In the Netherlands,cycling isn't seen as eccrfriendly exercise; it's part of everyday life, as it's people's top choice to school and work. There are more bicycles than residents in the Netherlands. In cities like Amsterdam and The Hague, up to 70 percent of all journeys are made by bike.
So how did cycling become such a popular means of transportation in the European country?
In the 1970s, the Dutch government began to improve its cycling infrastructure(基礎(chǔ)設(shè)施)due to both a social movement demanding safer cycling condition for children and the oil crisis in the Middle East, when oil producing countries stopped their exports to Western Europe.
To make cycling safer and more appealing, the Dutch have built the widest cycling net- work in the world. The country has over 40,000 kilometers of bicycle lanes and paths,which are clearly marked. They have smooth surfaces,separate signs and lights for those on two wheels. The lanes are wide enough to allow side-by-side cycling and passing.
In many cities the bike lanes are completely segregated(隔離的)from motorized traffic. And in many traffic situations cyclists are given priority(優(yōu)先權(quán))over drivers. Sometimes, where space is limited and both must share, you can see signs showing an image of a cyclist with a car behind accompanied by the words "Bike Street:Cars are guests".
As young people aren't allowed to drive alone until they are 18,cycling offers Dutch teen- agers an alternative form of freedom. The government also makes cycling training lessons a compulsory part of the Dutch school curriculum(課程).
Bike parking facilities are ubiquitous in the country. Cyclists are accommodated in the way motorists are elsewhere. Take Groningen, a city in the northeastern part of the Netherlands,for example. The city's central train station has underground parking for 10,000 bikes.
【小題1】We can conclude that in the Netherlands cycling is____.

A.regarded as eco-friendly exercise
B.thought of as part of people's life
C.looked on as a way to lose weight
D.considered as a way to entertain
【小題2】What can we learn about the Netherlands from the first paragraph?
A.Most vehicles the Dutch use are buses.
B.The native people cycle the best in the world.
C.Everyone has one bike on average in the Netherlands.
D.The number of bikes is larger than the population there.
【小題3】Which of the following made the government improve the cycling infrastructure?
A.A large number of bikes.
B.Hope for healthy life style.
C.People's preference to bikes.
D.Children's safety demand and lack of oil.
【小題4】The underlined word "ubiquitous" in the last paragraph means“_,,.
A.high quality B.unique C.very common D.special
【小題5】What does the Dutch government do about teenagers cycling?
A.It makes cycling covered by school education.
B.It encourages teenagers to cycle alone.
C.It will watch over teenagers who ride bikes.
D.It suggests teenagers cycling before driving.


【小題1】B
【小題2】D
【小題3】D
【小題4】C
【小題5】A

解析試題分析:文章介紹在荷蘭騎車是生活的一部分,孩子安全的考慮和缺乏油,荷蘭政府改善自行車的基礎(chǔ)設(shè)施,一系列的自行車配套設(shè)施都很完善。
【小題1】細節(jié)題:從第一段的句子:In the Netherlands,cycling isn't seen as eccrfriendly exercise; it's part of everyday life, as it's people's top choice to school and work. 可知在荷蘭騎車是生活的一部分,選B
【小題2】細節(jié)題:從第一段的句子:There are more bicycles than residents in the Netherlands. 可知在荷蘭自行車的數(shù)量比人口多,選D
【小題3】細節(jié)題:從第三段的句子:In the 1970s, the Dutch government began to improve its cycling infrastructure(基礎(chǔ)設(shè)施)due to both a social movement demanding safer cycling condition for children and the oil
crisis in the Middle East 可知因為孩子安全的考慮和缺乏油,荷蘭政府改善自行車的基礎(chǔ)設(shè)施,選D
【小題4】猜詞題:從最后一段的句子:The city's central train station has underground parking for 10,000 bikes.可知荷蘭的自行車停放設(shè)施是很普遍的,選C。
【小題5】. 細節(jié)題:從倒數(shù)第二段的句子:The government also makes cycling training lessons a compulsory part of the Dutch school curriculum(課程).可知荷蘭政府把騎自行車變成一個課程,選A。
考點:考查社會現(xiàn)象類短文

