【文章內(nèi)容簡介】
ing him why.” 當(dāng)我九歲的時候,我喜歡和我爸爸一起去釣魚。但唯一不好玩的是,他能釣到很多魚,而我卻什么也抓不到。我通常很沮喪,不停地問他為什么。可知我沮喪是因為我抓不到魚,故選A。 (2)考查推理判斷。第二段講述的是隨著我慢慢長大,我理解了父親的話,于是我買了很多關(guān)于魚的書和參加關(guān)于魚的俱樂部和會議去了解魚的特點及習(xí)性,可推斷作者的父親的話的含義就是要想抓到魚就應(yīng)該多研究魚,了解魚,故選D。 (3)考查細節(jié)理解。根據(jù)第二段中的“That is why fish prefer shallow water to deep water because the former is warmer. Besides, water is usually warmer in direct sunlight than in the shade. Yet, fish don39。t have any eyelids (眼皮) and the sun hurts their eyes.” 這就是為什么魚喜歡淺水而不是深水,因為前者比較溫暖。此外,在陽光直射下,水通常比在陰涼處溫暖。然而,魚沒有任何眼皮和太陽傷害他們的眼睛。根據(jù)作者對魚的研究,可知在水邊樹下的淺水中更容易找到魚,故選D。 (4)考查推理判斷。根據(jù)最后一段中的“ My dad never once said, ‘If you want to catch a fish you need to think like a fisherman.’ What he said was, ‘You need to think like a fish.” Years later, with great efforts to promote longterm services to people much older and richer than me, I gradually learned what we all need is to think more like customers.’” 我爸爸從來沒有說過,“如果你想釣一條魚,你需要像漁夫一樣思考?!彼f,“你需要像魚一樣思考?!睅啄旰螅楸任夷觊L和富有得多的人推廣長期服務(wù),我逐漸了解到我們需要的是像顧客那樣去思考。由此可知,父親的話對我后來的銷售工作有著很大的影響,因此推斷作者父親釣魚的建議對作者很有啟發(fā),故選B。 (5)考查推理判斷。本文主要講述作者小時候同父親釣魚,作者父親的關(guān)于釣魚的建議給了作者在釣魚,尤其是后來的銷售工作中的一些啟示。作者寫釣魚主要也是想表達作者父親的建議對作者后來銷售工作的啟發(fā),因此可推斷這篇文章可能來自關(guān)于銷售的書,故選B。 【點評】本題考點涉及細節(jié)理解和推理判斷兩個題型的考查,是一篇人生感悟類閱讀,考生需要準確捕捉細節(jié)信息,并根據(jù)上下文進行邏輯推理,從而選出正確答案。4.閱讀理解 Olympic National Park, with its temperate rainforests and breathtaking views, exerts a natural pull on many Pacific Northwestemers. But Seattle writer Rosette Royale found it repellent. To Royale, the park seemed like a damp, dirty and unpleasant place. I couldn39。t figure out why anyone would want to carry a 50pound pack into the wilderness and camp there for days, he said. It didn39。t make sense. Then he met Bryant Carlin, a vendor (小販) for Real Change, the Seattle weekly sold on the street by vendors who are homeless or lowwage earners. He was also a skilled outdoorsman and a nature photographer who would take weekslong photographic journeys to the park. The two men connected in the fall of 2011 when Royale interviewed Carlin for a feature story in Real Change about Carlin39。s photography. That first time they met—and for years afterward—Carlin invited Royale to go camping with him. Each time, Royale said Thanks, but no thanks. Until one day, in the spring of 2015, Royale surprised himself by saying yes. Little did I know, said Royale, that saying 39。yes39。 would change the course of my life. Royale and Carlin went on five separate journeys to the Olympic wilderness. They camped in spring, summer, fall and winter. For Royale, the trips were exhausting and terrifying. But the trips were also inspiring, and helped Royale—a black, strange man—to develop a relationship with the outdoors that he had never experienced before. For Carlin, the trips were an opportunity to throw off the label of homeless. In Olympic National Park, sleeping outside just means you39。re a camper. But there was one aspect of Carlin39。s life in the city that he couldn39。t escape: alcohol abuse. While he never brought beer on their camping journeys, the effects of years of drinking weren39。t so easy to leave behind.(1)What does the underlined word repellent in paragraph 1 mean? ....(2)According to Royale, what made his life course changed? first meeting with Carlin. rejection of Carlin39。