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阅读理解-阅读单选(约310词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要围绕垂直农业这一新兴农业形式进行了深入的探讨,介绍了其背景、特点、市场价值,以及当前面临的挑战,特别是能源成本上升对其造成的影响。

1 . Why do farmers grow crops outside in fields when we can arrange them vertically (垂直地)? The idea of vertical farming was first proposed in 1999. It was seen as a way to save space, reduce air miles and transform old and abandoned buildings, like warehouses. In 2021, Fortune Business Insights valued the global vertical farming market at 3.47 billion dollars. Now, however, this industry is under threat, partly due to rising energy costs.

According to the magazine Science Focus, vertical farming gives ten times the yield (产量) of conventional outdoor farming. However, in order for crops to grow using this method, plants are placed in a controlled environment, grown not under the Sun, but under LED lights and watered with recycled water pumped on a closed-loop system (闭环系统).

Unfortunately, energy prices have risen across the globe. Therefore, this reliance on electricity has meant the last few years have not been easy for the industry. Cindy van Rijswick, from the Dutch research firm RaboResearch, has estimated that operational costs for a vertical farm are around 15% higher now compared to 18 months ago. Infarm, Europe’s largest vertical farming company, made around500 employees redundant (被裁员的) in November 2022 because they needed to downsize. They blamed higher operating costs due to energy increases as one reason for the layoffs.

Another issue related to the cost-of -living crisis and affecting vertical farming is the type of produce grown. This includes herbs such as basil, as well as salad leaves and leafy greens. Compared to traditionally farmed plants, like onions and carrots, these products tend to be more expensive, which could lead to reduced demand as consumers become more cautious about their spending.

So, it seems that a future with food grown under LED lights is looking less and less bright.

1. What is the feature of vertical farming?
A.Saving urban land and achieving zero emissions.
B.Demanding highly technical and complex control.
C.High energy consumption and low output value.
D.Making full use of sunlight and water resources.
2. How does the author develop his idea in Paragraph 3?
A.By making assumptions.
B.By criticizing a typical behaviour.
C.By listing specific data and facts.
D.By referring to a social phenomenon.
3. What can we infer from the text?
A.Vertical farming avoids climate and disaster impacts.
B.Vertical farming costs jumped due to higher energy prices.
C.Vertical farming grows high-value, cost-effective produce.
D.High yield protects vertical farming from market competition.
4. Which of the following is the best title for the text?
A.Is This the End of Vertical Farming?B.Is Vertical Farming Highly Efficient?
C.Challenges Industrial Agriculture FacesD.New Trends in Vertical Agriculture
阅读理解-阅读单选(约320词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是新闻报道。文章报道了夏威夷州正在考虑立法,要求游客支付费用以访问州立公园的新闻。

2 . Hawaii lawmakers are considering legislation (立法) that would require visitors to pay for a year-long license or pass to visit state parks. Josh Green is the state’s governor. He said, “We get between 9 and 10 million visitors a year, but we only have 1.4 million people living here.” He added, “Those 10 million travellers should be helping us sustain our environment.” Lawmakers still debating how much they would charge.

The governor campaigned in 2022 on the idea of having all tourists pay a $50 fee to enter the state. Legislators think this would violate US constitutional protections for free travel. They instead think visitors should pay to enter parks and trails. Either policy would be a first of its kind for any US state. Hawaii’s leaders are following the example of other popular tourist areas with similar fees or taxes. They include Venice, Italy, and Ecuador’s Galapagos Islands.

Hawaii State Representative Sean Quinlan is the leader of the House Tourism Committee. He said changes in the activities of travellers are part of Hawaii’s push. He said golf rounds per visitor per day have dropped 30 percent over the past 10 years while hiking has increased50 percent. People are also seeking out isolated places they have seen on social media. The state does not have the money to oversee and protect all these places, he said.

Most state parks and trails are currently free. Some of the most popular ones already charge, like Diamond Head State Monument. That trail leads hikers from the floor of a 300,000-year-old volcano up to the top. It gets 1 million visitors each year and costs $5for each traveller.

A bill currently before the legislature would require visitors over the age of 15to buy a yearly pass to visit forests, parks, trails or “other natural area on state land”. People who live in Hawaii would not need to pay.