練習冊系列答案
相關(guān)習題

科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

The phenomenon is becoming more and more popular that human beings have developed a closely relationship with the most dangerous of animals-Kevin Richardson treats lions like kitty cats,Andre Hartman has a special bond with Great White Sharks and now there is 79­year old Werner Freund who has spent the last 40 years of his life in the company of wolves.
While details about how and why the former paratrooper(傘兵) became attached to these beautiful wild animals are a little summary,he has been tending them in his 25­acre Wolvespark located in the German province of Saarland,since 1972.While he currently has a group of 29,over the years he has raised almost 70 wolves belonging to all breeds(種屬) ranging from Siberian to Arctic,Canadian,European and even,Mongolian.The wolves treat Werner as if he were one of their own.They nuzzle(依偎) against him,play with him and are generally sheeplike when he is around,just like they would be around a head wolf!
This,however,is not accidental-It is a position that Werner works on establishing and maintaining with a simple act,every single day-Whenever it's feeding time,he calls his wolves to come for the raw meat by howling.As the hungry animals rush to get their food,they are always met with this scene-Werner sinking his teeth into the raw meat first.While this may sound a little rude,that is how the position of hierarchy(等級) is established in the animal world.It is always the leader male that gets the first meal and only when he signals,can the rest join in.Werner's wolves know this rule quite well and never challenge his authority.
While wolves,the largest member of the dog family,are believed to be dangerous,they rarely attack humans.Werner says that in reality,they are beautiful gentle souls,whose reputation has been tarnished,by fairy tales like Red Riding Hood!
【小題1】We can know________from the first paragraph.

A.a(chǎn)ll lions like Kevin Richardson 
B.Great White Sharks are dangerous animals 
C.only some specialists can live animals together 
D.Werner Freund accompanies wolves day and night 
【小題2】What's the best title of the passage?
A.Human beings can get along well with animals 
B.Werner Freund and his famous Wolvespark 
C.Werner Freund treats his wolves like friends 
D.Ex­paratrooper shares special bond with wolves 
【小題3】We can infer that the wolves treat Werner Freund________.
A.peacefully B.respectfully C.fearfully D.fondly 
【小題4】When Werner Freund feeds his wolves,________.
A.he whistles loudly 
B.he bites the meat firstly 
C.wolves challenge his authority 
D.wolves eat all their foods. 

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

Online grocery shopping was counted as the next great innovation to make our lives easier. In China more than 3,000 websites offer the service, but none have turned a profit.
Xiang Nian has had a hard day at the office but at least she can skip the trip to the grocery store. A text message on her phone lets her know the order she placed earlier in the day has been delivered to a locker outside her apartment.
"It’s really convenient for an office worker like me. My fresh products are waiting for me when I get home and can start cooking. No need to go to the supermarket any more," Xiang says.
One of the largest online supermarkets in Wuhan is Just-easy Fresh Produce. Over the past 3 years, the company has developed its online retail grocery business by guaranteeing fresh produce and an innovative delivery system. They've installed thousands of lockers in communitieshttp:// / around downtown Wuhan.
"We get an average of 8,000 orders per day. That's the most in China, I'm proud of it. We have placed over 20 thousand lockers in more than half of the communities in Wuhan and we plan to expand to all of them. Many e-commerce giants, like Taobao, are talking about cooperation with us," Jie Xiaofeng, manager of Wuhan Just-easy Agricultural Science & Technology Co., says.
While Just-easy may have thousands of customers, a staff of almost 300 and 40 delivery trucks, it's still operating in the red.
"There are over 3,000 companies selling fresh products online in China. But none is making a profit. It will take them at least 3 years before they make a profit. The major challenge is the cost of delivery. But they do have many advantages. The price of their goods is lower than the supermarkets," professor He Dehua at Huazhong Agricultural University, says.
A number of China's e-commerce giants are making moves into online grocery sales, with Taobao opening an online platform it calls "Cainiao". And traditional retailers(零售店) including Wal-Mart and Carrefour are also looking to start selling their produce online.
Many big B2C e-commerce players usually take fresh farm produce as the last category to add to their offerings. But now more and more large businesses have set their eyes on the industry. They want to prove the fresh food market is definitely suited to online sales.
【小題1】What is the main idea of the passage?

