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阅读表达 About 43 years ago, I spotted an ad...

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About 43 years ago, I spotted an advertisement in the paper for the YMCA wildness program. I was 15 and wanted to do something different. My first experience was a boat trip. I still have the images of sunrises and sunsets with all beautiful colors on Lake of the Woods.

As a teenager, I didn’t know that I was having the best adventure a teenager could have. Even now I can feel the cold water dripping down my arm as we sat in the boat pulling the paddles awkardly through running water. It was my first experience in a boat and my arms became tired after many hours of paddling.

We stopped for lunch in the boat by assembling all the boats together. Our guide handed out chocolate, cheese and dried meat.

At night, it was time to camp at our site picked out by our guide. There we learned to start campfires and cook some of our meals. This is where I felt in love with noodles. It was wonderful to share simple meals over the fire and talk with new friends. We cleaned up our mess and put up our tents and slept on the ground. We learned to carry the heavy packs to our next destination. I developed a sense  of accomplishment and had arm muscles after that trip.

There were no phones , makeup, hair dryers...just us and the bush. We came from different backgrounds with different personalities and we all had to work together as a group.

I liked the boat trip so much that I joined the “Survival” trip the next year. I kept a journal from that second trip and often go back to it.

1.Where did the author experience his first boat trip in the wild?(No more than 5 words)

2.What did the author think of his/her first boat trip?(No more than 10words)

3.What does the underlined word “assembling” in paragraph 3 probably mean?(1 word)

4.What did the author learn to do from the camp of the first boat trip?(no more than 10 words)

5.What do you think of a trip without phones?(no more than 20words)

 

1.On lake of the Woods 2.It was the best adventure a teenager would have. 3.Gathering 4.To start /starting campfires, cook meals and carry the heavy pack. 5.It’s a great opportunity to completely enjoy a trip without any one disturbing, which should be encouraged. 【解析】 这是一篇记叙文。文章讲述了作者第一次参加荒野项目的经历。作者认为自己的第一次乘船行程是青少年所能拥有的最好的冒险。作者在这次经历中学会了很多,包括在露营时,他们学会了生火和做饭。作者非常享受这次经历。 1.细节理解题。根据第一段最后两句话“My first experience was a boat trip. I still have the images of sunrises and sunsets with all beautiful colors on Lake of the Woods.”可知我第一次荒野乘船经历是在在森林之湖。故答案为“On lake of the Woods”。 2.细节理解题。根据第二段“As a teenager, I didn’t know that I was having the best adventure a teenager could have.”可知我认为我的第一次乘船行程是青少年所能拥有的最好的冒险。故答案为“It was the best adventure a teenager would have.”。 3.词义猜测题。根据第三段中的“all the boats together”,可知此处是把所有的船都聚集在一起,由此可知“assembling”意为聚集。故答案为“Gathering”。 4.细节理解题。根据第四段中的“At night, it was time to camp at our site picked out by our guide. There we learned to start campfires and cook some of our meals.We learned to carry the heavy packs to our next destination”可知在第一次乘船经历中露营时,我们学会了生火和做饭。我们学会了把沉重的背包搬到下一个目的地。故答案为“To start /starting campfires, cook meals and carry the heavy pack.”。 5.推理判断题。题目问你认为没有手机的旅行怎么样。没有手机的话,我们可以全身心地去享受旅行,不需要担心别人打扰,所以这种旅行方式应该被支持。故答案为“It’s a great opportunity to completely enjoy a trip without any one disturbing, which should be encouraged.”。
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    In the mid-1990s, Dr. Marshall Duke, a psychologist at Emory University, was asked to help explore ceremonies in American families. “There was a lot of research at the time into the falling apart of the family,” he said. “But we were more interested in what families could do to oppose those forces.” And they found that the single most important thing you can do for your family may be the simplest of all: develop a strong family narrative(口述故事).

Around that time, Dr. Duke’s wife, Sara, a psychologist who works with children with learning disabilities, noticed something about her students. “The ones who know a lot about their families tend to do better when they face challenges,” she said.

