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[主观题]

The Lake District in north-west England is an area remarkably little affected by industria

lization. The principal activity is still sheep-farming, as it has been for a thousand years, and many ancient words like "fell" for "hill" and "tam" for "lake" are still in daily use. In spite of its heavy rainfall and relative inaccessibility, its special atmosphere and spectacular natural beauty combine to make this one of England's favourite holiday areas at all seasons of the year. But at Christmas 1968, still gripped by the fear that foot-and-mouth disease could spread to the hill flocks and sweep like wildfire right up to the Scottish border, it was quieter than ever before in this century. Luckily not a single farm had caught tile infection, the nearest case having been an isolated one at Kendal several weeks before. But every Lakeland farmer knows that one case among the unfenced hill flocks on the fells could lead to complete annihilation of hundreds of thousands of sheep and the virtual end of the district's principal industry; you cannot replace sheep, acclimatized to their own part of the fell for generations, in the same way that you can replace cattle in a field.

Nobody could remember a Christmas like it, especially Boxing Dab, which is traditionally one of the big outdoor holidays of the Lakeland year. Normally this is a day spent following the mountain packs of hounds, fell-walking and, if the weather is propitious, skiing and skating, but this time there were none of these things. Visitors were actively discouraged, and those who did come were asked not to go on the fells, footpaths or bridleways or near farmland, while motorists were requested not to drive on minor roads and to shun the smaller valleys. The enterprising hotels which had earlier in the year decided to keep open during the winter were by the end of October having a desperate time. Hundreds of bookings had been cancelled and scores of dinner parties and young farmers' reunions eliminated. All youth hostels were closed. At least one climbing club, unable to climb, substituted a training programme of films and simulated climbs on the more substantial municipal buildings.

The weather in the area was dry, crisp, windless and cold, in fact ideal for brisk outdoor activities. But nobody was able to enjoy it. Everything was stopped: hunting, walking, climbing, skiing, motor cycle trials, sporting events of every description. All the seasonal dances, festivals, conferences, shepherds' meets and a hundred and one, other social occasions abandoned. The ice was bearing on some of the lakes but you could not go skating there. Meanwhile the foxes, emboldened by an unprecedented freedom from harassment, were stalking closer to the farms and the flocks of Christmas turkeys, while the hounds sulked miserably in their kennels.

Farmers are apt to criticize some sections of the outdoor fraternity for their occasional thoughtless behaviour, but the way that walkers, climbers, skiers, fishermen, hunters and the rest went out of their way to help them at this time should never be forgotten. The general public, locals and visitors alike, tried to give the fell farmers a sporting chance, and this remarkable display of public spirit was the one bright note in a very sad time.

The word "this" in line 5 refers to______.

A.its special atmosphere

B.the Industrial Revolution

C.the spectacular natural beauty

D.the Lake District

答案

D
解析:这是考查指示代词的用法。“In spite of its heavy rainfall and relative inaccessibility, its special atmosphere and spectacular natural beauty combine to make this one of England's favourite holiday areas at all seasons of the year.”(尽管有很大的降雨量和相对的不可接近性,但是它特殊的环境和壮观的自然美使其成为英国一年四季中最受欢迎的地方。)这里的“this”指的就是最开头提到的地点。故选D。

更多“The Lake District in north-west England is an area remarkably little affected by industria”相关的问题

第1题

The Lake District, which is well-known for its beautiful scenery, is located in theA.south

The Lake District, which is well-known for its beautiful scenery, is located in the

A.south of Scotland.

B.northwest of England.

C.north of Wales.

D.east of England.

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第2题

The ______ was typical of the Lake District, with high mountains, lakes, and deep valleys.

A.scene

B.scenery

C.view

D.landscape

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第3题

Liwan is the name of Guangzhou's southwest district, bordered by Renmin Lu to the south an
d west. Not so long ago, in the【C1】______1900s, this area of the city was renowned【C2】______its Cantonese restaurants, gardens, teahouses and boat rides on【C3】______many waterways. This was at a time【C4】______the Liwan area was【C5】______into a new town in much the same way【C6】______the Tianhe area is now becoming the place to be in Guangzhou.

Today, though, the Liwan district【C7】______rapid development【C8】______new high-rise apartment buildings are mushrooming everywhere. Most of the rivers that crossed the area【C9】______now disappeared, and【C10】______we can get to a boat ride is hiring a pedal boat on Liwan Lake. Fortunately, some attempt is【C11】______to preserve the area's architectural and cultural heritage, particularly on the streets around Liwan Lake Park.

