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1、阅 读 理 解Passage 1 Have you ever seen a moon that looks unbelievably big? It hangs over the horizon 1ike a huge,pale hot-air balloon. Many people think of the bright full moon of autumn or the harvest moon that way-like a huge,pale hot-air balloon. But can you always trust your eyes? The harvest moon
2、is the full moon on a day nearest the first day of autumn. Full or nearly full, it rises early in the evening for several nights in a row, It brings farmers well-lit evenings to harvest their crops. The harvest moon can look huge. But does it really fill more of the sky than an ordinary full moon? W
3、hy does the moon look bigger when it is near the horizon? Our brains compare the size of the moon with the size of the objects we see on the horizon. We know that the distant mountains, homes, or skyscrapers are really large. And, since the moon is much farther away than is the distant landscape, we
4、 ”see” the moon as being larger than it would otherwise look.1. To what do we compare the size of the harvest moon?A. Mountains B. Building C. Homes D. A11 of these2. The main purpose of the article is to A. inform B. persuade C. praise D. convince3The author knew most people find the moon A. myster
5、ious B. interesting C. boring D. so ordinary4The moon looks bigger if A. it is autumn B. it is near the horizon C. homes are near D. it is a clear night5. The autumn moon A. is more beautiful than it really looks Bis the brightest object in the skyC. rises slowly at dawn D. helps farmers see as they
6、 harvest their cropsPassage 2 Strange thing happens to time when you ravel. Because the earth is divided into twenty-four time zones one hour apart, you can have days with more or fewer than twenty-four hours,and weeks with more or fewer than seven days. If you make a five-day trip across the Atlant
7、ic Ocean, your ship enters a different time zone every day. As you enter each zone, the time changes the hour. Traveling west, you set your clock back; traveling east, you set it ahead. Each day of your trip has either twenty-five or twenty-three hours. If you travel by ship across the Pacific you c
8、ross the international date line. By agreement, this is the point where a new day begins. When you cross the line, you change your calendar the full day, backward or forward. Traveling east, today becomes yesterday;traveling west, it is tomorrow!1. The best title for this selection is A. A Trip Acro
9、ss the Atlantic B. How Time Changes Around the World C. Crossing the International Date Line D. How time Zone Were Set Up2. The difference in time between zones is A. seven days B. twenty-four hours C one hour D. more than seven days3. From this selection it seems true that the Atlantic Ocean A. is
10、in one time zone B. is divided into twenty-four time zones C. is divided into five time zones D. cannot be crossed in five days4. The international date 1ine is the name for A. the beginning of any new time zone B. the point where time changes by one hourC. the point where a new day begins D. any ti
11、me zone in the Pacific Ocean5. If you cross the ocean going east, you set you clock A. ahead one hour in each new time zone B. ahead one time for the whole tripC. back one full day for each one full day D. ahead by twenty-three hoursPassage 3 Holidays in the United States usually occur at least once
12、 a month. Most months have a national holiday that has been arranged to be celebrated on a Monday. The holidays have all been decided to be celebrated on a Monday so that the workers may have 3-day weekends-that is, Saturday, Sunday and Monday in order to rest or travel or do things with their famil
13、ies. Major holidays in the United States such as New Years Day or Christmas Day or the day, when we remember the first settles of the United States, called Thanksgiving Day are celebrated a11 over the country During these holidays most business close and the workers stay home and celebrate with thei
14、r families. Vacation can be from 2 weeks a year to 4 weeks a year. This usually depends on how long youve been working for a company, what type of position you have, whether you have a very high position or a very important position and its difficult to find someone to replace you In this case, you
15、might take a few days at a time rather than taking one month all at once. Usually the more time you spend working for a company, the more time you may get for a vacation1. The govemment of the United States makes it a rule for workers to have a weekend almost once a month. A. 1-day B. 2-day C. 3-day
16、 D. 4-day2. Workers in the United States sometimes work from A. Monday to Saturday B. Tuesday to Sunday C. Thursday to Friday D. Tuesday to Friday3. Which statement is NOT true according to this passage?A. Only a few shops remain open on New Years Day B. Most of the worker neednt work on Christmas D
17、ayC. Days on vacation must be more than all the holidays in a year.D. All the workers have a half-month vacation4. The reason why someone has to divide his vacation into several parts is that A. no one can be found to take his place B. he hasnt a most high position C. he plays an important role in h
18、is work D. he hasnt been working for his company for a long time5. Which of the following is the best title for this passage? A. Holidays in the United States B. vacation in the United States C. How DO the workers Spend Their Holidays D. Something About the holidays and Vacation in the U.SPassage 4
19、Sarah Winchester was a very rich woman. She didnt buy many jewels or fancy clothes. Instead, she spent millions of dollars to build a house. The strange thing about Sarahs house was that it was never finished. Work on the house went on for 38 year because Sarah was afraid to stop building it. Sarahs
20、 house was near San Jose, California Every day, a crew of carpenters, plumbers, and other workers arrived there. Sarah wanted more rooms and more doors and more windows, so the workers kept on building them. The house was seven floors high and had 160 rooms. There were 2000 doors and 10000 windows.
