题目
题型:不详难度:来源:
Cupcakes are small, round cakes topped with frosting (糖霜). It has been an American tradition that moms bring cupcakes to the classroom to celebrate their child’s birthday.
But recently some doctors have called for this to be banned. They believe cupcakes contribute to child obesity.
Despite their good intentions, however, some people believe that experts are interfering (妨碍) with American culture. The cupcake is seen as American as apple pie — only prettier.
According to Marion Nestle, a professor of nutrition at New York University, the cupcake is the most democratic (民主的) of desserts. As they are small enough for one person, you don’t have to share your cupcake with anyone — it’s all yours. They are also all the same size, so there can’t be any cries of “she got the bigger piece!”
Each bite can taste different depending on how much icing you have. It is a lesson in self- determination. Some people eat only a little of the frosting every time, others have it all in just one bite.
In recent years, eating a cupcake has become as trendy as having a cup of Starbucks coffee.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton jokingly promised on a talk show that if she was elected president, she would give everyone a cupcake on her birthday.
Ruth Reichl, editor-in-chief of Gourmet magazine, explains that the rise of the cupcake is very much about going back to American national identity in food, which is all about comfort. “People want to think about when they and their country were innocent,” she said.
小题1:According to the passage, it has been an American tradition that ___________.
A.the family holds a party for children on their birthday |
B.a mom cooks a bowl of noodles for her children on their birthday |
C.a mom makes a cupcake for her children on their birthday and brings it to the classroom |
D.parents go travelling with their children on their birthday |
A.Because they themselves don’t like cupcakes. |
B.Because they think cupcakes are not so delicious. |
C.Because they believe cupcakes will cause cries of “She got the bigger piece”. |
D.Because they believe cupcakes are one of the causes to make children become fat. |
A.The cupcake is more democratic than any other desserts in the US. |
B.The cupcake is too small to share with others. |
C.The sizes of cupcakes are the same so it’s equal to everyone. |
D.Cupcakes will lead to child obesity so they should be banned. |
A.popular | B.gentle | C.delicious | D.different |
A.To arouse the readers’ attention to banning the tradition of making cupcakes. |
B.To show that cupcakes are becoming a popular way to show kindness and comfort. |
C.To make a comparison between them in order for readers to remember them. |
D.To give readers some idea of cupcakes so as to better understand the American culture |
答案
小题1:C
小题1:D
小题1:D
小题1:A
小题1:B
解析
核心考点
试题【YOUR mom might cook a bowl of noodles for you on your birthday. But in the US, a】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
Mother’s Day was proclaimed a day for national observance by President Woodrow Wilson in 1915. Ann Jarvis from Grafton, West Virginia, had started the idea to have a day to honor mothers. She was the one who chose the second Sunday in May and also began the custom of wearing a carnation.
In 1909, Mrs. Dodd from Spokane, Washington, thought of the idea of a day to honor fathers. She wanted to honor her own father, William Smart. After her mother died, he had the responsibility of raising a family of five sons and a daughter. In 1910, the first Father’s Day was observed in Spokane. Senator Margaret Chase Smith helped to establish Father’s Day as a national commemorative day in 1972.
These days are set aside to show love and respect for parents. They raise their children and educate them to be responsible citizens. They give love and care.
These two special days are celebrated in many different ways. On Mother’s Day people wear carnations. A red one symbolizes a living mother. A white one shows that the mother is dead.Many people attend religious services to honor parents. It is also a day when people whose parents are dead visit the cemetery. On these days families get together at home, as well as in restaurants. They often have outdoor barbecues for Father’s Day. These are days of fun and good feelings and memories.
小题1:According to the passage, which of the following about the second Sunday in May is
NOT true?
A.It is a day to show love to mothers |
B.It is a day to wear carnations |
C.It is a day for people to visit the cemetery |
D.It is a day for many people to attend religious services |
a. The first Father’s Day was observed.
b. Mother’s Day was proclaimed a day for national observance
c. Father’s Day became a day for national observance.
d. The idea of honoring fathers was brought up
A.a b c d | B.d a b c | C.b a c d | D.d a c b |
A.Mrs. Do | B.Margaret Chase Smith | C.Ann Jarvis | D.Woodrow Wilson |
A.one should wear a red carnation if one’s mother pass away |
B.on Mother’s Day, families often go out to have barbecues |
C.on Father’s Day, people often stay at home to celebrate the special day. |
D.The purpose to have these two special days is to show love to parents |
A.call on people to love and respect their parents |
B.introduce Mother’s Day and Father’s Day. |
C.tell the difference between Mother’s Day and Father’s Day |
D.show how important fathers and mothers are |
A very popular breakfast food in America is the pancake--- a thin , flat cake made out of flour and often served with maple syrup. The idea of the pancake is very old. In fact, pancakes were made long ago in ancient China.
Bagels, a round thick bread with a hole in the middle , are also popular for breakfast in America. Polish people in the late 1600s came up with the idea for the first bagels and this new kind of bread soon took off across Eastern Europe.
