While large numbers of residents in this area ______ the A/H1N1 flu, very few suffered death.
[     ]
A. picked up        
B. took up        
C. brought up          
D. caught up
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2012-2013學(xué)年遼寧省鞍山一中高二上學(xué)期期中考試英語(yǔ)試卷(帶解析) 題型:單選題

While large numbers of residents in this area ___the A/H1N1 flu, very few suffered death.

A.picked up B.took up C.brought up D.caught up

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2011-2012學(xué)年湖南省瀏陽(yáng)一中高一下學(xué)期第三次階段測(cè)試英語(yǔ)試卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解

Chinese White Collars(白領(lǐng)) Go Down on the Farm
The latest craze among China’s white collar workers, reported in the British newspaper the Daily Telegraph, is an online virtual agricultural game called “Happy Farm.” Virtual farmers can visit each other’s farm, trade livestock and can use real cash to buy virtual (虛擬的) items such as special tools, quality seeds, and animals. The free game is played through social networking sites like kaixin001.com, Face book or xiaonei.com.
Urban office workers can escape the pressures and stresses of everyday life and enter a peaceful virtual existence where players can grow vegetables, practice animal farming and receive satisfaction that comes with a hard-won harvest. Because most Chinese white collars have little amusement after work, Happy Farm gives them a virtual world to make their dreams come true.
Global Times, an English language daily based in Beijing, recently reported that there are more than 15 million Chinese urbanites spending more than five hours a day on their virtual “farms.”
According to the English language website of the People’s Daily newspaper, the increased interest in farming among some urban office workers has resulted in some of them becoming real hobby farmers, tending small plots of land in their free time. Mr. Liu, a white collar worker, has rented a piece of farmland for RMB 3000. Mr. Liu and his family like to drive down to their farm on the weekend and do different farming tasks such as watering, weeding, fertilizing and worming. Later on, cabins will be built on agricultural land making it possible for part-time farmers like Mr. Liu to stay on their land for two weeks enabling them to get a little taste of a farmer’s life.
It is a rather interesting social development that some of urban office workers are becoming interested in farming and agriculture, while large numbers of farmers and agricultural workers continue to move to the cities.
【小題1】What is “Happy Farm”? (No more than 7 words)
【小題2】Why do more and more Chinese white collars go down on Happy Farm?
(No more than 14 words)
【小題3】List 4 farming tasks Mr. Liu and his family do on their farms. (No more than 5 words)
【小題4】How long do Chinese urbanites spend on their virtual farms every day? (No more than 4 words)

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2012-2013學(xué)年浙江省寧波市鄞州區(qū)高三5月適應(yīng)性考試英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解

We like to think our intelligence is self-made; it happens inside our heads, the product of our inner thoughts alone. But the rise of Google, Wikipedia and other online tools has made many people question the impact of these technologies on our brains. Is typing in “Who has played James Bond in the movies?” the same as our knowledge about the names like Roger Moore, Timothy Dalton, Pierce Brosnan and Daniel Craig? Can we say we know the answer as long as we know how to rapidly get the information on Google?

Here the question is about how we define intelligence itself. The answer appears to be interesting, because the evidence from psychological studies suggests that much of our intelligence comes from how we coordinate ourselves with other people and our environment.

An influential theory among psychologists is that we're cognitive misers(認(rèn)知吝嗇者). This is the idea that we are unwilling to do mental work unless we have to. We try to avoid thinking things fully when a short cut is available. If you've ever voted for the presidential candidate(總統(tǒng)候選人) with the most honest smile, or chosen a restaurant based on how many people are already sitting in there, then you are a cognitive miser. The theory explains why we'd much rather type a zip code into Google Maps than memorize and recall the location of a place – it's so much easier to do so.

Research shows that people don't tend to rely on their memories for things they can easily access. Buildings can somehow disappear from pictures we're looking at, or the people we're talking to can be changed with someone else, and often we won't notice – a phenomenon called “change blindness”. This isn't an example of human stupidity – far from it, in fact – this is an example of mental efficiency. The mind relies on the world as a better record than memory.

