语料库-提供经典范文,文案句子,常用文书,您的写作得力助手

2024屆高考英語二輪復習閱讀理解寒假訓練:(14)

雕龍文庫 分享 時間: 收藏本文

2024屆高考英語二輪復習閱讀理解寒假訓練:(14)

  閱讀理解訓練(14)

  閱讀下列短文,從每題所給的四個選項(A、B、C、D)中,選出最佳選項并在答題卡上將該項涂黑。The following story took place long ago in Israel. One day when government officials were rebuilding an office, they found a mouse hole in a corner and used smoke to force the mice inside the hole to come out. A while later they indeed saw mice running out, one after another.

  Then, everyone thought that all the mice had escaped. But just as they were just about to start to clean up, they saw two mice squeezing out at the exit of the hole. After some endeavor, the mice finally got out. The strange thing was that after they came out of the hole, they did not run away immediately. Instead, one chased after the other near the exit of the hole. It seemed that one was trying to bite the tail of the other.

  Everyone was puzzled, so they stepped closer to take a look. They realized that one of the mice was blind and could not see anything, and the other one was trying to allow the blind mouse to bite on his tail so he could pull the blind one with him to escape.

  After witnessing what happened, everyone was speechless and lost in thought. During meal time, the group of people sat down in a circle and started to chat about what happened to the two mice.

  One serious Rome official said: “I think the relationship between those two mice was that of emperor and minister.” The others thought for a while and said: “That was why!” Thus the Rome official showed his arrogance .

  A smart Israeli said: 揑 think the relationship between those two mice was husband and wife.?Again the others thought for a while, and all felt it made sense; so they expressed agreement. Therefore, the Israeli抯 countenance (the臉色,面色)showed self-satisfaction.

  A Chinese, who was accustomed to the firm tradition of loyalty to parents, said: “I think the relationship between those two mice was that of mother and son.” Once again the others thought for a while, and felt this was more reasonable. So they expressed agreement yet another time. Therefore, the face of the Chinese showed professional modesty.

  At that moment, one pure-minded Samaritan(撒瑪利亞人) who was squatted (蹲)on the ground resting his chin in his hands, bewilderedly (為難地)looked at other people, and asked: 揥hy did those two mice have to have a certain relationship??e Suddenly, the atmosphere froze. Then the group looked back at the Samaritan and remained speechless. The Rome official, the Israeli and the Chinese who had spoken earlier all lowered their heads in shame, and did not dare to respond.

  In fact, the true love is not established on benefit, friendship and loyalty or blood relationship. Instead, it is based on no relationship.

  1. Which of the following is the correct order to describe the story according to the passage?

  a. Mice came out one after another forced by smoke.

  b. Government officials found a mouse hole in an office.

  c. Two more mice came out of the hole.

  d. One mouse tried to bite the tail of the other one near the exit of the hole.

  e. Government officials were about to clean up.

  A.b-a-e-c-d

  B.b-a-c-d-e

  C.c-b-a-e-d

  D.c-a-d-b-e

  2. Why didn’t the two mice escape immediately?

  A. They didn’t know about the danger.

  B. One was trying to bite the tail of the other.

  C. They couldn’t find the right direction to run away.

  D. One was trying to help the other to escape together.

  3. What does the sentence “That was why!” mean in Para.5?

  A. “That was just the reason why you think the two mice were emperor and minister?”

  B. “That was just the reason why the two mice ran after each other?”

  C. “That was just the reason why one mouse helped the other to escape from the hole!”

  D. “That was just the reason why we should believe your words?”

  4. Why did they lower their heads in shame according to the passage?

  A. They did not dare to answer.

  B. They failed to analyze the relationship between the mice.

  C. They regretted driving a poor blind mouse away.

  D. They did not express themselves much better.

  參考答案1—4 ADCD

  B

  You may not pay much attention to your daily elevator ride. Many of us use a lift several times during the day without really thinking about it. But Lee Gray, PhD, of the University of North Carolina, US, has made it his business to examine this overlooked form of public transport. He is known as the “Elevator Guy”.

  揟he lift becomes this interesting social space where etiquette (f禮儀) is sort of odd (奇怪的),” Gray told the BBC. “They (elevators) are socially very interesting but often very awkward places.”

