THERE are many different Londons, and they appeal to people with many different passions: museum lovers, theatergoers, opera buffs (愛(ài)好者,迷;熱心人), devotees of royalty, students of history, people who like to walk in the rain. But richest of all, perhaps, is the London for book lovers.
Because the city is the star and the backdrop of so much great literature, it is possible to believe you know it very well — how it looks, how it feels — without ever leaving your home country, or indeed your home. But it is better to visit, if only for the joy of seeing the landscape of your imagination come to life. How breathtaking to happen upon Pudding Lane, where a bakery accident led to the Great Fire of 1666, after reading Pepys’s account in his diaries. Or to wander along Baker Street, where Sherlock Holmes once fictionally solved the unsolvable. Walk across London Bridge and gaze down, toward Southwark Bridge: this is the stretch of the Thames where Dickens’s sinister characters dredged up corpses in “Our Mutual Friend.”
The city is not so foggy as it was in 1952, when Margery Allingham published “The Tiger in the Smoke,” or as socially stratified as it when Marianne Dashwood waited in “Sense and Sensibility” for a suitor who never called; or as greedy as it was in the thrusting 1980s of Martin Amis’s “Money.” But it is all of those Londons, an accrual of different descriptions and eras. It is a city made for description — reread the first passages of “Bleak House,” also on the subject of fog, for a moody introduction — and one that so respects its authors that it buried a number of the best ones in style, in Westminster Abbey.
There are plenty of organized literary-themed tours around the city, easily found on the Internet. Or you can wander characteristically on your own, which is more fun. If you take the Tube or the bus, make sure to carry a book.  
6. What can we infer from the first paragraph?
A. Most people of London like visiting museums.
B. No Londoners go to cinemas to see the films.
C. A majority of Londoners are book lovers.
D. All the Londoners like to walk in the rain.
7. What information can you get from Pepy’s diaries?
A. Great Fire of 1666 caused by an accident in a bakery.
B. Sherlock Holmes once lived in Baker Street.
C. London Bridge is next to Baker Street.
D. “Our Mutual Friend” is one of Dickens’s works.
8. Who is Sherlock Holmes?
A. A book lover.            B. A character of Dickens’s novel: “Our Mutual Friend”.
C. A detective.              D. A person who set the Great Fire of 1666.
9. In which book can’t you find the description about the fog in London?
A. “The Tiger in the Smoke”        B. “Sense and Sensibility”
C. “Money”                                       D. “Our Mutual Friend”
10. Which of the following statements is NOT true according to the passage?
A. Most kinds of tours around London may be found on the Internet.
B. You must be shown around London by a guide.
C. There are many kinds of literary-themed activities including tours.
D. You’d better take a book when you travel in London.
6-10  CACDB
6.  此題為推理判斷題。根據(jù)本段中museum lovers可知,“倫敦人喜歡去參觀博物館”,但不像A項(xiàng)所說(shuō)的most people of London,故不能選;第一段中并沒(méi)有提及是否有人去看電影,但也無(wú)法排除B項(xiàng)正誤;文中提到了people who like to walk in the rain,但這只是many different Londons的部分,文中并沒(méi)有提及是 all;根據(jù)本段最后一句 But richest of all, perhaps, is the London for book lovers.可知C項(xiàng)正確。
7.  此題為細(xì)節(jié)考查題。根據(jù)第二段中How breathtaking to happen upon Pudding Lane, where a bakery accident led to the Great Fire of 1666, after reading Pepys’s account in his diaries.可知此處得知Great Fire of 1666 caused by an accident in a bakery.的出處是Pepys’s diaries;B、C、D三項(xiàng)中所提信息,都是正確的,但與此處的題干是無(wú)關(guān)的,故不能選擇。
8.  此題為細(xì)節(jié)考查題。根據(jù)第二段中Or to wander along Baker Street, where Sherlock Holmes once fictionally solved the unsolvable.的內(nèi)容,尤其是句中fictionally可知:Sherlock Holmes應(yīng)是一個(gè)detective。
9.  此題為細(xì)節(jié)考查題。根據(jù)文中第三段所提供的信息可知:此段中的四部作品都涉及到了fog的內(nèi)容,而在文中沒(méi)有提及在Our Mutual Friend中是否提到過(guò)這一主題。因此選擇D項(xiàng)。
10.  此題為細(xì)節(jié)考查題根據(jù)文中最后一段的內(nèi)容:…easily found on the Internet.可知A項(xiàng)正確;There are plenty of organized literary-themed tours around the city,…可知C項(xiàng)正確;If you take the Tube or the bus, make sure to carry a book可知D項(xiàng)正確;Or you can wander characteristically on your own, which is more fun.可知B項(xiàng)不正確,故選擇B項(xiàng)。
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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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Speak clearly and loudly enough. Show interest and enthusiasm in your voice. When you speak, look at the interviewer. Also don’t say negative things about yourself, or former employers.
