科目:gzyy 來源:2010年重慶市高考仿真試卷三 題型:閱讀理解
Three years ago, a study of overfishing led to sharp debate.It warned that the world’s ocean fish could be almost gone by the middle of the century.Now, a new study offers more hope.It shows that the risk of fisheries(漁場) collapse has recently decreased in some areas-some, but not all.
BORIS WORM: “This means different regions are heading in different directions and some regions have indeed begun to eliminate overfishing.”
Boris Worm at Dalhousie University in Canada and Ray Hilborn at the University of Washington in Seattle were lead authors of the new study.
Professor Worm also led the earlier study published in 2006.Professor Hilborn publicly disagreed with those findings.The result: the two scientists agreed to work together on a new study.
They led a team that studied ten areas.In five of them, the rate at which fish are being taken out of the sea has dropped to a level that should let the populations recover.Three areas still had overfishing, but corrective measures have begun.
Yet, in all, almost two-thirds of fish populations studied worldwide still need rebuilding.
Only two areas did not have an overfishing problem in either the new study or the earlier one.They are New Zealand and the American state of Alaska.
The new study found that overfishing has been reduced in Canada’s Newfoundland-Labrador area and in Iceland and southern Australia.It also found improvements in the northeastern United States and the California Current that flows south along the West Coast.
The study found that better controls are still needed in the North Sea, the Baltic Sea and the Bay of Biscay between France and Spain.
The findings from two years of research appear in the journal Science.
Using nets that let smaller fish escape and agreeing not to fish in certain areas can help reduce overfishing.The study showed that these measures helped fish populations grow in Kenya.
But one of the authors of the study, from the Wildlife Conservation Society, says fisheries in Africa face another threat.Most countries in Africa, he says, are selling fishing rights to industrialized nations which catch large amounts of seafood.
The study shows what happened when industrialized nations increased restrictions on fishing in their own waters.Seafood companies moved their boats to developing countries with fewer restrictions.
1.Among the ten areas surveyed in the new study, _______ of them were not so overfished as they used to be.
A.two-thirds B.five C.three D.two
2.As to the new study, which of the following statements is Wrong?
A.It found that two of the areas studied showed improvements.
B.It lasted two years in all.
C.It showed that many areas still needed improving.
D.It was conducted not only by Boris Worm and Ray Hilborn.
3.The underlined word in paragraph 2 eliminate most probably means________.
A.defeat B.reduce C.get rid of D.improve
4.Which can be the best title for the passage?
A.Study Finds Some Ocean Fisheries Are Recovering
B.Boris Worm and Ray Hilborn’s New Study
C.New Findings about Overfishing Offer Hope
D.Overfishing Is Decreasing
科目:gzyy 來源:2010-2011學年山東省莘縣一中高二下學期第一次月考英語卷 題型:閱讀理解
BEIJING, Oct. 8(Xinhua)——There are ten times as many Chinese newspapers and magazines than there were 30 years ago. That’s when the country adopted the reform and opening-up policy.
Figures from the General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP)show there were 186 newspapers and 930 magazines in China in 1978. Today, the country has 2,081 newspapers and 9,363 different magazines.
In the meantime, official figures show China has some 600 publishing houses producing nearly 300,000 kinds of books. That’s a dramatic increase from the 105 publishers of the past that produced only 10,000 different books.
Rapid economic development and universal education since China adopted the reform has helped fuel the need for more information sources.
Under the market economy, hundreds of publishing houses and newspapers have taken steps to restructure management systems into corporations listed on the stock market.
The legal system overseeing the news and publishing industries in China has also changed over the last three decades. Since 1990 a law and five relevant(相關) regulations were adopted in 1990 to govern the sectors.
Since it started in 1993, digital publishing has flourished. Its industrial volume amounted to 20 billion yuan (2.93 billion U.S. dollars) in 2006. More than 500,000 kinds of digital books were produced last year alone in China, which is more than any other country in the world.
