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阅读理解-阅读单选(约410词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。主要介绍的是青少年犯罪越来越严重,世界各国在避免青少年犯罪方面所做出的努力。

1 . Jennifer and James Crumbley were found guilty of involuntary manslaughter (过失杀人罪) due to their failure to prevent their son Ethan from carrying out a deadly school shooting in Michigan, US. They were sentenced to 10 to 15 years in prison on April 9, reported The New York Times. The sentence for them marks the first instance in the US where parents have been held legally accountable for their child’s involvement in a mass shooting.

Prosecutors (检察官) argued that the couple ignored clear signs of their son’s mental health issues and emphasized that they purchased the gun he used in the 2021 attack. Ethan, who was only 15 when he killed four students in the shooting, was sentenced to life. “Opportunity knocked over and over again, louder and louder, and it was ignored,” Judge Cheryl Matthews told the court.

Instances of extreme and violent crimes committed by minors consistently stir shock and controversy globally. Such issues urge widespread societal reflection, leading nations to consider revising laws to lower the age of criminal responsibility. While most countries and regions have maintained a standard minimum age of criminal responsibility at 12 or 14 years for an extended period, there are exceptions. For example, Japan lowered the age from 16 to 14 in 2000, according to Xinhua.

In 2010, Denmark lowered its minimum age of criminal responsibility from 15 to 14 years old. However, researchers found that this change did not reduce crime rates among 14-year-olds. Instead, the punitive measures (惩罚措施) had negative effects. These young individuals often fell behind their peers academically, especially on high school graduation exams, and the rate of reoffenders increased. Consequently, Denmark reversed this policy two years later, restoring the minimum age of criminal responsibility to 15 years old, The Paper reported.

Denmark’s experience showed that the law doesn’t always stop people from committing crimes again. Furthermore, preventing young people from committing crimes poses a complex challenge.

In Germany, imprisonment is considered a last resort, with a focus on educational, rehabilitative (善后的) and disciplinary measures, as noted in a 2018 paper published in the Justice Evaluation Journal. According to the paper, youth imprisonment is applied in only 2 percent of all cases. Additionally, some prisons offer vocational programs for young inmates, including woodworking, metalworking, and farming. Meanwhile, most of these teenage offenders are placed in community programs where social workers help educate and guide them toward a normal life.

1. Why were Jennifer and James sentenced ?
A.They were the murders of involuntary manslaughter.
B.They offered a gun to Ethan who carried out a school shooting.
C.They didn’t take the parenting responsibility for their son’s problems in growth.
D.They ignored their son’s mental health problems.
2. Which of the following statements does the author possibly agree to?
A.Parents should be the key power to stop young people from committing crime.
B.Solving the problems of minor’s crime needs joint efforts and diverse measures.
C.Lowering the age of criminal responsibility can effectively prevent minors from crime.
D.Increasing the rate of youth imprisonment can effectively prevent minors from crime.
3. What does the underlined word “resort” in the paragraph mean?
A.action to takeB.a place to visit
C.an end to happenD.a chance to take
4. What’s the purpose of the author to write the article?
A.to show the severity of youth crime
B.to show the efforts countries have made to stop youth crime
C.to show the measures countries have made to stop youth crime
D.to raise parents’ awareness of regulating and educating responsibility
7日内更新 | 19次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届黑龙江省佳木斯市第一中学高三下学期第三次模拟考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约430词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是说明文。这篇文章详细阐述了咖啡店如何刺激人们的创造力,解释了咖啡店环境对人的思维有积极影响的原因,包括噪音、视觉多样性等因素。

2 . Some of the most successful people have done their best work in coffee shops. Pablo Picasso, JK Rowling, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Bob Dylan ---whether they’re painters, writers, philosophers, or singer-songwriters, people across nations and centuries have tapped into their creativity working away at a table in a café.

