(英语)高三英语阅读理解(一)解题方法和技巧及练习题及解析

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(英语)高三英语阅读理解(一)解题方法和技巧及练习题及解析
一、高中英语阅读理解
1.阅读理解
Durian(榴莲) is probably the smelliest fruit in the world, letting out an unusual unpleasant smell which would make anyone bring up. However, nobody was aware of what gave this fruit its unique smell, so a team of researchers from Singapore decided to take a look at its genome (基因组) and find out,
Durian is well-known throughout Southeast Asia as the king of fruits, mostly because of its awful appearance and smell. However, the origin of this unpleasant smell was unknown, so researchers decided to map the genome of the fruit, and find the gene that controlled it. A group of genes, volatile sulfur compounds (含硫化合物), became very active in the fruit, and they were found responsible for resulting in the unpleasant smell.
The fruit confuses everyone with a sulfuric smell, like rotten onions and ingredients. The smell lasts long, mostly because the fruit contains more volatile sulfur compounds. Other species usually benefit from two gene copies at most, but durian has four, leading to the striking smell.
However, this smell might be an advantage for durian in the wild. Although we find it unpleasant, many animals might be attracted by it. If they eat the fruit, then they can easily spread its seeds everywhere, thus contributing to the distribution of the species.
The mapping of the durian genome also showed some other information on the species. First of all, the fruit has an impressive number of genes, namely 46,000. Also, with the help of these genes, they saw how it evolved, and discovered it was related to the cacao tree. All the other discoveries have been published in the journal Nature Genetics.
Despite the striking smell, many people actually enjoy eating the fruit. However, not all durian species are edible, and some of them may even cause damage to our health, Even so, the fruit is often imported, significantly contributing to the economy.
(1)What give durian its unique smell?
A. Onions nearby.
B. Two gene copies.
C. Rotten ingredients in it.
D. Volatile sulfur compounds.
(2)What does the underlin ed word “evolved” in Paragraph 5 probably mean?
A. Developed.
B. Escaped.
C. Predicted.
D. Tolerated.
(3)What can we infer from the text?
A. No birds enjoy eating durian.
B. Durian can be planted all over the world.
C. Some of durian species can not be eaten.
D. Durian has no relationship with the cacao tree.
(4)What's the best title for the text?
A. What's Durian?
B. The Influence of the Smell
C. The Distribution of Durian
D. The Mystery of the Unpleasant Smell of Durian 【答案】(1)D
(2)A
(3)C
(4)D
【解析】【分析】本文是一篇说明文,新加坡的研究者找出导致水果有难闻气味的原因就是水果中含有的挥发性硫化合物非常活跃,这种气味对于野外生存榴莲来说有利于吸引动物来吃这种水果,同时传播种子。

(1)考查细节理解。

根据第二段中的“so researchers decided to map the genome of the fruit, and find the gene that controlled it. A group of genes, volatile sulfur compounds (含硫化合物), became very active in the fruit, and they were found responsible for resulting in the unpleasant smell.”可知,研究人员找到一组基因——挥发性硫化合物(South-Type),在水果中非常活跃,发现是它们导致了这种难闻的气味。

故选D。

(2)考查词义猜测。

根据倒数第二段内容可知,研究者画出了榴莲的基因图。

通过基因图,发现了这种水果的基因庞大,有46000条基因。

在这些基因的帮助下,他们了解了榴莲的基因如何演变的,并发现榴莲与可可树有关。

A项develop“使进化”,与划线词evolved 是同义词。

故选A。

(3)考查推理判断。

根据最后一段中的“not all durian species are edible, and some of them may even cause dam6.age to our health,”可知,并不是所有的榴莲都是能吃的,有些榴莲是不可以吃的。

由此可推断出选C。

(4)考查主旨大意。

文章说榴莲可能是世界上最臭的水果,但没有人知道原因。

新加坡的研究者决定来查明原因。

最后通过绘制的榴莲基因图发现了它难闻气味的原因。

由此可知,本文最好的题目应该是“榴莲难闻之谜”最为适合,故选D。

【点评】本题考点涉及细节理解,,推理判断,词义猜测和主旨大意四个题型的考查,是一篇科普类阅读,要求考生在捕捉细节信息的基础上,进一步根据上下文的逻辑关系,进行分析,推理,概括和归纳,从而选出正确答案。

