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Ted talks bitterly about being made to p...

    Ted talks bitterly about being made to play the clarinet as a kid. For three years during his teens, his parents required him to spend an hour after dinner every night practicing. His parents wanted him to be in the marching band. They disagreed with him when he thought maybe jazz was more his thing. 1. However, he learned to hate it.

Angela was forced to take up the violin when she was 12. During her practice, she would close her bedroom door, lay the violin on her bed and pull the bow back and forth across the strings while reading her favorite novels. Then she tried to make them believe that maybe the violin wasn’t for her.2.

The parents of both of the kids were wellintentioned(出于好心的). 3. They saw it as their responsibility to provide the opportunity to have lessons and to insist on regular practicing.

They weren’t wrong to want music in their kids’ lives.4.

●Music can help adjust the mood.

●Making music and listening to it develop the part of the brain that is involved with language and reasoning.

●So many mathematicians, engineers and architects are also musicians. There are facts showing that learning an instrument helps in the development of spatial-temporal skills.

●Making music is a way to make friends and to improve self-esteem.

●Best of all, playing an instrument is a skill that can be enjoyed and shared over a lifetime.

Both Ted’s and Angela’s parents’ hearts were in the right place. But they, like many parents, failed to understand that providing lessons would not make their kids into musicians if practicing was a chore(令人厌烦的工作) instead of a pleasure. Music educators are clear: 5. Ideally, music lessons are something we do with our kids, not to them.

A. They wanted him to love his instrument.

B. Playing instruments is good for your health.

C. Much to her relief, they stopped the lessons.

D. Understanding kids is very important, especially for parents.

E. Kid’s success in music depends on parental involvement.

F. There are many good reasons to give kids lessons on an instrument.

G. They believed that playing an instrument would give their kid some kind of advantage.

 

1.A 2.C 3.G 4.F 5.E 【解析】 这是一篇说明文。本文主要讲述了父母为孩子安排乐器练习这一现象及专家对此的建议。 1.根据空后的“However, he learned to hate it”可知,父母强迫Ted练习单簧管,得来的结果是让他讨厌这个乐器,A项中的love与空后的hate相对应,故选A项。 2.从上一句“Then she tried to make them believe that maybe the violin wasn’t for her”可知,Angela尽力使她的父母相信,小提琴不适合她。空处应是接“结果”。故C项(使她很欣慰的是父母同意不让她练习小提琴了)符合题意,故选C。 3.根据上文中的“well-intentioned(出于好心的)”和下文中的“They saw it as their responsibility to provide the opportunity to have lessons”可知,父母让孩子学习乐器是出于好心,他们认为演奏乐器会给孩子带来某种好处。故选G。 4.下文的五个要点是让孩子学习乐器的好处,这些好处是家长要求孩子学习乐器的理由。故选F。 5.根据下一句中的“Ideally, music lessons are something we do with our kids, not to them”可知,音乐专家的建议是孩子们在音乐方面的成功取决于父母的参与。故选E。
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    Theresa May is the second female prime minister(首相), taking charge of the UK at one of the most hard times in recent political history.

Born in Sussex but raised largely in Oxfordshire, Mrs. May was educated in a grammar school in the village of  Wheatley. The young Theresa Brasier threw herself into village life.

Like Margaret Thatcher, she went to the University of Oxford to study. In 1976, in her third year, she met her husband Philip May. They were introduced at a Conservative Association disco and got married four years later.

Her university friend Pat Frankland, speaking in 2011 on a BBC Radio 4, said, “I cannot remember a time when she did not have political ambitions(政治抱负).”

There are no tales of drunken  student celebration, but Pat Frankland and other friends said May was not the serious figure she would later come to be seen as, and that she had a sense of fun and a full social life.

After graduating with a degree in geography, May went to work in the Bank of  England. But it was already clear that  she saw her future in politics. Like Margaret Thatcher, it took a bit of time for her to find hers. She first dipped her toe in the water in 1992, when she gained a Labour seat in North West Durham. She entered Parliament in 1997 and Theresa was chosen as Home Secretary(内政大臣) in May 2010 and became the longest-serving Conservative Home Secretary for over 60 years. During this time she was in charge of reductions in crime, reform of the police, and the introduction of the landmark Modern Slavery Act 2015.

