Are you an optimist? Do you look at your glass and see it as half full? Do you believe that every cloud has a silver lining and that things generally turn out for the best? Do you believe that if something is meant to be, it will be? If you reply “yes” to all of these questions, then you are an optimist. You probably are enthusiastic, cheerful and outgoing. You may be successful at work and in love.
But you may be misguided because things don’t turn out for the best. You may believe that when one door closes another one opens (for example, you may fail to obtain a new job; another chance will come around soon). Wrong. When one door closes, another door slams (砰然關(guān)上) in your face. That’s bitter reality.
Now a book has been published which confirms what pessimists (悲觀者) have suspected all along. It’s called The Positive Power of Defensive Pessimism. Its author argues that defensive pessimism can lead to positive results. Defensive pessimism is a strategy used to manage fear, anxiety and worry. Defensive pessimists prepare for the things by setting low outcomes for themselves. They carefully consider everything that may go wrong and plan for ways to handle these problems. And this gives them a sense of control. Lawrence Sanno, a psychology professor, says, “What’s interesting about defensive pessimists is that they tend to be very successful people, so their low opinion of the situation’s outcomes is not realistic. They use it to motivate themselves to perform better.”
So far, so good. This is not rocket science. Defensive pessimists prepare carefully and consider what might go wrong, whether at work, on date or even in a sports game. It makes sense to have a back-up plan. There are many sayings in English urging caution. For example, “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.” And “Don’t count your chickens until they hatch.” To have a confident and optimistic approach to life’s problems is good. But listen to what Woody Alien, the American comedian says, “Confidence is what you have before you understand the problem.”
There are pros and cons to being an optimist and a pessimist. Don’t feel bad if you see the glass half empty. You are a realist. But lighten up and hook up with someone who sees the same glass half full.
【小題1】What’s the passage mainly about?
A.A book that has recently been published. |
B.How to become successful in life. |
C.The dangers of being too optimistic. |
D.The benefits of defensive pessimism. |
A.it’s not a dangerous thing to do |
B.it is quite simple to understand |
C.the cost is not so high |
D.there is no real proof |
A.Don’t put all your eggs in one basket. |
B.The glass is half full not half empty. |
C.Whatever will be, will be. |
D.Every cloud has a silver lining. |
A.a(chǎn)n optimist | B.a(chǎn) defeatist | C.a(chǎn) realist | D.a(chǎn) scientist |
【小題1】D
【小題2】B
【小題3】A
【小題4】C
解析試題分析:本文是一篇說明文,說明了防御性悲觀主義的積極力量,防御性悲觀使用一個管理策略的恐懼、焦慮和擔(dān)心。防御性悲觀主義者為自己準備設(shè)定低的結(jié)果,他們仔細考慮處理這些問題的方法,這給了他們一個控制感
【小題1】主旨大意題。文章在第一段提出了人應(yīng)該樂觀一點會更好,接著主要討論了要做一個有意識的悲觀者,因為這樣的悲觀者才會對以后的事情做好充分的準備,會有詳細的計劃和安排。那樣才能有更好的結(jié)果。故D正確。
【小題2】推理題。諺語This is not rocket science.中的rocket science指困難的事情,指那些很難以理解的事情。本句話的意思就是指這很好理解,不是那么難以理解的事物。故B正確。
【小題3】推理題。根據(jù)文章倒數(shù)第二段3,4行There are many sayings in English urging caution. For example, “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket,”說明該諺語就是指那些表示謹慎的諺語,故A項符合那些pessimists (悲觀者)的特點。故A正確。
【小題4】推理題。根據(jù)第二段的最后三句:當(dāng)上帝關(guān)上一扇門的時候,他會為你打開另外一扇門。但是實際上并不是總是如此,說明他對待一切是很現(xiàn)實的。以及文章后幾段的內(nèi)容可在C正確。
考點:考查議論文
科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
As any parent with an iPhone or an iPod Touch knows, mobile apps (手機軟件) can be an engaging and entertaining experience for kids. Now, a new study of PBS Kids suggests that the experience can be an educational one as well.
