In the north of Scotland there is a lake called Loch Ness. It is the biggest lake in Britain. It is over thirty kilometres long and in places nearly 300 meters deep. It is cold and dark and not many people went there until after 1930. Then a road was made around the lake. Holiday makers began to use the road, and this was when the stories began.
Someone said that he had seen a monster in the lake. He said it was twelve meters long. It had a long neck and a small head. Then someone else said he had seen it. Others said the same thing and in 1933 a London doctor took a photo. It looked like a monster with a long neck and a thick body but the photo was not dear. The newspapers printed the picture and called it the Loch Ness monster, or "Nessie".
Then the argument began. Some people, however, were certain there was something living in the lake. Others said there was nothing there.
In 1961, a lot of people joined together to make a real effort to see and photograph the monster if there was one! Several times people thought they saw something but after ten years there was still no real proof.
Later underwater television cameras were used, but no one found any real proof. However, they did find something interesting: a huge underwater cave. It was big enough to be home of a monster, but of course, this was not a proof.
In 1975, however, some American scientists formed a search group. They used an underwater camera. It took pictures every seventy seconds. Some of the pictures seemed to show a red-brown creature. Its body was about four meters long and had a very ugly head on the end of a four meter neck. Many people then began to believe in the monster. But even today we can not be certain.
【小題1】Before 1930, ____.
A.few people went to Loch Ness Lake |
B.many people had been there |
C.nobody went to the lake |
D.nobody knew about the lake |
A.It looked like a horse. |
B.It was a creature with a long neck and a small head. |
C.It looked beautiful. |
D.It was tiny and pretty. |
A.An American |
B.A television camera |
C.A holiday-maker |
D.A doctor from London |
A.found the monster itself |
B.found a huge cave under water |
C.believed that there wasn't any monster at all |
D.took some pictures which seemed to show a monster |
【小題1】A
【小題2】B
【小題3】D
【小題4】D
解析試題分析: 在蘇格蘭北部有一個深湖叫做尼斯湖。它是200多米深,它是最深的湖在聯(lián)合王國。人們說一個巨大的怪物(妖怪)生活在黑暗、寒冷的水。但只有少數(shù)幾個人說,他們看到它。
【小題1】A 細節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)第一段提到It is cold and dark and not many people went there until after 1930.1930年之前很少有人去那,故選A項。
【小題2】B 細節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)第二段提到He said it was twelve meters long. It had a long neck and a small head. Then someone else said he had seen it.Others said the same thing and in 1933 a London doctor took a photo. It looked like a monster with a long neck and a thick body but the photo was not dear.可知長脖子,小腦袋的生物,故選B項。
【小題3】D 細節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)第二段提到Others said the same thing and in 1933 a London doctor took a photo. It looked like a monster with a long neck and a thick body but the photo was not dear.這位醫(yī)生照相的,給這個水怪,故選D項。
【小題4】D 細節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)最后一段提到In 1975, however, some American scientists formed a search group. They used an underwater camera. It took pictures every seventy seconds.他們組成一個搜尋小隊,用水下相機,給水怪照相,故選D項。
考點:科普類閱讀。
科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Even when you’re extremely busy, you aren’t using your time with 100% efficiency. There are gaps in everyone’s schedule where they aren’t doing anything important. Even if your schedule has no gaps, there is probably lots of time where you aren’t working as fast or as effectively as you possibly could.
Why aren’t you completely efficient? It’s because time isn’t the limiting factor. If it were the limiting factor, people could work non-stop without breaks or any unproductive distractions(消遣). Instead, people, even those who are highly productive, need to take breaks, occasionally procrastinate(拖延) and slow down on tasks throughout the day.
The real and most important limiting factor for productivity is your energy levels to pay attention. Energy levels limit your productivity because when you’re tired, you can have ample time and still not get everything done. Your attention ability is also limited, because even if there are a million things that need to be done, you can only focus on one or two at a time.
