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Though technology has considerable wonde...

    Though technology has considerable wonderful benefits, it is becoming increasingly obvious that our addiction to technology and overall cell phone addiction is becoming too common. However powerful it is, it does have a power-off button.1.

● Powering-down prevents the fear of missing out.

Scientifically speaking, the Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) has been recognized as a recently rising psychological  disorder brought on by the huge increase in technology addiction. The premise(假定) is simple.2.Within  this constant stream of information, our fear of being left out continues to grow. Turning off social media and learning how to live in the moment are both important skills in this modern world.

● Powering-down promotes creation over consumption.

Essentially, most of our time is spent in one of the two categories: consuming or creating. Certainly, technology can contribute to creating. For example, this article was written (created) on a computer. But most of the time we spend in front of technology is spent consuming (playing video games, browsing the Internet, watching movies, listening to music).3. It needs more creating. It needs your passion, your solution, and your unique contribution.

Power down and begin contributing to a better world because of it.

4.

If we power down for a while, we can learn something about ourselves. We will learn we are far more addicted to technology than we would have guessed. But that is the nature of addiction, isn’t it? We can never fully realize our level of addiction until the item is out of sight. The only way to truly discover technology’s controlling influence on our life is to turn it off, walk away, and sense how strong the pull is to turn it back on.

● Life, at its best, is happening right in front of you.

Our world may be changing, but the true nature of life is not. Life, at its best, is happening right in front of you.5.The conversations are natural and authentic. And the love is real. But if we are too busy staring down at our screen, we’re going to miss all of it.

A.It has a negative effect on our creativity.

B.Our world doesn’t need more consuming.

C.The experiences in life will never repeat themselves.

D.The following are some important reasons to unplug.

E.Our social media are filled with everything happening all around us.

F.Powering-down helps remove unhealthy feelings of envy and loneliness.

G.Technology addiction can only be understood when the object is taken away.

 

1.D 2.E 3.B 4.G 5.C 【解析】 这是一篇说明文。文章讲述了对科技产品上瘾变得越来越普遍,作者呼吁人们适当远离科技产品,并且提了一些建议和原因。 1.本句位于第一段最后一句,有启示下文的作用,再总揽全文黑色加粗字都是一些需要拔掉插头的原因,故D选项“以下是一些需要拔掉插头的重要原因”符合上下文语境,故选D。 2.根据后文Within this constant stream of information, our fear of being left out continues to grow.可知在这源源不断的信息中,我们对被排除在外的恐惧持续增长。由此可知,后文提到了我们身边被源源不断的信息包围着,可知本句是在说明社交媒体充斥着我们周围发生的一切。故E选项“我们的社交媒体充斥着我们周围发生的一切”符合上下文语境,故选E。 3.根据上文But most of the time we spend in front of technology is spent consuming (playing video games, browsing the Internet, watching movies, listening to music)可知但是我们在科技面前花费的大部分时间都花在了消费上(玩电子游戏、上网、看电影、听音乐)。以及后文It needs more creating.可知它需要更多的创造。由此可知,此处是在说明我们的世界不需要更多的消费,而是需要人们的创造。故B选项“我们的世界不需要更多的消费”符合上下文语境,故选B。 4.根据本段中We can never fully realize our level of addiction until the item is out of sight.可知我们永远不可能完全意识到我们的上瘾程度,直到物品消失在视线之外。由此可知,本段是在说明要将物品拿走,人们才能理解科技成瘾的情况。后文中the item is out of sight可对应到G选项中the object is taken away。故G选项“只有当物品被拿走时,人们才能理解科技成瘾”符合上下文语境,故选G。 5.根据上文Life, at its best, is happening right in front of you.可知生活最好的时候,就发生在你面前。由此推断该空讲的是关于life话题的。故C选项“人生的经历永远不会重演”符合上下文语境,故选C。
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    American writer A.N.DEVERS was at a rare-book fair in New York City in 2015 when she noticed a Joan Didion title selling for just $25. Then she saw the price tag of a novel by the equally famous Cormac McCarthy: about $600. “I realized we don’t value women’s work the same way we do men’s,” Devers says. “It’s depressing. But it’s also exciting, because I can do something about it.”

