The first newspaper was written by hand and put up on walls in public places. The earliest daily newspaper was started in Rome in 59 BC. In the 700s the world’s first printed newspaper was published. Europe didn’t have a regularly printed newspaper until 1609, when one was started in Germany.
The first regularly published newspaper in English was printed in Amsterdam in 1620. In 1621, an English newspaper was started in London and was published once a week. The first daily English newspaper was the Daily Courant, which came out in March 1702.
In 1690, Benjamin Harris printed the first American newspaper in Boston .But not long after it was first published, the government stopped the paper. In 1704, John Campbell started the Boston Newspaper, the first newspaper published daily in the American colonies(殖民地). By 1760, the colonies had more than thirty daily newspapers.There are now about 1, 800 daily papers in the United States.
Today, as a group, newspapers in English have the largest circulation (發(fā)行量)in the world .But the largest circulation for a newspaper is that of the Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun . It sells more than eleven million copies every year.
小題1:The first regularly printed European newspaper started in ________.
A.Rome in 59 BCB.Germany in 1609
C.Amsterdam in 1620D.England in 1621
小題2:The first daily newspaper in English started in _________.
A.1620B.1621C.1590D.1702
小題3:What does the author want to inform us?
A.History of newspapers
B.History of daily newspapers
C.The beginning of newspapers
D.On reading newspapers

小題1:B
小題2:D
小題3:A

試題分析:文章介紹了報(bào)紙發(fā)展的歷史,世界各地從報(bào)紙的雛形到日?qǐng)?bào)的有序發(fā)行以及殖民地報(bào)紙的發(fā)行。同時(shí)也說(shuō)明了報(bào)業(yè)發(fā)展的現(xiàn)在的情形,發(fā)行量最大的報(bào)紙等。
小題1:B細(xì)節(jié)理解題。Europe didn’t have a regularly printed newspaper until 1609, when one was started in Germany.直到1609年歐洲才有了定期發(fā)行的報(bào)紙,首份是在德國(guó)發(fā)行。由此可推出答案應(yīng)為B。
小題2:D細(xì)節(jié)理解題。The first regularly published newspaper in English was printed in Amsterdam in 1620. In 1621, an English newspaper was started in London and was published once a week. The first daily English newspaper was the Daily Courant, which came out in March 1702.句意為:第一份定期發(fā)行的英語(yǔ)報(bào)紙1620年阿姆斯特丹發(fā)行,1621年,倫敦發(fā)行第一份英文報(bào)紙一周發(fā)行一次,第一份英語(yǔ)日?qǐng)?bào)出版于1702年三月,故答案應(yīng)為D。
小題3: A綜合理解題。第一自然段的意思是:第一份定期發(fā)行的英語(yǔ)報(bào)紙1620年阿姆斯特丹發(fā)行,1621年,倫敦發(fā)行第一份英文報(bào)紙一周發(fā)行一次,第一份英語(yǔ)日?qǐng)?bào)出版于1702年三月。第二自然段的意思是:美國(guó)報(bào)紙的發(fā)行情況以及殖民地報(bào)業(yè)的情況,故答案應(yīng)為A,即報(bào)紙發(fā)展的歷史。
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

If the eyes are the romantic’s window into the soul, then the teeth are an anthropologist’s ( 人類學(xué)家 ) door to the stomach.
In a study published last month in the journal Science, Peter Ungar of the University of Arkansas and his partner, Matt Sponheimer of the University of Colorado, US, examined the teeth of our early human ancestors to find out what they were really eating.
They already knew that different foods cause different marks on teeth. Some cause scratches, while others cause pits (坑).The carbon left on teeth by different foods is also different. Tropical grasses, for example, leave one kind of carbon, but trees leave another kind because they photosynthesized ( 光合作用 ) differently.
Traditionally, scientists had looked at the size and shape of teeth and skulls ( 頭骨 ) to figure out what early humans ate. Big flat teeth were taken to be signs that they ate nuts and seeds, while hard and sharp teeth seemed good for cutting meat and leaves. But this was proven wrong.
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However, when the two scientists studied the Paranthroupus, it turned out to have none of these characteristics. The teeth had a different kind of carbon, and were covered with scratches, not pits. This suggests they probably ate grass, not nuts and fruit stones. It was the exact opposite of what people had expected to find.
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A.a(chǎn)nthropologists can study the structure of human stomachs by studying their teeth.
B.a(chǎn)nthropologists can study the diet of early humans by studying their teeth
C.a(chǎn)nthropologists can learn whether humans were healthy by looking at their teeth
D.a(chǎn)nthropologists can get the most useful information about humans from their teeth
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B.Pits on teeth are caused by eating grass or leaves.
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A.tell readers that they are one of our close cousins living in eastern Africa
B.tell readers they had different eating habits from modern humans
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