2.阅读理解
Oh my God, the robots are taking over! We're doomed! Doomed! Now that I've gotten that out of my system, it's become clear that while we may or may not be doomed, the robots are taking over. The latest example is the government's new guidelines for self-driving cars.
Tesla, Google and Uber are already testing driverless cars in cities across America. Uber chief executive Travis Kalanick is among those predicting that by 2021, self-driving cars will play a big part in urban settings.
Nearly 40,000 people died last year in this nation in automobile-related accidents, and we believes driverless cars can save tens of thousands of lives annually.
Makes sense. Robot drivers are less likely to get drunk, drive without a license, text while driving or feel agitated at the scene of a pileup. On the other hand, I wonder how these highly sensitive cars will react, with walkers constantly dashing into the street. Will they jam on the brakes every 10 seconds?
But there's a bigger picture. Not only are robots replacing humans behind the wheel, but behind the work desk, in warehouses, senior homes, you name it. Robots aren't just taking over in the workplace.
The question is, where can't a robot function better than a human? How about writing songs?
A robot can go through every combination of notes in record time and come up with a pleasing melody. The lyrics might be a different story. Is a Grammy-winning song co-written by Hank Human and R-3071 in our future?
Finally, it's only a matter of time until we have robot politicians and presidential candidates. Why not? They can be programmed to be experts in world and domestic affairs and come up with the best solutions without corruption and bad humors.
Actually, it's too bad such technology isn't available in 2016. Pretty sure the robot would win in a landslide.
(1)What does the underlined word “agitated” mean?
A. Tired
B. Cautious
C. Careful
D. Anxious
(2)What doubt does the writer have about self-driving cars?
A. How passengers behave in it.
B. How robot drivers get the license.
C. How they avoid crashing into other car.
D. How they respond to walkers on a busy street.(3)The last questions asked in the sixth paragraph reflects the writer’s ________.
A. confidence in robots, winning Grammy Awards
B. eagerness to listen to songs written by robots
C. doubt about robots’ ability to write songs
D. curiosity about the future Grammy songs (4)What might be the most suitable title for the text?
A. Robots will control the world in every field
B. Robots are coming but not soon enough
C. Robots are being used in our daily life
D. Robots can drive cars and write music
【答案】(1)D
(2)D
(3)A
(4)B
【解析】【分析】本文谈论机器人是否会控制世界的问题。

以无人驾驶汽车为例,谈论无人驾驶的优缺点,以及在其他领域对机器人的应用,最后得出结论,机器人等现代化科学技术全面代替人类只是时间问题。

(1)猜测词义。

根据划线词所在句“Robot drivers are less likely to...at the scene of a pileup.”可知,作者想说的是无人驾驶汽车看到堵车也不会感到焦虑不安。

所以agitated应意为“焦虑的”,相当于 anxious,故选D。

(2)细节理解。

根据第四段中on the other hand, I wonder how these highly sensitive cars will react, with walker constantly dashing into the street.可知,作者担心的是这些无人驾驶的汽车如何对经常冲进马路的行人如何反应,故选 D。

(3)推理判断。

题干询问的是第六段提出的最后一个问题反映了作者的什么看法,根据本段提到的机器人能够创作出优美的旋律可推知,作者是想借此问题说明将来机器人肯定会写出获得格莱美奖的音乐作品,故选A。

(4)主旨大意。

通读全文内容尤其是最后一段中的“it’s too bad such technology isn’t available in 2016”可知,本文作者认为机器人时代来的不够快,B项反映了作者的看法,概括了文章内容。