  We walk in and usually turn around to face the door. If someone else comes in, we may have to move. And here, according to Gray, lift users unthinkingly go through a set pattern of movements. He told the BBC what he had observed.

  He explained that when you are the only one inside a lift, you can do whatever you want – it’s your own little box.

  If there are two of you, you go into different corners, standing diagonally (對角線地) across from each other to create distance.

  When a third person enters, you will unconsciously form a triangle. And when there is a fourth person it becomes a square, with someone in every corner. A fifth person is probably going to have to stand in the middle.

  New entrants to the lift will need to size up the situation when the doors slide open and then act decisively. Once in, for most people the rule is simple – look down, or look at your phone.

  Why are we so awkward in lifts?

  “You don’t have enough space,” Professor Babette Renneberg, a clinical psychologist at the Free University of Berlin, told the BBC. “Usually when we meet other people we have about an arm’s length of distance between us. And that’s not possible in most elevators.”

  In such a small, enclosed space it becomes very important to act in a way that cannot be construed (理解) as threatening or odd. “The easiest way to do this is to avoid eye contact,” she said.

  5.The main purpose of the article is to _____.

  A. remind us to enjoy ourselves in the elevator

  B. tell us some unwritten rules of elevator etiquette

  C. share an interesting but awkward elevator ride

  D. analyze what makes people feel awkward in an elevator

  6. According to Gray, when people enter an elevator, they usually _____.

  A. turn around and greet one another

  B. look around or examine their phone

  C. make eye contact with those in the elevator

  D. try to keep a distance from other people

  7. Which of the following describes how people usually stand when there are at least two people in an elevator?

  A.

  Door

  B.

  Door

  C.

  Door

  D.

  Door

  The point in the chart refers to one person.

  8. The underlined phrase “size up” in Paragraph 7 is closest in meaning to _____.

  A. judge

  B. ignore

  C. put up with

  D. make the best of

  參考答案5—8 BDCA

  C

  Once I invited a group of friends round to my house, telling them that I was going to record their speech. I said I was interested in their regional accents, and that it would take only a few minutes. Thus, on one evening, three people turned up at my house and were shown into my front room. When they saw the room they were a bit alarmed, for it was laid out as a studio. In front of each easy chair there was a microphone at head height, with wires leading to a tape-recorder in the middle of the floor. I explained that all I wanted was for them to count from one to twenty. Then we could relax and have a drink.

  I turned on the tape-recorder and each in turn seriously counted from one to twenty in their best accent. When it was over, I turned the tape-recorder off and brought round the drinks, and for the rest of the evening there was general cheerful conversation?interrupted only by the fact that I had to take a telephone call in another room, which unfortunately lasted some time.

  Or at least that was how it would appear. For, of course, the microphones were not connected to the tape-recorder in the middle of the room at all but to another one, which was turning happily away in the kitchen. The participants, having seen the visible tape-recorder turned off, paid no more attention to the microphones which stayed in front of their chairs, only a few inches from their mouths, thus giving excellent sound quality. And my lengthy absence meant that I was able to obtain as natural a piece of conversation as it would be possible to find.

  I should add, perhaps, that I did tell my friends what had happened to them, after the event was over, and gave them the choice of destroying the tape. None of them wanted to—though for some years afterwards it always seemed to be my round when it came to the buying of drinks. Linguistic research can be a very expensive business.

  9. The writer asked his friends to count from one to twenty because _______.

  A. he wanted to record the numbers for his research

  B. he wanted to find out whether the tape recorder was working

  C. he wanted to make his friends relax before real recording started

  D. he wanted his friends to think that was all he wanted to record

  10. The writer went into another room to ________.

  A. get a natural recording of his friends’ conversation

  B. stay away from too much drinking with his friends

  C. bring a telephone into the front room

  D. answer a long distance phone call

  11. The writer turned off the tape-recorder because _______.

  A. he had to answer a phone call

  B. he wanted his friends to enjoy some drinks

  C. he thought the tape-recorder might bother his friends

  D. he wanted to make his friends believe he had finished the recording

  參考答案9-11 DAD

  D

  It was fifteen past nine as Marie hurried into the office building where she was going to work.Her bus had inched along through heavy morning traffic, making her a few minutes late for her very first job.She decided to start out half an hour earlier the next day.

