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Tony Burke, Australia’s environment minister, says he won’t decide until next year whether the koala should be protected as an endangered species. He was expected to make his decision by the end of October. But that decision has been put off. Burke said he needed more time to go over the latest information about the koala’s population.
In September, an Australian Senate committee reported that there was no question the koala’s population is on the decrease. “But they may not yet be eligible (符合条件) for listing as a threatened species,” said Senator Doug Cameron. “To have such a significant Australian icon(偶像) included on the threatened species list would be a national shame.”
The koala is found only in the eucalyptus (桉树) forests of Australia. And its population is reported to have fallen sharply for many reasons, including the cutting down of forests to make way for human beings’ development, their own illness, climate change and killings by other animals such as wild dogs. And every year many koalas are hit by cars as they are trying to cross the busy roads.
Putting off the decision on protection for the koala “is really bad news,” said Debbie Pointing, the president of the Koala Action Group. “We’ve worked tirelessly for many years to gather data on the populations,” Pointing said. “That data should be enough to make a decision.”
However, Burke pointed out that the Australian government had spent at least $6.3 million on koala conservation efforts since 1996. senators listed efforts that are already underway in Queensland – the construction of special koala bridges as well as fences along roads, to keep the animals out of harm’s way.
Some people say that is not enough. “What we’re doing at the moment is likely to drive this species to extinction,” Queensland University zoologist Bill Ellis said.
“Koalas are an iconic Australian animal,” Burke told Australians. “They hold a special place in the hearts of Australians.”
But it is a fact that if more isn’t done to protect the koala, they might soon hold a place only in Australians’ memories.
小题1:Tony Burke put off announcing the koala as an endangered species because        .
A.he needed more time to examine latest information
B.he doubted whether koalas’ number is decreasing
C.he was thinking about ways to protect koalas
D.he had more important issues to deal with
小题2:What is Paragraph 3 mainly about?
A.The habitat of the koala.
B.Australia’s traffic problems.
C.The importance of koalas for Australians.
D.Reasons for the decrease of the koala population.
小题3:According to the text, Debbie Pointing thinks that        .
A.the construction of special koala bridges is of little use
B.the government should announce the koala as an endangered species
C.the government is to blame for the decreasing koala population
D.koala are becoming less important in Australians’ hearts
小题4:It can be learned from the text that Tony Burke        .
A.decided to construct more fences along roads
B.called on Australians to take care of the koala
C.thought the government has done much for koalas
D.was optimistic about the koalas’ future
小题5:What is the main idea of the text?
A.Australia puts off the decision on whether the koala is endangered.
B.Australia is taking special measures to protect koalas.
C.The population of koalas is reducing rapidly.
D.Australians are concerned about koalas.

答案

小题1:A
小题2:D
小题3:B
小题4:C
小题5:A
解析
文章是关于澳大利亚推迟宣布考拉是濒危动物而引起的人们的讨论。
小题1:细节题。根据第一段最后一句Burke said he needed more time to go over the latest information about the koala’s population.
小题2:段落大意题。根据第三段内容以及第2行可知这一段是关于考拉数量下降的原因。
小题3:根据文章第4段内容可知Debbie认为他们给政府提供的数据足以让政府宣布考拉濒临灭绝。
小题4:推理题。根据文章倒数第4段可知Tony Burke认为政府已经做了很多。
小题5:主旨大意题。文章主要就是阐述Australia推迟宣布考拉是濒危动物,引起了人们的激烈讨论。
核心考点
试题【Tony Burke, Australia’s environment minister, says he won’t decide until next ye】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
“Big boys don’t cry.” I heard those words a lot   36  up in America in the late sixties and early seventies. In those days men were expected to be   37  and rugged and never shed a tear no matter what. Our   38  were all stone faced cowboys who were too   39  to cry. Believing this then I tried my best   40  to cry at all during my teenage and early adult years.
All that changed,   41 , as I was driving home alone one night shortly after my Mom   42 . It was dark and raining outside. I was struggling to   43  the car on the road while at the same time   44  to hold the tears back in my eyes. I remember almost going off the road twice as I blinked back (眨眼控制) the salty water that was burning my   45  and blurring (使模糊) my vision. My hands shook, my heart   46 , and my soul felt dead.   47  I could do it no longer. I stopped, pulled over, lay my head on the steering wheel, and   48 . I cried until the tears couldn’t fall anymore. I cried until the pain that I was holding onto so   49  finally fled my heart.
After that night I   50  something. Big boys do cry.   51 , it is the biggest hearts that cry the most. I realized too that it is our   52  that can release us from our anger and our grief while   53  us to our love and our God. Tears help us to embrace this often bittersweet life. They help us to keep growing   54  to each other in love and joy instead of   55  ourselves up in dull, aching, and lonely hearts.
小题1:
A.hurryingB.growingC.risingD.getting
小题2:
A.toughB.coldC.independentD.active
小题3:
A.leadersB.neighborsC.heroesD.fathers
小题4:
A.strictB.strongC.stubbornD.eager
小题5:
A.stillB.alwaysC.hardlyD.never
小题6:
A.otherwiseB.thereforeC.howeverD.instead
小题7:
A.leftB.diedC.returnedD.disappeared
小题8:
A.keepB.holdC.fixD.move
小题9:
A.hoppingB.learningC.managingD.struggling
小题10:
A.armsB.feetC.eyesD.hairs
小题11:
A.hurtB.sankC.frozeD.stopped
小题12:
A.ActuallyB.FinallyC.NaturallyD.Immediately
小题13:
A.fadedB.sleptC.restedD.cried
小题14:
A.secretlyB.carefullyC.stronglyD.firmly
小题15:
A.realizedB.pickedC.gainedD.lost
小题16:
A.At leastB.In factC.In allD.As usual
小题17:
A.loveB.sweatC.tearsD.relation
小题18:
A.helpingB.changingC.removingD.reconnecting
小题19:
A.closerB.higherC.richerD.shorter
小题20:
A.catchingB.shuttingC.pickingD.wrapping

