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文章大意:本文是一篇应用文。文章是关于过期杂志打折出售的广告。

1 . BACK ISSUES

JUNE 2020

Full results of the BBC Music Magazine Awards, plus interviews with all winners. Plus Schubert’s Die schöne Müllerin on your CD.

JULY 2020

An exclusive (独家的) interview with cellist Yo-Yo Ma as he returns to bluegrass, plus Ravel’s ballet Daphnis et Chloé on the cover CD.

AUGUST 2020

A 125th anniversary (周年纪念日) celebration of the people who shaped the Proms, plus Prokofiev’s Symphony No. 5 on the cover CD.


UP TO 30% OFF FOR SUBSCRIBERS (订购者)

1. We’re sorry, but issues of BBC Music published more than 12 months ago are no longer being sold.

2. BBC Music Magazine and CD slipcases (硬盒) are perfect for storing your collection. Subscribers can save up to 30% when ordering both together.

To order call 03330 162 118


BACK ISSUE PRICES
SUBSCRIBERSNON-SUBSCRIBERS
UK — £4.48 per copyUK — £5.60 per copy
Europe — £5.28 per copyEurope — £6.60 per copy
Rest of the world — £6.08 per copyRest of the world — £7.60 per copy
SLIPCASE PRICES
SUBSCRIBERS
LOCATIONMAGAZINE & CD HOLDER Save 30%MAGAZINE HOLDER Save 20%CD HOLDER
Save 20%
UK£11.50£6.80£6.40
Europe£14.00£8.00£7.15
Rest of the world£16.20£9.15£8.75
NON-SUBSCRIBERS
LOCATIONMAGAZINE & CD HOLDERMAGAZINE HOLDERCD HOLDER
UK£16.50£8.50£8.00
Europe£20.02£10.00£9.00
Rest of the world£23.25£11.50£11.00
1. What do we know about the June 2020 issue?
A.It lists those winning the BBC Music Magazine Awards.
B.It is a special issue about an anniversary celebration.
C.It reports an interview with only one musician.
D.It collects the stories of many musicians.
2. What should we notice when buying the issues?
A.Issues published over a year ago are not offered.
B.People must order magazines and CDs together.
C.Only people in the UK can enjoy the low price.
D.All of the issues have 30% off.
3. How much should a European subscriber pay for a magazine holder?
A.£10.00.B.£8.00.
C.£6.80.D.£6.60.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 较易(0.85) |
名校
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了由谷歌支持的名为Local Recall的项目可以通过点击一个按钮或口头提问来访问《东方日报》超过150年的报纸。文章还介绍了项目的运行过程以及面临的问题。

2 . The Eastern Daily Press (EDP), a newspaper covering Nolfolk, northern parts of Suffolk and eastern Cambridge shire, is published daily in Norwich, UK. Founded in 1879 as a broadsheet called the Eastern Counties Daily Press, it changed its name to the Eastern Daily press in 1872. The paper is now owned and published by Archant, formerly known as Eastern Counties Newspapers Group.

Soon, a Google-backed project named Local Recall giving access to over 150 years of Eastern Daily Press newspaper at the click of a button or spoken question will be released. Archant is home to archive that holds tens of thousands of newspapers-with some Norwich Mercury editions dating from as far back as the middle of the 18th century. In 2017, Archant applied to the Google Digital News Innovation Fund to breathe new life into the archive. The company received £600,000 from Google and part-matched the fund to start Local Recall.

The project began in early 2018 and with help from Norwich-based artificial intelligence and chatbot company Ubisend along with specialist historical scanning companies Towns Web Archiving and Findmypast, Local Recall has since digitized an estimated 750,000 pages of EDP newspapers. In the process, more than seven million articles have been uploaded online. The digitization process, while impressive, could not always guarantee exact recreation of the text. Factors such as paper thickness, marks on the page and general wear and tear could make results confusing. It became clear there was a need for human eyes to pick out errors.