  Once inside the building, she had to stand at the elevators and wait several minutes before she could get on one going to the sixth floor.When she finally reached the office marked "Smith Enterprises", she knocked at the door nervously and waited.There was no reply.She tapped on the door again, but still there was no answer.From inside the next office, she could hear the sound of voices, so she opened the door and went in.

  Although she was sure it was the same office she had been in two weeks before when she had the interview with Mr. Smith, it looked quite different now.In fact, it hardly looked like an office at all.The employees were just standing around chatting and smoking.In the front of the room, somebody must have just told a good joke, she thought, because there was a loud burst of laughter as she came in.For a moment she had thought they were laughing at her.

  Then one of the men looked at his watch, clapped his hands and said something to the others.Quickly they all went to their desks and, in a matter of seconds, everyone was hard at work.No one paid any attention to Marie.Finally she went up to the man who was sitting at the desk nearest to the door and explained that this was her first day in the office.Hardly looking up from his work, he told her to have a seat and wait for Mr. Smith, who would arrive at any moment.then Marie realized that the day's work in the office began just before Mr. Smith arrived.

  Later she found out that he lived in Connecticut and came into Manhattan on the same train every morning, arriving in the office at 9:35, so that his staff knew exactly when to start working.

  12.Marie could hardly recognize the office she went into as__.

  A.she had been there only once

  B.Mr. Smith was not in the office

  C.nobody was doing any work

  D.the office seemed different

  13.The people in the office suddenly started working because___.

  A.their morning break was ended

  B.the boss was about to arrive

  C.they saw a stranger in the office

  D.no one wanted to talk to Marie

  14.We can infer from the text that the employees of the enterprise___.

  A.were cold to newcomers

  B.were always punctual for work

  C.lacked devotion to the company

  D.would start their work by listening to a joke

  15.The best title for this text would be___.

  A.Punctual Like A Clock

  B.A Cold Welcome

  C.An Unpunctual Manager

  D.Better Late Than Never

  參考答案12—15 DBCA

  閱讀理解訓練(14)

  閱讀下列短文,從每題所給的四個選項(A、B、C、D)中,選出最佳選項并在答題卡上將該項涂黑。The following story took place long ago in Israel. One day when government officials were rebuilding an office, they found a mouse hole in a corner and used smoke to force the mice inside the hole to come out. A while later they indeed saw mice running out, one after another.

  Then, everyone thought that all the mice had escaped. But just as they were just about to start to clean up, they saw two mice squeezing out at the exit of the hole. After some endeavor, the mice finally got out. The strange thing was that after they came out of the hole, they did not run away immediately. Instead, one chased after the other near the exit of the hole. It seemed that one was trying to bite the tail of the other.

  Everyone was puzzled, so they stepped closer to take a look. They realized that one of the mice was blind and could not see anything, and the other one was trying to allow the blind mouse to bite on his tail so he could pull the blind one with him to escape.

  After witnessing what happened, everyone was speechless and lost in thought. During meal time, the group of people sat down in a circle and started to chat about what happened to the two mice.

  One serious Rome official said: “I think the relationship between those two mice was that of emperor and minister.” The others thought for a while and said: “That was why!” Thus the Rome official showed his arrogance .

  A smart Israeli said: 揑 think the relationship between those two mice was husband and wife.?Again the others thought for a while, and all felt it made sense; so they expressed agreement. Therefore, the Israeli抯 countenance (the臉色,面色)showed self-satisfaction.

  A Chinese, who was accustomed to the firm tradition of loyalty to parents, said: “I think the relationship between those two mice was that of mother and son.” Once again the others thought for a while, and felt this was more reasonable. So they expressed agreement yet another time. Therefore, the face of the Chinese showed professional modesty.

  At that moment, one pure-minded Samaritan(撒瑪利亞人) who was squatted (蹲)on the ground resting his chin in his hands, bewilderedly (為難地)looked at other people, and asked: 揥hy did those two mice have to have a certain relationship??e Suddenly, the atmosphere froze. Then the group looked back at the Samaritan and remained speechless. The Rome official, the Israeli and the Chinese who had spoken earlier all lowered their heads in shame, and did not dare to respond.