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Phone the company if you have not heard anything after one week. Ask if they have make a decision about the job.
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C. Because it is needed by our employer.
D. Because we need it to improve our feeling.
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


Tens of thousands of theatre tickets will be given away to young people next year as part of a government campaign to inspire a lifelong love for theatre.
The plan to offer free seats to people aged between 18 to 26—funded with £2.5 million of taxpayers’ money—was announced yesterday by Andy Burnham, the Culture Secretary. It received a cautious welcome from some in the arts world, who expressed concern that the tickets may not reach the most underprivileged.
The plan comes as West End theatres are enjoying record audiences, thanks largely to musicals teaming up with television talent shows. Attendances reached. 13.6 million in 2007, up 10 percent on 2006, itself a record year. Total sales were up 18 percent on 2006 to almost £470 million.
One theatre source criticised the Government’s priorities(優(yōu)先考慮的事) in funding free tickets when pensioners were struggling to buy food and fuel, saying: “I don’t know why the Government’s wasting money on this. The Yong Vic, as The Times reported today, offers excellent performances at cheap prices.”
There was praise for the Government’s plan from Dominic Cooke of the Royal Court Theatre, who said: “I support any move to get young people into theatre, and especially one that aims to do it all over England, not just in London.”
Ninety-five publicly funded theatres could apply for funding under the two-year plan. In return, they will offer free tickets on at least one day each week to 18 to 26-year-olds, first-come, first-served. It is likely to be on Mondays, traditionally a quiet night for the theatre.
Mr. Burnham said: “A young person attending the theatre can find it an exciting experience, and be inspired to explore a new world. But sometimes people miss out on it because they fear it’s ‘not for them’. It’s time to change this perception.”
Jeremy Hunt, the Shadow Culture Secretary, said: “The real issue is not getting enthusiastic children into the theatre, but improving arts education so that more young people want to go in the first place. For too many children theatres are a no-go area.”
小題1:Critics of the plan argued that ______.
A.the theatres would be overcrowded
B.it would be a waste of money
C.pensioners wouldn’t get free tickets
D.the government wouldn’t be able to afford it
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A.benefit the television industry
B.focus on producing better plays
C.help increase the sales of tickets
D.involve all the young people in England
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A.Ninety-five theatres have received funding.
B.Everyone will get at least one free ticket.
C.It may not benefit all the young people.
D.Free tickets are offered once every day.
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A.many plays are not for young people
B.many young people don’t like theatre
C.people know little about the plan
D.children used to receive good arts education
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Sweetest Day in America is always the third Saturday in October. This holiday is much more important in some regions than in others (Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo being the biggest Sweetest Day cities). It is a holiday that is gaining in popularity every year throughout the country.
Sweetest Day is celebrated on the third Saturday in October as a day to make someone happy. It is an occasion which offers all of us an opportunity to remember not only the sick, aged, and orphaned, but also friends, relatives and associates whose helpfulness and kindness we have enjoyed.
Over 60 years ago, a man in Cleveland, believing that the city's orphans and shut­ins (臥病在床的人) too often felt forgotten and neglected, thought of the idea of showing them that they were remembered. He did this through the distribution of small gifts. With the help of his friends and neighbors, he distributed these small remembrances on a Saturday in October. During the years that followed, other Clevelanders began to participate in the celebration ceremony, which came to be called “Sweetest Day”. In time, the Sweetest Day idea of spreading cheer to the underprivileged was broadened to include everyone, and became an occasion for remembering others with a kind act or a small remembrance. And soon the idea spread to other cities all over the country.
Sweetest Day is not based on any single group's religious affection or on a family relationship. It is a reminder that a thoughtful word or deed enriches life and gives it meaning.
Because for many people remembering takes the form of gift­giving, Sweetest Day offers us the opportunity to show others that we care, in a practical way.
小題1:We can learn from the first paragraph that Sweetest Day is ________.
A.sometimes the third Saturday in October
B.hardly celebrated in Detroit
C.of equal importance in every part of the USA
D.getting increasingly popular in the USA
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A.the young and disabled
B.friends and relatives
C.orphans and shut­ins
D.the sick and aged
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A.Detroit        B.Cleveland
C.BuffaloD.Washington
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A.we careB.we admire
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