Have you ever heard of blogs (博客)? If you haven’t, you should have. It’s here, it’s growing and it’s having an influence on our life. Surf the Internet and you’ll find blogs everywhere. A blog, shortened from “weblog”, is a public Internet journal written by one person or a group of people. It is a website in which a person or a group can place news, personal thoughts, text, photos, video or audio files, or links upon which visitors can comment. A blog lets you post on the Internet without having to know web design or be technical. You are given an environment to make dated entries on the topic of your choice which are “published”, so other people can read them.
Authoring a blog, maintaining a blog or adding an article to an existing blog is called “blogging”. Blogging has revolutionized Internet publishing in the last several years because it gives everyone with Internet access the opportunity to become an online writer. Objects, such as “text and photos” in a blog can be called “blog posts”, “posts”, or “entries”. The person who posts these entries is called a “blogger”.
Now, somewhere around the world, a blog is created almost every 6 seconds. Because it’s great potential, Bill Gates views it as important as e-mail, BBS, and MSN. He’s trying to make blogs the important tools for future business communications.
小題1:A blog is           .
A.a(chǎn) commentB.a(chǎn)n Internet journal
C.a(chǎn) designD.a(chǎn) link
小題2:A person can do the following things in a blog EXCEPT _______.
A.talk to othersB.give commentsC.read articlesD.enjoy photos
小題3:Who is a blogger?
A.A person who posts letters.
B.A person who writes articles.
C.A person who posts text or photos in a blog.
D.A person who is an online publisher.
小題4:According to the passage, the reason why blogs are so popular is that they ____.
A.give everyone the chance to be an online writer
B.can be created by people without much knowledge of computer technology
C.enable a blogger to place news, personal thoughts, text and photos and give comments
D.a(chǎn)ll of the above

小題1:B
小題2:A
小題3:C
小題4:D
文章介紹了微博的一些相關(guān)事宜。
小題1:細(xì)節(jié)題。根據(jù)第一段第三行, is a public Internet journal written by one person or a group of people.
小題2:細(xì)節(jié)題。根據(jù)第一段第五行which visitors can comment說明B正確;第一段最后一行so other people can read them.可數(shù)C正確。根據(jù)第一段第4行a person or a group can place news, personal thoughts, text, photos, video or audio files,可知D正確。
小題3:細(xì)節(jié)題。根據(jù)第二段最后一句The person who posts these entries is called a “blogger”.
小題4:細(xì)節(jié)題。根據(jù)第二段第三行g(shù)ives everyone with Internet access the opportunity to become an online writer.說明A正確;根據(jù)第一段2,3行can place news, personal thoughts, text, photos, video or audio files, or links upon which visitors can comment.可知C正確。根據(jù)文章可知沒有太多知識的人也可以發(fā)微博。使用C正確。最后的答案為D。
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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

