题目
题型:同步题难度:来源:
this 19-year-old Swede is anything but ordinary from the computer in his parents" home
he helps the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) find out the world"s most wanted
cybercriminals
Jonathan first made headlines when he and another Swede, Fredrik Bjoerck, found
out the maker of the " Melissa" virus(病毒)in March 1999. He came to the aid of the
FBI again on May 7,finding out the suspected (嫌疑) sender of the dangerous"I LOVE
YOU" virus. The suspect was caught in Manila on May 8.
Jonathan"s special skills are in hot demand as officials around the world express alarm at
the "virtual"crimewave. In between studying for final exams,hanging out with friends and
referring his younger brother"s football matches, the quiet, gentle teenager also gives
lessons on e-security(电子安全) to large companies. He reads a lot and exchanges
information with other computer experts to know much about the latest tricks of the
hacker(黑客) trade.
Many companies have already tried to employ him, but he is not interested at the
moment. Instead, he plans to begin law school in. the autumn at Sweden"s Uppsala
University and start up his own security company.
Although he works with the FBI now and then, his family insists he"s just "a regular
kid". Jonathan is a great kid, he has his friends and he does a lot more than just play with
the computer, his little sister Tessa said, adding that he helps the FBI because "He likes
to help" , not because he"s looking for fame and recognition.
When the world was hit by the" Love Bug" virus, Jonathan was too busy preparing a
speech on e-security to look into the problem. "Finally on May 7,I had some free time,
so I "began looking. " Within a few hours, he had found the suspect and e-mailed his
method and results to the FBI. He said his work on the" Melissa" virus, which took three
weeks to solve was a big help in finding the suspect so quickly.
"This time I knew exactly where to start. I knew what to disregard and what to look at. "
B. Jonathan is really a quiet, gentle and ordinary boy
C. many compaiues want the young computer expert to join m
D. any cybercriminal will surely be found out wherever they are
B. his work together with Fredrik Bjoerck to find out the maker of the "Melissa" virus
C. his little sister"s talk about his good qualities as a regular kid and a good programmer
D. his speech on e-security to many computer companies after his fight against hackers
virus we can infer that._____
B. experience is knowledge
C. hard work leads to success
D. failure is the mother of success
B. He is such a brave fighter that any criminal will feel afraid.
C. He is an expert on security, not interested in running a company.
D. He is a regular kid but does something unusual.
答案
核心考点
试题【阅读理解。 Jonathan James looks like just another kid about to graduate from high】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
about thirty to forty hours a week during the summer. Most of the time I spent there 2 with Mr
Cillespie. He never had any 3 , and nobody seemed to care about his 4 .
I spent many days there _ 5 his hand and talking to him, helping with 6 that needed to be done.
He became a close friend of mine, 7 he responded with only an occasional 8 of my hand. Mr
Gillespie was m a coma(昏迷).
I left for a week to 9 with my parents, and when I came back, Mr Gillespie was gone. I didn"t
have the 10 to ask any of the nurses where he was, 11 fear they might tell me he had died. So with
many 12 unanswered, I continued to volunteer there through my eighth-grade year. 13 years later,
when I was a junior in high school, I was at the gas station when I noticed a 14 face. When I realized
who it was, my eyes were filled with tears. He was 15 ! I asked if he was Mr Gillespie. With an 16
look on his face, he replied yes. I explained how I knew him and that I had spent many hours talking with
him in the hospital. Tears 17 up in his eyes, and he gave me the warmest bug I had ever 18 .
Then he told me about his life and what 19 of him to put him in the coma. We cried for a while
and exchanged a bug, said our goodbyes and went our 20 ways.