You might not be able to insert another 4-5 hours into your schedule without making some sacrifices. But even extremely busy people can add an hour or two into their schedule without cancelling anything. The reason it’s hard to “find time” isn’t a lack of time. It’s because you don’t have enough energy left to focus on something else that needs to fit into your day.
I first suspected time wasn’t the real problem during an extremely busy period in my life over a year ago. I was insanely (發(fā)瘋地)busy, but at that time I still exercised regularly. I had daily to-do lists with over twenty items, and I still found time to exercise. However, after a few weeks off, due to illness, I stopped exercising. I was not busy by any standards, in fact, my schedule was incredibly light. Despite this free time, I found it hard to find time to exercise. It seemed to get pushed later and later into my schedule until it was gone. How can I explain this odd experience? I believe you have known it.
【小題1】If someone can’t work with 100% efficiency, the most important limiting factor is ________.
A.a(chǎn) schedule without gaps | B.breaks and distractions |
C.the limited time | D.the limited energy |
A.work without any rest | B.focus on many things at a time |
C.find some more time in a day | D.do some exercise regularly |
A.He had a longer daily to-do lists with over twenty items. |
B.He stopped doing exercise because of the lack of energy. |
C.He found it hard to find time to exercise because he was busier. |
D.He pushed most of the things later and later in his schedule. |
A.prove what the real limiting factor is |
B.show us how busily he needs to work |
C.explain how important a healthy body is |
D.tell us what an odd experience he has |
A.Are You Really Lack of Time? | B.How Can You Work Efficiently? |
C.What Makes Your Energy Limited? | D.When Should You Do Exercise? |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:完型填空
A successful scientist is generally a good observer. He makes full 36 of the facts he observes. He doesn’t accept ideas which are not 37 on obvious facts, and therefore refuses to accept authority as the only 38 for truth. He always 39 ideas carefully and makes experiments to prove them.
The rise of 40 science may perhaps be considered to 41 as far back as the 42 of Roger Bacon, the wonderful philosopher of Oxford, who live 43 the years 1214 and 1292. He was probably the first in the Middle 44 to suggest that we must learn science 45 observing and experimenting on the things around us, and he himself 46 many important discoveries.
Galileo, however, who lived more than 300 years later (1564-1642), was the greatest of several great men, 47 in Italy, France, Germany, or England, began by 48 to show how many important 49 could be discovered by observation. Before Galileo, learned men believed that large bodies fell more 50 towards the earth than small ones, 51 Aristotle said so. But Galileo, going to the 52 of the leaning Tower of Pisa, let fall two 53 stones and proved Aristotle was wrong. It was Galileo’s 54 of going direct to Nature, and proving our 55 and theories by experiment, that has led to all the discoveries of modern science.
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Google is testing its newest high-tech device, Google Glass. Most of the technologies for Google Glass are already available on smart phones. Google has taken those same technologies and added them to eyeglass frames(眼鏡架). The company describes the glasses as wearable computers that would change the way people view others and the world.
"Google Glass is a tiny computer that sits in a lightweight frame, and rests neatly above your eye and it makes exploring and sharing the world around you a lot easier,” said Chris Dale, the Senior Manager of Communications for Google Glass.
The glasses have a tiny video screen and a camera that connect wirelessly to the Internet through WIFI, a smartphone, or a tablet computer. You can make and receive calls, send and receive texts, take pictures, record video or search the web. You control Google Glass using your voice, and a touchpad on the right arm of the frame.
Professor Marcia Dawkins is among a select group of people who have been given a chance to test out Google Glass. "I thought this is something I definitely need for my classroom and hopefully for my personal life too."
The Professor's Google Glass looks like a pair bright orange glasses, without the actual glass. But there's a tiny rectangular(長方形的)glass at the top right-hand corner. Through that glass, she has been recording video while biking. She also has been able to talk to her sister in Thailand, and she plans to use the device to teach a public speaking class.