  In fact, the true love is not established on benefit, friendship and loyalty or blood relationship. Instead, it is based on no relationship.

  1. Which of the following is the correct order to describe the story according to the passage?

  a. Mice came out one after another forced by smoke.

  b. Government officials found a mouse hole in an office.

  c. Two more mice came out of the hole.

  d. One mouse tried to bite the tail of the other one near the exit of the hole.

  e. Government officials were about to clean up.

  A.b-a-e-c-d

  B.b-a-c-d-e

  C.c-b-a-e-d

  D.c-a-d-b-e

  2. Why didn’t the two mice escape immediately?

  A. They didn’t know about the danger.

  B. One was trying to bite the tail of the other.

  C. They couldn’t find the right direction to run away.

  D. One was trying to help the other to escape together.

  3. What does the sentence “That was why!” mean in Para.5?

  A. “That was just the reason why you think the two mice were emperor and minister?”

  B. “That was just the reason why the two mice ran after each other?”

  C. “That was just the reason why one mouse helped the other to escape from the hole!”

  D. “That was just the reason why we should believe your words?”

  4. Why did they lower their heads in shame according to the passage?

  A. They did not dare to answer.

  B. They failed to analyze the relationship between the mice.

  C. They regretted driving a poor blind mouse away.

  D. They did not express themselves much better.

  參考答案1—4 ADCD

  B

  You may not pay much attention to your daily elevator ride. Many of us use a lift several times during the day without really thinking about it. But Lee Gray, PhD, of the University of North Carolina, US, has made it his business to examine this overlooked form of public transport. He is known as the “Elevator Guy”.

  揟he lift becomes this interesting social space where etiquette (f禮儀) is sort of odd (奇怪的),” Gray told the BBC. “They (elevators) are socially very interesting but often very awkward places.”

  We walk in and usually turn around to face the door. If someone else comes in, we may have to move. And here, according to Gray, lift users unthinkingly go through a set pattern of movements. He told the BBC what he had observed.

  He explained that when you are the only one inside a lift, you can do whatever you want – it’s your own little box.

  If there are two of you, you go into different corners, standing diagonally (對角線地) across from each other to create distance.

  When a third person enters, you will unconsciously form a triangle. And when there is a fourth person it becomes a square, with someone in every corner. A fifth person is probably going to have to stand in the middle.

  New entrants to the lift will need to size up the situation when the doors slide open and then act decisively. Once in, for most people the rule is simple – look down, or look at your phone.

  Why are we so awkward in lifts?

  “You don’t have enough space,” Professor Babette Renneberg, a clinical psychologist at the Free University of Berlin, told the BBC. “Usually when we meet other people we have about an arm’s length of distance between us. And that’s not possible in most elevators.”

  In such a small, enclosed space it becomes very important to act in a way that cannot be construed (理解) as threatening or odd. “The easiest way to do this is to avoid eye contact,” she said.

  5.The main purpose of the article is to _____.

  A. remind us to enjoy ourselves in the elevator

  B. tell us some unwritten rules of elevator etiquette

  C. share an interesting but awkward elevator ride

  D. analyze what makes people feel awkward in an elevator

  6. According to Gray, when people enter an elevator, they usually _____.

  A. turn around and greet one another

  B. look around or examine their phone

  C. make eye contact with those in the elevator

  D. try to keep a distance from other people

  7. Which of the following describes how people usually stand when there are at least two people in an elevator?

  A.

  Door

  B.

  Door

  C.

  Door

  D.

  Door

  The point in the chart refers to one person.

  8. The underlined phrase “size up” in Paragraph 7 is closest in meaning to _____.

  A. judge

  B. ignore

  C. put up with

  D. make the best of

  參考答案5—8 BDCA

  C

  Once I invited a group of friends round to my house, telling them that I was going to record their speech. I said I was interested in their regional accents, and that it would take only a few minutes. Thus, on one evening, three people turned up at my house and were shown into my front room. When they saw the room they were a bit alarmed, for it was laid out as a studio. In front of each easy chair there was a microphone at head height, with wires leading to a tape-recorder in the middle of the floor. I explained that all I wanted was for them to count from one to twenty. Then we could relax and have a drink.

