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题型:阅读理解-阅读单选 难度:0.85 引用次数:95 题号:6657525

A great woman once said, “Women must try to do things as men have tried. When they fail, their failure must be a challenge to others. “These are the words of US pilot Amelia Earhart(1897- 1937), a pioneer in aviation(航空领域), who was the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean

Her story ended in mystery when she disappeared without a trace(踪迹)during a flight over the Pacific Ocean. Theories about what happened to Earhart were proposed, but nothing was ever confirmed—until now. A study published in March conducted by Richard Jantz from the University of Tennessee, US, determined that bones found in 1940 on a remote Pacific island belonged to Earhart. Following the discovery, the world’s memories of the legendary female pilot were brought back to life.

Earhart was born in 1897. When she was young, she was very interested in stories about women who were successful in male-dominated(男性为主的)professions, such as engineering and law. But in 1920, Earhart’s life changed after her first experience of being a plane passenger. As soon as the plane left the ground, Earhart knew that she loved flying, so she found herself a teacher and started to learn how to fly for herself. To pay for the lessons and buy a plane of her own, she took all sorts of jobs.

Inl932, Earhart flew solo(独自地)across the Atlantic, becoming the first woman ever to do so. She also designed a flying suit for women and went on to design other clothes for women who led active lives. When she was nearly 40, Earhart was ready for a final challenge—to be the first woman to fly around the world. Her first attempt was unsuccessful but she tried again in 1937 with her navigator(领航员)Fred Noonan. But one month later, they disappeared in bad weather in mid-flight.

Even though it’s still not clear how she ended up on the island, we’re one step closer to finding the answer. And no matter what, Earhart will be forever remembered as a brave pioneer, both as a pilot and as a woman.

1. When did Earhart first fly across the Atlantic Ocean alone?
A.In 1920.B.In 1932.
C.In 1937.D.In 1940.
2. What started Earhart’s interest in flying?
A.Her parent’s influence.B.Her teachers’ encouragement.
C.Her first experience as a passenger.D.Her childhood love for engineering.
3. Which of the following words best describes Earhart?
A.Open-minded and patient.B.Creative and helpful.
C.Talented and outgoing.D.Pioneering and determined.
4. What’s the article mainly about?
A.The discovery of Earhart’s bones.
B.What made Earhart a great pilot.
C.The inspiring life story of Earhart
D.Some possible causes of Earhart’s death.
【知识点】 记叙文 其他著名人物

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【推荐1】Katherine Johnson whose life was described in the movie Hidden Figures died on February 24, 2020, aged 101. The 2016 movie describes a real story of some female African-American mathematicians who joined the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and led a mission to put the first man on the moon in the 1950s when racial discrimination (种族歧视) was widespread.

“NASA is deeply saddened by the loss of a leader from our pioneering days,” said NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine on the webpage of NASA. “Ms. Johnson helped our nation push the boundaries of space and she also played an important role in opening doors for women and people of color to explore space. At NASA we will never forget her courage and leadership and the achievements we could not have reached without her.”

Johnson was born in West Virginia in 1918. She graduated from West Virginia State University with a major in mathematics and became a teacher at a public school. She was also the first African-American woman to attend graduate school in mathematics at West Virginia University until she left school to focus on raising children.

Her life changed in 1952 after a long career break. A relative told her about open positions at the all-black West Area Computing section at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics’s Langley laboratory, and she began to work for the aerospace (航空航天) industry at Langley the next year. NASA depended on humans for complicated aerospace calculation as there was no high-functioning electronic computer. Female mathematicians usually took the job as their salary was lower. Johnson was one of those African-American human computers.

Johnson was initially in charge of aerospace analysis and then a space development mission when NASA was launched in 1958. Then she worked for the 1961 suborbital (亚轨道的) flight of astronaut Alan Shepard. Johnson continued to participate in missions after she retired in 1986. Her hidden achievements were finally publicized when Barack Obama awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015 and her dramatic life was made into a movie.