1. What does the underlined word “violate” mean in Paragraph 2?
A.Break.B.Establish.C.Uphold.D.Perfect.
2. What is Paragraph 3 mainly about?
A.The decreasing number of tourists to Hawaii.
B.Advantages of Hawaii’s tourism resources.
C.The increasing financial burden of Hawaii.
D.One reason for wanting to charge tourists.
3. What can be concluded from the text?
A.None of the attractions in Hawaii charge fees currently.
B.The goal to charge fees is to limit the number of tourists.
C.Lawmakers are arguing about whether charging fees is legal.
D.Charging fees is beneficial for Hawaii’s natural environment.
4. What is the text?
A.A news report.B.A travel guide.
C.A law textbook.D.A promotional brochure.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍了紧迫感文化,分析了它对身心的伤害,并就如何避免紧迫感陷阱提出了建议。

3 . In an increasingly fast-paced world that rewards immediacy, urgency culture makes it hard to tell what is truly important and what is not. At work, this could involve handling frequent last- minute requests, unrealistic deadlines, and the expectation to be reachable even after hours. In personal life, behaviour patterns of urgency culture include overextending in relationships, frequently checking social media updates out of fear of missing out, and responding immediately to calls and texts, even when it’s inconvenient.

The constant rush to be “always on” professionally and personally can create stress. Being part of the “always on” culture often involves multitasking. However, research shows every time we multitask, it actually slows the brain down and may reduce productivity by up to 40 percent. Meanwhile, constant overstimulation - a significant contributor to urgency culture- will debilitate your dopamine (多巴胺) system. In short, the more overstimulated you are, the less joy you can feel. Over time, urgency culture can also be harmful to physical health. A false sense of urgency tricks the body into reacting as if it’ s in a threatening situation, activating the “fight-or- flight” response. Your breathing becomes faster, your blood pressure and heart rate go up, and you lose the ability to regulate emotions, and an overactive fight-or-fight response contributes to high blood pressure, poor quality of sleep and eating disorders.

To avoid the urgency trap, experts recommend pausing for a few moments before leaping into action every time something comes up. It allows you to step back and assess whether this demand for your attention is in line with your priorities. Setting clear expectations in personal and professional relationships can also help plan, prioritize and problem-solve without causing false urgency. The best thing you can do to deal with urgency culture is to regularly engage in activities that remind you there is no rush.

1. Which of the following can be described as “urgency culture” according to paragraph 1?
A.Focusing on important matters.B.Finishing work before deadline.
C.Giving everything high priority.D.Maintaining useful relationships.
2. How does multitasking influence people according to the author?
A.It contributes to their work efficiency.
B.They may feel under constant pressure.
C.It helps to slow down their working pace.
D.Their sense of achievement will decrease.
3. What does the underlined word “debilitate” in paragraph 2 probably mean?
A.Weaken.B.Balance.C.Activate.D.Divide.
4. Which of the following can be the best title of the text?
A.The Power of Rush: The Secret to Modern Success
B.Stay Well-connected: The New Path to Personal Productivity
C.No Pressure, No Growth: Boosting Yourself in Urgency Culture
D.More Haste, Less Speed: Breaking Free From the “Always-on” Trap
2024-05-27更新 | 43次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届山西省太原市高三下学期三模考试英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。每年春天,尤其是复活节,许多人都会冲动地买小鸭子作为礼物,通常是送给孩子的。但几个月后,动物救援人员经常看到当地公园和池塘里被遗弃的鸭子。文章主要介绍了一项旨在保护宠物鸭的运动。

4 . On Christmas Eve, two little ducks were found frozen on a pond in Smithville, Ohio. They flapped their wings, fruitlessly struggling to free themselves on the ice until two locals spotted them and helped set the animals free. The two ducks were later named Olaf and Elsa, characters from Disney’s Frozen, and sent to an animal rescue organization.

“Every year in springtime, particularly at Easter, many people buy ducklings on impulse as gifts, often for their kids. People associate baby animals like ducklings, chicks, and bunnies with springtime,” says John Di Leonardo, an anthrozoologist. “But months later, animal rescuers routinely see a rise in abandoned ducks in local parks and ponds.”

Elsa and Olaf’s tough situation highlights the reason why domestic ducks always show up in local parks and ponds. Assuming they can live, their case is pretty similar to going to Yellowstone National Park and seeing a wolf and such like. “Oh, if this wolf can live well, my dog can do too,” says Adison Smith, president of Wasatch Wanderers Animal Rescue. “Those ducks lack hunting instincts, and many quickly starve to death or fall sick. A majority cannot fly because of small wings. They don’t migrate, so they can’t survive winter. They’re literally sitting ducks for predators (捕食者),” John Di Leonardo adds.

