題目列表(包括答案和解析)
完形填空:閱讀下面短文,從每小題所給的四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出一個(gè)最佳答案。
I would like to suggest that for sixty to ninety minutes each evening all television broadcasting in the United States be forbidden by law.
Let us take a serious, reasonable look at what the 1 might be if such a suggestion were- 2 ; families might use the time for a real family hour. They might sit 3 together after dinner and actually talk to one another. It is well known that many of our 4 -everything in fact, from the generation gap to the high divorce rate and to some forms of mental illness-are caused at least in part by 5 to communicate. By using the quiet family hour to 6 our problems, we might get to know each other better.
On evenings when such talk is 7 , families could rediscover more active pastimes. Freed from TV and forced to find their own activities, they might go out to take a 8 together to watch the sunset 9 they might take a walk together. 10 free time and no TV, children and adults might rediscover reading. There is more 11 in a good book than in a TV program. Scientists report that the generation growing up with television can hardly write an English sentence, 12 at the college level. Skill is often learned from reading. A more literate new generation could be a product of the quiet hour.
A different form of reading might also be done as it was in the past:reading aloud. The quiet hour could become the story hour. When the quiet hour 13 , the TV networks might be forced to 14 with better shows in order to get us back from our newly discovered activities.
At first glance, this idea seems radical (激進(jìn)的). How will we spend the time then? The fact is:it has been only twenty-five years since television came to 15 American free time. Those of us thirty-five and older can 16 childhoods without television. It wasn't that difficult.
1.
[ ]
2.
[ ]
3.
[ ]
4.
[ ]
5.
[ ]
6.
[ ]
7.
[ ]
8.
[ ]
9.
[ ]
10.
[ ]
11.
[ ]
12.
[ ]
13.
[ ]
14.
[ ]
15.
[ ]
16.
[ ]
The disaster at the Chernobyl(former USSR前蘇聯(lián)) power station happened quickly and without warning. It was in the early hours of April 26, 1986 when the cooling system of the reactor(反應(yīng)堆) failed. Minutes later, a violent (猛烈地) explosion blew the top off the reactor and blasted(爆炸生成) a huge cloud of radioactive gas high into atmosphere. Two people were killed immediately. Hundreds received powerful radiation overdose (過量). And more than 25,000 had to be taken away from their homes.
Days later, the radioactive cloud had spread as far as Scotland. Its radiation was weak, but all over Europe radioactive rain was falling. In some areas people were advised not to eat fresh vegetables, or drink fresh milk, and the sale of meat was forbidden.
The accident at Chernobyl was the world’s worst nuclear accident. In Britain, it convinced (使……相信) many people that all nuclear power stations should be shut down for good. But the Central Electricity Generating Board didn’t agree. They claimed that ·similar disasters could not happen in Britain because of safer designs, fewer deaths are caused using nuclear fuel (燃料) than by mining for coal or drilling for oil and gas. Nuclear accidents are unusually fewer compared with other types of accidents-such as air crashes, fires or dam break-down more nuclear power stations are necessary because the world’s supplies of oil, coal and natural gas are running out.
In 1957 in Cumbria (Britain) a nuclear reactor overheated and caught fire. No one was killed but fourteen workers received radiation overdose. Small amounts of gas and dust were let out over the local countryside.
An official report said the accident was nearly a full-scale disaster. The Nuclear Authority wanted the report published but the Prime Minister at the time refused. He thought that it would make people less confident in Britain’s nuclear industry. Thirty years later, the cabinet(內(nèi)閣) records of 1957 were published. Only then did the public discover what had really happened in Cumbria.
1.. One result of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster was that ______.
A. 25,000 people were killed
B. fresh foods were polluted
C. people in Scotland were taken away from their homes
D. hundreds of houses in Chernobyl were destroyed
2..According to the passage, nuclear accidents______.
A. are most unlikely to cause death B. are always kept secret from the public
C. can only happen in underdeveloped countries D. may happen in any country that has nuclear power station.
3.. After the nuclear accident at Chernobyl many people in Britain _______.
A. still believed it could not happen in their country.
B. were not convinced that nuclear power stations could be safe
C. accepted that there would be fewer deaths than in drilling for oil
D. supported nuclear power stations because world fuel supplies were low
4... The British Government refused to publish the report on the Cumbria accident because _______.
A. Britain’s supplies of oil, coal and gas were running out
B. it takes thirty years for the effects of radiation to appear
C. fewer people died in that accident than in other types of accidents
D. it was concerned that the British people would doubt their country’s nuclear expertise (核技術(shù))
|
百度致信 - 練習(xí)冊(cè)列表 - 試題列表
湖北省互聯(lián)網(wǎng)違法和不良信息舉報(bào)平臺(tái) | 網(wǎng)上有害信息舉報(bào)專區(qū) | 電信詐騙舉報(bào)專區(qū) | 涉歷史虛無主義有害信息舉報(bào)專區(qū) | 涉企侵權(quán)舉報(bào)專區(qū)
違法和不良信息舉報(bào)電話:027-86699610 舉報(bào)郵箱:58377363@163.com