密云区2014高考英语阅读理解系列训练(8)及答案.doc
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1、密云区2014高考英语阅读理解系列训练(8)及答案阅读理解、专题训练(*)、如何做好推理判断题 方法点拨做推理判断题时注重从已知推出未知,但在推理过程中千万不要主观臆断,掺杂自己的观点。 活学活用根据所学技巧,完成下列读写任务The automobile has many advantages. Above all,it offers people freedom to go wherever and whenever they want to go. The basic purpose of a motor vehicle is to get from point A to point B
2、as cheaply,quickly,and safely as possible. However,to most people,cars are also personal fantasy machines that serve as symbols of power,success,speed,excitement,and adventure.In addition,much of the worlds economy is built on producing motor vehicles and supplying roads,services,and repairs for tho
3、se vehicles. Half of the worlds paychecks are auto related. In the United States,one of every six dollars spent and one of every six nonfarm jobs are connected to the automobile or related industries,such as oil,steel,rubber,plastics,automobile services,and highway construction.In spite of their adv
4、antages,motor vehicles have many harmful effects on human lives and on air,water,land,and wildlife resources. The automobile may be the most destructive machine ever invented. Though we tend to deny it,riding in cars is one of the most dangerous things we do in our daily lives.Since 1885,when Karl B
5、enz built the first automobile,almost 18 million people have been killed by motor vehicles. Every year,cars and trucks worldwide kill an average of 250,000 peopleas many as were killed in the atomic bomb attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasakiand injure or permanently disable ten million more. Half of the
6、 worlds people will be involved in an auto accident at some time during their lives.Since the automobile was introduced,almost three million Americans have been killed on the highwaysabout twice the number of Americans killed on the battlefield in all US.wars. In addition to the tragic loss of life,
7、these accidents cost American society about $ 60 billion annually in lost income and in insurance(保险),administrative(行政的),and legal expenses.Streets that used to be for people are now for cars. Pedestrians and people riding bicycles in the streets are subjected to noise,pollution,stress,and danger.
8、Motor vehicles are the largest source of air pollution,producing a haze of smog over the worlds cities. In the United States,they produce at least 50% of the countrys air pollution.根据短文,写一篇3050词左右的摘要_.根据所读短文,选出最佳答案1Cars represent people s _.AoccupationBidentityClife style Dfame2According to the pass
9、age,the average number of people killed annually in traffic accidents around the world is_.A18 million B250,000Chalf of the worlds population D60 million3A serious environmental problem resulting from automobiles is _.Atragic loss of life Btraffic jamsCair pollution Dmental stress4It can be inferred
10、 from this passage that automobiles_.Aare an important part of the world s economyBare becoming less dangerousCwill produce less air pollution in the futureDare killing more people in recent years than in the past5The title that suits the passage best is _. AAutomobile and Economy BAutomobile and th
11、e Environment CThe Problems with the AutomobileDAdvantages and Disadvantages of the Automobile参考答案Automobiles have both advantages and disadvantages. They can get people anywhere and bring them good feelings,as well as job opportunities. But in the meantime,they kill and injure people,cost a lot of
12、money and pollute the earth we live on.15:BBCAD*结束(201*浙江卷)One evening in February 2007 . a student named Paula Ceely brought her car to a stop on a remote in Wales . She got out to open a metal gate that blocked her path . Thats when she heard the whistle sounded by the driver of a train.Her Renaul
13、t Clio parked across a railway line. Second later,she watched the train drag her car almost a kilometre down the railway tracks. Ceelys near miss made the news because she blamed it on her GPS device(导航仪).She had never driven the route before .It was dark and raining heavily . Ceely was relying on h
14、er GPS. But it made no mention of the crossing .I put my complete trust in the device and it led me right into the path of a speeding train ,she told the BBC. W ho is to blame here ? Rick Stevenson ,who tells Ceelys story in his book When Machines Fail US, finger at the limitations of technology. We
15、 put our faith in digital devices, he says, but our digital helpers are too often not up to the job. They are filled with small problems. And its not just GPS devices: Stevenson takes us on a tour of digital disasters involving everything from mobile phones to wireless key boards. The problem with h
16、is argument in the book is that its not clear why he only focuses digital technology,while there may be a number of other possible causes. A map-maker might have left the crossing off a paper map. Maybe we should blame Ceely for not paying attention. perhaps the railway authorities are at fault for
17、poor signaling system. Or maybe someone has studied the relative dangers and worked out that there really is something specific wrong with the CPS equipment. But Stevenson doesnt say.Its a problem that runs through the book. In a section on cars, Stevenson gives an accout of the advanced techniques
18、that criminals use to defeat computer-based locking systems for cars. He offers two independent sets of figures on car theft; both show a small rise in some parts of the country. He says that once once again not all new locks have proved reliable. Perhaps, but maybe its also due to the shortage of p
19、olicemen on the streets. Or changing social circumstances. Or some combination of these factors .The game between humans and their smart devices is complex. It is shaped by economics and psychology and the cultures we live in. Somewhere in the mix of those forces there may be way a wiser use of tech
20、nology. If there is such a way, it should involve more than just an awareness of the shortcomings of our machines. After all, we have lived with them for thousands of years. They have probably been fooling us for just as long .41.WhatdidPaulaCeelythinkwasthecauseofheraccident?A.Shewasnotfamiliarwith
21、theroad.B.Itwasdarkandrainingheavilythen.C. The railway works failed to give the signal.D. Her GPS device didnt tell her about the crossing42.Thephrase” nearmiss”(paragraph2)canbestbereplacedby_.A.closebitB.heavylossC.narrow escapeD.bigmistake43.WhichofthefollowingwouldRickStevensonmostprobablyagree
22、with?A. Moderntechnologyiswhatwe cantlivewithout.B.Digitaltechnologyoftenfalls shortofoutexpectation.C.Digitaldevicesaremore reliablethantheyusedtobe.D.GPSerrorisnottheonly causeforCelerysaccident.44.In the writers opinion, Stevensons argument is_.A. one-sided B. reasonable C.puzzling D.well-based45
23、.What is the real concern of the writer of this article?A.The major causes of traffic accidents and car thefts.B.The relationship between humans and technologyC.Theshortcomingsofdigital devicesweuse.D.Thehuman unawarenessoftechnicalproblems.【答案】DCBAB*结束 We discuss the issue of when to help a patient
24、 die. Doctors of our generation are not newcomers to this question. Going back to my internship(实习)days, I can remember many patients in pain, sometimes in coma(昏迷), with late, hopeless cancer. For many of them, we wrote an order for heavy medicationmorphine(吗啡)by the clock. This was not talked abou
25、t openly and little was written about it. It was essential, not controversial.The best way to bring the problem into focus is to describe two patients whom I cared for. The first, formerly a nurse, had an automobile accident. A few days later her lungs seemed to fill up; her heart developed dangerou
26、s rhythm disturbances. So there she was: in coma, on a breathing machine, her heartbeat maintained with an electrical device. One day after rounds, my secretary said the husband and son of the patient wanted to see me. They told me their wife and mother was obviously going to die; she was a nurse an
27、d had told her family that she never wanted this kind of terrible death, being maintained by machines. I told them that while I respected their view, there was nothing deadly about her situation. The kidney(肾) failure she had was just the kind for which the artificial kidney was most effective. Whil
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