There are many ways coffee shops stimulate our creativity in a way offices and homes don’t. Research shows that the stimuli in these places make them effective environments for work; the combination of noise, visual variety and casualness can give us just the right amount of distraction to help us be at our sharpest and most creative.

Some of us put on our noise-cancelling headphones as soon as we sit down to work in a public setting. But background noise can benefit our creative thinking. A 2012 study published in the Journal of Consumer Research showed that a low-to-moderate level of background noise in a place like a cafeteria can actually increase our creative output. Another study from 2019 had similar findings: the right amount of noise benefits our senses. And while that right level of noise is different for everyone, audio (听觉的) stimuli in the background also help us improve decision-making. So, the jazz music, light conversation and noises from coffee bar workers aren’t vexatious —they could help you come up with your next masterwork.

Also, one thing that can make working from home and the office dull is the unexciting visual environment. “Visual stimulation has an effect on peoples creative thinking process. Coffee shops generally have visual stimuli,” says Sunkee Lee, whose research suggests that visual variety “helps you to think outside the box”. Korydon Smith, who co-wrote a recent article on the benefits of working in coffee shops, says, “People come and go. The daylight changes. The colours of food vary. These activities inspire our brains to work a bit differently than at home”.

And while the typical coffee shop user might be a lone worker, experts say these café settings can also benefit work groups who are brainstorming. “There is an implied formality when gathering on office-based or digital meeting platforms. By contrast, there is an air of informality when meeting up at a bar or café. Agendas are not required to meet someone for coffee, but are inbuilt in a scheduled meeting, virtual or otherwise, which can kill creativity,” says Smith.

1. What does the author intend to do in paragraph 2?
A.Add some background knowledge.B.Summarize the following paragraphs.
C.Support the first paragraph with examples.D.Introduce a controversial topic for discussion.
2. Which of the following best describes the underlined word “vexatious” in paragraph 3?
A.Unexpected.B.Permanent.C.Annoying.D.Original.
3. What do Lee and Smith both stress about coffee shops?
A.Visual variety there encourages creativity.
B.Audio stimuli there help with decision-making.
C.A lo ne worker can meet like-minded people there.
D.Bar workers there always make people feel at home.
4. What can, benefit group discussions in a coffee shop?
A.Its air of excitement.B.Its implied formality.
C.Its casual atmosphere.D.Its nice food and drink.
7日内更新 | 27次组卷 | 1卷引用:黑龙江省大庆市实验中学实验二部2023-2024学年高三下学期英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是议论文。主要讨论交通罚单可以减少驾驶员卷入灾难性事故的几率,然后通过事实和论据进行论证,包括研究人员的研究结果,以及相关的数据分析和观察。

3 . Pity the poor traffic policeman. He’s the last guy you want to see when you’re speeding down the highway. But according to a major research by scientists in Canada and California, that policeman just might be saving your life or the life of someone else.

The researchers have found that a traffic ticket reduces a driver’s chance of being involved in a disastrous accident greatly. The effect doesn’t last long, however. Within months, the lead foot is back on the pedal and the risk of killing yourself or someone else is back up to where it was before that policeman stared you in the eye and wrote out that expensive ticket. It is back to business as usual for most motorists.

Traffic tickets save thousands of lives every year. Yet traffic laws are applied infrequently, almost as if by whim (心血来潮), partly because people just don’t like traffic policemen, and there are lots of other things for the government to spend money on than applying highway safety laws.

Researches looked at the month prior to a disastrous accident, and the number of traffic convictions (定罪), and then the same month in the year before. They found there were fewer tickets in the month before a disastrous accident than there were a year before, which suggests there’s a protective effect of having a ticket.

The scientists also turned up some surprising results. “Most of the crashes did not involve alcohol,” they reported. “The relative risk reduction associated with traffic convictions was remarkably consistent among women and men, regardless of age, prior driving record, and other personal data. Men, however, were involved in far more disastrous accidents than women and the most accident-prone (有倾向的) age was between 30 and 50.”

