The sun had gone behind a cloud. I was very tired and wanted nothing in the world so much as to be at home. At last I got to the gate of Hide Park. But this was worse than ever; there were buses there—high and terribly red cars, taxis and still more buses in an endless line. Everywhere there were people hurrying past or waiting to get into the buses, while I stood lost in the middle of them.
I was ready to cry. In despair, I crossed the street on to an “island”, where I found a policeman. I took my last bit of courage in both hands and said, “Please, sir, where is Addison Road?” He began to explain, but when he saw that I couldn’t understand he became helpless, too. “Are you French at school?” A few minutes later, he smiled and raised his hand. How wonderful! The traffic stopped. Even the red buses stood still and waited until I had crossed the road.
小題1:That        is the most probable reason why she was tired out.
A.it had been very hot by then
B.the writer had been standing lost for a long time
C.the writer had been completely lost
D.the writer had been wandering in the park for a long time
小題2:Because the writer was made so worn out,          .
A.she wanted nothing on earth but her home
B.she thought it perfect to stay at home
C.she would never leave her home at all
D.she didn't get to the park on time.
小題3:In this passage “island” means           .
A.a(chǎn) piece of land surrounded by water
B.a(chǎn) raised place in a busy street where people may be safe from traffic
C.a(chǎn) safe place that can only be used by policemen
D.a(chǎn) safe place that nobody can use without permission
小題4:Why did the traffic stop? Because            .
A.a(chǎn)ll the drivers could understand French
B.perhaps a certain driver had broken the traffic rules
C.a(chǎn)ll the drivers knew the policeman very well
D.the policeman was directing the traffic
小題5:In which country do you think the story happened?
A.Switzerland.B.France.C.England.D.A certain non-English speaking country.

小題1:D
小題2:B
小題3:B
小題4:D
小題5:C

試題分析:作者在海德公園游玩了一天后,精疲力竭,打算回家。但是當(dāng)他到了公園門口時(shí)發(fā)現(xiàn)到處是川流不息的車輛,匆匆行路的人們,作者迷路了。他絕望之中找到了一名警察,盡管語(yǔ)言不通,最后警察還是幫助了他,指揮車輛停下來讓作者穿過了馬路。
小題1:D。推理判斷題。根據(jù)文章首段中At last I got to the gate of Hide Park.可以推測(cè)作者去逛公園了,所以感覺非常疲憊,故答案選D。
小題2:B。細(xì)節(jié)理解題。從文章第一段中I was very tired and wanted nothing in the world so much as to be at home.可以判斷作者如此的疲憊以至于希望一直在家里呆著,而沒出來游玩,故答案選B。
小題3:B。詞義猜測(cè)題。根據(jù)對(duì)當(dāng)時(shí)情景的描述可知作者處在了川流不息的車流中,由此判斷作者是到了一個(gè)能避開車輛的地方,去找警察問路,故答案選B。
小題4:D。細(xì)節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)文章第二段he smiled and raised his hand. How wonderful! The traffic stopped.可以判斷警察讓車輛停止了下來,以便讓作者通過,故答案選D。
小題5:C。推理判斷題。根據(jù)文中出現(xiàn)的Hide Park(英國(guó)最大的皇家公園),可知作者在英國(guó)求學(xué),故答案選C。
練習(xí)冊(cè)系列答案
相關(guān)習(xí)題