【小題1】Which of the following would be the best title for the text?
| A.Digital books take the place of common ones in China. |
| B.China has more newspapers and magazines. |
| C.More information sources are developing with the economy. |
| D.A law should be adopted to govern the publishing industries. |
| A.the publishing houses want to make more money. |
| B.there are more readers along with the bigger population. |
| C.economic and education have developed under the policy. |
| D.the legal system overseeing the publishing industries has changed. |
| A.The development of publishing industry in the past was out of control. |
| B.Hundreds of publishing houses have closed down and turned to stock market. |
| C.China adopted the reform and opening-up policy about 20 years ago. |
| D.China produces more digital books than any other country. |
| A.first appeared | B.fell down |
C. well developed | D.successfully ended |
| A.culture and education | B.entertainment |
C.s cience and technology | D.business |
科目:gzyy 來源:20102011學年山東省高二下學期第一次月考英語卷 題型:閱讀理解
BEIJING, Oct. 8(Xinhua)——There are ten times as many Chinese newspapers and magazines than there were 30 years ago. That’s when the country adopted the reform and opening-up policy.
Figures from the General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP)show there were 186 newspapers and 930 magazines in China in 1978. Today, the country has 2,081 newspapers and 9,363 different magazines.
In the meantime, official figures show China has some 600 publishing houses producing nearly 300,000 kinds of books. That’s a dramatic increase from the 105 publishers of the past that produced only 10,000 different books.
Rapid economic development and universal education since China adopted the reform has helped fuel the need for more information sources.
Under the market economy, hundreds of publishing houses and newspapers have taken steps to restructure management systems into corporations listed on the stock market.
The legal system overseeing the news and publishing industries in China has also changed over the last three decades. Since 1990 a law and five relevant(相關) regulations were adopted in 1990 to govern the sectors.
Since it started in 1993, digital publishing has flourished. Its industrial volume amounted to 20 billion yuan (2.93 billion U.S. dollars) in 2006. More than 500,000 kinds of digital books were produced last year alone in China, which is more than any other country in the world.
1.Which of the following would be the best title for the text?
A. Digital books take the place of common ones in China.
B. China has more newspapers and magazines.
C. More information sources are developing with the economy.
D. A law should be adopted to govern the publishing industries.
2.There are ten times as many newspapers and magazines because ________.
A. the publishing houses want to make more money.
B. there are more readers along with the bigger population.
C. economic and education have developed under the policy.
D. the legal system overseeing the publishing industries has changed.
3.Which is true according to this text?
A. The development of publishing industry in the past was out of control.
B. Hundreds of publishing houses have closed down and turned to stock market.
C. China adopted the reform and opening-up policy about 20 years ago.
D. China produces more digital books than any other country.
4. The underlined word “flourished” in Paragraph 7 probably means ________.
A. first appeared B. fell down
C. well developed D. successfully ended
5. You will probably read this text in the ________ column of XINHUA NET?
A. culture and education B. entertainment
C. science and technology D. business
科目:gzyy 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解
| A.Digital books take the place of common ones in China. |
| B.China has more newspapers and magazines. |
| C.More information sources are developing with the economy. |
| D.A law should be adopted to govern the publishing industries. |
| A.the publishing houses want to make more money. |
| B.there are more readers along with the bigger population. |
| C.economic and education have developed under the policy. |
| D.the legal system overseeing the publishing industries has changed. |
| A.The development of publishing industry in the past was out of control. |
| B.Hundreds of publishing houses have closed down and turned to stock market. |
| C.China adopted the reform and opening-up policy about 20 years ago. |
| D.China produces more digital books than any other country. |
| A.first appeared | B.fell down |
C. well developed | D.successfully ended |
| A.culture and education | B.entertainment |
C.s cience and technology | D.business |
科目:gzyy 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Some people look at a hole and see empty space. Others see opportunity. That’s what Sheri Schmelzer spotted a few years ago when everyone—including her three children—started wearing Crocs, the colorful shoes dotted with holes.
“My kids and I were clowning around, and my eldest daughter, Lexie, got the sewing kit out. I brought one of the Crocs, pulled some buttons, rhinestones, and fabric out of the kit, and stuck them in the holes. Lexie said, ‘Mom, I love that!’”
Sheri and Lexie, then seven, spent the rest of the day filling holes in the family’s 12 pairs of Crocs. Every look-alike shoe was suddenly unique. When her husband, Rich, experienced in setting up businesses, came home later that day, says Sheri, “I could see the light bulb go on over his head,” Crocs had sold millions of pairs of shoes; the couple figured they could create a business simply by riding the wave. Rich refused to let a decorated Croc leave their Boulder, Colorado, house until he’d filed a patent.