They also pointed out that most crashes could have been prevented by a small difference in driver behavior. So the next time you see that policeman in your rear-view mirror, give him or her a broad smile.

1. How will the drivers probably behave months after having traffic tickets?
A.Drive more attentively than before.B.Return to where accidents happened.
C.Escape a spot check for alcohol.D.Drive as fast as they did before.
2. Which statement about traffic laws is correct?
A.They have saved thousands of lives so far.
B.They are not favored by traffic policemen.
C.They are carried out consistently and sufficiently.
D.They are not the priority of the government’s budget.
3. What can be learned from paragraph 4?
A.Traffic tickets can guarantee safe driving.
B.It is necessary to reduce traffic convictions.
C.Disastrous accidents will decline with more traffic tickets given.
D.Tickets’ protective effect can be found before disastrous accidents.
4. What can be inferred from the research?
A.Its results applied to both men and women.
B.None of the traffic crashes involved alcohol.
C.Women aged 30 to 50 caused more disastrous accidents.
D.Drivers were used to looking at the mirrors while driving.
7日内更新 | 64次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届黑龙江省哈尔滨市哈师大附中高三第三次模拟考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了什么是“好感认知差距”以及这种心态对人们社交关系的影响。

4 . Initial conversations can have a huge impact on how relationships develop over time. People are often stuck in the impressions they think they might have made the minute they finish speaking with someone for the first time: “Did they like me or were they just being polite?” “Were they deep in thought or deeply bored?”

To find out whether these worries are necessary, we have conducted nearly 10 years of research. In our studies, participants in the UK talked with someone they had never met before. Afterward, they were asked how much they liked their conversation partner and how much they believed that their conversation partner liked them. This allowed us to compare how much people believed they were liked to how much they were actually liked.

Time and time again, we found that people left their conversations with negative feelings about the impression they made. That is, people systematically underestimate how much their conversation partners like them and enjoy their company — a false belief we call the “liking gap”.

This bias (偏见) may seem like something that would occur only in initial interactions, but its effects extend far beyond a first impression. Surprisingly, the liking gap can constantly affect a variety of relationships, including interactions with coworkers, long after the initial conversations have taken place. Having a larger liking gap is associated with being less willing to ask workmates for help, less willing to provide workmates with open and honest feedback, and less willing to work on another project together.

There are numerous strategies to minimize your biased feelings. One place to start is shifting your focus of attention. Try to direct your attention to your conversation partner, be genuinely curious about them, ask them more questions, and really listen to their answers. The more you’re zeroed in on the other person, and the less you’re focused on yourself, the better your conversation will be and the less your mind will turn to all the things you think you didn’t do well.

1. Why did the author carry out 10 years of research?
A.To dismiss national concerns.B.To check out a potential bias.
C.To enhance human communication.D.To develop harmonious relationships.
2. What is one effect of people’s liking gap?
A.Fewer chances of new projects.B.Underestimation of their ability.
C.Bad relationships with people around.D.Low willingness to interact with others.
3. What does the author intend to do in the last paragraph?
A.Restate opinions.B.Deliver warnings.C.Give suggestions.D.Make a summary.
4. Which might be the best title for the text?
A.Liking Gap May Influence Work Performances
B.First Impressions Rely On Initial Conversations
C.People Probably Like You More Than You Think
D.How People Like You Matters Less Than You Assume
2024-05-15更新 | 360次组卷 | 2卷引用:黑龙江省哈尔滨市双城区兆麟中学2023-2024学年高二下学期5月期中英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-七选五(约240词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文为一篇说明文,讨论了“内疚的快感”这一概念,即人们在犒劳自己时可能会感到内疚,但心理学家认为这种行为实际上可以提升情绪并照顾自己。文章还区分了自我放纵和自我培养的概念,并讨论了如何在面对压力时做出负责任的决定。

5 . You might have heard of the expression “a guilty pleasure”—maybe it’s the chocolate bar you buy on the way home from work, or the new clothes that you don’t really need.     1     . Perhaps we don’t feel we deserved it, or we don’t think it was a responsible way to spend our money. But should we feel like this? Do we really have to feel guilty about treating ourselves?