Meanwhile, a platform was provided for an army of more than 800 volunteers to help proofread and correct the stories from days gone by. Melanie Duncan, 47, from Helleson, got involved in the project after learning about it through Facebook. “It’s a window of memories into our past that we might have no knowledge of otherwise. The project is an invaluable source of accessible information. I have enjoyed every minute of doing it so far,” she said. Soon, users will be able to explore EDP archives from October 1870 right up to the latest news through a subscription service available on monthly and annual price plan.

1. What can be said about the EDP?
A.It is a regional daily newspaper.B.It has a history of more than 200 years.
C.It belongs to Archant and Findmypast.D.It is more popular in Suffolk and Norfolk
2. What was the challenge in the digitization process?
A.The tight schedule of the project.B.The poor quality of the old paper.
C.A shortage of funds.D.Lack of volunteers.
3. What are expressed in Melanie Duncan’s words?
A.Doubt.B.Emptiness.C.Appreciation.D.Disappointment
4. What does the author mainly tell us in the text?
A.It is convenient to renew a subscription on the Internet.
B.Many archived newspaper are now available online.
C.Archant tries to cooperate with TownsWeb Archiving.
D.Local Recall helps people reconnect with their history
阅读理解-阅读单选(约260词) | 较易(0.85) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要对四本青少年杂志进行了介绍和宣传,包括每本杂志的创刊时间、目标读者、内容简介、发刊频次和网址等信息。

3 . Top Teen Magazines to Follow


Affinity

Affinity is one of the largest teen-ran online magazines in the world, devoted to helping teens get early experience in journalism, learn writing skills and communicate with others. Since its launch in 2013, over 8.5 million people from over 200 countries have benefited from it. It covers topics relating to politics, mental health, entertainment etc.7 posts/week || affinitymagazine. us


TeenZone

First published in 2000, TeenZone is a magazine for the South African teenager. Teens today have voices that we all need to hear. They need to be taken seriously, lo be given the chance to express their views and concerns, to ask questions and receive advice, and in enjoy themselves in a safe environment. TenZone seeks to provide this platform (平台). It is written by teens, for teens.

3 posts/week || teenzonemagazine. co. za


The Teenager Today

Named The Teenager at the beginning, it was founded in 1963 with the purpose of uniting young people in a bond of true friendship, understanding and love. The Teenager Today is India’s only magazine intended for teens. It aims to be Indian teens’ high-quality resource for information, practical advice, and answers to all kinds of questions. What’s more, it comes to you with lots of fun!

5 posts/week||theteenagertoday.com


Teenage

Established in 1988, Teenage is Singapore’s first and number one youth publication, and the guide for young adults who want to know the latest in entertainment news, along with fashion, beauty, music trends and lifestyle tips.

24 posts/year || teenage. com.sg

1. On which magazine can we learn how to write a news report?
A.Teenage.B.Affinity.C.TeenZone.D.The Teenager Today.
2. What does the TeenZone magazine mainly aim to do?
A.Give voice to teens.
B.Improve teens’ life skills.
C.Make teens’ voices heard.
D.Help teens gain friendships.
3. What do we know about The Teenager Today?
A.It was first published in 1988.
B.It is interesting for teens to read.
C.It was called Teenage at the beginning.
D.It is intended for South African teenagers.
2022-02-26更新 | 54次组卷 | 1卷引用:河南省荥阳市2020-2021学年高一上学期期末考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约280词) | 适中(0.65) |
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4 . Four Popular Newspapers in 2021

The Guardian

The Guardian is a British daily newspaper founded on May 5, 1821. It was founded by John Edward Taylor. Its headquarters (总部) is in London, the United Kingdom. It covers daily news from various sections like political news, sports news, business news, jobs and interviews, current affairs, local news, national and international news etc. The Guardian Weekly and The Observer are the sister newspapers of The Guardian.

The Asashi Shimbun

The newspaper is one of the five national newspapers in Japan. This Japan’s oldest and largest daily newspaper was founded on January 25, 1879. Its headquarters is in Tokyo, Japan. It circulates (发行) about 3,000 copies each day. It covers news from various fields like world, sports, business, jobs, current affairs, interviews, breaking news and so on.

