杭州外国语学校2019年高考英语集训阅读理解每日一练05.doc_第1页
杭州外国语学校2019年高考英语集训阅读理解每日一练05.doc_第2页
杭州外国语学校2019年高考英语集训阅读理解每日一练05.doc_第3页
杭州外国语学校2019年高考英语集训阅读理解每日一练05.doc_第4页
杭州外国语学校2019年高考英语集训阅读理解每日一练05.doc_第5页
免费预览已结束,剩余1页可下载查看

下载本文档

版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领

文档简介

.杭州外国语学校2019年高考英语集训阅读理解每日一练05 倒数第十周星期五AMy six-year-old granddaughter stared at me asif she were seeing me for the first time.”Grandma, you are an antique(古董),”she said. You are old. Antiques are old. You are my antique. 1 was not satisfied to let the matter rest there.I took out the Websters Dictionary and read the definition(定义)to Jenny.I explained, An antique is not only old, its an object existing since or belonging to earlier times.a work of art. piece of furniture. Antiques aretreasured,I told Jenny as I put away the dictionary. They have to be handled carefully because they sometimes are very valuable. In order to qualify as an antique, the object has to be at least 100 years old.Im only 67,I renunded Jenny.We looked around the house for other antiques, besides me. There was a desk that washanded down from rone aunt to another and finally to our family. Its very old,I told Jenny.“I try to keep it polished and I show it off whenever I can. You do that with antiques. There was a picture on the wall purchased at a garage sale. It was dated 1867. Now thats an antique, I boasted. Over 100 years old. Of course it was marked up andscratched and not in very good condition. Sometimes age does that, I told Jenny. Butthe marks are good marks. They show living, being around. Thats something to displaywith pride. In fact, sometimes, the more an object shows age, the more valuable it can become.lt was important that I believed this for my own self-esteem.Our tour of antiques continued. There was a vase on the floor. It had been in my housefor a long time. I was not certain where it came from but I didnt buy it new. One thing about antiques, I explained to Jenny, was that they usually had a story. Theyd been in onehome and then another, handed down from one family to another, traveling all over theplace. Theyd lasted through years and years. They could have been tossed away, or ignored. or destroyed, or lost. But instead, they survived. For a moment, Jenny looked thoughtful. ccl dont have any antiques but you, she said. Then her face brightened. Could I take you to school for show and tell? Only if I fit into your backpack, I answered. And then Jennys antique lifted her up and embraced her in a hug that would last through the years.1. Grandma read the definition of antique to Jenny in order to .A. list all the important characteristics of antiquesB. tell Jenny the importance of protecting antiquesC. change Jennys shallow understanding of antiquesD. express her disappointment at being called antique2. Which of the following information did grandma convey to Jenny?A. The desk reminded her of her dear relatives.B. The marks on the picture showed its age and value.C. There was usually a sad story behind each antique.D. She planned to buy a new vase to replace the old one.3. By saying I dont have any antiques but you (Paragraph 7), Jenny meant .A. grandma was a treasure to herB. antiques were rare and valuableC. she had nothing but a few possessionsD. grandma and antiques had a lot in common4. What can be inferred from the last paragraph?A. Grandma was too old to lift Jenny up.B. Jenny had a strong desire for grandmas love.C. Jenny was too young to know grandmas humor.D. Grandma had a deep long-lasting love for Jenny.5. What can be the best title for the passage? A. Jennys Antique B. A Story of AntiquesC. A Tour of Antiques D. Grandmas Antique BIf you have questions about developing your study practices,the first place to look is in our Study Guides. However,if you dont find the answers you need here, or you feel the guidance would make more sense in the situation of your own work, then you may find it helpful to talk to an adviser individually.Weoffer subject-focused sessions(辅导课) -with friendly professional advisers.These 30-nunute sessions (longer if necessary)are tailor-made to your individual needsand completely secret.What to expect from an individual advice sessionOur individual advice sessions are quite informal and tailored to your needs. Youradviser will usually want to talk a bit about how your studies are going generally, and what you would like to discuss. As sessions are quite short,its useful if you can be prepared by tlunking about this before you arrive. It will be helpful for us if you can bring any marked work that you have, so that we can see what areas of your work markers have commented on.We aimto help you developyour skills to study more effectively andachievesubject success. So we will not correct work for you, but will help you understand what youneed to know to correct it yourself in the future. Everyone works differently, so we maymake a number of suggestions - it will be up to you to try them out and see what worksest for you.If youd like to discuss