A few months ago as I wandered through my parents’ house,the same house I grew up in,I had a sudden,scary realization.When my parents bought the house,in 1982,they were only two years older than I am now.I tried to imagine myself in two years, ready to settle down and buy the house I’d still be living in almost 30 years later.
It seemed ridiculous.On a practical level,there’s no way I could afford to buy a house anytime soon.More importantly,I wouldn’t want to.I’m not sure where I’ll be living in two years,or what kind of job I’ll have.And I don’t think I’ll be ready to settle down and stay in one place.
So this is probably the generation gap that divides my friends and me from our parents.When our parents were our age,they’d got their education,chosen a career,and were starting to settle into responsible adult lives.
My friends and I--“Generation Y”--still aren’t sure what we want to do with our lives.Whatever we end up doing,we want to make sure we’re happy doing it.We’d rather take risks first,try out different jobs,and move from one city to another until we find our favorite place.We’d rather spend our money on travel than put it in a savings account.
This casual attitude toward responsibility has caused some critics to call my generation “arrogant”(自大的), “impatient”, and “overprotected”.Some of these complaints have a point.As children, we were encouraged to succeed in school,but also to have fun.We grew up in a world full of technological innovation: cell phones,the Internet,instant messaging,and video games.
Our parents looked to rise vertically(垂直的)--starting at the bottom of the ladder and slowly making their way to the top, on the same track, often for the same company. That doesn’t apply to my generation.
Because of that, it may take us longer than our parents to arrive at responsible, stable adulthood. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing. In our desire to find satisfaction, we will work harder, strive for ways to keep life interesting, and gain a broader set of experiences and knowledge than our parents’ generation did.
【小题1】When the author walked through her parents’ house,she _______.
| A.had no idea what she wanted from life |
| B.realized I should buy a house |
| C.started to think about her own life |
| D.wondered why her parents had settled down early |
| A.Their attitude toward responsibility. |
| B.Their ways of making their way to the top. |
| C.Their ways of gaining experience. |
| D.Their attitude towards high technology. |
| A.It’s better to take adult responsibility earlier. |
| B. It’s all right to try more before settling down. |
| C.It involves too much effort to rise vertically. |
| D.It’s ridiculous to call her generation “arrogant”. |
| A.The sudden realization of growing up. |
| B.Criticisms of the young generation. |
| C.A comparison between lifestyles of generations. |
| D.The factors that have changed the young generation. |
【小题1】C
【小题2】A
【小题3】B
【小题4】C
解析试题分析:本文讲述了作者他们这一代人与父辈之间的生活方式的不同。写文章是为了让别人对他们这一代人更加理解。
【小题1】细节题:从文章第一段的句子:I tried to imagine myself in two years, ready to settle down and buy the house I’d still be living in almost 30 years later.可知当作者经过父母的房子的时候,她开始思考自己的生活,选C
【小题2】细节题。根据倒数第二段This casual attitude toward responsibility has caused some critics to call my generation “arrogant”, “impatient”, and “overprotected”.可知作者和朋友和父母主要的代沟正在于对责任的态度,答案为A
【小题3】推断题。根据第四段We’d rather take risks first, try out different jobs, and move from one city to another until we find our favorite place. We’d rather spend our money on travel than put it in a savings account. 说明我们要尝试很多不同的事物,以后再定居下来,故B的做法可能适合我们这一代。故B正确。
【小题4】主旨大意题。本文通过对比,讲述自己这一辈与父辈不同的生活方式。故答案为C
考点:考查人生百味类短文
科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Growing up, I remember my father as a silent, serious man—not the sort of person around whom one could laugh. As a teenager arriving in America, knowing nothing, I wanted a father who could explain the human journey. In college, when friends called home for advice, I would sink into deep depression for what I did not have.
Today, at twenty-seven, I have come to rediscover them in ways that my teenage mind would not allow—as adults and as friends with their own faults and weaknesses.
One night after my move back home, I overheard my father on the telephone. There was some trouble. Later, Dad shared the problem with me. Apparently my legal training had earned me some privileges in his eyes. I talked through the problem with Dad, analyzing the purposes of the people involved and offering several negotiation strategies(策略).He listened patiently before finally admitting, “I can’t think like that. I am a simple man.”
