科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
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科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
A.children | B.a(chǎn)nimals | C.mines | D.bananas |
A.patient | B.clever | C.brave | D.serious |
A.Two hours. | B.One day. | C.Four weeks. | D.Nine months. |
A.Each day about 200 people were killed or hurt by mines, |
B.The APOPO started to train the rats in January 2004. |
C.The trainers gave the rats food after they smelt out a mine. |
D.The rats and the deminers saved thousands of lives. |
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科目:初中英語 來源:2012-2013學(xué)年浙江省瑞安市畢業(yè)生學(xué)業(yè)考試適應(yīng)性測試英語試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解
Have you heard of Chen Binqiang in Zhejiang Province? Over the past six years, he has taken care of his mother who got Alzheimer’s disease.
Chen’s mother, 64-year-old Chen Yueguang, has been ill since 2007. The illness became very serious quickly and she has lost the ability to speak and can not look after herself. None of Chen’s other family members, however, could take care of their sick mother. Chen’s father died in a traffic accident when he was eight, his two sisters married far away and his wife has a 92-year-old grandmother to look after.
Chen taught Chinese in Central School of Lengshui town, which is about 30 kilometers away from his home in Pan’an. So he spent five days at school and only went home on weekends. When he said he would take his mother to work, even his wife was doubtful and worried. She really doesn’t think it is a good idea for him to take care of his mother in school. She worries what if he lost his job because of this.
But Chen has made the decision. Soon he was putting a safety hat onto his mother’s head and helping her sit on his electric bike’s back seat. He thinks that his mother used to take him around and now he should take her.
These days, things got a little easier for him. With the help of Pan’an government, Chen got a new job in Pan’an Middle School in October 2012. The new school is only five minutes’ ride from his home, which means he can take care of his mother more conveniently.
Chen feels happiest when his mother is looking at him. She must have forgotten who he is, and she even can’t call his name. But she surely knows that Chen is kind to her. He feels that is enough.
On February 19th, 2013, Chen got the prize for Touching China, held by China Central Television to honor those whose performances have moved the people.
1. What does Chen Binqiang do? He is ___________,
A.a(chǎn) farmer B.a(chǎn) driver C.a(chǎn) postman D.a(chǎn) teacher
2.The word “doubtful” in Paragraph 3 means ________.
A.疑惑 B.明白 C.預(yù)料 D.支持
3. How did Chen take her mother to his school?
A.In his car. B.In a taxi.
C.By electric bike. D.On foot.
4. The passage mainly tells us _______.
A.people will live a very hard life if our parents become seriously ill
B.it should be allowed to take care of our mothers at work places
C.a(chǎn) man who shows loving care for his mother and his great spirit
D.Touching China honors people whose performances move us
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科目:初中英語 來源:2011年福建省福州市中考英語試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解
There are about 80,000,000 mines* under the ground in more . than 60 countries. It is difficult and dangerous to clear these rnines, About 50 people including many children were’ killed ‘or htirt each iay. In 2003, APOPO, a Dutch research com pan y that uains the an imals, came up with the-idea of s\ng rats to search for the mines.
The animal trainers ‘found that a kind of rats from Africa were clever and had.a sharp* sense of smell. The rats were about 75 cm long and.weighed about l.35 kg, light enough to run across a minefield without setting off the mines.
In January 2004, the APOPO started this project. First, the trainers let the 4-week-old baby rats get familiar with humans. A few weeks later, the rats were no Ionger afraid of people and ‘the things around them. Then they were trained to connect a click* sound with food. After the rats had leamed that, the trainers then taught them to tell the difference between the smell of mines and other smells. When the rats could do it, the click was sounded and they were given a bit of banana. The method was called clicker training. “The training isn’t easy, said trainer Abdullah Mchomvu. “You have to be patient. Sometimes I get angry, but then again, I tell myself these are animals.”
After nine months’ training, the rats were taken to a minefiel山 They’ran across the minefield, stopped, sat and scratched the ground to tell the deminers* that they smelt out’a mine. Then the mine was cleared. It had taken two ‘deminers a day to clear a 200㎡ . minefield, but with the help of two rats ‘they could finish it in two hours.
The rats and ~he deminers saved thousands of lives, “The rats did this job much better than we expected. So far they have helped to make almost 2,000,000㎡ of land safe. They are heroes,” said Bart Weeqens, the head of the APOPO.
1. The APOPO trained the rats to search for .
A. children B. animals C. mines D. bananas
2. While training the rats, the trainers have to be
A. patient B. clever C. brave D. serious
3. How long did the training last?
A. Two hours. B. One day. C. Four weeks. D. Nine months.
4.Which of the following is NOT TRUE according to the passage?
A. Each day about 200 people were killed or hurt by mines,
B.The APOPO started to train the rats in January 2004.
C. The trainers gave the rats food after they smelt out a mine.
D.The rats and the deminers saved thousands of lives.
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科目:初中英語 來源:2011年浙江省溫州市中考英語試卷 題型:閱讀理解
There are about 80,000,000 mines* under the ground in more . than 60 countries. It is difficult and dangerous to clear these rnines, About 50 people including many children were’ killed ‘or htirt each iay. In 2003, APOPO, a Dutch research com pan y that uains the an imals, came up with the-idea of s\ng rats to search for the mines.
The animal trainers ‘found that a kind of rats from Africa were clever and had.a sharp* sense of smell. The rats were about 75 cm long and.weighed about l.35 kg, light enough to run across a minefield without setting off the mines.
In January 2004, the APOPO started this project. First, the trainers let the 4-week-old baby rats get familiar with humans. A few weeks later, the rats were no Ionger afraid of people and ‘the things around them. Then they were trained to connect a click* sound with food. After the rats had leamed that, the trainers then taught them to tell the difference between the smell of mines and other smells. When the rats could do it, the click was sounded and they were given a bit of banana. The method was called clicker training. “The training isn’t easy, said trainer Abdullah Mchomvu. “You have to be patient. Sometimes I get angry, but then again, I tell myself these are animals.”
After nine months’ training, the rats were taken to a minefiel山 They’ran across the minefield, stopped, sat and scratched the ground to tell the deminers* that they smelt out’a mine. Then the mine was cleared. It had taken two ‘deminers a day to clear a 200㎡ . minefield, but with the help of two rats ‘they could finish it in two hours.
The rats and ~he deminers saved thousands of lives, “The rats did this job much better than we expected. So far they have helped to make almost 2,000,000㎡ of land safe. They are heroes,” said Bart Weeqens, the head of the APOPO.
1. The APOPO trained the rats to search for .
A. children B. animals C. mines D. bananas
2. While training the rats, the trainers have to be
A. patient B. clever C. brave D. serious
3. How long did the training last?
A. Two hours. B. One day. C. Four weeks. D. Nine months.
4.Which of the following is NOT TRUE according to the passage?
A. Each day about 200 people were killed or hurt by mines,
B.The APOPO started to train the rats in January 2004.
C. The trainers gave the rats food after they smelt out a mine.
D.The rats and the deminers saved thousands of lives.
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