  I turned on the tape-recorder and each in turn seriously counted from one to twenty in their best accent. When it was over, I turned the tape-recorder off and brought round the drinks, and for the rest of the evening there was general cheerful conversation?interrupted only by the fact that I had to take a telephone call in another room, which unfortunately lasted some time.

  Or at least that was how it would appear. For, of course, the microphones were not connected to the tape-recorder in the middle of the room at all but to another one, which was turning happily away in the kitchen. The participants, having seen the visible tape-recorder turned off, paid no more attention to the microphones which stayed in front of their chairs, only a few inches from their mouths, thus giving excellent sound quality. And my lengthy absence meant that I was able to obtain as natural a piece of conversation as it would be possible to find.

  I should add, perhaps, that I did tell my friends what had happened to them, after the event was over, and gave them the choice of destroying the tape. None of them wanted to—though for some years afterwards it always seemed to be my round when it came to the buying of drinks. Linguistic research can be a very expensive business.

  9. The writer asked his friends to count from one to twenty because _______.

  A. he wanted to record the numbers for his research

  B. he wanted to find out whether the tape recorder was working

  C. he wanted to make his friends relax before real recording started

  D. he wanted his friends to think that was all he wanted to record

  10. The writer went into another room to ________.

  A. get a natural recording of his friends’ conversation

  B. stay away from too much drinking with his friends

  C. bring a telephone into the front room

  D. answer a long distance phone call

  11. The writer turned off the tape-recorder because _______.

  A. he had to answer a phone call

  B. he wanted his friends to enjoy some drinks

  C. he thought the tape-recorder might bother his friends

  D. he wanted to make his friends believe he had finished the recording

  參考答案9-11 DAD

  D

  It was fifteen past nine as Marie hurried into the office building where she was going to work.Her bus had inched along through heavy morning traffic, making her a few minutes late for her very first job.She decided to start out half an hour earlier the next day.

  Once inside the building, she had to stand at the elevators and wait several minutes before she could get on one going to the sixth floor.When she finally reached the office marked "Smith Enterprises", she knocked at the door nervously and waited.There was no reply.She tapped on the door again, but still there was no answer.From inside the next office, she could hear the sound of voices, so she opened the door and went in.

  Although she was sure it was the same office she had been in two weeks before when she had the interview with Mr. Smith, it looked quite different now.In fact, it hardly looked like an office at all.The employees were just standing around chatting and smoking.In the front of the room, somebody must have just told a good joke, she thought, because there was a loud burst of laughter as she came in.For a moment she had thought they were laughing at her.

  Then one of the men looked at his watch, clapped his hands and said something to the others.Quickly they all went to their desks and, in a matter of seconds, everyone was hard at work.No one paid any attention to Marie.Finally she went up to the man who was sitting at the desk nearest to the door and explained that this was her first day in the office.Hardly looking up from his work, he told her to have a seat and wait for Mr. Smith, who would arrive at any moment.then Marie realized that the day's work in the office began just before Mr. Smith arrived.

  Later she found out that he lived in Connecticut and came into Manhattan on the same train every morning, arriving in the office at 9:35, so that his staff knew exactly when to start working.

  12.Marie could hardly recognize the office she went into as__.

  A.she had been there only once

  B.Mr. Smith was not in the office

  C.nobody was doing any work

  D.the office seemed different

  13.The people in the office suddenly started working because___.

  A.their morning break was ended

  B.the boss was about to arrive

  C.they saw a stranger in the office

  D.no one wanted to talk to Marie

  14.We can infer from the text that the employees of the enterprise___.

  A.were cold to newcomers

  B.were always punctual for work

  C.lacked devotion to the company

  D.would start their work by listening to a joke

  15.The best title for this text would be___.

