科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Samuel Osmond is a 19-year-old law student from Cornwall, England. He never studied the piano. However, he can play very difficult musical pieces by musicians such as Chopin and Beethoven just a few minutes after he hears them. He learns a piece of music by listening to it in parts. Then he thinks about the notes in his head. Two years ago, he played his first piece Moonlight Sonata(奏鳴曲)by Beethoven. He surprised everyone around him.
Amazed that he remembered this long and difficult piece of music and played it perfectly, his teachers say Samuel is unbelievable .They say his ability is very rare, but Samuel doesn’t even realize that what he can do is special. Samuel wanted to become a lawyer as it was the wish of his parents, but music teachers told him he should study music instead. Now, he studies law and music.
Samuel can’t understand why everyone is so surprised. “I grew up with music. My mother played the piano and my father played the guitar. About two years ago, I suddenly decided to start playing the piano, without being able to read music and without having any lessons. It comes easily to me ---I hear the notes and can bear them in mind---each and every note,” says Samuel.
Recently, Samuel performed a piece during a special event at his college. The piece had more than a thousand notes. The audience was impressed by his amazing performance. He is now learning a piece that is so difficult that many professional pianists can’t play it. Samuel says confidently,” It’s all about super memory---I guess I have that gift.”
However, Samuel’s ability to remember things doesn’t stop with music. His family says that even when he was a young boy, Samuel heard someone read a story, and then he could retell the story word for word.
Samuel is still only a teenager. He doesn’t know what he wants to do in the future. For now, he is just happy to play beautiful music and continue his studies.
【小題1】What is special about Samuel Osmond?
| A.He has a gift for writing music. |
| B.He can write down the note he hears. |
| C.He is a top student at the law school. |
| D.He can play the musical piece he hears. |
| A.Samuel chose law against the wish of his parents. |
| B.Samuel planned to be a lawyer rather than a musician. |
| C.Samuel thinks of himself as a man of great musical ability. |
| D.Samuel studies law and music on the advice of his teachers. |
| A.received a good early education in music |
| B.played the guitar and the piano perfectly |
| C.could play the piano without reading music |
| D.could play the guitar better than his father |
| A.He became famous during a special event at his college. |
| B.He is proud of his ability to remember things accurately. |
| C.He plays the piano better than many professional pianists. |
| D.He impressed the audience by playing all the musical pieces. |
| A.The Qualities of a Musician |
| B.The Story of a Musical Talent |
| C.The Importance of Early Education |
| D.The Relationship between Memory and Music. |
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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
It was Mother’s Day morning last year and I was doing my shopping at our local supermarket with my five-year-old son, Tenyson. As we were leaving, we found that only minutes earlier an elderly woman had fallen over at the entrance and had hit her head on the concrete. Her husband was with her, but there was blood everywhere and the woman was embarrassed and clearly in shock.
Walking towards the scene, Tenyson became very upset about what had happened to the couple. He said to me, “Mum, it’s not much fun falling over in front of everyone.”
At the front of the supermarket a charity(慈善) group had set up a stand selling cooked sausages and flowers to raise funds. Tenyson suggested that we should buy the lady a flower. “It will make her feel better,” he said. I was amazed that he’d come up with such a sweet idea. So we went over to the flower seller and asked her if we could buy a flower for the lady to cheer her up. “Just take it,” she replied. “I can’t take your money for such a wonderful gesture.”
By now paramedics(救援人員)had arrived, and were attending the injured woman. As we walked up to her, my son became intimidated by all the blood and medical equipment. He said he was just too scared to go up to her. ZXXK
Instead I gave the flower to the woman’s husband and told him, “ My son was very upset for your wife and wanted to give her this flower to make her feel better.”
At that, the old man started crying and said, “Thank you so much, you have a wonderful son. Happy Mother’s Day to you.”