Her husband was interested, and along with a colleague, Robyn Fivush, set out to learn if Sara’s assumption was valid. They developed a measure called the “Do You Know?” scale(量表)that asked children to answer 20 questions. Examples included: Do you know where you grandparents grew up? Do you know where your mom and dad went to high school? Do you know an illness or something really terrible that happened in your family?

Dr. Duke and Dr. Fivush asked those questions of four dozen families in the summer of 2001, and  taped several of their dinner table conversations. They then compared children’s results to a series of psychological tests the children had taken, and reached a surprising conclusion. The more children knew about their family’s history, the stronger their sense of control over their lives and the higher their self-respect. Why does knowing where your grandmother went to school help a child become tougher and happier? “The answers have to do with a child’s sense of being part of a larger family,” Dr. Duke said.

So if you want a happier family, retell the story of your family, especially about the positive moments and how you braved the difficult ones. That act alone may increase the probability that your family will thrive ( )for many generations to come. This is particularly important for children, whose identity tends to get locked in during adolescence.

1.What research topic attracted Dr. Duke most in the mid-1990s?

A.Why families fell apart? B.How to keep families united?

C.Why family ceremonies existed? D.How to preserve family tradition?

2.Why did Duke and Fivush develop the “Do You Know?” scale?

A.To explore learning disabilities B.To study family challenges

C.To test Sara’s assumption D.To research family illness

3.What may be linked with kids’ mental health according to Duke?

A.The frequency of dinner table conversations. B.The knowledge about their family history.

C.The sense of control over their schoolwork. D.The belief in their family’s success.

4.What does the underlined word “This” in the last paragraph refer to?

A.Telling family stories B.Having a thriving stories

C.Living in a happy family D.Braving the difficult moments

5.What is the purpose of this text?

A.To solve a problem B.To give expert advice

C.To tell an interesting story D.To present a research result.

 

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Stella’s mother, Abby, comes over for her share. The Philadelphia Zoo’s two female giraffes consume about a pound of leaves in mere minutes. Fortunately, the zoo has plenty, thanks in part to an unusual source: the local power company.

Utility( )companies routinely cut back trees. They want to keep branches from damaging power lines and causing power failures. Usually the branches end up in landfills. But in recent years, a growing number of energy providers have begun donating them to zoos. Hungry zoo animals are happy to eat the green, leafy tree branches known as “browse”

Browse partnerships between zoos and power companies are one example of the creative and sometimes unexpected ways zoos work with local organizations to meet animals’ particular-and often huge-dietary needs. Store chains and restaurants sell or donate greens, fruits and vegetables to zoos. Local landowners also provide plant material. But utility companies are in a special position. They need to regularly cut back branches. And they have no use for these branches themselves.

PECO Energy Co. Is Pennsylvania’s largest electric and natural gas utility. From August through October, the company delivered three pickup trucks full of browse every week to the Philadelphia Zoo. The weekly browse delivery totaled between 100 and 200 pounds.

“Zoos require a lot of browse because it’s such an important part of many animals’ diets. Of the Philadelphia Zoo’s 330 species, 40 eat it. Browse has it all: fiber, protein, vitamins, minerals and a little fat. It’s also lower in sugar and higher in protein and fiber than some other plant material, ”said Toddes, the Zoo’s director. “Chewing on the bark is even good for animals’ teeth.”

What’s more, browse provides animals with important exercise, she said. In the wild, giraffes eat the tops of trees. So zoo staff hang browse up high to simulate(模拟)their native environment. This also gives visitors a better idea of the animals’ natural behavior.

1.What can be learned about Stella and her mother?

A.They are big eaters B.They don’t like oversize weeds

C.They have difficulty reaching leaves D.They live in a local power company

2.Why do utility companies cut back trees?

A.To beautify the tree B.To use them to produce power

C.To provide food for zoo animals D.To keep power lines working normally.

3.In what way are browse partnerships between zoos and power companies special?

A.The donations are for large animals B.The donations come from landfills

C.The donations are given routinely D.The donations contain fruits and vegetables.

4.What did Toddes say about PECO’s browse?

A.It has great nutritional value. B.It doesn’t require strong teeth

C.It’s more than what the animals can eat. D.It’s suitable for most of the zoo’s species.

5.Why do zoo staff hang browse up high?

A.To give visitors a better view.

B.To get the giraffes moving a lot.