In the late 1800s, thousands of Jews from Eastern Europe travelled to the United States and brought the recipe for bagels with them. Today, New York bagels are said to be the best in the world. Many people have them with cream for breakfast on the go.
Doughnuts (usually spelled “donut” in the United States) came from France. They were served to American soldiers in France in the World War Ⅰ. After the war, American soldiers asked cooks in the United States to make doughnuts for them. Now , served with coffee, they are a very popular breakfast food across the United States.
小题1:This reading is mainly about ________
A.famous places to eat breakfast. |
B.why people in the United States eat breakfast |
C.the most popular types of pancakes in the United States |
D.the history of popular breakfast foods in the United States. |
A.the pancake | B.the bagel | C.the doughnut | D.The passage doesn’t say. |
A.They both came from Europe | B.They are both easy to make |
C.They are both sweet | D.people in New York make them best |
A.Polish people | B.Jewish People | C.Chinese People | D.American soldiers |
A.French people | B.Jewish people |
C.other American soldiers | D.cooks from the United States. |
Things really began to change for the company in 1981. That year, Howard Schultz met the three men who ran Starbucks. Schultz worked in New York for a company that made kitchen equipment. He noticed that Starbucks ordered a large number of special coffee makers, and he was curious about the company. Schultz went to Seattle to see what Starbucks did , and he liked what he saw. He wanted to become part of the company. In 1982, the original Starbucks owners hired Schultz as the company’s head of marketing.
In 1983, Schultz traveled to Italy. The unique atmosphere of the espresso(浓咖啡) bars there caught his eye. To Schultz it seemed that Italians spent their daily lives in three places: home, work , and coffee bars . His experience in Italy gave Schultz a new idea for Starbucks back in Seattle.
Schultz created an atmosphere for Starbucks coffee shops that was comfortable and casual, and customers everywhere seemed to like it. Between 1987 and 1992, Starbucks opened 150 new stores---and that was only the beginning. As a matter of fact, by the year 2000, three new Starbucks stores opened somewhere around the world every day!
Today, Starbucks has thousands of stores, including stores in twenty-six countries. One thing that helps make Starbucks succeed in cities outside the United Stateds is the way Starbucks works with local stores and restaurants. By working together with a store already in the city, Starbucks gains an understanding of customers in the city. This understanding helps Starbucks open stores in the right locations for their customers.
小题1:What is the main topic of the reading?
A.how Starbucks has grown | B.Starbucks’ customers |
C.what Starbucks makes | D.how Starbucks makes its coffee |
A.It grew very quickly | B.It was run by Howard Schultz |
C.It was a small company | D.It made special coffee makers |
A.a coffee seller from New York | B.the man who changed the company |
C.an Italian coffee maker | D.one of the original owners of the company |
A.3 | B.150 | C.300 | D.more than 1000 |
A.opening restaurants in just a few locations each year. |
B.only selling locally produced coffee beans |
C.working with other major coffee-making companies |
D.learning about local customers. |
There are also many different kinds of wedding ceremonies practiced around the world. These ceremonies can be very short and simple, or very long and complicated.
One of the largest and most expensive wedding ceremonies in recent times was held in Dubai in 1981. The couple tying the knot at this wedding were the son of Sheik ( a male Arab ruler) Rashid Bin Saeed Al Maktoum and Princess Salama. The wedding ceremony took seven days and cost $44 million. It was held in a large building which was specially built for the ceremony and looked like a stadium. The bride and groom needed a large place for their wedding because more than 20,000 guests were invited.
The reasons why a man and woman get married also vary. Sometimes they marry because they are in love, sometimes they marry because someone they meet through a matchmaker, and sometimes they marry because their parents tell them that they must marry.
One unusual example of an arranged marrige took place in Bangladesh in 1986. The groom was an eleven-month-old boy and the bride was a three-month-old girl. They were the youngest married couple ever.
The parents of the bride and groom arranged the marriage as a way of ending a fight between the two families who had been arguing over a farm for twenty years. Both families thought they owned the farm, but no one knew exactly . The fight ended for good when the young boy married the young girl. By arranging this marriage, neither famlily was forced to lose face. The two families agreed to give the farm to the young people.
小题1:What is the best title for this passage?
A.An Unusual Wedding Tradition | B.A Short History of Marriage |
C.Common Western Wedding Trations. | D.Interesting Wedding Around the World |
A. a farmer and a neighbor B. the son of a sheik and a princess
B. a king and a queen D. two babies.
小题3:Why was the wedding ceremony in Dubai held in a building like a stadium?
A. The ceremony was very long
B. The groom loved to play sports.
C, Many people came to the wedding.
D. People in Dubai usually get married in stadium.
小题4:Why did the families in Bangladesh make their children get married?