But not everyone is excited about Google Glass. Some are concerned about possible risks to privacy.
John Simpson is the director of the privacy project at Consumer Watchdog.
"It is going to allow people to come in and spy on you and record that, without you knowing what is going on."
Filmmaker Chris Barrett showed just how easy it is to record people without them knowing it. His glass captured(捕捉)a man getting arrested after a fight. He shared the video on You Tube.
Also some are concerned about the use of facial recognition(面部識別)technology on Google Glass. But Google says it will not approve the use of such applications. The Internet company says it is still testing its new device, and it hopes to make Google Glass available to the public by early next year.
【小題1】The technologies Google has made use of for Google Glass are______.
A.completely new |
B.mostly already in use for smartphones |
C.high-tech but out-of-date |
D.a(chǎn)ll old |
A.It’s a very small computer. |
B.It’s very light in weight. |
C.Everyone can buy it now. |
D.It can be used for teaching by school teachers. |
A.record video and chat | B.send emails |
C.teach a class | D.spy on others |
A.Google has done what it can to protect people’s privacy. |
B.Google Glass may be used for bad purposes. |
C.Most people feel worried about the use of the Glass. |
D.Google Glass is more useful than smartphones. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
People in several American states may be surprised to see cars on city streets without a driver. Experimental driverless vehicles now are legal in Florida, Nevada and California. They are pointing the way to a future that is not far down the road. The high-tech company Google has a number of self-driving cars, which had covered 480,000 kilometers by August. Volvo is among the companies doing road tests and says it plans to sell driverless cars by 2020.
In September, California Governor Jerry Brown signed an act to allow autonomous vehicles on the roads of his state. “Today we’re looking at science fiction becoming tomorrow’s reality—the driverless car.” The technology for these cars includes cameras, radar and motion sensors. The systems have been improved through competitions sponsored by the US government agency DARPA. Engineer Richard Mason of the Rand Corporation helped design driverless vehicles for DARPA challenge races.
“Cars have become much more fuel-efficient, and new electronic features are making Hondas safer,” said Angie Nucci of Honda America. “A camera on the passenger-side mirror actually engaged on your guiding screen so you can safely change lanes.” Other safety features include warning systems on the front and the sides of the cars. These systems help drivers, but don’t replace them. Curator Leslie Kendall of the Petersen Automotive Museum said autonomous cars will make the high ways safer.
“By taking out drivers, you also remove most risks of an accident,” Kendall said. He said consumers, however, may be unwilling to lose control. “It may take them time to come to realize that the technology is indeed reliable, but it will have to prove itself first.”
Mason said the technology already works and the biggest challenge now is getting down the cost for driverless vehicles from hundreds of thousands of dollars to something more affordable. He said this will happen as the technology is improved.
【小題1】What can we learn from Paragraph l?
A. Volvo will be the first to sell driverless cars.
B. Driverless cars are pointing us a faraway future.
C. Driverless vehicles are now legal in the whole USA.
D. Google’s self-driving cars have covered a long distance.
【小題2】We learn that Governor of California Jerry Brown_________.
A.helped design self-driving cars |
B.supports self-driving cars on roads |
C.considers self-driving cars science fiction |
D.improved the self-driving car systems |
A.They are not allowed to run on the road. |
B.Their technical problems remain to be solved. |
C.They are now too expensive for consumers. |
D.They are more dangerous for people on the street. |
A.The Benefits of the Self-driving Cars |
B.The Biggest Challenge of the Self-driving Cars |
C.Safer or More Dangerous Self-driving Cars |
D.Self-driving Cars—Science Fiction Future Is Near |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
The size and location of the world’s deserts are always changing. Over millions of years, as climates change and mountains rise, new dry and wet areas appear. But within the last hundred years deserts have been increasing after frightful speed. This is partly because of natural changes, but most responsible for creating deserts are men.
