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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。

2 . 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
3 . 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。

4 . 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 | 188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)
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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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。

5 . 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210词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要描述了广州荔湾区开车的人去集市摆摊的现象。
6 . 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。

When night falls, the hustle and bustle of the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou turns to the banks of the Pearl River in Liwan district. Hundreds of people and cars     1     (decorate) with colorful lights and eye-catching shop signs swarm (挤满) a local car boot sale bazaar (集市).

Liang Jinsheng, a local youth, sells lemon tea at the bazaar,     2     was opened to the public on July 15 last year. The almost one-square-meter car trunk is his space for tea making.

“I used     3     (work) in the catering industry. I saw on the Internet many people doing business at car boot sale bazaars. So I decided to give it     4     try, as doing business is low-cost and low-risk,” Liang says.

“Although my ‘shop’ is small, I have obtained the necessary business licenses     5     will stick with hygienic (卫生的) standards to ensure food     6     (safe),” Liang adds.

While     7     (make) the lemon tea, Liang also livestreams on short-video platforms to drive traffic.

“Recently, a lot of residents     8     (come) to my tea booth after watching my livestream. I make around 1,000 yuan ($148) at the bazaar every night,” he says.

    9     most cases, Guangzhou will support these new types of business activities, says the city’s commerce department, noting that many commercial plazas (露天广场) have offered     10     (much) space for car boot sales and introduced night-themed activities to stimulate consumption.

2024-03-27更新 | 124次组卷 | 2卷引用:2024届黑龙江省牡丹江市普通高中协同发展共同体高三下学期第一次模拟英语试题
23-24高三下·浙江·阶段练习
阅读理解-阅读单选(约370词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:这是一篇夹叙夹议文,本文主要讨论了在决策时如何理性地考虑放弃,而不是盲目地坚持。作者通过个人经历和身边的例子,讨论了沉没成本谬误对决策的影响,并强调了决策时应当关注未来的收益而非过去的投入。

7 . I came across an image recently of a distance runner with a message that told readers to persevere (坚持) at all costs. It reminded me of a conversation I had. My colleague’s teaching assistant was asking for my advice. He wanted to know when to quit something. He described how he’d been playing an online game with people for some time. It hadn’t been very fun lately, but there was always that small chance of a reward (upgraded equipment, etc).

I inquired further about his relationship with the players and his gains from the game. I then discussed the sunk cost dilemma, a concept I studied in advanced school due to its personal impact. In high school, I applied to five universities, planning to choose the cheapest one. SUU offered the best scholarship, and after paying a $100 commitment fee, I heard back from another school with an even better scholarship. Despite the new offer, I stayed committed to SUU, believing that switching schools, even if it meant acknowledging the “wasted” $ 100, would have been the wiser financial choice.

A rational (理性的) decision maker is not ruled by past investments, but weighs future outcomes. I didn’t focus on future outcomes when weighing colleges. I focused on the money I sunk into SUU. Rather than evaluating future career options, I focused on the fact that I’d already taken elementary education courses.

I’m not the only one that’s fallen prey to this. I wear clothes I dislike simply because I spent money on them (and that money won’t come back). Unhealthy relationships last because of the invested time (leading to more unhappy years). However, time, effort, or money that you’ve invested doesn’t mean you should continue. Society often stresses perseverance — never quit, never give up, don’t waste. However, only you know your right path. Walking away can be the toughest choice. You might realize a path you’re on is no longer the right one or never was.

1. Why does the author introduce a distance runner’s image at first?
A.To make a contrast.B.To give a definition.
C.To draw a conclusion.D.To illustrate a theory.
2. What is the common characteristic of a rational decision maker?
A.Following suit as most people.B.Taking elementary education.
C.Valuing the development in future.D.Overlooking past investments.
3. What does the underlined idiom “fallen prey to” mean in the last paragraph?
A.Get benefits from.B.Be harmed by.C.Be interested in.D.Get rid of.
4. Which is the best title of the text?
A.Perseverance is a virtueB.The chosen path is the toughest
C.Cut your losses for your winnersD.Walking away means losing all
2024-03-26更新 | 234次组卷 | 6卷引用:英语 (九省新高考卷03) (含考试版+听力+答案+解析+答题卡) -2024年高考押题预测卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文为一篇说明文,主要介绍了新的科学研究发现有创造力的人更有可能有效地利用空闲时间,而不会感觉无聊。

8 . The study by University of Arizona researchers, published in the Creativity Research Journal, finds that creative people are more likely to fruitfully use idle (空闲的) time by letting one idea lead to another.

