閱讀理解

  Travel across the globe with Wasabi Airlines’ new Watchman Digital Entertainment System! The Watchman is available to all first class passengers, offering hundreds of hours of entertainment that puts you in control.

  With the aid of digital technology, you get to choose from a library of 25 of the latest Hollywood movies, 45 hours of television’s best, and a host of Sony Play Station games, all presented in attractive digital quality.View your favorite selections on your own personal monitor.With your own remote control, you decide when your movie starts, pauses, rewinds, or fast forwards, not the flight attendants.

  Also, Watchman offers you 40 of the world’s hottest CDs.With Wasabi’s Watchman DES you can sit back, relax, and forget you’re on an airplane.

(1)

Who is this ad meant for?

[  ]

A.

Teenagers.

B.

Airline travelers.

C.

Airplane repairmen.

D.

Adults.

(2)

Which of the following statements is true?

[  ]

A.

You can enjoy hundreds of hours of CDs during the travel.

B.

The Wasabi’s Watchman DES is controlled by the flight attendants on the airplane.

C.

You can have fun by means of three amusing ways.

D.

The purpose of the passage is to introduce the Wasabi’s Watchman DES to passengers.

答案:1.B;2.D;
解析:

(1)

根據(jù)短文第一段“The Watchman is available to all firstclass passengers”可知,此廣告是為乘坐的旅客所寫。

(2)

根據(jù)文章第二段中用了大量的篇幅向乘客介紹各種可以實(shí)現(xiàn)娛樂的方式,這種“娛樂器”可以將所有的功能盡收其中,所以顯然是賣產(chǎn)品。


練習(xí)冊系列答案
相關(guān)習(xí)題

科目:高中英語 來源:2006年普通高等學(xué)校招生全國統(tǒng)一考試、英語(全國2) 題型:050

閱讀理解

  “Who made your T-shirt?” A Geo etown University student raised that questionPietra Rivoli, a professor of business, wanted to fin the answerA few weeks later, she bought a T-shirt and began to follow its path from Texas cotton form to Chinese factory to charity bin(慈善捐贈(zèng)箱)The result is an interesting new book, The Tra ’s of a T-shirt in the Global Economy(經(jīng)濟(jì))

  Following a T-shirt around the world in a way to make her point more interesting, but it also frees Rivoli from the usual arguments over gobal tradeShe goes wherever the T-shirt goes, and there are surprises around every cornerIn China, Rivoli shows why a clothing factory, even with its poor conditions, means a step toward a better e for the people who work thereIn the colorful used-clothing markets of Tanzania, she realizes, th “it is only in this final stage of life that the T-shirt will meet a real market,” where the price of a shirt changes by the hour and is different by its size and even colorRivoli’s book is full of mem able people and scenes, like the noise, the bad air and the “muddy-sweet smell(泥土香味)of the cotton”She says, “Here in the factory, Shanghai smells like Shallowater Texas

  Rivoli is at her best when making those sorts of unexpected connectionsShe even finds one between the free traders and those who are against globalizationThe chances opened up by trade are vast, she argues, but free markets need the correcting force of politics to keep them in checkTrue economic progress needs them both

(1)

What do we learn about Professor Rivoli?

[  ]

A.

She used to work on a cotton farm

B.

She wrote a book about world trade

C.

She wants to give up her teaching job

D.

She wears a T-shirt wherever she goes

(2)

By saying T-shirt “meet a real market”, Rivoli means in Tanzania ________

[  ]

A.

cheaper T-shirt are needed

B.

used T-shirt are hard to sell

C.

prices of T-shirt rise and fall frequently

D.

prices of T-shirt are usually reasonable

(3)

What does the word “them” underlined in the last paragraph refer to?

[  ]

A.

Free-markets

B.

Price changes

C.

Unexpected connection

D.

chances opened up by trade

(4)

What would be the best title for the text?

[  ]

A.

What T-shirt Can Do to Help Cotton Farms

B.

How T-shirt Are Made in Shanghai

C.

How T-shirt Are Sold in Tanzania

D.

What T-shirt Can Teach Us

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:山東省諸城一中2012屆高三下學(xué)期階段測試英語試題 題型:050

閱讀理解

  Most American students go to traditional public schools.There are about 88,000 pub-lic schools all over the US.Some students attend about 3000 independent public schools called charter schools.

  Charter schools are self-governing.Private companies operate some charter schools.They are similar in some ways to traditional public schools.They receive tax money just as other public schools do.Charter schools must prove to local or state governments that their students are learning.These governments provide the schools with the agreement called a charter that permits them to operate.

  Charter schools are different because they do not have to obey most laws governing tra-ditional public schools.Local, state or federal governments cannot tell them what to teach.Each school can choose its own goals and decide the ways it wants to reach them.Class size is usually smaller than in traditional public schools.

  The Bush Administration strongly supports charter schools as a way to re-organize pub-lic schools that are failing to educate students.But some education agencies and unions op-pose charter schools.One teachers' union has just made public the results of the first nation-al study comparing the progress of students in traditional schools and charter schools.

  The American Federation of Teachers criticized the government's delay in releasing the results of the study, which is called the National Assessment of Educational Progress.U-math education experts say the study shows that charter school students performed worse on math and reading tests the students in regular public schools.

  Some experts say the students is not a fair look at charter schools.because students in those schools have more problems than students in teaditional schools.Other education experts say the study results should make charter school officials demand improved student progress.

(1)

If a private company wants to operate a charter schools, it must ________.

[  ]

A.

try new methods of teaching

B.

prove its management ability

C.

obey the local and state laws

D.

get the government's permission

(2)

Charter schools are independent because ________.

[  ]

A.

they make greater progress

B.

their class size is smaller

C.

they enjoy more freedom

D.

they oppose traditional ways

(3)

What's the government's attiude toward charter schools?

[  ]

A.

Doubtful.

B.

Supportive.

C.

Subjective.

D.

Optimistic.

(4)

What can we learn from the text?

[  ]

A.

More students choose to attend charter schools.

B.

Charter schools are better than traditional schools

C.

Students in charter schools are well educated.

D.

People have different opinions about charter schools.

(5)

It can be inferred from the text that ________.

[  ]

A.

charter schools are part of the public education system

B.

one-on-one attention should be paid to students

C.

the number of charter schools will be limited

D.

charter schools are all privately financed

查看答案和解析>>

同步練習(xí)冊答案