The study, which was administered by PBS under a grant from the Department of Education, first tested the vocabulary level of a group of 90 Title 1 school children, aged 3 to 7. Then, the children were each given two weeks with an iPod Touch loaded with the Martha Speaks Dog Party app created by PBS Kids.
The study monitored how the children used the iPod, during what hours, and in what context. On average, the study found that kids played with the iPod Touch for a total of 5 hours across the two weeks, with half that time spent playing the Martha Speaks app. At the end of the two week trial, the children were given another vocabulary test, which revealed an increase in vocabulary acquisition by as much as 31 per cent.
The study findings are particularly useful as smart phones and mobile devices have become increasingly popular among families and parents are faced with a proliferation of mobile apps designed for kids. According to a recent Nielsen study, smart phone usage is 12% higher in households with children than other households.
“Mobile apps can be a great learning tool in the hands of children,” said Lesli Rotenberg, SVP, Children’s Media, PBS. “This research is important in helping to better understand and guide the development of new apps that improve the value of children’s screen time with significant educational outcomes.”
So what does it all mean? Well, at the very least it will help parents get over that guilty feeling when they hand over their iPhone or iPod Touch for a little peace and quiet. At best, it provides more evidence that mobile devices and apps do indeed have educational value and could be an important part of the child-learning process for many years to come.
【小題1】What Lesli Rotenberg said in the fifth paragraph suggests that .
A.he has a positive attitude towards mobile apps |
B.he thinks children should never use smart phones |
C.he is doubtful about mobile apps designed for children |
D.he thinks parents should be careful with mobile apps for children |
A.parents will feel more comfortable giving kids iPhone or iPod Touch |
B.parents will know what kind of mobile phones are suitable for kids |
C.parents will know what children do with mobile phones |
D.parents can watch over their children now and then |
A.The popularity of smart phones among kids |
B.The entertaining function of smart phones |
C.Smart phones make kids learn more. |
D.It’s too early for kids to use smart phones |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
To some, it's a dream job---eating delicious meals for free and then writing about them. But for some food critics, their eyes aren't the only thing that gets wide with yet another feast.
Karen Fernau, a food writer for The Arisona Republic, said when she first started her job –she began to gain weight. “I always looked forward to lunch before this job, then all of a sudden lunch was all day every day. " she says. Nine years later, keeping her weight steady and her health intact (完好無損的)is a daily battle. If she knows she will be going to a tasting at a bakery or eating a four-course meal, she usually eats fruits or salads throughout the day. Now she is always keeping track of what's in the food she eats and she says most people don't even look at or consider it. At one tasting task alone, she says, upward of l,000 calories is often added to her day. That's about half of the recommended total calories per day for the average adult.
But even though she's thought of a special eating method, Fernau says sticking to it is a daily battle. And food editors, writers and critics across the country couldn't agree more. “When I'm at home or not eating for work, it's healthy food to the extreme," says Phil Vettel, who's been a restaurant critic for the Chicago Tribune for 19 years.
Vettle, who eats dinner at four restaurants each week, says unlike most professions, he has no right to choose. "If I'm going out to eat, I can't choose the healthiest thing on the menu, I have to eat when they're bringing me. " While Vettel exercises when he can, Joe Yonan, a food editor at The Washington Post, has strengthened his exercise habits since he started the job two years ago. Yonan says he realized early on that he was gaining weight and immediately hired a personal trainer to meet with three times a week, on top of his body training three to five times a week.
Still, it's a struggle that many Americans might envy. After all, it's one thing to get your calories from lobster(龍蝦) tails or a delicate(精致的)chocolate cookie and quite another to get them from sodas and fast-food burgers.
【小題1】What does the underlined sentence mean in Para l?
