Pop music is the name for different forms of popular, commercial(商业) music. It had its beginning in the USA and spread throughout the whole world during the 1950s and 1960s. It is widely liked by the young people. The best known early form of pop music was “rock’ n’ roll”; another was “blues”. A more recent development is “folk-rock”. Pop music has taken the place of native music in many parts of the world; it has caused the number of people for jazz to become much smaller than it was in the 1950s and earlier, and it has now begun to rule musical stage productions. It’s a big industry. Much pop music is without artistic value, but the work of some pop singers, e.g. the Beatles, Bob Dylan, the groups like Floyd and Crosby, Stills and Nash, is on a higher musical level. And there is still a great interest in it today. Pop music concerts and festivals are held all over the world.All of the following forms belong to pop music EXCEPT __________________.
A.blues | B.rock’ n ’roll | C.jazz | D.folk-rock |
According to the article, the number of people for jazz in the 1950s and earlier was ___________ it is today.
A.much greater than | B.much smaller than | C.as great as | D.as small as |
Which of the following is TRUE?
A.No pop music is on a high musical level. |
B.Much pop music is very artistic. |
C.Pop music is highly artistic. |
D.Not all pop music is without artistic value. |
“It is a big industry” means that _______________.
A.it makes a lot of music![]() |
B.it is a big musical and commercial business |
C.the pop singers are very hard-working |
D.pop music is on a very high musical level |
A town in Oxfordshire has become the first in the UK to have biomethane(生物甲烷)gas from human waste piped to their homes for gas central heating and cooking.
Up to 200 families in Didcot now receive the gas via the national gas power system. Head of energy and technology at British Gas, Martin Orrill, said customers wouldn’t notice any difference as the gas is purified(提炼)to the highest standard and has no smell. The gas is produced at a sewage(污物)treatment works plant in Didcot.
The entire process takes only less than three weeks, with the sewage being collected and sent first to settlement tanks. The solid waste material is then fed into digesters, where anaerobic bacteria(厌氧菌)digest the sewage, with the aid of enzymes(酶)to speed up the process. The digestion process produces methane, which can be burned to drive machines to produce electricity, or can be purified and fed into the gas network and piped to homes and businesses. British Gas says supplying the gas rather than electricity is far more efficient since around two-thirds of the energy is lost in producing electricity.
Partners in the Didcot project, British Gas, Scotia Gas Networks, and Thames Water, all hope to expand the process to other towns, and other companies such as Ecotricity and United Utilities have also announced biomethane projects being planned. One of these projects, in Manchester, could be supplying 500 homes with biomethane by mid next year. Another British Gas project in Suffolk will provide gas from digestion of brewery wastes to around 235 families.
The Didcot project cost £2.5m and was influenced by promises of government aids aimed at encouraging companies to develop renewable technologies. An EU directive means the UK must ensure at least 15 percent of its energy is from renewable sources by 2020.
The UK produces about 1.73 million tons of sewage annually. If all sewage treatment works in the UK were fitted with the technology, they could supply gas for up to 350,000 families.Which of the following is true of the biomethane gas?
A.It’s mainly made from rotting plants. |
B.It’s an environmentally friendly gas. |
C.Its production process is too long. |
D.It’s easily recognized by the customers. |
What is the function of the enzymes?
A.To digest the solid waste material. |
B.To help get rid of anaerobic bacteria. |
C.To help purify the biomethane. |
D.To speed up the digestion process. |
According to British Gas, the biomethane gas had better be used _____.
A.as the power for the vehicles |
B.for the heating and cooking |
C.to produce the electricity |
D.to drive a variety of machines |
The last three paragraphs mainly show that _____.
A.UK government supports the biome thane projects |
B.the biome thane projects are very costly |
C.the biome thane projects still face many barriers |
D.the biome thane projects are promising |
What should the text belong to?
A.Computer science. | B.Engineering. | C.Energy. | D.Business. |
IQUIQUE, Chile (Reuters) — Rescue workers at the San Jose gold and copper mine in northern Chile had reason to sing this week. A small hole drilled into the earth became a passage to freedom for 33 trapped miners, who spent 69 days underground. “Never have people been trapped for so long so deeply,” says a doctor at NASA, the American space agency, which helped in the rescue.
But the chief medical officer for the miners said most are in good enough health to leave the hospital within a day or so. The first three recovered and went home Thursday night.
For much of the day the miners relaxed with Chilean President Sebastian Pinera. The 32 Chileans and 1 Bolivian still wore special sunglasses to protect their eyes.
