_______ a lot of visitors were absorbed in the beautiful natural landscape.


  1. A.
    Very
  2. B.
    Much
  3. C.
    Quite
  4. D.
    Rather
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:吉林省長(zhǎng)春外國(guó)語(yǔ)學(xué)校2011-2012學(xué)年高二下學(xué)期期中考試英語(yǔ)試題 題型:022

單詞拼寫

She does a lot of v________(自愿的;無(wú)償?shù)?work for the Red Cross.

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:

  Talking on a mobile phone is expensive, so a lot of people send text messages. Text messages are much cheaper than talking on a mobile phone, and you can make it even cheaper by shortening the words that you use. You can do this by taking out “unimportant” letters in the words and using numbers instead of words(2=to, 3=free, 4=for, 8=ate, h8=hate, etc. ). Here is an example :Im 3 nw, why nt gv me a cll? (I’m free now, why not give me a call?)

Mobile phone users have developed a series of symbols to show how they feel. They are called emoticons(情感符號(hào)). To read an emoticon, you have to look at it sideways. For example, if you say something in a text message which is a joke, you can follow it with a smiling face. Like this: Why did t u cll me? Im so sad. ∶-)

  Here are some others. Can you think of these text messages where you could use them?

  ∶·)laughing∶ ·(sad∶·<really sad

  ∶·v shouting| · | sleep∶ o shocked

  8 · | surprised\· o bored

1. The underlined word “sideways” in this passage means______ .

A. 從側(cè)面地    B. 從旁邊地

C. 斜眼地   D. 顛倒地

2. What do you think of this text message “Whr hv U bn? Im wtng 4 U”means?

A. Where have you been? I’m waiting for you.

B. Where have you been? I’m looking for you.

C. What are you doing? I’m waiting for you.

D. What are you doing? I’m looking for you.

3. Which one means“l(fā)aughing” in the text messages?

A. ∶·(          B. ∶· )

C. ∶· <     D. 8 ·

 

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:2010—2011年廣東省梅州市曾憲梓中學(xué)高二下期末考試英語(yǔ)試卷 題型:閱讀理解

DJs (disc jockeys) are the people who play and present music on the radio, or in nightclub. A VJ (video jockey) is a person who introduces music videos on television.
VJs were first seen on television in the early 1980s when MTV went on the air. As MTV caught on, and the audience for music videos expanded, a variety of other music video channels started broadcasting. In addition to rock music, there were channels for people who were into alternative kinds of music, such as country music, light rock, and R & B, and all of these channels needed VJs. By the 1990s, international music video channels like Channel V in Asia and VIVA in Europe had started.
The VJs for the new international stations had to be chosen carefully. Although some VJs did shows focused on small audiences and showed mostly local content, other VJs presented shows for international viewers. These VJs, and the material they presented, needed to be popular in several different cultures.
One successful international VJ in Asia is Asha Gill. She is from Malaysia, but parents and grandparents are from India, France, and England. She speaks three languages and has fans across Asia, from Japan to the United Arab Emirates.
Another VJ who has made a big hit in Asia is Lili. She is actually a computer-animated VJ on MTV Asia. An actress wearing special computer equipment makes Lili move like a puppet. The actress also talks for Lili, and her shows can be seen in five languages.
When asked what makes a good video jockey, many successful VJs have given similar answers. To be a good VJ you need to know a lot about music, you need to be funny, and you can’t be shy.
【小題1】What is the reading mainly about?

A.how to become a VJB.the most popular VJ today
C.the differences between DJs and VJsD.some general information about VJs
【小題2】What kind of music did the first VJ probably introduce?
A.classicalB.rhythm and blues C.rock and popD.country
【小題3】What do Channel V and VIVA have in common?
A.They are both owned by MTV.
B.They are music video channels in Asia.
C.They do not use VJs to introduce the music.
D.They have viewers in more than one country.
【小題4】Which is NOT true about Asha Gill?
A.She speaks more than one language.B.Her family were all born in Malaysia.
C.She’s popular in quite a lot of Asian countries.D.She is a successful VJ.
【小題5】 Which of the following does the passage NOT mention as being important for someone who wants to be a VJ?
A.speak many different languagesB.listen to a lot of music
C.talk easily with different peopleD.being able to make people laugh

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:20102011河北省12月份高二英語(yǔ)試題 題型:閱讀理解

Britain’s symbolic red phone boxes have become out of date in the age of the mobile, but villages across the country are stepping in to save them, with creative intelligence. Whether as a place to exhibit art, poetry, or even as a tiny library, hundreds of phone boxes have been given a new life by local communities determined to preserve a typical part of British life. In Waterperry, a small village near Oxford, the 120 residents have filled the phone box next to the old house with a pot of flowers, piles of gardening and cooking magazines, and stuck poems on the walls.

They took control of the phone box when telecoms operator BT said it was going to pull it down, an announcement that caused such dissatisfaction that one local woman threatened to chain herself to the box to save it. “I’d have done it, “ insisted Kendall Turner. “It would have been heartbreaking for the village. “ Local councilor Tricia Hallam, who came up with the idea for the phone box’s change, said quite a few people would have joined her, adding, “ We couldn’t let it go because it’s a British symbol.”

Only three feet by three feet wide, and standing 2.51-meter tall, the phone boxes were designed by Giles Gilbert Scott in 1936 for the 25th anniversary of the reign of King George V. Painted in “Post Office red” to match the post boxes, they were once a typical image of England and the backdrop(背景) to millions of tourist photographs.

Eight years ago there were about 17,000 across Britain, but today, in a country where almost everybody has a mobile phone, 58 percent are no longer profitable and ten percent are only used once a month. “On average, maintaining them costs £800 a year per phone box-about £44 million annually,” said John Lumb, general manager for BT Payphones.

1.Some red phone boxes in Britain have been used for ____.

a. selling flowers    b. cooking   c. reading  d. exhibiting art or poetry

A.a(chǎn), b

B.c, d

C.a(chǎn),b,c

D.b,c,d

2.Why do the villagers want to keep the red phone boxes?

A.Because millions of people visit Britain to see the red phone boxes.

B.Because the local people could earn a lot of money from the red phone boxes.

C.Because the red phone boxes have already become a symbol of Britain.

D.Because the red phone boxes may be useful for some people in emergency.

3.What is the color of the British post boxes according to the passage?

A.Green

B.Red

C.Black

D.Yellow

4.What is John Lumb’s attitude towards pulling down the red phone boxes?

A.supportive

B.Opposed

C.Neutral

D.Indifferent.

 

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:

It is reported that the 2008 Olympic Games needs a lot of v_________________ to work for it without any pay.

 

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