A.The food critics are always impressed by the delicious food in the restaurant. |
B.The food critics are shocked to learn they have to have one more feast. |
C.There is a wide variety of choices for the food critics to choose from. |
D.The food critics eat delicious food, which also tends to result in gaining weight. |
A.They enjoy free and delicious dishes and make comments on them. |
B.They only work for local magazines and newspapers. |
C.Once they become food critics, they tend to stay in the job. |
D.Their excellent sense of taste makes them qualified for the job. |
A.Not eating anything except for the free meals. |
B.Writing down everything they put into their mouth. |
C.Hiring a personal trainer for special exercise instructions. |
D.Choosing only the healthy food on the menu. |
A.No matter whether the food is expensive or not, the gaining of calories is the same. |
B.The calories that lobster tails and chocolate cookies contain are less harmful. |
C.Americans envy those food critics since they enjoy delicate and tasty food. |
D.Everybody should take the calories in their food carefully. |
A.A job offering free meals may not be as desirable as it sounds to be. |
B.Dishes in the restaurant usually contain too many calories. |
C.Eating fruits and vegetables every day is the best way to lose weight. |
D.Food writers work hard to maintain their health and weight. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
In some parts of the United States, farming is easy. But farming has always been difficult in the northeastern corner of the country, which is called New England.
New England has many trees and thin, rocky soil. Anyone who has wanted to start a new farm there has had to work very hard. The first job has been cutting down the trees. The new job has been digging out the roots of the trees. Then the farmer has had the difficult job of removing stones from his land. This work of removing stones never really ends, because every winter more stones appear. They come up through the thin soil from the rocks below. Farmers have to keep removing stones from the fields. Even today, farms which have been worked on for two hundred years still keep producing more stones. That is why stone walls are used instead of fences (籬笆) in New England fields. The stone walls are not high and a man can easily climb over them. However, they keep the farmer’s cows from joining those of his neighbor’s.
【小題1】Where is New England?
A.In England. | B.In North America. |
C.In South America. | D.In Australia. |
A.Because the farmers keep digging them out. |
B.Because there are rocks below the soil and the soil is too thin. |
C.Because there are no trees at all. |
D.Because the wind keeps blowing. |
A.There are almost no trees in New England. |
B.Farming is difficult in New England. |
C.It’s difficult for farmers to remove stones from the fields. |
D.The stone walls in New England are not high. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
One hot night last July, when our new baby wouldn’t or couldn’t sleep, I tried everything I could think of : a warm bottle, songs gentle rocking. Nothing would settle him. Guessing that I had a long night ahead of me, I brought a portable TV into his room, figuring that watching the late movie was as good a way as any to kill of the hours till dawn. To my surprise, as soon as the TV lit up, the baby quieted right down, his little eyes focused brightly on the tube. Not to waste an opportunity for sleep, I then tiptoes out of the room, leaving him to watch the actors celebrate John Bellushi's forty-fifth birthday.
My wife and I heard none of the baby that night, and the next morning when I went into his room, I found him still watching TV himself.
I found in my baby's behavior a symbol of the new generation. My wife and I had given him some books to examine, but he merely spit upon them. When we read to him, he did not feel comfortable. And so it is in the schools. We find that our students don't read and they look down upon reading and scold those of us who teach it. All they want to do is watch TV. After this experience with the baby, however, I have reached a conclusion: “Let them watch it!” If television is that much more attractive to children than books, why should we fight about it? Let them watch it all they want!
【小題1】Why did the author bring a TV set into his son's room?
A.To make his son keep quiet. |
B.To spend the night by watching TV programs. |
C.In order not to let his son feel lonely. |
D.To make his son go to sleep as soon as possible. |
A.unexpected | B.encouraging | C.exciting | D.nervous |
A.a(chǎn) doctor | B.a(chǎn) reporter | C.a(chǎn)n editor | D.a(chǎn) teacher |
A.They prefer reading to watching TV. |
B.They like watching TV after school. |
C.They would rather watch TV than read books. |
D.They like their teachers who teach them reading. |
A.talk about | B.think about | C.quallel about | D.care about |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
It’s such a happy-looking library, painted yellow, decorated with palm-tree stickers and sheltered from the Florida sun by its own roof. About the size of a microwave oven, it’s pedestrian-friendly, too, waiting for book lovers next to a sidewalk in Palm Beach country Estates, along the northern boundary of Palm Beach Gardens.