Man can make deserts, but they can also prevent them from getting bigger. Algeria is planning a green belt of trees along the edge of the Sahara Desert to stop the sand. In China, too, windbreaks are being built in the northwest to keep the desert from growing.
But desert still threaten the world. Experts believe that land that is on the way to becoming deserts equals the size of Australia, Russia and US put together. Can we stop the spread of the world’s deserts and save the land that is so essential to mankind? Yes, we can, And we must.
【小題1】The reason for the land that turns into deserts is mostly because of _______
A.the changing of the climates | B.man |
C.the natural changes | D.the wind |
A.trees planted as a belt to stop the wind |
B.high walls as a belt to stop the wind |
C.long and deep ditch as a belt to stop the wind |
D.men stood side by side as a belt to stop the wind |
A.of increasing at an unbelievable speed |
B.of spreading in Australia , Russia, and the US |
C.of appearing new dry and wet areas in every part of the world |
D.that they cause the changes of the climates |
A.People move away from the land that is on the way to become deserts |
B.To build great walls to stop the wind and sand |
C.To plant trees and grass on the surface of the land |
D.To irrigate the desert |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Europe is now the biggest market for organic food in the world, having grown by 25 percent a year over the past 10 years. Denmark’s agriculture minister is herself an organic farmer. The UK market for organic food grew by 55 percent in 2000, while the food market as a whole grew by only one percent. Yet only seven percent of British shoppers account for nearly 60 percent of organic sales. However popular the idea of organic farming may be, it is still an interest for only a few people.
So what makes the idea of organic farming popular? Organic farming means farming with natural materials, rather than with man-made fertilizers or pesticides(殺蟲劑). Organic farmers rely on many methods — such as crop rotation (農(nóng)作物的輪作) and the use of resistant(有抵抗力的)varieties, because they are necessary for organic farmers to compensate for the shortage of man-made chemicals.
Organic farming is often supposed to be safer than traditional farming for the environment. Yet after a long research on organic farming worldwide for a number of years, science continues to be against this opinion. The House of Commons committee on agriculture stated that, even with complete research work, it would fail to find any scientific evidence to prove “that any of claims made for organic farming is always true”.
However, the talk about the benefits of organic farming is going on. This is partly because many people depend on their individual farm, the soil, the weather, and so on.
【小題1】The first paragraph mainly tells us _________.
A.organic farming has been performed only in Europe over the past 10 years. |
B.governments of European countries have cared less about organic farming. |
C.organic farming isn’t so popular as expected. |
D.European countries need organic food more than the other countries in the world. |
A.a(chǎn)rgue for | B.care for |
C.make up for | D.pay for |
A.It refers to farming with natural materials, instead of chemical fertilizers. |
B.It refers to farming with chemical fertilizers rather than natural fertilizers. |
C.It refers to farming with soil rather than any other thing. |
D.It refers to growing crops with man-made fertilizers and pesticides. |
A.organic farming is safer than traditional farming for the environment. |
B.the idea that organic farming is safer has not been proven by science. |
C.organic farming is accepted by the UK’s House of Commons committee. |
D.organic farming is preferred to traditional farming. |
A.The UK’s agriculture minister is an organic farmer. |
B.Organic farming is popular with young people. |
C.Farmers try every means to improve the organic sales system. |
D.Ninety-three percent of British shoppers don’t buy organic products. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
All of us eat every day, but most of us don’t understand nutrition(營養(yǎng)). How much do you know about good nutrition? Are the following statements true or false?
1. People who don’t eat meat can stay healthy.
True. As long as people eat enough milk, eggs and meat alternates(替代物), they can get enough protein.
2. Fresh vegetables cooked at home are always more nutritious than canned vegetables.
False. The difference depends more on how vegetables are prepared than whether they are fresh or canned. Vegetables cooked in too much water can lose a large quantity of vitamins.
3. Food eaten between meals can be just as good for health as food eaten at regular meals.
True. Nutritional value depends on what types of food you eat, not when you eat them. Eating an egg or an orange between meals can contribute to a good diet.
