1 . There’ s no place like home. It’ s the place where we’ re surrounded by our possessions and creature comforts. We purchase things to give our homes a personal touch. And one thing we’re buying more of is houseplants. But are these “living” additions to our homes good for us and the environment?
Houseplants, also known as pot plants, add a natural touch and they have the ability to brighten up a room on a budget. The Royal Horticultural Society found that nearly 72% of adults in the UK had a houseplant in their home, with this figure rising to 80% of 16-24 year olds. A fifth of owners also said they use plants in the home to boost their health and well-being. And average sales last year were up on the previous year.
It seems millennials (千禧代) are driving the growth in the sales of houseplants. More young people are living in flats without a garden. 24-year-old Daisy Hale said “being able to care for something but not having too much commitment—I guess that’s a classic millennial line—is ideal for my lifestyle.”
From hanging baskets, to cacti (仙人掌) and succulent ferns, the choice of vegetation is endless. They are easy to care for, and there have been unproven claims that they improve the air quality in our home. But whatever their benefits, there are now concerns that they might not be so good for the environment. Some are bought online and shipped from overseas. Fay Kenworthy, co-founder of PlantSwap, a community activity that encourages people to trade plants locally, said “this could defeat many local plants.”
But botanist James Wong argues that home delivery has less of an environmental impact than multiple trips to the garden center in a car. Although he’ s not too concerned about the environmental impact, others are worried about the plastic pots they are in and the type of peat (泥炭) that some of them are grown in. However, a sustainable approach to buying them may be the best way forward if we want to introduce some natural greenery into our homes.
1. What is the benefit of a houseplant?A.A houseplant can cure people of many diseases. |
B.A houseplant is ideal for millennials’ career. |
C.A houseplant improve the water quality in our home. |
D.A houseplant can beautify a room with little money. |
A.The choice of vegetation is endless. | B.People should buy local plants. |
C.It’s best to buy plants online. | D.Houseplants are hard to care for. |
A.A fashion magazine. | B.A tour brochure. |
C.A scientific fiction. | D.A history book. |
A.Negative. | B.Neutral. | C.Positive. | D.Not mentioned. |
A.Natural Greenery | B.Millennials’ Choice |
C.Houseplants: Good or Bad? | D.Hanging Baskets or a Garden? |
2 . Why do plants grow in some places and not in others? Why does some land have so much growing on it, while other land has almost no plants growing on it at all?
To grow, plants need several things. One is warmth. In very cold places almost nothing grows. Plants also need water. In very dry parts of the Earth only a few unusual plants can grow. That’s why dry deserts everywhere are almost not covered by trees or grass.
Plants must also have a place in which to put down their roots and grow. They find it difficult to grow on hard land. The town is built on hard land. The plants here have only the soil found between the cracks of the stones to grow in.
Another thing plants must have before they can grow is food.
What will happen if we try to make things grow on the sandy beach? A few plants, such as beach grass, will grow in sand, but most plants won’t. Even if the weather is warm enough and we water the plants each day, many of them will die because the sand on this beach has almost no food for plants.
1. According to the passage, plants need things to grow well.A.two | B.three | C.four | D.five |
A.缝隙 | B.表面 | C.夹层 | D.底部 |
A.there isn’t enough sunlight | B.there is too much water |
C.it is too crowded there | D.it has little food for plants |
A.science | B.history | C.travel | D.math |
3 . In hot countries the woods are not like our woods. They are great dark forests, where the trees grow so closely together, and are so tall, that if you looked up you could hardly see the sky.
Then there are a great many climbing plants, which twist themselves round and round the trunks and branches of the trees. They are called vegetable cables, because they are so much like ropes. They reach from one tree to another, and almost fill up the spaces between. Troops of monkeys run along the vegetable cables from one tree to another, or swing from the branches by their tails, making a noise all the time as if they are talking to each other. When night comes they roll themselves into a ball, gathered together as close as may be, to keep themselves warm.
Dangers of every kind lie in the forest. The poisonous snake may lie coiled among the bushes, or traces of the wild American tiger may be seen upon the path.
Then there are all sorts of wonderful birds, such as we never see in our country, except in cages. Birds, beasts, and insects live there, for the most part, undisturbed. It is their home; and on every side they are at work, hunting their prey, or escaping from danger. For though man seldom wages war upon them, these wild creatures of the forest are engaged in constant warfare with each other; and the weak are always using some plan to protect themselves from the strong.
There are a great many curious things to be seen in these South American forests.
1. Why are the forests in hot countries so dark?A.Because it is cloudy and rainy in the woods. |
B.Because there is no sunshine shinning there. |
C.Because it is night time there all year around. |
D.Because the trees are tall and grow closely together. |
A.Twisting trunks. | B.Vegetable cables. |
C.Rolling ropes. | D.Grape branches. |
A.By their talking. | B.By their running. |
C.By their noises. | D.By their tails. |
A.rolled | B.injured |
C.climbed | D.poisoned |
A.Trees, trunks and branches. | B.Monkeys, snakes and tigers. |
C.Birds, beasts, and insects. | D.Man, fruits and vegetables. |