If you find yourself _____ no one will help you, please call me.
A.where B.when C.which D.what
科目:高中英語 來源:2012-2013學年廣東省汕頭市金山中學高二下學期期中英語試卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
Sharks have lived in the oceans for over 450 million years, long before dinosaurs appeared. There are now about 360 species of sharks, whose size, behavior, and other characteristics differ widely.
Every year, we catch and kill over 100 million sharks, mostly for food and for their fins. Dried shark fins are used to make shark fin soup, which sells for as much as $50 a bowl in fine Hong Kong restaurants. Other sharks are killed for sport and out of fear. Sharks are vulnerable(易受傷的) to overfishing because it takes most species 10 to 15 years to begin reproducing and they produce only a few offspring(后代).
Influenced by movies and popular novels, most people see sharks as people-eating monsters. This is far from the truth. Every year, a few types of shark injure about 100 people worldwide and kill about 25. Most attacks are by great white sharks, which often feed on sea lions and other marine(海洋的) mammals. They sometimes mistake human swimmers for their normal prey, especially if they are wearing black wet suits.
If you are a typical ocean-goer, your chances of being killed by an unprovoked(非受挑釁而發(fā)生的)attack by a shark are about 1 in 100 million. You are more likely to be killed by a pig than a shark and thousands of times more likely to get killed when you drive a car.
Sharks help save human lives. In addition to providing people with food, they are helping us learn how to fight cancer, bacteria, and viruses. Sharks are very healthy and have aging processes similar to ours. Their highly effective immune system allows wounds to heal quickly without becoming infected, and their blood is being studied in connection with AIDS research.
Sharks are among the few animals in the world that almost never get cancer and eye cataracts(白內(nèi)障). Understanding why can help us improve human health. Chemicals taken from shark cartilage(軟骨)have killed cancerous tumors in laboratory animals, research that someday could help prolong your life.
Sharks are needed in the world’s ocean ecosystems. Although they don’t need us, we need them. We are much more dangerous to sharks than they are to us. For every shark that bites a person, we kill one million sharks.
【小題1】Which of the following is NOT a reason why people kill sharks?
A.People kill sharks for food. |
B.People kill sharks for sport. |
C.People kill sharks out of fear. |
D.People kill sharks because they often attack swimmers. |
A.There are many different species of sharks, but only a few of them are dangerous to humans. |
B.Sharks never get ill. |
C.Sharks are a valuable resource for human. |
D.Sharks play an important role in the ocean ecosystem. |
A.movies have given people the wrong impression of sharks |
B.most sharks are dangerous to humans |
C.sharks will attack anyone who is wearing black |
D.it is dangerous to swim in the ocean |
A.save | B.protect | C.lengthen | D.improve |
A.Are Sharks Dangerous? | B.Sharks And Humans |
C.Sharks: Humans’ Friends | D.Sharks Help Save Human Lives |
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科目:高中英語 來源:貴州省云峰中學09-10學年度高二下學期3月月考試英語 題型:閱讀理解
D
Are you afraid of sharks? You shouldn’t be! Below we cleared up the main myths about one of the world’s most perfectly formed creatures …
All sharks are the same.
This is absolutely not true. There are nearly four hundred species of sharks and they vary widely in habitat, size, features, diet and lifestyle. They range from the cigar shark, which is about 15 centimetres long, to the whale shark, which can be up to about nine meters long. More than 50 percent of sharks are less than a metre long and more than 90 percent are less than two metres long. And their habitat ranges from shallow to deep water and from the Arctic to the Tropic.
___________________
This is not true, either. In fact, many shark populations are decreasing. The chief reason for this is that hundreds of thousands of them are caught in fishing nets. Depending on where they are caught. They are either killed for their fins(鰭), which are used in shark’s fin soup, or they are tossed back into the sea because they are unwanted. Almost all sharks which are discarded in this way die. Also, sharks mature late in life and produce very few young. If the current reduction in numbers continues, the ecological balance of the oceans will be severely threatened.
Sharks will always attack you
This is nonsense. The chances of being attacked by a shark are minimal. You are 250 times more likely to be killed by lightning than by a shark, and your chances of being killed by lightning are practically zero.
However, if you are planning to take a swim in shark territory, then follow these simple rules:
Avoid swimming at dawn or duck when visibility decreases.
Avoid areas where there are breaking waves. Turbulent(洶涌的) water makes it difficult for sharks to see and determine whether you are prey(獵物).
