2024屆高考英語二輪復習閱讀理解七十五十集之連載訓練:(59)

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2024屆高考英語二輪復習閱讀理解七十五十集之連載訓練:(59)

  2024高考英語二輪閱讀理解八十集之連載訓練(59)

  人物故事類

  閱讀下列四篇短文,從每小題后所給的A,B,C或D四個選項中,選出最佳選項。

  In Western culture, 21 was the age at which young people traditionally received a key to their parents’ door, as a symbol of entering adulthood. Now, the age of 21 is a time when people ask themselves: where do I go from here?

  Jiang Fangzhou’s 21 years have been filled with the kind of success most young people wouldn’t dare hope for in a lifetime. She published her first book at the age of nine and has written many more since then. She is regarded as a spokesperson for her generation. However, her hopes and concerns for the future appear decidedly normal.

  She explains that while her fellow students are chiefly concerned with getting a job or buying an apartment, shefrets over how she can excel in her work when having limited experience of the world.

  However, Jiang, now a senior at the School of Journalism and Communication of Tsinghua University, notes that her peers face intense pressure and competition at school. They are expected to excel in their field of study despite limited experience, just as Jiang is expected to shine in the literary world.

  Young people, she says, have been forced to open their eyes to the world around them. Jiang’s world has opened up, too. She’s more at ease with herself at 21, compared with when she began college.

  “My horizon has broadened and I’m more tolerant,” she says. “As a freshman, I was desperate. I stopped people around me and asked: ‘Is there anything in the world still worth hoping for? ‘ But now I don’t do that.”

  Jiang says that she may not pursue writing as her main future career because she wants to try“other lifestyles”—overseas travel and study touring sound particularly inviting to her. But she is concerned that many foreigners have skewed (歪曲的,傾斜的) perceptions about China.

  “A few days ago I overheard a conversation between two foreigners sitting next to me on a flight,” says Jiang. “They were having a heated discussion about the number of beggars in China. And how Chinese always go for ‘petty profits’. In fact, they had been in China for only a week.”

  Jiang believes prejudice is unavoidable, but she also maintains that Chinese and Westerners, for example, share much common ground.

  “We share the same principles, such as honesty and a willingness to help others,” says Jiang. “The differences between peoples are not that huge.”

  1. What does the passage mainly talk about?

  A. Jiang Fangzhou’s novels.

  B. Embracing new challenges.

  C. Jiang Fangzhou’s university life.

  D. Jiang Fangzhou’s success.

  2. What does the underlined phrase mean?

  A. be patient with B. be worried about

  C. be content with

  D. be indifferent about

  3. Which of the following sentences is true?

  A. Jiang doesn’t have any pressure and competition as the others do.

  B. Jiang’s peers face intense pressure and competition at school.

  C. Jiang wants to be a professional writer in future.

  D. Jiang often asks her friends some questions now.

  4. We can infer from the text that_____. 

  A. there is nothing but prejudice between Chinese and Westerners

  B. Jiang accepts the fact that there are huge differences between peoples

  C. one week is enough to know about a true China.

  D. Jiang disagrees with what the two foreigners said about Chinese

  【參考答案】1—4、BBBD

  較難題目特訓:人物故事類

  閱讀下列四篇短文,從每小題后所給的A,B,C或D四個選項中,選出最佳選項。

  At the age of ten I could not figure out what this Elvis Presley guy had that the rest of us boys did not have. I mean, he had a head, two arms and two legs, just like the rest of us. About nine o’clock on Saturday morning I decided to ask Eugene Correthers, one of the older boys, what it was that made this Elvis guy so special. He told me that it was Elvis’ wavy hair and the way he moved his body.

   About half an hour later all the boys in the orphanage(孤兒院)were called to the main dining-room and told we were all going to downtown Jacksonville, Florida to get a new pair of Buster Brown shoes and a hair cut.That is when I got this big idea, which hit me like a ton of bricks.If the Elvis hair cut was the big secret, then that’s what I was going to get.

  All the way to town I told everybody, including the matron(女管家)from the orphanage who was taking us to town, that I was going to look just like Elvis Presley and that I would learn to move around just like he did and that I would be rich and famous one day, just like him.

