These words are ________ in meaning, so in most cases, they are changeable.


  1. A.
    nearby
  2. B.
    closed
  3. C.
    nearly
  4. D.
    close
D
A項(xiàng)nearby表示“附近的”,closed是close作動詞時(shí)的過去分詞,這里作形容詞,表示“關(guān)著的”,nealrly是副詞,表示“幾乎”,在這句句子中放在副詞后肯定錯誤,而D項(xiàng)close在這里是形容詞,表示“接近的”,be close in meaning表示“在意思上接近”,所以D項(xiàng)正確。
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科目:高中英語 來源:河南省鄭州智林學(xué)校2010屆高三下學(xué)期模擬測試(一) 題型:閱讀理解


E
“Life is speeding up. Everyone is getting unwell.”
This may sound like something someone would say today. But in fact, an unknown citizen who lived in Rome in AD 52 wrote it.
We all love new inventions. They are exciting, amazing and can even change our lives.
But have all these developments really improve the quality of our lives?
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Inventions have speeded up our lives so much that they often leave us feeling stressed and tired. Why do you think people who live far away from noisy cities, who have not telephones, no cars, not even any electricity often seem to be happier? Perhaps because they lead simpler lives.
One family in the UK went “back in time” to see what life was like without all the inventions we have today. The grandparents, with their daughter, and grandsons Benjamin, 10, and Tomas, 7, spent nine weeks in a 1940s house. They had no washing machine, microwave, computer or mobile phones.
The grandmother, Lyn, said, “It was hard physically, but not mentally.” She believed life was less materialistic. “The more things you have, the more difficult life becomes,” She said. The boys said they fought less to fight over, such as their computer. Benjamin also noticed that his grandmother had changed from being a “trendy(時(shí)髦的), beer-drinking granny, to one who cooked things.”
Here are some simple ways to beat the stress often caused by our inventions!
Don’t be available all the time. Turn off your mobile phone at certain times of the day. Don’t check your e-mail every day.
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B.they were curious about how people lived without modern inventions
C.they were troubled by modern inventions
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A. native speakers can understand “Chinglish”

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