Since the issue is largely due to a lack of awareness, Adison Smith has started a campaign and hung more than 50 signs in a dozen cities to remind parkgoers that getting rid of pet ducks tends to be disastrous to them and can be illegal by the state law, “Our goal is to get the problem at its source,” Adison says. Most people tend to buy ducklings at stores for less than a dollar each, or kids take them home from school hatching projects.

“Though most abandoned ducks live short, miserable lives, Olaf and Elsa are an exception — they’ll spend their remaining days at Lasa Sanctuary in Wooster, Ohio, in a shelter with other ducks, clean hay, and protection against predators,” John Di Leonardo says.

1. Why did Olaf and Elsa appear on a frozen pond on Christmas Eve?
A.They starred in the film Frozen.B.They practised their hunting skills.
C.They escaped from an animal shelter.D.They were abandoned by their master.
2. What does John mean by his words in Paragraph 3?
A.Animals share a lot in living habits.B.Pet ducks are less adaptable in the wild.
C.Yellowstone is a great place for wildlife.D.Animals can get along well with each other.
3. What is Adison’s campaign aimed at?
A.Increasing the selling prices of ducks.
B.Reminding people to save our resources.
C.Educating people about the animal protection.
D.Appealing for the establishment of new animal laws.
4. What does John Di Leonardo think of the present life of Olaf and Elsa?
A.Dangerous.B.Easeful.C.Restricted.D.Exhausted.
2024-05-27更新 | 26次组卷 | 1卷引用:山西省太原市第五中学2023-2024学年高二下学期5月月考英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是议论文。文章主要讨论了古典音乐的应用场景和价值,以及对于将古典音乐用作背景音乐的不同观点。

5 . Pullman is a superb writer and Seagull is a brilliant communicator. They had a debate after Seagull posted a question on his social media platform: “When you were trying to create an environment for learning, what were your best pieces of classical music to listen to?” He received hundreds of suggestions — and one negative reply, from Pullman: “That’s not what classical music is for. Treat it with respect.”

That did it! Everyone — professional musicians, students, teachers — weighed into the argument, and the majority supported Seagull and were criticizing Pullman.

It’s easy to see why people are annoyed. We all want classical music to be as accessible as possible, especially to the young. If some of them are using Bach or Schubert as a tool to help them study, what’s the problem? They may also develop an attachment to classical music.

So is Pullman ridiculous and supercilious by objecting to classical music being used as background music? At first sight, his idea seems stuffy and extreme. By suggesting that classical music should be “treated with respect” and not used as background music, Pullman seems to be closing classical music of to millions of people.

It’s worth pointing out, however, that he isn’t the first to express concerns about classical music being devalued by becoming too commonplace in today’s technologically shaped world. In Benjamin Britten’s 1964 speech, the composer expressed exactly the same worries as Pullman. Britten suggested, “The true musical experience demands some preparation, some effort, a journey to a special place, saving up for a ticket, some homework perhaps”. In short, it demands as much effort from listeners as from composers and performers.

I don’t agree with such an extreme viewpoint, but I do think it touches on a reality. You will never fully grasp the beauty of classical music if you half-hear it only in the background. That doesn’t necessarily matter. Music can be enjoyed on many levels. What Pullman and Britten are really saying is that, in a drive for “accessibility”, we shouldn’t deny the emotional and intellectual complexity underpinning (构成) much classical music.

1. What did Seagull’s posting result in?
A.Great admiration for Seagull.
B.Public criticism of classical music.
C.A discussion about learning environments.
D.An argument over the role of classical music.
2. What does the underlined word “supercilious” in paragraph 4 probably mean?
A.Self-important.B.Open-minded.C.Impatient.D.Considerate.
3. Why is the Benjamin Britten’s 1964 speech mentioned?
A.To show his affection for classical music.
B.To introduce young people to classical music.
C.To demonstrate classical music is demanding.
D.To support Pullman’s idea over classical music.
4. Which word best describes the author’s attitude to Pullman’s idea?
A.Favorable.B.Doubtful.C.Objective.D.Uninterested.
2024-04-29更新 | 154次组卷 | 2卷引用:2024届山西省临汾市高三下学期考前适应性训练考试(二)英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇新闻报道。文章主要围绕建筑师Ada Tolla和Giuseppe Lignano利用全球港口空置集装箱作为建筑材料的创意和实践进行了报道。介绍了他们的作品和理念,同时也探讨了集装箱建筑所面临的挑战和争议,包括温度控制问题和环保方面的考虑。

6 . Millions of shipping containers are sitting empty at ports all over the world. And they’ve been a treasure for architects Ada Tolla and Giuseppe Lignano.

