组卷网 > 高中英语综合库 > 主题 > 人与社会 > 社会 > 犯罪与惩罚
题型:阅读理解-信息匹配 难度:0.85 引用次数:47 题号:13746215
阅读下列应用文及相关信息,并按照要求匹配信息。
首先请阅读下列警方通报查找人员的信息:
NameHeightWeightAgeDetails
AZiggy Nizott1.82 m90kg35Long history of violent crime including robbery, assault and car theft.
BDennis Tsokas1.95 m70 kg28Well known to local police having been arrested several times for pick-pocketing.
CMichael Clarke1.7 m65 kg20Arrested as a youth for car theft and the selling of stolen goods.
DMark Hughes1.6 m60kg29Is wanted by police for several armed robbery of grocery stores, banks and post offices.
EHerb Elliot1.6 m90kg22Recently released from prison where he served 2 years for selling stolen goods.
以下是相关事件及人物的描述,请把描述与相关提示性文字匹配起来。
1. A valuable dog was taken while being walked by its owner in City Park yesterday afternoon. Police wish to talk to a man seen nearby at the time, described by witnesses as short and fat with short light hair and clear glasses.
2. Yesterday morning at 9.30a.m. a man armed with a gun entered the National Bank and demanded money from the staff, before fleeing when confronted by bank security staff. Security cameras show the man as being short and thin with shoulder length blonde hair.
3. A car was stolen from the supermarket carpark on Friday, June 23 this year by a man described as very young, 1.7 metres tall with thin dark hair and carrying a blue backpack. A reward of $500 is offered for the car’s recovery.
【知识点】 犯罪与惩罚

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阅读理解-阅读单选(约290词) | 较易 (0.85)
【推荐1】D
LONDON—Archaeologists have discovered a smaller prehistoric(史前) site near Britain’s famous circle of standing stones at Stonehenge.
Researchers have named the site “Bluehenge” after the color of the 27 Welsh stones that were laid to make up a path. The stones have disappeared, but the path of holes remains.
The new circle, unearthed over the summer by researchers from Sheffield University, represents an important find, researchers said Saturday. The site is about a mile away from Stonehenge.
Bluehenge, about 80 miles southwest of London, is believed to date back to about the time Stonehenge was built, about 5,000 years ago.
Mike Parker Pearson of Sheffield University said he believed the path and stonehenge itself were linked to rituals(仪式) of life and death.
Mike Parker suggested that the ancient funerary rituals began at a different circle site known as “Wood-henge”, which represented the world of the living. The bodies of the dead were then brought down the River Avon to Bluehenge, which represented death, and were finally carried along a ceremonial route known as the Avenue to Stonehenge.
Bournemouth University Professor Tim Darvill, an expert on Stonehenge, told Britain’s Dail Mail that Bluehenge “adds to the richness” of the ancient site’s story.
“This henge is very important because it forms part of the picture of ceremonial monuments in the area and puts Stonehenge into context,” Darvill was quoted(引述) as saying. “It’s no longer Stonehenge standing alone, but it has to be seen in context with the landscape.”
1. How many henges are mentioned in this passage?
A.TwoB.ThreeC.FourD.Five
2. Who believed the Stonehenge is related to ancient ritual of death?
A.Archaeologists from LondonB.Welsh researchers
C.Mike Parker PearsonD.Professor Tim Darvill
3. What does the underlined sentence “It’s no longer Stonehenge standing alone, but it has to be seen in context with the landscape.” in the last paragraph mean?
A.Stonehenge has noting to do with Bluehenge
B.Woodhenge represented the world of living in ancient times.
C.Bluehenge represented death
D.Stonehenge, Woodhenge and Bluehenge should be studied together
4. From the passage we can learn that ______.
A.researchers have named the site “Bluehenge,” because they have found blue huge stones there
B.funerary rituals were carried out along the path starting from Woodhenge, River Avon to Bluehenge, finally Stonehenge.
C.Bluehenge is 1 mile away from London
D.Bluehenge dates back to 2000 BC
2010-04-17更新 | 604次组卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约290词) | 较易 (0.85)

【推荐2】After more than a year of bitter political debate, President Obama sat down in the White House East Room on March 23 and signed the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act into law with a pen,and then another pen,and another. Obama used 22 pens to sign the $938 billion health care bill.

