Of Chinese secondary school students top ten heroes,Mao Zedong,ranks number one and Olympic track gold medal winner,Liu Xiang,ranks fifth,according to a survey conducted by All-China Women’s Federation (ACWF).
Late Chinese leaders,Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai,and revolutionary martyrs,Liu Hulan and Dong Cunrui,all have remained important heroes in the eyes of Chinese teenagers aged 13 to 18.
Meanwhile,the 2004 Olympic track and field star,Liu Xiang;model police chief,Ren Changxia;Hong Kong action star,Jackie Chan,and China’s first astronaut Yang Liwei,have ascended to be the new stars among the students.
“The coexistence of old and new models in youth’s hearts reveal the new era’s character,” said Han Xiangjing,president of “China Women” magazine attached to ACWF.
The respondents also chose their parents as heroes,ranking number two.
“This reflects that young students’ selection standards of heroes have changed to be more human oriented,emotional and personalized,”Han said.
Reasons given by the surveyed students for this choice are:“parents are the people I love and indispensable to me”and“they consistently guide,encourage and support me.”
The survey was conducted in six provinces and cities across China,including Beijing,Shanghai,Henan,Shanxi,Liaoning and Hunan.Students completed 1018 questionnaires;443 polled were boys and 575 were girls.
小題1:This passage most probably appears _________.
A.in a newspaperB.in a magazine
C.in a history bookD.in a report
小題2:This passage mainly talks about _________.
A.a(chǎn) survey about teenagers’top 10 heroes
B.why teenagers regard their parents as heroes
C.different heroes in teenagers’eyes
D.All-China Women’s Federation
小題3:How many heroes of the top 10 can be found in the passage?
A.10.B.9.C.8.D.7
小題4:Which of the following is NOT the reason why teenagers choose their parents as heroes?
A.Their parents are the people they love very much.
B.Their parents are indispensable to them.
C.Their parents have done something great and successful.

小題1:A
小題2:A
小題3:B
小題4:C

小題1:推理判斷題。由文章結(jié)構(gòu)及語言特點可推知為新聞類文章。
小題2:總結(jié)概括題。全文對一項調(diào)查的結(jié)果進行分析,介紹。
小題3:細節(jié)理解題。從全文可以找到9個偶像。
小題4:細節(jié)理解題。從文章倒數(shù)第二段可知。
練習(xí)冊系列答案
相關(guān)習(xí)題

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


The devastation of Typhoon Morakot over Taiwan and eastern China is a reminder that the northwest Pacific is the most dangerous region in the world for tropical storms.The worst of these are typhoons, which are the same as hurricanes in the Atlantic and eastern Pacific, or cyclones in the Indian Ocean and Australia.They all have winds of more than 118km/h (73mph) spinning around a central core.
These storms start off as a mass of thunderstorms in the tropics outside the Equator.Given the right conditions, they form a bigger and more organised storm and feed off warm seas at more than 26.5C (80F) to get the fuel that they need to become a fully-fledged(羽毛豐滿的) typhoon, hurricane or cyclone.Each storm is like a heat engine, extracting heat from the warm, humid air over the sea and turning it into phenomenal amounts of energy — equivalent to about 200 times the entire world’s electrical generating capacity.But warm, moist air is not enough — these storms also need slack winds aloft, because strong high-altitude winds can rip off the top of the storm clouds and send the entire storm tumbling(翻跟頭).
The damage from tropical storms often comes from their winds, or the storm surges from the sea as the winds pile up water into a huge battering ram(沖擊夯) that floods coastlines.But the devastation from Typhoon Morakot came from its unbelievable rainfall — about a year’s average rain in some places — that set off landslides and mudslides.
45.According to the first paragraph, the common point among typhoons,hurricanes and cyclones is _______.
A.that they all come from the oceans
B.that they all have winds of over 118km/h spinning around a central core
C.that they all cause great damage
D.that they all can generate electricity
46.Which of the following is the best title of this passage?
A.Typhoon Morakat devestates Taiwan and eastern China
B.How is the typhoon formed?
C.Typhoon Morakot was how to devestate the areas it travelled
D.How terrible is Typhoon Morakat!
47.The devastation from Typhoon Morakot is mainly from ______.
A.its wind                  B.its rainfall      
C.landslides and mudslides      D.the storm
48.It can be inferred from the passage that ______.
A.Taiwan is off the northwest Pacific
B.the damage from tropical storms often comes from their winds
C.tropical storms often happen
D.tropical storms only need warm, moist air

