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高中三年级英语

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  • 阅读理解
    阅读理解。
    Israel was happy, very happy. The news of a deal to bring home the kidnapped soldier Gilad Shalit ,
    a young man held prisoner by Hamas for five years,spread.
    But the happiness was hardened by the reality of the price Israelis had paid to set him free. The 1,027 Palestinian prisoners to be exchanged for the single Israeli corporal turned out to include men and women
    convicted (宣判有罪) of some of the worst terrorist attacks in the country.
    "Ambivalent," says Aya Ilouz, of her feelings on the matter. Strolling in downtown Jerusalem with her
    husband Liron and their 5-month-old daughter Yael, the couple is so in sync on the question of the day
    that they finish each other's thoughts.
    "Yes," says Liron, "we are very happy and excited to see Gilad meet his family. And on the other
    hand-"
    "We are very concerned," says Aya.
    "About what happens next," Liron explains. "When the next terrorist blows himself up, someone will
    have to answer."
    Just around the corner, on King George Street, Alan Bauer had been walking home with his son on
    March 21, 2002, when a Palestinian man named Mohammad Hashaika exploded a suicide vest packed
    with metal scraps. Eighty-four people were wounded that day. Of the three killed, one was a woman
    pregnant with twins.
    Though the bomber of course died, Israeli courts convicted the two women who drove him to the site
    of the bombing, easing his way past the Israeli checkpoint by buying flowers to carry in the Mother's Day
    crowd.
    "These women, as I speak, are being released," Bauer says.
    Specifics have a way of weakening the joy of Shalit's release. Among the 477 prisoners released on
    Tuesday, in the first phase of the exchange, are an organizer of the 2002 Passover bombing that killed 30
    people; a woman who developed an online relationship with a lovesick Israeli youth she then had
    murdered when he came to meet her; and the man who proudly displayed his bloody hands to the mob
    (暴民) gathered outside the Ramallah building where two Israeli soldiers were beaten to death after
    making a wrong turn onOct. 12, 2000.
    When the list became public, relatives of terrorism victims appealed, without success, to Israel's
    supreme court to prevent the prisoner exchange. The court hearing was interrupted repeatedly by upset
    survivors, including Shvuel Schijveschuurder, who lost five of his family members in a 2001 attack at a
    Jerusalem Sbarro. To protest the release of the woman who drove the suicide bomber to the pizza
    restaurant, Schijveschuurder poured paint on a memorial to Yitzhak Rabin, the Prime Minister slain by an
    Israeli extremist for signing the Oslo Accords.
    "When we say 1,027 prisoners will be released, it's abstract, it doesn't mean anything," says Eliad
    Moreh Rosenberg, who was wounded in the 2002 terrorism bombing at the Hebrew University cafeteria. "But for victims of terror, it's a reality."
    Israeli officials calculate that 60% of those released resume terrorism attacks. To help prevent that
    resumption this time around, Israel insisted that most of the prisoners liberated be sent either to the Gaza
    Strip - which is sealed off from Israel and under the control of Hamas, which says it continues to observe
    a cease-fire - or into exile (流放) in Turkey, Qatar or Syria. About 100 arrived in the West Bank, where
    the government led by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas works diligently to suppress
    terrorism, cooperating with Israeli intelligence and military.
    With the future uncertain, on Tuesday, Jewish Israelis stopped and stared at televisions wherever they
    came upon them. On the sidewalk at midmorning outside the 24-hour Hillel Market, 50 people were
    gathered under a flat screen to catch the first images of Shalit, looking painfully thin . "It was moving. It
    was very exciting," says Anat Rubin, 42. "I just saw photos of him getting out of the car. It gave me
    chills." But she says she heard Hamas say that, learning from success, it was keen to kidnap more Israelis
    in order to win freedom for the 6,000 Palestinians still in Israeli prisons. "I don't want to see the photos of
    them doing the V for victory," she says. "Like they won. They are really releasing murderers. I'm happy
    and sad all together."
    1. The word "Ambivalent" in paragraph 3 is close to _________ in meaning.
    A. happy
    B. moved
    C. contradicted
    D. terrified
    2.Why do the Israelis feel concerned about the exchange of prisoners?
    A. Because it's not fair to exchange 1 with 1,027.
    B. Because they are concerned about the health of Shalit.
    C. Because they are worried more terrorist blows are coming.
    D. Because they want to know when and where the prisoners will be set free.
    3. Of the following statements, which one is TRUE?
    A. All the 1,027 prisoners were released at a time.
    本题信息:2012年浙江省模拟题英语阅读理解难度较难 来源:姜雪
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日常生活类阅读

等考点的理解。关于这些考点您可以点击下面的选项卡查看详细档案。
  • 日常生活类阅读

日常生活类阅读的概念:

日常生活这一话题主要涉及人们衣食住行等方面的活动。这一话题的选材主要针对人们日常的工作,生活以及学习情况。做这一类题时,最主要的是要把握好人物的活动内容,时间和地点。


日常生活类阅读题答题技巧:

【题型说明】
该类文章内容涉及到人们的言谈举止、生活习惯、饮食起居、服饰仪表、恋爱婚姻、消遣娱乐、节日起源、家庭生活等。文章篇幅短小,追根溯源,探索各项风俗的历史渊源,内容有趣。命题也以送分题为主,如事实细节题、语义转换题、词义猜测题和简单推理判断题等。虽然这类文章读起来感觉轻松,试题做起来比较顺手,但绝不能掉以轻心。因为稍不留神,就会丢分。   
【备考提醒】
为了保证较高准确率,建议同学们做好以下几点:   
1、保持正常的考试心态。笔者在教学中发现,越是容易的试题,同学们越是容易失分。为什么呢?因为在这种情况下,同学们极易产生麻痹思想,认为题目好做,就不引起高度重视,于是思维不发散、不周密。而命题人就是利用同学们的这一弱点,设计陷阱题。所以,无论试题难易与否,我们都要保持正常的考试心态。试题容易,不欣喜;试题难,不悲观。   
2、根据前面讲到的方法,认认真真、细细心心做好事实细节题。   
3、做好语义转换题。这类题是根据英语中一词多义和某些词语在文中能表达一定的修辞意义的原则而设计的。要求同学们解释某生词的含义,确定多义词或短语在文中的意思,确认文中的某个代词所指代的对象,或者对英语中特有的表达、格言、谚语进行解释。这种题要求同学们一定要根据上下文猜测词义或理解句子,切不可望文生义。   
4、做好简单推理判断题。简单推理判断题要以表面文字为前提,以具体事实为依据进行推理,做出判断。这种推理方式比较直接,只要弄清事实,即可结合常识推断出合理的结论。