The Washington Post

The newspaper, an American daily newspaper, was founded on December 6, 1877. It was founded by Stilson Hutchins. Its headquarters is in Washington, DC, the United States. It is an English newspaper which circulates about 474,000 daily copies while about 830,000 on Sunday. It is the oldest and largest English newspaper in the US that covers news from various fields such as sports, business, jobs, current affairs, politics etc.

China Daily

It is an English-language daily newspaper that was founded on June 1, 1981. Its head-quarters is in Beijing, China. It’s published from Monday to Saturday and its circulation is about 500,000. It is the widest print circulation of any English language newspaper in China. It serves those who are foreigners in China as well as those who wish to improve their English. It covers news from each field like sports, business, jobs, current affairs, politics etc.

1. Which newspaper has the longest history?
A.The Washington Post.B.The Asashi Shimbun.
C.The Guardian.D.China Daily.
2. How many copies does The Washington Post circulate every Sunday?
A.About 3,000.B.About 474,000.C.About 500,000.D.About 830,000.
3. What do the four newspapers have in common?
A.They have sister newspapers.
B.They are daily newspapers.
C.They are published for English learners.
D.They were founded in the 19th century.
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-阅读单选(约500词) | 适中(0.65) |
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5 . A symbol of a booming children’s book market is a self-styled “kaleidoscope (万花筒) of creative genius for kids”, the magazine Scoop, a startup based in Dalston, east London, which the author Neil Gaiman has described as “the kind of magazine I wish we’d had when I was eight.”

Scoop is the idea of the publisher Clementine Macmillan-Scott. A year ago, hers looked like an impossible venture. But against the odds for little magazines, Scoop has survived. Macmillan-Scott said, “I really wasn’t certain we would get to this point, but we are now approaching our first birthday.” She links the magazine’s fortunes to a prosperous market and reports that “through the hundreds of children, parents and teachers we speak to at our workshops, we know that children are greedy for storytelling.”

Inspired by an Edwardian model, Arthur Mee’s Children’s Newspaperr, Scoop is a mix of innovation and creativity. Establishment heavyweights such as the playwright Tom Stoppard, plus children’s writers such as Raymond Briggs, author of Fungus the Bogeyman, have adopted its cause. The magazine has also given space to 10-year-old writers and pays all contributors, high and low, the same rate — 10p a word.

It’s a winning formula. Macmillan-Scott reports “a quarterly sales increase of roughly 150% every issue”, but is cautious about her good fortune. “It’s all too clear to us that these children are hungry for print.”

Scoop focuses on the most profitable part of the children’s market, Britain’s eight to 12-year-old readers. In literary culture, this is the crucial bridge between toddlers (儿童) and adolescents and its publisher knows it. Macmillan-Scott is committed to listening to readers aged eight to 12, who have an editorial board where they can express their ideas about the magazine. “If we don’t get these children reading,” she says, “we will lose out on adult readers. To be fully literate, you have to start as a child.”

Macmillan-Scott argues against the suggestion that reading is in decline. “If you look at our figures,” she objects, “you’ll find that children do read and that Scoop is part of a craze for reading hardback books. Kids love paper and print. They might play games on a digital device, but they prefer not to read on a Kindle. The real market for e-books is among young adult readers.” Some of her evidence is anecdotal, but her sales figures and readership surveys support a picture of eight to 12-year-olds absorbed in books.

“What our research shows beyond question,” she says, “is that children have a love for reading that’s not seriously threatened by other kinds of entertainment. Reading for pleasure is a very real thing at this age, and the worries that some adults have about children losing interest in reading are simply not grounded in reality.”