  When I got my new Buster Brown shoes, I could hardly wait for my new hair cut and now that I had my new Buster Brown shoes I would be very happy to go back to the orphanage and practice being like Elvis.

  We finally arrived at the big barber shop, where they cut our hair for free because we were orphans(孤兒). I looked at the barber and said, “I want an Elvis hair cut. Can you make my hair like Elvis?” I asked him, with a big smile on my face. “Let’s just see what we can do for you, little man,” he said. I was so happy when he started to cut my hair. Just as he started to cut my hair, the matron signed for him to come over to where she was standing. She whispered something into his ear and then he shook his head, like he was telling her “No”. Then he told me they were not allowed to give us Elvis hair cuts. Then I saw my hair falling onto the floor.

  1.In the author’s eyes, Elvis Presley was _________.

   A. disgusting B. admirable C. ambitious D. dynamic 

  2. From the passage, we can know that _________.

   A. Buster Brown was more appealing than Elvis Presley

   B. An Elvis hair cut cost the orphans a lot of money

   C. The author was fascinated with the stars Buster and Elvis

   D. The barber was unwilling to give the boy an Elvis hair cut

  3. We can learn from the underlined sentence that the boy was _________.

   A. excited to have an Elvis hair cut

  B. worried to think about the secret

   C. anxious to remove the ton of bricks

  D. careful to seize the chance

  4. How would the boy probably feel when he walked out of the barber shop?

   A. Delighted.  B. Guilty. C. Self-satisfied. D. Depressed.

  【參考答案】1—4、BCAD

  較難題目特訓:人物故事類

  閱讀下列四篇短文,從每小題后所給的A,B,C或D四個選項中,選出最佳選項。

  Inside the pleasingly fragrant cafe, So All May Eat (SAME) in downtown Denver, the spirit of generosity (慷慨) is instantly noticeable: A donation box stands in place of a cash register. Customers here pay only what they can afford, no questions asked.

  A risky business plan, perhaps, but SAME Cafe has done one unchangeable thing in the Mile High City for six years: Open only at midday, the restaurant provides poor local people with healthy, delicious lunches six days a week. Those unable to pay for their meals can instead volunteer as waiters and waitresses, and dishwashers, or look after the buildings and equipment for the cafe.

  “It’s based on trust, and it’s working all right, ” says co- owner Brad Birky, who started the cafe in 2006 with his wife Libby. Previously volunteering at soup kitchens, the Birkys were dissatisfied with the often unhealthy meals they served there.

  “We wanted to offer quality food in a restaurant where everyone felt comfortable, regardless of their circumstances, ” Birky says. SAME’s special lunch menu changes daily and most food materials are natural and grown by local farmers.

  The cafe now averages 65 to 70 customers(and eight volunteers) a day. And the spirit of generosity behind the project appears to be spreading. In early 2007, one volunteer who had cleared snow for his meals during the long winter said goodbye to the Birkys. “He said he was going to New Orleans to help with the hurricane cleanup, ” says Birky.

  1. What can we learn about the soup kitchens the Birkys previously worked for?

  A. They refused to have volunteers.

  B. They offered low quality food. 

  C. They provided customers with a good environment.

  D. They closed down because of poor management.

  2. According to the passage, which of the following is TRUE?

  A. The customers who cannot pay can work as volunteers instead.

  B. More volunteers will go to New Orleans for the hurricane cleanup.

  C. Many new cafes will be opened to offer free lunches in the town.

  D. The lunch menu has remained the same since the cafe was started.

  3. The author’s attitude towards running such a cafe is_____. 

  A. unfavorableB. approving C. doubtfulD. cautious

  【參考答案】1—3、BAB

  較難題目特訓:人物故事類

  閱讀下列四篇短文,從每小題后所給的A,B,C或D四個選項中,選出最佳選項。

  Most young architects—particularly those in big cities—can only dream about working in a building of their own. And making that dream come true often means finding a building no one else seems to want,which is exactly what happened to David Yocum and his partner,Brian Bell. Their building is a former automobile electrical-parts firm in Atlanta. From the outside,it looks too old,even something horrible,but open the door and you are in a wide,open courtyard,lined on three sides with rusting (生銹的)walls.