Following her election as Leader of the Conservative Party, Theresa was chosen as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on 13th July 2016.

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A.1976 B.1980

C.1992 D.1997

2.According to the text, what may contribute most to May’s becoming the Prime Minister?

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B.Her husband’s help.

C.A sense of fun.

D.A full social life.

3.What does May have in common with Thatcher according to the text?

A.They received the degree in geography.

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D.They got to know their husbands in university.

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    The researchers say a person loses two months for every kilogram overweight they are — and seven years for smoking a packet of cigarettes a day.

Unusually, a team from the University of Edinburgh found their answers by researching differences in people’s genetic code or DNA. Finally they thought they would show new ways of helping us to live longer.

The group used the DNA of more than 600,000 people who are taking part in a natural experiment. If someone smokes, drinks, drops out of school and is overweight, it can be difficult to find out the impact of one specific unhealthy behavior.

Instead, the researchers turned to the natural experiment. Some people carry mutations(变异) in their DNA that increase appetite or make them more likely to put on weight, so researchers were able to compare those programmed to eat more with those who were not. The research team also found specific mutations in human DNA that could change lifespans(寿命).

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C.The results of many natural and massive experiments.

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A.One related to controlling the immune system.

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A.To follow them until they die.

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    One billion teenagers and young adults around the world risk losing their hearing by listening to loud music, according to the World Health Organization. The U. N. agency is asking young people to turn down the volume(音量) to prevent great damage to their hearing.

Many people believe the sound being louder is better if they are listening to rock and roll. But experiencing really loud music, even really good music, can have a serious effect on the hearing.

Studies in middle- and high-income countries show nearly 50 percent of teenagers and young adults aged 12 to 35 listen to unsafe levels of sound. They are listening on their personal audio devices as well as at concerts, nightclubs and other entertainment places.

But what is an unsafe level of sound?

The WHO says there can be many kinds of unsafe levels of sound. It depends on how loud the sound is and how long you listen to it. Unsafe levels of sound can mean noise levels of 85 decibels(分贝) for eight hours a day or 100 decibels for just 15 minutes.

Doctors say there are simple measures to protect people from unsafe sound levels. Young people who wear earplugs(耳塞) during concerts can enjoy music at 90 decibels as much as they can at 110 decibels. But they admit that earplugs may not look very cool. A common sense suggestion is to turn down the volume on their personal audio devices. The WHO also advises young people to limit their use of such devices to less than one hour a day. It reminds people to use their technology to stay safe. Smartphone apps can help t monitor safe listening levels.

The U. N. agency estimates 360 million people suffer hearing loss linked to many causes, including noise, genetic conditions, infectious diseases and aging. It notes half of all cases of hearing loss are avoidable.

1.What’s the purpose of the passage?

A.To advise good music.

B.To advise people to wear carplugs.

C.To give tips on how to enjoy loud music.

D.To remind people to prevent hearing loss.

2.The underlined words “unsafe levels of sound” can refer to ______.

A.how loud the sound is

B.how long you listen to the music

C.loud music at 90 decibels

D.noise at 100 decibels for 150 minutes

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A.One billion young people risk hearing loss from loud music.

B.Smartphones can do harm to people’s hearing.

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D.Louder music is good music.

4.What’s the main idea of the last but one paragraph?

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C.Not all cases of hearing loss are avoidable.

D.The reason why people wear earplugs during concerts.

 

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短文改错

Hello, Peter. I'm very grateful for your concern about my coming exam. To tell you the truth, I have been busy prepare for the exam recently. Some classmates are feeling really nervous clue to the exam, but I don't take it so serious. I always learn in a relaxing mood and I'm making a great progress. Now that I had tried my best, it doesn't matter much to me which the result is.

In my opinion, we should keep a good balance among our study, rest or exercise. I believe we can be successful if we prepare for the exam by a proper way.

I'd appreciate if you could give me some good advices.

 

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