1. What did Bridenstine’s words in the second paragraph mainly want to tell us?
A.To show NASA’s appreciation for Johnson’s leadership.
B.To express all Americans’ regret over Johnson’s death.
C.To show Johnson’s contributions to space exploration.
D.To emphasize NASA’s achievements in space exploration.
2. Why did NASA depend on humans for complex aerospace calculation?
A.It was cheaper to hire humans.
B.The computers at that time weren’t advanced enough.
C.It couldn’t afford to buy electronic computers.
D.Humans were more accurate than computers in calculation.
3. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.Johnson worked for the aerospace industry for at least 33 years.
B.Johnson used to work in a private school.
C.Johnson starred in the movie Hidden Figures.
D.Johnson was the first woman to attend graduate school in the United States.
4. What is the author’s intention in writing this passage?
A.To promote Hidden Figures.
B.To highlight the greatness of women.
C.To tell readers achievements made by NASA.
D.To honor the great mathematician Katherine Johnson.
2021-12-04更新 | 123次组卷
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【推荐2】One determined student stepped off the traditional job for blind people in China, and now challenges a new life at university in Britain. Being a massage therapist(按摩师) is a perfect job for many people with a visual disability, but for Zheng Jianwei, it was far from enough.

The 30-year-old former massage therapist gave up his hospital job in 2009 to prepare for admission to graduate school. He took IELTS(雅思考试), the language-fluency test necessary for university admission in the UK, in 2012 and scored 6.5 points. He was the first blind examinee to take the IELTS in the Southeast Chinese region. After about four years’struggle, Zheng successfully gained an offer from the University of Essex in the United Kingdom and became a graduate student.

However, Zheng’s path to graduate school was not easy. “I can’t take China’s national entrance exam for graduate school, which doesn’t provide study material(材料) for blind students,” he says.

He then turned to search for graduate school overseas. However, English became his nightmare. Zheng studied in special schools for visually challenged students since primary school, but foreign language was never a main subject.

Before giving up his job and learning English again in 2009, Zheng only knew the alphabet, a few words and some basic expressions. “Learning English again in my late 20s is not easy,” he says.

It took him three years of intensive study to gain entrance to a graduate school overseas. Because of the lack of study material, Zheng needs to spend hours and days looking for textbooks for the visually disabled and copying them, while it may take only five minutes for a sighted person to order a plain English textbook from Amazon.

In his parents’eyes, Zheng has been a sensible, independent and decisive man from a young age. Zheng made all the major decisions by himself, including studying abroad and choosing majors. “We just follow his decisions,” the mother says.

1. According to the first paragraph, a blind person in China is likely to ________.
A.go abroad for graduate schoolB.work as a massage therapist
C.be far from pleased with lifeD.enjoy a perfect job
2. It can be learned from the passage that the blind students in China ________.
A.can’t take the national entrance exam to college
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C.can never learn a foreign language well
D.can’t afford the English textbooks for an national entrance exam
3. Which of the following can match Zheng Jianwei’s story?
A.All mankind is created equal.
B.Many hands make light work.
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D.Nothing is impossible when mind is set.
4. It can be inferred from the passage that Zheng’s ________.
A.parents have to follow any of his decisions
B.parents don’t understand or care about him
C.visual disability meant a hopeless damage to him
D.mind is healthy though physical disabled
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【推荐3】Editors of newspapers and magazines often go to extremes to provide their reader with unimportant facts and statistics. Last year a journalist had been instructed by a well-known magazine to write an article on the president’s palace in a new African republic. When the article arrived, the editor read the first sentence and then refuse to publish it. The article began: “Hundreds of steps lead to the high wall which surrounds the president’s palace”. The editor at once sent the journalist a fax instructing him to find out the exact number of steps and the height of the wall.

The journalist immediately set out to obtain these important facts, but the took a long time to send them. Meanwhile, the editor was getting impatient, for the magazine would soon go to press. He sent the journalist two more faxes, but received no reply. He sent yet another fax informing the journalist that if he did not reply soon he would be fired. When the journalist again failed to reply, the editor reluctantly published the article as it had originally been written. A week later, the editor at last received a fax from the journalist. Not only had the poor man been arrested, but he had been sent to prison as well. However, he had at last been allowed to send a fax in which he informed the editor that the he had been arrested while counting the 1,084 steps leading to the fifteen-foot wall which surrounded the president’s palace.

1. Why did the editor act as he did?
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D.Because he wanted to please the president of the new African republic.
2. Why did the journalist take a long time to send the details required?
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D.Because he had been arrested before he had had time to obtain the facts.
3. Why had the journalist been arrested?
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D.Because the article was published in its original form.
2024-01-02更新 | 22次组卷
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