Three years later, after moving to London and joining the U.K.’s booming rare-book trade, Devers opened the red doors of her new bookstore, the Second Shelf. Located in a quiet courtyard off the busy streets of London’s Soho, the store almost exclusively stocks rare books by women (alongside a handful of male-authored books about women). The focus is modern fiction: Elizabeth Bowen novels, romances by Rosamunde Pilcher, poetry by Ntozake Shange.

Devers’ skill for finding overlooked jewels was polished during a childhood of Visits to yard sales in towns across the U.S., a result of her family’s following her father’s Air Force job. Some of her most sought-after recent finds were works by Miriam Tlali, the first black woman to publish a novel in South Africa. Devers hit on her 1975 debut in a charity store and quickly sourced and sold 15 more Tlali books.

In collecting these works, the Second Shelf is correcting a historical imbalance that has allowed women’s literary achievements to be eclipsed. Bookdealers have tended to be men; much of the trade’s early material was collected by “country gentlemen who ran estates and amassed libraries of books to show their wealth and intelligence,” Devers says. She argues that they’ve been like their peers in other male-led creative industries — including television, film and the news media — in that “they focus on themselves.”

That past contributes to a plain absence of women’s work among the books considered to be valuable cultural objects. In January, the Second Shelf went viral (走红) on Twitter after Devers pointed out that only nine books by women appeared in a list, produced by a trade website, of the 500 biggest sales at auction in the books-and-paper field last year. Even among more recently published works, a 2018 study found, titles by women are on average priced 45% lower than books by men.

In recent years, calls have gone out to read only books by women for a year and for universities to expand their curriculums. The observance of Women’s History Month in the U.S. has also made March a time for publishers to suggest fitting reading lists. Devers’ shop is the physical site of that movement challenging the current situation. “We’ve been taught to find value in something really narrow,” she says. “It’s time to explore something different.”

1.The first paragraph tells the readers _________.

A.why Devers named her shop the Second Shelf

B.how Devers was exposed to rare book trade

C.what motivated Devers to open the Second Shelf

D.where Devers first came across women’s literary works

2.The underlined word “eclipse” in the fourth paragraph means_________.

A.fully exposed

B.partially concealed

C.seriously treated

D.roughly explained

3.Which may explain the absence of the great literary works by women?

A.The trade used to be dominated by men.

B.Women writers’ ideas conflict with the bookdealers’.

C.Males tend to be productive in the creative industry.

D.The majority of male readers don’t read modern fiction.

4.What can be inferred from the passage?

A.In recent years, university curriculums have emphasized books by women.

B.Women’s History Month has pushed women writers to be more productive.

C.More physical bookstores like Devers’ are needed to change the situation.

D.The Second Shelf is helping turn a page for women in literature.

 

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Europe is facing unheard-of demographic changes that will have a major impact on society and on the economy and consequently on education and training provision and needs. The European population is aging: over the next 30 years the number of younger Europeans(up to 24 years old)will fall by 15%. One in three Europeans will be over 60 years old, and  about one in then will be over 80.

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A.It reduces health care costs greatly.

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    The story of chocolate begins with the discovery of America in 1492. Columbus was the first European to come into contact with cacao. Columbus was struck by how much value the Indians placed on them as he did not know the beans were used by currency. It is unlikely that Columbus brought any of these beans back to Spain and it was not until about 25 years later that Cortez grasped the commercial possibilities when he found the Aztecs using the beans to make the royal drink “chocolatl”.

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The process of turning cacao into chocolate hasn’t changed much since the late 1800s, when the Swiss learned to make fine unsweetened chocolate. Mixed with cocoa butter and other ingredients and then “purified”, the finished result is shaped, cooled, packaged by machine, distributed, sold and of course, eaten!

1.Why didn’t Columbus bring beans back to Spain at once when he found cacao?

A.Because he couldn’t afford to buy the cacao bean.

B.Because he didn’t know how to turn cacao bean into chocolate.

C.Because he was not aware of the commercial value of cacao bean then.

D.Because Spaniards then didn’t favour the chocolate that the Aztecs originally drank.

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C.patent D.portable

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A.Cacao trees require hot, rainy climates and adequate sunlight.

B.Cacao trees need a lot of looking after to be used commercially.

C.Cacao trees won’t produce fruit until the fifth year.

D.Cacao trees can grow well in all continents.

 

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