a coursework assignment which you are currently working on,it may be helpful if you can email your work to the adviser you are seeing oefore your meeting (contact details are here), with a note sessions are quite short, you might prefer that develop your work, rather than reading it! Please note:saying what you would like to discuss. Aswe spent the time discussing how you can We cannot pravide subject-specific advice. For this,it is best to consult your course tutor. If you would prefer to talk to someone else, try your personal tutor, or the Senior Tutor in your department. Your department or school office will be able to advise on who that is.We do not proof-read work. See our guide to Effective Proof-reading to help you to develop develop your own proof-reading practices.Study Advisers are not trained to teach English as a Foreign Language. For basic principles relating to common errors in academic English, please see our guide to Academic Writing. If you feel you need more detailed help, there are also links on the Academic Writing pages to more comprehensive websites, including some with interactive exercises.If English is not your first language, the In-sessional English SLrpport Programme (IESP) provides training courses in academic writing skills, speaking skills, and pronunciation practice.There is a smll charge for students not paying full overseas fees.Booking an advice sessionSessions may be booked in advance by calling 0118 378 4242 0r emailing studyadvicereading.ac.uk. Please include a contact phone number in any messages you leave.6. The underlined word tailor_made in Paragraph 2 most probably means .A. valuable B. suitable C. available D. acceptable7. As sessions are time-limited,it is helpful if you can .A. predict what suggestion works best for youB. bring some non-marked work for commentsC. prepare what youd like to discuss in advanceD. consult with your adviser on your work by phone8.If a Chinese student plans to take an English pronunciation training course, he/she cansee the guide to .A. Study Guides B. Effective Proof-readingC. Academic Writing D. In-sessional English Support Programme9, What is the purpose of the passage?A. To give some professional subject advice.B. To promote the individual advice sessions.C. To stress the importance of a friendly adviser.D. To provide four websites offering study guides.CYou are careful with your money: you collect all kinds of coupons; look for group-buydeals if you eat out; you dont buy clothes unless in a sale. Does all this make you a wiseconsumer? Lets do the math first: you walk into a coffee shop and see two deals for a cup of coffee. The first deal offers 33 percent extra coffee. The second takes 33 percent off the regular price. Whats the better deal? Well, they are about the same, youd think. And youd be wrong. The deals appear to be equal, but in fact, they are different. Heres the math: Lets say the standard coffee is 10 yuan and lets divide the amount of coffee into three portions(部分). That makes about 3.3 yuan per portion, The first deal gets you 4 portions for 10 yuan (2.5 yuan per portion) and the second gets you 3 portions of coffee for 6.6 yuan (2.2 yuan per portion) and is therefore a better deal.In a new study published by the Journal of Marketing, participants were asked the same question, and most of them chose the first deal, the Atlantic website reported. Why? Because getting something extra for free feels better than getting the same for less. The applications of this view into consumer psychology(心理) are huge. Instead of offering direct discounts, shops offer larger sizes or free samples.According to the study, the reason why these marketing tricks work is that consumers dont really know how much anything should cost, so we rely on parts of our brains that arent strictly quantitative.There are some traps we should be aware of when shopping. First of all, we are heavily influenced by the first number. Suppose you are shopping in Hong Kong. You walk into Hermes, and you see a 100,000 yuan bag. Thats crazy. You shake your head and leave. The next shop is Gucci, a handbag here costs 25,000 yuan. The price is still high, but compared to the 100,000 yuan price tag you just committed to your memory, this is a steal. Stores often use the price difference to set consumers expectation. Another trap we often fall to Is that we are not really sure what things are worth. And so we use clues(暗示) to tell us what we ought to pay for them. US economist Dan Ariely has done an experiment to prove this. According to the Atlantic, Ariely pretended he was giving a lecture on poetry. He told one group of students that the tickets cost money and another group that they would be paid to attend. Then he informed both groups that thelecture was free. The first group was anxious to attend, believing they were getting something of value for free. The second group mostly declined, believing they were being forced to volunteer for the same event without reward.Whats a lecture on