They may be just passing your office, computer bag slung (懸掛) over one shoulder. Or they may be sitting in a car outside it, causally tapping away at a laptop. They look like innocent passers-by. In fact, they are stealing your corporate secrets.
Drive-by hacking is the trendy term given to the practice of breaking into wireless computer networks from outside the buildings that house them. A recent study in the UK, sponsored by RSA Data Security, found that two-thirds of organizations with wireless networks were risking their data in this way. Security experts patrolled (巡邏) several streets in the City of London seeking evidence of wireless networks in operation.
Of 124 that they identified, 83 were sending data without encrypting(加密)them. Such data could readily be picked up by a passer-by armed only with a portable computer, a wireless modem and a few pieces of software that can be freely downloaded from the Internet.
The data could include sensitive company documents containing valuable information. Or they could be e-mail identities and passwords that could be used by hackers to log into corporate networks as if they were legal users.
Most companies using wireless networking technology do not take even the simplest of measures to protect their data. Nearly all wireless network technology comes with some basic security features that need only to be activated (激活) in order to give a minimum level of security, for example, by encrypting the data being passed over the network.
Raymon Kruck, business development manager at Check Point Software, a security technology specialist, believes this could be partly a psychological problem. People see the solid walls of their building as safeguards and forget that wireless networks can extend up to 200 meters beyond physical walls.
Companies without any security at all on their wireless networks make it ridiculously easy for hackers to break in. Switching on the security that comes with the network technology should be automatic. Then there are other basic steps a company can take, says Mr. Kruck, such as changing the passwords on the network from the default (默認(rèn)) setting.
Companies can also install firewalls, which form a barrier between the internal network and the public Internet. They should also check their computer records regularly to spot any abnormal activity, which might betray the presence of a hacker.
小題1:According to the study sponsored by RSA Data Security, two thirds of the subjects _______.
A.had most of their company data stolen
B.depended on wireless computer networks
C.were exposed to drive-by hacking
D.were unaware of the risk of wireless hacking
小題2:Which of the following is NOT considered in the study?
A.The number of computer hacking incidents.
B.The number of wireless computer networks identified.
C.The way in which data are sent and received.
D.The way in which data are hacked and stolen.
小題3:Most wireless network technology has_________.
A.data encryption program
B.password security programs
C.illegal-user detection
D.firewall
小題4:Raymond Kruck most probably agrees that wireless network security involves ________.
A.wireless signal administration
B.changes in user’s awareness
C.users’ psychological health
D.stronger physical walls
小題5:The passage is most likely to be seen in a __________
A.book reviewB.science fictionC.textbookD.computer magazine

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

By 2050
Futurologists(未來學(xué)家)predict that life will probably be very different in 2050.
TV channels(頻道)will have disappeared. Instead, people will choose a program from a “menu” and a computer will send the program directly to the television. Today, we can use the World Wide Web to read newspaper stories and see pictures on a computer thousands of kilometers away. By 2050, music, films, programs, newspapers, and books will come to us by computer.
Cars will run on new, clean fuels and they will go very fast. Cars will have computers to control the speed and there won’t be any accidents. Today, many cars have computers that tell drivers exactly where they are. By 2050, the computer will control the car and drive it to your destination. Space planes will take people halfway around the world in 2 hours. Today, the United States Space Shuttle can go into space and land on Earth again. By 2050, space planes will fly all over the world and people will fly from Los Angeles to Tokyo in just 2 hours.
Robots will have replaced people in factories. Many factories already use robots. Big computers prefer robots—they don’t ask for pay rises or go on strike, and they work 24 hours a day. By 2050, we will see robots everywhere—in factories, schools, offices, hospitals, shops and homes.
Medical technology will have conquered many diseases. Today, there are devices(設(shè)備)that connect directly to the brain to help people hear. By 2050, we will be able to help blind and deaf people to see and hear again.
Scientist will have discovered how to control genes(基因). Scientists have already produced clones(克。﹐f animals. By 2050, scientists will be able to produce clones of people, and decide how they look, how they behave and how clever they are. Scientists will be able to do these things, but should they?
小題1:According to the passage, the following can be realized today EXCEPT __________.
A.reading newspapers on a computer
B.making a space shuttle go into space and land on Earth again
C.creating cloned animals
D.choosing TV programs freely from a “menu”
小題2:We can learn from the passage that some big companies prefer robots to human workers, because human workers __________.
A.can work 24 hours a day
B.often ask for more pay
C.a(chǎn)re not clever enough
D.a(chǎn)re often late for work
小題3:From Paragraph 5 we can infer that __________.
A.there will be no blind and deaf people by 2050
B.few diseases will attack people by 2050
C.devices are connected directly to the brain to help people hear
D.medical technology will be more effective by 2050
小題4:What is the author’s attitude towards the cloning technology?
A.The author does not support the use of cloning technology.
B.The author thinks human cloning is impossible.
C.The author does not really support the idea of human cloning.
D.The author is quite excited about human cloning.

