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①One by one, prejudices are disappearing...

One by one, prejudices are disappearing in the West. People may harbour private suspicions that other people’s race or sex makes them inferior—but to say so openly is totally taboo. One old prejudice remains respectable, though. Just ask a childless person.

They are not charged to special taxes, as they were in Soviet Russia; nor are they driven from their

homes, as they still are in some poor countries. The childless nonetheless come in for a lot of criticism. Some point out that non-parents are failing to produce the future workers who will pay for their pensions. Childless politicians are charged with not having a proper stake(利害关系)in society. “He talks to us about

the future, but he doesn’t have children!” complained Jean-Marie Le Pen, co-founder of the National Front party, of Emmanuel Macron, who went on to win the French presidency. Similar attacks on Theresa May and Angela Merkel also failed—but researchers find that many voters quietly agree.

The charges against the childless should be thrown out, along with other social prejudice. In many

rich countries, between 15% and 20% of women, and a slightly higher proportion of men, will not have children. The share is rising. Some have medical problems; others do not meet the right person in time; still others decide they do not want them. Whatever the cause, the attacks on the childless are baseless.

If non-breeders are selfish, they have a strange way of showing it. They are more likely to set up

charitable foundations than people with children, and much more likely to donate money to good causes. According to one American estimate, the mere fact of not having children raises the amount a person leaves to charity by a little over $10,000. The childless are thus a small but useful counterweight to the world’s parents, who stop social immobility by passing on their social and economic advantages to their children.

The fact that so many senior politicians lack offspring(子孙)ought to put to rest the idea that they

do not care for society. Five of the G7 countries are led by childless men and women. Mr Macron, Mrs May, Mrs Merkel, Shinzo Abe and Paolo Gentiloni have their faults, but they are not notably less able than Justin Trudeau (who has three children) let alone Donald Trump (who has five). Their opportunities for nepotism

裙带关系)are limited. And they spare their countries dynastic politics.

The charge that childless people fail to pull their weight in population is correct, but is less serious than it appears. Those who do not have children do put pressure on public pension systems. Governments

have to do unpopular things like making pensions less generous, as Japan has done, or accepting more immigrants, as some Western countries have done. But to sustain ( ) public pensions in the long

term, countries do not actually need more parents. What they need instead is more babies. It is possible to combine a high rate of childlessness with a high birth rate, provided people who become parents have more than one or two children. That was the pattern in many Western countries a century ago. Ireland, yet another country with a childless leader, still manages it today.

The childless also do everyone else a favour by creating wonderful works of art. British novelists

have been especially likely to have no offspring: think of Hilary Mantel, P.G. Wodehouse and the Brontë sisters. In September last year Britain put Jane Austen on its ten-pound note. That decision has was controversial, though it was hard to see why. Few people have written as shrewdly(出神入化)about money

or about families—even though Austen did not marry, and had no children.

1.What is the main idea of Paragraph 2?

A. The childless often get punished in society.

B. The childless often come under sharp criticism.

C. Most successful politicians have no children

D. Childlessness affects the result of an election.

2.The childless are prejudiced because people think the childless    .

A. have a strange way to show selfishness

B. set a bad example for young people

C. are not as able as those with children

D. are the government’s financial burden

3.What does the underlined word “it” in Paragraph 6 refer to?

A. Accepting more immigrants.

B. Reducing the pensions for the aged.

C. Encouraging parents to have more children.

D. Supporting the political leaders with no children.

4.What is the author’s attitude towards the childless?

A. Understanding    B. Skeptical

C. Disappointed    D. Reserved

5.Which of the following shows the structure of the passage?(to represent Paragraphs 1 to 7)

A.     B.

C.     D.

6.What is the best title for the passage?

