题目
题型:四川省同步题难度:来源:
those who enjoy killing people on screen disagree with the result. "I have played the most violent games
available on the market today, "writes Mateo, 15. "I don"t go killing people or stealing cars because I
see it in a game. My parents say that, as long as I remember it"s a game, I can play whatever I want. "
Despite what they say, many scientific studies clearly show that violent video games make kids more
likely to yell, push, and punch, says Brad Bushman, a psychologist at the University of Michigan in
Ann Arbor. Bushman and his colleagues recently reviewed more than 300 studies of video media effects
and said, " We included every single study we could find on the topic. Regardless of what kids say,
violent video games are harmful. "
TV has been around a lot longer than video games, so researchers have more data on the longterm
effects of violent TV shows on people than they do on the effects of violent video games. Scientists at
the University of Michigan recorded the TVwatching habits of hundreds of first and third graders in
1977. Fifteen years later, the researchers looked at what kind of adults these kids had become. By
the time they were in their early twenties, women who had watched violent shows as kids were four
times as likely to have punched, choked, or beaten other people as were women who didn"t watch
such programs as kids. Boys who watched violent TV grew up to be three times as likely to commit
crimes as boys who didn"t watch such programs. But that doesn"t mean that everyone who watched
violent programs ended up being violent themselves. It was just more likely to happen for some people.
1. Which of the following about Mateo is TRUE?
A. He doesn"t go killing people or stealing cars in a game.
B. He works in a market.
C. His parents allow him to play violent games as long as he regards it as a game.
D. He agrees that gameplaying habits and TV watching inspire one to act out.
2. Researches show ________.
A. violent TV shows have more bad effects on people than violent video games
B. women are more likely to punch, choke or beat other people
C. boys who watched violent programs ended up being violent themselves
D. both violent TV shows and violent video games are harmful
3. According to the passage, we students________.
A. had better watch violent TV shows than play violent games
B. should try to control our behaviors after playing violent games
C. should give up the habits of watching violent shows and playing violent games
D. should keep away from those watching violent programs in case they commit crimes
4. From the passage, we can infer that________.
A. everyone who watched violent programs ended up being violent themselves
B. Brad Bushman is against violent video games
C. government has taken measures to stop violent shows and games
D. TV has been around a lot longer than video games
答案
核心考点
试题【阅读理解 Researches have suggested that your gameplaying habits and TV watching i】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
be good at all the __2__.
Boffins are clever, but are never the most __3__ people in the school. They have friends amongst
themselves. __14__ in society, they are normally shy and withdrawn (离群的). Boffins __5__ their
studies to the __6__ of other people. Edwin is the __7__ example of a boffin. He has friends, but
they are also __8__. Edwin is extremely clever. His voice has a very strong British accent that other
people __9__ funny.
A boffin"s interest is something __10__ other people may not be interested in. For example, they
may like to play games on computer that others may find __11__. In their spare time, boy boffins
__12__ like playing war games and strategies. Boffins prefer technology such as computers to having
sports __13__. Normally, they are not very sporty and are bad at __14__.
Boffins also act in a manner that is slightly strange. They don"t __15__ what other people will think
of them because of these outbursts.
While most children take the word "boffin" in a __16__ way, adults, especially teachers, __17__
boffins. Boffins spend their time in class actually __18__ attentively instead of messing around. This is
mainly the reason why they appear to be more intelligent than everyone else around them.
Although they may not be the most exciting people, I like boffins. They have intelligent __19__ of
their own and are not afraid to show them. Boffins are the cleverest ones, and there"s nothing bad about
__20__ in that way.
( )1. A. alone ( )2. A. sports ( )3. A. popular ( )4. A. Therefore ( )5. A. prefer ( )6. A. company ( )7. A. useful ( )8. A. classmates ( )9. A. discover ( )10. A. which ( )11. A. amusing ( )12. A. would ( )13. A. outside ( )14. A. English ( )15. A. reject ( )16. A. positive ( )17. A. argue with ( )18. A. listening ( )19. A. minds ( )20. A. ruling out | B. top B. activities B. diligent B. So B. devote B. course B. similar B. players B. seek B. that B. popular B. feel B. indoors B. P.. E.. B. like B. active B. approve of B. talking B. rooms B. standing out | C. last C. jobs C. intelligent C. But C. refer C. approach C. classic C. boffins C. uncover C. as C. pleasing C. look C. upstairs C. music C. care C. relative C. speak of C. writing C. hobbies C. carrying out | D. late D. subjects D. humorous D. Then D. contribute D. access D. extreme D. teachers D. find D. who D. boring D. smell D. abroad D. art D. accept D. negative D. comment on D. reading D. eyes D. turning out | |||||
完形填空 | ||||||||
It"s no secret that many children would be healthier and happier with adoptive parents than with their birth parents. That"s especially__1__of children who remain in homes where they"re badly treated because the law blindly favors biological parents. It"s also true of children who __2__ for years in foster (寄养) homes because of parents who can"t or won"t care for them but refuse to give up custody (监护) rights. Fourteenyearold Kimberly Mays __3__ neither description, but her recent court victory could __4__ help children who do. Kimberly has been the __5__ of an angry custody battle between the man who raised her and her biological parents, with whom she has never lived. A Florida judge __6__ that the teenager can remain with the only father she"s ever known and that her biological parents have "no legal __7__" on her. Shortly after__8__ in December 1978, Kimberly Mays and another baby were mistakenly switched and sent home with the __9__ parents. Kimberly"s biological parents, Ernest and Regina Twigg, received a child who died of a heart disease in 1988. Medical tests __10__ that the child wasn"t the Twiggs" own daughter, but Kim only was, thus leading to a custody __11__ with Robert Mays. In 1989, the two families __12__ that Mr Mays would maintain custody with the Twiggs getting visiting rights. Those rights were ended when Mr Mays decided that Kimberly was being __13__. The decision to __14__ Kimberly with Mr Mays caused heated discussion. But the judge made clear that Kimberly did have the right to sue (起诉) on her own behalf. Thus he made it clear that she was more than just a personal possession of her parents. Biological parentage does not mean an absolute ownership that cancels(取消) all the __15__ of children. | ||||||||
|