But first they needed a name. “Rich and I had seen a movie where Meg Ryan says to Tom Hanks, ‘I’m such a flibbertigibbet!’ That became my nickname, so I called the business Jibbitz.” While Sheri designed, Rich strategized. They decided to sell the charms through a website, Jibbitz.com
Six months later, in February 2006, Sheri was doing so well that Rich left his business to work with her full-time. She was making hundreds of Jibbitz to order, by hand, by herself, in their basement. And filling those holes wasn’t as easy as it looked. The bigger the shoe, the bigger the holes; it took six models before Sheri figured out how to make her charms one-size-fits-all. Later Rich found a way to get plastic Jibbitz manufactured in China.
Someone at Crocs was sure going to notice the charms—after all, the company was headquartered (總部設在) just ten miles down the road. Duke Hanson, one of Crocs’ founders, spotted Lexie and her Jibbitz at the local pool, handed her his business card, and said, “Have your mom call me.”
Sheri and Rich met with Crocs executives, but no one suggested buying the company. Sheri was actually relieved because she wanted to see if she, not Crocs, could make it big. And she did. In December 2006, Crocs bought Jibbitz for $20 million, with the Schmelzers staying on board.
1. The passage is mainly about ____.
A. how the Schmelzers found opportunities out of nothing.
B. how the Schmelzers found opportunities and developed their business
C. how creativity matters to a successful business
D. how the business of Crocs became successful.
2. When Sheri said, “I could see the light bulb go on over his head”, she meant that ____.
A. Rich was really excited B. Rich liked their shoe charms
C. saw this as a business opportunity
D. Rich wasn’t satisfied with the decorations
3. From Paragraph 5, we can learn that ____.
A. the Schmelzers kept improving to make their business successful
B. Sheri does not trust others when it comes to designing Jibbitz
C. making the products unique is key to business success
D. Rich made a lot of sacrifices for their family business
4. Which of the following is arranged in the right order according to the text?
a. the Schmelzers applied for a patent b. Crocs’ shoes sold well
c. the Schmelzers set up their website
d. by making their products in China, the Schmelzers spread their business.
A. acdb B.bacd C. bcad D. adcb
科目:gzyy 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
認真閱讀下面短文,并根據(jù)所讀內(nèi)容在文章后圖表中的空格內(nèi)填入最恰當?shù)脑~。
注意:每空一詞。
Ten is not just a number. For Hong Kong, it means change. That change began 10 years ago on July 1, 1997, when Hong Kong was returned to the mainland. A year later, putonghua became a major subject in middle schools there. Street chatter now is trilingual: Cantonese, English and putonghua.
But language is just one of the many changes. Over the past 10 years, the flow of people has left its mark, especially on the young people.
The first sign is in the job market. Before 2006, about 10,000 young professionals from the mainland found jobs in Hong kong. At the same time, around 240,000 Hong Kong residents had worked or were working on the mainland. More than 60 percent of them were aged 23 to 25, according to official statistics.
Geng Chun, 26, a native of northern
“I like Hong Kong,” Geng said. “Hong Kong needs us. We’re young, well-educated and energetic.”
Education is the next thing to change. After the return, more people from both the mainland and Hong Kong began crossing the border to get an education.
According to
There was a growth on the other side as well. In the early 1990s, about 100 mainland students went to Hong Kong every year to study. Last year, 1300 studied in Hong Kong universities.
Besides social and cultural changes in Hong Kong, business exchanges between the mainland and Hong Kong have greatly increased.
According to a Xinhua report, by the end of 2006, the mainland’s total investment in Hong Kong had reached $40 billion since 1997, which makes up 57 percent of all investments to places outside the mainland.
“We have many clients from the mainland, and actually, they are becoming our biggest group of clients,” said Ho, a manager for a Hong Kong PR company. “The mainland has provided our company with more business opportunities, which are vital for our development.”