( )1. A. undertook ( )2. A. talked ( )3. A. visitors ( )4. A. condition ( )5. A. catching ( )6. A. something ( )7. A. as if ( )8. A. squeeze ( )9. A. interview ( )10. A. chance ( )11. A. in ( )12. A. worries ( )13. A. Several ( )14. A. strange ( )15. A. dead ( )16. A. uncertain ( )17. A. filled ( )18. A. given ( )19. A. occurred ( )20. A. opposite | B. volunteered B. met B. doctors B. expense B. seizing B. nothing B. even though B. performance B. communicate B. courage B. by B. troubles B. Many B. familiar B. excited B. ugly B. welled B. made B. happened B. different | C. obtained C. was C. nurses C. accommodation C. scratching C. everything C. because C. activity C. vacation C. time C. for C. cautions C. Ten C. handsome C. surprised C. unconscious C. moved C. received C. arose C. separate | D. participated D. helped D. neighbors D. comfort D. holding D. anything D. so D. movement D. discuss D. choice D. with D. questions D. Few D. curious D. alive D. unwilling D. brought D. exchanged D. became D. same |
完形填空 | |||
I had my first job at the age of thirteen,when a friend of my mother"s who owned a bookshop 1 me for six hours a week to help her in the shop. I was very 2 to earn my own pocket money and my parents 3_ interfered(干涉) with how I spent it,even when I was spending it 4 . They believed that by eaming money, spending it, and leaming from the_5__ ,1 would become more mature (成熟的) and 6 about how to handle work,relationships with others , and money. Like many _7 parents,my parents also let me and my brothers do things over which they 8 a great deal. When I was sixteen,for example,after I finished high school and before I entered university,l wanted to spend the summer months travelling around 9 .My mother was against the idea of my travelling alone at such a young age,but my father felt that it would be a great 10 for me. In the end,my father won the 11 0n the condition that I limited my travelling to France,my mother"s home,where I had many uncles, aunts and cousins 13 through the country who could 12 shelter and help if I needed them. Three years later,my younger brother decided to _14 a year off after his first year in university and travel through the United States and the Caribbean. Again niy mother was very worried and not 15 to see my brother leave school,but my father encouraged him and my brother had a(n) _16 year working his way on trains and ships to 17passage to different ports and cities, and discovering many fascinating places and people. These kinds of experiences are probably rare(稀少的) for children in many countries but in the US they are fairly 18 . Most parents start 19 their children at a young age to do small things by themselves.By the time they have finished high school,many American kids have already had part-time jobs, traveled around the US or other countries on their own,have 20 the university they plan to attend and maybe even decided on their future career,and so on. | |||
( )1.A. taught ( )2.A. anxious ( )3.A. never ( )4.A. quickly ( )5.A. work ( )6.A. strict ( )7.A. American ( )8.A. helped ( )9.A. Asia ( )10.A. journey ( )11.A. argument ( )12.A. send out ( )13.A. promise ( )14.A. leave ( )15.A. angry ( )16.A. unusual ( )17.A. accept ( )18.A. welcome ( )19.A. bringing ( )20.A. selected | B. allowed B. content B. ever B. foolishly B. mistakes B. reasonable B. Japanese B. supported B. Africa B. experience B. game B. give out B. afford B. make B. eager B. hard B. eam B. fit B. forcing B. admired | C. treated C. proud C. always C. seriously C. others C. polite C. Chinese C. shared C. Europe C. chance C. discussion C. carry out C. provide C. take C. sorry C. strange C. find C. necessary C. pushing C. afforded | D. hired D. hopeful D. even D. honestly D. books D. responsible D. British D. worried D. Korea D. possibility D. plar. D. spread out D. serve D. prepare D. sad D. busy D. search D. common D. protecting D. left |
阅读理解。 | |||
Patricia asked for the cheapest car available at Acme Car Rental. She needed a car for 48 hours. Because it was the weekend,there was only one car available at the moment-an SUV. Patricia was an environmentalist. SUVs,which are big cars consuming a lot of gasoline,offended her greatly. But she needed something to get to Baker,a town that was 100 miles from the small airport. So she went, RentMe instead. "I need a car for 48 hours," she said," and I don"t want an SUV. I want something cheap. "They told her they had just the vehicle for her,a 1998Toyota. Thirty dollars a day,including insurance and other incidental fees. All she had to do was to pay forher own gasoline. Patricia was very pleased. Thirty dollars a day was a good rate even for a weekday. She signed all the paperwork,and they gave her the keys. The Toyota was a 4-speed,4-cylinder,2-door beauty,the paint,tires,and the interior were like the new. It was comfortable, even though the air-conditioner was not the frostiest(结霜的) . She got in and drove north. It was a two-lane road all the way to Baker,with only one town between the airport and Baker. That town was Noms,40 miles from Baker. Patricia didn"t make it to Norris. The car refused to run 30 minutes after she had been driving it. Fortunately,her cell phone was able to connect back to the RentMe desk. "My car stopped running. and I"m out here in the middle of nowhere in the hot sun! " she said. "That doesn"t make any sense," said the clerk."You did put gas in the car before you left town, didn"t you? " "No. Of course not ! " yelled Patricia. " Why would Iput gas in the car before I even got out of town?" "Well,why do you think you got such a good rate-we save money by having the customer gas up instead of us having to put gas in the car. " "I was in a hurry,"said Patricia. "Well,sometimes you pay a price for being in a hurry," said the clerk. " We"II send a man out with some spare gas for you:if you"d like. ,," Of course l"d like , " said Patria.ia. " How long willit be?" The clerk told her it would be within the hour. He didn"t tell her that there would be a $ 50 service charge for delivering the gas,or that the 3 gallons of fuel would cost her $ 7 a gallon. She would get that bad news when she retumed the car to the airport. | |||
