Yasuda is 95 years old. Looking for easier ways to search the Web and send email, he bought Apple’s iPad. The company has sold 3.27 million iPads since they entered the market in April. Although it’s impossible to know with certainty how many seniors (老年人) are buying them, evidence suggests that it’s a hit with seniors.
The iPad’s intuitive interface (直观界面) makes it attractive to seniors around the world, says Takahiro Miura, a researcher at the University of Tokyou. “The iPad is a good tool for seniors because it’s very easy to use,” he says. “Unlike the PC, it doesn’t require former knowledge.”
James Cordwell, a researcher in London, says the iPad’s popularity with seniors is helping Apple reach beyond its traditional base of young customers. “The world’s population, especially in developed markets, is getting older. It’s probably a market where Apple has least entered, ” Cordwell says. Senior users are “a key source of growth for them in the future.”
Seniors make up about 22 percent of the population in Japan. They may prove that seniors are willing to accept the iPad. Besides the customer group under 30, they spend more than any other group in the country, according to a report. Motoo Kitamura, 78, a former gas salesman, bought an iPad to help him communicate with his 2-year-old grandson and prevent him from experiencing some of the mental problems that sometimes come with getting older. “Trying new things like that is good mental exercise,” he says.
【小题1】The underlined part “a hit” in Paragraph 1 probably means ______ .
| A.a sudden attack | B.a heavy burden | C.quite popular | D.very familiar |
| A.It has intuitive interface. |
| B.It is easy to operate. |
| C.Beginners can use it without similar experiences. |
| D.People can use it as a way to do mental exercise. |
| A.People above thirty are Apple’s largest customer group in Japan. |
| B.The traditional customers of Apple’s products are usually the young. |
| C.Seniors will soon grow into Apple’s largest customer group. |
| D.Seniors in Japan are fond of buying latest hi-tech products. |
【小题1】C
【小题2】D
【小题3】B
【小题4】A
解析试题分析:本文主要讲了苹果传统的顾客是年轻人,但是越来越多的老年人也开始喜欢用“苹果”。
【小题1】细节题。The iPad’s intuitive interface (直观界面) makes it attractive to seniors around the world, says Takahiro Miura, a researcher at the University of Tokyou. “The iPad is a good tool for seniors because it’s very easy to use,” he says. “Unlike the PC, it doesn’t require former knowledge.可知“a hit”的意思是相当地受欢迎,故选C。
【小题2】 细节题。根据Besides the customer group under 30, they spend more than any other group in the country, according to a report. Motoo Kitamura, 78, a former gas salesman, bought an iPad to help him communicate with his 2-year-old grandson and prevent him from experiencing some of the mental problems that sometimes come with getting older. “Trying new things like that is good mental exercise,” he says.可知D选项并不是苹果平板电脑的优点,故选D。
【小题3】细节归纳题。根据Besides the customer group under 30, they spend more than any other group in the country, according to a report.可知苹果传统的顾客是年轻人,故选B。
【小题4】概括题。整篇文章都在讲“苹果”在老年人中逐渐受到欢迎,故选A。
考点:考查新闻类短文
科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Few laws are so effective that you can see results just days after they take effect.But in the nine days since the federal cigarette tax more than doubled-to $1.01 per pack-smokers have jammed telephone “quit lines” across the country seeking to kick the habit.
This is not a surprise to public health advocates.They've studied the effect of state tax increases for years,finding that smokers,especially teens,are price sensitive.Nor is it a shock to the industry,which fiercely fights every tax increase.
The only wonder is that so many states insist on closing their ears to the message.Tobacco taxes improve public health,they raise money and most particularly,they deter people from taking up the habit as teens,which is when nearly all smokers are addicted.Yet the rate of taxation varies widely.
In Manhattan,for instance,which has the highest tax in the nation,a pack of Marlboro Light Kings,cost $10.06 at one drugstore Wednesday.In Charleston,S.C.,where the 7 cent a pack tax is the lowest in the nation,the price was $4.78.