Ten Years Reshapes Hong Kong
(1)_______________ | Putonghua is a. a major (2)________________ in middle schools; b. heard in street (3)____________________. |
(4)_______________ Market | a. Hong Kong employs about 10,000 young (5)________________ from the mainland . b. More Hong Kong residents go to work on the mainland. |
(6)_______________ | More students from the mainland study in Hong Kong. The number was (7)____________ in 2006. Also more Hong Kong students go to the mainland for study. |
(8)_______________ exchange | a. From 1997 to 2006, the mainland altogether (9)_______________ $4 billion in Hong Kong. b. The mainland has provided more business (10) ________________ for Hong Kong companies. |
科目:czyy 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Television has long been one of America's favorite forms to relax: It develops faster than print and radio media.But how and when we catch our favorite shows is changing greatly.
During the 2004-2005 TV season the average family watched more than 8 hours of television a day, an increase of morn than 12 percent from ten years ago. There were also more programs to choose. In 2006 the ordinary American home had access to 104 different channels, almost double the number just six years ago.
But new technologies(技術)like video recorder and digital cable(數(shù)字有線)are changing the way people think of traditional TV.That, of course, depends on the audience's age.Old people still watch some TV shows and the nightly news.Young people are more likely to listen to download music on watch their favourite shows on the Internet.However, according to an expert, “TV will never be replaced.But without the video recorder or the Internet, I would feel lost—like I had my legs, but not my arms.”
1.American people like watching TV and __________
A.it develops faster than newspaper and radio media
B.a(chǎn)ll the American families watch TV 8 hours a day
C.there were 104 different channels in 2000
D.a(chǎn)ll people like the night news
2.Why is the way American people watch TV changing a lot?
A.The number of audiences is large.
B.People spent lots of time watching TV.
C.There are mere channels to choose
D.The new technologies give new ideas to relax.
3.The underlined word “had access to” means ___________
A.had a night to buy
B.had time to enjoy
C.was able to choose from
D.had a way to relax
4.The passage mainly tells us _____________
A.the video recorder and the Interne1 will not replace TV
B.old people like TV shows mere than the young
C.how and when American people catch their favourite shows is changing greatly
D.we will feel lost without the new technologies
科目:czyy 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
| A.the only Tibetan postman in China | B.the first postwoman in the world |
| C.doing a hard job as a postwoman | D.making her village famous overnight |
| A.he once fell into the river. | B.He was killed by a snake. |
| C.He died when swimming in the river. | D.He got hurt when building the bridge. |
| A.Kill it with stones. | B.Keep it off and go on. |
| C.Throw it away and leave. | D.turn around and run. |
| A.She is building a bridge across the Lancang River. |
| B.She has realized all the villagers’ dreams. |
| C.She got her job as a post woman before 2000. |
| D.She doesn’t need to do her work now. |
科目:czyy 來源:2011年山東省東營市中考英語試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解
Last Friday, a Tibetan(藏族的) postman became the first woman postal worker to give a speech at the World Postal Meeting in Bern, the capital of Switzerland. She was Nima Lamu, a postwoman of Yunling Post office, Yunnan Province.
She said, “I had to cross the Lancang River along a steel wire. My younger brother nearly died in the river before. I felt so afraid when I was asked for the first time to cross
the river. But when I reached the other side, I found that I was flying.”
Her area is locked in (封閉) two snowy mountains and three big rivers. She said, “:What worries me most is the snakes on the way. Sometimes, I throw little stones toward them and I often tell my self ‘Keep going’. ”
Ten years ago, it took Nima five days to finish each week’s mail. She had to face snowstorms, floods, snakes and loneliness on her 350-kilometer journey. Nima said, “The situation has developed a lot these years. Now we have a bridge that was built across the Lancang River in 2006.”
Nima never dreamed she would become famous one day when she first look up her job, 12 years ago. Changes have been seen in recent years as more tourists visit Nima’s hometown. But one thing remains unchanged: she is still the carrier of the villagers’ hopes and dreams.