poetry by an economist worth? The students bad no idea. Thats the point. Do we really know what a shirt is worth ? What about a cup of coffee? Whats the worth of a life insurance.policy? Who knows? Most of us dont. As a result, our shopping brain uses only what is knowable: visual(祝觉的) clues, invited emotions, comparisons, and a sense of bargain. We are not stupid. We are just easily influenced.10. The first paragraph of the passage is intended to A. ask a question B. introduce a topicC. give some examples D. describe a phenomenon11. The writer takes the math for example in Paragraph 2 to show . _.A. consumers usually fall into marketing trapsB. consumers expectation is difficult to predictC. consumers purchasing power is always changingD. consumers rely on their own judgment when shopping12. What consumer psychology is mentioned in the passage?A. The first number has little influence on which item should be bought.B. Consumers never use visual clues to decide how much should be paid.C. Getting something extra for free is better than getting the same for less.D. Consumers never rely on parts of the brains that arent strictly quantitative.13. According to the passage, shops use the following tricks to make more profits EXCEPT . A. showing price differences B. offering larger sizesC. providing free samples D. giving direct discounts14. What can we know from US economist Dan Arielys experiment?A. Arielys free lecture enjoyed popularity among students.B. The students actually didnt know what the lecture was worth.C. The second group was willing to be volunteers without reward.D. The first group was eager to find out the value of Arielys lecture. DOne morning in Philadelphia, the sun shone bright through all the thick jungles and the tall churches. John, 6, wearing the worn-out clothes, walked from afar, his dark small hands holding a piece of stolen bread.John stopped for a moment at the entrance to the sacred church and then left tightlyholding the bread, He was an orphan(弧儿), whose parents were killed in World War Illeaving him alonein the orphanage for five years, Like many children in the orphanage, he had a lot of free time. Mostly no one took care of them, so they had to learn how to steal those they wanted. John believed the existence of God, so every Sunday morning in any case be would go to the cburch to have a look and listen to those people singing inside or reciting the Bible.He felt only at this moment he was the child of God and so close to God. But he couldntenter because his clothes were so dirty. John himself knew it.John was quietly counting. This was his 45th Sunday at the entrance to the church. He stood on tiptoe for a while and walked away.As time passed, the pastor(牧师) noticed John and learned from others that he was thesmall boy who liked stealing things in the orphanages.On the 46th Sunday, the sun was shining and John came still holding a piece of bread with his dark small hands. When he just stood there, the pastor came out. He felt like running away, but he was carried by the pastors friendly smile.The pastor walked up to his side, clearly seeing Johns small hands tremble.Are you John?John didnt answer, but looked at the pastor and nodded.Do you believe in God? the pastor petted John on his head stained with dust.Yes,l do! This time John told him loudly.So you believe in yourself? John looked at the pastor, without a word.The pastor went on saying, At the first sight of you, I find youre different from other kids because you have a good heart.His face tunung red, John said timidly, In fact, Im a thief. With that, he loweredhis head.The pastor didnt speak, but held Johns dark small hands, slowly opened them andput them against his wrinkled face.Ah: Just at the same time, John shouted and was about to take out his dark smallhands. Yet the pastor tightly held his small hands and spread them out in the sun.Do you see, John?What?Youre cupping the sunshine in your hands.John blankly looked at his hands: when did they become so beautiful?In Gods eyes, all cluldren are the same. When they are willing to spread out their hands to greet the sun, the sun will naturally shine on them. And you have two things more than they do. First is courage and the second is kindness. With that, the pastor led him into the church. It was the first time that John went into this sacred place, and at this moment he didnt feel inferior, but the unspeakable warmth.On that morning embracing the sunshine, John found himself again, along with the confidence, satisfaction, happiness, dreams he had never had.Twenty years h

温馨提示

  • 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
  • 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
  • 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
  • 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
  • 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
  • 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
  • 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。

评论

0/150

提交评论