“In psychology and neuroscience, most studies on human thoughts either prompt (提示) participants to think in a certain way or ask them to report on thoughts they experienced, but less is known about how thoughts naturally arise and unfold over time in unprompted contexts,” said Jessica Andrews-Hanna, an associate professor in the Department of Psychology and senior author of the paper. “This is where our study comes in.”

The researchers divided the study into two parts. For the first experiment, the researchers asked each participant to sit alone in a room for 10 minutes without any access to digital devices. In the absence of any particular prompt, the participants were asked to voice their thoughts aloud in real time. The recorded files from 81 participants were then transcribed (转录) and analyzed.

The first experiment found that creative people were more engaged in their thoughts when they were left alone without distractions, such as cell phones and the Internet. “Creative people rated themselves as being less bored, even over those 10 minutes. They also spoke more words overall, which indicated that their thoughts were more likely to move freely,” said Andrews-Hanna.

For the second experiment, over 2,600 adults answered questions through a smartphone app called Mind Window, developed by Andrews-Hanna and her graduate student Eric Andrews. Participants who self-identified as being creative reported being less bored during the idle time.

The researchers are continuing this line of work using their Mind Window app. They encourage people to download and use the app to help scientists understand how people across the world think in their everyday lives. “Understanding why different people think the way they do may lead to promising interventions to improve health and well-being,” said Andrews-Hanna.

1. What do Andrews-Hanna’s words in paragraph 2 focus on?
A.The necessity of the study.B.The value of former studies.
C.The participants of the study.D.The process of former studies.
2. What did the participants do in the first experiment of the study?
A.They spoke out what they thought.B.They recorded their own voices.
C.They remembered some prompts.D.They finished a number of reports.
3. What did the study find about creative people?
A.They made better use of digital devices.
B.They enjoyed idle time more than others.
C.They were more likely to understand others.
D.They were more willing to share their thoughts.
4. Which word best describes Mind Window app according to the researchers?
A.Educational.B.Fashionable.C.Expensive.D.Beneficial.
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文,文章介绍了青少年常常忽略母亲的声音,而小时候则非常听话。文章解释了这一现象背后的原因:大脑为了适应不同成长阶段对外界的不同需求,因此在不同年龄阶段对不同人的声音反应程度有不同。

9 . Do you sometimes ignore your mom while chatting with friends? If you’re a teen, that’s fairly ________. And new researches may explain why so many adolescents ________ their mom’s voices.

Young kids’ brains are very tuned in to their mothers’ voices. But as they grow up, everything ________. Teenagers’ brains are more tuned in to strangers’ voices. This obvious ________ usually happens between ages 13 and 14. That’s when teenagers are in the course of puberty (青春期), a roughly decade-long transition into adulthood.

Researchers scanned the brains of 7 to 16-year-olds as they listened to things said by their mothers or by unfamiliar women. The words were purely ________: teebudieshawlt, keebudieshawlt and peebudieshawlt. As the kids listened, certain parts of their brains became ________. This was especially true in brain regions that help us to ________ rewards and pay attention. That’s exactly as it should be. The experiments show that those parts of their brains react more strongly to the unfamiliar voices than to their mothers’.

These areas in the adolescent brains don’t stop ________ mom. It’s just that unfamiliar voices become more rewarding and worthy of attention. “As kids ________, their survival depends less and less on maternal support. ________ , they rely more and more on their ________—friends and others closer to their own age. So the brains need to begin paying more attention to that wider world. The brain seems to ________ new needs that come with adolescence.”