Do not wear jewellery in the water. Sharks are attracted to shiny fishes, and jewellery may resemble their scales(鱗片).
Do not swim near schools of small fish, which are the favorite food of some sharks.
68. The underlined word “myths” in the first paragraph means ____.
A. an idea or story that many people believe but which is not true
B. something that is impossible to understand or explain or about which little is known
C. a feeling of surprise
D. something that you are curious to know
69. From the passage we can learn sharks ____.
A. look alike B. are dangerous
C. usually live in deep sea D. hardly attack people
70. Which of the following is proper for the blank in the third paragraph?
A. Sharks’ fin soup is nutritious
B. There are too many sharks in the sea
C. Many shark populations are decreasing
D. Sharks produce many young
71. Which of the following rules should you follow when you’re going to swim in shark areas?
A. Don’t swim before day breaks.
B. Choose areas where there are big waves.
C. Wear something shiny when swimming.
D. Choose areas where there are many small fish.
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科目:高中英語 來源:2014屆廣東省汕頭市高二下學期期中英語試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解
Sharks have lived in the oceans for over 450 million years, long before dinosaurs appeared. There are now about 360 species of sharks, whose size, behavior, and other characteristics differ widely.
Every year, we catch and kill over 100 million sharks, mostly for food and for their fins. Dried shark fins are used to make shark fin soup, which sells for as much as $50 a bowl in fine Hong Kong restaurants. Other sharks are killed for sport and out of fear. Sharks are vulnerable(易受傷的) to overfishing because it takes most species 10 to 15 years to begin reproducing and they produce only a few offspring(后代).
Influenced by movies and popular novels, most people see sharks as people-eating monsters. This is far from the truth. Every year, a few types of shark injure about 100 people worldwide and kill about 25. Most attacks are by great white sharks, which often feed on sea lions and other marine(海洋的) mammals. They sometimes mistake human swimmers for their normal prey, especially if they are wearing black wet suits.
If you are a typical ocean-goer, your chances of being killed by an unprovoked(非受挑釁而發(fā)生的)attack by a shark are about 1 in 100 million. You are more likely to be killed by a pig than a shark and thousands of times more likely to get killed when you drive a car.
Sharks help save human lives. In addition to providing people with food, they are helping us learn how to fight cancer, bacteria, and viruses. Sharks are very healthy and have aging processes similar to ours. Their highly effective immune system allows wounds to heal quickly without becoming infected, and their blood is being studied in connection with AIDS research.
Sharks are among the few animals in the world that almost never get cancer and eye cataracts(白內(nèi)障). Understanding why can help us improve human health. Chemicals taken from shark cartilage(軟骨)have killed cancerous tumors in laboratory animals, research that someday could help prolong your life.
Sharks are needed in the world’s ocean ecosystems. Although they don’t need us, we need them. We are much more dangerous to sharks than they are to us. For every shark that bites a person, we kill one million sharks.
1.Which of the following is NOT a reason why people kill sharks?
A.People kill sharks for food.
B.People kill sharks for sport.
C.People kill sharks out of fear.
D.People kill sharks because they often attack swimmers.
2.According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT true?
A.There are many different species of sharks, but only a few of them are dangerous to humans.
B.Sharks never get ill.
C.Sharks are a valuable resource for human.
D.Sharks play an important role in the ocean ecosystem.
3.It can be inferred from the passage that _______.
A.movies have given people the wrong impression of sharks
B.most sharks are dangerous to humans
C.sharks will attack anyone who is wearing black
D.it is dangerous to swim in the ocean
4.The underlined word “prolong” in the last but one paragraph means ______.
A.save B.protect C.lengthen D.improve
5.The best title for the passage would be _______.
A.Are Sharks Dangerous? B.Sharks And Humans
C.Sharks: Humans’ Friends D.Sharks Help Save Human Lives
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科目:高中英語 來源:貴州省09-10學年度高二下學期3月月考試英語 題型:閱讀理解
D
Are you afraid of sharks? You shouldn’t be! Below we cleared up the main myths about one of the world’s most perfectly formed creatures …
All sharks are the same.
This is absolutely not true. There are nearly four hundred species of sharks and they vary widely in habitat, size, features, diet and lifestyle. They range from the cigar shark, which is about 15 centimetres long, to the whale shark, which can be up to about nine meters long. More than 50 percent of sharks are less than a metre long and more than 90 percent are less than two metres long. And their habitat ranges from shallow to deep water and from the Arctic to the Tropic.