科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

One of the world’s richest men has taken a close interest in one of man’s most basic functions:visiting the toilet.Bill Gates’s charitable organization,the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation,is looking for inventors to design the loo of the future,which,they hope,would improve sanitation for millions of people around the world.
So,what’s wrong with the traditional flush toilet?Firstly,it wastes a huge amount of potential drinking water.Secondly,they are more likely to cause pollution.This is a real problem in many areas of the developing world,where,according to United Nations estimates,unsafe sanitation causes half of all hospitalizations.Younger people are particularly at risk.Illnesses which cause diarrhea are responsible for the deaths of about 1.5 million children a year.Finally,standard lavatories simply aren’t practical in remote areas.
The challenge set by Bill Gates was to come up with a latrine which works without running water,electricity or aseptic tank.It also needed to operate for less than 5 cents.28 designs were displayed at the recent Reinvent the Toilet Fair,in Seattle,USA.Among them was one which turned human waste into electricity using microwaves,another which converted human waste into charcoal,and yet another which used urine for flushing.
But the winner was a solar­powered design which generated hydrogen gas and electricity. The team from the California Institute of Technology(CIT) picked up a prize of $100,000.
But clearly Bill Gates doesn’t feel he’s flushing money down the toilet.After the Seattle event he said,“We couldn’t be happier with the response we’ve gotten.” Gates has even pledged $370 million more to the future toilet project.They hope to field test more prototypes over the next three years.
小題1:Why is Bill Gates paying people to invent new toilets?
A.Because he wants to test people’s sense of creativity.
B.Because he wants to improve sanitation for many people.
C.Because he thinks the traditional ones are out of fashion.
D.Because he can’t design this kind of things himself.
小題2:Which of the following is NOT a problem with the traditional flush toilet?
A.They waste too much water.
B.They might cause diseases.
C.They are not always practical.
D.They are too complicated to use.
小題3:The underlined word “l(fā)atrine” in the third paragraph might have similar meanings to the word “________” in the text.
A.looB.sanitation
C.diarrheaD.prototype
小題4:The team from CIT won the prize because their design ________.
A.can change human waste into electricity
B.can turn human waste into charcoal
C.can produce power with solar energy
D.can use urine for flushing

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

A house of cards? Sounds unbelievable, doesn’t it? Not if the architect is 31-year-old Bryan Berg. He’s made a career out of building fantastic card houses, stadiums, capitols, castles — and the world’s tallest card tower. How does he do it?
Bryan’s structures are amazing because they are made entirely of perfectly balanced, freestanding playing cards. He never uses glue, tape, or anything else to hold the cards together. Nor does he fold the cards. He’s discovered another way to make a strong house of cards, using a trick from nature.
To make plants strong, nature builds them with cells that have tough walls. Rows and rows of these cells form a grid(格子) that helps leaves and stems keep their shape. Bees use the same kind of repeating pattern to create strong honeycombs, where they live and store honey. Bryan designs similar grids, using cards to create a repeating pattern of cells.
He begins with a single cell made by balancing four cards against one another to form a box. Then he repeats the cell over and over, expanding outward to form the grid, which makes a good foundation for a strong card structure. The larger the grid, the more weight it can carry. Sometimes Bryan uses several cards, instead of just one, to construct the cell walls, making the grid even stronger. The trick, he tells kids when he speaks in classrooms, is to place your cards as tightly together as possible when laying out your grid, making sure the cards are not leaning at all.
After building this solid base, Bryan lays cards across the top to make the floor for the next “story” of the building. He may add towers, columns, steeples, or domes. Using the principle of repeating cells, Bryan builds structures of amazing strength.
In the Cards
Not surprisingly, Bryan has always been interested in building things. Growing up on a “big, old farm” in rural Iowa, he had plenty of room to play. “We were in the middle of nowhere,” Bryan remembers, “with lots of space to do whatever we wanted. I was always making something, using things like sticks or bales of hay.”
Bryan’s grandfather taught him how to stack cards. Bryan’s two interests — building and card stacking — soon combined. But stacking in his family’s farmhouse was challenging. “Our old house had wood floors that weren’t all level,” he reports. “And they weren’t very firm. When people walked around, it was like ‘earthquake action.’ It was a challenge to build something that wouldn’t fall down immediately.”
Bryan constructed tower after tower; he went through a lot of trial and error before he built anything taller than himself. When he placed a few decks of cards on top of his grid, he discovered how strong it was. Bryan’s towers began to grow taller.
How Tall Is Too Tall?
Bryan’s first Guinness World Record for the world’s tallest card tower came in the spring of 1992, when he was in high school. Learning that the world record was 12 feet 10 inches, Bryan built a slim tower that topped out at 14 feet 6 inches. Done as a project for his geometry class, it took him 40 hours and 208 decks of cards. Since then he’s gone on to win world records for even taller buildings. His latest winner measured 25 feet 3.5 inches and used about 2,400 decks of cards. The building, which tapered to a high, narrow point, had 131 stories.
Why don’t these towers fall down? The key is in a good solid base, a repeating pattern of stories, and a tapering top. Bryan likes to point out how card buildings resemble real ones. They are built cell by cell, story by story. The separate parts make one strong whole. The heavier the building, the stronger and more stable it is. But the weight can’t all be at the top.
After spending so much time building something so cool, Bryan admits it’s sometimes painful to see his structures destroyed. But he compares his work to the building of a sandcastle or an ice sculpture.
“They wouldn’t be as special if they were permanent,” he points out. “My buildings are like snowdrifts, or clouds in the sky. They can’t last forever.
小題1:According to the article, which natural structure is a model for Bryan’s card structures?
A.A sand dune.B.A honeycomb.
C.A snowdrift.D.A thundercloud.
小題2:What was Bryan’s first world record?
A.The tallest card tower.B.The widest card dome.
C.The heaviest card house.D.The sturdiest card structure.
小題3:Bryan’s hobby is the result of combining which two boyhood interests?
A.Plant cells and honeycombs.
B.World records and geometry.
C.Building things and stacking cards.
D.Playing cards and designing houses.
小題4:Why was it a challenge for Bryan to build card structures in his family’s farmhouse?
A.The floors of the house were uneven.
B.The ceilings in the house were too low.
C.The floors of the house were slippery.
D.The windows in the house were windy.
小題5:In the underlined sentence, the word “tapered” means the top of the building was_________.
A.olderB.shinierC.strongerD.thinner

