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题目列表(包括答案和解析)

阅读理解。
     Frederic Mishkin, who's been a professor at Columbia Business School for almost 30 years, is good
at solving problems and expressing ideas. Whether he's standing in front of a lecture hall or engaged in a
casual conversation, his hands are always waving and pointing. When he was in graduate school, one of
his professors was so annoyed by this constant gesturing that he made the young economist sit on his
hands whenever he visited the professor's office.
     It turns out, however, that Mishkin's professor had it exactly wrong. Gesture doesn't prevent but
promotes clear thought and speech. Research demonstrates that the movements we make with our hands when we talk form a kind of second language, adding information that's absent from our words. It's
learning's secret code: Gesture reveals what we know. It reveals what we don't know. What's more, the
agreement (or lack of agreement) between what our voices say and how our hands move offers a clue to
our readiness to learn.
     Many of the studies establishing the importance of gesture to learning have been conducted by Susan
Goldin-Meadow, a professor of psychology at the University of Chicago. "We change our minds by
moving our hands," writes Goldin-Meadow in a review of this work. Particularly significant are what she
calls "mismatches" between oral expression and physical gestures. A student might say that a heavier ball
falls faster than a light one, for example, but make a gesture indicating that they fall at the same rate, which
is correct. Such differences indicate that we're moving from one level of understanding to another. The
thoughts expressed by hand motions are often our newest and most advanced ideas about the problem
we're working on; we can't yet absorb these concepts into language, but we can capture them in
movement.
     Goldin-Meadow's more recent work strews not only that gesture shows our readiness to learn, but
that it actually helps to bring learning about. It does so in two ways. First, it elicits (引出) helpful behavior
from others around us. Goldin-Meadow has found that adults respond to children's speech-gesture
mismatches by adjusting their way of instruction. Parents and teachers apparently receive the signal that
children are ready to learn, and they act on it by offering a greater variety of problem-solving techniques.
The act of gesturing itself also seems to quicken learning, bringing new knowledge into consciousness and
aiding the understanding of new concepts. A 2007 study by Susan Wagner Cook, an assistant professor
of psychology at the University of Iowa, reported that third-graders who were asked to gesture while
learning algebra (代数) were nearly three times more likely to remember what they'd learned than
classmates who did not gesture.
1. According to Paragraph 1, Frederic Mishkin was asked to sit on his hands because ____.  
A. he could litter express his ideas that way
B. he always pointed his finger at his professor
C. his professor did not like his gesturing
D. his gestures prevented his professor from thinking
2.  How is gesturing important in acquiring knowledge? 
A. It draws tasteful responses from others and increases learning speed.
B. It promotes second language learning and quickens thinking.
C. It provides significant clues for solving academic problems.
D. It reduces students' reliance on teachers' instruction.
3. What can be inferred from the passage about gesture-speech mismatches?   
A. They can stimulate our creativity.
B. Instructors should make full use of them.
C. Teachers can hardly explain new concepts without them.
D. They serve as a stepping stone to solving real life problems.
4. What could be the best title of the passage?
A. Hand Motions, a Second Language      
B. Gesturing: Signal of Understanding
C. New Uses of Gesturing                    
D. The Secret Code of Learning

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阅读理解。

Dear editor,
     I am writing to ask what has happened to our young people. They are not as polite or hard-working as
my generation (一代人). I will give you two examples.
     Last Friday, I got on the underground at 9:15 a.m. It was very crowded so there was no free seat. There
were some boys sitting on the seats near me. I didn't know why they were not at school. They were talking
and laughing loudly. It was difficult for me to read my newspaper with all the noise. At the next stop, a
pregnant (怀孕的) woman and her daughter got on with lots of shopping bags. I expected the boys to let them
sit down. They saw the woman but they did nothing. I had to ask them to give the woman and her daughter
seats. They did so but gave me a rude look.
     Last Saturday, I had dinner with my friend's family. I was glad to see his children, who I hadn't seen for
ten years. During the dinner, I started talking about world politics with the children. It soon became clear that
they didn't know much about it. They couldn't tell me the name of the King of Spain or President of Italy. All
they knew about was the Internet or which singers were the most beautiful. In my days, students knew the
kings, the queens and the presidents of every country in Europe.
    I worry about the future of Germany. How could these young people become good workers and parents?
They sit around Mcdonald's after school instead of going to the library as I did at their age. Maybe they have
too much money. Perhaps some readers can give us some ideas about what to do with this "lost generation".
                                                                                                                                  Yours sincerely,
                                                                                                                                   Frantz Vogts

1. Mr Vogts writes this letter to the editor to ______.
[     ]
A. show how rude the teenagers are
B. complain (抱怨) about young people's act
C. show teenagers are lazy
D. express his worry about Germany's future
2. When Mr Vogts met the boys on the underground, he ______.
[     ]
A. knew he wouldn't get a seat
B. didn't know why they were not at school
C. felt he would be in trouble
D. expected they would get off at the next stop
3. Mr Vogts was disappointed at the dinner because ______.
[     ]
A. The children didn't like him
B. the children knew much about the Internet
C. his friend knew little about world politics
D. the children knew little about world politics
4. By saying "lost generation", Mr Vogts refers to ______.
[     ]
A. today's workers
B. the people at his age
C. today's young people
D. the young people who are poor