Philosophers have suggested that thinking is really happening in the environment as much as it is happening in our brains. The philosopher Andy Clark called humans "natural born cyborgs(電子人)", those naturally capable of absorbing and combining new tools, ideas and abilities. In Clark's view, the route to a solution is not the issue – having the right tools really does mean you know the answers, just as much as already knowing the answer.

Rather than being forced to rely on our own resources for everything, we can share our knowledge. Technology keeps track of things for us so we don't have to, while large systems of knowledge serve the needs of society as a whole. I don't know how a computer works, or how to grow vegetables, but that knowledge is out there and I can get to benefit. The internet provides even more potential to share this knowledge. Wikipedia is one of the best examples – an increasingly large database of knowledge from which everyone can benefit.

So as well as having a physical environment – like the rooms or buildings we live or work in – we also have a mental environment, which means that when I ask you where your mind is, you shouldn’t point toward the centre of your forehead. As research shows, our minds are made up just as much by the people and tools around us as they are by the brain cells inside our skull.

1.Why did the writer raise the questions in Paragraph 1?

A.To find out who has played James Bond in the movies.

B.To introduce the topic to be discussed in the passage.

C.To show that he knows the answer to the questions.

D.To attract readers’ attention by mentioning James Bond.

2.What is the writer’s attitude towards the rise of technologies like Google and Wikipedia?

A.Supportive        B.Objective          C.Indifferent         D.Neutral

3. Which of the following might the philosopher Andy Clark agree with?

A.Intelligence is something that is made by one’s brain itself.

B.Intelligence is something that only happens inside one’s head.

C.Intelligence is the product of one’s inner thoughts alone.

D.Intelligence is a mixture of the environment, people and one’s brain cells.

4.It is true about the phenomenon called “change blindness” that human beings____.

A.a(chǎn)re stupid not to notice the changes

B.a(chǎn)re efficient in mental work

C.a(chǎn)re blind to changes around them

D.rely on memory when dealing with things

5.According to the text, how do technologies like Google, Wikipedia affect us?

A.They make us much more intelligent.

B.They make us lazier and more stupid.

C.They have little to do with our intelligence.

D.They have a negative effect on our intelligence.

 

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014屆遼寧省高二上學(xué)期期中考試英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:單項(xiàng)填空

While large numbers of residents in this area ___the A/H1N1 flu, very few suffered death.

A.picked up         B.took up           C.brought up        D.caught up

 

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014屆湖南省高一下學(xué)期第三次階段測(cè)試英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解

Chinese White Collars(白領(lǐng)) Go Down on the Farm

The latest craze among China’s white collar workers, reported in the British newspaper the Daily Telegraph, is an online virtual agricultural game called “Happy Farm.” Virtual farmers can visit each other’s farm, trade livestock and can use real cash to buy virtual (虛擬的) items such as special tools, quality seeds, and animals. The free game is played through social networking sites like kaixin001.com, Face book or xiaonei.com.

Urban office workers can escape the pressures and stresses of everyday life and enter a peaceful virtual existence where players can grow vegetables, practice animal farming and receive satisfaction that comes with a hard-won harvest. Because most Chinese white collars have little amusement after work, Happy Farm gives them a virtual world to make their dreams come true.

Global Times, an English language daily based in Beijing, recently reported that there are more than 15 million Chinese urbanites spending more than five hours a day on their virtual “farms.”

According to the English language website of the People’s Daily newspaper, the increased interest in farming among some urban office workers has resulted in some of them becoming real hobby farmers, tending small plots of land in their free time. Mr. Liu, a white collar worker, has rented a piece of farmland for RMB 3000. Mr. Liu and his family like to drive down to their farm on the weekend and do different farming tasks such as watering, weeding, fertilizing and worming. Later on, cabins will be built on agricultural land making it possible for part-time farmers like Mr. Liu to stay on their land for two weeks enabling them to get a little taste of a farmer’s life.

It is a rather interesting social development that some of urban office workers are becoming interested in farming and agriculture, while large numbers of farmers and agricultural workers continue to move to the cities.

1.What is “Happy Farm”? (No more than 7 words)

2.Why do more and more Chinese white collars go down on Happy Farm?

(No more than 14 words)

3.List 4 farming tasks Mr. Liu and his family do on their farms. (No more than 5 words)

4.How long do Chinese urbanites spend on their virtual farms every day? (No more than 4 words)

 

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