A.The online grocery shopping is making our life easier.
B.Just-easy Fresh Produce is a pioneer of the online retail grocery business.
C.Conventional retailers are facing challenges.
D.None of the online grocery supermarkets has made a profit.
【小題2】The underlined part “it's still operating in the red” probably means _______.
A.the present situation of the company makes them angry
B.the company is not making a profit
C.the company is very popular with customers
D.the staff of the company are aggressive
【小題3】What can we learn from the last two paragraphs?
A.The fresh food market is definitely suited to online sales.
B.Fresh farm produce is the last category that people will buy online.
C.Online grocery sales have drawn the attention of e-commerce giants.
D.Traditional retailers choose to sell their produce on Cainiao.
【小題4】What’s the author’s attitude towards online grocery shopping?
A.Pessimistic. B.Indifferent. C.Objective. D.Supportive.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

Advertisers tend to think big and perhaps this is why they’re always getting criticism. Their critics(批評家)seem to resent(對...不滿) them because they have a gift for self-promotion and because they have so much money to throw around. ‘It’s unjust,’ they say, ‘that this entirely unproductive industry (if we can call it that) should absorb millions of pounds each year. It only goes to show how much profit the big companies are making. Why don’t they stop advertising and reduce the price of their goods? After all, it’s the consumer who pays…’
The poor old consumer! He’d have to pay a great deal more if advertising didn’t create mass markets for products. It is precisely because of the heavy advertising that consumer goods are so cheap. But we get the wrong idea if we think the only purpose of advertising is to sell goods. Another equally important function is to inform. A great deal of the knowledge we have about household goods comes largely from the advertisements we read. Advertisements introduce us to new products or remind us of the existence of ones we already know about. Supposing you wanted to buy a washing machine, it is more than likely you would obtain details regarding performance, price, etc., from an advertisement.
Lots of people pretend that they never read advertisements, but this claim may be seriously doubted. It is hardly possible not to read advertisements these days. And what fun they often are, too! Just think what a railway station or a newspaper would be like without advertisements. Would you enjoy gazing at a blank wall or reading railway byelaws(內(nèi)部規(guī)則) while waiting for a train? Would you like to read only closely printed columns of news in your daily paper? A cheerful, witty advertisement makes such a difference to a dull wall or a newspaper full of the daily ration(定量) of disasters.
We must not forget, either, that advertising makes a positive contribution to our pockets. Newspapers, commercial radio and television companies could not survive without this source of revenue(收益). The fact that we pay so little for our daily paper or can enjoy so many broadcast programs is due entirely to the money spent by advertisers. Just think what a newspaper would cost if we had to pay its full price!
Another thing we mustn’t forget is the ‘small ads.’ which are in virtually every newspaper and magazine.  What a tremendously useful service they perform for the community! Just about anything can be accomplished through these columns. For instance, you can find a job, buy or sell a house, announce a birth, marriage or death in what used to be called the ‘hatch(giving birth), match and dispatch’ column but by far the most fascinating section is the personal or ‘a(chǎn)gony’ column(讀者來信專欄). No other item in a newspaper provides such entertaining reading or offers such a deep insight into human nature. It’s the best advertisement for advertising there is!
【小題1】What is main idea of this passage?

A.Advertisements.
B.Advertisements bring fun to readers.
C.Advertisers perform a useful service to communities.
D.The costs of advertisements.
【小題2】The attitude of the author toward advertisers is             
A.a(chǎn)ppreciative.B.trustworthy.C.criticalD.dissatisfactory.
【小題3】Why do the critics criticize advertisers?
A.Because advertisers often brag(自夸).
B.Because critics think advertisement is a “waste of money”.
C.Because customers are encouraged to buy more than necessary.
D.Because customers pay more.
【小題4】Which of the following is Not True?
A.Advertisement makes contribution to our pockets and we may know everything.
B.We can buy what we want.
C.Good quality products don’t need to be advertised.
D.Advertisement makes our life colorful.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