A partial mine collapse on 5th August trapped them more than half a kilometer underground. They had to stretch a two-day food supply. For two weeks no one knew if they were alive or dead. Later, they received supplies.
The first miner rescued on Wednesday was Florencio Avalos. The second was Mario Sepulveda, who talked about how the experience tested his faith. The last miner up was Luis Urzua, who was the shift leader when his crew became trapped.
Rescuers used a metal cage to pull the miners to safety in less than 24 hours — faster than expected. The rescue capsule was a half-meter wide and known as the Phoenix, an imaginary bird from ancient stories. It bursts into flames but is continually reborn and rises from the ashes.
Chile’s Navy built the capsule with advice from mining experts and NASA engineers. It worked like an elevator, traveling up and down on a cable through a shaft(竖井)drilled 622 meters into the rocks.
Millions of people around the world watched the rescue. More than one thousand journalists traveled to the mine in the Atacama Desert to report on the rescue. They joined family members of the miners and rescue crews housed in an area of tents known as Camp Hope.What would be the best title for the passage?
A.Rescued miners speak out |
B.Miners’ life deep underground |
C.A rebirth for 33 rescued miners in Chile |
D.Chilean president honors rescued miners |
How many rescued miners are still in hospital?
A.3. | B.30. | C.33. | D.69. |
We can infer from the passage that ______.
A.all the trapped miners are Chileans |
B.the Chileans rescued the miners alone |
C.the rescue caught the world’s attention |
D.the trapped miners lived easily underground |
Which of the following is true of the Phoenix?
A.It was a wooden cage like a capsule. |
B.It worked efficiently in the rescue. |
C.It was named after a real Chilean bird. |
D.It was built by NASA engineers. |
The rescue is great for the reason that ______.
A.33 trapped miners were saved |
B.the American space agency took part |
C.Chilean President was on the rescuing spot |
D.it lasted so long and the miners were trapped so deep |
A daughter’s duty? Adult daughters are often expected to caregiver for older parents. In 2007, Jorjan Sarich and her dad moved from California to Idaho. It was where he wanted to live his rest time.
“I left my occupation, I left my friends; he did the same thing,” said Sarich, who bought a house with her father, George Snyder, in the China Gardens neighborhood of Hailey after his health began to decline. Though a graduate student struggling to finish her dissertation(论文), Sarich chose to be her dad’s full-time caregiver.
“It’s only now, several years later, that I’m realizing how much work it was. It’s the kind of exhaustion(疲惫)that sleep doesn’t cure,” she said.
About 6 million Americans provide care to elderly relatives or friends living outside of nursing homes. Laurel Kennedy, author of “The Daughter Trap” (Thomas Dunne Books, $25.95), says that women bear a disproportionate(不成比例的)share of the burden — about 70 percent of hands-on care giving such as bathing.
“I want to be clear: Women don’t hate this,” Kennedy said. “What they hate is that everyone just assumes they’ll do it.”
Kennedy is calling for a social revolution equal to the rise of affordable child care and day care: Employers should help working caregivers by offering accommodations. Men should step up more often. It’s unfair that women are always chosen to provide care for an elderly family member.
Despite the hard work it took on Sarich — interrupted sleep and the knowledge that his 2009 death was the end game, she would do it again. Since about half a century had gone by, she wasn’t the person he remembered, and he wasn’t the person she remembered either. Caring for her father changed how each saw the other. Why did Jorjan Sarich caregiver for her father?
A.It was a very easy job. | B.She had no work to do. |
C.It was the social practice. | D.She lived with her father. |
What can we infer from the book “The Daughter Trap”?
A.Daughters don’t like care giving. |
B.Daughters devote a lot to care giving. |
C.Care giving is daughters’ duty. |
D.Care giving should be sons’ duty. |
What does the underlined phrase “a social revolution” refer to?
A.The child care revolution. | B.The reform in day care. |
C.The social development. | D.The change in care giving. |
How many years did Jorjan Sarich work as her father’s full-time caregiver?
A.Five years. | B.Only one year. | C.Four years. | D.Two years. |
In her care giving, Jorjan Sarich _____.
A.got along well with her father | B.was a little tired of her father |
C.changed her father in every way | D.felt it was unfair to do so |
The common cold is the world's most widespread illness, which is plagues(疫病) that flesh receives.