  In 2000,Yocum and Bell found this building in the city’s West End. Built in 1947,the structure had been abandoned years earlier and the roof of the main building had fallen down. But the price was right,so Yocum bought it. He spent eight months of his off-hours on demolition (拆除),pulling rubbish out through the roof,because it was too dangerous to go inside the building. The demolition was hard work,but it gave him time to think about what he wanted to do,and“to treasure what was there—the walls,the rust,the light. “ Yocum said. “Every season,more paint falls off the walls and more rust develops. It’s like an art installation (裝置)in there—a slow-motion show. “

  Since the back building had been constructed without windows,an all-glass front was added to the building to give it a view of the courtyard,and skylights were installed in the roof. The back of the building is a working area and a living room for Yocum and his wife. A sort of buffer (緩沖) zone between the front and the back contains a bathroom,a kitchen and a mechanical room,and the walls that separate these zones have openings that allow views through to the front of the studio and the courtyard beyond.

  Yocum and Bell,who have just completed an art gallery for the city,feel that the experience from the decoration of their building,focusing on the inside rather than the outside,has influenced their work. It has also given these architects a chance to show how they can make more out of less.

  1. According to the passage,it is for most young architects in big cities to work in a building of their own. 

  A. easy B. unnecessary C. unrealistic D. common

  2. Yocum bought the old building because . 

  A. it was a bargain to him

  B. it was still in good condition

  C. it was located in the city center

  D. it looked attractive from the outside

  3. Working on the old building,Yocum and Bell . 

  A. pulled rubbish out through the roof

  B. removed the skylights from the bathroom

  C. presented a slow-motion show in an art gallery

  D. built a kitchen at the back part of the old building

  4. It can be inferred from the passage that Yocum and Bell . 

  A. benefited a lot from pulling down the roof

  B. turned more old buildings into art galleries

  C. got inspiration from decorating their old building

  D. paid more attention to the outside of the art gallery

  5. The main idea of the passage is that . 

  A. people can learn a lot from their failures

  B. it is worthwhile to spend money on an old building

  C. people should not judge things by their appearance

  D. creative people can make the best of what they have

  【參考答案】1--5 、CAACD

  2024高考英語二輪閱讀理解八十集之連載訓練(59)

  人物故事類

  閱讀下列四篇短文,從每小題后所給的A,B,C或D四個選項中,選出最佳選項。

  In Western culture, 21 was the age at which young people traditionally received a key to their parents’ door, as a symbol of entering adulthood. Now, the age of 21 is a time when people ask themselves: where do I go from here?

  Jiang Fangzhou’s 21 years have been filled with the kind of success most young people wouldn’t dare hope for in a lifetime. She published her first book at the age of nine and has written many more since then. She is regarded as a spokesperson for her generation. However, her hopes and concerns for the future appear decidedly normal.

  She explains that while her fellow students are chiefly concerned with getting a job or buying an apartment, shefrets over how she can excel in her work when having limited experience of the world.

  However, Jiang, now a senior at the School of Journalism and Communication of Tsinghua University, notes that her peers face intense pressure and competition at school. They are expected to excel in their field of study despite limited experience, just as Jiang is expected to shine in the literary world.

  Young people, she says, have been forced to open their eyes to the world around them. Jiang’s world has opened up, too. She’s more at ease with herself at 21, compared with when she began college.

  “My horizon has broadened and I’m more tolerant,” she says. “As a freshman, I was desperate. I stopped people around me and asked: ‘Is there anything in the world still worth hoping for? ‘ But now I don’t do that.”

  Jiang says that she may not pursue writing as her main future career because she wants to try“other lifestyles”—overseas travel and study touring sound particularly inviting to her. But she is concerned that many foreigners have skewed (歪曲的,傾斜的) perceptions about China.

  “A few days ago I overheard a conversation between two foreigners sitting next to me on a flight,” says Jiang. “They were having a heated discussion about the number of beggars in China. And how Chinese always go for ‘petty profits’. In fact, they had been in China for only a week.”

  Jiang believes prejudice is unavoidable, but she also maintains that Chinese and Westerners, for example, share much common ground.