故选B。

【点评】议论文阅读首先要弄清楚作者要证明什么观点,然后用什么样的论据进行怎样的分析,最后得出了什么样的结论,理清了线索,理解文章就不是问题。

看题时注意确定关键词,然后在文章中定位,找到与选项一致的内容,就可以轻松的确定答案。

3.阅读理解
Since 2013, Torobo, a robotic arm designed to test the limits of artificial intelligence, has had one ambition—to be admitted to the University of Tokyo. However, it has repeatedly failed. This year was no exception.
In early November Torobo took an exam to prepare for an all-important standardized test. While Torobo's total score of 525 out of 950 was 14 points higher than in 2015,its standard score of 57.1% was slightly lower, because human students did better in the 2016 test.
Though the score,which is higher than the national average, is enough to get the robot admitted to many other famous Japanese universities,
it falls short of the minimum required for the University of Tokyo.
A closer analysis of the results showed that Torobo's newly programmed ability to solve complex physics problems helped increase its
year-over-year physics score from 46. 5% to 59%. The robot also dug deep into its database of information from textbooks and websites to obtain
an impressive 66.3% in world history. The average 60% scores acquired in the two math sections, were not too shabby either.
But,while Torobo is able to handle knowledge-based questions and ones involving complex mathematical calculations, it has a hard time thinking independently. As a result, the robot is unable to fully understand multiple sentences and phrases to arrive at the logical conclusions required in the English language tests. This weakness was reflected in the weak oral and writing scores, which came in at 36.2% and 50.5%, respectively.
Fortunately, after four tiring years, the robot's creators have decided to free Torobo from its annual test-taking suffering, the research team will instead focus on improving the robot's ability to pick out specific answers from massive sets of data—a skill that led to its excellent history scores. They believe the expertise(专业技术)will help Torobo succeed as an industrial robot. (1)What is the disadvantage of Torobo?
A. It has much difficulty searching for facts.
B. It doesn't own language skills.
C. It has weak independent thinking ability.
D. It couldn't get through the exams.
(2)What does the underlined word “it” in the third paragraph refer to?
A. the score
B. Torobo
C. the University of Tokyo
D. the national average (3)What did the exam results show?
A. Torobo's score didn't reach the national average.
B. Torobo's programmed ability improved its math score.
C. Torobo was admitted to a university.
D. Torobo did well in the history exam.
(4)What is the text mainly about?
A. Subjects a robot are good at.
B. A robot's performances in exams.
C. Majors that are suitable for a robot.
D. A robot's ways to deal with exams.
【答案】(1)C
(2)A
(3)D
(4)B
【解析】【分析】本文是一篇说明文,主要介绍了一款用来测试人工智能极限的机器人在考试中的表现和它的弊端。

(1)C 细节理解题。

根据文章倒数第二段的前两句内容可知,Torobo的缺点是不擅长独立思考,不能理解复杂的句子。

故选C.
(2)A 词义猜测题。

根据上半句“Though the score,…, is enough to get the robot admitted to many other famous Japanese universities,”可知,前半句从句的主语the score就是主句的主语it所代指的。

故选A.
(3)D 细节理解题。

根据第四段各个学科得分的比较以及最后一段可知,Torobo的历史成绩非常好。

故选D.
(4)B 主旨大意题。

通读全文可知,本文主要介绍了参加考试的机器人在各个学科方面的不同表现。

故选B.
【点评】本文是一篇关于介绍机器人的说明性阅读理解。

主要以细节理解题为主,抓住关键词,理解文章主旨。

其中第二题比较有难度,需要排除其它选项。

主旨题看前面一,二段一般可以透漏出端倪。

4.阅读理解
It's 3 o'clock and you've been hard at work. As you sit at your desk, a strong desire for chocolate overcomes you. You try to busy yourself to make it go away. But it doesn't. Here is another situation. Perhaps you are not feeling well. The only thing you want to eat is a big bowl of chicken soup, like your mom used to make when you were sick as a child. Food cravings are a strong desire for a specific type of food. And they are normal.
Scientists at the website How Stuff Works compare hunger and cravings this way. Hunger is a fairly simple connection between the stomach and the b rain. They even call it simply “stomach hunger.” When our stomachs burn up all of the food we have eaten, a hormone (荷尔蒙) sends a message to one part of the brain for more food, which regulates our most basic body functions such as thirst, hunger and sleep. The brain then produces a chemical to start the appetite and you eat. Hunger is a function of survival.
A craving is more complex. It activates (使活跃) brain areas related to emotion, memory and reward. These are the same areas of the brain activated during drug-craving studies. So, some scientists call food cravings “mind hunger.” People often crave foods that are high in fat and sugar. Foods that are high in fat or high in sugar produce chemicals in the brain. These chemicals give us feelings of pleasure.
In a 2007 study, researchers at Cambridge University found that “dieting or restricted eating generally increases the possibility of food craving.” So, the more you deny yourself a food that you want, the more you may crave it. However, fasting is a bit different. They found that eating
no food at all for a short period of time lessened food cravings.
So, the next time you crave something very specific, know that your brain may be more to blame than your stomach.
(1)What is the function of the first paragraph?
A. To remind readers of their own special food.
B. To deepen the understanding of hunger.
C. To report the discovery of craving study.
D. To lead to the topic of the whole passage.(2)What do we learn about food craving?
A. It shows food is linked to feelings.
B. It ensures a person survives hunger.
C. It means the stomach functions well.
D. It proves the brain decides your appetite.
(3)What's the likely result of dieting?
A. The decrease of chemicals.
B. The increase of food desire.
C. The refusal of fat and sugar.
D. The disappearance of appetite.
(4)What does the passage mainly discuss?
A. The functions of brain areas.
B. What hunger is all about.
C. The findings of food craving.
D. What dieting may bring us.
【答案】(1)D
(2)A
(3)B
(4)C
【解析】【分析】本文是说明文,主要谈论饮食冲动的调查结果。