The man then bent down and gave his wife the flower, telling her who it was from. Though badly hurt and shaken, the old lady looked up at Tenyson with love in her eyes and gave him a little smile.
【小題1】What dose the author intend to tell us?
| A.One can never be too careful. |
| B.Actions speak louder than words. |
| C.Love begins with a little smile. |
| D.A small act of kindness brings a great joy. |
| A.The elderly woman was knocked down by Tenyson. |
| B.Tenyson’s idea of buying a flower gained his father’s support. |
| C.Tenyson’s care for the elderly woman puzzled the flower seller. |
| D.The elderly woman was moved to tears by Tenyson’s gesture. |
| A.a(chǎn)stonished | B.struck | C.frightened | D.excited |
| A.Flower Power |
| B.Mother’s Day |
| C.An Accidental Injury |
| D.An Embarrassing Moment |
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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
The Brown Bear
My wife Laura and I were on the beach, with three of our children, taking pictures of shore birds near our home in Alaska when we spotted a bear. The bear was thin and small, moving aimlessly.
Just a few minutes later, I heard my daughter shouting, “Dad! The bear is right behind us!” An agreesive bear will usually rush forward to frighten away its enemy but would suddenly stop at the last minute. This one was silent and its ears pinned back---- the sign (跡象) of an animal that is going in for the kill. And it was a cold April day. The bear behaved abnormally, probably because of hunger.
I held my camera tripod (三腳架) in both hands to form a barrier as the bear rushed into me. Its huge head was level with my chest and shoulders, and the tripod stuck across its mouth. It bit down and I found myself supporting its weight. I knew I would not be able to hold it for long.
Even so, this was a fight I had to win: I was all that stood between the bear and my family, who would stand little chance of running faster than a brown bear.
The bear hit at the camera, cutting it off the tripod. I raised my left arm to protect my face; the beast held tightly on the tripod and pressed it into my side. My arm could not move, and I sensed that my bones were going to break.
Drawing back my free hand, I struck the bear as hard as I could for five to six times. The bear opened its mouth and I grasped its fur, trying to push it away. I was actually wrestling (扭打) with the bear at this point. Then, as suddenly as it had begun, the fight ended. The bear moved back toward the forest, before returning for another attack----- The first time I felf panic.
Apparently satisfied that we caused no further threat, the bear moved off, destroying a fence as it went. My arm was injured, but the outcome for us could hardly have been better. I’m proud that my family reminded clear-headed when panic could have led to a very different outcome.
【小題1】The brown bear approached the family in order to _______.
| A.catch shore birds | B.start an attack |
| C.protect the children | D.set up a barrier for itself |
| A.felt safe | B.got injured |
| C.found some food | D.took away the camera |
| A.pride | B.patience |
| C.calmness | D.cautiousness |
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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Steven Spielberg was not a scholar, and his classmates teased him. Rather than read, the kid really preferred running around with an 8mm camera, shooting homemade movies, which he showed to friends for a small fee.
In his first year of high school, he dropped out. But when his parents persuaded him to return, he was mistakenly placed in a learningdisabled class, which lasted one month. Only when the family moved to another town did he land up in a more suitable high school, where he eventually graduated.
After being denied entrance into a traditional filmmaking school, Steven Spielherg enrolled in English at California State University at Long Beach. Then in 1965, he recalls, in one of those serendipitous moments, his life took a complete turn. Visiting Universal Studios, he met Chuck Silvers, an executive in the editorial department. Silvers liked the kid who made 8mm films and invited him back sometime to visit.
He appeared the next day. Spielberg, dressed in a dark suit, carrying his father's briefcase with nothing inside but a sandwich and candy bars walked confidently up to the guard at the gate of Universal and gave him a casual wave. The guard waved back. He was in.
“For the entire summer,” Spielberg remembers, “I dressed in my suit and hung out with the directors and writers, including Silvers, who knew the kid wasn't a studio employee, but winked at him. I even found an office that wasn't being used, and became a squatter (擅自占用他人房子的人). I bought some plastic tiles and put my name in the building directory: Steven Spielberg, Room 23C.”