Perhaps not. Psychologists have suggested that buying things for yourself can make you feel better as it provides an opportunity to take control of your situation.    2     . It may be that as well as lifting your mood, when you buy a treat, you might just be looking after yourself.

Of course, there are also examples of people turning to destructive behaviour when faced with stressful circumstances. People might spend money that they don’t have or turn to dangerous addictions. Psychologist Leon Seltzer considers the difference between self-indulgence and self-nurturing.    3     , while self-nurturing is taking responsible decisions to satisfy our needs and take care of ourselves in ways that don’t have a significant impact.

    4    . So, many universities publish guides with advice for coping with exam stress. Reflecting the difference between self-indulgence and self-nurture, they recommend rewarding yourself for your efforts, doing things that you enjoy and are good at so that you can feel accomplishment.    5     . Thus, perhaps, as long as we make responsible decisions, we shouldn’t feel guilty about our guilty pleasures.

A.Exams are vital for students.
B.Self-indulgence can have negative consequences
C.The difference becomes evident when students manage exam pressure
D.They also recommend embracing activities that could dampen your spirits
E.Besides, you should avoid things that may make you feel worse afterwards
F.It comes from the idea that when we treat ourselves, it can sometimes leave us feeling guilty
G.It can give you social contact as well as a confidence boost from changes you make to your self-image
阅读理解-阅读单选(约440词) | 较难(0.4) |
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文章大意:本文为一篇说明文。文章讲述了面对家庭冲突或者隔阂,相比疏远,修复是更好的方法。

6 . Search “toxic parents”, and you’ll find more than 38, 000 posts, largely urging young adults to cut ties with their families. The idea is to safeguard one’s mental health from offensive parents. However, as a psychoanalyst (精神分析学家), I’ve seen that trend in recent years become a way to manage conflicts in the family, and I have seen the severe impacts estrangement (疏远) has on both sides of the divide. This is a self-help trend that creates much harm.

“Canceling” your parent can be seen as an extension of a cultural trend aimed at correcting imbalances in power and systemic inequality. Today’s social justice values respond to this reality, calling on us to criticize oppressive and harmful figures and to gain power for those who have been powerless. But when adult children use the most effective tool they have—themselves—to gain a sense of security and ban their parents from their lives, the roles are simply switched, and the pain only deepens.

Often, what I see in my practice are cases of family conflict mismanaged, power dynamics turned upside down rather than negotiated. I see the terrible effect of that trend: situations with no winners, only isolated humans who long to be known and feel safe in the presence of the other.

The catch is that after estrangement, adult children are not suddenly less dependent. In fact, they feel abandoned and betrayed, because in the unconscious, it doesn’t matter who is doing the leaving; the feeling that remains is “being left”. They carry the ghosts of their childhood, tackling the emotional reality that those who raised us can never truly be left behind, no matter how hard we try.

What I have found is that most of these families need repair, not permanent break-up. How can one learn how to negotiate needs, to create boundaries and to trust? How can we love others, and ourselves, if not through accepting the limitations that come with being human? Good relationships are not the result of a perfect level of harmony but rather of successful adjustments.

To pursue dialogue instead of estrangement will be hard and painful work. It can’t be a single project of “self-help”, because at the end of the day, real intimacy (亲密关系) is achieved by working through the injuries of the past together. In most cases of family conflict, repair is possible and preferable to estrangement—and it’s worth the work.