However, mothers’ voices still have special power, especially in times of ________. Studies also showed that levels of stress hormones (荷尔蒙) ________ when stressed-out girls heard their moms’ voices on the phone.

So while both teens and their parents sometimes feel frustrated by missed messages, that’s okay. “That’s the way the ________ is wired, and there’s a good reason for it.”

1.
A.commonB.rareC.strangeD.impossible
2.
A.put upB.tune outC.listen toD.show off
3.
A.changesB.mattersC.evolvesD.counts
4.
A.actionB.shiftC.abilityD.function
5.
A.complicatedB.meaningfulC.nonsenseD.nonstop
6.
A.numbB.smallC.calmD.active
7.
A.collapseB.designC.detectD.process
8.
A.keeping outB.responding toC.working withD.turning down
9.
A.struggleB.advanceC.shrinkD.mature
10.
A.OnceB.OtherwiseC.InsteadD.Besides
11.
A.strangersB.competitorsC.partnersD.peers
12.
A.adapt toB.appeal toC.apply toD.attach to
13.
A.stressB.reliefC.safetyD.plenty
14.
A.variedB.droppedC.toppedD.remained
15.
A.headB.mindC.heartD.brain
2024-03-23更新 | 349次组卷 | 2卷引用:黑龙江省哈尔滨市第三中学2023-2024学年高三下学期一模英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约390词) | 适中(0.65) |
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文章大意:本文是一篇议论文。文章主要探讨了熟悉性原则对我们决策的影响,并提出了一种平衡的观点来看待这个原则,而不是将其视为阻碍,作者建议我们可以通过逐步扩展熟悉区域来利用这一原则来促进创造性和成长。

10 . Studies have shown the mere exposure effect, also referred to as the familiarity principle, inspires our decisions. It is a helpful psychological mechanism that helps us sustain our energy and focus our attention on other things. Getting used to new things takes effort and it can be exhausting. So unless we have a terrible experience, we are likely to buy from companies we’ve got used to. That is why companies spend so much money on advertising and marketing and why insurance companies openly charge existing customers more than new ones.

It’s not the case that we only desire things we already know. Some studies suggest when invited to share our preferences, we sometimes see less familiar options as more desirable. But when acting on that preference, we fall back to what we know. This might explain why sometimes the things we want and the things we do don’t quite match up. We might even return to companies that treated us poorly in the past or stay in bad relationships.

It’s easy to paint the familiarity principle as an enemy or something to battle as if it is something that holds us back from living our dreams. But this attitude might be overwhelming because it tends to encourage us toward big-picture thinking. Where we imagine that change requires a substantial dramatic swing that we don’t feel ready for. Some articles suggest the solution to familiarity frustration is complete exposure to novelty. While this can appear effective in the short run, we may only end up replacing one problem with another. It also risks overwhelm and burnout.

So what if we can work with the familiarity principle instead? Familiarity is something we can learn to play with and enjoy. It is a setting for creativity and a pathway to expansion. We can broaden the zone of familiarity bit by bit. If we think of familiarity as something that can expand, we can consider changing the conditions in and around our lives to make more space for our preferences to take root and grow gently. From here, we will start to make decisions, drawing from an ever-deepening pool of valuable options.

1. What allows insurance companies to charge old customers more?
A.The improved service.B.The advertising cost.
C.The familiarity principle.D.The law of the market.
2. What can be learned from paragraph 2?
A.Our preferences affect our decisions.
B.Familiarity tends to generate disrespect.
C.The familiarity principle is a double-edged sword.
D.There can be a mismatch between desires and actions.
3. What is the author’s attitude towards the solution in some articles?
A.Disapproving.B.Tolerant.C.Objective.D.Reserved.
4. Which of the following is the best title for the text?
A.Step Out Of Your Familiarity ZoneB.Spare A Thought For Your Preference
C.Gently Expand Your Familiarity ZoneD.Give Priority To The Mere Exposure Effect
共计 平均难度:一般