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Over 70 percent of the "double single-child couples" in China need help from their parents in taking care of their own kids, according to a recent survey.
"Women of China" magazine and a consulting company carried out a survey recently on young couples of the "single-child" generation, the Morning Post reports. The couples surveyed were around 29 and have been married for three years on average, with university education and monthly income of 4.000 yuan ($531). Among them, 43.5 percent have kids.
Results show that 71.9 percent of the young couples have help from their parents in taking care of their kids.
Grown up as the "single-child", the only child in a family since the family planning policy was adopted in 1979, this generation depends much on their parents.
The parents of the "single-child" generation focused more on their children's physical well-being rather than their attitudes and values, according to some psychologists.
The research also found that the "double single-child couples" follow a rather traditional value system.
Survey shows that 27.5 percent of them got married after dating for one to two years, 25.2 percent two to five years, and 20 percent didn't tie the knot until dating for five years. Also, 30 percent of the couples were schoolmates, while 43.8 percent were introduced by someone.
Since their marriage are based on enduring relationships, 65.2 percent of the husbands and 62.9 percent of the wives think that compromise(妥協(xié))and tolerance(寬容)are necessary in their marriage. Meanwhile, 21.7 percent of the husbands and 37.1 percent of the wives support the idea that happiness is the key standard for a marriage.
小題1:The best title for the passage should be_______.
A.Mom and Dad, Take Care of My Kid PleaseB.Double Single-child Couples
C.The Problem of the Single ChildD.A Recent Survey By Woman of China"
小題2:Which of the following is NOT supported by the passage?
A.The majority of the "double single-child couples" in China depend much on their parents.
B.The parents of the “single-child” generation more care about their study and education.
C.One-fifth of the couples surveyed didn't get married until dating for five years.
D.All the couples surveyed have university education and 30 percent of them were schoolmates
小題3:Which of the following descriptions about “double single-child couples” is True ?
A.They are single child in either family and independent of their parents
B.They are single child in either family and they are dependent on their parents
C.They have at least two children and can afford to support themselves
D.They, who were introduced by someone, follow a rather traditional value system
小題4:According to the passage, we can learn that ______ is necessary in marriage.
A.wealthB.healthC.understandingD.education