s invitation. camping trips with Carlin. reading of Carlin39。s feature story.(3)What did the trips with Royale mean to Carlin? improved his photography skills. helped him feel a sense of belonging. deepened his relationship with nature. enabled him to get rid of alcohol addiction.【答案】 (1)D(2)C(3)B 【解析】【分析】文章主要講了羅亞爾和卡林的奧林匹克國家公園露營之旅對各自產(chǎn)生的意義。 (1)詞義猜測題。根據(jù)第一段To Royale, the park seemed like a damp, dirty and unpleasant ,公園似乎是一個潮濕、骯臟和令人不快的地方。由此可知,But Seattle writer Rosette Royale found it 。A. Appealing. 吸引人的;B. Puzzling. 令人迷惑的;C. Rewarding. 有益的;D. Disgusting. 令人厭惡的。故選D。 (2)細節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)第三段“Little did I know,” said Royale, “that saying 39。yes39。 would change the course of my life.”(“我不知道,”羅亞爾說,“說‘是’會改變我的人生軌跡?!保┛芍_亞爾認為,是他和卡林的露營之旅改變了他的人生軌跡。故選C。 (3)推理判斷題。根據(jù)最后一段For Carlin, the trips were an opportunity to throw off the label of “homeless. 對卡林來說,這些旅行是一個擺脫“無家可歸”標簽的機會。推斷出,與羅亞爾的旅行對卡林意味著它們幫助他感到一種歸屬感。故選B。 【點評】考查閱讀理解。涉及詞義猜測題,細節(jié)理解題和推理判斷題。詞義猜測題應(yīng)根據(jù)上下文以及文章所表達的感情色彩推測劃線詞的含義;細節(jié)理解題要注意從文章中尋找答案;推理判斷題要仔細閱讀上下文,推測出所需信息。5.閱讀理解 Recently, as the British doctor Robert Winston took a train from London to Manchester, he found himself being steadily angry. A woman had picked up her phone and begun a loud conversation, which would last an unbelievable hour. Furious, Winston began to tweet about the woman. He took her picture and sent it to his more than 40,000 followers. When the train arrived at its destination, Winston rushed out. He39。d had enough of the woman39。s rudeness. But the press were now waiting for her on the platform. And when they showed her Winston39。s messages, she used just one word to describe Winston39。s actions: rude. Winston39。s tale is something of a microcosm(縮影) of our age of increasing rudeness, fueled by social media. What can we do to fix this? Studies have shown that rudeness spreads quickly, almost like the mon cold. Just witnessing rudeness makes it far more likely that we, in turn, will be rude later on. The only way to avoid it is to deal with it face to face. We must say, Just stop. For Winston, that would have meant approaching the woman, telling her that her conversation was frustrating other passengers and politely asking her to speak more quietly or make the call at another time. The rage and injustice we feel at the rude behavior of a stranger can drive us to do odd things. In my own research, surveying 2,000 adults, I discovered that the acts of revenge people had taken ranged from the ridiculous to the disturbing. Winston did shine a spotlight on the woman39。s behavior — but from afar, in a way that shamed her. We must instead bat rudeness head on. When we see it occur in a store, we must step up and say something. If it happens to a colleague, we must point it out. We must defend strangers in the same way we39。d defend our best friends. But we can do it with grace, by handling it without a trace of aggression and without being rude ourselves. Because once rude people can see their actions through the eyes of others, they are far more likely to end that strain themselves. As this tide of rudeness rises, civilization needs civility.(1)What can you learn about Robert Winston from the passage? A.He knows how to speak to rude people.B.He behaved im