食物与情感有关系,节食的结果会导致食物欲望的增加。

(1)目的意图题。

根据第一段最后一句Food cravings are a strong desire for a specific type of food. And they are normal.可知,第一段是为了引导整篇文章的话题。

故答案选D。

(2)推理判断题。

根据第三段最后一句Food cravings are a strong desire for a specific type of food. And they are normal.可知,食物与情感有关系。

故答案选A。

(3)推理判断题。

根据倒数第二段第一句In a 2007 study, researchers at Cambridge University found that“dieting or restricted eating generally increases the possibility of food craving.可知,节食的结果会导致食物欲望的增加。

故答案选B。

(4)主旨大意题。

根据最后一段So, the next time you crave something very specific, know that your brain may be more to blame than your stomach.本文主要谈论饮食冲动的调查结果。

故答案选C。

【点评】说明文主题和文章大意的技巧:应对文章主题和中心大意考题时,寻找和发现文章主题句就是关键。

这个主题句一般具有如下特点:①表达的意思比较概括。

②句子结构简单,大多数时候,不采用长句、难句的形式。

③段落的其他句子必定是用来解释或发挥主题句所表达的主题思想的。

④主题句的位置除个别情况下是在文中的句子,大多数情况下,主题句往往是在段首和段尾。

所以,在阅读文章时,要特别注意文章的首段、首句和末句。

5.阅读理解
Parents may think they're smart about where they store medicines, but their kids are smarter.
Nearly 60,000 young children are rushed to the hospital every year after getting into medicines not meant for them, according to a new report from Safe Kids Worldwide.
The report finds little connection between what parents know about storing medicines safely and what they actually do. Nine out of 10 parents know that medicines should be stored up and away out of reach and sight, but 7 out of 10 of them admit not doing that. They leave medicines out on kitchen counters, sinks and sofas, believing babies and toddlers(学步者)aren't tall enough or strong enough to reach them. Unfortunately, they probably can. Children as young as a month have ended up in an emergency department because they'd been poisoned by getting into a medicine that was left within reach.
Most poisonings related to medicines---particularly among babies and toddlers---occur within their home. Kids develop rapidly and they want to explore their environment. At certain ages they have a lot of hand-to-mouth activity, and so it's very common for them to explore their environment and then try to taste what they find.
The new Safe Kids worldwide report includes a survey of 2,000 parents with children under age 6. While the number of children visiting an emergency department for accidental poisonings had declined since the 2010 maximum, the decline has slowed in recent years.
Prescription and over-the-counter medicines cause the most severe poisonings, but vitamins and supplements(补充品)can also cause problems. There are steps families can take to lower the risk for an accidental medicine poisoning.
(1)Why are children poisoned according to the text?
A. Some of the medicines at home taste nice.
B. There is something poisonous in medicines.
C. Kids have easy access to medicines at home..
D. Kids are curious to explore the environment
(2)What can we learn from the text?
A. Vitamins and supplements can do good to kids.
B. The team made a survey of 2,000 kids under age 6.
C. 600 parents surveyed could keep medicines properly.
D. Kids are usually smart at storing medicines at home.
(3)What could be the best title for the text?
A. Parents' Casual Behavior Leads to Kids Poisoned
B. The Number of Kids Poisoned Has Declined Lately
C. Nearly 60,000 Children Are Poisoned by Medicines
D. Kids Are Facing the Risk of Being Poisoned at Home
【答案】(1)C
(2)D
(3)A
【解析】【分析】本文是是一篇说明文,介绍了由于父母存放药品不当导致孩子药物中毒的调查结果。