On Longjin Xi Lu, for instance, you can still see some of the Xiguan houses and【C12】______unique wooden doors. These large three or four-story grey-brick houses were built【C13】______a Western style, and the interiors were decorated with the best of local crafts,【C14】______stained glass windows and【C15】______wooden furniture. They were the【C16】______of the neighborhood at the turn of the last century.

As well as these Xiguan houses, the area【C17】______has some large European-style. stone buildings. The Liwan Museum is【C18】______in one of these colonial buildings. It was built in 1912 for the local branch manager of a Hong Kong bank. The museum is stocked【C19】______with memorabilia(大事记)from Liwan's colorful past—old photographs, maps, Cantonese opera costumes and【C20】______scrolls(名册). To find the museum, walk south along Longjin Xi Lu from the Liwan Lake Park's entrance till the crossroads, then turn right.

【C1】

A.lately

B.latter

C.later

D.late

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第4题

听力原文:I Ladies and gentlemen, attention please. Our bus will arrive at Lake District in
a few minutes. You can feel the comfortable cool air coming from the lake. This is a favorite place for tourists in summer, especially on a hot summer afternoon like today. This area is one of the British national parks. People began to build houses around the lake a hundred years ago, so in this park you can have a special view of houses of all shapes and styles and colors. In late autumn and winter, this park is the best place for an outing. People like to have a good walk around it.

Now our bus is driving around the lake. You can sit back and enjoy the beauty of everything here. The bus will take us to a good spot, where you can take the most wonderful photos you have ever taken. Here we are! Where we get off is where we get on. Return to the bus in fifty minutes. Thank you!

Who do you think is speaking?

A.A bus driver.

B.A tourist guide.

C.A visitor.

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第5题

Chicago: Some Big Places to See in the "City of the Big Shoulders"Early last century, the

Chicago: Some Big Places to See in the "City of the Big Shoulders"

Early last century, the poet Carl Sandburg described Chicago, Illinois, as the "City of the Big Shoulders." That still seems right. Chicago does a lot of things in a big way.

For example, the city is a big transportation center in the Midwest for trains, trucks, ships and planes.

Manufacturing is one of the biggest industries in Chicago.

And Chicago has one of America's busiest ports. The city stretches for about 40 kilometers along the southwestern shore of Lake Michigan. The Saint Lawrence Seaway opened in 1959. It connects the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean.

Big Things in Chicago

Chicago is big on music. Visitors can find all kinds, from classical to hip-hop. Some of the best places for jazz and blues are along Rush Street.

There are lots of things to see and hear in Chicago.

At the Art Institute of Chicago, people can see fine Asian art and much more.

At the Museum of Science and Industry, visitors crowd a working coal mine and a World War Two submarine(潜水艇).

At the Adler Planetarium, people see stars and learn about space. And at the Shedd Aquarium, they see colorful fish and learn about life under the sea.

Not surprisingly Chicago has a lot of big buildings. The two tallest are the Sears Tower and the John Hancock Building.

Many people take architectural tours around Chicago. There are many interesting landmarks and building designs to see.

The Wrigley Building, near the Chicago River, opened in the early 1920s. This office building is hard to miss. It is bright white.

Downtown Chicago, the business center, is known as the Loop. There are many offices and stores. The Loop includes the financial district around LaSalle Street. The financial district is home to the Chicago Board of Trade, the Chicago Stock Exchange and many banks.

Another big thing to see, and feel, is the weather. After all, another name for Chicago is the "Windy City." People turn their shoulders to the strong winds off Lake Michigan. In winter, Chicago gets a lot of snow; in summer, the weather is hot and sticky.

Almost 3 million people live in Chicago. Chicago is America's third largest city, after New York and Los Angeles. More than 9 million people live in surrounding communities.

Over the years many immigrants have settled in Chicago. Many of its people have ethnic roots in Poland, Germany, Ireland and Italy. More recent immigrants have come from all over the world.

Today just under half the population of the city of Chicago is non-Hispanic(非西班牙裔的)white. The city has large black and Hispanic populations. 4 percent of the people are Asian.

Millennium Park

When people in Chicago want to be outdoors, one place to go is Millennium Park. In this City of Big Shoulders, almost everything about Millennium Park is big. It covers 10 hectares(公顷). It took almost 9 years to finish.

Millennium Park is on Michigan Avenue near Lake Michigan. It officially opened in 2004. It cost 475 million dollars.

Millennium Park has gardens and places for music, dance and ice skating. It also has one of the largest outdoor statues in the world. Anish Kapoor of Britain created this work of public art. It weighs 110 tons.