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阅读理解

  There was quite a wide-spread worry that computers would take the world from man one day. Already today, less than 40 years later, as computers are taking more and more of the work in business and in our personal lives, we are faced with a less happy but also less foreseen (预见的) problem. People seem to be over-trusting computers and are unwilling to challenge (挑战) their authority (权威). Indeed, they act as if they hardly know that wrong buttons may be pushed or that a computer may simply make mistakes.

  Obviously, there is no need for people to check all its answers and numbers, but people should also depend on their own and check the machine when they have the feeling that something has gone wrong.

  Questioning and checking must continue to be as much a part of good business as they were in precomputer (无计算机的) days. Computers should not be seen as a substitute (替代) for thinking and reasoning (推理) skills.

1.The passage suggests those dealing with computers ________.

[  ]

A.be reasonably doubtful about them

B.check all their answers

C.fully depend on them

D.use them for business aims only

2.It can be inferred from the passage that the author would disagree about ________.

[  ]

A.investment (投资) in computers

B.the use of one's mind

C.checking computers often

D.complete dependence on computers for decision making

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语篇理解:

  Kleptomania is an illness of the mind that gives a person the desire to stealSuch a person is not really a thiefThey are sick and cannot help themselvesAll small children act naturally and as they grow up they normally learn to control their actionsPeople with kleptomania for certain medical reasons have failed to develop control over their desire to take things that do not belong to themWith medical help they may become normal citizens againThe things that a kleptomaniac steals are seldom of great valueThey often give away what they have stolen or collect objects without using them

1What is the topic of the text?

[    ]

AYoung thieves

BAn unusual illness

CReasons for stealing

DA normal child’s actions

2From the text we learn that small children ______

[    ]

Ahave little control of themselves

Busually steal things but grow up honest

Care usually kleptomaniacs

Dlike to give things away

3Kleptomaniacs usually steal things that ______ . 

[    ]

Aare valuable

Bare unimportant

Ctheir friends like

Dthey themselves need

4Which of the following words can best replace (替代) the word desire in the first sentence?

[    ]

Achance

Bpower

Cright

Dwish

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阅读理解

  It was a day to celebrate if your family had put most of its money in a bank.You will get more money back because of a recent rise in interest rates(利率).

  On October 29, for the first time in nine years, the People’s Bank of China(PBOC)raised interest rates.The rate for one-year renminbi deposits(存款)was increased from 1.98 per cent to 2.25 per cent.And the rate for one-year renminbi loans(代款)went up from 5.31 per cent to 5.58 per cent.Longer term rates saw higher increases.

  So what are interest rates?Banks offer some money to encourage people to keep their savings in a savings account(储蓄帐户),and ask more money in return if you borrow money from them.The percentages of the extra money are the interest rates.

If your parents have borrowed money from banks to pay for houses or cars, the interest rates rise was not good news.

  An increase in the interest rates on a loan means the borrower will need to repay more to the bank.For example, a person who borrowed, 10,000 yuan from the bank had to return 10,531 yuan before the interest rise.But after the interest rates are increased, he has to pay extra 27 yuan per year.

  The rise came following a great demand for the cooling of the over-heating Chinese economy.For several years, pushed by a huge investment and construction projects, the country has had the fastest economic growth in the world.But this can be damaging just as it is when a person grows too fast and can no longer fit their clothes.It is hoped that with a higher interest rate people will act more cautiously and take less risks when borrowing money.

  “The rate rise will help the economy to cool down.It will reduce investment in unnecessary industrial and construction projects.”said Su Ning, deputy governor(副行长)of the PBOC.

(1)

If we deposit 1000 RMB in the bank for one year, how much can we get after October 29?

(The tax rate on interest rates is 20%.)

[  ]

A.

21.6.

B.

13.68.

C.

15.84.

D.

18.

(2)

What is the purpose of the rise in the interest rates?

[  ]

A.

To attract greater investment.

B.

To make people earn more money.

C.

To carry out construction projects.

D.

To cool down the over-heating Chinese economy.

(3)

By saying “this can be damaging just as it is when a person grows too fast and can no longer fit their clothes” the writer ________.

[  ]

A.

warns that if the economy grows too rapidly, it will cause trouble

B.

warns us that industry will suffer a loss

C.

advises us to buy bigger clothes when we are young

D.

advises us not to grow too fast

(4)

Which of the following is NOT a result of the increase in the interest rates on a loan?

[  ]

A.

People will make wiser investments.

B.

People will need to repay more to the bank.

C.

People will borrow more money to invest in their business.

D.

People will be careful of taking money from banks to expand their business.

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