题目
题型:不详难度:来源:
Humor is often the best way to keep a small misunderstanding from escalating into a big deal. Recently a neighbor of mine had a squabble with his wife as she drove him to the airport. Airborne, he felt miserable, and he knew she did, too. Two hours after she returned home, she received a long-distance phone call. “Person-to-person for Mrs. I. A. Pologize,” intoned the operator. “That’s spelled ‘P’ as in…” In a twinkling, the whole day changed from grim to lovely at both ends of the wire.
An English hostess with a quick wit was giving a formal dinner for eight distinguished guests whom she hoped to enlist in a major charity drive. Austerity(节俭)was a fashion in England at the time, and she had asked her children to serve the meal. She knew that anything could happen—and it did, just as her son, with the studied concentration of a tightrope walker, brought in a large roast turkey. He successfully elbowed the swinging dining-room door, but the backswing threw the bird onto the dining-room floor.
The boy stood rooted: guests stared at their plates. Moving only her head the hostess smiled at her son,” No harm, Daniel,” she said. “Just pick him up and take him back to the kitchen”… she enunciated clearly so he would think about what she was saying… “and bring in the other one.”
A wink and a one-liner instantly changed the dinner from a red-faced embarrassment to a conspiracy of fun.
小题1:What is the main idea of the passage?
A.Humor is the key to success in our work and our lives. |
B.Humor enables us to cope with difficult situation effectively. |
C.Humor is the only best way to criticize someone without losing his face. |
D.Humor makes fun of any difficult situations. |
A.Comedians on TV are believed to have done a lot in making people more tolerant of racial and religious differences. |
B.To make up differences, humor is a most acceptable as well as a most effective means. |
C.People often turn to humorous ways when meeting with difficult situations because of its effectiveness. |
D.Only by adopting the means of humor can one succeed in some jobs. |
A.the son had to cook another turkey for the guests |
B.she already had made more than one turkey ready for the dinner |
C.some other dish would be served instead of a turkey |
D.the son could serve the same turkey after it was cleaned |
答案
小题1:B
小题2:C
小题3:D
解析
小题1:推断题。根据文章第一行Humor is a most effective, yet frequently neglected, means of handling the difficult situations in our lives.
小题2:细节题。文章并没有提及C。ABD文章都提到了。
小题3:推理题。根据上下文可知实际上家里指有一致火鸡,那么从厨房里拿出的还是那只。故D正确。
核心考点
试题【Humor is a most effective, yet frequently neglected, means of handling the diffi】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
Hazel has been studying volcanoes for a long time, so it’s not surprising she is used to the danger. Her interest in volcanoes began at school. A teacher gave her a book about Pompeii. “I remember reading about the eruption of Vesuvius and the destruction of the city,” she explains. “The thought of all those people just frozen in time had quite an effect on me and I am still excited by their dangerous beauty today.”
Nowadays, volcanoes are getting more and more unpredictable. There have been many changes in sea level caused by global warming and melting ice caps. These have resulted in some dormant volcanoes erupting, so studying them is more dangerous than ever before. Hazel says that although she doesn’t take any unnecessary risk she has had some frightening moments. Her worst experience was on the slopes of Mount Etna in Sicily, when she was slowly surrounded by lava. “I had a choice of walking ten hours to get around the lava flow or just walking across it,” she explains. She chose to pick a path across the cooler rocks in the lava stream. “I guess it was five metres. The flow was 1,000°C, so if you hesitated your boots would begin to melt. It was scary, but it really was a practical decision --- there wasn"t time to do anything else.”
And what about the future? “I haven’t been to the volcanoes in Indonesia yet. And I would love to spend some time working in the Antarctic,” she says. “I would also like to know why quiet lava flows erupt from some volcanoes and why other volcanoes go bang.” In other words, Hazel Rymer won’t be exchanging her volcanoes for the relative safety of driving to work just yet.
小题1:Hazel’s claim that “driving to work is more risky” than exploring volcanoes shows that ______.
A.people have exaggerated the dangers of volcanoes in the past |
B.Hazel does not really understand the dangerous situations she puts herself in. |
C.there are many bad drivers in the place where Hazel lives |
D.Hazel is being modest and understating the dangers she faces |
A.When she was visiting Italy. |
B.When she was at school. |
C.When she was twenty. |
D.When she saw Vesuvius. |
A.melting ice-caps | B.volcanic eruptions |
C.changes in sea level | D.higher temperatures |
A.take a dangerous route |
B.take an unnecessary risk |
C.leave her boots behind |
D.walk for ten hours around the mountain |
A.revisit volcanoes she knows |
B.go on holiday to the Antarctic |
C.find a less dangerous job |
D.discover new things about volcanoes |
The good doctor had some 38 theories on planting trees. He believed in “No pains, no gains”. He never 39 his new trees, which was 40 many people. Once I asked why. He 41 that watering plants spoiled them, and that if you water them, each following tree generation will 42 weaker and weaker. So you have to make things 43 for them. He talked about how watering trees 44 shallow roots, and how trees that weren’t watered had to grow deep roots in 45 of water. I came to understand that he meant deep roots were to be 46 . I planted a couple of trees a few years back and I took good care of them. Two years of 47 has resulted in trees that expect to be waited on hand and foot. Whenever a cold wind blows, they 48 and tremble their branches. Funny things about those trees of Dr. Gibbs’. The lack of water seemed to 49 them in ways comfort and ease never could.
