Every country has its own culture.
Even though each country uses doors. Doors many have_    __functions and purposes which lead to ___  _ differences.
When I first came to America, I noticed that a public building had two different__  ___ and they had distinct(不同的) functions. You have to push the door with the word “PUSH” to go out of the building and to pull the door with the word “PULL” to_   ____the building. This was new to me, because we use the ___  __ door in south Korea. For quite a few times I failed to go out of a shopping centre and was embarrassed.
The way of using school bus doors was also ____  __ to me .I used to take the school bus to classes. The school decided that when the driver opened both the front and back doors, ___    _who were getting off the bus should get off first, and students who were getting on should get on __   _ . In South Korea, we do not need to wait for people to get off. One morning, I hurried to the bus, and when the bus doors opened, I___   ____tried to get on the school bus through the front door. All the students around looked at me, I was totally_     _,and my face went red.
小題1:
A.differentB.importantC.practicalD.unusual
小題2:
A.nationalB.embarrassingC.culturalD.a(chǎn)mazing
小題3:
A.exitsB.entrancesC.signsD.doors
小題4:
A.enterB.leaveC.openD.close
小題5:
A.mainB.sameC.frontD.back
小題6:
A.a(chǎn)nnoyingB.hardC.satisfyingD.strange
小題7:
A.parentsB.studentsC.teachersD.drivers
小題8:
A.soonerB.laterC.fasterD.earlier
小題9:
A.politelyB.patientlyC.unconsciouslyD.slowly
小題10:
A.embarrassedB.a(chǎn)nnoyedC.unsatisfiedD.excited

小題1:C
小題2:C
小題3:C
小題4:A
小題5:B
小題6:D
小題7:B
小題8:B
小題9:C
小題10:A

試題分析:本文主要講不同國(guó)家門的功能不同,使用門的方式也不同
小題1:考查形容詞:A. different不同的,B. important重要的,C. practical實(shí)際的,D. unusual不尋常的,由本段首句可知門有很多實(shí)用的功能。選C
小題2:考查形容詞:A. national 國(guó)家的,B. embarrassing令人尷尬的,C. cultural文化的,D. amazing令人驚訝的,由本段首句可知,門的功能不同導(dǎo)致了文化差異。選C
小題3:考查名詞:A. exits出口,B. entrances進(jìn)口,C. signs標(biāo)志,D. doors門,從后面的句子:You have to push the door with the word “PUSH” to go out of the building可知美國(guó)的公共大樓有兩個(gè)標(biāo)志,選C
小題4:考查動(dòng)詞: A. enter進(jìn)入,B. leave 離開,C. open打開,D. close 關(guān)閉,從前面的You have to push the door with the word “PUSH” to go out of the building與go out of the building相對(duì),應(yīng)是enter the building。選A
小題5:考查形容詞:A. main主要的,B. same同樣的,C. front前面的,D. back后面的,與前面23題的different doors相對(duì),應(yīng)是the same door。選B
小題6:考查形容詞:A. annoying令人生氣的,B. hard困難的,C. satisfying令人滿意的,D. strange奇怪的,聯(lián)系前一段的This(門的功能) was new (not familiar, not experienced before ) to me可知,門的使用方式對(duì)我來(lái)說(shuō),“也(also一詞是重要信息詞)很陌生(與new同義應(yīng)是strange)”。strange的意思是unfamiliar, not known or experienced before(不熟的,不知道或以前沒(méi)有經(jīng)歷過(guò)的)與后文內(nèi)容吻合。選D
小題7:考查名詞: A. parents父母,B. students 學(xué)生,C. teachers老師,D. drivers司機(jī),由與之前列的and students who were getting on should get on…可知。選B
小題8:考查形容詞:A. sooner更快,B. later 更遲, C. faster 更快,D. earlier更糟與前面的first相對(duì),即要先下后上。,選B
小題9:考查副詞:A. politely禮貌地,B. patiently耐心地,C. unconsciously 無(wú)意識(shí)的,D. slowly慢地,由前文可知,因韓國(guó)不必等別人下了再上的習(xí)慣,作者習(xí)慣這樣了,所以看到校車將門打開后,就“無(wú)意識(shí)地”上車了。C
小題10:考查形容詞:A. embarrassed尷尬的,B. annoyed生氣的,C. unsatisfied不滿意的,D. excited周圍所有的人都看著自己,當(dāng)然就會(huì)“感到尷尬”,臉也就紅了。選A
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Did you know that the first documented use of OMG(oh my god)was in 1917, or that LOL was once a common term meaning little old ladies in 1960? That's what the world learned when OMG, LOL, and FYI (for your information) were added to the Oxford English Dictionary last week. This dictionary is considered by many to be the reference book that defines the English language.
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A.expressions like LOL and FYI have been added to the Oxford English Dictionary
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B.used commonly by the dictionary editors
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