【小題1】Nima was invited to the meeting in Bern because she was _________.
| A.the only Tibetan postman in China | B.the first postwoman in the world |
| C.doing a hard job as a postwoman | D.making her village famous overnight |
| A.he once fell into the river | B.He was killed by a snake. |
| C.He died when sw | D.He got hurt when building the bridge. |
| A.Kill it with stones. | B.Keep it off and go on. |
| C.Throw it away and leave. | D.turn around and run. |
| A.She is building a bridge across the Lancang River. |
| B.She has realized all the villagers’ dreams. |
| C.She got her job as a post woman before 2000. |
| D.She doesn’t need to do her work now. |
科目:czyy 來源:2011年貴州省遵義市中考英語試卷 題型:閱讀理解
Last Friday, a Tibetan(藏族的) postman became the first woman postal worker to give a speech at the World Postal Meeting in Bern, the capital of Switzerland. She was Nima Lamu, a postwoman of Yunling Post office, Yunnan Province.
She said, “I had to cross the Lancang River along a steel wire. My younger brother nearly died in the river before. I felt so afraid when I was asked for the first time to cross the river. But when I reached the other side, I found that I was flying.”
Her area is locked in (封閉) two snowy mountains and three big rivers. She said, “:What worries me most is the snakes on the way. Sometimes, I throw little stones toward them and I often tell my self ‘Keep going’. ”
Ten years ago, it took Nima five days to finish each week’s mail. She had to face snowstorms, floods, snakes and loneliness on her 350-kilometer journey. Nima said, “The situation has developed a lot these years. Now we have a bridge that was built across the Lancang River in 2006.”
Nima never dreamed she would become famous one day when she first look up her job, 12 years ago. Changes have been seen in recent years as more tourists visit Nima’s hometown. But one thing remains unchanged: she is still the carrier of the villagers’ hopes and dreams.
1.Nima was invited to the meeting in Bern because she was _________.
A. the only Tibetan postman in China B. the first postwoman in the world
C. doing a hard job as a postwoman D. making her village famous overnight
2. What happened to her brother according to Nima Lamu?
A. he once fell into the river . B. He was killed by a snake.
C. He died when swimming in the river. D. He got hurt when building the bridge.
3.Which picture is TRUE about Nima’s crossing the river ten years ago?
![]()
4.What will Nima do if she finds a snake on the way?
A. Kill it with stones. B. Keep it off and go on.
C. Throw it away and leave. D. turn around and run.
5.What is RTUE about Nima?
A. She is building a bridge across the Lancang River.
B. She has realized all the villagers’ dreams.
C. She got her job as a post woman before 2000.
D. She doesn’t need to do her work now.
科目:czyy 來源:2011年山東省德州市中考英語試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解
Last Friday, a Tibetan(藏族的) postman became the first woman postal worker to give a speech at the World Postal Meeting in Bern, the capital of Switzerland. She was Nima Lamu, a postwoman of Yunling Post office, Yunnan Province.
She said, “I had to cross the Lancang River along a steel wire. My younger brother nearly died in the river before. I felt so afraid when I was asked for the first time to cross the river. But when I reached the other side, I found that I was flying.”
Her area is locked in (封閉) two snowy mountains and three big rivers. She said, “:What worries me most is the snakes on the way. Sometimes, I throw little stones toward them and I often tell my self ‘Keep going’. ”
Ten years ago, it took Nima five days to finish each week’s mail. She had to face snowstorms, floods, snakes and loneliness on her 350-kilometer journey. Nima said, “The situation has developed a lot these years. Now we have a bridge that was built across the Lancang River in 2006.”
Nima never dreamed she would become famous one day when she first look up her job, 12 years ago. Changes have been seen in recent years as more tourists visit Nima’s hometown. But one thing remains unchanged: she is still the carrier of the villagers’ hopes and dreams.
1.Nima was invited to the meeting in Bern because she was _________.
A. the only Tibetan postman in China B. the first postwoman in the world
C. doing a hard job as a postwoman D. making her village famous overnight
2. What happened to her brother according to Nima Lamu?
A. he once fell into the river . B. He was killed by a snake.
C. He died when swimming in the river. D. He got hurt when building the bridge.
3.Which picture is TRUE about Nima’s crossing the river ten years ago?
![]()
4.What will Nima do if she finds a snake on the way?
A. Kill it with stones. B. Keep it off and go on.
C. Throw it away and leave. D. turn around and run.
5.What is RTUE about Nima?