Dad is a brilliant scientist who can deconstruct the building blocks of nature. Yet human nature is a mystery to him. That night I realized that he was simply not skilled at dealing with people, much less the trouble of a conflicted teenager. It’s not in his nature to understand human desires.
And so, there it was—it was no one’s fault that my father held no interest in human lives while I placed great importance in them. We are at times born more sensitive, wide-eyed, and dreamy than our parents and become more curious and idealistic than them. Dad perhaps never expected me for a child. And I, who knew Dad as an intelligent man, had never understood that his intelligence did not cover all of my feelings.
It has saved me years of questioning and confusion. I now see my parents as people who have other relationships than just Father and Mother. I now overlook their many faults and weaknesses, which once annoyed me.
I now know my parents as friends: people who ask me for advice; people who need my support and understanding. And I have come to see my past clearer.
【小题1】What was the author’s impression of her father when she was a teenager?
| A.Friendly but irresponsible. |
| B.Intelligent but severe. |
| C.Cold and aggressive. |
| D.Caring and communicative. |
| A.She did not have a phone to call home. |
| B.Her father did not care about her human journey. |
| C.Her father was too busy to answer her phone. |
| D.Her father could not give her appropriate advice. |
| A.he blamed her for impoliteness. |
| B.he rediscovered human nature. |
| C.he consulted with her about his problem. |
| D.he changed his attitude towards the author. |
| A.My Parents as Friends. |
| B.My Parents as advisers. |
| C.My father—a serious man. |
| D.My father—an intelligent scientist. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
A driver stopped his car on a street side to have a rest. As he lay down in the seat and closed his eyes, a person came up and knocked at the window to ask the time. The driver opened his eyes and looked at his watch: “It’s 8:05,” he said. Then he went to sleep again. But soon he was waken up again because a second person was knocking at the window. “Sir, do you know the time?” he asked. The driver looked at his watch again, and told him it was half past eight.
In this way, the driver thought he could not have a good rest, so he wrote a short note and stuck it on the window for all to see. It said, “I don’t know the time.”
Again, he lay down in the seat for his sleep. A few minutes later, a third person came and began to knock at the window, “Hey, sir,” he said, “It’s a quarter to nine.”
【小题1】Where did the driver sleep?
| A.At the window | B.In the street road |
| C.In his car | D.In his room. |
| A.40 minutes | B.25 minutes |
| C.50 minutes | D.70 minutes |
| A.Because he didn’t know the time |
| B.Because he didn’t want anybody to trouble him |
| C.Because he needed somebody to wake him up. |
| D.Because he wanted somebody to tell him the time |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
I live in Hollywood. You may think people in such an attractive, fun-filled place are happier than others. If so, you have some mistaken ideas about the nature of happiness.
Many intelligent people still equate happiness with fun. The truth is that fun and happiness have little or nothing in common. Fun is what we experience during an act. Happiness is what we experience after an act. It is a deeper, more long-lasting emotion. Going to an amusement park or ball game, watching a movie or television, are fun activities that help us relax, temporarily forget our problems and maybe even laugh. But they do not bring happiness, because their positive effects end when the fun ends.
I have often thought that if Hollywood stars have a role to play, it is to teach us that happiness has nothing to do with fun. These rich, beautiful individuals have constant access to exciting parties, fancy cars, expensive homes, everything that spells “happiness”. But in memoir(回忆录) after memoir, celebrities reveal the unhappiness hidden beneath all their fun: depression, alcoholism, drug addiction, broken marriages, troubled children, and long-time loneliness.
The way people hold on to the belief that a fun-filled, pain-free life equates happiness actually decreases their chances of ever attaining real happiness. If fun and pleasure are equated with happiness, then pain must be equated with unhappiness. But, in fact, the opposite is true: More times than not, things that lead to happiness involve some pain.
As a result, many people avoid the very efforts that are the source of true happiness. They fear the pain inevitably brought by such things as marriage, raising children, professional achievement, religious commitment, charitable work and self-improvement.