  “We share the same principles, such as honesty and a willingness to help others,” says Jiang. “The differences between peoples are not that huge.”

  1. What does the passage mainly talk about?

  A. Jiang Fangzhou’s novels.

  B. Embracing new challenges.

  C. Jiang Fangzhou’s university life.

  D. Jiang Fangzhou’s success.

  2. What does the underlined phrase mean?

  A. be patient with B. be worried about

  C. be content with

  D. be indifferent about

  3. Which of the following sentences is true?

  A. Jiang doesn’t have any pressure and competition as the others do.

  B. Jiang’s peers face intense pressure and competition at school.

  C. Jiang wants to be a professional writer in future.

  D. Jiang often asks her friends some questions now.

  4. We can infer from the text that_____. 

  A. there is nothing but prejudice between Chinese and Westerners

  B. Jiang accepts the fact that there are huge differences between peoples

  C. one week is enough to know about a true China.

  D. Jiang disagrees with what the two foreigners said about Chinese

  【參考答案】1—4、BBBD

  較難題目特訓:人物故事類

  閱讀下列四篇短文,從每小題后所給的A,B,C或D四個選項中,選出最佳選項。

  At the age of ten I could not figure out what this Elvis Presley guy had that the rest of us boys did not have. I mean, he had a head, two arms and two legs, just like the rest of us. About nine o’clock on Saturday morning I decided to ask Eugene Correthers, one of the older boys, what it was that made this Elvis guy so special. He told me that it was Elvis’ wavy hair and the way he moved his body.

   About half an hour later all the boys in the orphanage(孤兒院)were called to the main dining-room and told we were all going to downtown Jacksonville, Florida to get a new pair of Buster Brown shoes and a hair cut.That is when I got this big idea, which hit me like a ton of bricks.If the Elvis hair cut was the big secret, then that’s what I was going to get.

  All the way to town I told everybody, including the matron(女管家)from the orphanage who was taking us to town, that I was going to look just like Elvis Presley and that I would learn to move around just like he did and that I would be rich and famous one day, just like him.

  When I got my new Buster Brown shoes, I could hardly wait for my new hair cut and now that I had my new Buster Brown shoes I would be very happy to go back to the orphanage and practice being like Elvis.

  We finally arrived at the big barber shop, where they cut our hair for free because we were orphans(孤兒). I looked at the barber and said, “I want an Elvis hair cut. Can you make my hair like Elvis?” I asked him, with a big smile on my face. “Let’s just see what we can do for you, little man,” he said. I was so happy when he started to cut my hair. Just as he started to cut my hair, the matron signed for him to come over to where she was standing. She whispered something into his ear and then he shook his head, like he was telling her “No”. Then he told me they were not allowed to give us Elvis hair cuts. Then I saw my hair falling onto the floor.

  1.In the author’s eyes, Elvis Presley was _________.

   A. disgusting B. admirable C. ambitious D. dynamic 

  2. From the passage, we can know that _________.

   A. Buster Brown was more appealing than Elvis Presley

   B. An Elvis hair cut cost the orphans a lot of money

   C. The author was fascinated with the stars Buster and Elvis

   D. The barber was unwilling to give the boy an Elvis hair cut

  3. We can learn from the underlined sentence that the boy was _________.

   A. excited to have an Elvis hair cut

  B. worried to think about the secret

   C. anxious to remove the ton of bricks

  D. careful to seize the chance

  4. How would the boy probably feel when he walked out of the barber shop?

   A. Delighted.  B. Guilty. C. Self-satisfied. D. Depressed.

  【參考答案】1—4、BCAD

  較難題目特訓:人物故事類

  閱讀下列四篇短文,從每小題后所給的A,B,C或D四個選項中,選出最佳選項。

  Inside the pleasingly fragrant cafe, So All May Eat (SAME) in downtown Denver, the spirit of generosity (慷慨) is instantly noticeable: A donation box stands in place of a cash register. Customers here pay only what they can afford, no questions asked.

  A risky business plan, perhaps, but SAME Cafe has done one unchangeable thing in the Mile High City for six years: Open only at midday, the restaurant provides poor local people with healthy, delicious lunches six days a week. Those unable to pay for their meals can instead volunteer as waiters and waitresses, and dishwashers, or look after the buildings and equipment for the cafe.