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:不詳 題型:完形填空

If you ask me when I became a mom, I can tell you that the day I became a mom was not the day my daughter was born, but seven years later when I did the best thing I could do for my daughter and myself. I     us from the home that wasn’t really a home at all.
That day, my daughter and I were sitting in our     home having a quiet dinner just as I had always wanted for her. We were talking about what she had done in school and suddenly her little hand     the full glass of milk by her plate. As I watched the white tablecloth and     painted white wall become dark brown, I looked at her small face. It was filled with     , knowing what the outcome of the event would have meant in her father’s     a week before. When I saw that look on her face and looked at the     running down the wall, I simply started     . I am sure she thought I was    , but then she must have realized that I was thinking, “It’s a good thing your     isn’t here!” She started laughing with me, and we laughed until we     . These were tears of joy and     and were the first of many tears that we cried together. That was the day we knew that we were going to be okay.
That was the day I really became a mom. I    that being a mom isn’t only going to ballet, and attending every school concert. It isn’t keeping a(n)     house and preparing perfect meals. It certainly isn’t       thatthings are always normal when they are not. For me, being a mom started when I could laugh over spilt milk.
小題1:
A.protectedB.removedC.separatedD.prevented
小題2:
A.newB.oldC.beautifulD.cold
小題3:
A.went overB.picked upC.took onD.knocked over
小題4:
A.firmlyB.carelesslyC.slowlyD.freshly
小題5:
A.pleasureB.fearC.painD.smile
小題6:
A.a(chǎn)bsenceB.patienceC.presenceD.a(chǎn)rrival
小題7:
A.jamB.juiceC.milkD.water
小題8:
A.laughingB.shoutingC.scoldingD.praying
小題9:
A.sadB.excitedC.sickD.crazy
小題10:
A.friendB.fatherC.grandmaD.brother
小題11:
A.criedB.faintedC.sleptD.stopped
小題12:
A.braveryB.horrorC.surpriseD.peace
小題13:
A.questionedB.discoveredC.wonderedD.remembered
小題14:
A.splendidB.messyC.spotlessD.lifeless
小題15:
A.describingB.pretendingC.creatingD.meaning