4. Taking extra vitamins beyond the recommended daily allowances won’t give you more energy.
True. It’s widely believed that extra vitamins provide more energy. But taking more than the baby needs doesn’t make it function better, just as overfilling your gas tank doesn’t make your car run better.
5. Natural vitamins are better supplements(補充)for the diet than synthetic vitamins.
False. There is no difference. A vitamin has the same properties(性質(zhì))and specific chemical structure whether made in a laboratory or taken from plant or animal parts.
6. Older people need the same amount of vitamins as younger people.
True. Older people need the same quantity of vitamins as younger people although they need fewer calories. Certain illnesses raise the requirements for some vitamins, but that is true for the young as well as the old.
7. Food grown in poor soil is lower in vitamins than food grown in rich sold.
False. The vitamins in our foods are made by the plants themselves. They don’t come from the soil.
However, the minerals in a plant depend on the minerals in the soil.
If you have answered these questions correctly, you can say you know much about food and nutrition by today’s standards. But remember that nutrition is a growing science and that may be aged as new information is obtained.
【小題1】The main purpose of the passage is to .
A.list today’s standards of some food and nutrition |
B.introduce what should be eaten and what not |
C.explain what is helpful to your health and what is not |
D.test our nutrition IQ by judging the problems listed |
A.help to bring about | B.take the place of |
C.make room for | D.turn to |
A.不同的 | B.特別的 |
C.合成的 | D.天然的 |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
We sometimes think global warming or climate change is a problem very far away from our lives, and that only the government needs to worry about it. But it's hardly possible to completely stay out of it scientists are now 95 percent sure that humans have been the “dominant cause” of global warming trends since the 1950s.
One of the conclusions of a report released on Sept 27 by the United Nations says that human activities have caused global temperatures to rise by 0.89 0C between 1901 and 2012. That might not seem like a lot, but the truth is that a major part of that heat has been absorbed into the oceans, which is not surprising given that they cover two thirds of Earth's surface. Also, water has a much greater capacity (容量) to absorb heat than the air does, according to The Economist.
While many greenhouse gases occur naturally and are needed to keep the Earth warm enough to support life, humans' use of fossil fuels is the main source of excess (多余的) greenhouse gases. According to CNN, by driving cars, using electricity produced by burning coal and oil or heating our homes with coal or natural gas, we release a large amount of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
Your body can barely feel a difference of 0.89 0C, but the Earth's ecosystems are so sensitive that even small changes can disturb them. It often starts with the smallest creatures at the bottom of the food chain, eventually affecting bigger animals, many of which could end up becoming extinct.
Global warming is also linked to an increase in extreme weather. A larger amount of carbon dioxide traps more energy inside the atmosphere. This changes the patterns of storms and rainfall in many regions and can lead to droughts and floods. Worse still, melting sea ice in warmer oceans is causing sea levels to rise at a speed of more than three millimeters per year, according to The Guardian, which also increases the risk of flooding.
“The report should serve as another wakeup call that our activities today have a profound impact on society, not only for us, but for many generations to come,” French Michel Jarraud, secretarygeneral of the World Meteorological Organization, said at a news conference.
【小題1】The underlined word “dominant” in the first paragraph means “ ________”.
A.common | B.indirect |
C.secondary | D.leading |
A.Greenhouse gases have been proven to harm merely the Earth . |
B.There is little we can do to prevent global warming. |
C.Global warming can increase the chances of droughts and floods. |
D.The hugeness of oceans makes them better absorbers of heat than the air. |
A.is more harmful to smaller creatures than bigger ones |
B.is not serious because most of the extra heat has been absorbed by the oceans |
C.has made the Earth's ecosystems more sensitive to changes |
D.is likely to cause many species to become extinct |
A.Negative. | B.Supportive. |
C.Doubtful. | D.Uninterested. |
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