科目: 來源:2012-2013學(xué)年浙江省杭州市西湖高級中學(xué)高一5月月考英語試卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
A growing number of college students are applying to take entry tests for medical and dental (牙科的) schools among increasing graduate unemployment in Korea.
“I’ve decided to apply for the test to enter a medical college to become a doctor, changing from my original plan to prepare for a lawyer qualification exam in order to get a more stable job in the future,” said a 24-year-old college graduate, Lee, who majored in business administration during his undergraduate schooling.
The new medical and dental school system is getting popularity, attracting an increasing number of students every year since its appearance in 2004, as it is open to all college graduates regardless of their previous majors.
The Education Development introduced the new medical and dental education system, in which college students with bachelor’s degrees are allowed to study medicine or dentistry by taking the Medical Education Test (MET) and Dental Education Test (DET).
Ten medical schools and six dental colleges that have used the new system have received 4,377 applications (申請) for the entrance exams.
Applicants are getting younger compared with those in their 20s representing 76.9 percent of the total. The tests might be easier for students with biology and chemistry majors, but graduates from other majors are also applying for the tests.
Under the existing medical and dental education system, students should take a two-year premedical course followed by a four-year medical course.
Students graduating under the new medical or dental education system are given master’s degrees, while those graduates who studied under the previous system have bachelor’s degrees.
【小題1】Why do more and more Korean students apply for medical schools?
| A.Because doctors are highly respected in Korea. |
| B.Because they want to get a more stable job. |
| C.Because medicine is easier to learn than other subjects. |
| D.Because the medical education system is reasonable. |
| A.two | B.four | C.six | D.seven |
| A.it takes a longer time to get the master’s degree in the old system |
| B.students may find it a lot easier to get a bachelor’s degree in medicine |
| C.graduates from other majors like history are not allowed to apply for those schools |
| D.the new system are not so popular as expected because of its high unemployment |
| A.New Medical and Dental School System Is Carried Out in Korea |
| B.Korean College Students Have a New Job Choice |
| C.Korean College Students Rush to Medical and Dental Schools |
| D.Doctors Are Becoming Popular in Korea |
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科目: 來源:2012-2013學(xué)年浙江省杭州市西湖高級中學(xué)高一5月月考英語試卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
Jeanne Calment, a French woman, become a record breaker on 17 October 1995, when at the age of 120 years and 238 days, she became the longest-lived human being on record. A Japanese man died in 1986 at the age of 120 years and 237 days.
Jeanne Calment lives in a small old people’s home in the south of France, her husband, her only child and her grandson have all died. She is nearly blind and deaf and is always in a wheelchair, but her doctor describes here as being “more like a 90-year-old in good health” than someone of 120. She still has a lively sense of humor. When asked on the 120th birthday what she expected of the future, she replied, “A very short one.” She also remarked that she thought the good Lord had forgotten all about her.
So what is the key to a long life? According to some doctors, diet, exercise and no smoking are the three important factors. Jeanne Calment has followed two of the tips. She has always eaten a healthy diet, and she used to do exercises every day until she broke her leg at the age of 115. However, until recently she drank two glasses of strong red wine a say, and she does smoke (now only a little). Besides, Jeanne Calment might have got very good genes from her parents. Her father lived to the age of 94 and her mother to 86.
A local lawyer bought her house when she was 80 under an agreement that he would pay her some money every year until her death. It must have seemed a good move at her age, but so far the lawyer has paid her at least three times the value of the house. Every year on her birthday Jeanne Calment sends him a card saying: “Sorry, I’m still alive!”
【小題1】 How does Jeanne Calment feel about her old age?
| A.She feels upset and unhappy. |
| B.She is cheerful and humorous. |
| C.She likes to live much longer. |
| D.She feels she is going to die very soon. |
| A.smoking only little every day |
| B.neither smoking nor drinking |
| C.a(chǎn)lways drinking two glasses of strong red wine a day and never smoking |
| D.the good genes from her parents, a healthy diet and some exercises |
| A.good habits of body-building. |
| B.Some materials that control the development of a living thing. |
| C.Comfortable living conditions. |
| D.Something necessary for a person to keep his life. |
| A.She had an agreement with the lawyer when she was 80. |
| B.The lawyer has not paid her enough rent yet. |
| C.The lawyer has paid her more money than the value of the house. |
| D.The house she sold to the lawyer was worth the money already paid. |
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科目: 來源:2013屆河北正定中學(xué)高三第三次模擬考試英語卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
Harvard University named historian Drew Gilpin Faust as its first female president on Sunday, ending a lengthy and secretive search to find a successor to Lawrence Summers.
