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阅读理解。      Parents and kids today dress alike, listen to the same music, and are friends. Is this a good thing?
Sometimes, when Mr. Ballmer and his 16-year-old daughter, Elizabeth, listen to rock music together and talk
about interests both enjoy, such as pop culture, he remembers his more distant relationship with his parents
when he was a teenager.
     "I would never have said to my mom, "Hey, the new Weezer album is really great. How do you like it?""
says Ballmer." There was just a complete gap in taste."
     Music was not the only gulf. From clothing and hairstyles to activities and expectations, earlier generations
of parents and children often appeared to move in separate orbits.
     Today, the generation gap has not disappeared, but it is getting narrow in many families. Conversations on
subjects such as sex and drugs would not have taken place a generation ago. Now they are comfortable and
common. And parent-child activities, from shopping to sports, involve a feeling of trust and friendship that can
continue into adulthood.
     No wonder greeting cards today carry the message, "To my mother, my best friend."
     But family experts warn that the new equality can also result in less respect for parents.
     "There"s still a lot of strictness and authority on the part of parents out there, but there is a change
happening," says Kerrie, a psychology professor at Lebanon Valley College. "In the middle of that change, there
is a lot of confusion among parents."
     Family researchers offer a variety of reasons for these evolving roles and attitudes. They see the 1960s as
a turning point. Great cultural changes led to more open communication and a more democratic process that
encourages everyone to have a say.
     "My parents were on the "before" side of that change, but today"s parents, the 40-year-olds, were on the "after" side," explains Mr. Ballmer. "It"s not something easily accomplished by parents these days, because life
is more difficult to understand or deal with, but sharing interests does make it more fun to be a parent now." 1. The underlined word "gulf" in Para.3 most probably means _____. A. interest
B. distance
C. difference
D. separation 2. Which of the following shows that the generation gap is disappearing? A. Parents help their children develop interests in more activities.
B. Parents put more trust in their children"s abilities.
C. Parents and children talk more about sex and drugs.
D. Parents share more interests with their children. 3. The change in today"s parent-child relationship is _____. A. more confusion among parents
B. new equality between parents and children
C. less respect for parents from children
D. more strictness and authority on the part of parents 4. By saying "today"s parents, the 40-year-olds, were on the "after" side", the author means that today"s
    parents _____. A. follow the trend of the change
B. can set a limit to the change
C. fail to take the change seriously
D. have little difficulty adjusting to change5. The purpose of the passage is to _____. A. describe the difficulties today"s parents have met with
B. discuss the development of the parent-child relationship
C. suggested the ways to handle the parent-child relationship
D. compare today"s parent-child relationship with that in the past
答案
1-5: BDBAB
核心考点
试题【阅读理解。      Parents and kids today dress alike, listen to the same music, and are】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
完形填空。    Do you know what kind of things the young people are reading? More and more   1   and parents have
noticed another kind of pollution, which comes from the printed papers   2   on streets.   
    These printed things   3   newspapers but have hardly anything to do with   4  . You can only find reading
materials badly made up there-some are too strange for anyone to   5  , others are frightening stories of
something   6  . However, many of the young readers are getting interested in such   7   reading, which   8   
them what they should pay for their breakfast and brings them nightmares (噩梦) and immoral (邪恶) ideas
in   9  . Homework is left  10 , and daily games are lost.   
    These sellers shout on streets selling their papers well. The writers, publishers and printers,  11  they are,
we never know, are  12  their silent money.
