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c and people in America? drivers listen to news as well as music when they drive to work. drivers never listen to music when they drive to work. drivers carry small radios with earphones when they drive on the streets. always listen to music before class, in class and after class.(3)Which of the following statement is TRUE according to the passage? people in America like popular music. singers can get all the money from the tapes. Shanbo and Zhu Yingtai is a kind of pop music in China.,western or country music is a little different from its beginning.(4)What39。s the best title of the passage? language. in America. music. listeners.【答案】 (1)B(2)A(3)D(4)B 【解析】【分析】本文是一篇說明文,介紹了美國的幾種音樂。 (1)考查推理判斷。根據第一段中的“Music is an international songs that are sung or played by instruments are beautiful to all people everywhere”可知,音樂是一種世界性的語言,用樂器演唱或演奏的歌曲對世界各地的人們來說都是美麗的,因此推斷美妙的歌曲深受世界人民的歡迎。故選B。 (2)考查推理判斷。根據第三段中的“Adult drivers listen to music on the car radio as they drive to also listen to the news about sports,the weather,politics,and activities of the American people.”可知,成年司機開車上班時聽汽車收音機里的音樂,他們還收聽體育新聞,天氣,政治,和美國人民的活動。A項正確。其他三項描述都不正確。故選A。 (3)考查細節(jié)理解。根據倒數第二段中的“This was started by cowboys who would sing at night to the cows they were ,any music about country life and the love between a country boy and his girl is called western or country music.”可知,如今的鄉(xiāng)村音樂與過去是不同的。當初它是牛仔唱給牛聽的,但現在它是任何關于鄉(xiāng)村生活或鄉(xiāng)村青年愛情的音樂。故選D。 (4)考查主旨大意。從文中各段的描述看,本文主要講的是美國的音樂種類。故選B。 【點評】本題考點涉及細節(jié)理解,推理判斷和主旨大意三個題型的考查,是一篇文化類閱讀,要求考生在捕捉細節(jié)信息的基礎上,進一步根據上下文的邏輯關系,進行分析,推理,概括和歸納,從而選出正確答案。8.閱讀理解 Americans gave nearly $300 billion away last year. Do you know the reason? Beyond the noble goals of helping others, it is that giving will make them happier. It is a fact that givers are happier people than nongivers. According to the Social Capital Community Benchmark Survey, a survey of 30,000 American households, people who give money to charity are 43% more likely than nongivers to say they are very happy about their lives. Similarly, volunteers are 42% more likely to be very happy then nonvolunteers. The happiness difference between givers and nongivers is not due to differences in their personal characteristics, such as ine or religion. Imagine two people who are identical in terms of ine and faith, as well as age, education, politics, sex, and family circumstances, but one donates money and volunteers, while the other does not. The giver will be, on average, over 40 percentage points more likely to be very happy than the nongivers. A number of studies have researched exactly why charity leads to happiness. The surprising conclusion is that giving affects our brain chemistry. For example, people who give often report feelings of euphoria, which psychologists have referred to as the Helper39。s High. They believe that charitable activity produces a very mild version of the sensations people get from drugs like morphine and heroin. Of course, not only does giving increase our happiness, but also our happiness increases the possibility that we will give. Everyone prefers to give more when they are happy. Researchers have investigated this by conducting experiments in which people are asked about their happiness before and after they participate in a charitable activity, such as volunteering to help children or serving meals to the poor. The result is clear that giving has a strong, positive causal impact on our happiness, so does happiness on giving(1)According to Paragraph 2. We can learn that . A.only those people who gave money to charity will be happyB.more givers say they feel having happy lives than nongiversC.those who donate money are happier than those who volunteerD.42% of the volunteers say they are as happy as the nonvolunteers(2)What causes the happiness difference? A.Ine.B.Faith.C.Education.D.Donation.(3)If a person feels happy, he may . A.ask for more donationsB.stop charitable activityC.be likely to give more.D.cook food for the poor【答案】 (1)B(2)D(3)C 【解析】【分析】本文是一篇說明文,介紹了美國人愛做慈善,因為給予別人幫助比得到幫助更讓人快樂。 (1)考查細節(jié)理解。根據 第二段中的“people who give money to charity are 43% more likely than nongivers to say they are ‘very happy’ about their lives.”可知給予者比得到幫助者更快樂。故選B。 (2)考查細節(jié)理解。根據第三段年齡,性別,收入,信仰,家庭環(huán)境都相同的兩個人,總是向慈善機構捐錢的那個人,更快樂??芍蔷栀浐徒o予影響一個人的快樂。故選D。 (3)考查細節(jié)理解。根據最后一段中的“not only does giving increase our happiness, but also our happiness increases the possibility that we will give.”一個人越快樂就越愿意去捐贈,去幫助別人。故選C。 【點評】本題考點涉及細節(jié)理解題型的考查,是一篇文化類閱讀,要求考生準確掌握細節(jié)信息,結合題目要求,從而選出正確答案。9.The passage is followed by several questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that fits best according to the information given in the passage you have just read. In a career that lasted more than half a century, Tom Wolfe wrote fiction and nonfiction bestsellers including The Electric KoolAid Acid Test and The Bonfire of the Vanities. Along the way, he created a new type of journalism and coined phrases that became part of the American vocabulary. Wolfe began working as a newspaper reporter, first for The Washington Post, then the New York Herald Tribune. He developed a literary style in nonfiction that became known as the New Journalism. I39。ve always agreed on a theoretical level that the techniques for fiction and nonfiction are interchangeable, he said. The things that work in nonfiction would work in fiction, and vice versa. When Tom Wolfe39。s voice broke into the world of nonfiction, it was a time when a lot of writers, and a lot of artists in general, were turning inwards, says Lev Grossman, book critic for Time magazine. Wolfe didn39。t do that. Wolfe turned outwards. He was a guy who was interested in other people. Wolfe was interested in how they thought, how they did things and how the things they did affected the wo