21、There were also three elevators, nine kitchens, and 47 fireplaces. Why did Sarah want a house that kept geeing bigger? The reason seemed to be that Sarah was afraid of dying. She thought she would die when the house was finished,so she made certain that it was never finished. Sarah Winchesters plan
22、seemed to have worked because she lived to be 83 years old. Finally, her house was finished.1. What did Sarah keep doing to her house? A. Making it cleaner B. Making it quieter C. Making it bigger D. Making it more beautiful2. The story says that Sarahs house had A. 7 floors B. 40 floors C. 160 floo
23、rs D. 3 floors3. Who did the work on Sarahs house? A. Sarah herself and other workers. B. Sarahs children and other workers. C. Carpenters and plumbers and other workers D. Engineers and other workers4. How long did the work on the house continue?A. For 7 yearsB. For38 yearsC. For 83 yearsD. The sto
24、ry doesnt tell5. Sarahs house was finally finished A. when she moved in B. when she spent all her money C. when she died D. when she was seriously illPassage 5 The diner is only a humble restaurant, but it has a special place in American life. Diners appear in our novels, plays, poems, and movies. M
25、any artists have used diners as scenes for their paintings. Why are diners so fascinating to us? The diner attracts many different kinds of people. It is a heaven for lonely truck drivers far away from home. Construction workers learn about new jobs in distant cities. Traveling salesmen exchange gos
26、sip with one another. Teenagers sit in their booths, eating hamburgers. The people who work in diners are also interesting. Where did the new waitress come from? Will she remain here, or will she suddenly run off one day, as the last one did? And is the short-order cook really an escaped prisoner, f
27、leeing from the law? Everyone comes to the diner for a different reason. Some want to work there. And some want to eat there. Some stay for years, and others stay only for a few minutes. But, for all of them, the diner is a bright, warm stopover between the endless stretches of an open road.1. Whats
28、 the main idea of paragraph 27 A. The attraction of diners to different people. B. Food offered at diners. C. How people eat at diners. D. When people come to diners. 2. The purpose of the last paragraph is to A. tell us about the reason for people coming to diners B. invite us to try diners as a st
29、opover between stretches of an open road C. give a summary of the whole passage D. state the major point of the preceding paragraph3. Why do truck drivers like a diner?A. Its a place to gossip. B. Its a place for flies and a hamburger C. Its a haven against loneliness. D. Its a place to learn about
30、new jobs.4. Diners attract A. only truck drivers B. many different kinds of people C. novelists D. escaped prisoners5. Diners areA. quiet B. unpleasant C. luxurious D. fascinatingPassage 6 In the past two years, millions of Americans have suddenly embraced the bicycles as if it were a startling new
31、invention. Annual bike sales doubled between 1960 and 1970, and there are nearly 70 million bikes in the United States today. ThatS more than two for every three automobiles. Of course, the bike has been around for more than 150 years, and this isnt Americas first bicycle boom. A wave of bike enthus
32、iasm swept the land in the late 1800s and bicycle production hit two million units in 1897. Then with the coming of the auto, bicycling declined; and for decades remained popular only with children and a few adult faddists. Now, national preoccupation with air pollution and physical fitness has brou
33、ght the bike back to the forefront-particularly with adults. More than eight million bikes were sold in the United States last year and a third of them went to adults. The year before, only 15 percent of new bike sales were for adults.1. The word embrace” in the first sentence is closest in meaning
34、to A. make use of B. take someone into alms C. contain D. deal with2. It can be concluded that if people continue to concern themselves with air pollution and physical fitness, A. stricter air standards will be enforced B. fewer automobiles will be sold C. Americans will enjoy better health D. bicyc