1. It can be learned from the passage that Scoop ________.
A.is aimed at teenagers in Britain
B.has taken a year to publish its first issue
C.has got its name from Arthur Mee’s newspaper
D.pays as much to young writers as to famous ones
2. The word “anecdotal” (in Para 6) is closet in meaning to ________.
A.conclusiveB.undeniable
C.defensiveD.unconvincing
3. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.Children would rather listen to stories than tell stories by themselves.
B.Magazines for children aged under 8 are not very common in Britain.
C.Scoop illustrates the power of printed books in the face of digital revolution.
D.Research carried out by Scoop has been questioned by those writing for children.
4. Macmillan-Scott is most likely to agree that _______.
A.the market for children’s e-books remains to be explored
B.a child who dislikes reading won’t love reading when grown up
C.other kinds of entertainment have influenced children’s reading habits
D.it is necessary for adults to worry about children’s lack of interest in reading
2021-12-21更新 | 124次组卷 | 4卷引用:上海市静安区2020-2021学年高二上学期期末英语试卷
语法填空-短文语填(约180词) | 适中(0.65) |
名校
6 . 阅读下面材料,在空白处填入一个适当的单词或所给单词的正确形式。

China Daily,     1     (establish) in 1981 as the national English-language newspaper, has developed into a multi-function information platform combining newspapers, websites and apps with a strong     2     (present) on Facebook, Twitter, Sina Weibo and WeChat. It is to its credit     3     it serves more than 200 million readers all over the world and is a preferred choice for people who read about China in English. The news reaches an audience readership     4     (far) than China. The group plays an important role as a channel for information exchanges     5       China and the rest of the world. China Daily cooperates with     6     (lead)global news organizations to publish China Watch,     7       supplement(补充) published as an insert in major newspapers in more than 20 countries including The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal The Sydney Morning Herald, The Daily Telegraph etc. With a combined readership of more than 5 million, China Watch     8     (publish) in English, French, German, Japanese, Russian, Spanish and Portuguese in the last five years. Popular as it is, China Daily is still serving     9     an Asia News Network member by sharing and exchanging stories and staff with mainstream     10     (medium)in other parts of the world.

2021-11-23更新 | 62次组卷 | 1卷引用:湖南省临澧县第一中学2021-2022学年高二上学期11月段考英语试题
21-22高一上·上海·期中
阅读理解-六选四(约260词) | 适中(0.65) |
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7 . Richard and Judy's book club has transformed sales figures for dozens of novels, and turned modest publishing successes into triumphs. And now the husband and wife team have turned literary talent spotters too, with competition for potential authors that could make a star of a grandmother and doctor from Bournemouth.

    1     She beat more than 4,000 other viewers who were asked to submit a summary and the first chapter to the show's Hot to Get Published contest. Her manuscript temporarily entitled The Olive Renders, was described as a love story of courage and saving from sin told by a young woman who writes from a dystopian(反面乌托邦的)future. Ms. Aziz said winning gave her “the luxury of having time to finish writing my novel” without worrying about money. Ms. Aziz, who was born in Yorkshire, has worked as a shop assistant, dental receptionist, factory packer, singer and cleaner, but her only experience of writing was as a news reporter for three years.     2    

    3     It comprised Joseph O'Connor, whose book Star of the Sea increased rapidly in sales after crazy reviews on Richard and Judy, Amanda Ross, the head of the television company which makes the show, and Maria Rejt, publishing director for Pan Macmillan, which will publish the winning story.

In a surprise move, Pan Macmillan also offered the three runners-up the chances to be published,with advances of E 20,000 each: Alison Penton Harper, 40, a mother of two from Northamptonshire; Rachel Zadok te Riele, 33, from South Africa, a waitress who lives in south London; David Fidimore, 60, who is married with two children and has with two unpublished novels and numerous short storied.     4    

A.Christine Aziz, 52, who left school at 15 with a single O-level in English, on the Channel 4 show's competition and will receive a 50,000 advance for her first novel.
B.The Channel 4 show's competition was funded by the publishing company Pan Macmillan.
C.Ms. Aziz said the money would be enough to support the rest of her life
D.Five aspiring authors made it on to the shortlist for judging by a panel.
E.She did not like the pressure of journalism, but now she must complete the work and prepare herself for sales and marketing treatment usually reserved for bestselling authors.
F.Ms. Rejt said the shortlist reflected “an extraordinary range of talent from the extremely commercial to the beautifully literary”.
2021-11-18更新 | 115次组卷 | 2卷引用:上海市华东师范大学第二附属中学2021-2022学年高一上学期中考试英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约290词) | 适中(0.65) |