The dirt road made our car jump as we traveled to the Millennium Village in Sauri, Kenya. We passed the market where women sat on the dusty ground selling bananas. Little kids were wrapped in cloth on their mothers’ backs, or running around in bare feet and torn clothing. When we reached the village, we walked to the Bar Sauri Primary School to meet the people. Welcoming music and singing had almost everyone dancing. We joined the dancing and clapped(鼓掌)along to the joyful, lively music. The year was 2004, the first time I had ever been to Sauri.
The Millennium Village project was created to help reach the Millennium Development Goals, which were set by the United Nations in 2000. The plan is to get people out of poverty, assure(確保)them of access to health care and help them stabilize the economy and quality of life in their communities. The goals are supposed to be met by 2015; some other targets are set for 2025. But our first sight of Sauri showed us there was plenty of work to do.
On that day in 2004, we followed the village leaders into Yala Sub-District Hospital. It wasn’t in good shape. The rooms were packed with patients who probably wouldn’t receive treatment, either because the hospital did not have it or the patients could not afford it. There was no running water or electricity in the hospital. It is hard for me to see people sick with preventable diseases who are near death when they shouldn’t have to be. I just get scared and sad.
Malaria(痢疾)is one disease, common in Africa, which is preventable and treatable. Mosquitoes carry malaria, and infect people by biting them. Kids can die from it easily, and adults get very sick. Mosquitoes that carry malaria come at night. A mosquito net, treated with chemicals that last for five years, keeps malarial mosquitoes away from sleeping people. Each net costs $5. There are some cheap medicines to get rid of malaria too. The solutions are simple, yet 20,000 kids die from the disease each day. So sad, and so illogical. Mosquito nets could save millions of lives.
We walked over to see the farmers. Their crops started to die because they could not afford the necessary fertilizer(肥料)and irrigation. Time and again, a family will plant seeds only to have an outcome of poor crops because of lack of fertilizer and water. Each year, the farmers worry: Will they harvest enough food to feed the whole family? Will their kids go hungry and become sick?
Many kids in Sauri didn’t attend school because their parents couldn’t afford school fees. Some kids are needed to help with housework, such as fetching water and wood. In 2004, the schools had minimal supplies like books paper and pencils, but the students wanted to learn. They all worked hard with the few supplies they had. It was hard for them to concentrate, though, as there’s no midday meal.
Great changes have taken place in these years. Today, Yala Sub-District Hospital has medicine, free of charge. Water is connected to the hospital, which also has a generator(發(fā)電機)for electricity. There are no school fees, and the school now serves midday meals for the students. The attendance rate is way up. All this is encouraging supporters of the Millennium Villages project.
There are many solutions to the problems that keep people poor. What it will really take is for the world to work together to change poor areas forever. When my kids are my age, I want this kind of poverty to be a thing of history. It will not be an easy task. But Sauri’s progress shows us all that winning the fight against poverty is achievable in our lifetime.
【小題1】In Paragraph 1, the writer describes the kids’ clothes to show that _________________.

A.local children spent a lot of time outside
B.local parents were not responsible
C.local villagers were very poor
D.local villagers were very friendly Zxxk
【小題2】 What is mainly discussed in Paragraph 3?
A.Medical conditions.B.Agriculture.
C.Education.D.Economy.
【小題3】What does the underlined word “minimal” in Paragraph 6 probably mean?
A.Many.B.Few.C.Colorful.D.Various.
【小題4】Because there was no midday meal in school, __________________.
A.kids lacked energy to study attentively
B.many kids dropped out of school
C.kids made more efforts to study hard
D.many kids had to go back home for lunch
【小題5】This story is mainly about _____________________________.
A.the education in an African village
B.the schools and hospitals in an African village
C.the poverty and the progress of an African village
D.the author’s car journey to an African village