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Adrian’s “Amazing Race” started early when his parents realized that he, as a baby, couldn’t hear a thing, not even loud noises. In a special school for the hearing-impaired (聽覺受損的),he learned sign language and got to mix with other disabled children. However, the sight of all the disabled children communicating with one another upset his mother. She wanted him to lead a normal life. So after speaking to an advisor, she sent him to private classes where he learned to read lips and pronounce words.
Later on, Adrian’s parents decided to send him to a regular school. But the headmaster tried to prevent them from doing so, saying regular school couldn’t take care of a special needs students. His parents were determined to take the risk and push him hard to go through his work everyday because they wanted to prove that, given the opportunity, he could do anything. Adrian made the grade and got accepted. It was a big challenge. The pace(節(jié)奏)was faster so he had to sit at the front of the class and really pay attention to the teacher, which wasn’t always easy. But he stuck to it and did a lot of extra work after school.
The efforts made by Adrian and his parents paid off. Adrian graduated with good grades and got into a top high school. He also achieved a lot in life outside school. He developed a love for the outdoors and went to Nepal to climb mountains. He even entered the World Yacht Race 05/06--- being the first hearing-impaired Asian to do so.
But none of these achievements would have been possible without one of the most important lessons from his mother.” “If you believe in yourself and work hard, you can achieve great results.” She often said.
小題1:How did Adrian communicate with other children in the special school?
A.By speaking.B.By making loud noises.
C.By reading lipsD.By using sign language.
小題2:Adrian’s parents decided to send him to a regular school because          .
A.they wanted to prove the headmaster wrong
B.they wanted him to live a normal life
C.he wouldn’t mix with other disabled children
D.he wasn’t taken good care of in the special school
小題3:How did Adrian finally succeed in his study?
A.He did a lot of outdoor activities.
B.He was pushed hard to study every day.
C.He worked very hard both in and after class
D.He attended private classes after school.
小題4:Why is Adrian’s life described as an “Amazing Race”?
A.He did very well in his study
B.He succeeded in entering a regular school
C.He reached his goals in spite of his disability
D.He took part in the World Yacht Race 05/06