(1)考查细节理解。

根据第三段中的“ At certain ages they have a lot of hand-to-mouth activity, and so it's very common for them to explore their environment and then try to taste
what they find.”在一定的年龄,他们有很多的手和嘴活动,所以他们很容易去探索他们的环境,然后尝试品尝他们发现的东西在家里,他们很容易碰到药品,故选C。

(2)考查细节理解。

根据第一段中的“Parents may think they're smart about where they store medicines, but their ki ds are smarter. ”父母可能会认为他们很聪明,他们在哪里储存药品,但他们的孩子更聪明。

故选D。

(3)考查主旨大意。

根据倒数第三段中的“Most poisonings related to medicines---particularly among babies and toddlers---occur within their home.”很多中毒事件是发生在家中的,再根据文章大意,故选A。

【点评】本题考点涉及细节理解和主旨大意两个题型的考查,是一篇生活类阅读,要求考生准确掌握细节信息,并根据上下文进行概括和归纳,从而选出正确答案。

6.阅读理解
Have you ever lost your car on a parking lot? It happens. You park and go shopping. When you get back, you have no idea where your car is. It can be discouraging.
You don't need to install (安装) an expensive GPS system to keep track of your car. That's too expensive. You would need to pay a monthly subscription fee just to use it. But is there a way to track your vehicle without spending a fortune? Yes, now there is! A California-based start-up company was able to make this a reality. They created a tiny device (装置)that works with your smartphone, and it could be exactly what you're looking for! It's called TrackR Bravo. It's changing the way we keep track of the important things in our lives.
Install the free TrackR app on your smartphone, connect the app to your device and you're ready to go! Simply attach TrackR to whatever you want to keep an eye on. The entire process of setting it up only takes 5 minutes or less. You can attach it to your keys, wallet and anything else you don't want to lose. Then use the TrackR app to find where your missing item are in seconds. Forget expensive GPS systems or tracking services. Nobody wants to pay expensive monthly subscription fees. We understand how stressful these things can be, and this is the reason why the company created TrackR. This device is your VIP when you need to take care of important things.
If you forget where you park your car, take out your smartphone and open the TrackR app. Tap on the “lost item” sig n on the screen and the app will tell you the exact location. This device is by no means expensive. TrackR only costs $29, a small price to pay for peace of mind. The device is small enough that you can attach it to your pets. Put it on their collar, and you will never lose track of them! Attach it to your key or wallet, and never waste a minute rummaging the whole house for it.
Since you've been informed about this brilliant invention, now attach it to everything that's important to you.
(1)Why does the author mention the lost car in the first Paragraph?
A. To explain how terrible the situation is.
B. To stress the importance of being cautious.
C. To lead to the topic concerning finding lost items.
D. To provide one common example about theft.
(2)What's the feature of the TrackR app?
A. The process of setting up the app is complex.
B. The cost of setting up the app is rather high.
C. The app is available in any electronic equipment.
D. The app helps locate the lost items in a short time.
(3)The TrackR was created because .
A. life is full of all kinds of pressure
B. tracking services cause financial burden
C. people want to keep their important items safe
D. GPS systems can not provide specific location
(4)Which of the following is closest to the meaning of the underlined word "rummaging" in Paragraph 5?
A. Searching
B. Destroying
C. Cleaning
D. Moving
【答案】(1)C
(2)D
(3)B
(4)A
【解析】【分析】本文是一篇说明文,介绍杰出的发明TrackR,它可以帮助你找到丢失的东西。

(1)考查推理判断。

根据第一段中的“Have you ever lost your car on a parking lot? It happens. You park and go shopping. When you get back, you have no idea where your car is. It can be disc ouraging.”可知,提到丢失的汽车是为了寻找丢失物品的话题。

故选C。

(2)考查细节理解。

根据第三段中的“Then use the TrackR app to find where your missing item are in seconds.”可知,这个应用程序可以帮助在短时间内找到丢失的物品。