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀下面短文,根據(jù)小題的具體要求,簡要回答問題。
UFO is short for Unidentified Flying Object. It’s also called Flying Saucer. It is one of the most popular topics in the 20th century. With films like Close Encounters of the Third Kind and ET in the 1970s came a rapid increase in reports of flying saucers and men from Mars. More than 20 countries said their people once saw the UFO and there were over 1,200 reports about the UFO. Some even said they saw aliens.
In July, 1916, Gaynor was a nine-year-old girl and lived in North Wales. One day, on her way home from school, she saw a silver object in a field not far from her home. The object looked like a saucer. Gaynor was very scared. She stayed in the tall grass and watched the door of the strange object open. She saw two aliens wearing silver suits get ou. Then they use something to examine the ground. They were short and had pink eyes. After about half an hour, the two aliens went back into the object. Then it took off. When Gaynor got home, she told her mother about her unusual experience, but her family decided to keep quiet about it. They didn’t want others to laugh at their daughter. However, 18 months later, Gaynor told her story to UFO scientists. They found out that Gaynor told the truth.
小題1:What does UFO stand for? (No more than 3 words)
小題2:How did Gaynor feel when she saw the silver object like a saucer? (No more than 4 words)
小題3:Why did Gaynor’s parents keep quiet about her experience ? (No more than 10 words)

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

As computers become more popular in China, Chinese people are increasingly relying on computer keyboards to input Chinese characters. But if they use the computer too much, they may end up forgetting the exact strokes(筆畫)of each Chinese character when writing on paper. Experts suggest people, especially students, write by hand more.
Do you write by hand more or type more? In Beijing, students start using a computer as early as primary school. And computer dependence is more wide-spread among university students. Almost all their assignments and essays are typed on a computer.
All the students interviewed say they usually use a computer.
It's faster and easier to correct if using a computer. And that's why computers are being applied more and more often to modern education. But when people are taking stock in computers increasingly, problems appear.
“When I'm writing with a pen, I find I often can't remember how to write a character, though I feel I’m familiar with it.”
“I'm not in the mood to write when faced with a pen and paper.”
Many students don't feel this is something to worry about. Now that it's more convenient and efficient to write on a computer, why bother to handwrite?
Many educators think differently. Shi Liwei, the headmaster of a famous primary school in the capital said, “Chinese characters enjoy both practical and aesthetic (審美的) value. But those characters typed with computer keyboards only maintain their practical value. All the artistic beauty of the characters is lost. And handwriting contains the writer's emotion. Through one's handwriting, people can get to know one's thinking and personality. Beautiful writing will give people a better first impression of them.”
To encourage students to handwrite more, many primary schools in Beijing have made writing classes compulsory (必修的) and in universities, some professors are asking students to turn in their homework and essays written by hand.
小題1:Which of the following can best serve as the title of the passage?
A.The Importance of Handwriting and Typing
B.To Type or To Hand Write
C.Writing By Computer Will Replace Writing By Hand
D.Practical and Aesthetic Value of Chinese Characters
小題2:The students interviewed prefer to write using a computer mainly because ______.
A.they are usually asked to e-mail their Homework and Essays
B.they can correct the mistakes they make quickly and conveniently
C.they find it not easy to remember how to write a character
D.computers have become a trend and fashion in China
小題3:Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE of the advantages of handwriting?
A.Handwriting contains the writer's emotion.
B.The writer’s thinking and personality are shown in his or her handwriting.
C.Handwriting can impress people well and build one’s self-confidence.
D.Chinese characters enjoy both practical and aesthetic value.
小題4:The underlined expression “taking stock in” (Paragraph 4) probably means _____.
A.getting bored withB.getting dependent on
C.becoming crazy aboutD.getting curious about
小題5:We can draw the conclusion from the passage that _______.
A.more and more students will give up writing on a computer
B.writing by hand will give way to typing by computer one day
C.more and more students will pay attention to handwriting
D.the typing article better expresses one’s emotion and quality

