

DTechnology will take over our lives one day.

 

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Mark Twain has been called the inventor of the American novel.And he surely deserves additional praisethe man who popularized the clever literary attack on racism.

I say clever because anti­slavery fiction had been the important part of the literature in the years before the Civil War.H.B.Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin is only the most famous example.These early stories dealt directly with slavery.With minor exceptionsTwain planted his attacks on slavery and prejudice into tales that were on the surface about something else entirely.He drew his readers into the argument by drawing them into the story.

Again and againin the postwar yearsTwain seemed forced to deal with the challenge of race.Consider the most controversialat least todayof Twain’s novelsAdventures of Huckleberry Finn.Only a few books have been kicked off the shelves as often as Huckleberry FinnTwain’s most widely read tale.Once upon a timepeople hated the book because it struck them as rude.Twain himself wrote that those who banned the book considered the novel“trash and suitable only for the slums(贫民窟)”More recently the book has been attacked because of the character Jimthe escaped slaveand many occurrences of the word nigger.(The term Nigger Jimfor which the novel is often severely criticizednever appears in it.)

But the attacks were and are silly—and miss the point.The novel is strongly anti­slavery.Jim’s search through the slave states for the family from whom he has been forcibly parted is heroic.As JChadwick has pointed outthe character of Jim was a first in American fiction—a recognition that the slave had two personalities“the voice of survival within a white slave culture and the voice of the individualJimthe father and the man.”

There is much more.Twain’s mystery novel Pudd’nhead Wilson stood as a challenge to the racial beliefs of even many of the liberals of his day.Written at a time when the accepted wisdom held Negroes to be inferior (低等的) to whitesespecially in intelligenceTwain’s tale centered in part around two babies switched at birth.A slave gave birth to her master’s baby andfor fear that the child should be sold Southswitched him for the master’s baby by his wife.The slave’s light­skinned child was taken to be white and grew up with both the attitudes and the education of the slave­holding class.The master’s wife’s baby was taken for black and grew up with the attitudes and intonations of the slave.

The point was difficult to missnurture (养育)not naturewas the key to social status.The features of the black man that provided the stuff of prejudice—manner of speechfor example—wereto Twainindicative of nothing other than the conditioning that slavery forced on its victims.

Twain’s racial tone was not perfect.One is left uneasyfor exampleby the lengthy passage in his autobiography (自传) about how much he loved what were called“nigger shows”in his youth—mostly with white men performing in black­face—and his delight in getting his mother to laugh at them.Yet there is no reason to think Twain saw the shows as representing reality.His frequent attacks on slavery and prejudice suggest his keen awareness that they did not.

Was Twain a racist? Asking the questioning the 21st century is as wise as asking the same of Lincoln.If we read the words and attitudes of the past through the“wisdom”of the considered moral judgments of the presentwe will find nothing but error.Lincolnwho believed the black man the inferior of the whitefought and won a war to free him.And Twainraised in a slave statebriefly a soldierand inventor of Jimmay have done more to anger the nation over racial injustice and awaken its collective conscience than any other novelist in the past century.

1.How do Twain’s novels on slavery differ from Stowe’s?

ATwain was more willing to deal with racism.

BTwain’s attack on racism was much less open.

CTwain’s themes seemed to agree with plots.

DTwain was openly concerned with racism.

2.Recent criticism of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn arose partly from its________.

Atarget readers at the bottom

Banti­slavery attitude

Crather impolite language

Dfrequent use of“nigger”

3.What best proves Twain’s anti­slavery stand according to the author?

AJim’s search for his family was described in detail.

BThe slave’s voice was first heard in American novels.

CJim grew up into a man and a father in the white culture.

DTwain suspected that the slaves were less intelligent.

4.The story of two babies switched mainly indicates that________.

Aslaves were forced to give up their babies to their masters

Bslaves’ babies could pick up slave­holders’ way of speaking

Cblacks’social position was shaped by how they were brought up

Dblacks were born with certain features of prejudice

5.What does the underlined word “they” in Paragraph 7 refer to?

AThe attacks.

BSlavery and prejudice.

CWhite men.

DThe shows.

6.What does the author mainly argue for?

ATwain had done more than his contemporary writers to attack racism.

BTwain was an admirable figure comparable to Abraham Lincoln.

CTwain’s works had been banned on unreasonable grounds.

DTwain’s works should be read from a historical point of view.

 

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Here is an astonishing and significant factMental work alone can’t make us tired.It sounds absurd.But a few years agoscientists tried to find out how long the human brain could labor without reaching a stage of fatigue (疲劳)To the amazement of these scientiststhey discovered that blood passing through the brainwhen it is activeshows no fatigue at all! If we took a drop of blood from a day laborerwe would find it full of fatigue toxins(毒素) and fatigue products.But if we took blood from the brain of an Albert Einsteinit would show no fatigue toxins at the end of the day.

So far as the brain is concernedit can work as well and swiftly at the end of eight or even twelve hours of effort as at the beginning.The brain is totally tireless.So what makes us tired?

Some scientists declare that most of our fatigue comes from our mental and emotional(情感的) attitudes.One of England’s most outstanding scientistsJ.A.Hadfieldsays“The greater part of the fatigue from which we suffer is of mental origin.In factfatigue of purely physical origin is rare.”Dr.Brilla famous American scientistgoes even further.He declares“One hundred percent of the fatigue of a sitting worker in good health is due to emotional problems.”

What kinds of emotions make sitting workers tired? Joy? Satisfaction? No! A feeling of being boredangeranxietytensenessworrya feeling of not being appreciatedthose are the emotions that tire sitting workers.Hard work by itself seldom causes fatigue.We get tired because our emotions produce nervousness in the body.

1.What surprised the scientists a few years ago?

AFatigue toxins could hardly be found in a laborer’s blood.

BAlbert Einstein didn’t feel worn out after a day’s work.

CThe brain could work for many hours without fatigue.

DA mental worker’s blood was filled with fatigue toxins.

2.According to the authorwhich of the following can make sitting workers tired?

AChallenging mental work.

BUnpleasant emotions.

CEndless tasks.

DPhysical labor.

3.What’s the author’s attitude towards the scientists’ ideas?

AHe agrees with them.

BHe doubts them.

CHe argues against them.

DHe hesitates to accept them.

4.We can infer from the passage that in order to stay energeticsitting workers need to ________.

Ahave some good food

Benjoy their work

Cexercise regularly

Ddiscover fatigue toxins

 

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