故选D。

(3)考查细节理解。

根据第四段中的“Forget expensive GPS systems or tracking services. Nobody wants to pay expensive monthly subscription fees. We understand how stressful these things can be, and this is the reason why the company created TrackR.“可知,跟踪服务,造成财政负担。

故选B。

(4)考查词义猜测。

根据倒数第二段中的“The device is small enough that you can attach it to your pets.Put it on their collar, and you will never lose track of them! Attach it to your key or wallet”该装置是足够小,你可以将它附加到你的宠物上。

把它放在他们的项圈上,你从来不会与他们失去联系!把它系在你的钥匙或钱包上。

由此可知,找到它从不浪费一分钟搜查整个房子。

划线词的意思应该是“搜寻”,故选A。

【点评】本题考点涉及细节理解,词义猜测和推理判断三个题型的考查,是一篇科普类阅读,考生需要准确捕捉细节信息,并根据上下文进行逻辑推理,从而选出正确答案。

7.阅读理解
In America, parents tend to encourage their children to develop their potential (潜能) to the fullest extent. Fathers and mothers frequently teach their children both ambition and the confidence necessary to work toward their goals. American parents are always active in concentrating on what their kids can do, not what they can't. As a result, millions of American boys and girls grow up hoping to become actors and athletes, diplomats and doctors. Many of
them even want to become president.
American parents often encourage their children to become involved in extra activities of all types at school, such as student government, sports and music. They believe that only through taking part in these activities can their children become mature young adults.
As we all know, school work is important. But parents should realize that the social skills their children learn from natural conversations with each other are as important as schoolwork and the skills they will need in the future work. What's more important in their work is that their children should have a sound knowledge of physics or the ability to communicate effectively.
As a rule, Chinese parents don't educate their children about the same kind of ambition and confidence as Americans do, nor do they encourage the same level of participation in extra activities. Children are typically advised to study hard and pass exams. They have to spend a lot of time in doing much schoolwork every day. It is a great waste of time to do so.
Now more and more Chinese parents have recognized that they should pay attention to developing the potential of their children. I hope that leaders in Chinese educational circles should take some measures to develop the potential of their children. I am very confident about it.
(1)From the passage, we know the American parents pay much more attention to .
A. the social skills than Chinese parents
B. their children's studying hard and well
C. what their children want but they can't
D. extra activities than schoolwork
(2)According to the passage, Chinese parents .
A. know more than American parents to educate their children
B. owning ambition and confidence is necessary and important
C. pay much more attention to their children's fine future
D. don't encourage their children to participate in extra activities
(3)From the passage, we can infer .
A. American children are brave and adventurous
B. American children are more active in their studies
C. Chinese children have the ability to communicate effectively
D. something should be done to develop the potential of the children in China
(4)What's the writer's attitude towards Chinese education reform?
A. Neutral.
B. Indifferent.
C. Positive.
D. Negative.
【答案】(1)A
(2)D
(3)D
(4)C
【解析】【分析】本文是一篇议论文,比较了中国父母和美国父母不同的教育方式,可喜的是中国父母已经意识到自己的不足,今后将更加注意孩子社交技能的培养。

(1)考查细节理解。

根据第四段中的“As a rule,Chinese parents don't educate their children about the same kind of ambition and confidence as Americans do”,再根据前三段对美国父母对孩子的社交技能的培养推断美国的父母比中国的父母更重视孩子社交技能的培养。

故选A。

(2)考查细节理解。

根据第四段中的“nor do they encourage the same level of participation in extra activities”可知中国的父母不鼓励孩子参与额外的活动。

故选D。

(3)考查推理判断。

根据最后一段中的“Now more and more Chinese parents have recognized that they should pay attention to developing the potential of their children”判断中国应该采取措施开发孩子们的潜能了。

故选D。

(4)考查推理判断。

根据最后一段中的“I hope that leaders in Chinese educational circles should take some measures to develop the potential of their children. I am very confident about it”可推断作者对中国的教育采取的是积极态度。