1. Why do young people cut ties with the family?
A.To gain an independent life.B.To follow a tendency towards social justice.
C.To restore harmony in the family.D.To protect their psychological well-being.
2. What does the underlined word “catch” in paragraph 4 mean?
A.Response.B.Problem.C.Bond.D.Division.
3. To manage family conflict, what should young adults do in the author’s view?
A.Break down boundaries.B.Accept imperfection of family members.
C.Live up to their parents’ expectations.D.Repair a family item that has broken up.
4. What’s the author’s purpose of writing the text?
A.To advocate a self-help trend.B.To justify a common social value.
C.To argue against a current practice.D.To discuss a means of communication.
2024-05-11更新 | 50次组卷 | 1卷引用:黑龙江省大庆市实验中学实验二部2023-2024学年高二下学期期中考试英语试卷
7 . 假定你是育才高中学生李华,你校英文网站正在进行征文活动,主题是“How senior high school students use their pocket money”,你打算根据图表所示写一篇英文短文,内容包括:

1. 零用钱花费情况;
2. 指出问题所在;
3. 给予适当建议。
注意:1. 写作词数应为80左右;
2. 请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。

How senior high school students use their pocket money

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2024-05-06更新 | 52次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届黑龙江省部分学校高三下学期第三次模拟考试英语试题
阅读理解-七选五(约260词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇议论文。文章主要讨论了在美国无车生活方式的可能性和挑战,以Culdesac社区为例,分析了美国大部分城市为汽车友好设计的问题,以及拥有汽车可能带来的经济负担。同时,文章也提出了克服这些障碍、实现更健康、更经济的生活方式的可能性。

8 . Living car-free in the US

Culdesac admitted its first thirty-six residents in Tempe, Arizona, US, earlier this year.     1    . The $170 million neighborhood, with its white buildings and narrow walkways(走道), is expected to hold around 1,000 people when the full 760 units are completed by 2025, according to The Guardian. Similar projects in Charlotte, North Carolina, and Houston, Texas, are also underway, said Bloomberg.

In a country as car-dependent as the US, Culdesac is nothing short of visionary (有远见的).     2     although some densely(稠密地) populated costal US cities like Boston and New York City are walkable and have various public transportation options like bus and light rail. In the 2019 US Census, it was found that roughly 85% of Americans relied on a car to get to work.     3    . In a 2023 study, the American Automobile Association said that it costs an average of about $12,000 per year to own and maintain a car in the US. So, what is stopping Americans from abandoning cars and embracing relatively cheaper alternatives like e-bikes? In a word, unsafe roads that prioritize cars over people. According to a 2019 report by the World Health Organization, the US traffic fatality rate is 12.4 deaths per 100,000. At the same time, pedestrians and cyclists in the US are often blamed for being hit by drivers rather than the other way around.

    4    . By embracing a new car-free way of living, US projects like Culdesac can provide an alternative way of living that is both healthier and more affordable and, in turn, influence others to live a better way as well. As Vanessa Fox, a 32-year-old resident of Culdesac, said, “    5    . Freedom is being to just simply walk out and access places.”

A.Still, there is hope
B.Cars are allowed, but parking is limited
C.This can effectively avoid traffic accidents on a road
D.This reliance on cars doesn’t come cheap, unfortunately
E.For some, cars equal freedom, but for me, it’s a restriction
F.It describes itself as the first car-free neighbourhood built in the US
G.The vast majority of Americans are entirely dependant on cars to get around
2024-05-01更新 | 187次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届黑龙江省高三下学期第二次模拟考试英语试题(黑龙江辽宁名校联考)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约500词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了有研究表明,欧洲贫富差距加剧,贫困人口在增加,由此产生了一系列社会问题。

9 . Poverty has forced most Europeans to skip (跳过) meals during the past three years, according to a survey conducted by Ipsos on behalf of the charity French Secours Populaire, which supports people on low incomes. The survey of 10,000 Europeans in 10 nations asked whether money worries had worsened or improved during the past three years. More than half said their situation had worsened, with 29 percent saying they were so short of money that a single unexpected expense would put them into difficulty. The results, published on Monday in the charity’s European Barometer on Poverty and Precariousness, found 38 percent of Europeans were no longer able to eat three meals a day on a regular basis. And 21 percent of parents had skipped meals so they could feed their children.