    The sheep-skinned wolf"s story seems to have been forgotten once again. Why not  13  this kind of thing?
Yes, both teachers and parents have asked each other for more strict control of the young readers.  14 , the
more you want to forbid it, the more they want to have a look at it.  15  you may even find several children,
driven by the curious natures,  16  one patched paper, which has travelled from hand to hand.   
    It really does  17  to our society. It has already formed a sort of moral pollution. The  18  teachers and
parents need more powerful support in their protection of the young generation. At the same time the young
 19  need more interesting books to help them  20  those ugly papers.
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(     )1. A. teachers      
(     )2. A. found        
(     )3. A. depend on      
(     )4. A. it            
(     )5. A. understand     
(     )6. A. more important  
(     )7. A. poisonous     
(     )8. A. takes       
(     )9. A. use         
(     )10. A. undone       
(     )11. A. who         
(     )12. A. using        
(     )13. A. stop        
(     )14. A. Happily       
(     )15. A. Seldom       
(     )16. A. take        
(     )17. A. harm        
(     )18. A. worried      
(     )19. A. writers      
(     )20. A. get off      
B. writers   
B. sold    
B. work out  
B. them        
B. think    
B. still worse 
B. wonderful  
B. spends   
B. sight    
B. unknown   
B. what    
B. making     
B. forbid      
B. Luckily     
B. Always      
B. share       
B. good        
B. puzzled     
B. teachers    
B. come into            
C. readers   
C . printed   
C. look like  
C. children   
C. believe    
C. even better  
C. interesting 
C. pays         
C. common     
C. much     
C. whoever   
C. spending   
C. separate   
C. Unfortunately        
C. Hardly    
C. get        
C. favour    
C. surprised  
C. parents   
C. break down  
D. students        
D. put             
D. act as          
D. young people    
D. know            
D. very good       
D. useful          
D. costs            
D. return          
D. less            
D. whatever        
D. wasting         
D. leave           
D. Badly           
D. Sometimes                             
D. hold            
D. wrong           
D. disappointed    
D. readers         
D. get rid of      
阅读理解。
     As more Americans go to mainland China to take jobs, more Chinese and Americans are working side
by side. These cross-cultural partnerships, while beneficial in many ways, are also highlighting tensions
that expose differences in work experience, pay levels and communication.
     In the last few years, a growing number of Americans in their 20s and 30s have been heading to China
for employment, attracted by its faster-growing economy and lower jobless rate. Their Chinese co-workers
are often around the same age. But the two groups were raised differently. The Americans have had more
exposure to free-market principles. "Young Americans were brought up in a commercial environment," said
Neng Zhao, 28, a semor associate at Blue Oak Capital, a private firm based in Beijing. "We weren"t. So the
workplace is a unique learning process for my generation."
     Managers hiring workers in China appear to be paying for Western experience. Foreigners tend to earn
10 to 15 percent more than their Chinese counterparts (persons working in similar positions), said Michael
Norman, senior vice president at Sibson Consulting, an American firm. That imbalance does not go unnoticed
by Chinese workers. "There is definitely the belief that Americans get paid more for the same work," said
Ting Wang, 25, an associate at WildChina, a travel company based in Beijing. On the other hand, Chinese
workers have a deeper understanding of the influences, like Confucianism"and Communism, which play a
part in their country"s culture and economy.
     It is important and necessary for Americans working in China to adjust, said Mr. Norman, who works
on management and work force issues for multinational companies operating in Asia.
     "In the West, there is such a bonus on getting things done quickly, but when you come to work in China,
you need to work on listening and being more patient and understanding of local ways of doing business,"
he said.
1. What is mainly talked about in the passage?