题型:不详难度:| 查看答案
There is a very special wolf that lives in Africa. They are actually called, the African wild dog, of painted dogs.
These animals live in open woodlands, or in the plains of Africa. Today, however, most of the animals can be found in eastern or southern Africa. These animals are beautiful. They have rounded ears instead of pointed like most dogs, and they have four toes (脚趾) on each of their four feet, also a unique characteristic because other dogs have five. Their fine fur is always different from each other. The fur is usually a combination of black, brown, red, and white, and sometimes even yellow. No wonder they’re called the painted wolf.
The African wild dog is a very social animal. They live in groups and have numbers from five to about twenty. The members of a group are always very close to one another. They communicate in their own language or body language. When someone is very old or sick, the others will help, and they are willing to share the food with the elders and with those who are weak, which is what we should learn from.
The family does everything together, from raising young, to sleeping together, to hunting. When they hunt, they will work together suing team work to kill animals that are larger than them.
They sometimes hunt farm animals. This is unfortunate, because both poachers (偷猎者), and people who own farms shoot the painted dogs who are just trying to survive.
Before, there used to be many large groups throughout the land, but now the African wild god is very rare. They are also losing their population because of their own loss of habitat thanks to human’s farming and forest cutting.
小题1:From the text we learn that the African wild dog         .
A.lives in the north of Africa
B.has sixteen toes altogether
C.has pointed ears like most dogs
D.lives in forests in groups
小题2:Why do African wild dogs get the name “painted dogs”?
A.They all have colorful fur.
B.The dogs in the same group are of different colors.
C.Artists love to paint them in different colors.
D.None of them has the same color.
小题3:According to the author, what should we learn from African wild dogs?
A.They always do everything together.
B.They help the sick, the elderly and the weak.
C.They are always very close to one another.
D.They communicate in their own language.
小题4:Which of the following is NOT the reason why African wild dogs are becoming very rare?
A.Poachers kill some of them.
B.They are short of food sometimes.
C.They are losing their habitat.
D.Farmers shoot some of them.
小题5:Where could this passage probably be found?
A.The TravelersB.Fashion WeeklyC.Animal WorldD.Star Magazine

题型:不详难度:| 查看答案
Half a century after the March of Dimes (a US charity organization that collects money for children) put the 20th century’s most feared childhood disease on the road to eradication (根除), Bill Gates declared polio (小儿麻痹症) his important job and challenged world leaders to finish the job.
India, Nigeria, Pakistan and Afghanistan now have active transmission (传播) of the disease. Gates says the biggest problem with the success of the Global Polio Eradication program in those countries and elsewhere is lack of money.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation plans to increase its $200 million annual contribution (每年的捐款) by $102 million this year, Gates says. Gates recently met privately with Pakistan’s President in Washington, D.C., to try to persuade him to provide full support for Pakistan’s eradication plan.
Children in the USA also are at risk, experts say. Parents who don’t vaccinate (给某人接种疫苗) their children because they are fearful of vaccine side-effects create a large number of children who are likely to be harmed by the virus.
“If you increase the number of unvaccinated children, you increase the chance that this virus will find new subjects,” says David Oshinsky, Pulitzer Prized-winning author of Polio: An American Story.
“We’ve got to get this vaccine into the mouths of children,” says Bruce Aylward, head of the World Health Organization’s eradication program.
In 1988, when the World Health Organization launched the Global Polio Eradication program, the disease killed 350,000 children a year worldwide. By last year, the total dropped to fewer than 1,500 worldwide, Aylward says.
If Gates provides the final push for polio eradication, he may be remembered as much for helping prevent polio as for founding Microsoft, Oshinsky says.
“As long as there’s polio anywhere, people everywhere are at risk,” Aylawrd says. “We’re still not out of the woods.”
小题1:According to the text, the success of the Global Polio Eradication program mainly depends on          .
A.the World Health Organization’s policy
B.the development of a new vaccine
C.the local governments’ support
D.the collection of funds.
小题2:What do we know about polio according to the text?
A.People in Nigeria don’t take it seriously.
B.It’s now the most serious childhood disease.
C.Great progress has been made in preventing it.
D.There are few organizations helping to prevent it.
小题3:According to Oshinsky,           .
A.Gates should devote more time to Microsoft
B.polio eradication is a very important cause
C.vaccine side-effects should not be ignored
D.polio has been brought under control
小题4:According to the passage, which of the following about Bill Gates is TRUE?
A.He is the founder of the Global polio Eradication program.
B.He persuades some of the world leaders to support the eradication plan.
C.His foundation contributes $302, 000 to eradicate polio every year.
D.He works harder on preventing polio than founding Microsoft.
小题5:The underlined part “We’re still not out of the woods” means “       ”.
A.We get lost in the woodsB.We’re not free from trouble
C.we have no idea where to goD.We’re unable to eradicate polio

