满分5 > 高中英语试题 >

阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。 Cro...

阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。

Crows(乌鸦) are remarkably intelligent birds. Now these feathered geniuses are given a job: Six crows have been trained to pick up rubbish in the Puy du Fou historical theme park in western France. Whenever the six crows put cigarette ends or other small 1. (piece) of trash in a special container, it offers a treat to reward the crows 2. their efforts.

The idea came from one of the park’s employees, Christophe. In 2012, the theme park held a show during which the crows picked up roses and brought them to a “princess”. It was the show 3. inspired him. Since then, six crows 4.(raise) and trained to do the same with rubbish. The training system is similar to the one for testing crows’ intelligence, 5. a food dispenser(分发器) gives away a food reward when a crow 6. (correct) performs a task. Christophe also introduced other species of birds to go through the training. 7. (compare) with other birds, crows are much cleverer.

The purpose of 8. (train) the crows is to educate the people to reflect on themselves. Since the birds are able to protect the environment, we need to care about it too. “It is 9. funny way to remind people not 10.(throw) the rubbish everywhere,” said Christophe.

 

1. pieces 2. for 3. that 4. have been raised 5. where 6. correctly 7. Compared 8. training 9. a 10. to throw 【解析】 本文是一篇记叙文,讲述了在法国西部的一个主题公园,六只乌鸦被训练捡垃圾,目的是提醒人们不要随地扔垃圾。 1.考查名词。句意:每当这六只乌鸦把烟头或其他小垃圾放进一个特殊的容器里时,它们的努力就会得到奖励。other 修饰可数名词复数,故填pieces。 2.考查介词。句意参考上题解析,根据句意可知,此处表示“因……而奖励”,故填for。 3.考查强调句型。句意:正是那个表演给了他灵感。此处为强调句型,其基本结构为:it is/was+被强调部分+that+其余部分,此处强调the show,故填that。 4.考查时态。句意:从那时起,这六只乌鸦就被饲养并训练捡垃圾。Since then表明用现在完成时,six crows 与raise之间是被动关系,所以用现在完成时的被动语态,故填have been raised。 5.考查非限定性定语从句。句意:这个训练系统类似于乌鸦智力测试系统,在这个测试系统中,每当乌鸦正确地完成一项任务时,食物分配器会给出食物奖励。此处为非限定性定语从句,从句中不缺主宾表,缺少地点状语,故填where。 6.考查副词。句意参考上题解析,修饰动词performs用副词,故填correctly。 7.考查非谓语动词。句意:与其他鸟类相比,乌鸦聪明得多。crows与compare之间是逻辑上的动宾关系,表示被动,应该用过去分词作状语,故填Compared。 8.考查非谓语动词。句意:训练乌鸦的目的是教育人们反省自己。作介词of的宾语用动名词,故填training。 9.考查冠词。句意:这是一个提醒人们不要随地扔垃圾的有趣的方式。way是可数名词,用不定冠词表示泛指,故填a。 10.考查不定式。句意参考上题解析,remind sb to do表示“提醒某人做某事”,故填to throw。
复制答案
考点分析:
相关试题推荐

My car needed some mechanical work that I could not do myself. Since the garage I had been taking my car to had ____, my friend Dave gave me a recommendation: D's Auto Repair.

I was pleasantly ____ to discover that the owner of D's was a mechanic who had worked on my car several years earlier. ____ he was an employee at a gas station near my house. I knew that his work was good.

I ____ the paperwork for the repair and ___ while D took a phone call from another customer. As I sat there, I looked around the small office to keep myself _____ A framed newspaper article caught my attention. The headline ____: "Local Dairy Farmer Kills Whole Herd.” The article was about the ____ of a fifth-generation dairy farmer during the polluted milk scare in Michigan several years earlier. Dairy cows were becoming ____ a disease that was affecting the milk supply. The fifth-generation dairy farmer paid to have all of his cows ____. It was found that out of the entire herd, only a few were were infected. Because no one could ____ that the other cows were totally ____, he had the herd killed and buried to make consumers feel rest assured(放心). The farmer’s insurance did not cover his ____ because the state had not issued a(n) ____ for him to get rid of the herd. Asked why he did it, the farmer replied "Because it was the right thing to do.

I asked D why he ____ the article on the wall. I thought that he might be related to or ____ knew the farmer. He said he had never met the man, but that the farmer was a(n) ____ to him and set a standard for integrity(正直), trust and honesty. He said that is how he ____ his auto Repair business.

I was now doubly ____ by both the farmer and D. The next year, ____ my recommendation, my son started a nine-month mechanics apprenticeship(学徒) at D's Auto repair.

