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Look at the car! This is()car I have ever seen.A、a most beautifulB、the most beautifulC、
Look at the car! This is()car I have ever seen.
A、a most beautiful
B、the most beautiful
C、the more beautiful
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Look at the car! This is()car I have ever seen.
A、a most beautiful
B、the most beautiful
C、the more beautiful
第1题
Vision is the most important sense for safe driving. Yet, drivers using cell phones are likely to"look at" but not "see" objects. It is said that drivers using cell phones look but fail to see up to 50percent of the infornmtion while driving. Drivers are looking out of the windshield, but they do notreally deal with the situation on the road.
Although the public appear to be turning against cell phone use while driving, many admit theyregularly talk or text while driving. The police say that nine percent of the drivers at any given timeare using cell phones, and about one in four car accidents are directly related to cell phone use.
Using cell phones while driving has become a serious public health threat (威胁). A few stateshave passed laws making it unlawful to use a handheld cell phone while driving, but these laws give the false message that using a hand-free phone is safe. What was the woman doing when the car accident happened?
A.She was busy pressing buttons.
B.She was talking on her cell phone
C.She was looking at the red light ahead
D.She was looking for something in the car
The word "vision" (Paragraph 2 ) refers to the sense ofA.taste
B.touch
C.hearing
D.Sight
What is the percentage of the car accidents caused by drivers using cell phones?A.9%.
B.25%.
C.45%.
D.50%.
What do we know about the laws making it unlawful to use a handheld cell phone while driving?A.They are not perfect.
B.They are not necessary.
C.They are not practical.
D.They are not important
第2题
听力原文: The private motor vehicle has given us a freedom our ancestors could not dream about. We can travel swiftly, and usually safely, over the roads which have been built to accommodate our cars. People can display their wealth by driving a car which may cost as much as another person's home.
(29) Sadly the car has become a disadvantage as well as a boon. The car pollutes the atmosphere, may be involved in serious accidents, and by its very numbers blocks roads. (29) How can we reduce its use? The car is only desirable if we can use it easily, so we might begin by reducing access to parking spaces in the cities and simultaneously increasing the quality and availability of public transport. Cars could be banned from certain parts of the city, thus forcing people to walk or to use public transport. The expense of buying and running a car can be raised. (30) If the motorist is faced with a high purchase price, high road tax, high insurance premiums and substantial fines he or she may reconsider the purchase. A corresponding reduction in the price of public transport would help this financial argument against car ownership.
Neither of these arguments will sway the super rich who can afford the status cars, but it would perhaps encourage them to look at other ways of demon-strafing their wealth. (31) However we do it, reducing the number of cars on the road will reduce the problems of pollution and the congestion which can bring cities to a standstill.
29. What does the speaker focus on?
30.What factor might hinder most people's consideration of purchasing private cars?
31.What would be the result if the number of private cars is reduced?
(4)
A.The sadness of being involved in accidents.
B.Ways to limit the use of private cars.
C.The serious pollution on motor roads.
D.Freedom to travel quickly and safely.
第3题
Black cats are generally considered lucky in Britain, even though they are 【B17】 witchcraft. It is 【B18】 lucky if a black cat crosses your path — although in America the exact opposite belief prevails. Finally, a commonly held superstition is that of touching wood 【B19】 luck. This measure is most often taken if you think you have said something that is tempting fate, such as "my car has never 【B20】 , touch wood?"
【B1】
A.broadly
B.widely
C.quickly
D.speedily
第4题
A.报警cảnhbáo
B.防护bảovệ
C.救生设备thiếtbịcứusinh
D.设施cơsở
第5题
Mrs. Wilson and her daughters went to look at the house. Sure enough, there was a For Rent sign in the window. A woman next door told them that the owner was Antonio Pompei, who owned a bakery farther up the street.
Mrs. Wilson has great difficulty walking for she is almost blind, so she waited in the car while her daughters went along to the bakery. The daughters met Mr. Pompei, who agreed to rent the house. However, the daughters wanted to see the inside of the house before they agreed to rent it. One of the bakery employees went with them to the house, where he met Mrs. Wilson.
All three women liked the house and returned to the bakery to tell Mr. Pompei that they would rent it.
When Mr. Pompei saw Mrs. Wilson, he quickly walked out of the bakery. He had not realized Mrs. Wilson was Indian. Her daughters look more like their father, who is of a different ethnic(种族) origin. The next day, Mrs. Wilson and her daughters returned to the bakery in an attempt to rent the house. Because of her blindness, Mr. Wilson was helped out of the car and guided into the bakery by one of her daughters. Mr. Pompei told the women that the house was already rented.