1. Why didn"t Patricia want to rent an SUV? | |||
A. Because it was a big car that would need a lot of gasoline. B. Because she failed to carry enough money with her. C. Because she was not used to driving suc, h a big car. D. Because it was not easy to drive since it was so old. | |||
2. How much would Patricia have to pay at least when she returned the car to the airport? | |||
A. $ 161. B. $ 60. C. $ 131. D. $ 80. | |||
3. Which of the following is true? | |||
A. Patricia did put gas in the car before she left town. B. The air-conditioner of the Toyota was functioning perfectly. C. The car broke down halfway there and needed repairing. D. Patricia was quite satisfied with the price at first. | |||
4.The underlined word "offended" in the first paragraph means " " | |||
A. hurt the feelings of B. excited C. amused D. suited | |||
阅读理解. | |||
It was Thanksgiving morning and m the crowded kitchen of my small home. I was busy preparing the traditional Thanksgiving turkey when the doorbell rang. I opened the front door and saw two small children in rags shaking inside the storm door on the top step. " Anyoldpapers ,lady? " asked one of them. I was busy. I wanted to say " no" until I looked down at their feet. They were wearing thin little sandals(凉鞋) , wet with heavy snow. "Come in and I"ll make you a cup of hot cocoa. " They walked over and sat down at the table. Their wet sandals left marks upon the floor. I served them cocoa and bread with jam to fight against the cold outside. Then I went back to the kitchen and started again on my household budget. The silence in the front room struck me. I looked in. The girl held the empty cup in her hands, looking at it. The boy asked in a flat voice, " Lady, are you rich?" " Am I rich?Mercy , no ! " I looked at the old furniture in the room. The girl put her cup back in its saucer carefully and said, " Your cupsmatchyoursaucers. " Theyleftafter that, holding their bundles of papers against the wind. They hadn"t said" Thank you" . They didn"t need to. They had reminded me that I had so much for which to be grateful. Plain blue china cups and saucers were only worth five pence. But they matched. I tasted the potatoes and the meat soup. Potatoes and brown soup, a roof over our heads, my man with a good steady job-these matched , too. I moved the chairs back from the fire and cleaned the living room. The muddy prints of small sandals were still wet upon my floor. Let them be for a while, I thought, just in case I should begin to forget how rich I am. | |||
1. Two children came to the lady"s front door because_______ | |||
A. it was Thanksgiving Day B. it was too cold outside that day C. they wanted to collect old papers D. they wanted to have a cup of cocoa | |||
2. Why did the lady let the children in?______ | |||
A. Because she showed great pity on them. B. Because she had old papers to sell to them. C. Because she knew them and wanted to make them hot cocoa. D. Because she wanted to invite them to her Thanksgiving party. | |||
3. The girl thought the lady was rich perhaps in that______ | |||
A. she saw that the lady"s room was comfortable B. she saw the cups matched the saucers C. the furniture in the riving room looks new D. the boy with her told her about that | |||
4. From the passage , we can infer that whether you are rich or not depends on.______ | |||
A. how much money you have B. what jobs you are doing C. how you help others D. how you feel about your life | |||
完形填空. | |||
On the Iraq-Syria border, a pack of wild dogs circled American soldiers for food. The leader of the pack was a gray-and-white dog. The soldiers called him Nubs. Nubs was shaking and___1__able to stand. Marine major Brian Dennis looked closer and saw that there was a knife wound__2__his chest. Dennis couldn"t stand seeing the dog__3___. He and his men immediately treated the wound, and gave Nubs oral medicine. Nubs__4__but was still in pain. The next day, the team had to__5__. Ten days later, Dennis"s unit was back -- and so was Nubs. He was still__6__ , but the men fed him and played with him. Before long the unit once again__7__an outpost (前哨) 70 miles away. Nubs, slowly but determinedly,__8__them far into the trackless wasteland until the men lost__9__of him. Two days later, beyond Dennis"s__10__, he saw Nubs just outside the outpost. The dog had tracked him across 70 miles of frozen desert to__11__with the friend who had saved his life. From then on Nubs and the men slept in the same place, and ran around in the same ruins. Until an order came down from above that they were not__12__to have pets, Dennis __13__to make sure the dog would continue to live the__14__life. So he quickly raised $ 4,000 from his family and friends to fly Nubs to__15__. A month later, when Dennis and the dog were__16__in California, at first Nubs didn"t recognize the guy.__17__within minutes, the dog jumped into Dennis" s arms, jumping up again and again to__18__his friend"s face. A little__19__and concern in the middle of war will not save a violent world. But small stories, like the story of a soldier and a dog, hold a promise of a(n)__20__world. | |||
( )1.A. mostly ( )2.A. in ( )3.A. stand ( )4.A. pulled through ( )5.A. leave ( )6.A. hungry ( )7.A. look up ( )8.A. watched ( )9.A. touch ( )10.A. ability ( )11A. part ( )12.A. asked ( )13.A. decided ( )14.A. moving ( )15.A. London ( )16A. found ( )17.A. So ( )18A. lick ( )19.A. pity ( )20.A. equal | B. certainly B. on B. starve B. fell asleep B. rest B. tired B. look over B . followed B. sight B. surprise B. fight B. suggested B. agreed B. good B. America B. interviewed B. And B. touch B. mercy B. harmonious | C. hardly C. at C. bleed C. woke up C. pass C. dirty C. left for C. accompanied C. footprint C. imagination C. meet C. required C. accepted C. safe C. Iraq C. linked C. But C. bite C. care C. prosperous | D. never D. behind D. suffer D. fell down D. remain D. weak D. returned from D. barked D. smell D. understanding D. break D. allowed D. proposed D. interesting D. Syria D. reunited D. Though D. clean D. contribution D. amazing |