It’s a library built with love.
A year ago, shortly after Janey Henriksen saw a Brian Williams report about the Little Free Library organization, a Wisconsin-based nonprofit that aims to promote literacy and build a sense of community in a neighborhood by making books freely available, she announced to her family of four, “That’s what we’re going to do for our spring break!”
Son Austin, now a 10th-grader, didn’t see the point of building a library that resembles a mailbox. But Janey insisted, and husband Peter unwillingly got to work. The 51-year-old owner of a ship supply company modified a small wooden house that he’d built years earlier for daughter Abbie’s toy horses, and made a door of glass.
After adding the library’s final touches, the family hung a signboard on the front, instructing users to “take a book, return a book,” and making the Henriksen library, now one of several hundred like it nationwide and among more than 2,500 in the world, the only Little Free Library in Palm Beach County.
They stocked it with 20 or so books they’d already read, a mix of science fiction, reference titles, novels and kids’ favorites. “I told them, keep in mind that you might not see it again,” said Janey, a stay-at-home mom.
Since then, the collection keeps replenishing itself, thanks to ongoing donations from borrowers. The library now gets an average of five visits a day.
The project’s best payoff, says Peter, are the thank-you notes left behind. “We had no idea in the beginning that it would be so popular.”
【小題1】In what way is the library “pedestrian-friendly”?
A.It owns a yellow roof. |
B.It stands near a sidewalk. |
C.It protects book lovers from the sun. |
D.It uses palm-tree stickers as decorations. |
A.by a ship supply company |
B.on the basis of toy horses |
C.like a mailbox |
D.with glass |
A.It was made by a user of the library. |
B.It marked a final touch to the library. |
C.It aimed at making the library last long. |
D.It indicated the library was a family property. |
A.donate books to the library |
B.get paid to collect books for the library |
C.receive thank-you notes for using the library |
D.visit the library over 5 times on average daily |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Statistically, air travel is by far the safest way to travel, and you can make flying even safer, just by following these simple rules. As your chances of being involved in an air accident are practically nil (零), many of these tips concern what you should and shouldn't do to make your journey safer when you are airborne (升空的).
Fly on non-stop routes
Most accidents occur during the takeoff, climb, descent and landing phases of a flight, so flying non-stop reduces your exposure to these complex procedures.
Choose larger aircraft. w.w.w.k.s.5.u.c.o.m
Although small aircrafts have very good safety records, those with more than 30 passenger seats are designed to comply (遵守) with much stricter regulations and are tested more regularly to make sure they still comply. Also, in the unlikely event of a serious accident, larger aircraft provide a better opportunity for passenger survival.
Pay attention to the pre-flight safety briefing
The information may seem repetitious (重復(fù)的), but it's worth listening to the flight attendants. And even if you've flown before, it doesn't mean you know everything about the aircraft you're on, such as the location of the closest emergency exit.
Store things safely
Never put very heavy articles in the overhead storage bins. They may fall out when someone opens the bin and cause injury. Also, the bin may not be able to hold heavier objects during turbulence (氣流).
Keep our seat belt fastened while you are seated
Cabin crew always tell you this, but it's important. You would be seriously injured if the plane hits unexpected turbulence. Always fasten your seat belt if you are told to. The general rule of flying is this: If you are told to do something, do it first and ask questions later.
Let the flight attendant pour your hot drinks
Flight attendants are trained to handle hot drinks like coffee or tea in a crowded aisle on a moving aircraft, so allow them to pour the drink and hand it to you. Never ask to take a coffee pot from one of them.
【小題1】What is the overall reason for these air safety tips?
