北京市石景山区2022高考英语 阅读理解暑假训练(9).docx
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1、石景山区2022高考英语阅读理解暑假训练(9)及答案People tend to become more personal and hide less of themselves when using emailResearchers from Open University in Britain have found in a recent study that there are good reasons for thisThe team of researchers asked 83 pairs of students, all strangers to each other, to s
2、olve a problemThey had to discuss this question: If only five people in the world could be saved from a world disaster, who should they be? The pairs of students had to talk over the problem either face to face or by computersDrJohnson said, “They told their partners four times as much about themsel
3、ves when they talked over the Internet as when they talked face to faceWhen the computers were fitted with cameras so that students could see each other, this limited the personal side of the conversation” Generally the information was not extremely personalIt was mainly about things such as where t
4、hey went to school, or where they used to liveBut some students discussed their love stories, and personal childhood experiencesDrJohnson believes that emailing encourages people to focus on themselvesAnd when they do this, they become more open , especially if there are no cameras“If you cannot see
5、 the other person, it becomes easier to talk about yourselfThis is because you are not thinking what the other person is thinking of youSo emailing has become the modern way of talking” said DrJohnsonHowever, this style of talking is not entirely new“In the 19th century people started to use the tel
6、egraph to communicateNow the same kind of thing has happened and people ended up speaking more freely”DrJohnson thinks that e-mailers need to know about these effects of emailing, especially when they start work in a company“If you dont know about it, you could find yourself saying more about yourse
7、lf than you wanted to ”17The subject discussed in this passage is Ahow people open up when emailing Bhow people do research studies Chow to communicate at work Dhow to discuss and solve a problem 18The reason that some couples talked freely about themselves is that Athey didnt talk about very person
8、al things Bthey couldnt see each other Cthe cameras on the computers were turned on Dthey had to discuss a question 19What do the underlined words (in para4) refer to?AThe telegraphBThe computerCEmailingDFace-to-face talk20In the writers opinion, one should Afocus on oneself when emailing Btalk more
9、 freely in email than usual Cdiscuss any subject that one wants to Dconsider how one uses email at work E) ABCD*结束“The pen is more powerful than the sword(刀).” There have been many writers who used their pens to fight things that were wrong. Mrs Harriet Beecher Stowe was one of them.She was born in
10、the U.S.A. in 1811.One of her books not only made her famous but has been described as one that excited the world, and was helpful in causing a civil war and freeing the enslaved race. The civil war was the American Civil War of 1861, in which the Northern States fought the Southern States and final
11、ly won.This book that shook the world was called Uncle Toms Cabin. There was time when every English-speaking man, woman, and child has read this novel that did so much to stop slavery. Not many people read it today, but it is still very interesting. The book has shown us how a warm-hearted writer c
12、an arouse (唤起) peoples sympathies. The author herself had neither been to the Southern States nor been a slave. The Southern Americans were very angry at the book, which they said did not at all represent true state of affairs, but the Northern Americans were wildly excited over it and were so inspi
13、red by it that they were ready to go to war to set the slaves free.13. According to the passage_.A. every English-speaking person has read Uncle Toms CabinB. Uncle Toms Cabin was not very interestingC. those who dont speak English cannot have read Uncle Toms CabinD. the book Uncle Toms Cabin did a g
14、reat deal in the American Civil War14. What do you learn about Mrs Harriet Beecher Stowe from the passage?A. She had been living in the north of America before the American Civil War broke out.B. She herself encouraged the Northern Americans to go to war to set the slaves free.C. She was better as w
15、riting as swinging (挥舞) a sword.D. She had once been a slave.15. Why could Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowes book cause a civil war in America?A. She wrote so well that Americans loved her very much.B. She disclosed the terrible wrongs that had been done to the slaves in the Southern States.C. The Souther
16、n Americans hated the book while the Northern Americans like it.D. The book had been read by many Americans.16. What can we learn from the passage?A. We neednt use weapons (武器) to fight things that are wrong.B. A writer is more helpful in a war than a soldier.C. We must understand the importance of
17、literature and art.D. No war can be won without such a book as Uncle Toms Cabin.1316、DABC*结束Gossip(流言蜚语) is more powerful than truth, a study has shown, suggesting that people believe what they hear in an informal way even if they have evidence to the contrary. Researchers, testing students using a
18、computer game, also found gossip played an important role in decision making, said Ralf Sommerfeld, an evolutionary biologist who led the study. We show that gossip has a strong influence . even when participants have access to the correct information, the researchers wrote. It is evident that gossi
19、p has strong manipulative (控制的) potential. In the study, the researchers gave the students money and allowed them to give it to others in a series of rounds. The students also wrote notes that anyone could view about how others played the game. Students tended to give less money to people described
20、as scrooges and more to those described as generous players or social players, Sommerfeld said. People only took the gossip into account, not the past decisions they themselves had witnessed, he said in a telephone interview. The researchers then took the game a step further and showed the students
21、the actual decisions people had made, while supplying gossip that contradicted(同相矛盾) that evidence. In these cases, the students still based their decisions on the gossip, rather than the evidence, Sommerfeld said. Rationally (理性地), if you know what someone did, thats all you should care about, but
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