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Bored? Don't know what to do with your time? Get your friends or family together, go to the park or go hiking, do something fun —just don't turn on your TV.
The 10th annual TV-Turnoff Week starts on Monday. The TV-Turnoff Network, a nonprofit organization, began the program in 1994 to get children and adults to watch less television so that their time is spent doing more productive things. This year, millions of people will participate and find much more interesting things to do besides sitting in front of the television.
Experts are convinced(確信)that watching too much TV keeps kids from participating in healthy physical activities. The average household has a television on for 7 hours and 40 minutes a day! Kids spend more time watching TV than they spend in school. Turning off the TV gives you a chance to be with your family and friends. Going without it frees up valuable time that could be spent reading a good book, writing, drawing, or discovering something else that may interest you.
There are many organizations that support TV-Turnoff Week, including The Boys and Girls Clubs of America, YMCA, Girl Scouts USA, and Big Brothers/Big Sisters of America.Even First Lady Laura Bush is a supporter. "Television is no substitute for a parent. It doesn't help develop language skills; it's simply background noise," says Mrs. Bush.
Even kids who may not have liked going without TV have discovered the benefits. "I really didn't like TV-Turnoff Week except I did notice that my grades went up and I was in a good mood all week," said Drew Henderson, a student in Donora, Pennsylvania.
小題1:The TV-Turnoff Network started TV Turnoff Week to _____.
A.to get people to spend more time doing more productive things
B.to keep kids from participating in healthy physical activities
C.to advise people not to buy television sets
D.to persuade more people to join the organization
小題2:Which is not the advantage of turning off the TV?
A.Giving you a chance to be with your family and friends.
B.Sparing more time reading books.
C.Developing language skills.
D.Participating in healthy physical activities.
小題3:Laura Bush must be _____.
A.the first woman to support TV-Turnoff Week
B.the wife of American President
C.the first woman to organize TV-Turnoff Week
D.the first lady in the Boys and Girls Clubs of America
小題4: Drew Henderson’s words in the last paragraph imply that _____.
A.he doesn’t like TV-Turnoff Week
B.he doesn’t support TV-Turnoff Week at all
C.it’s unnecessary to have TV-Turnoff Week
D.he doesn’t support TV-Turnoff Week until he finds it does good to his study.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

PALO ALTO, California—“Switching off the television may help prevent children from getting fatter—even if they do not change their diet or increase the amount they exercise, ”US researchers said last week.?
A study of 192 third and fourth graders, generally aged eight and nine, found that children who cut the number of hours spent watching television gained nearly two pounds(0.9 kg) less over a one-year period than those who did not change their television diet.?
“The findings are important because they show that weight loss can only be the result of a reduction in television viewing and not any other activity,” said Thomas Robinson, a pediatrician(兒科專家) at Stanford University.?
“American children spend an average of more than four hours per day watching television and videos or playing video games, and rates of childhood being very fat have doubled ?over? the past 20 years,” Robinson said.?
In the study, presented this week to the Pediatric Academic Societies' annual meeting in San Francisco, the researchers persuaded about 100 of the students to reduce their television viewing by one-quarter to one-third.?
Children watching fewer hours of television showed a significantly smaller increase in waist size and had less body fat than other students who continued their normal television viewing, even though neither group ate a special diet or took part in any extra exercise.?
“One explanation for the weight loss could be that the children unstuck to the television may simply have been moving around more and burning off calories,” Robinson said.?
“Another reason might be due to eating fewer meals in front of the television. Some studies have suggested that eating in front of the TV encourages people to eat more,” ?Robinson? said.?
小題1:The author tries to tell us in the first two paragraphs that _______.
A.children will get fatter if they eat too much?
B.children will get thinner if they eat less?
C.children will get fatter if they spend less time watching TV?
D.children will get fatter if they spend more time watching TV?
小題2:According to the passage, the time American children usually spend on watching TV_______.
A.is more than four hours a dayB.is less than four hours a day?
C.doubled in the last twenty yearsD.is more than on any other activities?
小題3:The time children spend on TV viewing every day is suggested to be about _______.?
A.six hoursB.eight hoursC.three hoursD.one hour?
小題4:Which one of the followings is right??
A.Children usually eat fewer while watching TV.?
B.Children usually eat more while watching TV.?
C.Children eat the same amount of meals while watching TV.?
D.Children usually eat nothing while watching TV.?