The influence is obvious.![]()
In New York,high school smoking hit a new low in the latest surveys-13.8%,far below the national average.By comparison,26% of high school students smoke in Kentucky.Other low tax states have similarly depressing teen smoking records.
Hal Rogers,Representative from Kentucky,like those who are against high tobacco taxes,argues that the burden of the tax falls on low?income Americans “who choose to smoke.”
That's true.But there is more reason in keeping future generations of low?income workers from getting hooked in the first place.As for today's adults,if the new tax drives them to quit,they will have more to spend on their families,cut their risk of cancer and heart disease and feel better.
【小题1】The text is mainly about ________.
| A.the price of cigarettes |
| B.the rate of teen smoking |
| C.the effect of tobacco tax increase |
| D.the differences in tobacco tax rate |
| A.The new tax will be beneficial in the long run. |
| B.Low?income Americans are more likely to fall ill. |
| C.Future generations will be hooked on smoking. |
| D.Adults will depend more on their families. |
| A.tolerance | B.unconcern |
| C.doubt | D.sympathy |
| A.Teen smokers are price sensitive. |
| B.Some states still keep the tobacco tax low. |
| C.Tobacco taxes improve public health. |
| D.Tobacco industry fiercely fights the tax rise. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
According to Hunan Daily, in Yongxing County of Hunan Province, retired teacher Chen and his wife are living in a natural cave (山洞), and they quite enjoy such life.
Chen’s cave is 20 meters wide and 8 meters deep. Lichens (青苔)can be seen everywhere in it. Chen says that the place is free of pollution.
Because of being poor, they moved into the cave, Chen said. In 1975, the houses of his families and his neighbors were all burned to the ground in the fire. Chen was then already married and badly needed a house to live in. But he had no money to build a house, so he had to live in his relatives’ houses as long as 5 years.
In 1980, he happened to discover this cave, immediately he and his family members decided to live in there. Chen thought the cave could be a temporary(临时的)living place, but it never occurred to him that it could be his home in the next 28 years. Chen recalled that the first couple of days were the most difficult period, “I put up some wooden boards for a gate, but they were all blown away by wind that same night.”
Chen has two sons and a daughter, and they all left the cave after they got married. Now Chen’s old friends once in a while visit him in his cave drinking and playing Chinese chess. For Chen, the most enjoyable thing is to raise bees and grow kinds of plants.
【小题1】From the passage we know what Chen likes to do most is ____.
| A.drinking and playing chess with his friends |
| B.raising bees and growing plants |
| C.doing farm work in the fields |
| D.recalling his past life |
| A.His house was blown away by wind. |
| B.His house was washed away by floods. |
| C.His house was destroyed by fire. |
| D.The text doesn’t mention it. |
| A.All of Chen’s children are studying in the university. |
| B.Chen’s friends hardly come to the cave to see him. |
| C.Chen and his children still live together in the cave. |
| D.Chen found the cave quite by accident. |
| A.introduce a natural cave to people |
| B.tell us something about a teacher living in the cave for 28 years |
| C.explain how the Chens suffered during the 28 years |
| D.expect more people to visit Chen’s cave |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
QINGDAO--Water and power supplies have been restored in the East Chinese city of Qingdao, the site of an oil pipeline explosion on Friday, the local government said on Monday.
Crude oil began leaking(泄漏)from the pipeline at 3:00 an Friday in Qingdao in Shandong province. The valves(阀门)of the Huangdao oil warehouse were shut about 15 minutes later.
The oil spill(泄漏的石油)then flowed into the city’s rainwater pipe network, which empties into Jiaozhou Bay. Explosions occurred at two locations around 10:30 am Friday when workers were clearing the spill.
According to the local government, about 85 percent of public heating and 90 percent of the gas supply were also brought back to normal as of Monday.
Residents who have been taken to the temporary settlements are receiving bottled water and bread.