It paid off for everyone. Ten years later, the 28yearold Spielberg directed Jaws, which took in $470 million, then the biggest grossing movie of all time. Dozens of films and awards have followed because Steven Spielberg knew what his teachers didn't—talent is in the eyes of the filmmaker.
【小題1】Why was Steven Spielberg laughed at by his classmates?
| A.He was the youngest boy. |
| B.He was too short for his age. |
| C.He liked to fight with other boys. |
| D.He didn't care much about his lessons. |
| A.To see his movies. |
| B.To use his camera. |
| C.To look at his photos. |
| D.To include them in the movie. |
| A.Study English at a college. |
| B.Become a newspaper editor. |
| C.Work for Universal Studios. |
| D.Go to a traditional filmmaking school. |
| A.Being dressed in a suit. |
| B.Meeting Chuck Silvers. |
| C.Missing a filmmaking school. |
| D.Working for Universal Studios. |
| A.Always follow our dream and we can make it. |
| B.We need someone to help us realize our dreams. |
| C.Anyone can become a film director if he wants to. |
| D.We should grasp the opportunity that comes our way. |
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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Success is often measured by the ability to overcome adversity.But,it is often the belief of others that gives us the courage to try.
J.K.Rowling,author of the Harry Potter book series,began writing at the age of 6.In her biography,she remembers with great fondness when her good friend Sean,whom she met in secondary school,became the first person to encourage her and help build the confidence that one day she would be a very good writer
“He was the first person with whom I really discussed my serious ambition to be a writer.He was also the only person who thought I was bound to be a success at it,which meant much more to me than I ever told him at the time.”
Despite many setbacks,Rowling persevered in her writing,particularly fantasy stories.But it wasn’t until 1990 that she first conceived the idea about Harry Potter.As she recalls,it was on a long train journey from London to Manchester that the idea of Harry Potter simply fell into her head.“To my immense frustration (沮喪),I didn’t have a functioning pen with me,and I was too shy to ask anybody if I could borrow one.I think,now,that this was probably a good thing,because I simply sat and thought,for four (delayed train) hours,and all the details bubbled up in my brain,and this scrawny,blackhaired,bespectacled (戴眼鏡的) boy who didn’t know he was a wizard became more and more real to me.”
That same year,her mother passed away after a tenyear battle with multiple sclerosis,which deeply affected her writing.She went on to marry and had a daughter,but separated from her husband shortly afterwards.
During this time,Rowling was diagnosed with clinical depression.Unemployed,she completed her first novel in area cafes,where she could get her daughter to fall asleep.After being rejected by 12 publishing houses,the first Harry Potter novel was sold to a small British publishing house.
Now with seven books that have sold nearly 400 million copies in 64 languages,J.K.Rowling is the highest earning novelist in history.And it all began with her commitment to writing that was fostered by the confidence of a friend!
【小題1】Who believed J.K.Rowling was to be a good writer?
| A.Her friend Sean. | B.Her mother. |
| C.Her daughter. | D.Her husband. |
| A.a(chǎn)t the age of 6 | B.on a train journey |
| C.a(chǎn)fter her mother’s death | D.in her secondary school |
| A.her train was delayed for four hours |
| B.she didn’t have a pen with her |
| C.her mind suddenly went blank |
| D.no one would offer her help |
| A.openminded | B.warmhearted |
| C.goodnatured | D.strongwilled |
| A.hardship makes a good novelist |
| B.the courage to try is a special ability |
| C.you can have a wonderful idea everywhere |
| D.encouragement contributes to one’s success |
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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
I was never very neat, while my roommate Kate was extremely organized. Each of her objects had its place, but mine always hid somewhere. She even labeled(貼標(biāo)簽)everything. I always looked for everything. Over time, Kate got neater and I got messier. She would push my dirty clothing over, and I would lay my books on her tidy desk. We both got tired of each other.