【小题1】According to the passage, “fun activities” ____________.
| A.are the things we do before we find happiness |
| B.may help us relax and forget our problems sometimes |
| C.will lead us to the true happiness |
| D.could provide long-last positive effects |
| A.possess happiness because they are rich and famous |
| B.experience almost all kinds of happy things |
| C.tell us happiness isn’t equal to fun using their own stories |
| D.have to suffer a lot before they become successful |
| A.they believe happiness is the fun life without pain |
| B.they find pain equals unhappiness |
| C.they fear to lose what they already have in life |
| D.They are afraid all their efforts were in vain |
| A.describe the difference between happiness and fun |
| B.show the true meaning of happiness |
| C.encourage people to pursue fun activities |
| D.advise people to find their real life |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
How do you design a pay plan that motivates people to do their best work? A new study by three Harvard researchers suggests a novel answer: Shortly after you hire new workers, give them a raise.
"Previous research has shown that paying people more than they expect may elicit reciprocity(相互作用) in the form of greater productivity," notes Deepak Malhotra, a Harvard business-administration professor who worked on the study. What he and his colleagues found, however, was that the connection between more pay and extra effort depends on presenting the increase "as a gift—that is, as something you've chosen to do purely as a nice gesture, with no strings attached."
Malhotra and his team studied 267 people hired by oDesk, a global online network of freelancers, to do a one-time data-entry project for four hours. All of the new hires were people in developing countries, for whom hourly wages of $3 and $4 were higher than what they had been making in previous jobs.
The researchers split the group up into three equal parts. One group was told they would earn $3 an hour. A second group was initially hired at $3 an hour but, before they started working, they got a surprise: The budget for the project had expanded unexpectedly, they were told, and they would now be paid $4 an hour. The third group was offered $4 an hour from the start and given no increase.
Even though the second and third groups were eventually paid the same amount, the second group worked harder and produced more—about 20% more—than either of the other two. People in the second group also showed the most stamina, maintaining their focus all the way through the assigned task and performing especially well toward the end of the four hours. Interestingly, the more experienced employees in the high-performing group were the most productive of all, apparently because their previous work experience led them to appreciate the rarity of an unexpected raise.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, Malhotra points out that higher pay, in and of itself, didn't promote productivity: People who made $4 an hour from the beginning worked no harder than those who were hired at $3 and were then paid $3.
To get the most impact from their pay plans, he adds, companies might consider not only what to pay new hires, but when to pay it.
"The key thing is how you present [the reason for an increase]," he says. Doling out extra money could promote productivity most "if you make it clear that the pay raise is something you're choosing to do just because you can. Our theory is that people will reciprocate. If you do something nice, they'll do something nice back."
【小题1】Which of the following is true about the research?
| A.None of the participants earned more than $4 an hour in previous jobs. |
| B.89 of the participants got a $1 wage raise for their high productivity. |
| C.It was so important that the budget for it was increased in the process. |
| D.Stamina shown in it was positively related to the amount of money paid. |
| A.The quality of being intelligent or clever. |
| B.The quality of doing something difficult or dangerous. |
| C.The physical or mental energy needed to do a tiring activity for a long time. |
| D.A particular method of doing an activity, usually involving practical skills. |
| A.Because they thought they were better paid than the other groups. |
| B.Because they were experienced employees from developing countries. |
| C.Because an unexpected raise reminded them of their previous work. |
| D.Because they felt they were nicely treated and tried best to repay it. |
| A.No pains, no gains. |
| B.It matters not what we give but how. |
| C.Honesty is the best policy. |
| D.Actions speak louder than words. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
A few months ago as I wandered through my parents’ house, the same house I grew up in, I had a sudden, scary realization. When my parents bought the house, in 1982, they were only two years older than I am now. I tried to imagine myself in two years, ready to settle down and buy the house I’d still be living in almost 30 years later.
It seemed ridiculous. On a practical level, there’s no way I could afford to buy a house anytime soon. More importantly, I wouldn’t want to. I’m not sure where I’ll be living in two years, or what kind of job I’ll have. And I don’t think I’ll be ready to settle down and stay in one place.
So this is probably the generation gap that divides my friends and me from our parents. When our parents were our age, they’d gotten their education, chosen a career, and were starting to settle into responsible adult lives.
My friends and I – “Generation Y” – still aren’t sure what we want to do with our lives. Whatever we end up doing, we want to make sure we’re happy doing it. We’d rather take risks first, try out different jobs, and move from one city to another until we find our favorite place. We’d rather spend our money on travel than put it in a savings account.