___________________
This is not true, either. In fact, many shark populations are decreasing. The chief reason for this is that hundreds of thousands of them are caught in fishing nets. Depending on where they are caught. They are either killed for their fins(鰭), which are used in shark’s fin soup, or they are tossed back into the sea because they are unwanted. Almost all sharks which are discarded in this way die. Also, sharks mature late in life and produce very few young. If the current reduction in numbers continues, the ecological balance of the oceans will be severely threatened.
Sharks will always attack you
This is nonsense. The chances of being attacked by a shark are minimal. You are 250 times more likely to be killed by lightning than by a shark, and your chances of being killed by lightning are practically zero.
However, if you are planning to take a swim in shark territory, then follow these simple rules:
Avoid swimming at dawn or duck when visibility decreases.
Avoid areas where there are breaking waves. Turbulent(洶涌的) water makes it difficult for sharks to see and determine whether you are prey(獵物).
Do not wear jewellery in the water. Sharks are attracted to shiny fishes, and jewellery may resemble their scales(鱗片).
Do not swim near schools of small fish, which are the favorite food of some sharks.
68. The underlined word “myths” in the first paragraph means ____.
A. an idea or story that many people believe but which is not true
B. something that is impossible to understand or explain or about which little is known
C. a feeling of surprise
D. something that you are curious to know
69. From the passage we can learn sharks ____.
A. look alike B. are dangerous
C. usually live in deep sea D. hardly attack people
70. Which of the following is proper for the blank in the third paragraph?
A. Sharks’ fin soup is nutritious
B. There are too many sharks in the sea
C. Many shark populations are decreasing
D. Sharks produce many young
71. Which of the following rules should you follow when you’re going to swim in shark areas?
A. Don’t swim before day breaks.
B. Choose areas where there are big waves.
C. Wear something shiny when swimming.
D. Choose areas where there are many small fish.
查看答案和解析>>
科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Computer hackers(黑客)have now got their hands on mobile phones. A phone virus(病毒)program can 36 your phone do things you have no control over, computer security experts 37 .
It might 38 the White House or the police, or forward your personal address book to a marketing company.
Or it could simply eat into the phone’s operating software, turning it 39 and erasing your personal information.
Similar viruses have already made mobile phone owners 40 in
Mr Hypponen, chief technical officer of a computer security in Fin-land said a virus “can get your 41 and send them somewhere else. And it can record your 42 .”
Mobiles are now able to surf the net, send e-mails and 43 software. So they are easy 44 for the same hackers who have sent viruses to computers over the past decade.
“It’s technically 45 now,” said Stephen Trilling, director of re-search at anti-virus 46 .
“If the phone is connected to the 47 , it cant be used to transmit threats and 48 just as any computer can. ”
In
So phone operators had to 51 emergency calls until the 52 was removed.
In Europe, mobile’s short message service, 53 ,SMS, has been used to send codes that could damage 54.
Mobile users can 55 virus, of course, by sticking to their traditional phones without Web links, some experts said.
36. | A.get | B.force | C.make | D.damage |
37. | A.speak | B.talk | C.tell | D.say |
38. | A.lead | B.cause | C.control | D.call |
39. | A.off | B.out | C.down | D.on |
40. | A.interested | B.a(chǎn)ngry | C.excited | D.terrified |
41. | A.messages | B.passages | C.news | D.information |
42. | A.voice | B.passwords | C.music | D.a(chǎn)ddress |
43. | A.make | B.destroy | C.download | D.develop |
44. | A.jobs | B.tasks | C.subjects | D.targets |
45. | A.impossible | B.possible | C.useful | D.valuable |
46. | A.hardware | B.software | C.computer | D.equipment |
47. | A.computer | B.television | C.Internet | D.radio |
48. | A.strike | B.visit | C.hit | D.a(chǎn)ttack |
49. | A.in | B.by | C.on | D.with |
50. | A.send | B.dial | C.count | D.press |
51. | A.cancel | B.ban | C.stop | D.prevent |
52. | A.bug | B.mistake | C.fault | D.e-mail |
53. | A.a(chǎn)nd | B.nor | C.or | D.but |
54. | A.recorders | B.computers | C.TVs | D.phones |
55. | A.stop | B.a(chǎn)void | C.kill | D.find |
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