题目列表(包括答案和解析)
1.What made the American worn out on the Great Wall?
A.Walking for quite a long distance. B.Using up four camera films.
C.The length of the Great Wall. D.A four-hour tiring climb.
20.What does the underlined word“them”(Paragraph 4)refer to?
A.junk shops B.profits from shops C.old things D.old houses
19.The average British person .
A.does not respect old things because they are not fashionable
B.likes to build new houses simply because it is fashionable to do so
C.likes to buy new things because they are fashionable
D.does not like to buy things simply because they are fashionable
18.Second-hand goods sometimes fill you with sadness because .
A.they are too expensive for average buyers B.they remind you of the original owner
C.they are now neglected D.they are sold for charity
17.What is the small town on the border between England and Wales famous for?
A.Its sheep. B.Its bookshops C.Its cinema. D.Its castle.
16.Books found in second-hand book shops may .
A.be copies of the earliest printing. B.be on sale for the first time
C.never be worth very much D.never be rare
15.If the researchers give us some advice to avoid Monday morning feeling, what might it be?
A.Stop working on Monday
B.Greate a pleasant working environment
C.Get up late on Monday morning
D.Go to work with a doctor
E
In every British town, large and small, you will find shops that sell second-hand goods. Sometimes such shops deal mostly in furniture, sometimes in books, sometimes in ornaments(装饰)and household goods, sometimes even in clothes.
The furniture may often be“antique”,and it may well have changed hands many times. It may also be very valuable, although the most valuable piece will usually go to the London salerooms, where one piece might well be sold for hundreds of thousands of pounds. As you look around these shops and see the polished wood of chests and tables, you cannot help thinking of those long-dead hands which polished that wood, of those now-closed eyes which once looked at these pieces with love.
The books, too, may be antique and very precious; some may be rare first printings. Often when someone dies or has to move house, his books may all be sold, so that sometimes you may find whole libraries in one shop. On the border between England and Wales, there is a town which has become a huge bookshop as well. Even the cinema and castle have been taken over, and now books have replaced sheep as the town’s main trade.
There are also much more humble shops, sometimes simply called“junk shops”,where you can buy small household pieces very cheaply. Sometimes the profits from these shops go to charity(慈善事业).Even these pieces, though, can make you feel sad; you think of those people who once treasured them, but who have moved on, to another country or to death.
Although the British do not worship their ancestors, they do treasure the past and the things of the past. This is true of houses as well. These days no one knocks them down, they are restored until they are often better than new. In Britain, people do not buy something just because it is new. Old things are treasured for their proven worth; new things have to prove themselves before they are accepted.
14.It can be learned from this passage that heart attack has nothing to do with .
A.blood pressure
B.heart rate
C.hormonal changes
D.blood group
13.To protect people from suffering from heart attack, doctors have paid much attention to .
A.people’s working time
B.people’s living place
C.people’s diet and lifestyle
D.people’s nationalities
12.Monday morning feeling, as this passage shows, .
A.is not so serious as people thought
B.is harmful to working people in developed countries.
C.is the first killer in Germany and Italy.
D.is created by researchers in Germany and Italy
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