The Wilsons suspected discrimination. As soon as they got home, Mrs. Wilson phoned Mr. Pompei, without identifying herself, Mr. Pompei lost his temper.
Mrs. Wilson complained to the Human Rights Commission. Their examination discovered that the tenants who did rent the house had not even seen it at the time when Mrs. Wilson visited it. They applied to rent it a full week after Mrs. Wilson had applied.
(1)According to the passage, Mrs. Wilson was _____________.
A、to rent the house for her daughters
B、to rent the house for someone else
C、to rent the house for her family
D、to sublet (转租) the house
(2)According to the passage, we are certain that Mr. Wilson was _____________.
A、an Indian
B、not an Indian
C、an Asian
D、from India
(3)Mrs. Wilson found Mr. Pompei’s discrimination by _____________.
A、complaining to the Human Rights Commission
B、making the bakery owner angry
C、making an unidentifiable phone call
D、pretending to be a woman of wealth
(4)In the end Mrs. Wilson couldn’t rent the house simply because _____________.
A、she was of Indian origin
B、she needed assistance while walking
C、the owner of the house asked for more money
D、she was almost blind
(5)Which of the following statement is NOT TRUE?
A、Mr. Wilson had at least two daughters.
B、The house had been rented to someone else a week before.
C、Mrs. Wilson was almost blind.
D、Mr. Pompei was practicing racial discrimination.
第6题
A.3.3
B.3.4
C.3.5
D.3
第7题
For some minutes, all was quiet in the street. Then, from across the street, someone came walking.
It looked Like a man of middle height, dressed in a big raincoat, a soft hat and rubber-soled boots or shoes, and making little sound while walking; at most a soft, sliding sound.No one was in sight. it was a street with two rows of about fifty small houses, and there were three lamps on either side. The lamp nearest the child's house could be seen clearly, but the others were almost hidden by the smoke air. A car passed the end of the street and its lights showed faintly, but clearly enough to show the smooth skin of a woman's face. The car disappeared as the woman, wrapped up in her coat, reached the doorway of the child's house.
She put a key in the lock quickly, pushed the door open and stepped inside, then closed the door without looking round. She began to breathe hard.
She leaned against the door for a moment, then straightened up as if with an effort, and walked towards the door of the front room, the passage leading to the kitchen, and the narrow staircase. She hesitated outside the door, then went up the stairs, quickly but with hardly a sound.
There was enough light from the narrow hail to show the four doors leading off a small landing. She pushed each door open in turn and shone a torch inside, and the light fell upon beds, walls, furniture, a bathroom had-basin, a mirror which flashed brightness back; but this was not what the woman was looking for. She turned away and went downstairs, and hesitated again at the foot of the stairs, then turned towards the kitchen. Clearly there was nothing there, or in the small wash-room, that she wanted. Two rooms remained; the front room and a smaller one next to it. She opened the front room door. After a moment, she saw the child's bed and the child
36. The light of the car passing the end of the Street showed that _____.
A. a woman was driving the car
B. someone was standing by a Street lamp
C. a man and a woman were walking up the Street
D. a woman was walking by herself up the street
37. When the woman had closed the front door, she _____.
A. looked round quickly
B. started breathing again
C. rested before moving
D. walked straight towards the front room
38. The woman went upstairs _____.
A. in complete silence
B. alter hesitating for a moment
C. after looking inside the kitchen
D. as quickly as she could
39. When she was upstairs, the woman _____.
A. saw that there was a wash-basin in each room
B. noticed a mirror which she was looking for
C. found a torch inside one of the rooms
D. opened four different doors
40. Once she was in the house, the woman behaved as if what she was looking for _____.
A. might be in the kitchen
B. was more likely to be upstairs
C. would be easily seen by the light from the hall
D. would look frightening to a child
第8题
A.7.38mm – 2.5D
B.7.83mm – 3D
C.8.4mm – 2.5D
D.8.4mm – 3D
第9题
A.项目hạngmục
B.场所nơi
C.设备thiếtbị
D.建筑物vậtkiếntrúc
第10题
What is the author's attitude towards the eating habits in Brazil?
A.The author doesn't think much of them.
B.The author likes those in the U. S. better.
C.The author appreciates them very much.
D.The author shows no emotions whatever.
第11题