Many schools and kindergartens have reopened classes after Friday’s oil pipeline explosion. No injures and deaths of students or teachers have been reported following the explosions at an underground pipeline operated by Sinopec. The school buildings of one middle school in the district were seriously damaged during the explosions. Education authorities have arranged psychological help for students and teaching staff. All other 18 schools and kindergartens in the district reopened classes on Monday.
As of Monday noon, the death toll from the explosion had risen to 55, with 9 people still missing and 136 hospitalized. According to local police, 49 bodied have been identified so far, and 42 of them were male victims. As of Monday morning, the blood supply in Qingdao was enough for the injured after more than 950 people in the city donated more than 340,000 ml of blood in the wake of the incident.
【小题1】The underlined word “restored” in the first paragraph probable means “ ”.
| A.cut | B.destroyed | C.recovered | D.repaired |
| A.workers were cleaning the spill |
| B.valves of the oil warehouse were shut |
| C.the oil spill flowed into the city’s water network |
| D.crude oil began to leak from an underground pipeline |
| A.64 | B.49 | C.55 | D.42 |
| A.everything was brought back to normal right after the explosion |
| B.no measures were taken to help the suffering people out of trouble |
| C.no more dead body was found after Monday noon |
| D.all the 19 schools in the district were affected by the explosion |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
President Barack Obama rode a bicycle at the White House Science Fair on April 22. But it wasn’t an ordinary bike. As he pedaled, the President stayed in place, while the energy from his pedaling powered a water filtration (过滤) system. He was testing an invention created by a team of 14 students from Northeast High School, in Oakland Park, Florida.
Payton Karr, 16, and Kiona Elliot, 18, attended the fair as representatives of the project.“We were hoping President Obama would ride the bike, but we didn’t actually expect him to,” Payton told TFK. “ It really meant a lot.” Kiona agreed. “It was pretty awesome to see the invention, which was invented by a group of 14 high school students and one teacher, along with the help of community members, got the interest of the leader of our nation,” she said.
The project was an idea that came about after one of the Northeast students, Kalie Hoke, visited Haiti after the terrible 2010 earthquake and saw how difficult it was to find clean water. The students invented a portable(便携的), bicycle-powered emergency water filtration system, which can provide 20-30 people with drinking water in a 15-hour period. The teens hope their invention will one day be used by relief organizations like the Red Cross. “ They can take it to places after natural disasters so that water can be clean for the people there,” said Payton.
Payton and Kiona were among the 100 students from more than 40 states invited to the third annual White House Science Fair, in Washington, D.C., which is also attended by leaders in science and education. President Obama started the event in 2010 to stimulate students interested in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Maths).“Well, if you’re a young person and you produce the best experiment or design, you ought to be recognized for that achievement,” Obama said when he first announced the fair.
President Obama praised the projects during a speech to attendees after the fair. “The science fair projects of today could become the products and businesses of tomorrow,” he said. “If you’re inventing things in the third grade, what are you going to do by the time you get to college?”
【小题1】What is special about the bicycle President Obama rode?
| A.It can move very fast. |
| B.It is extremely beautiful. |
| C.It is used to make water clean. |
| D.It is made of eco-friendly materials. |
| A.were both community members |
| B.graduated from a famous university |
| C.finished the project with the help of their parents |
| D.were surprised that their invention interested Obama |
| A.at the request of the Red Cross |
| B.for city families to get pure water |
| C.during the terrible 2010 earthquake in Haiti |
| D.to provide people in disaster areas with clean water |
| A.help | B.inspire | C.change | D.entertain |
| A.wanted the youth to have big dreams |
| B.encouraged the youth to go to college |
| C.worried the young inventors would do nothing in college |
| D.believed the young inventors would have a promising future |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
The environmental group 350.org has launched a new campaign called Climate Name Change that proposes to revise to how hurricanes are named: call them after policymakers who say that humans are not to blame for global warming.
This will save the Katrinas and Sandys of the world from the injustice of having their names attached to major disaster, the group says. And, as a bonus, it will produce some peculiar weather reports.
“Rick Perry leaves trail of death,” appears under a broadcast titled “Rick Perry: The Tragedy.”
