Whom do you think Mary will _________ into the matter instead of her?
A. have looked B. have to lookC. have had lookingD. have look
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014年高中外研版必修4語(yǔ)篇訓(xùn)練卷(十)Module 4英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解
We will be traveling to the Presidio in San Francisco to visit the newly opened Walt Disney Family Museum. There are countless art exhibits and even a model of an early Disneyland Park.
We will enter the museum at the same time and then each family is free to enjoy the art exhibits in the museum. Lunch will be on you, so bring a lunch or bring money for the Museum Café. For those of you who are interested in exploring the Presidio, there is a free Presidio bus. The Walt Disney Family Museum is a must-see for anyone who likes Disneyland. Here are the details:
Date: March 22, 2013 Time: 9: 30 am to 4: 00 pm Location: Presidio, San Francisco |
Cost per person: $35(Adult)/ $25(Aged 6~17)/ $10(Children under 6 years). A registration(登記)fee covers round-trip bus transportation to and from Alameda and admission into the Walt Disney Family Museum. |
New pick-up location: Bayport Recreation Center, Jack London |
Avenue. (Parents must be around children on trip. Please check in at least 15 minutes before setting-out time. ) |
Click here to download the “Walt Disney Family Museum” flyer(PDF, 245Kb). |
It’s easy to register! You may register: In person or by mail at: Alameda Recreation and Park Department(2226 Santa Clara Avenue, Alameda, CA 94501) Phone registrations with Master Card or VISA will be accepted for people 18 years old and over(510)747-7529. Fax form with Master Card or VISA to(510)747-7566. Save time and register online at www. arpdeplay. com. Registration deadline: March 7, 2013 |
1. Besides a registration fee, visitors may also need to pay for .
A. the transportation to Alameda
B. the admission fee into the museum
C. the transportation from Alameda
D. their lunch inside the museum
2. How much will a couple have to pay if they take part in the activity with their 4-year-old daughter?
A. $60. B. $70. C. $80. D. $95.
3. What can we infer from the passage?
A. A single child cannot take part in the activity.
B. The Walt Disney Family Museum has a long history.
C. The Walt Disney Family Museum is not popular.
D. The Walt Disney Family Museum is mainly for adults.
4. Which of the following statements is WRONG about the registration?
A. People can register online.
B. People can register by mail.
C. People can go to register in person.
D. People of all ages can register by phone.
5.This passage is most probably taken from a .
A. newspaperB. magazine
C. websiteD. radio program
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014年高中外研版必修4語(yǔ)篇訓(xùn)練卷(九)Module 3英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解
“Just ate chicken feet for lunch. ”These were the words I wrote on my blog yesterday. By the next day there were hundreds of comments from my friends. They included “OH MY GOD! That is so disgusting(令人厭惡的)! ”, “What were they like? ” and “Why can’t you eat sandwiches like everyone else? ”
To Chinese people, chicken feet are a normal snack. To my friends in Britain, the thought of eating a chicken’s feet is weird(不可思議的). As weird, in fact, as eating a bullfrog(牛蛙), scorpion(蝎子), snake, or turtle.
But if there are two things I love more than anything else in life, they are trying new things and food.
I arrived in Beijing five months ago. Since then, I’ve searched for the “weirdest” foods so I can try them, then treat my friends to some “virtual eating”on my blog.
One weekend, I went to Wangfujing, Beijing’s “snack street”. The trip gave me tons of blog materials.
“I chose a stick with three live, wriggling scorpions on it, ”I wrote. “And it was pretty good. The scorpion was warm and crispy. The legs did have a tendency to get stuck between one’s teeth, however. What’s more, I am sure scorpion stung(蜇傷)me twice with its tail in revenge. ”
Next came snake: “A bit like a cross between fish and chicken, with a slightly rubbery texture(彈性口感)and meaty taste. ”
Some people were actually angry when I ate turtle soup—especially when I posted pictures showing the poor little guy’s head staring sadly up at us from the bowl. “I am never speaking to you again, ”wrote one former friend.
Still, I will continue my culinary quest(美食征程).
Next on my list is starfish, though I feel I should have some vegetables too—algae, maybe.
So what am I eating, tonight, you may ask. Pizza. Well, a girl’s gotta have a break sometimes.
1.According to the passage, which of the following “weirdest” foods is the one the author hasn’t tried?
A. Chicken feet. B. Bullfrog.
C. Scorpion. D. Chicken head.
2. What does the author like most in life?
A. Trying new things and food.
B. Traveling.
C. Walking.
D. Shopping.
3.Where did the author get her blog material?
A. From her friends.
B. From Wangfujing, Beijing’s “snack street”.
C. From shopping.
D. From the Internet.
4. What is the author’s friends’ attitude towards her trying “weird” foods?
A. They are satisfied.
B. They are happy.
C. They are surprised and even angry.
D. They are sorry.
5. What can we learn from the passage about the author?
A. The author likes eating.
B. The author enjoys traveling.
C. The author is fond of shopping.
D. The author is interested in Chinese food.
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014年福建省龍巖市畢業(yè)班聯(lián)合考試英語(yǔ)卷(解析版) 題型:其他題
閱讀下面短文,根據(jù)以下提示:1)漢語(yǔ)提示,2)首字母提示,3)語(yǔ)境提示,在每個(gè)空格內(nèi)填入一個(gè)適當(dāng)?shù)挠⒄Z(yǔ)單詞,所填單詞要求意義準(zhǔn)確,拼寫正確。
How do you understand happiness? Views on it 1. v from person to person. As far as I’m concerned, happiness doesn’t mean a large amount of money or being in the highest social status but 2. (意味) to obtain something that enriches my mind.