The two were in San Francisco recently for the opening of an exhibition at Hosfelt Gallery focused on their use of shipping containers as building materials.

The Italian “starchitects” got into the shipping container building game in the 1990s and people like shipping container buildings not only because they look interesting but also because they seem to solve a problem — finding a use for the millions of used steel shipping containers across the planet. They’re used in projects like Photoville in New York City, which transforms the containers into mini art galleries, and Monarch Village, a development for formerly unhoused people in Lawrence, Kansas. “Shipping containers are great for building with because they are modular (模块化的), movable and durable,” said California architect Douglas Burnham.

But there also exist many challenges, a significant one of which is temperature control. Those steel boxes get very cold inside in winter — and very, very hot in summer.

Joe Carroll lived in an eye-catching shipping container home designed by LOT-EK for five years. Carroll said that he appreciated many things about LOT-EK’s approach. “It’s about designing structures that are unique looking, not just a row of cubes (立方体),” said Carroll. But Carroll also said his energy bills were sky high. “There was no heat or solar energy,” he said. “We didn’t have any of that in the home.” All that heating and cooling takes not only money but environmental resources.

So what should we do with them? Critics say the most environmentally friendly use of all these unused steel shipping containers is to recycle them. “The highlight of these containers is, ‘Well, we’re saving them.’ But it doesn’t make any sense,” said San Francisco-based architect Mark Hogan of Open Scope Studio, who has publicly shared his concerns about shipping container housing. “You’d be much better off recycling the container into steel and then build out of steel studs — like the normal way you’d build a building.”

1. What was the focus of the exhibition at Hosfelt Gallery?
A.Traditional building materials.
B.Artistic paintings and sculptures.
C.Architecture photography collection.
D.Shipping containers in building projects.
2. What does paragraph 3 mainly talk about?
A.Advantages of shipping container buildings.
B.Representative projects of LOT-EK architects.
C.Ideal locations for shipping container complexes.
D.Procedures of building shipping container projects.
3. Why is Joe Carroll mentioned in paragraph 5?
A.To show the cost-effectiveness of the home.
B.To emphasize the high energy consumption.
C.To illustrate the unique design of the structure.
D.To prove the convenience of heat and solar resources.
4. What is Mark Hogan’s attitude towards shipping container housing?
A.Favorable.B.Unconcerned.
C.Curious.D.Critical.
2024-04-19更新 | 42次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届山西省晋中市平遥县高三4月(二模)大联考英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约420词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是新闻报道。本文主要讲述了金砖国家这一主要经济组织的历史性的扩张后更加闪耀,见证了金砖国家的魅力和活力,提高了全球南方的声音,反映了金砖国家和广大发展中国家维护全球公平与正义,促进和平与发展的决心。

7 . BRICS (金砖国家) grouping major emerging (新兴的) economies of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa is to more than double its members with the admission of six more countries This historic expansion, which was announce data press conference during the 15th BRICS Summit in Johannesburg, South Africa, involves Argentina, Egyptl, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, and their membership will take effect from Jan 1.2024.

Observers said that the expansion bears witness to BRICS’ charm and vitality, helps improve the voices of the Global South, and mirrors the resolve of the group and the wider developing world to safeguard global equity (公平) and justice and promote peace and development.

Seventeen years since its establishment, BRICS has witnessed fruitful cooperation results in economic, political and cultural areas, and continues to prosper in a spirit of openness, inclusiveness and win-win cooperation. The BRICS countries have written a wonderful story of the joint development of countries with different systems, cultures and regions, which has become a flagship of South-South cooperation.

Experts believe the expansion will represent a historic and new starting point for BRICS cooperation.

Mohammad Jamshidi, the Iranian president’s deputy chief of staff for political affairs, posted his celebrations to Iran’s accession to BRICS, calling it a “historic move”.

BRICS’ expansion in a well-studied manner “would increase its strength and effectiveness and improve its regional and international role, in a way that contributes.to achieving greater and faster development rates,” said Abdel-Sattar Eshrah, secretary-general of the Cairo-based Egyptian-Chinese Business Council. “It would create many opportunities for joint cooperation among BRICS members in various fields,” the Egyptian business leader said, adding that BRICS’ expansion is to increase the abilities of its members to address economic, financial and political crises and challenges.