C.To prevent other animals stealing giraffes’ food

D.To get the giraffes out of their native environment.

 

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A few years into my writing journey, we moved into a bigger home and I acquired my own office. My husband, Bill offered on more than one occasion to buy me a new desk for my office, but I ignored his offer.

One day, we stopped at the local office supply store. Bill found what he thought  was the perfect desk for me. “ I want to buy this for you, sweetie. My writer needs a bigger desk.” He hugged me.

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“Why don’t you want a bigger desk?” he said. “You must be afraid of something.”

“I’m not afraid of anything,” I said. “ Like I said, I really like my little desk. So don’t ask me again”.

He didn’t.

A few weeks later, while working in my new office, I looked around at the folders , books and papers lying all over my office floor but couldn’t find what needed to meet a contest deadline. My heart raced. I looked around my office. The room basically swallowed the tiny desk, making it look slightly out of place. Maybe I did need a bigger desk. Was Bill right? Was I afraid of something?

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At that moment, I recognized that a bigger desk symbolized bigger possibilities, stepping out in faith, and leaving my comfort zone.

1.What was the limitation of the “secretary desk”?

A.It was a bit small in size. B.It was too old to be functional

C.It competed with the shelf for room D.It prevented the author focusing on writing.

2.What happened to the author at the local office supply store?

A.She talked her husband into buying a desk. B.She had a quarrel with the salesperson.

C.She managed to overcome her fear. D.She declined her husband’s offer.

3.When did the author want to buy a new desk?

A.After she was stuck in a mess B.When she finished writing a book.

C.When she moved into a bigger house. D.After she missed an important contest.

4.What was the author afraid of before?

A.Unemployment B.Uncertainty

C.Loss of friendship D.Lack of trust

5.What would be the best title of the passage?

A.My writing journey. B.On the wings of change.

C.Why I love writing. D.A quarrel between my husband and I.

 

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    The Supreme Court is the highest court in the United States. Let’s meet some of the great women who have left their mark on the country’s highest court.

Margaret Brent

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Lucy Terry Prince

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Ruth Bader Ginsburg

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Myra Bradwell

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A.Brave and determined B.Generous and friendly

C.Considerate and optimistic D.Traditional and scholarly

2.What was Samuel Chase’s attitude to Lucy’s argument?

A.Favorable B.Uncaring

C.Doubtful D.Grateful

3.Who served on the Supreme Court?

A.Margaret B.Myra Bradwell

C.Lucy Terry Prince D.Ruth Bader Ginsburg

4.What does the author mean by the underlined sentence in the text?

A.Bradwell failed the state bar exam B.Bradwell’s request was unconstitutional.

C.The Illinois Supreme Court broke the law. D.The Supreme Court ruled against Bradwell.

5.What does the underlined word “denied” mean?

A.Liked. B.Refused

C.Introduced D.Worried

 

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    NASA scientists have found evidence of flowing water on Mars. This opens up the possibility of___ and wonders we can’t begin to imagine. The____undoubtedly is an astonishing achievement.

We may be excited by the thought of living things on another ______, but we seem to have lost _______in our own. In the past four decades, the world has____50% of its vertebrate( )wildlife. But across the latter half of this period, there has been a steep___ in media coverage (报道)of the subject.

Think of what would change if we valued_____ on the earth as much as we value the possibility water  on Mars._____ 3% of the water on this planet is fresh and of that, two-thirds is frozen. Yet we lay waste to  the ___part. Sixty percent of the water used in farming is____by careless irrigation. Rivers, lakes and aquifers ( )are sucked dry, while what remains is often so bad that it____the lives of those who drink it. As for salty water, which so______us  when apparently detected on Mars, however,  on Earth,  we express our___ by destroying it. A new report suggests fish numbers have  halved since  1970. Coral  reefs are under such___ that most could be gone by 2050.

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As clever new ways of wasting stuff are continually___ , we become more and more used to the___ consumption of the world’s precious resources. Isn’t it time for us to have second thoughts about our lifestyle?

1.A.peace B.trust C.life D.danger

2.A.appearance B.discovery C.performance D.operation

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5.A.spread B.lost C.ignored D.found

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9.A.private B.public C.unclear D.accessible

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