A. In defence of the childless

B. In hope of having a child or not

C. Reasons for not having children

D. Measures to address aging problems

 

1.B 2.D 3.C 4.A 5.B 6.A 【解析】 本文是一篇议论文。主要描述的是丁克一族在社会上受到的一些偏见和批判,并为无子女的人辩护。 1.段落大意题。根据第二段第2、3行可知,这一段主要描述的是丁克一族在社会上受到的一些偏见和批判。A选项的语言过度夸大了这种现象;C、D选项只是这一段当中提到的某个方面,并不能概括这一段的内容。故选B。 2.细节理解题。根据第二段第三行和第六段第二行可知,丁克一族没有子女为他们支付养老金,从而增加了政府的经济负担,因此D项符合题意。A项位于文章第四段的第一句,只是一种假设,与文章主旨相矛盾;B项并未在文章中提及;第四段最后一句话和第五、七段的举例说明丁克一族在某些方面不逊色于寻常父母,甚至比他们更优秀,所以C项不正确,故选D。 3.词义指代题。爱尔兰的领导人虽然是丁克,但是这个国家却把it运用的很好。通过it所在的句子位置可知it所指代的内容在前文中,因此锁定范围It is possible ---a century ago.前文中的pattern指的就是将高的丁克率和高出生率相结合,鼓励父母多生育。故选C。 4.推理判断题。通过第三段的第一句话和最后一段的第一句话作者认为社会对于丁克一族的指控和偏见应该被消除,而且他们对社会的贡献是客观存在的,因此可以判断作者对于丁克一族的态度是理解体谅的。故选A。 5.宏观结构题。文章1、2两段描述的是丁克一族受到偏见的社会现象,第3段是作者对这一现象的看法,第4、5、6、7段当中,作者分别通过丁克一族在慈善、政治能力、人口增长、艺术贡献方面的作用举例论证。故选B。 6.主旨题。根据第5小题文章的结构可以推断出,作者是在为受到偏见的丁克一族做辩护,并举例进行论证。C选项的表述过于片面;B/D偏离主旨。故选A。
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I’d be lying if I said a dog-like robot opening a door for another dog-like robot doesn’t creep me out. A full discussion of robot dogs is for another day, but for now, researchers studying the cognition(认知) and

welfare of real dogs have a less threatening view of dogs and technology, particularly when touchscreens are involved.

Like you, animals can learn to interact with the content displayed on touchscreens, and their touch reveals something about their choice, which in turn reveals something about their mind. Animals both on and off land can be trained to use touchscreens — from chimpanzees to dogs, cats, and even dolphins, among others. Touchscreen studies have explored how and what dogs categorize, their ability to learn by

exclusion(排除), and how they discriminate between different images. An added bonus is that, once a dog

has mastered the touchscreen, humans can remove themselves from the study and can’t unconsciously give signals to the dog.

Researchers are now posing a new set of questions: are touchscreens beneficial to the user? Can touchscreens exercise the dog’s mind, in addition to serving as a window into it?

No better place to start than with older pet dogs, a group facing a unique set of challenges. Aging dogs can have reduced physical activity compared to their younger counterparts. Less attention is often given to their learning, training and other mental activities; after all, who hasn’t heard the wrong proverb, “You can’t teach an old dog new tricks.” But dog minds are not meant to be inactive. Instead, “studies point to the fact that aging seems to be slowed by mental and physical stimulation, and thus stopping these activities might actually lead to faster aging in dogs.”

Lisa Wallis and colleagues at the Senior Family Dog Project at ELTE University in Budapest are exploring the effects of touchscreens on dog physiological, behavioral, and cognitive well-being.

Their recent conference paper gives us a look at how dogs learn to use the touchscreen and the direction of future  research. Over the  course  of a number of sessions, dogs learned  that when they nose-touch a particular image on the screen, a food treat pops out. At first, only a single image appears on the screen. Once the dogs reliably learn to nose-touch the image, they move on to discrimination training where two images appear together and only one image is “correct.” Only two out of one hundred thirty dogs were unable to grasp the task, and three displayed frustration suggesting touchscreens are within the capacity of the majority of senior dogs.

Wallis and colleagues will continue investigating long-term effects of touchscreen use, but it seems promising. “The positive association to the touchscreen is so strong that on several occasions when the dog was alone (the trainer had stepped out to answer the phone), and the feeder failed, dogs continued to work on the touchscreen with no reward until the end of the session.” Owners, even those initially skeptical, were impressed by the strategies their dogs used. They also observed that dogs slept soundly upon returning home from touchscreen sessions, highlighting that mental activity can have some of the same effects as physical exercise.