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

I have had just about enough of being treated like a second-class citizen, simply because I happen to be that unfairly treated member of society --- a customer. The more I go into shops and hotels, banks and post offices, railway stations, airports and the like, the more I am convinced the things are being run merely to suit the firm, the system, or the union. There seems to be a deceptive (欺騙的) new motto for so-called “service” organizations --- Staff Before Service.
How often, for example, have you queued for what seems like hours at the Post Office or the supermarket because there was not enough staff on duty to manage all the service grilles or checkout counters? Surely in these days of high unemployment it must be possible to hire cashiers and counter staff. Yet supermarkets, hinting darkly at higher prices, claim that uncovering all their cash registers at any one time would increase operating costs. And the Post Office says we cannot expect all their service grilles to be occupied “at times when demand is low”.   
It is the same with hotels. Because waiters and kitchen staff must finish when it suits them, dining rooms close earlier or menu choice is cut short. As for us guests, we just have to put up with it. There is also the nonsense of so many friendly hotel night porters having been thrown out of their jobs in the interests of “efficiency” and replaced by coin-eating machines which offer everything. Not to mention the tea-making kit in your room a kettle with a mixed collection of tea bags, plastic milk boxes and lump sugar. Who wants to wake up to a raw teabag? I do not, especially when I am paying for “service”.
Can it be stopped, this worsening of service, this growing attitude that the customer is always a trouble? I angrily hope so because it is happening, sadly, in all walks of life.
Our only hope is to hammer home our anger whenever and wherever we can and, if all else fails, bring back into practice that other, older slogan --- Take Our Deal Elsewhere.
【小題1】The writer feels that nowadays customers __________.

A.have become victims of modern organizations
B.a(chǎn)re unworthy of proper consideration
C.have received high quality service
D.deserve the lowest status in society
【小題2】The writer argues that the quality of service is changing because __________.
A.customers’ demands have greatly changed
B.customers’ needs have become more complex
C.the staff receive more consideration than customers
D.staff members are less considerate than their employers
【小題3】According to the writer, long queues at counters are caused by __________.
A.not having enough male staff on duty
B.difficulties in hiring more efficient staff
C.not providing enough staff on purpose to reduce budget
D.lack of cooperation between staff members
【小題4】The writer suggests that a customer __________.
A.go to other places where good service is available
B.put up with the rude manners of the staff
C.try to control his temper when ill-treated
D.be patient when queuing before checkout counters

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

The traditional distinction between products that satisfy needs and those that satisfy wants is no longer adequate to describe classes of products. In today’s prosperous societies, the distinction has become unclear because so many wants have been turned into needs. A writer, for instance, can work with paper and pencils. These are legal needs for the task. But the work can be done more quickly and efficiently with a word processor. Thus a computer is soon viewed as a need rather than a want.
In the field of marketing, consumer goods are classed according to the way in which they are purchased. The two main classes are convenience goods and shopping goods. Two lesser types are specialty goods and unsought(主動提供的) goods. It must be emphasized that all of these types are based on the way shoppers think about products, not on the nature of the products themselves. What is regarded as a convenience item in France (wine, for example) should be a specialty goods in the United States.
People do not spend a great deal of time shopping for such convenience items as groceries, newspapers, toothpaste, aspirin, and candy. The buying of convenience goods may be done routinely, as some families buy groceries once a week. Such regularly purchased items are called staples. Sometimes convenience products are bought without enough thinking; someone has a sudden desire for an ice cream sundae(圣代) on a hot day. Or they may be purchased as emergency items.
Shopping goods are items for which customers search. They compare prices, quality, and styles, and may visit a number of stores before making a decision. Buying an automobile is often done this way.
Shopping goods fall into two classes; those that are recognized as basically the same and those that are regarded as different. Items that are looked upon as basically the same include such things as home appliances, television sets, and automobiles. Having decided on the model desired, the customer is primarily interested in getting the item at the most favorable price. Items regarded as essentially different include clothing, furniture, and dishes. Quality, style and fashion will either take precedence(優(yōu)先) over price, or they will not matter at all.
【小題1】It can be learned from the first paragraph that ______. 