A.What to do in the event of a crash. | B.How to avoid turbulence. |
C.How to improve safety while you are flying. | D.How to avoid injury. |
A.smaller planes | B.passengers | C.larger aircraft | D.safety records |
A.a(chǎn)nything the flight staff tell you to do | B.general safety advice |
C.walking around the plane | D.pouring hot drinks |
A.Larger planes have more safety checks and are safer in an accident. |
B.Take-offs are safer on non-stop flights than landings. |
C.Every aircraft is different, so the safety procedures may be different. |
D.Seat belts should be worn to protect against turbulence. |
A.The Safest Way to Travel | B.Air Safety Tips |
C.Non-stop Routes | D.How to Fly a Plane |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Collecting information about pre-employment and filling out an application form are closely connected, However, filling out an application form is much easier because you have total control and have enough time to think and plan.
That you are given a form to fill out does not necessarily mean that you have to answer all the questions in it. If the form contains unclear questions or terms and conditions, you can make some changes before signing(簽約)it, or refuse to answer some of the questions. What you must realize is that those terms and conditions have been written by highly paid lawyers. Each word is important, or it would not be there; and you can be sure that there is not anything there that is written with your interests in mind.
I know what I speak of because, as a lawyer for Litton Industries. I wrote the terms and conditions that were printed on the back of order forms, I wrote the most tiring terms and conditions anyone has ever seen. Still, 90 percent of the buyers would just sign on them without questioning anything. If anyone questioned them, we would reach an agreement on something that was acceptable to both sides.
So when you see a preprinted application that contains questions or terms and conditions, read it all and read it slowly. If you don’t like something, you can simply change the parts you don’t like, Remember that everything can be settled by discussion. To what degree it can be settled depends on your position, of course, and that is something only you can determine.
【小題1】Filling out application forms is much “easier” because_______.
A.everything connected with application forms is easier |
B.you can control the form filling with enough time |
C.you can plan and have control of the needed time |
D.it is easier to collect information about pre-employment |
A.questions in a form must be answered |
B.everything in a form must be read carefully |
C.the conditions that interest you are changeable |
D.something of your interests is most important |
A.you must change a preprinted application before it is discussed |
B.questions in a form are more important |
C.you have little right to determine the conditions you like most |
D.it depends on yourself to settle things in a form |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Strange Baby-Naming Laws
Germany Parents are banned by law from using last names and the names of objects and products as first names. A child’s first name must clearly indicate his or her sex, and all names must be approved by the office of vital statistics in the area in which the child was born.
Iceland The country’s naming committee consults the National Register of Persons to determine if a name is acceptable. If parents want to go off-list, they must apply for approval and pay a fee, and the name must contain only letters in the Icelandic alphabet.
New Zealand The country’s Births, Deaths, and Marriages Registration Act of 1995 prohibits parents from choosing a name that “ might cause offense to a reasonable person; is unreasonably long; or is, includes, or resembles an official title or rank,” including, apparently, Adolf Hitler and Yeah Detroit—both names recently rejected.
Denmark If Danish parents prefer a moniker not on the list of 7,000 preapproved baby names, they must get permission from local church and government officials. Fifteen to 20 percent of the 1,100 reviewed names—including creative spellings of common names, last names as first names, and unusual names—are rejected each year.
【小題1】You can tell whether a baby is a girl or a boy according to the first name in _____.
A.Denmark | B.New Zealand | C.Iceland | D.Germany |
A.be approved by the office of vital statistics. |
B.be accepted by the National Register of Persons. |
C.contain only letters in the Roman alphabet. |
D.be paid for some money. |
A.Bin Laden | B.Talula Does The Hula |
C.Keenan Got Lucky | D.John Smith |
A.Danish babies’ names should be on the list if parents can’t get the permission. |
B.Each year about 150-200 reviewed names are rejected in Denmark. |
C.Adolf Hitler is banned in Iceland. |
D.Parents should pay a fee for babies’ names if the names are rejected. |
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