“Michelle Bachman is incredibly dangerous. If you value your life, please seek shelter from Michelle Bachman,” says an official while addressing a news conference.
The campaign is unlikely to influence the World Meteorological Organization, which has since 1954 named Atlantic tropical storms from an official list.
But the campaign’s goal seems less to actually name a hurricane after the speaker of the house, and more to call attention to an issue that this month has reached an alarming level of seriousness. The campaign comes just a month before the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will release its most recent report on the state of global warming and a week after a draft(草稿)of the report was given away to Reuters.
In the draft, scientists concluded with near certainty – about 95 percent sure – that humans are to blame for the worldwide temperature hikes over the last few decades. That was a revision from the 2007 report, which put scientific certainty that human activities were driving global climate change at about 90 percent.
And global warming, the report said, is not slowing down – it, actually, is accelerating. That means that sea levels could balloon upward as much as three feet by the end of the century, if emissions(排放量) continue at their current pace.
Still, as the Washington Post Climate notes, hurricanes are not the best sign of global warming. Though current data suggests that global warming will in the future stir up terrible super storms, there is still not enough evidence to support the idea that climate change strengthens the recent hurricanes that have torn at the US’s eastern coastline.
【小题1】It can be inferred that__________ is one of the policymakers who believe that humans are not to blame for global warming.
| A.Katrina | B.Rick Perry | C.Flossie | D.Sandy |
| A.changing the ways of naming hurricanes |
| B.introducing the methods of naming hurricanes |
| C.reminding policymakers to change their attitudes |
| D.calling attention to the coming report on global warming |
| A.global warming is speeding up at the same rate |
| B.it is human beings that have caused global warming |
| C.the new report has a more accurate data than the one in 2007 |
| D.human beings are not the only one to blame for global warming |
| A.policymakers should be blamed for the global warming |
| B.the campaign will cause the change of naming hurricanes |
| C.global warming has no necessary relation to terrible hurricanes |
| D.global warming will surely cause terrible super storms in the future |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Do you enjoy seeing the stars twinkling at night ? Or do you love the ocean and sea, diving and racing with lovely dolphins? With heavy burdens on their shoulders, teenagers find it hard to pull out. Even if they are free, they prefer to occupy themselves with computer games or watching TV. How to get children away from screens is a great concern for parents. Now there is some good news for those concerned parents and teachers.
A campaign is being launched to encourage children to surrender 30 minutes of screen time a day to head for the great outdoors.
The newly formed Wild Network – a collaboration of nearly 400 organizations – is attempting to attract youngsters away from television and computer screen and into fields, woods and parks.
Organizers say it is the UK's biggest ever campaign to reconnect children with nature and outdoor play, and claim it could help improve fitness, mental alertness and general well–being.
A documentary film, Project Wild Thing, will herald the launch at more than 50 cinemas across the UK from Friday. It looks at the increasingly fragile link between children and nature.
Members of the network include the National Trust, RSPB, Play England and the NHS sustainable development unit.
Andy Simpson, chairman of the Wild Network, said: "The tragic truth is that kids have lost touch with nature and the outdoors in just one generation. Time spent outdoors is down, roaming ranges have fallen drastically, activity levels are declining and the ability to identify common species has been lost."
Suggestions of how to get more time in nature include collecting conkers(板栗), camping or snail racing, and observing autumn colour on trees.
From January, the network will aim to make suggestions to politicians on how government can do more to get children muddy and bright-eyed.
This is not the first time the message of less screen, more play has been brought up. Children in the 1980s were entreated to do the same by the BBC TV series Why Don't You, which somewhat confusingly called on its viewers to "switch off your TV set, and go do something less boring instead".