War broke out one evening. Kate came into the room. Soon, I heard her screaming. “Take your shoes away! Why under my bed!” Deafened, I saw my shoes flying at me. I jumped to my feet and started yelling. She yelled back louder.
The room was filled with anger. We could not have stayed together for a single minute but for a phone call. Kate answered it. From her end of the conversation, I could tell right away her grandma was seriously ill. When she hung up, she quickly crawled(爬)under her covers, sobbing.
Obviously, that was not something she should not go through alone. All of a sudden, a warm feeling of sympathy rose up in my heart.
Slowly, I collected the pencils, took back the books, made my bed, cleaned the socks and swept the floor, even on her side. I got so into my work that I even didn’t notice Kate had sat up. She was watching, her tears dried and her expression one of disbelief. Then, she reached out her hands to grasp mine. I looked up into her eyes. She smiled at me, “Thanks.”
Kate and I stayed roommates for the rest of the year. We didn’t always agree, but we learned the key to living together: giving in, cleaning up and holding on.
【小題1】What made Kate so angry one evening?
| A.She couldn’t find her books. |
| B.She heard the author shouting loud. |
| C.She got the news that her grandma was ill. |
| D.She saw the author’s shoes beneath her bed. |
| A.she was scared by Kate’s anger |
| B.she hated herself for being so messy |
| C.she wanted to show her care |
| D.she was asked by Kate to do so |
| A.By analyzing causes | B.By showing differences |
| C.By describing a process | D.By following time order |
| A.My Friend Kate | B.Hard Work Pays Off |
| C.How to Be Organized | D.Learning to Be Roommates |
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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
A city child’s summer is spent in the street in front of his home, and all through the long summer vacations I sat on the edge of the street and watched enviously the other boys on the block play baseball. I was never asked to take part even when one team had a member missing—not out of special cruelty, but because they took it for granted I would be no good at it. They were right, of course.
I would never forget the wonderful evening when something changed. The baseball ended about eight or eight thirty when it grew dark. Then it was the custom of the boys to retire to a little stoop(門廊) that stuck out from the candy store on the corner and that somehow had become theirs. No grownup ever sat there or attempted to. There the boys would sit, mostly talking about the games played during the day and of the game to be played tomorrow. Then long silences would fall and the boys would wander off one by one. It was just after one of those long silences that my life as an outsider changed. I can no longer remember which boy it was that summer evening who broke the silence with a question: but whoever he was, I nod to him gratefully now. “What’s in those books you’re always reading?” he asked casually. “Stories,” I answered. “What kind?” asked somebody else without much interest.
Nor do I know what drove me to behave as I did,for usually I just sat there in silence, glad enough to be allowed to reain among them; but instead of answering his question, I told them for two hours the story I was reading at the moment. The book was Sister Carrie. They listened bug-eyed and breathless. I must have told it well, but I think there was another and deeper reason that made them to keep an audience. Listening to a tale being told in the dark is one of the most ancient of man’s entertainments, but I was offering them as well, without being aware of doing it, a new and exciting experience.
The books they themselves read were the Rover Boys or Tom Swift or G.A.Henty. I had read them too, but at thirteen I had long since left them behind. Since I was much alone I had become an enthusiastic reader and I had gone through the books-for-boys series. In those days there was no reading material between children’s and grownups’books or I could find none. I had gone right fromTome Swift and His Flying Machine to Theodore Dreiser and Sister Carrie. Dreiser had hit my young mind, and they listened to me tell the story with some of the wonder that I had had in reading it.