The practice of using different pens to sign important legislation(法规)dates at least as far back as Franklin Roosevelt. The reason is fairly simple. The pen used to sign historic legislation itself becomes a historical artifact. The more pens a President uses, the more thank-you gifts he can offer to those who helped create that piece of history. The White House often give pens to supporters of the newly signed legislation. When Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act in 1964, he reportedly used more than 75 pens and gave one of the first ones to Martin Luther King Jr. And in 1996, President Clinton gave the four pens he used to sign the Line-Item Veto bill to those most likely to appreciate the bill's consequence.

Once they're given away, some pens end up in museums; others are displayed proudly in recipients'(接受者) offices or homes. But they sometimes appear again, like in the 2008 presidential campaign(竞选活动), when John Macain promised to use the same pen given to him by President Reagan to cut pork from the federal budget.

Not every President goes for the multipen signature, however. President George W. Bush preferred signing bills with only one pen and then offering several unused "gift" pens as souvenirs.

1. .We can learn from paragraph 1 that the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act        .
A.has been passed easily
B.was put forward one year ago
C.becomes law in the USA
D.is unimportant
2. How are the pens dealt with after being used by President Obama?
A.Supporters of the newly signed legislation are likely to get some of them.
B.Obama will keep them.
C.They will be just set aside
D.They will be sold to the public at a high price.
3. What can we learn about John Macain?
A.He was ever President in the USA.
B.He took part in the 2008 presidential campaign.
C.He never used the pen given by Reagan.
D.He was only concerned about his own business.
4. What does this passage mainly tell us ?
A.Obama signed the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
B.It is a practice to use multiple pens to sign important legislation in the USA.
C.Pens are necessary in the signature.
D.All the presidents like the multipen signature.
2010-04-26更新 | 562次组卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约310词) | 较易 (0.85)

【推荐3】BUKHANNON, West Virginia—Two rescue teams slowly moved along a two-mile path on Monday night to the site of a coal mine explosion that trapped 13 miners, who had not been heard from since the early morning accident.

Meanwhile, at a nearby church, more than 250 family members and friends gathered, waiting for updates(最新报道)on the rescuers’ progress.

The miners were trapped at about 6:30 and many families weren’t informed of the accident until about 10 a.m-more than three hours after it happened.“It’s very upsetting, but you’ve got to be patient, I guess,” said John Helms, whose brother, Terry, was trapped in the mine.

The trapped miners were about 260 feet underground and about 10,000 feet from the Sago Mine’s entrance, said Roger Nicholson, general counsel from International Coal Group.

At a late night news conference, Nicholson said one team had advanced about 4, 800 feet in the four hours since entering the mine just before 6 p.m.Another team entered the mine about 30 minutes later.

He said the crew was very experienced, with some members having worked underground for 30 to 35 years.The miners were equipped with about one hour of breathable oxygen each.The company has not released the names of the miners.

The teams test the air about every 500 feet, and have to disconnect (remove) the power to the phones they use to communicate with the surface before doing that.“ We don’t want to be energizing anything if it’s in an atmosphere with burnable gases,” Kips said.

The cause of the explosion was not immediately known.High levels of carbon monoxide were discovered shortly after the explosion, which delayed rescue efforts, but those levels have since subsided(减退), authorities said.

1. According to the passage, we can infer that ________.
A.all the miners who were trapped underground were still alive
B.communication with the trapped miners was cut off
C.the two rescue teams entered the mine at the same time
D.the rescue started as soon as the accident happened
2. If the first team advanced at an average speed, they could dig about _______ per hour.
A.1,000 feetB.2,400 feetC.1,200feetD.4,800feet
3. Where can the passage be seen?
A.In a magazine.B.In a newspaper.
C.In a science book..D.On an advertisement.
4. Which of the following shows the position where the miners were trapped?
E:entrance P: position where the miners were trappe
A.
B.
C.
D.
2010-04-10更新 | 356次组卷
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