The seven-member Harvard Corporation elected Faust, a noted scholar on History of the American South and dean of Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, as the university’s 28th president.
“This is a great day, and a historic day, for Harvard,” James R. Houghton, chairman of the presidential search committee, said in a statement. “Drew Faust is an inspiring and accomplished leader, a superb scholar, a dedicated teacher, and a wonderful human being.”
Her selection is noteworthy given the heated debates over Summers’ comments that genetic differences between the sexes might help explain the lack of women in top science jobs.
Faust has been dean of Radcliffe since 2001, two years after the former women’s college was combined into the university as a research center with a mission to study gender issues.
Some professors have quietly groused that the 371-year-old university is appointing a fifth president who is not a scientist. No scientist has had the top job since James Bryant Conant retired in 1953; its last four have come from the fields of classics, law, literature and economics.
Faust is the first Harvard president who did not receive a degree from the university since Charles Chauncy, a graduate of Cambridge University, who died in office in 1762. She attended the University of Pennsylvania.
“Teaching staff turned to her constantly,” said Sheldon Hackney, a former president of the University of Pennsylvania and historian who worked closely with Faust. “She’s very clear. She has a sense of humor, but she’s very strong-minded. You come to trust in her because she’s so solid.”
【小題1】Which might be the best title for the passage?
| A.Harvard named its first female president. |
| B.History of Harvard University changed. |
| C.Debates on female equality ended. |
| D.Drew Gilpin Faust, a famous woman historian. |
| A.She is the 28th president of Harvard University. |
| B.She is a famous scholar from the American South. |
| C.She isn’t a graduate from Harvard University. |
| D.She was head of Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. |
| A.a(chǎn)pproved | B.commented | C.complained | D.indicated |
| A.biography | B.personal letter | C.research paper | D.newspaper report |
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科目: 來源:2012-2013學(xué)年海南瓊海嘉積中學(xué)高二下學(xué)期教學(xué)質(zhì)量監(jiān)測英語卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
South Asia heatwave kills nearly 100
DHAKA - A heat wave sweeping India, Bangladesh and Nepal has killed nearly 100 people over the past two weeks, officials said on June 3, 2005.
A third of the people died in northern Bangladesh, mostly women and children from dehydration(脫水), heat stroke and diarrhoea(腹瀉).
"We are getting reports of several deaths due to heat wave and related diseases almost every day," an official said, as temperatures touched 43℃.
The weather office in Dhaka said the hot weather will last for another week until the monsoon(季風(fēng)) rains which are normally due by the middle of June.
Severe heat conditions in the southern Indian have killed at least 55 people, officials in the two states said.
While temperatures have fallen from a high of 45℃ in Andhra Pradesh to around 40℃, giving a respite(休息) to people, they are still on the rise in Orissa with Talcher town registering 48.5℃, a weather official said.
At least five people have died in Nepal from extreme heat, the government said.
【小題1】We can infer that the heatwave can cause ______.
| A.heat stoke | B.dehydration | C.diarrhoea | D.a(chǎn)ll above |
| A.remain the same | B.go on to rise sharply |
| C.begin to drop obviously | D.rise a little |
| A.Dhaka | B.Talcher | C.Andhra Pradesh | D.Nepal |
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科目: 來源:2013屆山西康杰中學(xué)高三第四次模擬英語卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
At 10 years old, Flynn Mc Garry became sick of the meals his mother cooked for him. So the Los Angeles native took matters into his own hands and started making his own dinners. One of his specialties? Trout with braised leeks(韭蔥燉鮭魚).
Now 13, the young chef is being praised as a “food prodigy(神童)”. He will spend his summer apprenticing with some of the best chefs at LA’s famous restaurants, MSNBC Nightly New reports.
Mc Garry began making a name for himself in the culinary(烹飪) world when John Sedlar, owner of the trendy Playa Restaurant, let Mc Garry take over the kitchen for a special nine-course meal. The meal sold out almost instantly.
“Flynn is a very unusual young man, and he’s very, very passionate,” owner John Sedlar told MSNBC.
By usual teenage boy standards, it’s true. So strong is his passion for cooking that the young man has turned his bedroom into an experimental kitchen laboratory.
