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发表于 2017-8-6 15:44:14
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7. A. incorrect B. wrong C. false D. bad
8. A. in B. on C. at D. under
9. A. refused B. suspected C. expelled D. expected
10. A. which B. when C. what D. where
11. A. take B. make C. come D. give
12. A. on B. in C. about D. at
13. A. look B. think C. view D. deal
14. A. decreasing B. possessing C. inspiring D. urging
15. A. directly B. obscurely C. scarcely D. plainly
16. A. which B. that C. what D. one
17. A. after B. when C. until D. before
18. A. someone B. everyone C. men D. one
19. A. when B. where C. which D. what
20. A. and B. or C. than D. but
PartⅡReading Comprehension
SectionA
Directions: There are 4 passages in this part .Each of the passages is
followed by 5 questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are 4
choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best one and mark your answer on the
ANSWER SHEET.(40points)
Passage One
As any homemaker who has tried to keep order at the dinner table knows,
there is far more to a family meal than food. Sociologist Michael Lewis has been
studying 50 families to find out just how much more.
Lewis and his co-workers carried out their study by videotaping the
families while they ate ordinary meals in their own homes. They found that
parents with small families talk actively with each other and their children.
But as the number of children gets larger, conversation gives way to the
parents’ efforts to control the loud noise they make. That can have an important
effect on the children. “In general the more question-asking the parents do, the
higher the children’s IQ scores,” Lewis says. “And the more children there are,
the less question-asking there is. ”
The study also provides an explanation for why middle children often seem
to have a harder time in life than their siblings. Lewis found that in families
with three or four children, dinner conversation is likely to center on the
oldest child, who has the most to talk about, and the youngest, who needs the
most attention. “Middle children are invisible,” says Lewis. “When you see
someone get up from the table and walk around during dinner, chances are that
it’s the middle child. ” There is, however, one thing that stops all
conversation and prevents anyone from having attention: “When the TV is on,”
Lewis says, “dinner is a non-event. ”
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