题目列表(包括答案和解析)
A camp built by students and volunteers spreads over Southern Methodist University(SMU). The affordable 21 are designed to be used by the poor as well as survivors of war and natural disasters.
“By the time 2020, there’s going to be about 1.7 billion people living in slums(贫民窟) so we would like to 22 change,” says Stephanie Hunt, co-founder of the Hunt Institute for Engineering and Humanities at SMU. The institute, which 23 build the village on SMU’s campus, was established to solve problem of the poor in the United States and around the world through engineering, and the free 24 .
The goal is not just to 25 lives, but to change the victims’ lives. The Institute hopes some entrepreneurs(企业家) might program and 26 some money with these ideas. One of the structures in the SMU village was built with bricks made 27 from recycled plastic bags.
They’re 28 together with heavy wires. Harvey Lacey, father of two college-aged sons, including one here at SUM, heard about this project and 29 his invention. It’s a heavy-duty, hand-crank compactor(手动压缩机)that anybody can use to form the big bricks he calls Ubuntu Blox.
“The advantages are that these 30 weigh less than two pounds. They’re very, very 31 These things can go for many generations of housing, ”says Lacey, who is 32 the design. Anybody can follow his online plans to 33 the compactor that turns plastic bags into bricks.
On this warm day, it’s 34 inside the Ubuntu Blox hut, thanks 35 to the thick plastic insulation(绝缘). Kenyan 36 Ronald Omyonga, visiting the global village before returning to his native Africa, says his country is full of these recyclable bags. With Lacey’s design, he says that litter could be transformed into 37 housing. He dreams of other 38 too.
“Look at the Harvey Lacey hut, as a means of creating 39 ,”says Omyonga.“Leaning the environment, and turning 40 into something that can form houses, not just for the poor.”
1. A.shelters B.clubs C.parties D.rooms
2. A.affect B.adapt C.effect D.adopt
3. A.discovered B.helped C.studied D.explored
4. A.entry B.competition C.trade D.market
5. A.save B.survive C.defend D.cure
6. A.share B.donate C.earn D.cost
7. A.briefly B.relevantly C.mostly D.efficiently
8. A.held B.stressed C.knocked D.packed
9. A.delivered B.contributed C.devoted D.sacrificed
10. A.piles B.masses C.loaves D.blocks
11. A.fragile B.thick C.hard D.bitter
12. A.giving out B.giving off C.giving up D.giving away
13. A.build B.invent C.improve D.possess
14. A.hot B.cold C.wet D.cool
15. A.nearly B.exactly C.partly D.fairly
16. A.doctor B.athlete C.photographer D.architect
17. A.safe B.dangerous C.beautiful D.large
18. A.advantages B.chances C.benefits D.profits
19. A.things B.jobs C.wonders D.conditions
20. A.waste B.resources C.ideas D.technology
The Linguistic Habits of a New Generation
In the year of 1914 a young girl named Monica Baldwin entered a convent(女修道院),remaining there until 1941 when she returned to the outer world. During these twenty-eight years wars and revolutions had come and gone in Europe. Her uncle, Stanley Baldwin, had led his country for some time. Technical developments had changed the conditions of everyday life almost beyond recognitions, but all these events had left as a matter of fact untouched the small religious community to which she had belonged. In 1949 Miss Baldwin published her impressions of those bewildering(令人困惑的)years of her return to a world in which the motorcar had replaced the horse and carriage and where respectable women showed their legs and painted their faces.
Yet it was not only these odd sights that surprised her, for she was more puzzled by what she heard. During a railway journey the term “luggage in advance” meant nothing to her, so in desperation she asked the porter to do as he thought best. Reading the newspapers made her feel very stupid, because the writers of reviews and leading articles used words and phrases such as Jazz,
71.Miss Baldwin found the world totally changed because .
A.she had worked for a religious community for a long time
B.she had been cut off from the rest of the world for many years
C.the community where she lived had been in war for many years
D.there had been too many technical developments
72.During a railway journey Miss Baldwin .
A.found the porter’s words hard to understand
B.found her luggage too heavy to carry
C.did not know how to talk with the porter
D.had to ask the porter to look after her luggage
73.Young people like to use the latest slang because .
A.they feel it is easier to use
B.they believe it will soon become standard usage
C.they want to show they have caught up with the time
D.they find it more powerful in expressing feelings
74.Miss Baldwin’s experience shows us that .
A.the English language has not changed much
B.the English language has entirely changed
C.language doesn’t change at all in the religious world
D.language changes with the passage of time
75.By the time a man is forty, he will .
