Seen from (the) outer space, the earth is ________ a blue ball
A.a(chǎn)nything but |
B.nothing more than |
C.not more than |
D.none other than |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源: 題型:
M: Well, this is it! What do you think of it?
W: I can hardly believe it's real.I've d of seeing it ever since _______
I saw it in books when I was a child.Just thinking of all this being built
by hand more than 2,000 years ago! No w it's one of the _______
wonders of the world.
M: A the started building is more than 2,500 years ago when ________
China was divided into v states.Three of the northern states ________
built defensive walls along their borders to keep o the enemies. ________
W.But I always thought the wall had been built by Qin Shihuang, the first
E of China. _______
M: Well, yes.In the way, you see, he united thew country in the ________
third century B.C.a(chǎn)nd one of the things he did was to join the s ________
walls into one big wall and to build more walls from the east coast right
across the length of north China to the west.
W: It is certainly something any nation could be proud of.I hear this is the
only humanc on the earth that can be seen from the moon. ________
By the way, how tall is the wall?
M: The average h is 7.8 meters; the average width is 6.5 meters ________
at the base and 4.5 meters at the top.Would you like to go up to the top?
W: Yes! I'd like to have a look from the top.
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
請(qǐng)認(rèn)真閱讀下面對(duì)話,并根據(jù)各題所給首字母的提示,在標(biāo)有題號(hào)的右邊橫線上,寫出一個(gè)英語(yǔ)單詞的完整、正確形式,使對(duì)話通順。
M: Well, this is it! What do you think of it?
W: I can hardly believe it's real. I've (76)d of seeing it ever since _________
I saw it in books when I was a child. Just thinking of all this being built
by hand more than 2,000 years ago! No (77)w it's one of the _________
wonders of the world.
M: (78) A the started building is more than 2,500 years ago when _________
China was divided into (79)v states. Three of the northern states _________
built defensive walls along their borders to keep (80)o the enemies.
._________
W. But I always thought the wall had been built by Qin Shihuang, the first
(81) E of China. _________
M: Well, yes. In the way, you see, he united the(82)w country in the_________
third century B. C. and one of the things he did was to join the (83)s _________
walls into one big wall and to build more walls from the east coast right
across the length of north China to the west.
W: It is certainly something any nation could be proud of. I hear this is the
only human(84)c on the earth that can be seen from the moon. _________
By the way, how tall is the wall?
M: The average (85) h is 7.8 meters; the average width is 6.5 meters_________
at the base and 4.5 meters at the top. Would you like to go up to the top?
W: Yes! I'd like to have a look from the top.
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:天水市一中2008級(jí)2009—2010學(xué)年第二學(xué)期第一階段考試蘭天班英語(yǔ) 題型:閱讀理解
On the night of May, 7,1942, a plane took off from an Air Force base in England to stop German fighters over the English Channel. The pilot of the plane was Captain Thomas Nash. Looking eastward, Nash saw twelve orange lights in a row, moving at an extremely high speed. As an experienced flyer, he had never seen anything like them. Thinking that they might be a new German weapon, he decided to follow them. But when he swung the plane around and headed directly for the lights, they disappeared.
Captain Nash may have been the first to see such orange lights but he wasn’t the last. His experience was repeated several times by pilots during World War Ⅱ in Europe and the Far East. What were they? No one knows for sure, but there is an interesting theory to explain them. According to this theory, the orange lights are space animals – animals specially adapted to life in the upper atmosphere just as some creatures are adapted to life at the bottom of the sea. These space animals, the theory says, live so far up in the atmosphere that they are invisible from the earth. They feed in part on the air and partly on energy from sunlight. Being almost pure energy themselves, they can give light at night. During the day they become invisible.
Before World WarⅡ, continues the theory, there was little radiated (輻射) energy available on the earth’s surface. Then came the development of rockets, atomic reactor (核反應(yīng)堆), and hydroelectric (水力發(fā)電的) plants. The space creatures are attracted by these sources of energy. At night when no energy is sent from sunlight, they go down into the lower levels to search a meal. They may even come into the scope of human eyesight. This explains the fact that they have been sighted now and then from the earth since 1942.
54.Which of the following best states the main idea of the passage?
A.The secret of nature can be completely explained.
B.Captain Nash may have been the first to see the lights in space.
C.Captain Nash saw twelve orange lights moving at a high speed.
D.According to an interesting theory, the orange lights are space animals.
55.The strange orange lights were first seen .
A.from the ground B.from a rocket ship
C.during World War I D.during World WarⅡ
56.The theory says that during the daytime the space animals .
A.can’t be seen B.shine brightly in the sky
C.can be seen from the earth D.visit the earth’s surface
57.If the space theory is true, the creatures go down to the lower places in order to .
A.make connection with man B.search for man – made energy
C.a(chǎn)ttract curiosity D.escape detection
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:2015屆甘肅省高一9月月考英語(yǔ)試卷(解析版) 題型:信息匹配
閱讀下列應(yīng)用文及相關(guān)信息,并按照要求匹配信息。首先,請(qǐng)閱讀以下世界古代奇觀的簡(jiǎn)介:
A. The Great Wall was begun more than two thousand years ago. It was built to keep out invaders. It extends about six thousand seven hundred kilometers across northern China. Today, the Chinese government is working to repairparts of the wall and protect as much of it as possible. The Great Wall of China is one of the largest building projects ever attempted. It is also the only object built by people that can be seen from space.