1.A. closed    B. started    C. expanded    D. developed

2.A. content    B. cautious    C. surprised    D. shocked

3.A. Just then    B. Back then    C. In advance    D. Before long

4.A. filled out    B. handed out    C. held out    D. took out

5.A. stared    B. reflected    C. worried    D. waited

6.A. informed    B. involved    C. prepared    D. occupied

7.A. wrote    B. read    C. recorded    D. shown

8.A. plans    B. feelings    C. actions    D. bravery

9.A. immune to    B. addicted to    C. infected with    D. allergic to

10.A. tested    B. killed    C. buried    D. sold

11.A. suspect    B. guarantee    C. challenge    D. question

12.A. satisfying    B. beneficial    C. dangerous    D. safe

13.A. danger    B. risk    C. loss    D. threat

14.A. order    B. warning    C. ban    D. solution

15.A. stored    B. displayed    C. collected    D. appreciated

16.A. anywhere    B. anyhow    C. somewhere    D. somehow

17.A. inspiration    B. companion    C. comfort    D. memory

18.A. bought    B. predicted    C. operated    D. acquired

19.A. embarrassed    B. impressed    C. confused    D. amused

20.A. in    B. by    C. at    D. on

 

查看答案

Why people collect art

Many people through history have gone to great lengths to collect art. But what motivates these collectors?

One popular explanation for collecting is that they can have financial gain. Some resell works, earning enormous profit. 1.. Immorally, some ‘collectors’ buy art as a form of money laundering(洗钱), since it is far easier to move art than cash between counties without examination.

2.. For them, art is important for other reasons. The best way to understand the underlying drive of art collecting is as a means to create and strengthen social bonds, and as a way for collectors to communicate within these new networks.

Collectors are not only interested in creating social links; they are also motivated by the messages they can send once these social networks are created. We all know art is a powerful way for the artist to express thoughts and feelings. 3.. Displaying art can send a message about who the collector really is --- at least who she sees herself as.

4.. Through the collections, collectors convey messages not just about themselves, but about the world as a whole. For example, the kid with the shoebox of bird feathers might show others her collection not just to make friends, but also to convince them about the importance of protecting endangered species.

People collect art for various reasons. 5..

A. Some gain art works in an illegal way

B. But most collectors think little of profit

C. Artworks preserve the qualities of their makers

D. No doubt art collection is a hard addiction to overcome

E. Some get large tax reductions for donating art to museums

F. It also serves as an effective way to express collectors

G. Other art collectors see their collections as having a broader power

 

查看答案

Modern lifestyles are generally quite different from those of our hunter-gatherer ancestors, a fact that some claim as the cause of the current rise in global obesity, but new results published July 25 in the open access journal PLOS ONE find that there is no difference between the energy expenditure(耗费) of modern hunter-gatherers and Westerners, casting doubt on this theory.

The research team behind the study, led by Herman Pontzer of Hunter College in New York City, along with David Raichlen of the University of Arizona and Brian M. Wood of Stanford measured daily energy expenditure among the Hadza, a population of traditional hunter-gatherers living in the open Savannah of northern Tanzania. Despite spending their days hiking long distances to seek for wild plants and game, the Hadza burned no more calories each day than adults in the U.S. and Europe. The team ran several analyses accounting for the effects of body weight, body fat percentage, age, and gender. In all analyses, daily energy expenditure among the Hadza hunter-gatherers was indistinguishable(难以区分的) from that of Westerners. The study was the first to measure energy expenditure in hunter-gatherers directly; previous studies had relied entirely on estimates.

These findings overturn the long-held assumption that our hunter-gatherer ancestors expended more energy than modern populations, and challenge the view that obesity in Western populations results from decreased energy expenditure. Instead, the similarity in daily energy expenditure across a broad range of lifestyles suggests that habitual metabolic(新陈代谢的) rates are relatively constant among human populations. This in turn supports the view that the current rise in obesity is due to increased food consumption, not decreased energy expenditure. It means we have more to learn about human physiology(生理学) and health, particularly in non-Western settings.

"These results highlight the complexity of energy expenditure. It's not simply a function of physical activity," says Pontzer.” Our metabolic rates may be more a reflection of our shared evolutionary past than our diverse modern lifestyles."

1.According to the new research, hunter-gatherers consume _________.

A. the same energy as Westerners    B. more energy than Westerners

C. less energy than Westerners    D. the same food as Westerners

2.How did the research team do the new research?

A. By comparing hiking distances.    B. By identifying wild plants and game.

C. By estimating daily energy expenditure.    D. By measuring daily energy expenditure.

3.People have long assumed that _________.

A. the rise in obesity is due to increased food consumption

B. decreased energy expenditure makes Westerners fat

C. daily energy expenditure stays the same in history

D. humans’ habitual metabolic rates are unchanged

4.Which of the following can reflect our shared evolutionary past?