I used to 50 for my sons that their lives will be easy. But 51 I’ve been thinking that it’s time to 52 my prayer. I know my children are going to meet 53 , and I’m praying they will be strong. The prayer for comfort is seldom met. What we need to do is to pray for deep roots, 54 when the winds blow, we won’t be 55 away.
小题1: |
|
小题2: |
|
小题3: |
|
小题4: |
|
小题5: |
|
小题6: |
|
小题7: |
|
小题8: |
|
小题9: |
|
小题10: |
|
小题11: |
|
小题12: |
|
小题13: |
|
小题14: |
|
小题15: |
|
小题16: |
|
小题17: |
|
小题18: |
|
小题19: |
|
小题20: |
|
The 12-year-old Knight developed a safety mechanism that made it impossible for a shuttle to leave the loom. The design was so effective, soon virtually every new power loom carried her invention, saving countless workers from injury or death. Being so young, she didn’t bother to patent the device, so she never received payment.
Knight wouldn’t make the same mistake later in life when she invented a machine that could produce flat-bottomed paper bags. Knight had built a small wooden model in her home, but she needed a metal version to show it could hold up to the stress of mass production. So she hired Charles Annan to make the full-sized machine for her, only to have him try to claim the patent for himself. When Knight sued(起诉), Annan’s argument was that the design had to be his, because no woman could possibly understand the complex mechanics. Knight proved him wrong when she brought back her wooden prototype and explained how every part worked. She won the case in 1871, making her the second woman to hold an American patent. Over a hundred years later, her design is still used as the basis for many modern flat-bottom bag machines.
But that wasn’t the last the world heard of Mattie Knight. During her lifetime, she made about 90 inventions and received 26 patents, becoming one of the most productive female inventors of the 19th century.
小题1:We can learn from Paragraph 1 that ________.
A.Knight behaved like boys | B.Knight had an unhappy childhood |
C.Knight did a poor job of making toys | D.Knight liked inventing things as a child |
A.It is still used today. | B.It brought her great profit. |
C.It was made when he was 20. | D.It reduced injuries at textile plants. |
A.stole the wooden model for the machine she invented. |
B.failed to make the full-sized machine for her |
C.tried to patent her invention for himself |
D.kept the metal version for himself |
A.Mattie Knight’s fight for her patent | B.A great woman in the 19th century |
C.“The female Edison”, Mattie Knight | D.Great inventions, great woman |
My parents and my teachers saw something in me ----- a __41____ to live ---- which I didn’t see, and they made me want to fight in out with _42____.
The __43___ lesson I had to learn was to believe in myself. I am not talking about simply the kind of __44____ that helps me down so unfamiliar staircase alone. I __45___ something bigger than that: a confidence that I am, despite being __46____, a real, positive person; that there is a special place where I can make myself fit.
It took me years to discover and strengthen this confidence. It had to start with the easy and simple things. __47____ a man gave me an indoor baseball. I thought he was laughing at me and I was __48____. “I can’t use this,” I said. “Take with you,” he urged me, “and roll it around.” The words __49___ in my head. “Roll it around!” By rolling the ball I could _50_____ where it went. This gave me an idea how to achieve a goal I had thought _51____ before playing baseball. At Philadelphia’s Overbrook School for the Blind I _52___ a successful variation of baseball. We called it ground ball.
I have set ahead of me a series of goals and then tried to reach them, one at a time. I had to be clear about my _53____. It was no good crying for something that I knew at the start was __54___ out of reach because that only invited bitterness of failure. I would fail something anyway, __55___ on the average I made progress.
小题1: |
|
小题2: |
|
小题3: |
|
小题4: |
|
小题5: |
|
小题6: |
|
小题7: |
|
小题8: |
|
小题9: |
|
小题10: |
|
小题11: |
|
小题12: |
|
小题13: |
|
小题14: |
|
小题15: |
|
小题16: |
|
小题17: |
|
小题18: |
|
小题19: |
|
小题20: |
|
The 2-year-old cat was adopted as a kitten and grew up in a third-floor dementia (痴呆) unit at the Steere House Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, where the facility treats people with Alzheimer"s, Parkinson"s disease and other illnesses. After about six months, the staff noticed Oscar would make his own rounds, just like the doctors and nurses. He"d smell and observe patients, then sit beside people who would end up dying in a few hours. Dosa said Oscar seems to take his work seriously. "This is not a cat that"s friendly to people," he said.