题型:不详难度:| 查看答案
Apple Inc co-founder and former CEO Steve Jobs, counted among the  greatest American CEOs of his generation, died on Wednesday at the age of 56,  after a years-long and highly public battle with cancer. Mourners gathered outside his house in Palo Alto, California, and Apple stores around the world.                         
Steve Jobs made technology fun. As tech leaders, they"re really happy if they have one hit in their life. Steve Jobs has the Apple II, the Mac, the iPod, the iPhone, the iPad and Pixar.
Steve Jobs was a college dropout. He was adopted by a machinist and his wife, an accountant. They supported his early interest in electronics. He and his friend Steve Wozniak started Apple Computer—now just called Apple—in 1976. They stayed at the company until 1985. That year, Steve Wozniak returned to college and Steve Jobs left in a dispute with the chief executive.
Mr. Jobs then formed his own company, called NeXT Computer. He rejoined Apple in 1997 after it bought NeXT, He helped remake Apple from a business that was in bad shape then to one of the most valuable companies in the world today. However, Steve Jobs stepped down as Apple"s chief executive in August, 2011 because of his health. He died a day after the company released a new iPhone version that met with limited excitement. Steve left behind a company that only he could have built, and his spirit will forever be the foundation of Apple.
President Obama said in a statement: by building one of the planet"s most successful companies from his garage, Steve Jobs showed the spirit of American ingenuity (独创性). By making computers personal and putting the Internet in our pockets, he made the information revolution not only accessible but intuitive (直觉的) and fun.
The fact that he was able to redesign American commerce top to bottom and across is really astonishing. He probably will be considered an industrial giant on the scale of Thomas Edison and Henry Ford, so one of the greatest of all time. Steve Jobs not only revolutionized technology, he also revolutionized American business. Steve Jobs was remembered as a " great visionary and leader" and a marketing genius.
小题1:What does the underlined word "dispute" in Paragraph 3 probably mean?
A.Discussion.B.Permission.C.Experiment.D.Argument.
小题2:According to Paragraph 2, the author wants to show that _____.
A.Steve Jobs made fun of modem inventions
B.Steve Jobs makes great contributions to the world
C.tech leaders will be happy when they have one hit in their life
D.Steve Jobs owns many companies in America
小题3:Which of the following statements about Steve Jobs is NOT TRUE?
A.Steve Jobs stepped down as Apple"s chief executive because of poor health.
B.Steve Jobs and his friend built a company called Apple Computer in 1976.
C.Steve Jobs was remembered as the founder of Apple and the Internet
D.President Obama spoke highly of Steve Jobs for his achievements.
小题4:How long did Steve Jobs work for Apple?
A.9 years.B.14 years.C.23 years.D.35 years
小题5:This passage is mainly about _____.
A.a brief introduction of Steve JobsB.the inventions of Steve Jobs
C.the childhood of Steve JobsD.the death of Steve Jobs

题型:不详难度:| 查看答案
Henry Ford was the first person to build cars which were cheap,strong and fast.He was able to se11 millions of models because he could produce them in large numbers at a time;that is,he made a great many cars of exactly the same kind. Ford’s father hoped that his son would become a farmer,but the young man did not like the idea and he went to Detroit(底特律)where he worked as a mechanic(机械师).By the age of 29,in 1892,he had built his first car.However,the car made in this way,the famous “Model T” did not appear until 1908-----five years after Ford had started his great motor car factory.This car showed to be so well-known that it remained unchanged for twenty years.Since Ford’s time,this way of producing cars in large numbers has become common in industry and has reduced the price of many goods which would otherwise be very expensive.
小题1:Henry Ford was the man to built _____ cars.
A.cheap and strongB.cheap and long
C.fast and expensiveD.strong and slow
小题2:Ford was able to sell millions of cars,because_____.
A.he made many great cars
B.his cars are many
C.he made lots of cars of the same kind
D.both A and B
小题3:The young man became a mechanic,_______.
A.which was his father’s will
B.which was against his own will
C.which was against his father’s will
D.which was the will of both
小题4:The “Model T” was very famous_____.
A.before 1908B.between 1982 and 1908
C.before 1892D.after 1908
小题5:Ford built his own car factory_____?
A.in 1903B.in 1908C.in 1913D.in 1897

题型:不详难度:| 查看答案
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