A. She is building a bridge across the Lancang River.
B. She has realized all the villagers’ dreams.
C. She got her job as a post woman before 2000.
D. She doesn’t need to do her work now.
科目:czyy 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解
| A.the only Tibetan postman in China | B.the first postwoman in the world |
| C.doing a hard job as a postwoman | D.making her village famous overnight |
| A.he once fell into the river | B.He was killed by a snake. |
| C.He died when sw | D.He got hurt when building the bridge. |
| A.Kill it with stones. | B.Keep it off and go on. |
| C.Throw it away and leave. | D.turn around and run. |
| A.She is building a bridge across the Lancang River. |
| B.She has realized all the villagers’ dreams. |
| C.She got her job as a post woman before 2000. |
| D.She doesn’t need to do her work now. |
科目:czyy 來源:山東省中考真題 題型:閱讀理解
科目:czyy 來源:山東省德州市2011年中考英語試題 題型:050
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科目:czyy 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
科目:gzyy 來源:2011-2012學年福建省安溪一中養(yǎng)正中學高一下學期期末聯(lián)考英語試卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
Howard Dill is a giant among giant pumpkin(南瓜) growers. He grew world champion pumpkins for four years running,from 1979 to 1982, and missed winning the fifth year by only 5 pounds. Today, his Dill Atlantic Giant seeds are sold worldwide to more than 50 seed companies. The pumpkins grown from his Dill Atlantic Giant seeds commonly weigh in at over 1,000 pounds. “I don’t have any training in genetics(遺傳學); it was all trial and error,” Dill says. He got his love of pumpkins from his father and has enjoyed growing them for years.
Dill still grows giant pumpkins, but not for competition. In the fall, visitors come to enjoy the pumpkins on his 90-acre farm in Nova Scotia, Canada. He plants ten acres of pumpkins for Halloween and two acres of giant pumpkins. One of giant pumpkins was recently baked into 442 pumpkin pies and sold at $5 each for charity.
It you want to try growing a giant pumpkin, Dill recommends starting with a soil test and then adding fertilizer(農(nóng)藥) as needed. Plant the giant pumpkin seed. A giant pumpkin can gain 15 to 20 pounds a day, so careful watering—every day or two—is necessary. You should wait about 130 days until the pumpkin matures and then you can harvest it.
Dill’s favorite pumpkin set the Guinness Book record in 1981. It weighted 493.5 pounds. “I’ve grown them larger since, but that one meant a lot,” he remembers. “I never would have imagined ten
years ago that there would be a 1,000-pounder, but there are many of them now,” says Dill. The 2006 world record holder is Larry Checkon of Pennsylvania. He grew a 1,469 pounder. Dill says, “These world champions are grown from my seeds, so I feel like a winner right along with them.”
【小題1】What can we learn about the world champion pumpkin of 1983?
| A.It weighed over 1,000 pounds. |
| B.It was missing after the competition. |
| C.It was 5 pounds heavier than that of 1982. |
| D.It was 5 pounds heavier than Dill’s biggest one that year. |
| A.$2210 | B.$442 | C.$1000 | D.$1469 |
| A.how to do a soil test |
| B.how to plant the giant pumpkin seed |
| C.when to water the pumpkin |
| D.how to grow a giant pumpkin |
| A.Gardening Giant: Howard Dill |
| B.World Champion Pumpkin |
| C.Dill Atlantic Giant Seeds |
| D.How to Grow Giant Pumpkins |
科目:gzyy 來源:2014屆福建省高一下學期期末聯(lián)考英語試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解
Howard Dill is a giant among giant pumpkin(南瓜) growers. He grew world champion pumpkins for four years running,from 1979 to 1982, and missed winning the fifth year by only 5 pounds. Today, his Dill Atlantic Giant seeds are sold worldwide to more than 50 seed companies. The pumpkins grown from his Dill Atlantic Giant seeds commonly weigh in at over 1,000 pounds. “I don’t have any training in genetics(遺傳學); it was all trial and error,” Dill says. He got his love of pumpkins from his father and has enjoyed growing them for years.
Dill still grows giant pumpkins, but not for competition. In the fall, visitors come to enjoy the pumpkins on his 90-acre farm in Nova Scotia, Canada. He plants ten acres of pumpkins for Halloween and two acres of giant pumpkins. One of giant pumpkins was recently baked into 442 pumpkin pies and sold at $5 each for charity.