Further studies will explore the effects of long-term touchscreen use on dog personality, activity levels, measures of well-being, and influence on the dog-human bond. Stay tuned.

1.What can we learn from the first two paragraphs?

A. Animals can decide the content shown on touchscreens.

B. Animals naturally have the ability to use touchscreens.

C. People can discriminate between dogs’ abilities by exclusion.

D. People can tell dogs’ needs through their touch on the screen.

2.By using the proverb in paragraph 4, the author intends to stress    .

A. aging dogs are too old to learn new skill

B. aging dogs experience a decline in energy

C. training younger dogs is more productive

D. training aging dogs is possible and beneficial

3.What is revealed by the research conducted by Lisa Wallis?

A. The dogs master the touchscreen use step by step.

B. Rewards are a must for dogs to finish the session

C. The dogs regard nose-touch as a form of physical exercise.

D. It remains to be seen whether it has a positive effect on dogs.

4.What does the passage mainly talk about?

A. How robot dogs have threatened the world.

B. How people establish better dog-human bonds.

C. How touchscreens can be employed to train dogs.

D. How long-held myths about dogs mislead people.

 

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So called “sin taxes” on sugary drinks, alcohol and tobacco not only work, but will help rather than improperly punish the poor, according to a major new international analysis.

Just a day before the UK brings in a levy on sugary drinks, experts are urging every country in the world to use taxes to keep people from the eating, drinking and smoking habits that will damage their health.The experts analyzed the effects of taxes on sugary drinks, tabacco and alcohol in countries that have introduced them and found that the criticism that they are punishing the poorest in unfounded.

Experts did a survey. They looked at 13 countries: Chile, Guatemala, Panama, Nicaragua, Albania, Poland, Turkey, Tajikistan, Tanzania, Niger, Nigeria, India and Timor-Leste. They found that wealthier families generally spend more on alcohol, soft drinks and snacks. In India, for instance, wealthier households spent seven times more on alcohol and three times more on soft drinks and snacks compared to poorer households. So those households end up paying a larger proportion of any tax.

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“The evidence suggests that concerns about higher taxes on tobacco, alcohol, and soft drinks harming the poor are overstated,” said Dr Rachel Nugent from RTI International in Seattle, USA, and chair of the Lancet Taskforce on NCDs and economics.

“Some degree of taxation on tobacco is common in many countries, and while we are starting to see progress on alcohol taxes, there is much more governments should be doing – in both high and low income countries – to consider the careful introduction of taxes on other unhealthy products like soft drinks and snacks. Price policies such as taxes will be a key part of the response to rising rates of non-communicable

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The UK sugar tax is a levy on the manufacturers of 18p per litre for drinks containing 5g of sugar per 100ml and 24p on those with 8g per 100ml.Many companies have reformulated their products, often swapping artificial sweeteners for sugar. Some – like Coca-Cola – have decided to stick to the original recipe and the price will rise, although the bottles and cans will shrink to reduce the impact.

1.What do we know about the “sin taxes”?

A. They receive warm welcome in developing countries.

B. They help people get rid of unhealthy lifestyles.

C. They have the same effects on the poor and rich.

D. They have a deeper influence on groups with high income.

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A. The public have turned a deaf ear to it.

B. The government has introduced taxes on snacks.

C. Many companies have raised the price of their products.

D. Coca-Cola will use smaller packages to counter the impacts.

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A. giving examples

B. telling stories

C. analyzing causes and effects

D. reasoning and concluding

 

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1.According to the passage, which of the following is TERE?

A. Those Americans who live above the poverty line won’t go hungry.

B. 13 million American children are food insecure for lack of transportation.

C. Among all the states in the USA, food insecurity in Mississippi is severest.

D. Neighborhood banks have no additional requirements for food packaging.

2.What is the author’s purpose in writing the passage?

A. To warn readers against dangers of insecure food.

B. To urge readers to help the poor out of poverty.

C. To inform readers of the severe food shortage in America.

D. To advocate readers contributing to food relief in America.

 

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6.A. so    B. but    C. or    D. for

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17.A. visited    B. left    C. passed    D. crossed

18.A. then    B. even    C. yet    D. still

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---What a waste of time to watch such a boring match!

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