A. Cross-cultural conflicts.
B. Cross-cultural partnerships.
C. Multinational companies in China.
D. Different pays for the same work. 

2. More Americans go to China to take jobs because _____.
A. they want to experience different cultures
B. Chinese workers are easier to cooperate
C. they can"t find proper jobs in America
D. the economy of China is developing rapidly

3. What does the underlined word "imbalance" in Paragraph 3 refer to?

A. Unfair pay levels.
B. Different working experience.
C. Unequal opportunities.
D. Different upbringing environment.
4. What can we learn from the passage?

A. Americans benefit more from working in China.
B. Chinese and American employees have the same experience.
C. Young Chinese can benefit from cross-cultural partnerships.
D. More Americans working in China causes higher jobless rate.

阅读理解。
     MySpace, the social networking website, is different from other websites which only provide stories about
other people. MySpace is a place that allows you to broadcast your own stories and persona information to as
many people as you like. Started two years ago, it is a big source of information for and about American kids.
     Teenagers and their parents feel very differently about it. Teens are rushing to join the site, not sharing their
parents" worries. It signals yet another generation gap in the digital era.
     For teenagers, it is a reliable network to keep in touch with their friends. They will often list their surnames,
birthdays, after-school jobs, school clubs, hobbies and other personal information.
     "MySpace is an easy way to reach just about everyone. I don"t have all the phone numbers of all my
acquaintances. But if I want to get in touch with one of them, I could just leave them a message on MySpace."
said Abby Van Wassen. She is a sixteen-year-old student at Woodland Hills High of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
     Parents on the other hand are seriously concerned about the security problems of MySpace.
     "Every time we hold a parents meeting, the first question is always about MySpace," said Kent Gates, who
travels the country doing Internet safety seminars (研讨会). The National Center for Missing and Exploited
Children has received at least 288 MySpace-related complaints, according to Mary Beth Buchanan, a lawyer in
Pittsburgh.
     "Your profile on MySpace shows all your personal information to anyone on the Web. And MySpace even
lists this information by birthplace and age. It"s like a free checklist for troublemakers and it endangers children,"
Buchanan said.
1. From the passage we can learn that MySpace ____.
A. brings about the generation gap
B. is very careful about people"s privacy
C. encourages you to list your personal information
D. lists the telephone numbers of your friends
2. Why are some parents against MySpace?
A. Because MySpace has a bad influence on their children.
B. Because they don"t want to pay so much money for MySpace.
C. Because it takes up too much of their children"s spare time.
D. Because troublemakers can easily approach their children through the site.
3. What can we infer from "Every time we hold a parents meeting, the first question is always about MySpace"?
A. MySpace has become a top issue troubling parents.
B. MySpace often holds parents meetings.
C. MySpace is quite popular-with parents.
D. Parents have lots of questions about the website.
4. The writer"s attitude towards MySpace is ____.
A. negative
B. positive
C. optimistic
D. objective
阅读理解。
     A few days ago my wife sent me out to buy something. When I came home, I handed her a paper bag
and said, "Here are the apples you wanted." She looked in the bag, and then she looked at me. "I told you,"
she said slowly, "to buy some eggs."
     I felt worried about my absent-mindedness, so I went to see a doctor. He was a very kind man "I have
seen many people like you. It"s nothing to worry about," he said "If you know you are absent-minded, you
are all right.But if you do not know you"re absent-minded, you may be really in trouble."
     "Many famous people were absent-minded," the doctor told me. "Thomas Edison was standing in line
one day to pay his taxes. When he arrived at the window, he found that he had forgotten his own name.
He had to ask the man who was behind him to tell him who he was."
     I felt much better and got up to leave. "Thank you, doctor," I said. "How much do I have to pay you?"
     "Ten dollars for the check-up," the doctor said.
     "But doctor, I did not have a check-up!"
     For a moment the doctor looked puzzled. Then he said, "Oh, yes, it was the patient before you who had
a check-up. How absent-minded I am!"
1. The doctor took Edison"s story for example ____.
A. to show absent-mindedness is common among people
B. because he liked telling stories
C. to make the author laugh
D. to make fun of Edison
2. The underlined word "absent-mindedness" in the second paragraph probably means ____.
A. a feeling of anger
B. a feeling of sadness
C. an emotion (情绪) of excitement
D. a trouble in which people often forget this or that
3. According to the passage, who was absent-minded?
A. Only the author.
B. The author"s wife.
C. The doctor alone.
D. The author and the doctor.
阅读理解。
     In the old days, children were familiar with birth and death as part of life. Now this is perhaps the first
generation of American youngsters who have never been close by during the birth of a baby and have never
experienced the death of a family member.
     Nowadays when people grow old, we often send them to nursing homes. When they get sick, we send
them to a hospital, where children are forbidden to visit terminal (晚期的) patients-even when those patients
are their parents. This deprives (剥夺) the dying patient of family members during the last few days of his
life and it deprives the children of an experience of death, which is an important learning experience.
     Some of my colleagues and I once interviewed and followed about 500 terminal patients in order to find
out what they could teach us and how we could be of more benefit, not just to them but to the members of
their families as well. We were most impressed by the fact that even those patients who were not told of their
serious illness were quite aware of its potential (潜在的) outcome.
     It is important for family members, and doctors and nurses to understand these patients" communication
in order to truly understand their needs, fears and fantasies (幻想). Most of our patients welcomed another
human being with whom they could talk openly, honestly, and frankly about their trouble. Many of them
shared with us their great need to be informed, to be kept up-to- date on their medical condition and to be
told when the end was near. We found out that patients who had been dealt with openly and frankly were
better able to cope with the coming of detach and finally to reach a true stage, of acceptance before death.
1. The elders of today"s Americans ____.
A. are often absent when a family member is born or dying
B. are unfamiliar with birth and death
C. usually see the birth or death of a family member
D. have often experienced the fear of death as part of life
2. Children in America are deprived of the chance to ____.
A. visit a patient at hospital
B. visit their family members
C. learn how to face death
D. look after the patients
3. The need of a dying patient for people to accompany him shows ____.
A. his wish for communication with other people
B. his fear of death
C. his unwillingness to die
D. he feels very upset about his condition
4. It may be concluded from the passage that ____.
A. dying patients should be truthfully informed of their condition
B. dying patients are afraid of being told of the coming of death
C. most patients are unable to accept death until it can"t be avoided
D. most doctors and nurses understand what dying patients need