故选C。

【点评】本题考点涉及细节理解和推理判断两个题型的考查,是一篇教育类阅读,考生需要准确掌握细节信息,并根据上下文进行逻辑推理,从而选出正确答案。

8.阅读理解
Mrs. Jones was my first patient when I started medical school—and I owe her a lot.
She was under my care for the first two years of my medical training, yet I knew very little about her, except that she was thin, perhaps in her mid 70s. It might seem rather negligent not to know the basic facts of my patient ,but I had a valid reason—Mrs. Jones was dead, and had been dead for about three years before I made a patient of her. Mrs. Jones was the dead body that I dissected(解剖)over the first two years of my medical training.
Of course, her name wasn't really Mrs. Jones, but it seemed a little impolite to be conducting research into someone's body without even knowing its name, so out of courtesy, I thought she should have one. “Me and Mrs. Jones, we've got a thing going on,” went the song co ming out of the radio as I unzipped the bag of her on my first day — and so she was christened.
As the months passed, I soon forgot that Mrs. Jones had, in fact, once been alive. One day, though, she suddenly became very human again. I'd been dissecting Mrs. Jones a good 18 months before I got around to the uterus(子宫). After I'd removed it, the professor came up to me, “If you look at the opening carefully, you'll see that the angle indicates that this woman has had several children, probably three.” I stared at it, and I suddenly felt very strange. This woman, who had given me something incredibly precious that I'd begun to take for granted, wasn't a dead body. She was a person, a mother, in fact.
At my graduation, the same professor came over to congratulate me. I explained the story about Mrs. Jones to him, and recalled what he'd told me about her having children and how that had affected me all those years ago.
“Well,” he said, “at the beginning of your training you had a dead body and managed to turn it into a person. Now you're a doctor, the trick is to have a person and not turn them into a dead body,” and he laughed, shook my hand and walked away.
(1)Why didn't the author know much about Mrs. Jones?
A. Because he was irresponsible for his patients.
B. Because he wasn't allowed to ask for her privacy.
C. Because he didn't know her until she passed away.
D. Because he was too careless while dissecting her.
(2)How did Mrs. Jones get her name?
A. It was passed down from the seniors of my school.
B. It came from a song being played when we first met.
C. She was named after a well-known singer I liked best
D. It just occurred to me when I opened the bag of her.
(3)What could be the author's feeling for Mrs. Jones now?
A. Grateful.
B. Pitiless.
C. Hateful.
D. Guilty.
(4)What did the professor imply by his words in the last paragraph?
A. Medical students are able to bring the dead back to life.
B. Being a doctor has nothing to do with the medical training.
C. Good doctors never fail to save their patients from dying.
D. Medical staff ought to have respect for life and humanity.
【答案】(1)C
(2)B
(3)A
(4)D
【解析】【分析】本文是一篇记叙文,作者讲述了和琼斯夫人之间的故事,说明了医务人员应该尊敬生命和人道。

(1)考查推理判断。

根据第二段中的“It might seem rather negligent not to know the basic facts of my patient ,but I had a valid reason—Mrs. Jones was dead, and had been dead for about three years before I made a patient of her.”可知琼斯夫人在去世后,把遗体捐给了医学院,所以在她去世之前,作者并不认识她,故选C。

(2)考查细节理解。

根据第三段中的“‘Me and Mrs. Jones, we've got a thing going on,’ went the song coming out of the radio as I unzipped the bag of her on my first day —and so she was christened.”可知当我们第一次见面的时候,收音机里正在播放一首歌《我和琼斯夫人》,她就这样被命名了,故选B。

(3)考查细节理解。

根据第一段中的“Mrs. Jones was my first patient when I started medical school—and I owe her a lot.”可知现在,我对琼斯夫人充满感激,故选A。

(4)考查推理判断。

根据最后一段中的“he said, ‘at the beginning of your training you had a dead body and managed to turn it into a person. Now you're a doctor, the trick is to have a person and not turn them into a dead body,’ and he laughed, shook my hand and walked away.”可知教授说得这段话的意思是:“在你刚开始训练解剖尸体的时候,你要设法把尸体变成一个人。

现在,你成为一名医生了,窍门就是不要把人变成尸体。

”这名教授说得这些话暗含的意思是医务人员应该尊敬生命和人道,故选D。

【点评】本题考点涉及细节理解和推理判断两个题型的考查,是一篇故事类阅读,考生需要准确掌握细节信息,并根据上下文进行逻辑推理,选出正确答案。

9.阅读理解
The Hunan Satellite TV(HNTV) show "Where are we going, Dad?" is a big hit. Many famous。

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