The most widespread fallacy(谬误) of all is that colds are caused by cold. They are not. They are caused by viruses passing on from person to person. You catch a cold by coming into contact, directly or indirectly, with someone who already has one. If cold causes colds, it would be reasonable to expect the Eskimos to suffer from them forever. But they do not. And in isolated Arctic regions explorers have reported being free from colds until coming into contact again with infected people from the outside world by way of packages and mail dropped from airplanes.
During the First World War soldiers who spent long periods in the trenches(战壕), cold and wet, showed no increased tendency to catch colds.
In the Second World War prisoners at the notorious Auschwitz Concentration Camp(奥斯维辛集中营), naked and starving, were astonished to find that they seldom had colds. At the Common Cold Research Unit in England, volunteers took part in Experiments in which they gave themselves to the discomforts of being cold and wet for long stretches of time. After taking hot baths, they put on bathing suits, allowed themselves to be with cold water, and then stood about dripping wet in drafty room. Some wore wet socks all day while others exercised in the rain until close to exhaustion. Not one of the volunteers came down with a cold unless a cold virus was actually dropped in his nose.
If, then, cold and wet have nothing to do with catching colds, why are they more frequent in the winter? Despite the most pains-taking research, no one has yet found the answer. One explanation offered by scientists is that people tend to stay together indoors more in cold weather than at other times, and this makes it easier for cold viruses to be passed on.
No one has yet found a cure for the cold. There are drugs and pain suppressors(止痛片) such as aspirin, but all they do is relieve the symptoms. Which of the following does not agree with the chosen passage?
A.The Eskimos do not suffer from colds all the time. |
B.Colds are not caused by cold. |
C.People suffer from colds just because they like to stay indoors. . . |
D.A person may catch a cold by touching someone who already has one. |
Arctic explorers may catch colds when.
A.they are working in the isolated arctic regions |
B.they are writing reports in terribly cold weather |
C.they are free from work in the isolated arctic regions |
D.they are coming into touch again with the outside world |
Volunteers taking part in the experiments in the Common Cold Research Unit.
A.suffered a lot | B.never caught colds | C.often caught colds | D.became very strong |
The passage mainly discusses.
A.the experiments on the common cold | B.the fallacy about the common cold |
C.the reason and the way people catch colds | D.the continued spread of common colds |
YOUR mom might cook a bowl of noodle for you on birthday. But in the US, a mom makes a cupcake for her children on their birthday.
Cupcakes are small, round cakes topped with frosting. It has been an American tradition that moms bring cupcakes to celebrate their child’s birthday.
But recently some doctors have called for this to be banned. They believe cupcakes contribute to child obesity.
Despite their good intentions, however, some people believe that experts are interfering with American culture. The cupcakes is seen as American as apple pie only prettier.
According to Marion Nestle, a professor of nutrition at New York university, the cupcakes is the most democratic of desserts. As they are small enough for one person, you don’t have go share your cupcake with anyone –it’s all yours. They are also all the same size, so there can’t be any cries of “she got the bigger piece!”
Each bite can taste different depending on how much icing you have. It is a lesson in self determination. Some people eat only a little of the frosting every time, other have it all in just one bite.
In recent years, eating a cupcake has become as trendy as having a cup of Starbucks coffee.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton jokingly promised on a talk show that if she was elected president, a he would give everyone a cupcake on her birthday.
Ruth Reichl, editor---in----chief of gourmet magazine, explains that the rise of the cupcake is very much about going buck to American national identity in food, which is all about comfort. “People want to about when they and their country were innocent,” she said.According to the passage, it has been an American tradition that_______.
A.a party for children is held on their birthday |
B.A mom cooks a bowl of noodles for her children on their birthday |
C.A mom makes a cupcake for her children on their birthday and brings it to the classroom |
D.parents go traveling with their children on their birthday |
Why do doctors ask people to ban cupcake on children’s birthday?
A.Because they themselves don’t like cupcake |
B.Because they think cupcakes are not so delicious |
C.Because they believe cupcakes will cause cries of “she got the bigger piece”. |
D.Because they believe cupcakes are one of the causes to make children become fat. |
The following are true according to Marion Nestle expect that ______
A.the cupcake is more democratic than any other deserts in the US |
B.the cupcake is too small to share with others |
C.the sizes of cupcakes are the same so it is equal to everyone |
D.cupcakes will lead to child obesity so they should be banned |
Why did the writer mention Hillary Clinton and Ruth Reichl?
A.To arouse the readers’ attention |
B.To show that cupcakes are becoming a popular to show kindness and comfort. |
C.To make a comparison between them |
D.To give readers a general idea of cupcakes |