  “It’s based on trust, and it’s working all right, ” says co- owner Brad Birky, who started the cafe in 2006 with his wife Libby. Previously volunteering at soup kitchens, the Birkys were dissatisfied with the often unhealthy meals they served there.

  “We wanted to offer quality food in a restaurant where everyone felt comfortable, regardless of their circumstances, ” Birky says. SAME’s special lunch menu changes daily and most food materials are natural and grown by local farmers.

  The cafe now averages 65 to 70 customers(and eight volunteers) a day. And the spirit of generosity behind the project appears to be spreading. In early 2007, one volunteer who had cleared snow for his meals during the long winter said goodbye to the Birkys. “He said he was going to New Orleans to help with the hurricane cleanup, ” says Birky.

  1. What can we learn about the soup kitchens the Birkys previously worked for?

  A. They refused to have volunteers.

  B. They offered low quality food. 

  C. They provided customers with a good environment.

  D. They closed down because of poor management.

  2. According to the passage, which of the following is TRUE?

  A. The customers who cannot pay can work as volunteers instead.

  B. More volunteers will go to New Orleans for the hurricane cleanup.

  C. Many new cafes will be opened to offer free lunches in the town.

  D. The lunch menu has remained the same since the cafe was started.

  3. The author’s attitude towards running such a cafe is_____. 

  A. unfavorableB. approving C. doubtfulD. cautious

  【參考答案】1—3、BAB

  較難題目特訓:人物故事類

  閱讀下列四篇短文,從每小題后所給的A,B,C或D四個選項中,選出最佳選項。

  Most young architects—particularly those in big cities—can only dream about working in a building of their own. And making that dream come true often means finding a building no one else seems to want,which is exactly what happened to David Yocum and his partner,Brian Bell. Their building is a former automobile electrical-parts firm in Atlanta. From the outside,it looks too old,even something horrible,but open the door and you are in a wide,open courtyard,lined on three sides with rusting (生銹的)walls.

  In 2000,Yocum and Bell found this building in the city’s West End. Built in 1947,the structure had been abandoned years earlier and the roof of the main building had fallen down. But the price was right,so Yocum bought it. He spent eight months of his off-hours on demolition (拆除),pulling rubbish out through the roof,because it was too dangerous to go inside the building. The demolition was hard work,but it gave him time to think about what he wanted to do,and“to treasure what was there—the walls,the rust,the light. “ Yocum said. “Every season,more paint falls off the walls and more rust develops. It’s like an art installation (裝置)in there—a slow-motion show. “

  Since the back building had been constructed without windows,an all-glass front was added to the building to give it a view of the courtyard,and skylights were installed in the roof. The back of the building is a working area and a living room for Yocum and his wife. A sort of buffer (緩沖) zone between the front and the back contains a bathroom,a kitchen and a mechanical room,and the walls that separate these zones have openings that allow views through to the front of the studio and the courtyard beyond.

  Yocum and Bell,who have just completed an art gallery for the city,feel that the experience from the decoration of their building,focusing on the inside rather than the outside,has influenced their work. It has also given these architects a chance to show how they can make more out of less.

  1. According to the passage,it is for most young architects in big cities to work in a building of their own. 

  A. easy B. unnecessary C. unrealistic D. common

  2. Yocum bought the old building because . 

  A. it was a bargain to him

  B. it was still in good condition

  C. it was located in the city center

  D. it looked attractive from the outside

  3. Working on the old building,Yocum and Bell . 

  A. pulled rubbish out through the roof

  B. removed the skylights from the bathroom

  C. presented a slow-motion show in an art gallery

  D. built a kitchen at the back part of the old building

  4. It can be inferred from the passage that Yocum and Bell . 

  A. benefited a lot from pulling down the roof

  B. turned more old buildings into art galleries

  C. got inspiration from decorating their old building

  D. paid more attention to the outside of the art gallery

  5. The main idea of the passage is that . 

  A. people can learn a lot from their failures

  B. it is worthwhile to spend money on an old building

  C. people should not judge things by their appearance

  D. creative people can make the best of what they have

  【參考答案】1--5 、CAACD

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