A.The children were in love |
B.The families wanted to end the fight |
C.The families wanted to buy a farm. |
D.The bride’s family wanted to sell their farm. |
A.The bride and groom were young. | B.The wedding was on a farm |
C. It was an arranged marriage. | D.More than 20,000 guests came to the wedding |
Sad to say, this project has turned out to be mostly low-level findings about factual errors and spelling and grammar mistakes, combined with lots of head-scratching puzzlement about what in the world those readers really want.
But the sources of distrust go way deeper. Most journalists learn to see the world through a set of standard patterns into which they plug each day’s events. In other words, there is a conventional story line in the newsroom culture that provides a backbone and a ready-made narrative structure for otherwise confusing news.
There exists a social and cultural disconnect between journalists and their readers, which helps explain why the "standard patterns" of the newsroom seem alien to many readers. In a recent survey, questionnaires were sent to reporters in five middle-size cities around the country, plus one large metropolitan area. Then residents in these communities were phoned at random and asked the same questions.
Replies show that compared with other Americans, journalists are more likely to live in upscale neighborhoods, have maids, own Mercedes, and trade stocks, and they’re less likely to go to church, do volunteer work, or put down roots in a community.
Reporters tend to be part of a broadly defined social and cultural elite, so their work tends to reflect the conventional values of this elite. The surprising distrust of the news media isn’t rooted in inaccuracy or poor reportorial skills but in the daily clash of world views between reporters and their readers.
This is an explosive situation for any industry, particularly a declining one. Here is a troubled business that keeps hiring employees whose attitudes vastly annoy the customers. Then it sponsors lots of symposiums and a credibility project dedicated to wondering why customers are annoyed and fleeing in large numbers. But it never seems to get around to noticing the cultural and class biases that so many former buyers are complaining about. If it did, it would open up its diversity program, now focused narrowly on race and gender, and look for reporters who differ broadly by outlook, values, education, and class.
小题1:What is the passage mainly about?
A.needs of the readers all over the world |
B.causes of the public disappointment about newspapers |
C.origins of the declining newspaper industry |
D.aims of a journalism credibility project |
A.quite trustworthy | B.somewhat contradictory |
C.very instructive | D.rather superficial(肤浅的) |
A.working attitude | B.conventional lifestyle |
C.world outlook | D.educational background |
最新试题
- 1根据推测,地球上原始生命最初生活在( )A.原始大气B.原始陆地C.原始海洋D.火山口
- 2“同一个世界,同一个梦想”,2008年奥运会在北京举行,北京为世人瞩目。读下图,回答1—2题。1、请在图中找出我国首都北
- 3电流看不见,摸不着,但我们可以通过电路中小灯泡的亮或灭来判断电流的有无,下列研究中也采用这种研究方法的是[ ]A
- 4曲线在点处的切线方程是 。
- 5下列物质中互为同系物的是[ ]A.葡萄糖和蔗糖 B.蔗糖与麦芽糖 C.乙酸和丙酸(CH3CH2COOH)
- 6“地理大发现”给人类带来的最重大的影响是A.促进了亚洲资本主义的发展B.促进了欧洲资本主义的发展C.促进了美洲资本主义的
- 7已知是定义在R上的函数,且对任意,满足,,且,则______
- 8如图所示,将一把钢尺紧按在桌面上,一端伸出桌面适当的长度,拨动钢尺,就可听到钢尺振动发出的声音。逐渐增加钢尺伸出桌面的长
- 9Even though the workers were not satisfied, they _____ to th
- 10有两块面积相同的小麦试验田,分别收获小麦9000kg和15000kg.已知第一块试验田每公顷的产量比第二块少3000kg
热门考点
- 1Jenny can__________, and she wants to join the music club.
- 2如图所示,四块相同的木块放置在水平地面上,如按图中阴影部分掉并取走,则剩余部分对水平地面的压强最大的是( )A.B.C
- 3下列属于生物的是( )A.漫天飞舞的雪花B.恐龙化石C.溶洞中长高的石笋D.逐年增粗长高的小树
- 4设为抛物线上任一点,为焦点,则以为直径的圆与轴的位置关系是 。
- 5快要熄灭的卫生香遇到金鱼藻在光下释放出的气体,立刻______,这就是说,金鱼藻在光下能够产生______.这个实验证明
- 6检验溶液的酸碱性可以使用 ,溶液的酸碱度可以用 表示。测定溶液的酸碱度可以使用
- 7(本题3分)先化简,再求值: 4x3—[—x2 —2( x3—x2+1 )],其中x= —
- 8下面两题请你任选一题,写一段话,要求语言准确、生动。(不超过100字)小题1:请以“时代是一棵树”为起句,围绕“真抓实干
- 9化简(1)(-2)3×(-4)2+3(-4)3×(-12)2-327;(2)(6+x)(6-x)+(x-3)2-1.
- 10如图,△ABC中,∠C=90°,AC=BC,AD平分∠CAB交BC于点D,DE⊥AB,垂足为E,且AB=6cm,则△DE