第二部分 阅读理解(共25小题,第一节每小题2分,第二节每小题1分;满分45分)
Joanne was stuck in a traffic jam in central Birmingham at 5: 30.and at 6: 30 she was expected to be chairing a meeting of the tennis club. At last, the traffic was moving. She swung quickly racing to her house. As she opened the door, she nearly fell over Sheba.
“Hey, Sheba,” she said, “I've got no time for you now, but I'll take you out as soon as I get back from tennis club.” Then she noticed Sheba seemed to be coughing or choking obviously, she could hardly breathe. Immediately, Joanne realized she would have to take her to the vet (兽医). When she got there, the vet was just about to close for the day. Seeing the state of Sheba, Dr. Sterne brought her quickly into his office.
“Listen, doctor, I'm really in a rush to get to a meeting, can I leave her with you, and go to get changed? I'll be back in ten minutes to pick her up, and then I'll take her on to the meeting with me. Is that OK?”
“Sure.” said the doctor.
Joanne made the quick trip back to her house in a couple of minutes. As she was once more entering the hallway, the phone by the door began to ring.
“This is Dr. Sterne,” said an anxious voice. “I want you to get out of that house immediately,” said the doctor’s voice. “I'm coming round right away, and the police will be there any time now. Wait outside!”
At that moment, a police car screeched to a stop outside the house. Two policemen got out and ran into the house. Joanne was by now completely confused and very frightened. Then the doctor arrived.
“Where’s Sheba? Is she OK?” shouted Joanne.
“She’s fine, Joanne. I took out the thing which was choking her, and she’s OK now.”
Just then, the two policemen reappeared from the house, half-carrying a white-faced man, who could hardly walk. There was blood all over him.
“My God, ”said Joanne, “how did he get in there? And how did you know he was there?”
“I think he must be a burglar.” said the doctor. “I knew he was there because when I finally removed what was stuck in Sheba’s throat, it turned out to be three human fingers.”
41. What was Joanne supposed to do at 6: 30?
A. To walk her dog.
B. To see her doctor.
C. To attend a club meeting.
D. To play tennis with her friends.
42. Joanne wanted to get back to her home again______.
A. to dress up for the meeting
B. to phone the police station
C. to catch the badly hurt burglar
D. to wait for her dog to be cured
43. From the passage, we can infer that______.
A. Sheba fought against the burglar
B. the police found the burglar had broken in
C. Joanne had planned to take her dog to the meeting
D. the doctor performed a difficult operation on the dog
44. In this passage, the writer intends to tell us that the dog is______.
A. clever B. friendly C. frightening D. devoted
Today many people say that women have the same chance as men in society. But this was not always so. In the past, women all over the world had to fight to get the same chance as men in education and jobs. Many people said that women should not receive much education because they would not do as well as men when they went to work.
One woman who showed that women should have the same chance was Marie, a scientist. In the 1800s scientists knew that a metal, uranium, gave off radiation. They also knew how much radiation came from his element. But they didn’t know what this radiation was like; they wondered why and how uranium gave off radiation. Marie Curie set out to answer these questions. In one of her experiments she was studying a certain material which, she knew, contained uranium, But it gave off 4 times as much radiation as usually does. What could explain this fact? Marie Curie thought that there must be another source of radiation in this material.
In 1898 Marie Curie set out to find out this new source of radiation, which she named “radium”. Her husband, who was also a scientist, helped her. They set up a laboratory in an old building behind a school. For four years Curies searched, doing many experiments, And one morning in 1902 Marie found the source of the radiation.
Marie Curie proved to the world that there was element that gave off radiation. And she also proved to the world that, if women are given truly equal chance, they can really help society.The scientists of Marie Curie’s day knew .
A.that uranium gave off radiation |
B.that radium gave off radiation |
C.that there was some radium in uranium |
D.that uranium and radium both gave off radiation |
The Curies found the element radium .
A.with other scientists’ help | B.by asking some famous scientists |
C.by doing many experiments | D.with their teachers’ help |
In the past many people thought .
A.that women must get the same chance as men in education and jobs |
B.that women should receive much education |
C.that women should get good jobs |
D.that women could not do the work well |
Marie Curie proved to people .
A.that there was a new element uranium |
B.that there was a new element radium |
C.that women could do their work as well as men if they were really given the same conditions |
D.both B and C |
Bushwick is a tough place to grow up. This part of Brooklyn, in New York City, has a lot of crime. More than half of its 100,000 residents rely on aid from the government. Only 50% of students at Bushwick High School graduate in four years.