35、le sales will continue to rise3. The bicycle is A. enjoying a strong revival B. creating traffic problemsC. popular only with children D. replacing the family cars4. The reader can also conclude that Americans are A. quick to follow the example of others B. interested in comfort and luxury C. concer
36、ned with the quality of their lives D. childish in the way they relax and exercise5. In the sentence“and this isnt Americas first bicycle boom.” The word boom” means A. a rapid increase in sale B. supermarket C. a rapid increase in price D. shopPassage 7 Doctors have known for a long time that extre
37、mely loud noises can cause hearing damage or loss. The noise can be the sound of a jet airplane or machines in factories or loud music or other common sounds found at home and at work. A person only needs to hear the noise for little more than one second to be affected.An American scientist had foun
38、d that using aspirin can increase the temporary hearing loss or damage from loud noise. He did an experiment, using a number of male students at a university who all had normal hearing. He gave them different amounts of aspirin for different periods of time, then he tested their hearing ability. He
39、found that students who were given four grams of aspirin a day for two days suffered much greater temporary hearing loss than those who did not use aspirin. The hearing loss was about twice as great. The scientist said millions of persons in the United States use much larger amounts of aspirin than
40、were used in the study. He said these persons face a serious danger of suffering hearing loss from loud noises. 1. Doctors have long known that A. one will become deaf when he hears a loud noiseB. hearing damage or loss can be caused by sounds of all kindsC. one may lose his hearing when he hears a
41、terribly loud noiseD. common sounds at home are not harmful to the ear2. This passage suggests that ones heating A. will be damaged even if he has heard a loud noise for less than one secondB. will be damaged even if he has heard a loud noise for only little more than one secondC. will not be damage
42、d if he has heard a loud noise for only little more than one secondD. will not be damaged if he has little more than one second to get ready3. According to this passage, one conclusion you can draw is that aspirin A. should never be taken more than four grams daily B. can damage ones hearing when it
43、 is given more than four grams daily C. makes hearing damage from loud noise worse D. increases hearing loss by three times4. Millions of Americans are in danger of suffering hearing loss because they A. often take jet airplanes on trips B. like listening to loud music C. are drowned in loud noises
44、at home as well as at work D. take too much aspirin5. The purpose of the experiment the American scientist did was to find A. how much aspirin would affect a persons hearingB. how much aspirin should be given in the treatment of the patients with hearing damage from loud noisesC. whether the person
45、who had hearing damage should use aspirinD. whether aspirin would increase the temporary hearing damage from loud noisesPassage 8 Just two months ago, Ana, a teenager, was preparing for an important exam. Winners receive scholarships and be able to study in the United States. Ana knew her grades wer
46、e excellent, but she realized that she must do well on the exams in order to qualify for the $ 3000 stipend. Although Ana had worried about the interview part of the exam, she came through with flying colors. She spoke to the American interviewer about her family background and discussed her educati
47、onal plans with them. Her hard work paid off, for she was one of the twenty awarded a four-year scholarship earlier this month. Now Ana cannot believe that she is sitting in a business management class at the University of California at Los Angeles. Although she has had seven years of English langua
48、ge classes, Ana is findin2 it difficult to understand the professor. Now she must work twice as hard to maintain her high grades.1. Ana realizes that A. her grades are poorB. she must do well on the examC. she is sitting in a business management classD. she must work twice as hard to get good grades2. Ana has b