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

You may think that sailing is a difficult sport, but it is really not hard to learn it. You do not need to be strong. But you need to be quick. And you need to understand a few basic rules about the wind.
First, you must ask yourself, “Where is the wind coming from? Is it coming from ahead or behind or from the side?” You must think about this all the time on the boat. The wind direction tells you what to do with the sail.
Let’s start with the wind blowing from the behind. This means the wind and the boat are going in the same direction. Then you must always keep the sail outside the boat. It should be at a 90° angle (角度) to the boat. Then it will catch the wind best.
If the wind is blowing from the side, it is blowing across the boat. In this case, you must keep the sail half way outside the boat. It should be at a 45° angle to the boat. It needs to be out far enough to catch the wind, but it shouldn’t flap (擺動). It shouldn’t look like on a flagpole. If it is flapping, it is probably out too far, and the boat will slow down.
Sailing into the wind is not possible. If you try, the sail will flap and the boat will stop. You may want to go in that direction. It is possible, but you can’t go in a straight line. You must go first in one direction and then in another. This is called tacking. When you are tacking, you must always keep the sail inside the boat.
小題1:What should you consider first while sailing?
A.Sailors’ strength.B.Wave levels.
C.Wind directions.D.Size of sails.
小題2:What does the word “It” underlined in Paragraph 4 refer to?
A.The boat.B.The wind.C.The sail.D.The angle.
小題3:What do you have to do when sailing against the wind?
A.Move in a straight line.B.Allow the sail to flap.
C.Lower the sail.D.Tack the boat.
小題4:Where can you probably find the text?
A.In a popular magazine.B.In a tourist guidebook.
C.In a physics textbook.D.In an official report.

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


Not everyone goes to university after high school graduation. Some work, others join the army and an increasing number worldwide are taking a “gap year” to travel or do community service in their own countries or abroad. They are studying sharks off the Australian coast, building schools in Mexico and learning Spanish or Italian.
The concept of a gap year may not be new, but the recent surge (涌現(xiàn)) of interest certainly is.  Some students are putting off admissions. Others, who don’t get into the college of their choice, are taking a year to explore new frontiers before reapplying.
Students are choosing to take a breather; they are thinking. They are not sure what they are going to do. They are going and exploring some of their interests. They are getting experience they can take to the school they finally go to.
It is an idea actively encouraged by colleges. Princeton University has just launched a “bridge year” program that will send 10 percent of its incoming class to do volunteer work abroad, starting in 2009. And the Harvard has spent the last 30 years urging incoming students to take a gap year.
“Many speak of their year away as a ‘life-changing’ experience or a ‘turning point’” says Harvard admissions director Marlin Lewis. “Many come to college with new opinions about their academic plans, their extracurricular interests and the career possibilities they observed in their year away.”
小題1:The reasons why some take a gap year are the following EXCEPT that ________.
A.they hate studying
B.they don’t know what to do
C.they want to get experience
D.they want to know their real interests
小題2:A student won’t ________ in a gap year.
A.travelB.join the army
C.do community serviceD.learn a foreign language
小題3:After a gap year, one would probably _________.
A.take another year off
B.earn a lot of money
C.be refused by his college
D.have new ideas about their future career
小題4:From the passage we know that ________.
A.more and more students will take a gap year
B.fewer and fewer colleges will encourage his students to take a gap year
C.the gap year can only give one some experience about society
D.nobody will change his own interests after the gap year