No matter how long your life is, you will, at best, be able to read only a few books of all that have been written, and the few you do read should include the best. It is to be expected that the selections will change with the times. Yet there is a surprising uniformity (一致) in the lists which represent the best choices of any period.
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The high cost of living in Sydney causes city parents to worry more about their children.
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Chairman of the Lifewise campaign John Crosswell said:“The research findings quite clearly highlight that Sydney parents prioritise (優(yōu)先考慮)their ability to earn money and yet because they are so busy doing so, it seems that their ability to spend time with their family is affected .Sydney parents are dedicated to earning money but as a consequence, perhaps they don’t have the time to enjoy spending it with their family.”
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“Looks like I’ll be getting it tomorrow,”Mr Dearnly responded.
小題1:What is the main idea of the passage?
A.The findings of a study on how Sydney people go through financial hardship with their family
B.A survey on the factors that may have influences on Sydney children’s happy childhood
C.a(chǎn) survey on the relations between children’s happiness and their parents’ability to earn in Sydney
D.A comparison between Sydney people and those of other cities on their views about earning money
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B.Helping Sydney parents find a suitable job?
C.Making Australian people improve their ability to earn
D.A ttracting Sydney people to buy insurance
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B.If moe of the parents couldn’t work their family finances will be clearly affected
C.Sydney parents are in a dilemma of devoting to work and enjoying family life
D.Sydney parents now can make a balance between their work and family life
小題5:What does “it ”underlined in the last paragraph refer to?
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Future history books might record that we were robbed of the use of our eyes ,In our hurry to get from one place to another, we fail to see anything on the way, Air travel gives you a bird’s –eye view of the world ---or even less if the wing of the aircraft happens to get in your way, When you travel by car or train , you are moving so quickly that you do not see the countryside clearly , Car drivers are forever thinking about going on and on; they never want to stop, Is it the great motorways ,that attract them, or what? And as for sea travel ,it hardly deserves mention ,It is perfectly summed up in the words of the old song:’I joined the navy to see the world ,and what did I see? I saw the sea’. You mention the place names in the world like EI Dorado, Kabul and someone is sure to say‘I’ve been there’meaning ,‘I drove through it at 100 miles an hour on the way to somewhere else.’
When you travel at high speeds, the present means nothing :you live mainly in the future because you spend most of your time looking forward to arriving at some other place, But actual arrival ,when it is achieved , is meaningless , You want to move on again . By traveling like this, you suspend (中止)all experience; the present stops being a reality:you might just as well be dead.
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A.block your sights
B.expend your range of vision
C.prevent you from going out of the plane halfway
D.make your travel continue
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A.They get a good view of the landscape
B.They make full use of their eyes
C.They fail to see the scenery with their heart
D.They are eager to see everything on the way.
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A.Because we change our aims all the time
B.Because we are eager to go to another place
C.Because we are looking forward to the future life
D.Because we cannot enjoy the experience we have had
小題4:What will the author most probably advise us to do?
A.To go hiking in the mountainB.To travel at a high speed
C.To travel by car or trainD.To go around the world
小題5:What would be the best title for the passage?
A.Different travelersB.The use of eyes
C.Ways of travelingD.True traveling