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Just two years before her 100th birthday, Sensei Keiko Fukuda has become the first woman to achieve a tenth-degree black belt --- the highest rank in the martial art and combat sport judo(柔道). Fukuda is now one of only four living people who’ve earned the tenth-degree (or dan) black belt. Throughout history, only sixteen people have ever achieved this honor.
Fukuda began practicing judo in 1935 and is the only surviving student of its founder, Kano Jiguro. Urged by her teacher, she learned English to help spread judo internationally.
During a time when getting married, building a family, and becoming a housewife was the standard, Fukuda went against tradition, opting out of marriage to pursue the martial art.
“All I did was judo ... this was my marriage,” Fukuda reflected tearfully to the San Francisco Chronicle. “This is when my life destiny was set. I just never imagined how long this road would be.”
She described the Jiguro’s school, known as the Kodokan, as “old-fashioned and sexist(性別歧視的) about belts and ranks”. In fact, an order that prevented women from achieving any higher than a fifth-degree black belt kept Fukuda at that level for thirty years. She was finally promoted to sixth dan in 1972 when a woman’s division was created.
Fukuda said she approached judo and her life with the intention to “be gentle, kind and beautiful, yet firm and strong, both mentally and physically”. Fukuda said this kind of beauty is decidedly not external (外部的). “ A kind soul is inner beauty,” she explained to the paper. “I believe this is true beauty … All my life this has been my dream.”
Dream realized, the 98-year-old Sensei Keiko Fukuda continues to teach judo three times a week at a woman’s judo.
小題1:It can be learned from the passage that ____________.
A.Fukuda achieved the tenth-degree black belt at 97.
B.four people earned the tenth-degree black belt in history.
C.nearly all of Kano Jiguro’s students were dead.
D.the Kodokan was founded in 1935.
小題2:The underlined part “opting out of” in the 3rd paragraph is closest in meaning to _________.
A.choosing or welcomingB.longing for or desiring
C.keeping out of or avoidingD.missing or having no chance of
小題3:Why did Fukuda remain at fifth-degree black belt for so long a time?
A.It was hard for her to improve her level.
B.She suffered from a foolish rule.
C.Her family life took up too much of her time.
D.She didn’t want to improve her level.
小題4:Which of the following is the main idea of the passage?
A.The only surviving student of Kano Jiguro remains single.
B.The tenth-degree black belt is the highest rank in judo.
C.Sensei Keiko Fukuda spreads judo throughout the world.
D.98-year-old woman becomes the first woman ever to earn judo’s highest-degree black belt.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Ashok Gadgil has spent the past three decades helping people in need—and he has no plans to stop .On May 2, Gadgil won the$100.000 Lemelson-MIT Award for Global Innovation. Each year,the honor is given to an inventor who has improved the lives of people in developing countries. Gadgil‘s inventions have helped more than 100 million people around the world.
Gadgil is a professor and physicist at the University of California. When he’s not teaching,he works to find solutions to global problems such as energy efficiency and water safety. “I chose to focus on problems where my knowledge of science could help,”he said
In the 1980s he came up with a program to make energy-efficient light bulbs more affordable for people in developing countries. Then in the 1990s,Gadgil designed his first life—saving invention,UV Waterworks .The device kills deadly disease —carrying germs(病菌)from drinking water. It costs just one cent to clean five liters of water .Gadgil was inspired to find an inexpensive solution to the clean water crisis after more than 10,000 people in his home country of India died from an outbreak of Bengal cholera,in 1993 The disease is spread through contaminated food and drinking water .So far,the invention has provided safe drinking water to more than five million people in poor areas.
As a professor,Gadgil encourages his students to stay positive about finding solutions to hard problems.“Be optimistic when you try a hard problem.”he says. “It’s when you solve a large problem that you can have a big impact on the world”
小題1:Gadgil was given Lemelson-MIT Award for___________.
A.his teaching experienceB.his new physical research
C.his vast knowledgeD.his helpful inventions
小題2:What call we learn about UV Waterworks?
A.It's Gadgil’s first inventionB.It’s used to clean water.
C.it was designed for his home countryD.It saved 10,000 people in total
小題3:The underlined word “contamninated”in Paragraph 3 means__________.
A.wastedB.consumedC.polluted D.canned
小題4:According to the last paragraph,Gadgil encourages his students__________.
A.to learn lessons from failures
B.to find problems in peaceful life
C.to make inventions to help poor people
D.to be confident when facing difficulties
小題5:Which of the following can best describe Gadgil?
A.Caring and optimistic.B.Independent and positive.
C.Powerful and strict.D.Responsible and sensitive.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