A.be speaking the same language as his parents do
B.have changed his way of speaking
C.not use the slang he liked to use when young
D.be using less new slang in speech and writing
The Linguistic Habits of a New Generation
In the year of 1914 a young girl named Monica Baldwin entered a convent(女修道院),remaining there until 1941 when she returned to the outer world. During these twenty-eight years wars and revolutions had come and gone in Europe. Her uncle, Stanley Baldwin, had led his country for some time. Technical developments had changed the conditions of everyday life almost beyond recognitions, but all these events had left as a matter of fact untouched the small religious community to which she had belonged. In 1949 Miss Baldwin published her impressions of those bewildering(令人困惑的)years of her return to a world in which the motorcar had replaced the horse and carriage and where respectable women showed their legs and painted their faces.
Yet it was not only these odd sights that surprised her, for she was more puzzled by what she heard. During a railway journey the term “luggage in advance” meant nothing to her, so in desperation she asked the porter to do as he thought best. Reading the newspapers made her feel very stupid, because the writers of reviews and leading articles used words and phrases such as Jazz, Hollywood, Cocktail and Isolationism. These and many others were quite incomprehensible to Miss Baldwin, who was really bewildered when friends said: “It’s your funeral or Believe it or not.” This is a rare and valuable reminder to the rest of us that the English language does not stand still. All language changes over a period of time for reasons which are imperfectly understood. Or rather since speech is really a form of human activity, it is more exact to say that each successive generation behaves linguistically in a slightly different manner from its predecessors(前辈,祖先). In his teens the young man likes to show how up-to-date he is by the use of the latest slang(俚语), but as the years go by some of his slang becomes standard usage and in any case he slowly grows less receptive(乐于接受的)to linguistic novelties(新颖,新奇),so that by the time he reaches his forties he will probably be unware that some of the expressions and pronunciations now being used were frowned upon by his own parents. In this respect language is a little like fashions in people’s dress. The informal clothes of one generation become the everyday wear of the next, and just as young doctors and bank clerks nowadays go about their business in sports jackets, they are allowed into their normal vocabulary expressions which were once limited to slang and familiar conversation.
1.Miss Baldwin found the world totally changed because .
A.she had worked for a religious community for a long time
B.she had been cut off from the rest of the world for many years
C.the community where she lived had been in war for many years
D.there had been too many technical developments
2.During a railway journey Miss Baldwin .
A.found the porter’s words hard to understand
B.found her luggage too heavy to carry
C.did not know how to talk with the porter
D.had to ask the porter to look after her luggage
3.Young people like to use the latest slang because .
A.they feel it is easier to use
B.they believe it will soon become standard usage
C.they want to show they have caught up with the time
D.they find it more powerful in expressing feelings
4.Miss Baldwin’s experience shows us that .
A.the English language has not changed much
B.the English language has entirely changed
C.language doesn’t change at all in the religious world
D.language changes with the passage of time
5.By the time a man is forty, he will .
A.be speaking the same language as his parents do
B.have changed his way of speaking
C.not use the slang he liked to use when young
D.be using less new slang in speech and writing
My name is Amanda LaMunyon. I have Asperger’s syndrome, a form of autism (自闭症). I don’t see myself as a person with a disability. I share who I am when I paint, sing and write.
I started writing poetry because I wanted to tell people what it was like to have Asperger’s syndrome. I don’t know how my life would be different without Asperger’s, but I know I look at the world differently than most people. I’m also learning that you don’t have to be like everybody else. You just have to be confident in who you are.
I discovered I could paint when I was 7. My math teacher Mrs. Brock loved one of my paintings so much that she hung it on the wall in her bedroom. I was so encouraged by her and since then my life has changed greatly.
Soon after, people asked me to show my art for charity events. I began to donate prints of my work for charity auctions (拍卖). I was glad that I really made a difference. I learned that when you give, you receive happiness.
I think it is very important for teens to express themselves. It’s a way to know yourself more clearly. You can turn your thoughts and feelings into a piece of artwork or a poem.
For example, when you paint, colors can help you express different emotions. When you write a poem, you have to get really honest with yourself and not be afraid to write down what you feel.
Creativity makes you unique and sets you apart from others. Creative ideas also help you make your dreams come true. They help you look at things in a new way.
I hope my story helps people to believe they can overcome their challenges and achieve their dreams. I like to encourage others. I know what encouragement has meant to me.
【小题1】The author mentions Mrs. Brock because she ______.
| A.taught the author how to paint |
| B.found the author had a gift for painting |
| C.influenced the author’s later life greatly |
| D.encouraged the author to change her life |
| A.learn more about themselves | B.express themselves in art |
| C.show their thoughts to others | D.dream big and go for it |
| A.Lucky. | B.Hardworking. | C.Positive. | D.Humorous. |
| A.Power of art | B.Happiness of giving |
| C.Importance of creativity | D.Wonder of encouragement |
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