"Oscar is better at predicting death than the people who work here," said Dr. Joan Teno of Brown University, who treats patients at the nursing home and is an expert on care for the terminally ill. She was convinced of Oscar"s talent when he made his 13th correct call. While observing one patient, Teno said she noticed the woman wasn"t eating, was breathing with difficulty and that her legs had a bluish color, signs that often mean death is near. Oscar wouldn"t stay inside the room, though, so Teno thought bis streak was broken. Instead, it turned out the doctor"s prediction was roughly 10 hours too early. Sure enough, during the patient"s final two hours, nurses told Teno that Oscar joined the woman at her bedside.
Doctors say most of the people who get a visit from the sweet-faced, gray-and-white cat are so ill that they probably don"t know he"s there, so patients aren"t aware he"s a predictor of death. Most families are grateful for the advance warning, although one wanted Oscar out of the room while a family member died. When Oscar is put outside, he paces and meows his displeasure.
No one"s certain if Oscar"s behavior is scientifically significant or points to a cause. Teno wonders if the cat senses mysterious scents or reads something into the behavior of the nurses who raised him. Nursing home staff aren"t concerned with explaining Oscar, so long as he gives families a better chance at saying goodbye to the dying. The staff recently gave Oscar a wall sign publicly praising his "sympathetic care."
小题1:What makes Oscar the cat so special?
A.He observes the cases of dying patients. |
B.He curls up next to the patients. |
C.He calls family members to the hospital. |
D.He senses when patients are to die. |
A.would go round and observe patients |
B.may sometimes fail to predict death |
C.is friendly and liked by every nurse |
D.was born and grew up in the hospital |
A.his bones were severely injured |
B.his magic power stopped working |
C.his devotion to work got changed |
D.his friendship with patients ended |
A.Oscar"s behavior is scientifically significant |
B.Oscar can read something of the nurses" behavior |
C.Oscar might like to stay with the dying patients |
D.Oscar is sympathetic to the dying patients |
A.Cats Can Be Used for Looking After Patients |
B.Oscar, the Sweet-Faced, Gray-and-White Cat |
C.As Death Comes Calling, So Does Oscar the Cat |
D.Oscar the Cat, the Best Helper of Our Hospital |
最新试题
- 1下面是著名主持人杨澜对著名的国学大师季羡林的一段访谈,请你根据季老的回答补充出杨澜的两处提问语。(4分)(1)杨澜:
- 22011年2月25日,十一届全国人大常委会表决通过了《中华人民共和国刑法修正案(八)》,其中关于醉酒驾车的问题引发了同学
- 3下列A~D四组反应中,其中I和Ⅱ可用同一个离子方程式表示的是 [ ]ⅠⅡ A.把金属铁放入稀硫酸中 把金属铁放入
- 4、函数y="ax2+bx+c" (a、b、c是常数),问当a、b、c满足什么条件时, (1)它是二次函数?(2)它是
- 5某中学对本校初中二年级女生身高情况进行抽测后得到部分资料,将其分成八个小组(身高单位:cm,测量时精确到1cm),列表如
- 6如图所示,在折纸活动中,小明制作了一张△ABC纸片,点D,E分别是边AB、AC上,将△ABC沿着DE重叠压平,A与A′重
- 7A是一种常见的单质,B、C为中学常见的化合物,A、B、C均含有元素X.它们有如图所示的转化关系(部分产物及反应条件已略去
- 8不等式(1-x)(3+x)>0的解集是[ ]A. (-3,1) B (-∞,-3)∪(1,
- 9下列各句中,没有语病的一项是[ ]A.这位奋斗在科技领域的优秀共产党员,曾经获得“全国劳动模范”、“全国五一劳动
- 10 铜的冶炼大致可分为:①富集:将硫化物矿进行浮选;②培烧,主要反应为:;③制粗铜,在1200°C发生的主要反应
热门考点
- 1假设2009年1单位M国货币/1单位N国货币为1:5.5。2010年,M国的通货膨胀率为10%,其他条件不变,从购买力角
- 2 一次函数的图象大致是( )
- 3—______ is it from your home to the school?—About ten minute
- 4有一固体混合物X,可能含有氯化钠、碳酸钾、亚硝酸钠、硫酸铝、碱性碳酸镁、碳酸氢钠等物质。为探究X的成分,设计方案并进行了
- 5唐朝时期,向中国派出留学生人数最多的国家是 ( )A.日本B.新罗C.大食D.天竺
- 6下列句子中,没有错别字的一句是A.险峰出于钝石,明火炽于暗木,珍珠产于贱蚌,美玉啄于丑璞——多少事物在转折中得以升华。B
- 7解不等式组7-x3-x≤18-x+22> 3.
- 8艾滋病被称为“现代癌症”,该病的病原体是艾滋病病毒,目前本市已有发现,比SARS病毒造成的“非典”死亡率还高,且具高传染
- 9夏天食品易腐烂,这是空气中微生物在食品中大量生长繁殖的结果。而放入冰箱贮藏的食品,其腐烂速度则慢得多,对这一现象最合理的
- 10阅读下文,完成文后各题。曾景宗,字子震,新野人也。父欣之,为宋将,位至征虏将军、徐州刺史。景宗幼善骑射,好畋猎。常与少年