A mother from Colorado who doctors said had died while giving birth to her son, has said it is a Christmas miracle that both she and the boy are alive.
Tracey Hermanstorfer's heart stopped beating and her son Coltyn appeared lifeless after the Caesarean(剖腹產(chǎn)術(shù))section on Christmas Eve. However a few minutes after he was born, both began breathing again. Dr Stephanie Martin told Good Morning America she could not explain how the pair survived. Mrs Hermanstorfer and her husband Mike told the American television show that their baby was now healthy and that they were doing “good” following the drama at Colorado Springs Memorial Hospital.
The couple, who already had two children, had to go into the hospital seven weeks earlier than planned. Her husband, 37, said his wife was tired after receiving an epidural(硬腦膜外麻醉)during the labour(分娩)but after closing her eyes, she “wasn't waking up”.She stopped breathing and she is believed to have suffered a heart attack before her heart stopped beating entirely.
Dr Martin said she was called in and that the outlook was grim since in most situations like this,“despite the best efforts of the team”, the mother was often unable to be revived. In that case doctors then tried to focus on delivering the baby but when he was born he was “completely lifeless”.
Mr Hermanstorfer told the Associated Press news agency,“I had everything in the world taken from me, and in an hour and a half I had everything given to me.”
Dr Martin said she did not have a “great explanation” for why Mrs Hermanstorfer's heartbeat returned. “Somewhere between four and five minutes she had been without heart rate and had stopped breathing a minute or two prior to her heart stopping,” she said. The doctors were then able to bring the baby back to life, and the mother was alive after that.
Despite tests, she said doctors were still not sure about what had happened. However Mrs Hermanstorfer and her husband Mike have said they believed it was down to a miracle. She said:“I got a second chance in life.”
小題1:The story happened on________.
A.December, 24B.December, 25C.December, 31D.January, 1
小題2:What might have happened to Tracey Hermanstorfer just before her heart stopped beating?
A.She became unconscious.B.She took a nap.
C.She had a bad headache.D.She suffered a heart attack.
小題3:Which of the following is the correct order of what happened to Tracey Hermanstorfer?
a.suffering a heart attack
b.stopping heart beating entirely
c.stopping breathing
d.coming back to life
e.receiving an epidural
f.producing a baby
A.a(chǎn)cfdbe
B.fcadbe
C.eacbfd
D.eabcfd
小題4:What feelings did Mr Hermanstorfer experience during the incident?
A.Sad and delighted.B.Disappointed and depressed.
C.Sad and angry.D.Touched and regrettable.
小題5:Which of the following words best expresses Dr Martin's attitude towards Tracey Hermanstorfer's coming back to life?
A.Shocked.B.Puzzled.C.Normal.D.Curious.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

When Jean Calment entered the world in 1875, telephones and automobiles still lay in the future. Albert Einstein and Pablo Picasso were not yet born. The Eiffel Tower was 14 years from being built. As a teenager, she met Vincent Van Gogh, near her home in Arles, in the south of France. He was “very ugly, ungracious, impolite, sick—I forgive him, they called him loco.” She recalled. When she died last week at age 122, she was the world’s oldest person. (There were others who claimed to the title, but only Calment had the official documents to prove her age)
Each February 21, her birthday, she would share the secrets of long life. Some years it was “a sense of humor”, others it was “keeping busy”. “God may have forgotten me,” she once explained. The truth probably was that she had good genes. Her mother reportedly lived to be 86 and her father 94.
Her life had its sadness: she outlived her husband, her only daughter and her grandson. According to a friend, she was imperturbable. “If you can’t do anything about it,” she reportedly said, “don’t worry about it.”
In her last years she was nearly blind and deaf, but her health remained good. She ate a few bars of chocolate each week and continued smoking until a few years ago, when she could no longer light her own cigarettes. She never lost her sense of humor. On her 110th birthday, she commented, “I have only ever had one wrinkle, and I am sitting on it.” Her longevity made her famous. Her spirits made her eternal(永恒的)
小題1:Why does the author mention Albert Einstein, Pablo Picasso and the Eiffel Tower?
A.To show that Calment had seen famous people and things.
B.To emphasize that Calement was born a long time ago.
C.To indicate that Calement is just as famous.
D.To admire the knowledge that Calement had.
小題2:The author believes that Calment’s longevity is mainly due to _____.
A.a(chǎn) sense of humorB.being kept busyC.belief in GodD.good genes
小題3:The underlined word imperturbable means ______.
A.calmB.humorousC.friendlyD.healthy
小題4:Toward the end of the story, the author seems to be impressed by Calment’s _____.
A.a(chǎn)ttitudeB.religious beliefC.knowledgeD.lifestyle

查看答案和解析>>

同步練習(xí)冊(cè)答案