A.a(chǎn) writer needs a word processor
B.needs and wants can’t be separated clearly
C.the way to distinguish the products is unimportant
D.a(chǎn) computer is a need rather than a want
【小題2】The example of wine is used to illustrate that ______.
A.goods are classified differently in different countries
B.the types of the product lie on the people rather than its nature
C.Frenchmen often drink but Americans sometimes do
D.one product may belong to many types
【小題3】Staples are items that ______.  
A.a(chǎn)re convenient to purchase
B.a(chǎn)re purchased without enough thinking
C.people “want but don’t need”
D.people are in constant need of
【小題4】Shopping goods that are considered as basically the same are those that ______.   
A.consumers don’t care where to buy them
B.consumers spend much time searching for
C.satisfy similar needs of the consumer
D.can be found in nearly every shop

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

If you’re among the millions of Americans packing their vocation bags for summer trips, don’t forget, however, that as soon as you step off the plane, you’re expected to follow that country’s laws. We took a look at one of the top countries Americans are most likely to visit and what might happen if you got caught.
Mexico
Smoking marijuana(大麻): If police find you smoking a cigarette which contains marijuana, they will most likely detain you overnight and you will get a fine.
Carrying a firearm: You might be able to walk around with a gun in Texas, but that isn’t so in Mexico, so leave your gun behind. If you wish to go hunting in Mexico, you can apply for a gun permit but are expected to be charged $5,000. If you are caught bringing a firearm, Mexican policeman may take away your car and arrest you. An arrested American may spend months in prison while his or her case is being looked into.
Driving 70 mph on the highway: Speed limits are on the lower side. Depending on what type of highway you’re driving on, you shouldn’t go faster than 60mph. The police enforce (執(zhí)行) the speed limit, but most local police don’t have radars(無線電探測器). The maximum fine for speeding is about $40. To scare (嚇得某人做……) tourists into paying the fine “on the spot”, sometimes police will threaten to keep your driver’s license (駕照). This is illegal.
【小題1】Which of the following statements are not true?

A.The laws in Texas are different from the ones in Mexico.
B.People will be fined if they smoke marijuana.
C.People will be arrested if they are caught bringing a gun.
D.The police in Mexico have the right to keep the drivers’ license.
【小題2】If the travelers want to drive in Mexico, they should _______.
A.drive on the lower side of the street
B.keep an eye out on the radars
C.limit their car speed
D.pay the fine on the spot.
【小題3】The word “detain” in the second paragraph means:  ____     .
A.a(chǎn)rrest B.fine C.punish D.destroy
【小題4】What can we know from the passage?
A.Different countries have different regulations.
B.Different countries have the same regulations.
C.Americans like to visit other countries.
D.Mexico police aren't friendly.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

Last year more than 13 Korean (韓國) TV series were introduced in China. Turn on the TV, and Korean beauties are appearing during peak viewing times(黃金時段). Some of the dramas are being repeated, but audiences continue to watch them. Why are the South Korean TV series loved by so many Chinese people? Cheng Yiting, a student from East China Normal University, gives us her reasons. She thinks that the good-looking actors with cool clothes and the beautiful sight in the dramas are the selling points for South Korean TV dramas. But what attracted the young audiences most is the pure and moving love stories.
And it seems that South Korean TV series has also won the hearts of middle-aged people. They are touched by the morals(道德)in the shows. These include the importance of respecting elders and social order. Though some people think South Korean TV series are too slow and too long, most of the Chinese audiences like them. Maybe we are really tired of Western TV series. Compared with that, South Korean TV series are not bad.
【小題1】Which of the following is NOT mentioned(提及)about South Korean TV series in the passage?

A.LoveB.Morals
C.Social orderD.The youth self-respect
【小題2】What is the main reason why South Korean TV series are popular?
A.The series are slow and long.
B.The actors wear cool clothes.
C.The stories with morals in them are pure and moving.
D.The actors are cool.
【小題3】What does the writer want to tell us?
A.We are fed up with South Korean TV series.
B.South Korean TV series is a great success and popular in China.
C.South Korean TV series are better than Chinese TV series.
D.We can learn a lot from Korean TV series so we need to watch them again and again.

查看答案和解析>>

同步練習冊答案