8 . Bien-dire Initial, Tuttolialiano and Puntoy Coma, separately from France, Spain and Italy, are published six times a year. They are fill of lively and original articles and in-depth interviews in French, Spanish or Italian to give you the inside track on French, Spanish of Italian culture. Key words and phrases are explained in English on the facing page. The articles, in turn, are narrated on the accompanying 60-minute audio CD to enable you to improve your listening comprehension and understand French, Spanish or Italian. In addition, every feature is graded for difficulty so that you can assess your progress with each issue.

For French speakers, Bien-dire Initial will take you from a beginner to an intermediate level and is published on alternate months so that they can be taken together to form a truly comprehensive French learning programme.

If you now want to be able to speak like a native, a subscription to Bien-dire Initial, TuttoItaliano and Puntoy Coma will inspire, motivate and help you to achieve fluency.

Key Benefits

·Speak French, Spanish or Italian with confidence by learning the language as it's really spoken

·Improve your vocabulary and listening comprehension

·Improve your knowledge of French, Spanish or Italian culture

·Take advantage of on-going, portable and flexible learning

·Acquire lively, relevant and up-to-date authentic content

Subscribe Today to either Bien-dire Initial, Tuttoltaliano or Puntoy Coma for a year for just £89(normal price £99) and you will receive an extra issue, worth over £16 For Free, and a Free electronic dictionary bookmark worth £24.99-a combined saving of £51!

Order Today By calling

0800 141 2210

Outside the UK call

+44 117 927 2236

Or order by visiting our website:

www.Languages-direct.com/BHTV17

1. What is special about Bien-dire Initial, Tuttoltaliano and Puntoy Coma?
A.They come out every month.B.They include one-hour audio CDs.
C.They have English editions.D.They feature some writing skills.
2. How much should you pay if you subscribe to Puntoy Coma for a year today?
A.£51.B.£73.C.£89.D.£105.
3. What is the purpose of the text?
A.To advertise some magazines.B.To introduce some learning methods.
C.To explain some cultural differences.D.To recommend some language agencies.
2021-11-12更新 | 47次组卷 | 1卷引用:江苏省南京市2021-2022学年高二上学期期中考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 较易(0.85) |
名校

9 . Are newspapers dying? Many say the disappearance of the daily paper is just a matter of time. Now newspaper circulation is dropping, ad income is drying up, and the industry has experienced a great wave of layoffs (裁员) in recent years. A third of the large newsrooms across the United States had layoffs between 2017 and April 2018 alone. So these people say the Internet is just a better place to get news. “On the web, newspapers are live, and they can enrich their coverage with audio, video, and the invaluable resources of their vast archives (档案),” said Jeffrey I. Cole, director of USC’s Digital Future Center. “For the first time in 60 years, newspapers are back in the breaking news business, except now their delivery method is electronic and not paper.”

Yes, newspapers are facing tough times, and the Internet can offer many things papers can’t. However, newspapers are still here, and many of them remain profitable. Rick Edmonds, a media business analyst for the Poynter Institute, says the widespread newspaper industry layoffs of the last decade should make papers more survivable. “Many newspapers are operating more leanly (精简地) now,” Edmonds said. “The business will be smaller, but there should be enough profit there to make a sustainable business for years to come.”

Those who claim the future of news is online ignore one important point: Online ad income alone just isn’t enough to support most news companies. Thus, online news sites will need a new business model to survive. One possibility may be paywalls, meaning people have to pay for content. The 2013 Pew Research Center media report found that paywalls had been adopted at 450 of the country’s 1,380 dailies.

Until someone figures out how to make online-only news sites profitable, newspapers aren’t going anywhere. Despite the occasional scandal (丑闻) at print institutions, they remain trusted sources of information people turn to.