This casual attitude towards responsibility has caused some critics to call my generation “arrogant”, “impatient”, and “overprotected”. Some of these complaints have a point. As children we were encouraged to succeed in school, but also to have fun. We grew up in a world full of technological innovation: cellphones, the Internet, instant messaging, and video games.
Our parents looked to rise vertically(垂直的)– starting at the bottom of the ladder and slowly making their way to the top, on the same track, often for the same company. That doesn’t apply to my generation.
Because of that, it may take us longer than our parents to arrive at responsible, stable adulthood. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing. In our desire to find satisfaction, we will work harder, struggle for ways to keep life interesting, and gain a broader set of experiences and knowledge than our parents’ generation did.
【小题1】What is the main “generation gap” between the author and her friends and their parents according to the article?
| A.Their ways of gaining experience. |
| B.Their attitude towards responsibility. |
| C.Their attitude toward high technology. |
| D.Their ways of making their way to the top. |
| A.It involves too much effort to rise vertically. |
| B.It’s better to take adult responsibility earlier. |
| C.It’s all right to try more before settling down. |
| D.It’s ridiculous to call her generation “arrogant”. |
| A.The author is envious of her parents enjoying a big house at her age. |
| B.“Generation Y” people don’t want to grow up and rush into adulthood. |
| C.Growing up in a hi-tech world makes “Generation Y” feel insecure about relationships. |
| D.The author wrote this article so that others would be able to understand her generation better. |
| A.Criticisms of the young generation. |
| B.The sudden realization of growing up. |
| C.A comparison between lifestyles of generations. |
| D.The factors that have changed the young generation. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
I remember the first time that I was extremely happy. I was about 8 years old when for the first time, there was a computer in the classroom. I remember that my teacher allowed each student to take turns to play various educational games on the computer. One day, I found the source code(编码)for one of these games. Without knowing or being taught any programming language, I was able to figure out some of the BASIC code. I just gave myself an infinite number of lives in the game, so I could continue playing it forever. This was also my first introduction to algebra, and I didn't even know it at the time. This was a decisive moment in my life. I was quite excited because of what I was learning and what I was able to do. As a result, I was enthusiastic for the rest of my life about self learning and computers, and I was quite happy doing them too.
I've noticed that people who are truly content with life are enthusiastic about what they do. This enthusiasm, along with good health, is the key to being happy. It also leads to self-confidence and content in life too. It may also lead to success, wealth, and achievements.
Success, wealth, or achievements can also bring some people happiness, yet I know plenty of rich people who are unhappy. I know many people with successful businesses that are not happy with what they are doing. I know people who continuously buy themselves new toys, such as cars, computers, and televisions, yet never seem content for too long. Please remember, happiness is the journey of life, not the destination.
【小题1】What can we know from Paragraph 1?
| A.The author has a great talent for algebra. |
| B.Creative thinking is necessary for every child. |
| C.The BASIC code of the computer is not difficult. |
| D.The author's experience in his childhood changed his life. |
| A.big | B.limitless | C.normal | D.small |
| A.interest is the best teacher | B.children are the hope of the future |
| C.young people are fearless | D.where there’s a will, there’s a way |
| A.Success and wealth. | B.Gifts and self-confidence. |
| C.Enthusiasm and good health. | D.Knowledge and achievements. |
| A.people who are rich and successful in career generally feel unhappy |
| B.wealth can’t bring people any happiness and comfort |
| C.one will feel unhappy once he has gained all the things that he wants |
| D.being enthusiastic about what you do is more important than wealth |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
We all have our ways of marking time. As a photographer, my life is measured from one story to the next. My oldest son was born in the middle of a long story about the Endangered Species Act. My daughter came along with a pack of gray wolves.
Twenty stories later, though, it’s the story in Alaska that I’ll remember best. It was the story about the loss of wilderness — and the story during which my wife Kathy got cancer. That’s the one that made time stand still. I stopped taking pictures on the day when she found that tumor (肿瘤). Cruelly, it was Thanksgiving. By Christmas, she had become very weak. Some days she was so sick she couldn’t watch TV.
Early examination saves time. But ours was not early. By the time you can feel it yourself, it’s often bigger than the doctor want it to be.