The next night and many nights thereafter, a kind of unspoken ritual (儀式) took place. As it grew dark, I would take my place in the center of the stoop and begin the evening’s tale. Some nights, in order to taste my victory more completely, I cheated. I would stop at the most exciting part of a story by Jack London or Bret Harte, and without warning tell them that that was as far as I had gone in the book and it would have to be continued the following evening. It was not true, of course; but I had to make certain of my new-found power and position. I enjoyed the long summer evenings until school began in the fall. Other words of mine have been listened to by larger and more fashionable audiences, but for that tough and athletic one that sat close on the stoop outside the candy store, I have an unreasoning love that will last forever.
【小題1】Watching the boys playing baseball, the writer must have felt ________.
| A.bitter and lonely | B.special and different |
| C.pleased and excited | D.disturbed and annoyed |
| A.invited him to join in their game |
| B.liked the book that he was reading |
| C.broke the long silence of that summer evening |
| D.offered him an opportunity that changed his life |
| A.the story was from a children’s book |
| B.listening to tales was an age-old practice |
| C.the boys had few entertainments after dark |
| D.the boys didn’t read books by themselves |
| A.it was written by Theodore Dreiser |
| B.it was specifically targeted at boys |
| C.it gave them a deeper feeling of pleasure |
| D.it talked about the wonders of the world |
| A.play a mean trick on the boys |
| B.experience more joy of achievement |
| C.a(chǎn)dd his own imagination to the story |
| D.help the boys understand the story better |
| A.One can find his position in life in his own way. |
| B.Friendship is built upon respect for each other. |
| C.Reading is more important than playing games. |
| D.Adult habits are developed from childhood. |
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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Arriving in Sydney on his own from India, my husband ,Rashid, stayed in a hotel for a short time while looking for a house for me and our children.
During the first week of his stay, he went out one day to do some shopping. He came back in the late afternoon to discover that his suitcase was gone. He was extremely worried as the suitcase had all his important papers, including his passport.
He reported the case to the police and then sat there,lost and lonely in strange city, thinking of the terrible troubles of getting all the paperwork organized again from a distant country while trying to settle down in a new one.
Late in the evening, the phone rang. It was a stranger. He was trying to pronounce my husband’s name and was asking him a lot of questions. Then he said they had found a pile of papers in their trash can(垃圾桶)that had been left out on the footpath.
My husband rushed to their home to find a kind family holding all his papers and documents. Their young daughter had gone to the trash can and found a pile of unfamiliar papers. Her parents had carefully sorted them out, although they had found mainly foreign addresses on most of the documents. At last they had seen a half-written letter in the pile in which my husband had given his new telephone number to a friend.
That family not only restored the important documents to us that day but also restoredour faith and trust in people. We still remember their kindness and often send a warm wish their way.
【小題1】What did Rashid plan to do after his arrival in Sydney?
| A.Go shopping |
| B.Find a house |
| C.Join his family |
| D.Take his family |
| A.a(chǎn) friend of his family |
| B.a(chǎn) Sydney policeman |
| C.a(chǎn) letter in his papers |
| D.a(chǎn) stranger in Sydney |
| A.Showed |
| B.Sent out |
| C.Delivered |
| D.Gave back |
| A.From India to Australia. |
| B.Living in a New Country. |
| C.Turning Trash to Treasure. |
| D.In Search of New Friends. |
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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
As more and more people speak the global languages of English, Chinese, Spanish, and Arabic, other languages are rapidly disappearing. In fact, half of the 6,000-7,000 languages spoken around the world today will likely die out by the next century, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
In an effort to prevent language loss, scholars from a number of organizations- UNESCO and National Geographic among them –have for many years been documenting dying languages and the cultures they reflect.
Mark Turin, a scientist at the Macmillan Center, Yale University, who specializes in the languages and oral traditions of the Himalayas, is following in that tradition. His recently published book, A Grammar of Thangmi with an Ethnolinguistic Introduction to the Speakers and Their Culture, grows out of his experience living, looking and raising a family in a village in Nepal.
