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阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。 Hun...

阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。

Hundreds of beautifully decorated dragon boats are taken to river1.__________(celebrate) the memory of the great poet Qu Yuan. In rivers across the country, dragon races2.___   ____(hold) on the fifth day of the fifth month of the lunar calendar. The festival is also a time to eat Zongzi, 3.______ traditional dish of rice and fruit4._________(wrap) in bamboo leaves. According 5._______the story of Qu Yuan, people would throw Zongzi into the water so that the fish6._________(eat) the rice instead of the poet. The festival is also celebrated to protect people from bad luck and 7.________(ill). Healthy herbs are sometimes hung on the front door and nutritious drinks are prepared. Some people believe that 8.______ an egg is balanced on its end at 9._______(exact) 12:00 noon, it means that the 10.______(come) year will be good.

 

1.to celebrate 2.are held 3.a 4.wrapped 5.to 6.would eat 7.illnesses 8.if 9.exactly 10.coming 【解析】 试题分析:文章介绍了端午节一些庆祝活动的由来及活动细节。 1..考查不定式。此处是不定式作目的状语,指赛龙舟的目的是纪念伟大的诗人屈原。故填to celebrate。 2..考查时态与语态。句中主语dragon races和动词hold是被动关系,指赛龙舟被举行。赛龙舟的日期是固定的一种习惯,用一般现在时。故填现在时的被动形式are held。 3..考查冠词。此处指粽子是一种传统的食物,表示一种,故填a。 4..考查过去分词。此处是过去分词表被动,指米和水果被竹叶包裹起来。故填wrapped。 5..考查固定短语。according to“根据,按照”,是固定短语,此处指根据屈原的故事,故填to。 6..考查动词形式。此处指人们把粽子扔进河里,这样鱼就会吃米而不吃屈原的尸体。根据主句的时态would throw,故填would eat。 7..考查名词。句中和bad luck并列,故用名词。指端午节还是为了庆祝保佑人们远离不幸和疾病。故填名词illnesses。 8..考查连词。句意:如果一个鸡蛋在正午12点能够立住,就意味着来年好运。此处表示条件,故填if。 9.,表示正好12点,用副词。故填exactly。 10.coming。 考点:考查对文章的理解和词汇、语法知识。 【名师点睛】 短文填空是根据首字母提示及短文大意填词的短文阅读。此题型要求结合文章内容填出单词,所填单词往往与文章的内容息息相关,因而解题前必须通读全文,对全文内容有一个整体的了解,从中获取文章的基本结构、体裁、主题及所使用的语态等信息。通读后再复读,边读边填词。 填词时应注意所填词的词性,如果是动词,需根据其在句中的意思确定其正确的时态、语态及非谓语动词形式比如文章第61小题考查不定式。此处是不定式做目的状语,指赛龙舟的目的是纪念伟大的诗人屈原。故填to celebrate. 62小题考查时态语态。句中主语dragon races和动词hold是被动关系,指赛龙舟被举行。赛龙舟的日期是固定的一种习惯,用一般现在时。故填现在时的被动形式are held. 64小题考查过去分词。此处是过去分词表被动,指米和水果被竹叶包裹起来。故填wrapped. 如果是名词应注意其单复数、所有格的变化。第67小题句中和bad luck并列用名词。指端午节还是为了庆祝保佑人们远离不幸和疾病的。故填名词illnesses. 如果是代词应注意其主格、宾格、形容词性物主代词、名词性物主代词、反身代词等的变化。 如果是形容词、副词应注意其等级的变化及两者之间的转化,第69小题考查副词。此处修饰12:00 noon表示正好12点,用副词。故填exactly。 70.小题考查形容词。the coming year“来年,即将到来的一年”,故填coming。 如果考查某些语法内容及特殊句式,要牢记语法规则,认真分析。 对于有一定难度的空处,先将其放置一边做后面的,最后再从全篇内容上考虑、分析,仔细体会出题者的意图。填完所有单词后,必须将所有填的词带入文中再读一遍,仔细检查自己所填的词是否与文章的情境、内容一致,读起来是否流畅,单词拼写是否正确,单词形式是否恰当等,发现问题应及时纠正。
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完形填空

阅读下面短文,从短文后所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项

Washoe is a young chimpanzee. She is no ________ chimpanzee, though. Scientists are doing a research ________ her. They want to see how civilized (驯化) she can ________. Already she does many things a human being can do.

For example, she has been learning how to exchange ________ with people. The scientists are teaching her ________ language. When she wants to be picked ________, Washoe points up with one finger. She rubs her teeth with her finger ________ she wants to brush her teeth. This is done after every meal.

