题目列表(包括答案和解析)
The Weekly Telegraph is Britain’s global newspaper, the home-grown quality newspaper that delivers the best of The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph to the British around the world and adds its special articles, features and reports designed to be of real value to foreign readers.Telegraph.co.uk/expat, the website, increases the value of the newspaper, thus creating a complete expatriate(国外的)support system, both online and offline.
Order a gift subscription(订阅)for a friend or relation overseas this Christmas and they will begin to recognize what a useful investment your subscription represents, and you’ll receive a FREE bottle of 10-year-old Tawny Port to enjoy at home in the UK.
Subscriptions will start early January 2010.Port can only be delivered to a UK address and receivers must be over 18 years of age.
For more details or for 6-month subscriptions, please contact our subscriptions department on Tel +44 (0) 1622 335080 or email weeklytelegraphsubs@telegraph.co.uk Office hours: 09:00-17:00 GMT).
Please contact weeklytelegraphsubs@telegraph.co.uk with any questions regarding your subscription.
Your money back if you are not satisfied
Our “no quibble” money-back policy means that we guarantee to return the money for your subscription in full if you are not satisfied with the first four issues.
YOUR PAYMENT
Select a zone of payment.Price is for 52 issues.
United Kingdom 105.00 GBP (Great Britain Pound)
USA 125.00 GBP
Canada/ Australia/ New Zealand 108.00 GBP
Zambia/ Zimbabwe /Tanzania 85.00 GBP
South Africa 80.00 GBP
Middle East/ Europe/ Rest of the world 80.00 GBP
1.The Weekly Telegraph in the advertisement is mainly intended for ______.
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A.the British at home and abroad |
B.the British in the UK |
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C.the foreigners in Britain |
D.English learners across the globe |
2.If you want to receive a free bottle of 10-year-old Tawny Port, you must ______.
a.live in the United Kingdom b.have an overseas friend who is over 18
c.order a subscription of the Weekly Telegraph
d.offer your friend or relation’s address overseas
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A.a, b |
B.c, d |
C.a, c |
D.b, c |
3.What do we know about the Weekly Telegraph from the passage?
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A.The content of it can’t be read online. |
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B.One can subscribe to it 24 hours a day. |
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C.Your money can partly come back if you’re not satisfied. |
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D.The prices for different countries are probably different. |
4.To order a 6-month subscription for a friend in Tanzania, you should ______.
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A.contact the subscriptions department |
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B.subscribe to the Daily Telegraph for a year |
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C.tell your friend to visit telegraph.co.uk/expat |
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D.pay 85.00 GBP |
5.Which of the following statements is true based on the text?
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A.Telegraph.co.uk/expat receives support from online readers only. |
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B.Subscriptions of the paper can be made starting from January 2010. |
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C.Telegraph.co.uk/expat mainly solve your subscription problems. |
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D.US and Middle East readers can enjoy equal price for 52 issues. |
Valencia is in the east part of Spain(西班牙). It has a port on the sea, two miles away on the coast. It is the capital of a province that is also named Valencia.
The city is a market centre for what is produced by the land around the city. Most of the city’s money is made from farming. It is also a busy business city, with ships, railways, clothes and machine factories.
Valencia has an old part with white buildings, colored roofs, and narrow streets. The modern part has long, wide streets and new buildings. Valencia is well known for its parks and gardens. It has many old churches and museums. The University in the centre of the city was built in the 13th century.
The city of Valencia has been known since the 2nd century. In the 8th century it was the capital of Spain. There is also an important city in Venezuela(委内瑞拉)named Valencia.
【小题1】From the text, how many places have the name Valencia?
| A.One. | B.Two. | C.Three. | D.Four. |
| A.The color of the buildings. | B.The length of the streets. |
| C.The age of the buildings. | D.The color of the roofs. |
| A.2nd century. | B.8th century. | C.13th century. | D.20th century. |
| A.Its seaport. | B.Its University. |
| C.Its churches and museums. | D.Its parks and gardens. |
| A.markets. | B.business. | C.factories. | D.farming. |
A Tchaikovsky concerto(协奏曲)is what made Romel Joseph fall in love with the violin.
He learned how to play in Haiti, where he was born, but a Fulbright scholarship brought him to the United States, and he finally earned a master’s degree, reports CBS News reporter Katie Couric. Music had changed his life. He wanted to do the same for the children of Haiti.
Joseph built a school in Port-au-Prince nearly 20 years ago. He was on the third floor when suddenly “It was like boom boom boom and everything just opened,” Joseph said. “And the next thing I knew I was on the ground.”
Blind since birth, Joseph tried to feel his way out, but was pinned(夹)beneath heavy concrete(混凝土). He remained trapped for 18 hours. He prays that his new wife, seven months pregnant(怀孕的), will be found.