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

CAIRO, Egypt (Reuters) April 24, 2006—Three explosions shook the Egyptian Sinai resort of Dahab on Monday, killing 23 people and wounding dozens of others, rescue and security officials said.
Witnesses said smoke billowedup from the town’s tourist bazaar, and residents said they saw body parts and debrison the street after an explosion at a restaurant.
People in the small beach and diving resort, which is popular with backpackers, described scenes of carnageand chaos.
A cafe worker who was about 200 meters (yards) from the scene said: “We saw many dead people. People were screaming. People were being taken to hospital. Egyptians went to give blood. There were body parts. There’s police everywhere.”
“There are ambulances and cars taking people to hospital,” said another resident, who also did not want to be named.
The explosions took place at the Nelson Restaurant, the Aladdin Cafeteria and the Ghazala Supermarket, the Interior Ministry said.
The explosions took place in quick succession at about 7.15 p.m. (1715 GMT). “There is smoke coming from the area and there are people running everywhere,” said one witness, who heard the blasts.
An official with the local ambulance service said many of the dead appeared to be foreigners.
Israeli divers often stay in the resort but with the Passover holiday over it is unlikely many were there. The Israeli ambassador in Cairo and Israeli authorities said they did not know of any Israeli casualties.
One visitor said police were stopping cars and buses leaving the resort and had imposed restrictions on movements in and out of backpacker camps in the area.
It was the third set of three explosions on the eastern coast of the Sinai peninsula since October 2004, when a group attacked the Hilton hotel in the border resort of Taba and two other resorts on the northeast coast, killing 34 people.
Notes:
① billow  v. 翻騰
② debris  n. 殘骸
③ carnage  n. 殘殺,流血
④ chaos  n. 混亂
⑤ casualty  n. (人員)傷亡
小題1: What’s the result of the explosions in Dahab?
A.34 people were killed.
B.There were many Israeli casualties.
C.23 people were killed and dozens of others were injured.
D.Many houses were burned to the ground.
小題2:How many places did the explosions take place in?
A.TwoB.ThreeC.SixD.Eight
小題3:What does the underlined word “resort” mean?
A.popular holiday centreB.hotel or guest-house for holidaymakers
C.visiting some placeD.Making use of something for help
小題4:Which of the following statements is right?
A.Many of the dead appeared to be residents.
B.The first set of three explosions took place in October 2004.
C.Police couldn’t know what to do.
D.Israeli divers stayed in the resort with the Passover holiday over.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

BEIJING, Nov. 26—U.S. dollar hit another record low against the euro on Friday, with the European currency climbing above $1.32 for the first time. The green-back fell to its lowest in nearly five years against the yen the same day.
By 1943 EST, the dollar was trading at US$1.3265 per euro, compared with US$1.3270 in thin late New York trade. It was at 102.55 yen, little changed from New York after touching 102.37, a level not seen since March 2000, in London.
Japanese Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki repeated his warning against dollar weakness, threatening to take action against sudden moves, but market participants said such verbal intervention (口頭干涉) had long lost its clout.
Traders were expecting market liquidity to remain thin on Friday because of the extended U.S. holiday.
In such thin trading, many said a fall in the dollar past 102 yen and US$1.33 per euro was a real possibility.
Referring to recent currency movements as “brutal”, European Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet, who is the most vocal European policymaker on dollar weakness, is due to make comments in Rio de Janeiro, along with ECB council member and Spanish central bank governor Jaime Caruana.
Introduced in 1999 as the common currency for 12 European countries, the euro initially(最初) dropped against the dollar but has risen some 60 percent since hitting an all-time low of 82 U.S. cents in October 2000.
64. What does “the green-back” refer to in the first paragraph?
A. U.S. dollar                                           B. Another record
C. The euro                                              D. European currency
65. How did Sadakazu Tanigaki feel about dollar weakness?
A. Excited                    B. Puzzled             C. worried                    D. Disappointed
66. The underlined word “brutal” probably means ______.
A. cruelty                            B. help                 C. criticism                   D. apology
67. According to some people, it was possible for the dollar to trade ______.
A. at 1.3265 per euro                                 B. at 1.32 per euro
C. at 1.3270 per euro                                 D. at 1.331 per euro