Filipe Porto, a researcher at the Federal University of ABC and a member of the Brazilian Foreign Policy Observatory, said although the five founding member states have very different national conditions, the spirit of win-win cooperation has kept the BRICS mechanism (机制) dynamic and drawn interest from more countries.

The rise of emerging economies, represented by BRICS nations, is fundamentally changing the global landscape. With the historic expansion, the BRICS inechanism will have a greater voice in driving global governance reforms toward a more just an id equitable direction, filling the world with greater certainty and stability, said experts.

1. Which of the following can replace the underlined word “resolve” in paragraph 2?
A.Limitation.B.Freedom.C.Determination.D.Appointment.
2. What does the third paragraph chiefly tell us?
A.The benefits BRICKS has brought.
B.The management of BRICKS.
C.The regulations of BRICKS.
D.The founding of BRICKS.
3. What makes the BRICS mechanism dynamic and appeal to more countries?
A.Exhibiting strong leadership skills,
B.Creating win-win opportunities,
C.Driving global governance reforms.
D.Making the world have greater stability.
4. Which can serve as the best title for the news report?
A.Why BRICS is recovering
B.History of BRICKS’ development
C.BRICS grouping major emerging economies
D.BRICS shines brighter after historic expansion
2024-04-18更新 | 71次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届山西省祁县中学高三下学期第一次模拟考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇议论文。文章主要讨论了在与他人交谈时,对方频繁查看手机这一社会现象的影响和应对策略。

8 . Socially, few things are more annoying than someone repeatedly checking their phone in the middle of your conversation with them. Soon enough, you’re having unhappy thoughts, thinking of their way like, I’m boring you; you’re more concerned with whoever’s on that phone than me; you don’t care about me. None of that is necessarily true, but this is: “If someone is engaged in a great conversation, they wouldn’t care about their phones,” says Leslie, a psychologist and researcher at NYU.

Do you sometimes wonder: What should I have said to a rude person like this? What if we have to talk to such maddening persons? Experts have advice about how to deal with this.

Whether you say something or not, remember that the cell-addict’s annoying habits aren’t about you. “It’s rude, for sure, but sometimes we mistake the behavior for more than what it is,” says Leslie. “It’s possible that they are facing something tough and merely experiencing nervousness or anxiety,” he adds. It’s also possible that their partner is stuck with a flat tyre (轮胎) or their kid is sick in hospital. The point is that you don’t know.

So before you become angry at the cell-addict’s open rudeness, focus instead on building a better conversation than whatever’s going down on Instagram. You might never be able to achieve this, given the power of today’s social media, so if you’re close enough to a person, Leslie advises you to directly ask them: “What’s on that thing that’s so interesting?” Chances are that they will apologise at once and quickly put the phone away. But if the answer is something real, talk about it. Better yet, you can avoid the situation in advance by saying something like, “I’m really interested in catching up properly, so how about we leave our phones in the car?” If they indeed have that flat tyre or sick kid, at least you won’t have to assume that it’s because your stories are boring.

1. Why do people often check their phones according to Leslie?
A.They are anxious about something.
B.They are enjoying the conversation.
C.They are bored with the conversation.
D.They are interested in what’s on the phone.
2. What could be a reason for the cell-addicts’ annoying habits according to Leslie?
A.They may be nervous or anxious.
B.They are being rude intentionally.
C.They are avoiding the conversation.
D.They are disinterested in social interactions.
3. What is a better way to deal with the rudeness?
A.Talking about something real.
B.Asking the other person directly.
C.Avoiding the situation in advance.
D.Asking the other person for explanation.
4. What’s the main idea of the text?
A.What is a cell-addict.
B.How to deal with a cell-addict.
C.Why people repeatedly check their phones.
D.When to cut in appropriately during a conversation.
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。该文章主要探讨了AI代理的预测能力和使用互联网作为其记忆库的方式。同时文章指出目前的AI代理还需要更多的研究和工程来根据实际意图和后果调整工具的交流方式即AI代理需要训练和改进。

9 . AI agents are prediction engines using the web as their memory. They do no more than predict which words are more likely to follow any other word or group of words in a given language. When you ask ChatGPT a question, it analyzes it into words and their sequence, returning answers that match those sequences opposite. It might sound like a simple trick, and it is, yet the secret sauce is the size of the database the AIs use to perform it.