Instead of video game consoles, baseball trophies and movie posters, Mc Garry’s room is lined with mixers, pots and pans, cutting boards and a stainless steel worktable. It’s where Mc Garry cooks his monthly pop-up dinners, which are served from his family’s dining room, a monthly supper club he calls Eureka.
Mc Garry is deft(靈巧的) and confident in the kitchen, with skills he’s been practicing since he was a child. What started out as a means of self-preservation from his mom’s unsatisfactory cooking has turned into a passion that the teen hopes to develop into a career.
“My goal? Michelin three stars, a restaurant in the top 50 list,” he told MSNBC. “Hopefully the top five.” Meanwhile, Mc Garry’s 13-year-old resume is already richer and more impressive than most cooks many times his age.
Mc Garry isn’t the only talented young prodigy to surprise experts in his field in recent years. At just 17 years old, physicist Taylor Wilson is already teaching graduate-level courses in physics and has built a functioning nuclear reactor.
【小題1】Mc Garry first started cooking ___________.
| A.for himself | B.a(chǎn)s an experiment |
| C.in his own bedroom | D.with a teacher’s guidance |
| A.has the best cooking equipment in his kitchen |
| B.is inventive and has many new specialties to his name |
| C.has much and impressive cooking experience for his young age |
| D.wants to open his own Michelin three-star restaurant |
| A.prove that Flynn’s success is not a rare case |
| B.compare his talent to that of Flynn Mc Garry |
| C.introduce a young talent in a different field |
| D.suggest experts should be trained at a young age |
| A.A recipe book | B.A restaurant introduction |
| C.A career guide | D.A news report |
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科目: 來源:2013屆天津市高考壓軸卷英語卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
Which is sillier: denying we ever went to the moon or trying to convince the true nonbelievers?
Once upon a time – July 20, 1969, to be specific – two men got out of their little spaceship and wandered around on the moon for a while. Ten more men walked on the moon over the next three and a half years. The end.
Unfortunately, not quite. A fair number of Americans think that this whole business of moon landings really is a fairy tale. They believe that the landings were a big hoax (騙局) staged in the Mojave Desert, to convince everyone that U.S. technology was the “bestest” in the whole wide world.
Which is the harder thing to do: Send men to the moon or make believe we did? The fact is the physics behind sending people to the moon is simple. You can do it with computers whose entire memory capacities can now fit on chips the size of postage stamps and that cost about as much as, well, a postage stamp. I know you can because we did.
However, last fall NASA considered spending $15,000 on a public-relations campaign to convince the unimpressed that Americans had in fact gone to the moon. That idea was mostly a reaction to a Fox television program, first aired in February 2001, that claimed to expose the hoax. The show’s creator is a publicity hound (獵狗) who has lived up to the name in more ways than one by hounding Buzz Aldrin, the second man on the moon. Mr. X (as I will call him, thereby denying him the joyous sight of his name in print) recently followed Buzz Aldrin around and called him “a thief, liar and coward” until the 72-year-old astronaut finally lost it and hit the 37-year-old Mr. X in the face.
Anyway, NASA’s publicity campaign began to slow down. The nonbelievers took the campaign as NASA’s effort to hide something while the believers said that $15,000 to convince people that the world was round — I mean, that we had gone to the moon — was simply a waste of money. (Actually, the $15,000 was supposed to pay for an article by James E. Oberg, an astronomy writer who, with Aldrin, has contributed to Scientific American.)
If NASA’s not paying Oberg, perhaps it could put the money to good use by hiring two big guys to drag Neil Armstrong out of the house. Armstrong is an extremely private man, but he is also the first man on the moon, so maybe he has a duty to be a bit more outspoken about the experience. Or NASA could just buy Aldrin a commemorate plaque (紀(jì)念匾) for his recent touch on the face of Mr. X.
【小題1】We can learn from Paragraphs 2 and 3 that some Americans believe _______.
| A.moon landings were invented |
| B.U.S. technology was the best |
| C.moon landing ended successfully |
| D.the Mojave Desert was the launching base |
| A.NASA’s publicity campaign. | B.The Fox television program. |
| C.Buzz Aldrin. | D.James E. Oberg. |
| A.told a faithful story | B.was not treated properly |
| C.was a talented creator | D.had a bad reputation |
| A.proof to hide the truth |
| B.stupid and unnecessary |
| C.needed to convince the non-believers |
| D.important to develop space technology |
| A.a(chǎn)ngry | B.conversational | C.humorous | D.matter-of-fact |
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科目: 來源:2012-2013學(xué)年上海市上海理工大學(xué)附屬中學(xué)高一下期期中考試英語卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
They leap from helicopters or speeding boats, bringing aid to swimmers who get into trouble off Italy’s popular beaches.