Washoe has also been ________ to think out and find answers to problems. Once she was put in a ________ with food hanging from the ceiling. It was too high to ________. After she considered the ________, she got a tall box to stand ________. The food was still too high to be reached. Washoe found a ________ pole. Then she climbed onto the ________, grasped the pole, and ________ down the food with the pole. Washoe ________ like a human, too. The scientists keep her in a fully furnished house. After a hard ________ in the laboratory, she goes home. ________ she plays with her toys. She ________ enjoys watching television before going to bed. Scientists hope to ________ more about people by studying our closest relative chimpanzee.

1.A. foolishB. ordinaryC. specialD. simple

2.A. forB. byC. toD. on

3.A. experienceB. changeC. developD. become

4.A. actionsB. viewsC. messagesD. feelings

5.A. signB. humanC. spokenD. foreign

6.A. outB. atC. onD. up

7.A. whenB. untilC. sinceD. while

8.A. raisedB. trainedC. orderedD. led

9.A. caveB. zooC. roomD. museum

10.A. pullB. seeC. eatD. reach

11.A. problemB. positionC. foodD. ceiling

12.A. byB. onC. upD. with

13.A. straightB. strongC. longD. big

14.A. wallB. boxC. ceilingD. pole

15.A. knockedB. pickedC. tookD. shook

16.A. livesB. actsC. thinksD. plays

17.A. taskB. lessonC. dayD. time

18.A. HereB. ThereC. SoD. Then

19.A. quiteB. alreadyC. evenD. still

20.A. observeB. discoverC. gainD. learn

 

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根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。

Home on the Way

People need homes. Children assume their parents’ place as home; boarders call school “home” on weekdays; married couples work together to build new homes … But travelers have no place to call “home”, at least for a few nights. 1.    Don’t they have the right to a home? Of course they do.

Some regular travelers take their own belongings like bed sheets, pillowcases and family photos to make them have the feel of home no matter where they are; some stay for long periods in the same hotel and as a result become very familiar with its service and attendants;   2.    Furthermore, driving a camping car during one’s travels and sleeping in the vehicle at night are just like home only mobile!

And how about keeping relationships while in transit?      3.  Some send letters and postcards, or even photos; others may just call and say hi, just to let their friends know that they’re still alive and well. People find ways to keep in touch. Making friends on the way helps travelers feel more or less at home.   4.

Nowadays, fewer people are working in their local towns, so how do they develop a sense of belonging? Whenever we step out of our local boundaries, there is always another “home” waiting to be found.   5.

A. Hostels provide a clean safe place to stay while you are traveling around the world.

B. others may simply put some flowers by the hotel window to make it more homely.

C. Backpackers in youth hostel may become very good friends, even closer than siblings (手足).

D. So how about people who have to travel for extended periods of time?

E. No matter where you go in the world , hotels are there, too.

F. Some keep contact with their friends via the Internet.

G. Wherever we are, with just a little bit of effort and imagination we can make the place we stay in “home”.

 

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About a quarter of the world drives on the left, and the countries that do are mostly old British colonies (殖民地) like Australia , and Ireland. But Thailand, Indonesia and Japan also do so.

This strange quirk (奇事) puzzles the rest of the world; however, there is a perfectly good reason . Up to the late 1700’s , everybody travelled on the left side of the road because it’s the most sensible option for feudal (封建的), violent societies with mostly right-handed people. Soldiers with their swords under their right arm naturally passed on each other’s right, and if you passed a stranger on the road, you walked on the left to ensure that your protective sword arm was between yourself and him.

Revolutionary France, however, overturned this practice as part of its sweeping social rethink. A change was carried out all over continental Europe by Napoleon. It changed under Napoleon because he was left-handed. His armies had to march on the right so he could keep his sword arm between him and any opponent. From then on, any part of colonized by the French travelled on the right.

After the American Revolutionary War (1775—1783), the US became independent and decided to make traffic drive on the right in order to cast off all remaining links with its British colonial past. As America became the center of the car industry, if you wanted a good reliable vehicle, you bought American right-hand-drive cars. From then on, many countries changed out of necessity.

Today, the EU would like Britain to fall into line with the rest of Europe, but this is no longer possible. It would cost billions of pounds to change everything round. The last European country to change driving on the right was Sweden in 1967. While everyone was getting used to the new system, they paid more attention and took more care, resulting in a reduction of the number of road accidents.

1.Why did people travel on the left before the late 18th century ?

A. They were required to do so.

B. They were mostly left-handed.

C. It was easier to cross the street.

D. They could feel safer from attacks.

2.What was Napoleon’s attitude to walking on the left?

A. Support.B. Disapproval.C. Doubt.D. Sympathy.

3.For Americans, driving on the right was a way to show ________.