The survey quizzed people living in France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Moldova, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, and the United Kingdom. The pollsters found the main reason for the poor financial situation in many European families was the fast-rising cost of goods and services, with price inflation (通货膨胀) increasing by three times during 2022 and the cost of housing, water, and fuel rising by 18 percent during the course of a year. At the same time wages remained relatively unchanged.

The survey followed other recent worrying assessments of increasing levels of poverty throughout Europe, with Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics agency reporting 17 percent of the population of the 27-nation group was “at risk of poverty” and that only 15percent of Europeans had enough money not to have financial worries. Another survey, conducted by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation in June, found the UK had 5.7 million low-income households that were so lacking in money that they had no adequate access to food.

And another survey, by the Equality Trust, found the great difference between rich and poor in the UK was actually being worsened by the government, which, it concluded, was spending more money than any other European nation on subsidizing (补贴) the rich through structural inequality. Priya Sahni-Nicholas, the co-executive director of the Equality Trust, told The Guardian newspaper the growing chasm between rich and poor was “causing huge damage” to the economy. As a result, she said, “We have shorter healthy working lives, poorer education systems, more crime, and less happy societies.” The survey released this week for French Secours Populaire found money worries among Europe’s population now mean a significant number of people have turned off heaters, avoided treatment for medical problems, and borrowed money or other things as a result. The survey found one person in 12in Italy is in “absolute poverty” and relies on discounted food and food banks. And the situation was even worse in Greece and Moldova, which had more people at risk from poverty than any other European nation.

1. Why is there a poor financial situation in many European families?
A.On account of increasing taxes.B.Because of their pay’s being cut.
C.Owing to many people’s losing jobs.D.Due to rising prices of goods and services.
2. What is the percentage of Europeans who had no financial worries?
A.15%.B.17%.C.18%.D.21%.
3. What is the possible meaning of the underlined word “chasm” in the last paragraph?
A.Misunderstanding.B.Difference.C.Conflict.D.Concern.
4. What can be a suitable title for the news report?
A.Study shows rising poverty in Europe
B.Wages remain relatively unchanged in Europe
C.Poor people in Europe rely on discounted food
D.Survey quizzes people living in rich European countries
2024-04-30更新 | 163次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届黑龙江省高三下学期第二次模拟考试英语试题(黑龙江辽宁名校联考)
语法填空-短文语填(约230词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章介绍了可爱的、个性化的评价方式在教育过程中更受学生和家长的青睐,并且能让教育体验更好。
10 . 阅读下面短文,在空白处填入1个适当的单词或括号内单词的正确形式。

In a refreshing shift from conventional methods, some post-90 teachers in China are using memes (表情包), cute comments, and personalized feedback in their grading practices,     1     (receive) praise from parents and students alike. This innovative approach in education is reshaping the way students receive feedback on     2     (they) exams and assignments, making the learning process more engaging and enjoyable.

Gone are the days of impersonal and serious     3     (comment). Teachers are now using more conversational language in their evaluations, addressing students as “you” or “dear” instead of the formal “the students”. This change in tone creates a more personal and direct connection, fostering a positive learning environment.

The use of memes and hand-drawn images in marking papers     4     (be) not just about adding a touch of fun; it serves as a motivational tool for students. This trend has caught the attention of the online community,     5     many expressing their wish to have such creative and supportive teachers

    6     adoption of memes and personalized comments in grading represents a significant shift in educational practices in China. It not only aids in reducing the stress and pressure     7     (associate) with academic performance but also builds a     8     (strong) relationship between teachers and students. This method reflects a broader movement toward more empathetic and student-centered teaching     9     the focus is on encouragement and individual growth rather than solely on grades.

As these innovative practices gain     10     (popular), they promise to transform the educational experience for students, making learning more enjoyable and less frightening.

2024-04-19更新 | 81次组卷 | 1卷引用:黑龙江省哈尔滨市第九中学校2023-2024学年高二下学期4月月考英语试题
共计 平均难度:一般