Hundreds of specially trained dogs from Italy’s corps of canine(犬類的) lifeguards set out each summer to help swimmers in need of rescue.
These "life dogs" wear a harness that victims can grab to be dragged back to shore, and unlike human lifeguards, they can easily jump from helicopters and speeding boats to reach swimmers in trouble.
With millions flocking to Italy’s crowded beaches each summer, the Italian Coast Guard says it rescues about 3,000 people every year —and their canine helpers have saved several lives.
It takes three years for the canines to reach expert rescue status, and currently 300 dogs are fully trained for duty, said Roberto Gasbarri, who directs the Italian School of Canine Lifeguards program.
"Dogs are of good physical strength. They can increase the speed at which victims are rescued," Gasbarri said.
"The dog becomes a sort of intelligent lifebuoy(救生圈). It is a buoy that goes by itself to a person in need of help, and comes back to the shore also by himself, choosing the best landing point and swimming through the safest currents," he said.
The school will train any breed, as long as they weigh at least 30 kilograms, but New found lands and golden retrievers are most commonly used because they are good at swimming. Each dog works together with a human lifeguard, who also acts as the animal’s trainer.
"Being retrievers, they set out to pick up anything we tell them, be it a human being, an object, or a fish, and they bring it back to the shore," said lifeguard Monia Luciani. "They do not associate it with a physical activity, but it is rather a game for them."
【小題1】The dogs wear a harness so that __________.
【小題2】The dogs are helpful to _________.
【小題3】Why does the school usually choose to train the New found lands and golden retrievers?
___________________________________.
【小題4】How do the dogs regard the pickup training?
____________________________________.
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科目: 來源:2013屆河北唐山一中高三高考仿真測試英語卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
Food safety will become the food industry’s key target as the nation tries to adopt international food standards. The National Development and Reform Commission, the Standardization Administration of China, the Ministry of Agriculture and six other departments announced their 2004-05 development programme for national food standards over the weekend.
China is conducting a rectification (整頓) within two years. Inspectors will search for all known banned materials in food production. To reduce trading barriers, China will raise the ratio of adopting international standards in the food industry to 55 percent from today’s 23 percent. “Safety is the first consideration for anything entering people’s mouth followed by its nutritious value,” said Hao Yu, secretary-general of the National Food Industry Standardization Technique Committee. He added the usage of food addictives (添加劑) will be a major field for consideration in setting the new standards. On-the-spot checks during the past two years have shown the abuse (濫用) or misuse of addictives in food production and processing has become the biggest threat to food safety. In one case, talcum (滑石粉) powder was found in flour products, which is outlawed according to national food standards.
“At present there are no methods or standards to test the content of talcum powder in flour,” said Shang Yan’e, an official with the national watchdog on grain and oil inspections. Under the guidelines, all banned addictives will be recorded as inspections increase, Relevant departments have allocated (分配) funds to conduct risk evaluations on current food addictives to fix the limits of their usage. China will adopt international advanced techniques and standards so as to find out the harmful materials in food within a shortest period.
【小題1】China will raise the ratio of adopting international standards in the food industry by _____.
| A.55% | B.32% | C.23% | D.78% |
| A.Safety | B.Value | C.Nutrition | D.Addictives |
| A.Addictives are dangerous to people’s health. |
| B.Chinese food will be as safe as foreign food. |
| C.New food safety standards are to be fixed. |
| D.Food safety is a major concern in present China. |
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科目: 來源:2013屆河北唐山一中高三高考仿真測試英語卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
Which is sillier: denying we ever went to the moon or trying to convince the true non-believers?
Once upon a time—July 20, 1969, to be specific – two men got out of their little spaceship and wandered around on the moon for a while. Ten more men walked on the moon over the next three and a half years. The end.
Unfortunately, not quite. A fair number of Americans think that this whole business of moon landings really is a fairy tale. They believe that the landings were a big hoax (騙局) staged in the Mojave Desert, to convince everyone that U.S. technology was the “best” in the whole wide world.
Which is the harder thing to do: Send men to the moon or make believe we did? The fact is that the physics behind sending people to the moon is simple. You can do it with computers whose entire memory capacities can now fit on chips the size of postage stamps and that cost about as much as, well, a postage stamp. I know you can because we did.