A huge rounded form. of shiny steel captures a looking-glass image of the Chicago skyline and the clouds above. The statue is called "Cloud Gate."

The Spanish artist Jaume Plensa designed the Crown Fountain in Millennium Park. The fountain is surely one of the most unusual in the world.

The artist set a pool of water between two tall glass towers. Video images appear on the towers. The images are a series of pictures of nature and people's face

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第6题

Making Reading, Writing and Recession Work Together A.With books tucked neatly on the shel

Making Reading, Writing and Recession Work Together

A.With books tucked neatly on the shelves and a comfy purple-dragon rug in a back comernook, the library at San Diego"s Willard B. Hage Elementary School is the perfect place forchildren to fall in love with reading. Since the start of the school year, however, the libraryhas been off limits to students, who get to go there only when (already overworkeD.teacherscan escort them and handle the record keeping. "With all of the cutbacks we"ve had in thelast few years, the district can"t pay for someone to help check out books," explains PamWiesenberg, a third-grade teacher at the school. "As a result, the children suffer."

B.As the national economy continues to nose dive, a growing number of public schoolshave found themselves facing similar situations —— and making more and more painfulcutbacks. Advanced Placement programmes, extra help for English learners, art, musicand summer school could be on the chopping block in many places. Ditto (同上) for ef-forts to reduce class size.

C.The huge federal stimulus package should offer some relief to desperate districts; theHouse and Senate are haggling over versions that include at least $80 billion for edu-cation programs, a significant bump up from the Education Department"s $59 billiondiscretionary (自由裁量的) budget for fiscal 2008. But there"s a catch: a big chunk ofthe stimulus money that is designed to prevent massive teacher layoffs will be awardedonly to states that spend at least as much on education as they did in 2006 —— a tall ordergiven that a minimum of 42 states are facing significant budget gaps. At least 20 stateshave already cut their K-12 budgets. Moreover, even with the federal stimulus money,school districts will still get the bulk of their funding from state and local coffers, whichhaven"t been this low in decades. As Randall Moody, manager of federal advocacy forthe National Education Association, says, "When you have 40 states with serious budgetissues and that"s where schools get the bulk of their money, naturally there"s going to bea problem."

D.Budget disasters are perhaps most acute in California. The state, the most populous in theUS, spends about $48 billion a year on K-12 education, or nearly half its general fund,which receives revenue from a variety of sources, including income and sales taxes. Thisyear, however, the double hits of endless layoffs and an imploding (剧减的) real estatemarket has mined the fund, with legislators projecting a $42 billion deficit by the mid-dle of next year. To help bridge this gap, Govemor Amold Schwarzenegger has proposedshorting schools $2.1 billion during the rest of this academic year and $3.1 billion thenext. He wants to save an additional $1.1 billion by reducing the number of school days,from 180 to 175. Though the extra time off might cheer students, California school super-intendent Jack O. Connell strenuously opposes the move. Best sound bite: "To close theachievement gap and prepare all students for success in the competitive global economy,we should be offering more time in class, not less."

E. Despite Congress"s holding emergency weekend sessions to push through a stimulus plan,educators in many states lament the fact that schools won"t see a penny of the extra moneyuntil at least July. According to O. Connell, some of California"s poorest districts are run-ning out of cash for subsidised meal programmes. The Hayward district is planning layoffsthat would increase class size in primary grades from 20 students to 32. In Lake Elsinore,schools have turned off the lights in many rooms —— and placed duct tape over the switch-es —— to save money on electricity bills.

F.Terry Grier, superintendent of the San Diego Unified School District, says his districtneeds a cash influx (流入) now. "There are schools in our district that don"t even havenurses on certain days," says Grier, whose district includes Hage Elementary School andits shuttered stacks. "If a kid skins his elbow, a teacher has to take time out of her lesson todust him off, clean him up and put on a Band Aid."

G. California isn"t the only state grappling with steep K-12 budget cuts. In Florida, officialsin overcrowded school districts are bracing themselves for likely staff cuts. Connecti-cut"s board of education adopted a budget resolution in December that included an over-all 10% reduction —— a move that some fear means that pink slips for teachers are inevi-table. "The biggest line items in most school budgets are staff and benefits," says BobBrewer, an education consultant in East Hartford, Conn. "No district can absorb thosekinds of hits without trimming some of those big ticket items." Even oil and gas richstates are in a panic. In Alaska, for instance, sinking oil prices have some state legisla-tors scrambling to lock in education budgets for the next few years as the state preparesto dip into its savings to cover a shortfall of approximately $1.65 billion this year andup to $3 billion next year. In Montana, which earned big bucks last year from its naturalresources, education is funded primarily through property taxes, and many fear that theclosing of mines and aluminum plants could trigger a mass exodus and redistribute thetax base. "It doesn"t look good," says Eric Feaver, who heads the MEA MFT, a union ofteachers and state employees. "People around here are starting to ask themselves whatwill happen if people leave."

