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2006-2013年高考英语四川卷(47)

作者:罗林英 来源:大河老师 时间:2015-01-13 阅读: 字体:

   A. A big event to welcome a Chinese new year.
   B. A social gathering to raise money for wildlife.
   C. A party for close friends to meet and have fun.
   D. A meeting of Kwun Tong High School students.
33. How much do you have to pay in total if four of you go together?
   A. $20.                   B. $40.                        C. $60.                D. $80.
34. Which of the following statements is true?
   A. Tickets are sold in Kwun Tong High School.
   B. It’s unnecessary to take soft drinks with you.
   C. Free digital cameras are provided for everybody.
   D. Festival food will be served without extra charge.
 
B
On a sunny day last August, Tim heard some shouting. Looking out to the sea carefully, he saw a couple of kids in a rowboat were being pulled out to sea.
Two 12-year-old boys, Christian and Jack, rowed out a boat to search for a football. Once they’d rowed beyond the calm waters, a beach umbrella tied to the boat caught the wind and pulled the boat into open water. The pair panicked and tried to row back to shore. But they were no match for it and the boat was out of control.
Tim knew it would soon be swallowed by the waves.
“Everything went quiet in my head,” Tim recalls (回忆).”I was trying to figure out how to swim to the boys in a straight line.”
Tim took off his clothes and jumped into the water. Every 500 yards or so, he raised his head to judge his progress. “At one point, I considered turning back,” he says. “I wondered if I was putting my life at risk.” After 30 minutes of struggling, he was close enough to yell to the boys, “Take down the umbrella!”
Christian made much effort to take down the umbrella. Then Tim was able to catch up and climb aboard the boat. He took over rowing, but the waves were almost too strong for him.
“Let’s aim for the pier (码头),” Jack said. Tim turned the boat toward it. Soon afterward, waves crashed over the boat, and it began to sink. “Can you guys swim?” he cried. “A little bit,” the boys said.
Once they were in the water, Tim decided it would he safer and faster for him to pull the boys toward the pier. Christian and Jack were wearing life jackets and floated on their backs. Tim swan toward land as water washed over the boys’ faces.
“Are we almost there?” they asked again and again. “Yes,” Tim told them each time.
After 30minutes, they reached the pier.
35. Why did the two boys go to the sea?
     A. To go boat rowing.                                       B. To get back their football.
     C. To swim in the open water.                                   D. To test the umbrella as a sail.
36. What does “it” in Paragraph 2 refer to?
     A. The beach.               B. The water.                C. The boat.            D. The wind.
37. Why did Tim raise his head regularly?
     A. To take in enough fresh air.
B. To consider turning back or not.
     C. To check his distance from the boys.      
D. To ask the boys to take down the umbrella.
38. How did the two boys finally reach the pier?
     A. They were dragged to the pier by Tim.
B. They swam to the pier all by themselves.
     C. They were washed to the pier by the waves.
D. They were carried to the pier by Tim on his back.
 
C
LONDON — A British judge on Thursday sentenced a businessman who sold fake (假冒的) bomb detectors (探测器) to 10 years in prison, saying the man hadn’t cared about potentially deadly consequences.
It is believed that James McCormick got about $77.8 million from the sales of his detectors — which were based on a kind of golf ball finder — to countries including Iraq, Belgium and Saudi Arabia.
McCormick, 57, was convicted (判罪) of cheats last month and sentenced Thursday at the Old Bailey court in London.
“Your cheating conduct in selling a great amount of useless equipment simply for huge profit promoted a false sense of security and in all probability materially contributed to causing death and injury to innocent people,” Judge Richard Hone told McCormick. “you have neither regret, nor shame, nor any sense of guilt.”
The detectors, sold for up to $42,000 each, were said to be able to find such dangerous objects as bombs under water and from the air. But in fact they “lacked any grounding in science” and were of no use.
McCormick had told the court that he sold his detectors to the police in Kenya, the prison service in Hong Kong, the army in Egypt and the border control in Thailand.
“I never had any had results from customers,” he said.
39. Why was McCormick sentenced to prison?
     A. He sold bombs.                                            B. He caused death of people.
     C. He made detectors.                                       D. He cheated in business.
40. According to the judge, what McCormick had done _______.
     A. increased the cost of safeguarding                  B. lowered people’s guard against danger
C. changed people’s idea of social security          D. caused innocent people to commit crimes
41. Which of the following is true of the detectors?
     A. They have not been sold to Africa.                 B. They have caused many serious problems.
     C. They can find dangerous objects in water.              D. They don’t function on the basis of science.
42. It can be inferred from the passage that McCormick _______.
     A. sold the equipment at a low price    
B. was well-known in most countries
     C. did not think he had committed the crime
D. had not got such huge profit as mentioned in the text
 
D
Home to me means a sense of familiarity and nostalgia (怀旧). It’s fun to come home. It looks the same. It smells the same. You’ll realize what’s changed is you. Home is where we can remember pain, live, and some other experiences: We parted here; My parents met here; I won three championships here.