  A.Punctual Like A Clock

  B.A Cold Welcome

  C.An Unpunctual Manager

  D.Better Late Than Never

  參考答案12—15 DBCA

主站蜘蛛池模板: 工作服定制,工作服定做,工作服厂家-卡珀职业服装(苏州)有限公司 | 定制防伪标签_防伪标签印刷_防伪标签厂家-510品保防伪网 | 全自动包装秤_全自动上袋机_全自动套袋机_高位码垛机_全自动包装码垛系统生产线-三维汉界机器(山东)股份有限公司 | 上海瑶恒实业有限公司|消防泵泵|离心泵|官网 | 净化板-洁净板-净化板价格-净化板生产厂家-山东鸿星新材料科技股份有限公司 | SDI车窗夹力测试仪-KEMKRAFT方向盘测试仪-上海爱泽工业设备有限公司 | 恒温振荡混匀器-微孔板振荡器厂家-多管涡旋混匀器厂家-合肥艾本森(www.17world.net) | 北京网站建设公司_北京网站制作公司_北京网站设计公司-北京爱品特网站建站公司 | 并网柜,汇流箱,电控设备,中高低压开关柜,电气电力成套设备,PLC控制设备订制厂家,江苏昌伟业新能源科技有限公司 | 江西高职单独招生-江西单招考试-江西高职单招网 | 商秀—企业短视频代运营_抖音企业号托管| 【黄页88网】-B2B电子商务平台,b2b平台免费发布信息网 | 车辆定位管理系统_汽车GPS系统_车载北斗系统 - 朗致物联 | 刹车盘机床-刹车盘生产线-龙口亨嘉智能装备| 不干胶标签-不干胶贴纸-不干胶标签定制-不干胶标签印刷厂-弗雷曼纸业(苏州)有限公司 | 广东教师资格网-广东教师资格证考试网 | 废水处理-废气处理-工业废水处理-工业废气处理工程-深圳丰绿环保废气处理公司 | 学习安徽网| 山东PE给水管厂家,山东双壁波纹管,山东钢带增强波纹管,山东PE穿线管,山东PE农田灌溉管,山东MPP电力保护套管-山东德诺塑业有限公司 | 土壤有机碳消解器-石油|表层油类分析采水器-青岛溯源环保设备有限公司 | 上海阳光泵业制造有限公司 -【官方网站】 | 贵州科比特-防雷公司厂家提供贵州防雷工程,防雷检测,防雷接地,防雷设备价格,防雷产品报价服务-贵州防雷检测公司 | 阴离子聚丙烯酰胺价格_PAM_高分子聚丙烯酰胺厂家-河南泰航净水材料有限公司 | 小型气象站_便携式自动气象站_校园气象站-竞道气象设备网 | 等离子表面处理机-等离子表面活化机-真空等离子清洗机-深圳市东信高科自动化设备有限公司 | MES系统工业智能终端_生产管理看板/安灯/ESOP/静电监控_讯鹏科技 | 加气混凝土砌块设备,轻质砖设备,蒸养砖设备,新型墙体设备-河南省杜甫机械制造有限公司 | 北京成考网-北京成人高考网| [官网]叛逆孩子管教_戒网瘾学校_全封闭问题青少年素质教育_新起点青少年特训学校 | 杭州标识标牌|文化墙|展厅|导视|户内外广告|发光字|灯箱|铭阳制作公司 - 杭州标识标牌|文化墙|展厅|导视|户内外广告|发光字|灯箱|铭阳制作公司 | 螺旋丝杆升降机-SWL蜗轮-滚珠丝杆升降机厂家-山东明泰传动机械有限公司 | 塑胶跑道施工-硅pu篮球场施工-塑胶网球场建造-丙烯酸球场材料厂家-奥茵 | 整车VOC采样环境舱-甲醛VOC预处理舱-多舱法VOC检测环境仓-上海科绿特科技仪器有限公司 | LED太阳能中国结|发光红灯笼|灯杆造型灯|节日灯|太阳能灯笼|LED路灯杆装饰造型灯-北京中海轩光电 | 植筋胶-粘钢胶-碳纤维布-碳纤维板-环氧砂浆-加固材料生产厂家-上海巧力建筑科技有限公司 | 西子馋火锅鸡加盟-太原市龙城酉鼎餐饮管理有限公司 | 沥青车辙成型机-车托式混凝土取芯机-混凝土塑料试模|鑫高仪器 | 砖机托板价格|免烧砖托板|空心砖托板厂家_山东宏升砖机托板厂 | 成都竞价托管_抖音代运营_网站建设_成都SEM外包-成都智网创联网络科技有限公司 | 选矿设备,选矿生产线,选矿工艺,选矿技术-昆明昆重矿山机械 | 玄米影院|