He is now being treated at Miami’s Jackson Memorial Hospital for two injured legs and an arm.
Joseph wonders if he’ll ever play the violin again. He can feel sensation(知觉)in his fingertips. He said, “If you were to give me a violin and if I didn’t have to fold the fingers, I would be able to play.”
Joseph’s daughter Victoria spent three terrifying days unsure of her father’s fate. For her, having him home is the sweetest music.
“Can you imagine your dad not being able to play the violin?” Couric asked.
“No, I can’t,” Victoria Joseph said. “But I will love him all the same if he can’t.”
Romel do
esn’t know how many of his 300 students died in the quake. As he waits for news about his wife, Romel Joseph is already planning a return to Haiti to rebuild the school and continue teaching there.
“We can save two children, 20, 200, 300, 500 through education and music, and these children will make a difference,” Romel Joseph said.
【小题1】 Romel began to like music ________.
| A.because he was blind since birth |
| B.after he had listened to a famous piece of music |
| C.when he got a scholarship to study in America |
| D.since he was born in Haiti |
| A.upset | B.fearful | C.excited | D.optimistic |
| A.to see her father recover from the injury quickly |
| B.to listen to her father playing the sweetest music |
| C.to play the violin |
| D.to be sure that her father could play the violin |
| A.To save his students from the earthquake. |
| B.To change the life of children by teaching music. |
| C.To find out how seriously his school was damaged. |
| D.To look for his wife who is pregnant. |
| A.Music educ |
| B.A great blind musician and his students |
| C.Haiti earthquake: a story of a music teacher |
| D.How did some Haiti earthquake victims survive |
Coffee has a history dating back to at least the 9th century and has been a catalyst for social interaction across cultures and eras. Originally discovered in Ethiopia, coffee beans were brought into the Middle East by Arab traders, spreading to Egypt, Yemen, Persia, Turkey, and North Africa by the 15th century. Muslim merchants eventually brought the beans to the thriving port city of Venice, where they sold them to wealthy Italian buyers. Soon, the Dutch began importing and growing coffee in places like Java and Ceylon (largely through slave labor), and the British East India Trading Company was popularizing the beverage in England. Coffee spread across Europe and even reached America.
Where there has been coffee, there has been the coffeehouse. From the 15th century Middle Eastern establishments where men gathered to listen to music, play chess, and hear recitations from works of literature, to Paris' Cafe le Procope where luminaries of the French Enlightenment such as Voltaire, Rousseau, and Diderot came to enjoy a hot cup of joe, coffeehouses have traditionally served as centers of social interaction, places where people can come to relax, chat, and exchange ideas.
The modern coffee shop is modeled on the espresso and pastry-centered Italian coffeehouses that arose with the establishment of Italian-American immigrant communities in major US cities such as New York City's Little Italy and Greenwich Village, Boston's North End, and San Francisco's North Beach. New York coffee shops were often frequented by the Beats in the 1950's. It wasn't long before Seattle and other parts of the Pacific Northwest were developing coffee shops as part of a thriving counterculture scene. The Seattle-based Starbucks took this model and brought it into mainstream culture.
Although coffeehouses today continue to serve their traditional purpose as lively social hubs in many communities, they have noticeably adapted to the times. Rediscovering their purpose as centers of information exchange and communication, many coffee shops now provide their customers with internet access and newspapers. It has become extremely common to see someone sitting at a Starbucks listening to music or surfing the web on his or her laptop. Coffee stores today also maintain a fairly identifiable, yet unique aesthetic: wooden furniture and plush couches, paintings and murals drawn on walls, and soft-lighting combine to give coffee shops the cozy feeling of a home away from home.
Today, big business retail coffee shops are expanding quickly all over the world. Starbucks alone has stores in over 40 countries and plans to add more. Despite its popularity, Starbucks has been criticized and labeled by many as a blood-sucking corporate machine, driving smaller coffee shops out of business through unfair practices. This has even spawned an anti-corporate coffee counterculture, with those subscribing to this culture boycotting big business coffee chains. Increasingly popular coffee stores such as The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf are also giving Starbucks some stiff competition. In any case, it seems pretty clear that coffee has weaved itself into the fabric of our consumer-oriented culture.
【小题1】
Which of the following is the correct order of coffee spreading in history?
①Egypt ②America ③the Middle East ④Netherlands ⑤Venice
| A.①③④②⑤ | B.③①⑤④② | C.①⑤④③② | D.③②⑤④① |
| A.Starbucks has beaten all the competitors |
| B.there are no changes in the development of coffee culture |
| C.the taste of coffee has changed a lot |
| D.Starbucks has some effect on the development of coffee culture |
| A.Seattle | B.Ethiopia | C.Java | D.France |
| A.play chess with other customers |
| B.enjoy delicious dishes from South America |
| C.surf the internet |
| D.watch a TV play |
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