H. Where will those families go? And whose school districts can afford to absorb their chil-dren? In California, school officials are expecting to receive upwards of $8 billion overtwo years from the federal stimulus. While this money would enable districts to addresssome of their most pressing needs, John Mockler, an education funding specialist in Sac-ramento, says, "It"s not apanacea (万灵药). In the long term, Mockler says, states needto come up with new funding sources to support classroom instruction and let teachers dowhat they were hired to do —— teach. In the meantime, some school district administratorshave come up with creative solutions. Superintendent Jerry Vaughn of the Floydada Inde-pendent School District in Texas —— which has 900 or so students —— says he is working to-ward a partnership with a local wind power company that would pay for a laptop for everykid in grades 6 through 12. At the fast growing Forsyth County Schools District in Cum-ming, Ga., Bailey Mitchell, chief technology and information officer, recently opted to usefree open source software instead of purchasing expensive software licenses from vendorslike Microsoft. Mitchell says the decision will save $1.1 million over three years. "We satback and recognized the money we needed simply wasn"t going to materialize out of thinair," he says.

I. Back in San Diego, at Hage Elementary, teachers desperate for help in the school libraryare recruiting parent volunteers to staff the facility a few days each week. Juli Finney,president of the school"s Parent Teacher Association, admits that while this solution isn"tideal, it is precisely the kind of effort she and other parents must make to ensure that statebudget cuts don"t deny their children the chance to experience the thousands of books thatare now quite literally behind closed doors. "Technically, the PTA is supposed to put ic-ing on the cake and not provide the cake itself," she says. But when times are tough, somecake is better than no cake at all.

There might not be enough taxes for school budgets if a lot of people leave Montana.

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第7题

Building Renovation In cities across the United States, old factories,warehouses,schools,

Building Renovation

In cities across the United States, old factories,warehouses,schools, railroad stations and other buildings are being renovated for new uses. City planners and private investors are finding that good buildings, no matter how old, can be remodeled for new purposes. "If you'd asked someone four or five years ago whether he'd rent an apartment in an abandoned piano factory or clothing warehouse, he' d have thought you were crazy," says a New York architect. "Today, many people are eager to do it. " The, renovating may include a former city hall or courthouse changed into offices;a bank or church changed into a restaurant; or, as in Plains, Georgia, a railroad station used as a center for a presidential campaign.

Only a few decades ago, renovation was unpopular and generally far more expensive than taking down abandoned buildings, and starting from the beginning.A change began in the 1960s with a number of well-advertised projects, They included Ghirardelli Square in San Francisco,where an old chocolate factory was restored and made into shops and restaurants; Trolley Square in Salt Lake City, where abandoned car warehouses became a shopping mall;the Soho District of New York City, where unused warehouses were made into artists' studios and apartments.

What caused the change? "One reason is nostalgia,"a San Francisco builder suggests."Maybe old is better than new, many people are saying, Feelings about preserving attractive or historic buildings have changed a great deal. " A second cause is economy. The cost of tearing down an old building and constructing a new one from nothing now has risen to the point where it is often less expensive to fix a solid older structure. Also builders realize that fixing up an existing building often requires no new permits, sewer lines, or water connections.

Even when the costs of restoration are the same as or a bit more than the costs of putting up a new building, fixing the old building may be better. A Boston architect says,"The advantage comes when you can develop a final project that is more desirable than a new building one with the right location, more space, more floor area, a special character, materials of a particular quality. " Gradually, architects and builders are developing knowledge about renovation and preservation, bringing imagination and creativity to the job.

第 41 题 In the United States, renovating old buildings_________

A.has had a long history

B.is becoming increasingly popular

C.is still unpopular

D.has just caught the fancy of architects and builders

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第8题

They can vote in ______ district they choose.A.whicheverB.wheneverC.whereverD.however

They can vote in ______ district they choose.

A.whichever

B.whenever

C.wherever

D.however

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第9题

______of the land in that district ______ covered with trees and grass.A.Two-fifth; isB.Tw

______of the land in that district ______ covered with trees and grass.

A.Two-fifth; is

B.Two-fifth; are

C.Two-fifths; is

D.Two-fifths; are

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第10题

A) scope B) range C) field D) district

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