A. Our physiology activity.    B. Our energy expenditure.

C. Our metabolic rates.    D. Our modern lifestyle.

 

查看答案

Antarctica(南极洲)’s melting ice, which has caused global sea levels to rise by at least 13.8 millimeters over the past 40 years, was thought to primarily come from the unstable West Antarctic Ice Sheet(WAIS). Now, scientists have found that the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS)—considered largely unaffected by climate change—may also be melting at an unexpectedly rapid speed.

The WAIS, whose base is below sea level, has long been considered the most likely to break down. Besides gravity, a deep current of warm water slips beneath the sheet, melting it from below until it becomes a floating shelf at risk of breaking away. In contrast, extreme cold and a base mostly above sea level are thought to keep the EAIS relatively safe from warm waters.

But as greenhouse gases warm much of the planet, driving stronger polar winds, some scientists think warm water carried by a circular current will start to invade East Antarctica’s once unassailable ice. A cooperation of more than 60 scientists last year, published in Nature, estimated that the EAIS actually added about 5 billion tons of ice each year from 1992 to 2017.

Eric Rignot of the University of California, Irvine, and colleagues combined 40 years of satellite imagery and climate modeling and found that overall Antarctica now sends six times more ice into the sea each year than it did in 1979, with the majority coming from West Antarctica. But East Antarctica was responsible for more than 30% of Antarctica’s contribution to the 13.8-millimeter sea level rise over the past 40 years. “The more we look at this system the more we realize this is fragile,” Rignot says. “Once these glaciers become unstable there is no red button to press to stop it.”

Rignot hopes the study brings greater attention to a part of Antarctica that has traditionally been understudied. Helen Fricker, a glaciologist (冰川学家) in California, agrees. “We need to monitor the entire Antarctica and we just can’t do that without international cooperation.”

1.What is the new finding of scientists?

A. The east Antarctica is losing ice at an increasing rate.

B. The west Antarctica is melting six times faster than in 1979.

C. 5 billion tons of ice is added to Antarctica each year.

D. The sea level has risen by 13.8 mm over the past 40 years.

2.Which factor leads to the EAIS’s melting fast?

A. A base mostly over sea level.    B. The force of gravity.

C. The invasion of a warm current.    D. Extremely low temperature.

3.Which of the following best explains “unassailable” underlined in Para. 3 ?

A. Fragile.    B. Unattackable.

C. Mild.    D. Unstable.

4.Which way does Helen Fricker specially advocate?

A. Satellite imagery.    B. Global monitoring.

C. Worldwide climate modeling.    D. Worldwide combined efforts.

 

查看答案

Recently, many e-commerce platforms, including Didi Taxi, Ctrip, Fliggy, JD ad Taobao, have been uncovered that they are cheating their frequent customers. Their ways are pretty clever. When there are new users or conservative old users, they will give a quite appealing price to attract them into registering and buying goods. However, their big data is not that friendly to the stable users and frequent visitors. The system always offers them higher price for the same products or service. How does this happen? According to the data analysis, the system knows clearly that although they feel the price is high, they will finally pay the bill. By collecting and analyzing users’ profiles, buying habits and other information, big data recommends the same products to different users with different prices.

Companies also try other ways to make money, making online consumption far more worrying. For example, video websites always offer 120 seconds’ advertisements, which drives people crazy. And even if you pay for the membership to get rid of the ads, you have to “enjoy” 15-second “private” ads. By broadcasting them, companies make huge profits --- second to the membership fees. Also, owning 100Mbps network, you still put up with the slow speed when you are downloading a song. You have no choice but to become a VIP when you seek high quality services. Users seem to be lambs(羊羔) among wolves. Even though they say,” Since you have money, I’ll charge you more”, we can’t do anything about it.

It pains us that we haven’t figured out a way to deal with the problem. The only thing we can do is replacing our iPhones with Android phones if we want to buy a membership card, and applying for new accounts if we want cheaper hotels. Not finding a way to fight back, we can’t do anything but accept them passively.

1.How does big data serve companies according to the text?

A. By being kind to all users.

B. By giving a discount to stable users.

C. By attracting new users by analyzing their shopping habits.

D. By recommending the same products with higher prices to regular users.

2.What do we know from the third paragraph?

A. Membership can rid you of all the ads.

B. Only by being a VIP can you get a better service.

C. The slow download speed is due to your poor network.

D. Advertising income is the biggest income for video websites.

3.What is the author’ attitude towards the chances of finding a way to fight back?

A. Uncertain.    B. Casual.

C. Negative.    D. Positive.

4.What is the main idea of the text?

A. The big data provides helpful information to users.

B. We have to accept online consumption as it is.

C. There exist many online consumption traps.

D. Regular customers are richer.

 

查看答案
试题属性

Copyright @ 2008-2019 满分5 学习网 ManFen5.COM. All Rights Reserved.