Some people might say, “We should help these poor kids who have so many challenges.” But Malaak Compton-Rock looks at the teens in Bushwick and says, “ Go to help kids who have even bigger challenges than you do.” She believes that once young people see the power they have to make things better, they can handle their own problems more easily. So her service group, the Angel Rock Project, took 30 Bushwick kids to Soweto, in South Africa, to help poor families there. Soweto is a township outside the city of Johannesburg. The effort, called Journey for Change, aims to show that any kid can change the world.
“Kids in Bushwick face pressure to drop out of school or become involved in gangs and drugs.” Says Compton-Rock. “We want them to live a life of purpose and service.”
In Soweto, many parents have died of AIDS, a deadly disease. When that happens, a grandparent or a child must lead the family. The Bushwick volunteers helped such families. They tended vegetable gardens, cared for babies and bought groceries.
“The saddest thing was when we visited an orphanage (孤儿院) and I helped a little boy who had been abandoned because he had HIV, the virus that causes AIDS,” says Queen Clyde, 12. “It‘s been good to be on this trip. But what’s also important is what we do when it’s finished. That’s what counts.” “ I never appreciated what I had until I saw some people who had nothing,” says Sadara Lewis, 12 “It’s really changed my attitude. I want to make a difference.”
The trip was two weeks long. But the kids, aged 12 to 15, will spend all year speaking about their experience, fund-raising and more.What’s the main idea of the first paragraph?
A.Bushwick is the poorest place in New York City. |
B.Bushwick still needs more care from the government. |
C.It is children who suffer most in New York City. |
D.Children in Bushwick are living in a bad situation. |
In Compton-Rock’s opinion, the Bushwick kids __________.
A.have few challenges |
B.should be kept out of schools |
C.can learn to deal with their own problems by helping others |
D.are living much better than people in Africa |
Compared to Bushwick kids, some children in Soweto __________.
A.may have bigger challenges |
B.receive no care from the government |
C.are much more independent |
D.are able to lead the family |
According to the passage, “Journey for Change” can be best seen as the saying “________”.
A.God helps those who help themselves |
B.saying and doing are two things |
C.one stone kills two birds |
D.a friend in need is a friend indeed |
From the passage we know that __________.
A.there are few students in Bushwick High School |
B.the trip to Soweto will have a long influence in spite of its short time. |
C.most children are suffering from AIDS in Soweto |
D.kids with HIV will be abandoned in Soweto |
It was Thanksgiving morning and in the crowded kitchen of my small home I was busy preparing the traditional Thanksgiving turkey when the doorbell rang. I opened the front door and saw two small children in rags huddling together. “Any old papers, lady?” asked one of them.
I was busy. I wanted to say “no” until I looked down at their feet. They were wearing thin little sandals, wet with heavy snow.
“Come in and I’ll make you a cup of hot cocoa.”
They walked over and sat down at the table. Their wet sandals left marks upon the floor. I served them cocoa and bread with jam to fight against the cold outside. Then I went back to the kitchen and started again on my household budget.
The silence in the front room struck me. I looked in. The girl held the empty cup in her hands, looking at it. The boy asked in a flat voice, “Lady, are you rich?”
I looked at my shabby slipcovers. The girl put her cup back in its saucer carefully and said, “Your cups match your saucers.” Her voice was hungry with a need that no amount of food could supply. They left after that, holding their bundles of papers against the wind. They hadn’t said “Thank you.” They didn’t need to. They had reminded me that I had so much for which to be grateful. Plain blue china cups and saucers were only worth five pence. But they matched.
I tasted the potatoes and stirred the meat soup. Potatoes and brown meat soup, a roof over our heads, my man with a good steady job—these matched, too.
I moved the chairs back from the fire and cleaned the living room. The muddy prints of small sandals were still wet upon my floor. Let them be for a while, I thought, just in case I should begin to forget how rich I am. Two children came to the writer’s front door because _________________.
A.it was Thanksgiving Day | B.they were beggars |
C.they wanted old papers | D.they wanted a cup of cocoa |
Why did the writer let the children in?
A.She showed great pity on them |
B.She had old papers to sell |
C.She wanted to invite them to her Thanksgiving feast |
D.She wanted them to see how rich she was |
The girl thought the writer was rich perhaps because ________________.
A.she saw that the lady’s room was comfortable |
B.she saw the cups matched the saucers |
C.the writer’s slipcovers were very new |
D.the writer was preparing a big meal while she was too hungry. |
From the passage, we can infer that whether you are rich depends on ________.
A.how much money you have had |
B.how you feel about your life |
C.how you have helped others |
D.what job your husband is doing |
The writer left the muddy prints of small sandals on the floor for a while to ____________.
A.show her husband that someone had come |
B.remind her that she had helped two children |
C.remind her that she was very rich in the neighborhood |
D.remind her how life should be |
When an ant dies, other ants move the dead insect out. Sometimes, the dead ant get moved away very soon—within an hour of dying. This behavior is interesting to scientists, who wonder how ants know for sure—and so soon—that another ant is dead.