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


If you are looking for an animal to take the title of “most violent fish in the sea”, then the tiger puffer (河豚) fish would have to be a strong contestant. Not only is it deadly poisonous --- though that doesn’t stop people trying to eat it --- but it is also able to scare off enemies by inflating itself to become much larger than normal, when it is young it even chews on its own brothers and sisters.
Tiger puffer fish attach their eggs to rocks near the bottom of the sea, often at the mouths of bays. Then the larvae (幼魚) move to the entries of rivers and lakes once they have grown a little. Then, having put on a lot of weight, they head out to sea. There’s no innocent childhood for the puffer fish, as Shin Oikawa of Kyushu University in Japan and his colleagues found out when they put the larvae of tiger puffer fish in the lab and monitored them for two months. They found that the larvae went through three steps in which their metabolic(新陳代謝) rates increased dramatically when they reached body weights of 0.002g, 0.01g, and 0.1g. When a larva went through one of these steps, its behavior also changed. For instance, once a larva had passed the first level it would have grown its first tooth and could start attacking larvae that had not yet reached that stage. Similarly, any larva that had reached the 0.01g or 0.1g levels would start attacking lighter larvae.
The researchers noted that the baby fish had a “relatively small mouth”, so rather than swallowing their brothers and sisters whole, they would bite pieces out of them. Despite this limitation, the fish caused plenty of deaths --- up to 12 per cent of the deaths that happened in the lab each day.
Those fish that grew fast enough to be able to chew on their fellows had an advantage. The extra food accelerated their growth and development. Tiger puffer fish are likely to be faster and swifter, so they can deal better with enemies.
As the name suggests, puffer fish can inflate to make themselves seem much larger than they really are, thus scaring off enemies. They do this by filling their stomachs, which are extremely elastic(彈性的), with water. If that’s not enough of a threat, the tiger puffer fish --- like most of the other puffer fish in the family --- carries a deadly toxin(毒素). Eat one puffer fish and the poison will paralyze (癱瘓) your muscles, including the muscles responsible for breathing, so death is usually caused by a lack of oxygen. Famously, the fish is a delicacy in Japan, where highly qualified chefs produce dishes that contain the safe level of the poison. Interestingly, the puffer fish does not go to the trouble of producing the poison itself. Instead, it hosts bacteria (細(xì)菌) that produce the stuff. It obtains these bacteria from its diet, so the youngest adult fish are not poisonous.
小題1:All of the following statements account for the violence of puffer fish except that_____.
A.they are very difficult to catch
B.they can become larger to threaten enemies away
C.they kill their younger companions as they grow up
D.they are deadly poisonous
小題2:We can learn from the second paragraph that puffer fish _____.
A.can only grow to a weight of 0.1g
B.do not change their behavior as they grow up
C.like to find a safe place to hatch the next generation
D.begin to grow teeth when they reach the third level
小題3:Where does the poison in the puffer fish’s body come from?
A.Its inner organs.B.The air it breathes in.
C.The diet it eats.D.The bacteria around it.
小題4:Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?
A.Puffer fish can only produce poison when they face danger.
B.People like eating puffer fish even though they are poisonous.
C.The larvae are more aggressive than adult puffer fish.
D.Young puffer fish taste better than adult puffer fish.

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科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


Cellphones: is there a cancer link?
Could your cellphone give you cancer? Whether it could or not, some people are worrying about the possibility that phones, power lines and wi-fi could be responsible for a range of illnesses, from rashes to brain tumors.
Some say there is evidence to support the growing anxieties. David Carpenter, a professor of environmental health sciences at the university at Albany, in New York, thinks there’s a greater than 95 percent chance that power lines can cause childhood leukemia(白血病). Also there’s a greater than 90 percent chance that cellphones can cause brain tumors. “It’s apparent now that there’s a real risk,” said Carpenter.
But others believe these concerns are unjustified. Dr Martha Linet, the head of radiation epidemiology(流行病學(xué)) at the US National Cancer Institute, has looked at the same research as Carpenter but has reached a different conclusion. “I don’t support warning labels for cellphones,” said Linet. “We don’t have the evidence that there’s much danger.”
Studies so far suggest a weak connection between EMFs(電磁場) and illness — so weak that it might not exist at all. A multinational investigation of cellphones and brain cancer, in 13 countries outside the US, has been underway for several years. It’s funded in part by the European Union, in part by a cellphone industry group. The final report should come out later this year, but data so far don’t suggest a strong link between cellphone use and cancer risk.
小題1:From the passage we can learn that some people are worried because   .
A.they have evidence the use of cellphone can lead to cancer.
B.they make a fuss over cellphone use.
C.some expert has given a warning.
D.cellphones are responsible for brain tumors.
小題2:By saying “I don’t support warning labels for cellphones,” Dr Martha Linet has the idea that   .
A.the worrying is unnecessary.
B.cancer-warning labels should be on cellphones.
C.there is a link between cellphones and cancer.
D.cellphones have nothing to do with cancer.
小題3:The underlined word “underway” is closest in meaning to   .
A.started.B.kept on.C.gone on.D.in progress.
小題4:Which of the following best describes the attitude of the author towards the debate?
A.Optimistic.B.Objective.C.Disapproving.D.Casual.

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