A. the connection with France was broken

B. the US was no longer ruled by the UK

C. the American Revolution War had ended

D. America was the center of the car industry

4.What is the main cause of the UK failing to adopt the new system?

A. Its high costs to change.

B. Its increasing traffic accidents.

C. Its influence on colonies.

D. Its fast-developing car industry.

 

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There’s a whole lot of things that people fill their stomachs with. Some of them keep people alive. Some of them taste good to people. Some of them help people win pie-eating contests. Alcohol does none of these things. Why do people keep drinking it? And what does it do once it gets to their stomachs?

There are all kinds of alcohol molecules (分子), but the one that people most often pour down their throat is ethanol (乙醇). Ethanol is very tiny and it dissolves in water, so it gets into all sorts of places that it’s not supposed to. Alcohol heads for the digestive system. Because it dissolves in water, it can get into the water in the bloodstream. Because ethanol, to a certain extent, can pass through cell membranes(膜). It can go almost anywhere. It spreads through the muscles, and is sweated unmetabolized(未经新代谢的) and whole through the skin. It gets into the heart. It even takes a walk through the brain, and this is the secret of its powers.

Alcohol depresses the nerves, and the nerves affect almost every area of the body. Enough alcohol makes people sleep, so people who become unconscious choke on their own vomit (呕吐物). Most worryingly, enough alcohol can shut down those parts of the brain just like any other parts. People become unconscious and their brains simply forget to breathe.

Alcohol is broken down in the liver. Alcohol doesn’t destroy the liver, but products that the liver breaks the alcohol into do cause damage. A glass of wine per day can not do any harm. Instead, it can prevent heart attacks or can make someone functionally young. And it is kind of nice to know that sometimes, relaxation and cheer can be bottled. All that’s needed is to take care how much alcohol is let into a person’s brain.

1.How does the author introduce the topic of the text?

A. By statement.B. By question.

C. By arguing.D. By explaining.

2.Why can alcohol reach the brain?

A. Because it can move through water molecules in the blood.

B. Because it is small enough to get through any narrow space.

C. Because it is so light that the bloodstream can transport.

D. Because it is absorbed only by the cells in the stomach.

3.What’s the main idea of Paragraph 3?

A. Alcohol affects the work of the nerves.

B. Alcohol has an effect on people’s breath .

C. People are drunk when their brains get drunk.

D. Drinking too much is quite dangerous.

4.From the passage, we can know ________.

A. many people like a drink when they feel relaxed

B. enough alcohol can control the brain activities

C. alcohol damages the liver indirectly

D. proper alcohol may lead to better sleep

 

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No one can deny that buttons are an important clothing device. But, can they rise to the level of art? Organizers of an exhibit in New York think so.

Peter Souleo Wright organized “The Button Show” at Rush Arts Gallery in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan. Eleven artists used the small, ordinary objects to create sculptures, portraits and wearable art. Some of the works are political, some are personal and others are just fun.

Wright said each artist reimagines and repurposes the buttons to make art. “What I tried to do with this show,” he said , “was to look at artists who were promoting that level of craft.”

He said he wanted the button art to be comparable to a painting “because of the amount of detail and precision in the work”.

Artist Beau McCall produced “A Harlem Hangover”. It looks like a wine bottle that fell over on a table. A stream of connected red buttons hang over the side, like wine flowing down. Similar red buttons form a small pool on the floor.

McCall layers buttons of different shapes and sizes to create the bottle. The stitching that holds them together is also part of the artistic design.

For San Francisco-based artist Lisa Kokin, buttons are highly personal. After her father died in 2001, she created a portrait of him using only buttons. That memorial to her father led to other button portraits, including those of activists Rosa Parks and Cesar Chavez.

Others use buttons for details. Artist Amalia Amaki of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, placed them on and around old photographs. Los Angeles artist Camilla Taylor attached buttons to three large sculptures that look like headless animals with long , narrow legs.

“The Button Show” ends at March 12. The Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation paid for the exhibition. The foundation was created in 1995 by the Simmons brothers: artist Danny, hip-hop producer Russell and rapper Rev. Run. The foundation seeks to bring the artists to urban youth and to provide support for new artists.

1.Why did Wright organize “The Button Show”?

A. To show the importance of buttons.

B. To support the new artists.

C. To raise the button show to the level of art.

D. To create sculptures and portraits.

2.Whose works are personal?

A. Peter Souleo Wright.B. Beau McCall.

C. Lisa Kokin.D. Amalia Amaki.

3.If you want to see “The Button Show”, you should ________.

A. buy tickets before March 12

B. phone Peter Souleo Wright before March 12

C. go to Rush Arts Gallery

D. go to the Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundationn

 

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