One scientist recently came up with a way to explain this ant behavior. Dong-Hwan Choe is a biologist. Choe found that Argentine ants have a chemical on the outside of their bodies that signals to other ants, “I’m dead—take me away.”
But there’s a twist to Choe’s discovery. Choe says that the living ants—not just the dead ones—have this death chemical. In other words, while an ant crawls around, perhaps in a picnic or home, it’s telling other ants that it’s dead.
What keeps ants from dragging away the living ants?Choe found that Argentine ants have two additional chemicals on their bodies, and these tell nearby ants something like, “Wait—I’m not dead yet.” So Choe’s research turned up two sets of chemical signals in ants: one says, “I’m dead,” and the other set says, “I’m not dead yet.”
Other scientists have tried to figure out how ants know when another ant is dead. If an ant is knocked unconscious, for example, other ants leave it alone until it wakes up. That means ants know that unmoving ants can still be alive.
Choe suspects that when an Argentine ant dies, the chemical that says “Wait-I’m not dead yet” quickly goes away. Once that chemical is gone, only the one that says “I’m dead” is left. “It’s because the dead ant no longer smells like a living ant that it gets carried to the graveyard, not because its body releases(释放) new unique chemicals after death,” said Choe. When other ants detect the “dead” chemical without the “not dead yet” chemical, they drag away the body.
Understanding this behavior may help scientists figure out how to stop Argentine ants from invading new places and causing problems. Choe would like to find a way to use the newly discovered chemicals to spread ant killer to Argentine ant nests.
The ants’ removal behavior is important to the overall health of the nest. “Being able to quickly remove dead individuals and other possible sources of disease is extremely important to all animals living in societies, including us,” says Choe. “Think about all the effort and money that we invest daily in waste management.”The underlined word “twist” in Paragraph 3 means .
A.an unexpected change | B.a clear mistake |
C.an important key | D.a shocking conclusion |
Ants judge whether another one is dead or not depending on .
A.the sense of taste | B.the sense of smell |
C.the sense of touch | D.the sense of sight |
The result of the research can be used to .
A.kill troublesome pests |
B.solve the problem of endangered species |
C.prevent further expansion of the ants’ territory |
D.keep the balance of nature |
Why is it important to remove dead individuals?
A.Because it is easier to manage the living. |
B.Because it can save money to deal with the waste. |
C.Because it can provide more space for the living. |
D.Because it can keep the living from suffering disease. |
What might be the best title of the text?
A.Dead or living? It is easy to judge |
B.Pulling away the dead ants is a difficult task |
C.Ant nests have great undertaking capacity |
D.Leaving it alone or taking it away? Ants feel puzzled |
The accident at Lake Sherwood was in our backyard. An SUV(运动型多用途车)had gone off the road,down a hill, and collided with a tree. When we heard the wreck, I remembered to say “call 911”. My family was the first on the scene. Nick, my son, was on the cell phone with 911. He saw a friend who was a victim in the crash who was a 15 years old girl who was badly disfigured and had died instantly. It was a terrible scene.
There had been six people in the truck, all between 15 and 17 years old. My husband and I checked all the victims, and I picked one who was conscious and stayed with him. I talked with him and had him lay on the ground. When I asked him if he was hurt, he said he was sore all over. When help arrived, they asked me to stay and continue working with them. I did as Debbie Romine, .my instructor, said in class, and did what they wanted. They even said thank you before they left.
The sheriff deputies came by Saturday night to get our statements and play the 911 tape back, so Nick could identify all the voices in the background. They said over and over that the way he handled the call was the best they had heard in a long time. He was calm and worked with them even when he saw his friend who had died. The Sheriff’s Department is sending some people over to help us work through our emotions.
The first aid and CPR course I took in January really helped me. I just didn’t expect to put it to good use so soon.
Pennyd. Miller
Kansas State Dept of Education,Topeka According to the passage, in case of an emergence, people should dial_______________.
A.110 | B.120 | C.800 | D.911 |
Who died immediately after the accident?
A.A girl. | B.The writer. | C.Debbie Romine. | D.Nick. |
Why did the Sheriff deputies come by Saturday night?
A.To arrest the offender. | B.To offer them help. |
C.To get their statements. | D.To help them. |
According to the passage, which of the following statements is true?
A.The writer is a doctor. |
B.All the people in the car were killed in the accident. |
C.Debbie Romine offered much help to the victims. |
D.The writer took a first aid and CPR course in January. |
We can infer from the passage that__________________.
A.The first aid and CPR course in January really helped the writer |
B.The writer’s family were affected emotionally by the accident |
C.The victims were all conscious after the accident |
D.The police arrived long after the accident |