【小题1】What is the main purpose of the campaign in UK?
| A.To save 30 minutes for watching TV programme each day. |
| B.To encourage children to play outdoors. |
| C.To see the documentary film, Project Wild Thing. |
| D.To teach students how to learn more efficiently in schools. |
| A.improving health conditions |
| B.keeping touch with nature |
| C.learning more about wildlife |
| D.teaching children how to make full use of their spare time |
| A.to make children covered with mud |
| B.to urge politicians to do more things for children |
| C.to encourage children to take part in outdoors activities |
| D.to help children identify common species |
| A.A new campaign. | B.Less screen, more play outdoors. |
| C.A newly formed Wild Network. | D.Children get to know wild things. |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
On the evening of June 21, 1992, a tall man with brown hair and blue eyes entered the beautiful hall of the Bell Tower Hotel in Xi’an with his bicycle. The hotel workers received him and telephoned the manager, for they had never seen a bicycle in the hotel ball before though they lived in “the kingdom of bicycles.”
Robert Friedlander, an American, arrived in Xi’an on his bicycle trip across Asia which started last December in New Delhi, India.
When he was 11, he read the book Ma-rco Polo and made up his mind to visit the Silk Road. Now, after 44 years , he was on the Silk Road in Xi’an and his early dreams were coming true.
Robert Friedlander’s next destinations (目的地) were Lanzhou, Dunhuang, Urumqi, etc. He will complete his trip in Pakistan.
【小题1】The best headline(标题) for this newspaper article would be .
| A.The Kingdom of Bicycles | B.A Beautiful Hotel in Xi’an |
| C.Marco Polo and the Silk Road | D.An American Achieving His Aims |
| A.he asked to see the manager |
| B.he entered the hall with a bike |
| C.the manager had to know about all foreign guests |
| D.the manager knew about his trip and was expecting him |
| A.China, Pakistan, and India | B.Pakistan, China, and India |
| C.India, China, and Pakistan | D.China, India, and Pakistan |
| A.The stories about Marco Polo . | B.The famous sights in Xi’an . |
| C.His interest in Chinese silk. | D.His childhood dreams about bicycles . |
| A.determined | B.friendly | C.hardworking | D.open-minded |
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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:阅读理解
Mother-of-three Carmen Blake called her midwife(助产师)to ask for an ambulance when she went into labor unexpectedly with her fourth child.
But the 27-year-old claims she was refused an ambulance and told to walk the 100m from her house in Leicester to the city’s nearby Royal Infirmary(医院).
Her daughter Mariah was delivered on a pavement outside the hospital by a passer-by, just before ambulance crews arrived.
Ms Blake said she started going into labor at about 7:15 am on Sunday, August 2. She said, “I phoned up the Royal Infirmary, it’s just across the road.
“I went into the bath and realized she was gong to come quickly. I didn’t think I’d be able to make it out of the bath, so I phoned the maternity(妇产科的) ward back and told them to get an ambulance out.”
They said they were not sending an ambulance and told me I had had nine months to sort out a lift.
Experienced mother MS Blake today said she knew she had to get herself out of the bath and try to get to the hospital.
Eventually MS Blake and her friends enlisted the help of a physiotherapist(理疗师) who happened to be passing on her way to work. She dialed 999 and helped deliver baby Mariah while waiting for emergency services.
Ms Blake said despite the happy ending she was upset she was told to make her own way to the hospital as, being an experienced mum, she knew she did not have the time.
Today a government spokeswoman said, “We are disappointed that Ms Blake was not happy with the advice and care she received and will of course investigate any complaint. We are pleased that both Ms Blake and her daughter are well and healthy.”
【小题1】 Carmen Blake, the 27-year-old mother, gave girth to her new child Mariah .
| A.in the city’s Royal Infirmary |
| B.in the ambulance on her way to hospital |
| C.out of the bath at home |
| D.in the street on her way to hospital |
| A.felt worried | B.felt tired | C.gave birth to | D.went to sleep |
| A.there were not enough ambulance in the Royal Infirmary |
| B.the story ended with a sad ending |
| C.the maternity ward said Ms Blake only needed a lift |
| D.the maternity ward said Ms Blake ought to call earlier |
| A.failing to send an ambulance to help her |
| B.having killed her newly-born baby |
| C.not taking good care of her and her baby |
| D.refusing to admit her into the hospital |
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