Of the very various mix of content used to train ChatGPT, 60 percent was information collected from websites, blogs or social media. Another 20 percent was content shared on Reddit and evaluated relatively highly by the users. The rest was books typically found in the public field (mostly older and general purpose), with a bit of Wikipedia (3 percent) mixed in for good measure.

AI’s store for each word the probability that any other word will follow it. The quality and value of these predictions depend very much on how often and on how many circum- stances the software encounters any two (or more words) in the neighborhood, how long a sentence goes, and which sentence might follow another. When put together, these predictions favour the most influential texts of a given culture, which shaped generations upon generations of English language teachers and the students they educated.

ChatGPT speaks like a parrot because its delivery is not automatically adjusted. More re- search and engineering are needed to adjust the tool to each request’s real-life intentions and consequences. In academic learning, these situations should be the pre- and post-stages of the research process: finding arguments and packaging them for public consumption.

In their current forms, ChatGPT and its siblings (姐弟) are like those three-year-olds who can recite entire stories read to them only once. But turning a three-year-old into a learned Person takes 20 years of labour—some, structured education. It is time to stop reading Al agents stories and send them to a real school.

1. Which determines the accuracy of AI predictions?
A.Words.B.Network.C.Database.D.Questions.
2. How does the author support the theme of Paragraph 2?
A.By listing data.B.By giving examples.
C.By making comparisons.D.By quoting experts’ arguments.
3. What does the third paragraph mainly focus on?
A.Users of AI.B.Words’ frequency.
C.AI’s cultural nature.D.The length of a sentence.
4. What is the best title for the text?
A.How a ChatGPT worksB.Where a ChatGPT is found
C.A ChatGPT needs packagingD.A ChatGPT has a long way to go
2024-04-15更新 | 75次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届山西省晋中市平遥县第二中学校高三下学期冲刺调研押题卷(三)英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约330词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇记叙文。该篇文章讲述了经济学教授Michael Rizzo在演讲中反驳了地球正在面临气候灾难的观点。他强调了自己对于气候变化所不知道的事情的恐惧,并呼吁学生们要做更多的研究来理解气候变化问题。同时,他指出气候变化的“灾难”这一说法往往更多地源于信息报道的方式,而非科学本身。

10 . A GIF of the Wicked Witch (巫婆) of the West from “The Wizard of Oz” saying “I’ll get you, my pretty, and your little dog too!” played behind Economics Professor Michael Rizzo as students gathered in Wegmans Hall on Oct. 30 to hear him argue against the opinion that the Earth is going through a climate disaster.

“I’m curious to see how many people will misunderstand the point of my talk, which is about addressing the issue of disaster and not at all the issue of whether climate change is happening, or even the mechanics of it,” he said in an interview with the Cambus Times.

The talk included Rizzo stating his biggest fear—that he doesn’t know what he doesn’t know about climate change. The talk, he said, was assembled from everything he’s read, and, to him, things don’t look so bad, but he knows he hasn’t read everything.

First-year Aidan Lieberman, who attended the talk after hearing about it in Rizzo’s Prin- ciples of Economics class, thought the professor tried to fit too much into his time, but he agreed with the points that he could follow, saying “they seemed to make sense.”

“I was only able to follow a few of the points he was making, ” Lieberman said. “My biggest takeaway is that humans will be able to manage the effects of climate change as they become more severe. ”

Rizzo said he wanted students to leave the talk understanding that the rhetoric around climate “disaster” often comes more from how information is reported rather than the science it- self. Addressing issues of climate change, he stressed, requires a careful understanding that takes lots of research to achieve-research that he found students weren’t doing before coming to him with disagreements.

1. Why is the “The Wizard of Oz” saying mentioned?
A.To explain the dog is vital for the witch.
B.To prove students misunderstood the talk.
C.To suggest students made no sense of the talk.
D.To show the earth is facing a climate challenge.
2. What does the underlined word “assembled” probably mean in Paragraph 3?
A.Pieced.B.Differed.C.Separated.D.Reserved.
3. How does Aidan feel about Rizzo’s lecture?
A.Doubtful.B.Opposed.C.Positive.D.Unclear.
4. What does Rizzo suggest doing in the last paragraph?
A.Being creative.B.Doing more research.
C.Reporting objectively.D.Focusing on the information.
2024-04-15更新 | 46次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届山西省晋中市平遥县第二中学校高三下学期冲刺调研押题卷(三)英语试题
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