B. The Coliseum in Rome, Italy was built almost two thousand years ago. The ancient Roman sports center could hold fifty thousand people who gathered there to watch public events. Experts say it is one of the finest examples of Roman design and engineering.
C. The city of Machu Picchu in Peru includes some of the best stone works ever built. The ancient Inca people built Machu Picchu high in the Andes Mountains, northwest of the city of Cuzco. Machu Picchu is about thirteen square kilometers. Historians say it might have been one of the last places of safety for the Incas who were fleeing invaders from Spain.
D. India is famous for its temples and buildings. The most famous is the Taj Mahal, considered one of the most beautiful buildings ever built. The fifth Mughal emperor, Shah Jahan, ordered it built in Agra in sixteen thirty-one. He built it as a burial place in memory of his wife. The Taj Mahal has tiny colorful stones inlaid in white marble. The structure seems to change color during different times of the day and night.
E. Abu Simbel was built more than three thousand years ago. It is about 280 kilometers south of Aswan on the western bank of the Nile River. It took an army of workmen and artists more than thirty years to cut the huge temple into the face of a rock mountain. In front of the main temple are four huge statues of Ramses the Second. Each statue is about twenty meters high.
F. Stonehenge also belongs on a list of ancient wonders. It is a circle of huge stones in southeastern England. Experts believe work began on Stonehenge about five thousand years ago. We know very little about Stonehenge. We do not even know how these huge stones were moved to the area. Much has been written about Stonehenge, but experts say they still are not sure what it was used for.
以下是旅行者的信息,請(qǐng)匹配他們計(jì)劃參觀的世界奇觀。
1.Mr. Smith, who comes from Rome, Italy, plans to visit Asia. He hears about a beautiful building which tells a moving story about the love between an ancient ruler and his wife. __
2.Li Hua, who has been to the Great Wall several times, plans to visit an ancient wonder in Europe which has as long a history as the Great Wall. _
73. Cindy, who comes from India, plans to visit an ancient temple on the bank of a famous river in Africa. The temple, in front of which there were some huge statues, is one of the greatest stone works ever built. _
3.Jack will visit one of the oldest stone works ever built by people. It was made up of huge stones, but how ancient people moved the stones and why they built it remain a mystery._
4.A scientist will be sent into space. He hopes he can see an object built by human beings when he looks at our earth with his bare eyes. __
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來源:2010年浙江省高二上學(xué)期期中考試英語(yǔ)卷 題型:閱讀理解
Fish Ears Tell Fish Tales
Fish have ears. Really. They’re quite small and have no opening to the outside world carrying sound through the body. For the past seven years, Simon Thorrold, a university professor, has been examining fish ears, small round ear bones called otoliths (耳石).
As fish grow, so do their otoliths. Each day, their otoliths gain a ring of calcium carbonate (碳酸鈣). By looking through a microscope and counting these rings, Thorrold can determine the exact age of a young fish. As a fish gets older, its otoliths no longer get daily rings. Instead, they get yearly rings, which can also be counted, giving information about the fish’s age, just like the growth rings of a tree.
Ring counting is nothing new to fish scientists. But Thorrold has turned to a new direction. They’re examining the chemical elements (元素) of each otolith ring.
The daily ring gives us the time, but chemistry tells us about the environment in which the fish swam on any given day. These elements tell us about the chemistry of the water that the fish was in. It also says something about water temperature, which determines how much of these elements will gather within each otolith ring.
Thorrold can tell, for example, if a fish spent time in the open ocean before entering the less salty water of coastal areas. He can basically tell where fish are spending their time at any given stage of history.
In the case of the Atlantic croaker, a popular saltwater food fish, Thorrold and his assistant have successfully followed the travelling of young fish from mid-ocean to the coast, a journey of many hundreds of miles.
This is important to managers in the fish industry, who know nearly nothing about the whereabouts of the young fish for most food fish in the ocean. Eager to learn about his technology, fish scientists are now lending Thorrold their ears.
1.What can we learn about fish ears from the text?
A. They are small soft rings.
B. They are not seen from the outside.
C. They are openings only on food fish.
D. They are not used to receive sound.
2.Why does the writer compare the fish to trees?
A. Trees gain a growth ring each day.
B. Trees also have otoliths.
C. Their growth rings are very small.
D. They both have growth rings.
3.Why is it important to study the chemistry of otolith rings?
A. The elements of the otoliths can tell the history of the sea.
B. Chemical contents of otoliths can tell how fast fish can swim.
C. We can know more about fish and their living environment.
D. Scientists can know exactly how old a fish is.
4.How would you understand “fish scientists are now lending their ears”?
A. They are very interested in Thorrold’s research findings.
B. They want to know where they can find fish.
C. They lend their fish for chemical studies.
D. They wonder if Thorrold can find growth rings from their ears.
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