Documenting the Tangmi language and culture is just a starting point for Turin, who seeks to include other languages and oral traditions across the Himalayans reaches of India, Nepal, Bhutan, and China. But he is not content to simply record these voices before they disappear without record.
At the University of Cambridge Turin discovered a wealth of important materials- including photographs, films, tap recordings, and field notes- which had remained unstudied and were badly in need of care and protection.
Now, through the two organizations that he has founded-the Digital Himalaya Project and the World Oral Literature Project- Turin has started a campaign to make such documents, found in libraries and stores around the world, available not just to scholars but to the youngers.
Generations of communities from whom the materials were originally collected.Thanks to digital technology and the widely available Internet. Turin notes,the endangered languages can be saved and reconnected with speech communities.
【小題1】Many scholars are making efforts to _____.
| A.promote global languages |
| B.rescue the disappearing languages |
| C.search for language communities |
| D.set up languages research organizations. |
| A.Having first records of the languages |
| B.Writing books on language searching |
| C.Telling stories about language users |
| D.Linking with the native speakers |
| A.The cultural statics in India. |
| B.The documents available at Yale. |
| C.His language research in Britain. |
| D.His personal experience in Nepal. |
| A.Write sell and donate. |
| B.Record,repeat and reward. |
| C.Collect,protect and reconnect. |
| D.Design, experiment and report. |
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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
“Dad,” I say one day …..take a trip. Why don’t you fly and meet me?”
My father had just reired……….. His job filled his day, his thought, his life. While he woke up and took a warm shower, I screamed under a freezing waterfall Peru. While he tied a tie and put on the same Swiss watch, I rowed a boat across Lake of the Ozarks.
My father sees me drfting aimlessly, nothing to show for my 33 years but a passport full of funny stamps. He wants me to settle down, but now I want him to find an adventure.
He agrees to travel with me through the national parks. We meet four weeks later in Rapid City.
“ What is our first stop?” asks my father.
“What time is it?”
“Still don’t have a watch?”
Less than an hour away is Mount Rushmore. As he stares up at the four Presidents carved in granite(), his mouth and eyes open slowly, like those of little boy.
“Unbelievable,” he says, “How was this done?”
A film in the information center shows sculptor Gutzon Borglum devoted 14 years to the sculpture and then left the final touches to his son.
We stare up and I ask myself, Would I ever devote my life to anything?
No directions, …… I always used to hear those words in my father’s voice. Now I hear them in my own.
The next day we’re at Yellowstone National Park, where we have a picnic.
“Did you ever travel with your dad? I ask.
“Only once,” he says. “ I never spoke much with my father. We loved each other---but never said it. Whatever he could give me, he gave.”>
The kast sebtebce----it’s probably the same thing I’s say about my father. And what I’d want my child to say about me.
In Glacier National Park, my father says, “I’ve never seen water so blue.” I have, in several places of the world, I can keep traveling, I realize--- and maybe a regular job won’t be as dull as I feared.
Weeks after our trip, I call my father.
“The photos from the trip are wonderful,” he says.” We have got to take another trip like that sometime.
I tell him I’ve learn decided to settle down, and I’m wearing a watch.
【小題1】We can learn from Paragraphs 2 and 3 that the father _________.
| A.followed the fashion |
| B.got bored with his job |
| C.was unhappy with…… |
| D.liked the author’s collection of stamps |
| A.His father is interested in sculpture |
| B.His father is as innocent as a little boy |
| C.He should learn sculpture in the future |
| D.He should pursue a specific aim in life. |
| A.wants his children to learn from their grandfather |
| B.comes to understand what parental love means |
| C.learns how to communicate with his father |
| D.hopes to give whatever he can to his father |
| A.The call solves their disagreements |
| B.The Swiss watch has drawn them closer |
| C.They decide to learn photography together. |
| D.They begin to change their attitudes to life |
| A.Love Nature, Love Life |
| B.A Son Lost in Adventure |
| C.A Journey with Dad |
| D.The Art of Travel |
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