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Great Britain

“Great Britain” has several different names. Some people say “Britain”, or “the United Kingdom”, or just “UK”. There are four different countries in the United Kingdom: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Everyone from Britain is British, but only people from England are English. People from Scotland are Scottish, people from Wales are Welsh, and people from Northern Ireland are Irish. Don't call a Scottish or Welsh person English. He won’t like it!
Altogether more than 56 million people live in Britain, many of them in big industrial cities like London, Liverpool and Manchester, but people are often surprised by how much of Britain is open country, with lovely hills and woods, quiet rivers, lakes and farmlands.
Everyone in Britain speaks English. But in some parts of Scotland and Wales people speak an older language as well. The Welsh are especially proud of their language, and you can see road signs in Welsh all over Wales.
Everyone speaks English, but they do not all speak it in the same way. A Scottish person has to listen carefully if he wants to understand a Londoner. And when a Welsh person speaks, everyone knows at once where he comes from!
Many people think that the weather is cold and wet in Britain all the year round. But it isn't! True, it sometimes rains and even snows for days and days, but every year there are weeks of beautiful sunny weather when the British put on their bikinis and go out to sunbathe.
Britain is only a small country, but every part is different. Scotland is a land of mountains, lakes and romantic castles. The winters are cold, with plenty of snow, but the summers are often warm and sunny. Most farmers keep sheep, and there are many small factories which make fine sweaters from their wool. In some parts of Scotland, there are very few people. Deer live in the hills, and the rivers are full of fish. But Glasgow and Edinburgh are both large and busy, with all that is good (and bad) in modern cities.
Northern Ireland has its problems, but it has beauty too. In the warm, wet climate, the grass grows a brilliant green, and much of the land is farming country. Belfast is a large industrial city with many fine buildings and a big port from which ships come and go to Scotland and England. But Belfast has had many difficult years, and it is not the busy place it once was.
In the north of England there are many old industrial towns. Now, a great number of factories have closed and thousands of people have no work. Some have moved to the new towns, built in the 1960s and 1970s, where the industries are more modern. Outside the towns, much of this part of England is beautiful countryside, with green hills, lakes and sandy beaches. Fishing is an important industry in the North East, and every night (except Sunday) the fishing boats go out to sea.
The centre of England (the “Midlands”) is also an important industrial area, especially near the huge cities of Coventry and Birmingham, the centre of the car industry. But everywhere, even in the heart of a modern city, there are buildings from an older Britain — cathedrals, castles, and houses built hundreds of years ago.
Wales is a special place, a country of high mountains and pretty valleys. But Wales has plenty of industry too, with many factories and coal mines. The people of Wales are very musical. Every year they have a festival of Welsh music and poetry called an “Eisteddfod”.
The west of England is rich farming country. It produces milk, cream, butter, cheese and apples, which go to make cider, a popular drink. In the villages, country people often grow their own fruit, vegetables and flowers.
Some areas of Britain are very crowded. Around Manchester, in northwest England, and Glasgow, in Scotland, are large city areas of houses and factories. The southeast of England, too, has many towns and cities, including London, the giant capital. But quite near London there are still some quiet villages and peaceful farms.
Britain is an island, of course, and you are never far from the sea. Some of the coast, especially in the west, is wild and rocky, with small, sandy beaches, and romantic old harbours. Other parts are industrial. The east coast of Scotland, for example, is busy with oilrigs and fishing boats. The most popular beaches are near the many holiday towns on the south coast, where the weather is usually warmer. It is here that Londoners come to relax.
London London has been a capital city for nearly a thousand years, and many of its ancient buildings still stand. The most famous of these are the Tower of London, Westminster Abbey and St. Paul's Cathedral, but most visitors also want to see the Houses of Parliament, Buckingham Palace (the Queen's London home) and the many magnificent museums.
Once, London was a small Roman town on the north bank of the Thames, but slowly it grew into one of the world's major cities with more than nine million people. Fewer people live in the centre now, but the suburbs are still growing.
Places now in the heart of London, like Westminster, once stood in the middle of green fields. Many small villages, like Hampstead, Chelsea and Mayfair, became part of London, but they still keep some of their old atmosphere. Different areas of London seem like different cities. The West End is a rich man's world of shops, offices and theatres. The East End is the old working people's district, where there are many small flats and houses, some old, some new.
London is always changing. New buildings go up and old ones come down. Poorer areas become fashionable and people with more money move into them.
A hundred years ago, the river was crowded with ships, leaving for Java and Japan, New Zealand and New York, but now the port is nearly empty. People travel by air, and London's main airport, Heathrow, is one of the busiest in the world.
Like all big cities, London has streets and concrete buildings, but it also has many big parks, full of trees, flowers and grass. Sit on the grass (you're allowed to!) in the middle of Hyde Park or Kensington Gardens, and you will think that you are in the country miles away.
Many people live outside the centre of London in the suburbs, and they travel to work by train, bus or underground. Every day, nearly half a million office workers travel into the “City”, the business centre of London, a small area full of banks and offices. Some people come from far out of London, even from the coast, and spend up to four hours travelling every day.
Working hours are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. From 8 until 10 every morning, and 4.30 to 6.30 every evening, the trains are crowded with people, and after the morning “rush hour” the shoppers come.
By day the whole of London is busy. At night, the City is quiet and empty, but the West End stays alive, because this is where Londoners come to enjoy themselves. There are two opera houses here, several concert halls and many theatres, as well as cinemas, and the pubs, restaurants and night clubs are busy half the night.
Many people think that London is all grey, but in fact red is London's favorite colour. The buses are red, the letter boxes are red, and the mail vans are all bright, bright red. London is at its best when people are celebrating. Then the flags, the soldiers' uniforms, the cheering crowds and the carriages and horses all sparkle in the sunshine —if it's not raining, of course! 
Edinburgh Edinburgh is Scotland's capital, and one of the most beautiful cities in Britain. The heart of Edinburgh is the thousand-year-old castle, where the kings of Scotland lived for centuries.
From Edinburgh castle you can see for miles, north over the beautiful old streets, an arm of the sea that pushes inland. Far away are the mountains of central Scotland, often covered with snow.
Edinburgh has a busy cultural life. Every year, in September the International Festival takes place. Musicians, actors and singers come from all over the world and thousands of visitors fill the city. In the evening, the opera house, the theatres and the concert halls are full. In cafes and pubs, small groups sing, act and read poetry.
The castle is at its best in festival time. Every night there is a magnificent military “Tattoo”. Highland soldiers wearing “kilts” play the bagpipes, and march to the music.
Tartans, the patterns of the kilts, have an interesting history. Since the fifteenth century, each Scottish family has worn its own tartan as a kind of badge. It was a useful way of recognizing people, especially in times of war. Many tartans date only from the nineteenth century, but some of the old patterns still exist. “Dress” tartans, worn on special occasions, have light, bright colours. ”Hunting” tartans are usually green, blue or brown.
Oxford What is so special about Oxford and Cambridge, the two oldest universities in England? Why do so many students want to study there?
Both of these university towns are very beautiful. They have some of the finest architecture in Britain. Some of their colleges and libraries are three, four and even five hundred years old, and are full of valuable books and precious paintings. Both towns have many lovely gardens, where the students can read and relax in the summer months.
Oxford is the older university of the two. The first of its colleges was founded in 1249. The university now has thirty-four colleges and about twelve thousand students, many of them from other countries. There were no women students at Oxford until 1878, when the first women's college, Lady Margaret Hall, opened. Now, women study at most colleges.
Oxford is, of course, famous for its first class education as well as its beautiful buildings. Some of the most intelligent men and women in the country live and work here. Oxford gives them what they need: a quiet atmosphere, friendly colleagues, and the four-hundred-year-old Bodleian library, which has about five million books.
It is not easy to get a place at Oxford University to study for a degree. But outside the university there are many smaller private colleges which offer less difficult courses and where it is easy to enroll. Most students in these private schools take business, secretarial or English language courses.
小題1:Providing that you want to visit a most beautiful city and see “kilts” worn by men, you are supposed to go to ________.
A.EdinburghB.LondonC.ManchesterD.Birmingham
小題2:Oxford is one of the oldest universities in Britain, which is special because ________.
A.it has a big and modern library
B.it has a quiet and friendly atmosphere
C.tremendous of the most intelligent people in the country live and work there
D.a(chǎn)ll of the above

