(整理版高中英语)阅读理解主旨大意题练习.doc
![资源得分’ title=](/images/score_1.gif)
![资源得分’ title=](/images/score_1.gif)
![资源得分’ title=](/images/score_1.gif)
![资源得分’ title=](/images/score_1.gif)
![资源得分’ title=](/images/score_05.gif)
《(整理版高中英语)阅读理解主旨大意题练习.doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《(整理版高中英语)阅读理解主旨大意题练习.doc(5页珍藏版)》请在淘文阁 - 分享文档赚钱的网站上搜索。
1、阅读理解主旨大意题练习Getting the main ideas:1. Someday scientists may actually perfect a machine that can translate one language into another. Translation machines have been invented, and some are even used for certain tasks, but improvements are needed. As an example of the problems of machine translation, c
2、onsider the word like. In one sentence, it may mean “similar to, as in “He is like his father. In another sentence, it may mean “enjoy eating, as in “They like ice cream. The translating machine once digested the sentence “Time flies like an arrow. Out came the translation: Russian sentence that mea
3、nt “Time flies like to eat arrow.The paragraph tells mainly _.A. how translation machined work B. how translation machines are used for certain tasksC. why the word like needs careful translationD. why improvements are needed in translation machines2. The first woman employee of the U.S. Forest Serv
4、ice began as a clerk in New Mexico. Anita Kellogg wished to be a forest ranger. In 1920 she took a civil service examination for a ranger job a lonely and hard post in the rugged Southwest and passed it. She wasnt made a ranger, however, because she was a woman. She was made a fiscal agent to pay fi
5、refighters. Somehow, she got into the thick of a big forest fire in the Gila National Forest and performed so ably that she was given a commendation and an increase in pay. However, discrimination caused Anita Kellogg to fall short of her great ambition to become the first female forest ranger.The p
6、aragraph mainly tells _.A. how Anita Kellogg tried to become a forest rangerB. what forest rangers doC. where Anita Kellogg took a civil service examinationD. how many female forest rangers there today3. The nation that a horseshoe is lucky dates from ancient times. The grounds for the belief vary w
7、idely. In ancient times, iron was considered a sacred metal. Another theory is that horseshoe acquired its magical reputation because it is similar in shape to the crescent moon, once considered a symbol of good luck. Still another theory is that the superstition is somehow related to the mystic num
8、ber seven, the number of nails in a horseshoe. At any rate, the belief goes back to the time of the Romans. In modern times, President Truman hung a horseshoe above the door of his office in the White House.The paragraph mainly talks about _.A. why the horseshoe is considered a lucky symbolB. why th
9、e number seven is luckyC. what President hung a horseshoe outside his officeD. how the horseshoe resembles the moon(4) That furry Australian marsupial known as the Koala bear is not much like true bears. Most bears will eat small animals, such as mice and rats. They also like grass, eggs, garbage, a
10、nd snakes. Some bears even enjoy ice cream, soda, hot dogs and hamburgers. But the Koala has different eating habits. It will eat only the leaves of one type of tree eucalyptus. The Koala will starve to death rather than eat anything else.The paragraph tells mainly _.A. why the Koala likes eucalyptu
11、s leaves B. what, most bears in the wild prefer to eatC. where the native habitat of Koalas is located D. what Koalas and true bears like to eat(5) You may think that certain modern styles are ridiculous, but you should have seen fourteenth-century shoes! The “rage in shoe fashion back then was long
12、, upturned toes, often decorated with bells. The toes, stuffed with hay, curled upwards and then sometimes even curved back down again. This odd style was worn throughout Europe by nobles and commoners alike. The toes of some shoes were so long that little chains attached to the knees held them up a
13、nd prevented the wearer from tipping. Many rulers forbade the silly style. Even so, people persisted in wearing such outlandish footwear until the fashion finally died out of its own accord.The paragraph tells mainly _.A. who were unusual shoes in the fourteenth centuryB. how a fashion died out of i
14、ts own accordC. why silly shoe styles change D. what kinds of shoes were worn in the fourteenth century(6) You probably eat a lot more Chinese food than you think you do. Italians may not be happy, but here is the truth about spaghetti. Originally, it was an Oriental dish. Marco Polo, the famous Ita
15、lian trade and explorer, brought spaghetti back from his trips to China and introduced it to Europe. Sauerkraut may sound German, but the Chinese were eating it in 200 B.C. Because of its vitamins, sauerkraut was fed to the laborers working on that large scale public works project, the Great Wall of
16、 China. The paragraph tells mainly _. A. why the Italians may not be happy about spaghettis origin B. why the Chinese ate sauerkraut C. that spaghetti and sauerkraut are actually Chinese foods D. why Marco Polo are spaghetti(7) A vast cedar forest once covered the now barren slops of the Lebanese mo
17、untains. Early civilizations used the trees to build their houses and ships. The interior of King Solomons temple was made entirely of cedar from Lebanon. The first recorded forestry law to preserve these cedars was enacted by the Roman Emperor Hadrian. Unfortunately, rulers who followed Hadrian lac
18、ked his foresight, and for centuries the area was stripped. Four hundred trees near Basharri in northern Lebanon are all that remain of the once-vast forest. However, if nitrogen-fixing shrubs are planted to restore and enrich the soil, the area could once again become productive forest land.The par
19、agraph mainly tells _.A. who tried to preserve the Lebanese forestsB. what the interior of King Solomons temple was likeC. how early civilizations used cedar treesD. what has happened to the cedar forests of Lebanon(8) The Japanese are famous for their genius in producing small things. They have pro
20、duced small cars, radios, and trees. Japan now has a farmer who has worked for a decade to produce tiny pigs called minipigs. This farmers desire to go from “maxi to “mini was stimulated by the wide use of pigs in space control and medical research. The average adult hog weighs four hundred pounds.
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- 整理 高中英语 阅读 理解 主旨 大意 练习
![提示](https://www.taowenge.com/images/bang_tan.gif)
限制150内