However, many people have seldom experienced happiness. There are several 3.f for it. Some people aren’t good at finding the sun face. They’ve just 4. (抱怨)about their own misfortune or enlarged others’ joy, 5. (看不見(jiàn)) the happiness belonging to them. Some people lack faith. They only keep telling themselves to make money as6.______, not knowing their life’s aims 7. what on earth they really want, 8. can hardly let them have the feeling of happiness. Some people always like to compare with others in every aspect, such as positions, housing conditions and treasure. Some do not know devotion, not understanding helping others will bring them more pleasure. Still some others do not know to meet. Such people 9.u have possessed much but still want to seek more.
In my opinion, 10. s happiness equals pleasure what pleasure for long is happy. Therefore, just keep ourselves cheerful for every minute.
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014年福建省龍巖市畢業(yè)班聯(lián)合考試英語(yǔ)卷(解析版) 題型:單項(xiàng)填空
An completely new district of industry has appeared in ________ used to be wasteland.
A. whichB. thatC. whatD. where
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014年福建省龍巖市畢業(yè)班聯(lián)合考試英語(yǔ)卷(解析版) 題型:單項(xiàng)填空
She sells second-hand articles at reasonably fair prices from 10 to 50 dollars ____ in her shop.
A. somehowB. anywayC. nowhereD. anywhere
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014年山西太原市高三年級(jí)模擬考試(一)英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:其他題
閱讀下面材料,在空白處填入適當(dāng)?shù)膬?nèi)容或括號(hào)內(nèi)單詞的正確形式(不多于3個(gè)單詞)
Have you heard of a student awarded master’s dgree? Of curs. But the following student is quite different. Because she is 1. blind and dead. She is 2. combination of disabilities that is one of the mot severe known to mankind. Mrs Michelle Smithdas 3. (enjoy) a special success when she was awarded a masters degree at teachers’ College, New York, in the spring of 2005.
She did it with a lot of help from a lot of friends and 4. (volunteer). Michelle, who received her degree in education of blind and visually impaired (受損的)learners, 5. (believe)to be the first to gain a graduate degree from a top, famous university. She is an instructor at the Helen Keller National Centre in Sands Poit, New York, 6. she teaches Braille, vocabulary,sign language and 7. communicatio skills to those who are deaf-blind like her. For five years, she was driven to and from New York City for her classes by Mrs Linda Stillman, who also served 8. her interpreter. During classes, Mrs Stillman would sit next ot Michelle and hold her hand, using the manual alphabet (also known as finger-spelling) to communicate.Michelle also participated fully in class, going on al field trips and 9. (ask) questions in class. Outside class, many of her friends and helpers helped her read text books and write research papers.
According to one professor at Teachers’ College, Michelle was 10. only a fine student but also an inspriration to us all. Michelle
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014年山東省高考仿真模擬沖刺卷(一)英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:單項(xiàng)填空
Everybody was touched _________ words after they heard her moving story.
A. without B. beyond C. of D. in
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2014屆黑龍江省高三下學(xué)期第二次階段考試英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:其他題
Mary is digging in the ground for a photo, when along comes John. Seeing that there is no one in sight, John starts to scream. John’s angry mother rushes over and drives Mary away. Once his mum has gone, John helps himself to Mary’s potato.
We’ve all experienced similar annoying tricks when we were young—the brother who stole your ball and then got you into trouble by telling your parents you had hit him. But Mary and John are not humans. They’re African baboons(狒狒). ___1.___
John’s scream and his mother’s attack on Mary could have been a matter of chance, but John was later seen playing the same tricks on others. ___2.___
Studying behavior like this is complicated but scientists discovered apes(猿) clearly showed that they intended to cheat and knew when they themselves had been cheated. ___3.___ An ape was annoying him, so he tricked her into going away by pretending he had seen something interesting. When she found nothing, she “walked back, hit me over the head with her hand and ignored me for the rest of the day.”
Another way to decide whether an animal’s behavior is deliberate is to look for actions that are not normal for that animal. A zoo worker describes how an ape dealt with an enemy. “He slowly stole up behind the other ape, walking on tiptoe. When he got close to his enemy, he pushed him violently in the back, then ran indoors.” Wild apes do not normally walk on tiptoe. ____4.___ But looking at the many cases of deliberate trickery in apes, it is impossible to explain them all as simple copying.
It seems that trickery does play an important part in ape societies. ____5.___ Studying the intelligence of our closest relative could be the way to understand the development of human intelligence.
A. In most cases the animal probably doesn’t know it is cheating.
B. An amusing example of this comes from a psychologist working in Tanzania.
C. And playing tricks is as much a part of monkey behavior as it is of human behavior.
D. So the psychologists asked his colleagues if they had noticed this kind of trickery.
E. The ability of animals to cheat may be a better measure of their intelligence than their use of tools
F. This use of a third individual to achieve a goal is only one of the many tricks commonly used by baboons.
G. Of course it’s possible that it could have learnt from humans that such behavior works, without understanding why.
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