Cancer is a thief. It steals time. Our days are already short with worry. Then comes this terrible disease, unfair as storm at harvest time. But cancer also has the power to change us, for good. We learn to simplify, enjoying what we have instead of feeling sorry for what we don’t. Cancer even made me a better father. My work had made me a stranger to my three kids. But now I pay attention to what really matters. This is not a race. This is a new way of life and new way of seeing, all from the cancer.
In the end each of us has so little time. We have less of it than we can possibly imagine. And even though it turns out that Kathy’s cancer has not spread, and her prognosis (诊断) is good. We try to make it all count now, enjoying every part of every day.
I’ve picked up my camera again. I watch the sky, searching for beautiful light. When winter storms come, Kathy and I gather our children and take the time to catch snowflakes (雪花) on our tongues. After all, this is good. This is what we’re living for.
【小题1】As a photographer, the author used to ______.
| A.leave his daughter with a pack of gray wolves |
| B.express his love for his family in a special way |
| C.miss a great many important historical moments |
| D.devote much more to his career than his family |
| A.To cure his own disease. | B.To spend more time with his wife. |
| C.To seek a better position. | D.To leave the wilderness alone. |
| A.He treasured every bit of time with his family. |
| B.He has become a stranger to his children. |
| C.He takes his work more seriously. |
| D.He focuses more on medical care. |
| A.the snowflakes taste very good |
| B.snowflakes are what they feed on |
| C.they regard that as a way to enjoy life |
| D.there is beautiful light in the snowflakes |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
The dirty, homeless man sat on the pavement, staring at the stones. He thought back more than twenty years to when he was a boy living in a small red brick house on this very street. He recalled the flower garden, the swing his dad made, and the bike he had saved up for months to buy.
The man shrugged impatiently, for the brightness of those pictures hurt him, and his memory traveled on another ten years. He had a job by then, plenty of friends and started to come home less. He did not really want to remember those years, nor the day when, because of debts, he had gone home planning to ask for money. He felt embarrassed, but he knew exactly where his dad kept the money. When his parents stepped out of the room, he took what he wanted and left.
That was the last time he had seen them. Ashamed, he went abroad, and his parents knew nothing about the years of wandering or time in prison. But locked in his cell he often thought of home. Once free, he would love to see his parents again, if they were still alive, and still wanted to see him.
When his prison time was up, he found a job, but couldn’t settle. Something was drawing him home. He did not want to arrive penniless, so he hitchhiked most of the long journey back. But less than a mile from his destination he started to feel sick with doubt. Could they ever accept this man who had so bitterly disappointed them?
He spent most of that day sitting under a tree. That evening he posted a letter which, although short, had taken him hours to write. It ended with:
I know it is unreasonable of me to suppose you want to see me ... so it’s up to you. I’ll come early Thursday morning. If you want me home, hang a white handkerchief in the window of my old bedroom. If it’s there, I’ll come in; if not, I’ll wave good-bye and go.
And now it was Thursday morning and he was sitting on the pavement at the end of the street. Finally he got up and walked slowly toward the old house. He drew a long breath and looked.
His parents were taking no risks. ________________________________________
The man threw his head back, gave a cry of relief and ran straight through the open front door.
【小题1】Why did the man shrug impatiently (paragraph 2) while he was thinking of his childhood?
| A.The thoughts made him angry. |
| B.He felt he had wasted time. |
| C.He was anxious to go home. |
| D.The sweet memory caused him much pain. |
| A.He doubted if his parents still lived in that house. |
| B.He had much news to tell his parents. |
| C.He felt ashamed to ask for forgiveness. |
| D.He was longing to return home and felt excited. |
| A.b, a, c, d, e, f | B.b, a, c, f, d, e |
| C.a, c, b, d, f, a | D.a, d, b, c, e, f |
| A.Every inch of the house was covered in white. Sheets, pillowcases and table clothes had been placed on every window and door, making it look like a snow house. |
| B.The house before him was just as he remembered: the red bricks, the brown door and nothing else. |
| C.A colorful blanket was over the front door. On it, in large letters, was written, “Welcome home, son”. |
| D.A police car was parked in the drive way, and two officers stood at the front door. |
| A.Sweet Memory | B.White Handkerchief |
| C.Abandoned Son | D.Leaving Home |
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