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:完形填空

To advertise effectively today, you must abandon the old-school idea of “reaching the masses”. All advertising is local and personal. The key to effective advertising today is to focus on the     45  .
Some are the     46   ways every advertiser could work out. You can print a specific offer of your goods or service on door-hangers and place them on doorknobs in your area. Door-hangers on doorknobs will produce results in direct     47   about the strength of your offer. If you need to reach the drivers, flyer (宣傳單) under windshield (擋風(fēng)玻璃) wipers may have better effect than door-hangers. Imagine, how     48   if you hire someone to be a walking ad or launch a T-shirt advertising,     49  , you can print your products on T-shirts of your     50  . In the early 1970s “Hamp Baker says Drive with Care” was spray-painted on cars, which was a public service ad. Ever since, spray-painted sign has become more and more    51  .
More grand ways are as follows: virtual showroom. Build a website to    52   a virtual showroom. Use it when people call to ask    53   about your company, your products or your services. Also you can even use an old slide projector to put on a nighttime show. They’re    54   effective, and in the long run, cheap. Nothing is quite as powerful as a public    55   that seizes the public’s attention. You can invite a band to give a performance.    56  , you can hire famous models to show it vividly.
Nothing screams “expert” quite as loudly as a book written about a subject. You simply can’t    57   the power of your name on the cover of a book. You might only sell a few copies online, but the copies you give away in your town will make you a fortune. You won’t make money on the book. You’ll make it because of the book.
Of course, word-of-mouth is the best way to promote your    58  . Friends and past customers recommend your products to their family, friends and colleagues. Word-of-mouth works because the    59    is based on previous positive experiences.
小題1:
A.personB.productC.individualD.style
小題2:
A.specialB.commonC.a(chǎn)musingD.normal
小題3:
A.descriptionB.decisionC.discussionD.permission
小題4:
A.surprisingB.funnyC.impressiveD.a(chǎn)mazing
小題5:
A.that is B.a(chǎn)t the same timeC.a(chǎn)s a resultD.on occasion
小題6:
A.customersB.employersC.consumersD.employees
小題7:
A.expensiveB.usualC.popularD.meaningless
小題8:
A.refer toB.serve asC.stand forD.use as
小題9:
A.locationB.business-hoursC.salaryD.details
小題10:
A.unbelievablyB.consequentlyC.a(chǎn)ccidentallyD.occasionally
小題11:
A.speechB.sportC.debateD.performance
小題12:
A.For exampleB.MoreoverC.HoweverD.To be exact
小題13:
A.createB.guessC.imagineD.think
小題14:
A.productionB.reflectionC.consciousnessD.business
小題15:
A.informationB.relationshipC.pronunciation D.a(chǎn)chievement

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