However, last fall NASA considered spending $15,000 on a public-relations campaign to convince the unimpressed that Americans had in fact gone to the moon. That idea was mostly a reaction to a Fox television program, first aired in February 2001, that claimed to expose the hoax. The show’s creator is a publicity hound (獵狗) who has lived up to the name in more ways than one by hounding Buzz Aldrin, the second man on the moon. Mr. X (as I will call him, thereby denying him the joyous sight of his name in print) recently followed Buzz Aldrin around and called him “a thief, liar and coward” until the 72-year-old astronaut finally lost it and hit the 37-year-old Mr. X in the face.
Anyway, NASA’s publicity campaign began to slow down. The nonbelievers took the campaign as NASA’s effort to hide something while the believers said that $15,000 to convince people that the world was round — I mean, that we had gone to the moon — was simply a waste of money. (Actually, the $15,000 was supposed to pay for an article by James E. Oberg, an astronomy writer who, with Aldrin, has contributed to Scientific American.)
If NASA’s not paying Oberg, perhaps it could put the money to good use by hiring two big guys to drag Neil Armstrong out of the house. Armstrong is an extremely private man, but he is also the first man on the moon, so maybe he has a duty to be a bit more outspoken about the experience. Or NASA could just buy Aldrin a commemorate plaque (紀(jì)念匾) for his recent touch on the face of Mr. X.
【小題1】We can learn from Paragraphs 2 and 3 that some Americans believe _______.
| A.moon landings were invented |
| B.U.S. technology was the best |
| C.moon landing ended successfully |
| D.the Mojave Desert was the launching base |
| A.NASA’s publicity campaign. | B.The Fox television program. |
| C.Buzz Aldrin. | D.James E. Oberg. |
| A.proof to hide the truth |
| B.stupid and unnecessary |
| C.needed to convince the non-believers |
| D.important to develop space technology |
| A.NASA should not bother with the non-believers. |
| B.Armstrong was a very private and determined person. |
| C.Armstrong should be as outspoken as Buzz Aldrin. |
| D.NASA should send more astronauts to outer space. |
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科目: 來源:2012-2013學(xué)年山東省臨沭一中高二10月學(xué)情調(diào)查英語卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
A group of eight public high school students in Massachusetts, aged l5 to l7,designed and ran their own school within a school. They named their practice the Independent Project. They represented the usual range: two were close to dropping out before they started the project,while others were honors students.
Their guidance teacher was their adviser, consulting with them when the group encountered difficulties. Though they sought advice from English,math and science teachers, they were responsible for monitoring one another’s work and giving one another feedback. There were no grades, but at the end of the term,the students wrote evaluations of their classmates.
The students also designed their own course. In addition to some regular courses,they each took on an ‘individual project’,learning to play the piano or to cook,writing a novel or making a video about domestic(國內(nèi)的) violence. At the end of the term,they performed their new skills in front of the entire school. The last part of their self - designed course was to do a ‘collective project’ that had social significance. Because they felt the whole experience had been so life – changing,they ended up making a film showing how other students could start and run their own schools.
The project was a success. After returning to their traditional study,the students have high motivation and are doing well. One student who had failed all of his previous math courses spent three weeks teaching the others about probability. The lesson learned here is that if students are given the opportunity to take control or contribute significantly to their own learning they will become more accomplished,more engaged and more knowledgeable.
The students in the project are remarkable because they demonstrate the kinds of learning and personal growth that are possible when teenagers feel ownership of their high school experience,learn things that matter to them and learn together.
【小題1】Which of the following statements is TRUE?
| A.Some students might drop out of high school. |
| B.The teachers monitored the students’ homework. |
| C.The students themselves solved all their problems. |
| D.The teachers evaluate the students’ performances. |
| A.didn’t need to learn common lessons |
| B.tended to escape from the whole society |
| C.were unwilling to share their experiences |
| D.focused on self-study and working together |
| A.the traditional study is better than the project |
| B.a(chǎn)ll the students had failed their math courses |
| C.the students have freedom to design their lessons |
| D.the project was mainly concerned with math courses |
| A.they are unusually talented |
| B.they have better backgrounds |
| C.they have supportive teachers |
| D.they are owners of their education |
| A.Structure the kids’ days to the minute |
| B.Let kids rule their own school within a school |
| C.Offer students few opportunities to do anything |
| D.Provide traditional education to the students |
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