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Have you ever thought, “I wish I could take a year off and just travel around the word?” Well, three lucky American teenagers were able to do just that. The teens — two males and one female — got an all-expenses paid, yearlong hike to five continents.
This trip didn’t include any five-star hotels or shopping funs. Eighteen-year-old Jamie Fiel from Keller, Texas, 17-year-old Arsen Ewing from Canyon, California, and 16-year-old Tyler Robinson from Lincoln, Massachusetts, didn’t expect fancy treatment. They signed up for the experience of a lifetime, which included hard work, often uncomfortable accommodations, and encounters with some of nature’s most dangerous animals and environments.
Jamie, Arsen, and Tyler were among hundreds of high school kids nominated by their science teachers to take this trip. Earthwatch Institute sponsored this adventure. Each year, Earthwatch employs thousands of volunteers worldwide to help with scientific research projects.
The group went all around the world to get a close look at the most pressing environmental issues of our time. Their assignments were as varied as their locations, and included measuring and attending pink flamingos in Kenya’s Great Rift Valley, and tracking giant sea turtles in Costa Rica.
As they worked with the Earthwatch scientists, Jamie, Arsen, and Tyler began to understand that we are at a critical moment in the life of our planet. Time for change is running out. As the teens went from country to country and witnessed different environmental dangers and challenges, they understood that solutions to important environmental issues start with the power of one person’s actions. They realized that each of them can make a difference.
小題1:These teenagers went on the journey around the world      .
A.to experience the most serous environmental problems on the earth
B.to bring the kindness of America to the other parts of the world
C.to go on sightseeing around the world
D.to call on more teenagers to join Earthwatch Institute
小題2:What’s TRUE about their journey?
A. They had to pay for their journey on their own expense.
B, They often had to move from one hotel to another.
C. They had to take great pains to collect environmental information.
D. They received a warm welcome every time they arrived at a new place.
小題3:It can be inferred that Earthwatch Institute could be          .
A. an international university that takes in students from all over the world
B. a TV station that makes programmes on the beautiful scenery of the earth
C. a travel agency that organizes adventure trips specially for school children

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

The Kingdome in Seattle was destroyed on March 26,2000.It was taken down to make room for a new stadium.The blast(爆破)from the failing building caused the earth to shake as if an earthquake had happened.

Scientists placed more than 200 earthquake recorders in the earth to measure the movement.They found which parts of the
city shook the most.This information helped them know which parts of the city would be damaged in a real earthquake at an early time.
A real earthquake happened on February 28, 2001 in Seattle.The Nisqually earthquake was 6.8 on the Richter scale(里氏6.8級).It damaged the same parts of Seattle that scientists had predicted from the pulling down of the Kingdome.It was a plate quake.It started deep in the earth, 37 miles below the surface on the Juan de Fuca Plate.Sometimes,huge plates under the earth cause earthquakes when the plates move against each other suddenly.
Scientists have learned that deep earthquakes have very few aftershocks(余震).The Nisqually earthquake had only 4 ones.Another earthquake in California that was close to the surface had over 120 aftershocks.Scientists do not know why the deep earthquakes have fewer aftershocks.
Scientists plan to blast in the ground near Seattle with the purpose of testing the plate.The shockwaves from the blast will jump off the plate and give them all idea of where the plate is and how it is moving.This will give them more information in case another real earthquake hits the area.
56.Why were the scientists interested in the pulling down of the Seattle Kingdome?
A.To predict what might happen in a real earthquake.
B.To see which areas near the Kingdome would shake the hardest.
C.To measure the movement of the Earth with earthquake recorders.
D.All of the above.
57.What will happen after a deep earthquake according to the scientists?
A.There will be little damage.       
B.There will be many aftershocks.
C.There will be very few aftershocks. 
D.The Richter scale of the quakes will be 6.8 or more.
58.According to the passage,      have the most aftershocks.
A.deep earthquakes        B.shockwave earthquakes
C.earthquakes close to the surface    D.earthquakes more than 6.8 Richter scale
59.By studying the blast in the ground near Seattle, scientists hope to        
A.destroy the Kingdome
B.learn where the plate is and how it is moving
C.find out how many plates there are in the ground there
D.know which places are likely to have the most damage            

查看答案和解析>>

同步練習(xí)冊答案