1. Why are newspapers still there?
A.Many newspapers report more scandals.
B.Newspapers have applied new marketing methods.
C.Many newspaper companies simplified their operation.
D.Newspapers enrich their coverage with audio and video.
2. How can online news sites make more profits to support them?
A.By charging their readers.B.By featuring the online advertisements.
C.By releasing more shocking news.D.By cooperating with local printed newspapers.
3. What can be inferred from the last paragraph?
A.Newspapers won’t exist.B.Newspapers won’t be dead.
C.Newspapers won’t be trusted.D.Newspapers won’t be reduced.
4. What does the text mainly talk about?
A.The future of newspapers.
B.Advantages and disadvantages of newspapers.
C.The meaning of the existence of printed newspapers.
D.The comparisons between newspapers and online news.
2021-11-02更新 | 62次组卷 | 1卷引用:河南省范县第一中学2021-2022学年高二上学期第二次月考检测英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约480词) | 较易(0.85) |
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10 . Look around on your next plane trip. The iPad is the new pacifier (安抚奶嘴) for babies and toddlers.School-aged children read stories on smartphones. Their parents read on Kindles or skim a long list of email and news feeds. An invisible, game-changing transformation links everyone in this picture:the neuronal circuit(神经元回路)that underlies(成为···的基础)the brain's ability to read is rapidly changing.Our important “deep reading" processes may be under threat as we move further into the new digital-based ways of reading.

We know from research that the reading circuit is not given to human beings through a genetic blueprint like' it is with vision or language; it needs an environment to develop. Further,it will adapt to that environment's requirements. If the environment advantages the reading processes that are fast, multi-task oriented(以···为方向的) and well-suited for large amounts of information,like the current digital-based reading, so will the reading circuit. As a result, less attention and time will be allocated to slower,time-demanding deep reading processes.

Increasing reports from educators and researchers in psychology and the humanities bear this out. English literature scholar and teacher Mark Edmundson describes how many college students actively avoid the classic literature of the 19th and 20th centuries because they no longer have the patience to read longer, denser, more difficult texts. We should be less concerned with students' "cognitive impatience", however than by what may underlie it: the potential inability of large numbers of students to read with a level of critical analysis enough to comprehend the complexity of thought and argument found in more demanding texts.

Ziming Liu from San Jose State University has conducted a series of studies which indicate that the “new norm" in reading is skimming. Many readers now use an F or Z pattern when reading in which they sample the first line and then word-spot through the rest of the text. When the reading brain skims like this, it doesn't have time to grasp complexity, to understand others' feelings, to be aware of beauty, and to create thoughts of the reader's own.

Karin Littau and Andrew Piper have noted another aspect: physicality. They stress that the sense of touch in print reading adds an important part to information - a kind of“geometry(几何结构)”to words, and a kind of spatial "'thereness" for text. As Piper notes, human beings need a knowledge of where they are in time and space that allows them to return to things and learn from re-examination-what he calls the “technology of recurrence (再现)".The importance of recurrence for both young and older readers involves the ability to go back,to check and evaluate one's understanding of a text. The question, then, is what happens to comprehension when our youth skim on a screen whose lack of spatial thereness discourages “looking back".

1. What is Paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.What affects people's neuronal circuits.
B.Why deep reading is important to people.
C.Why people now prefer digital reading.
D.What will happen to our brain when we read.
2. What does the author want to stress about the college students?
A.Their lack of attentiveness.
B.Their lack of reading techniques.
C.Their inability to understand the complexity.
D.Their ignorance of various forms of literature.
3. According to Paragraph 4,the F or Z pattern
A.affects the way people skim
B.encourages people to read more
C.becomes popular among the youth
D.limits people's thinking development
4. What can we learn from the last paragraph?
A.Reading physical books helps us comprehend a text better.
B.Techniques should be suited for different reading materials.
C.A reading space can help us be more attentive.
D.It is important to use all senses to learn.
共计 平均难度:一般