It you want to try growing a giant pumpkin, Dill recommends starting with a soil test and then adding fertilizer(農(nóng)藥) as needed. Plant the giant pumpkin seed. A giant pumpkin can gain 15 to 20 pounds a day, so careful watering—every day or two—is necessary. You should wait about 130 days until the pumpkin matures and then you can harvest it.
Dill’s favorite pumpkin set the Guinness Book record in 1981. It weighted 493.5 pounds. “I’ve grown them larger since, but that one meant a lot,” he remembers. “I never would have imagined ten
years ago that there would be a 1,000-pounder, but there are many of them now,” says Dill. The 2006 world record holder is Larry Checkon of Pennsylvania. He grew a 1,469 pounder. Dill says, “These world champions are grown from my seeds, so I feel like a winner right along with them.”
1.What can we learn about the world champion pumpkin of 1983?
A. It weighed over 1,000 pounds.
B. It was missing after the competition.
C. It was 5 pounds heavier than that of 1982.
D. It was 5 pounds heavier than Dill’s biggest one that year.
2. One of Dill’s giant pumpkins earned .
A. $2210 B. $442 C. $1000 D.$1469
3. In the third paragraph Dill mainly tells about .
A. how to do a soil test
B. how to plant the giant pumpkin seed
C. when to water the pumpkin
D. how to grow a giant pumpkin
4.Which of the following is the best title for the passage?
A. Gardening Giant: Howard Dill
B. World Champion Pumpkin
C. Dill Atlantic Giant Seeds
D. How to Grow Giant Pumpkins
科目:gzyy 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
科目:gzyy 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解
| A.It weighed over 1,000 pounds. |
| B.It was missing after the competition. |
| C.It was 5 pounds heavier than that of 1982. |
| D.It was 5 pounds heavier than Dill’s biggest one that year. |
| A.$2210 | B.$442 | C.$1000 | D.$1469 |
| A.how to do a soil test |
| B.how to plant the giant pumpkin seed |
| C.when to water the pumpkin |
| D.how to grow a giant pumpkin |
| A.Gardening Giant: Howard Dill |
| B.World Champion Pumpkin |
| C.Dill Atlantic Giant Seeds |
| D.How to Grow Giant Pumpkins |
科目:gzyy 來源:2013屆江西南昌10所省重點中學高三第二次模擬突破沖刺(一)英語試卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解
Howard Dill is a giant among giant pumpkin growers. He grew world champion pumpkins for four years running,from 1979 to 1982,and missed winning the fifth year by a mere 5 pounds. Today,his Dill Atlantic Giant seeds are sold worldwide to more than 50 seed companies. The pumpkins grown from his Dill Atlantic Giant seeds commonly weigh in at over 1,000 pounds.“I don’t have any training in genetics ;it was all trial and error,”Dill says. He inherited his love of pumpkins from his father and has enjoyed growing them for years.
Dill still grows giant pumpkins, but not for competition. In the fall, visitors come to enjoy the pumpkin patch on his 90-acre farm in Nova Scotia,Canada. He plants ten acres of pumpkins for Halloween and two acres of giant pumpkins. One of giant pumpkins was recently baked into 442 pumpkin pies and sold at $ 5 each for charity.
It you want to try growing a giant pumpkin, Dill recommends starting with a soil test and then adding fertilizer as needed. Plant the giant pumpkin seed. A giant pumpkin can gain 15 to 20 pounds a day, so careful watering—every day or two—is essential. You should wait about 130 days until the pumpkin matures and then you can harvest it.
Dill’s favorite pumpkin set the Guinness Book record in 1981. It weighted 493.5 pounds. “I’ve grown them larger since, but that one meant a lot,” he remembers. “I never would have predicted ten years ago that there would be a 1,000-pounder,but there are many of them now,”says Dill。The 2006 world record holder is Larry Checkon of Pennsylvania. He grew a 1,469 pounder. Dill says, “These world champions are grown from my seeds, so I feel like a winner right along with them.”
【小題1】What can we learn about the world champion pumpkin of 1983?
| A.It weighed over 1,000 pounds. |
| B.It was missing after the competition. |
| C.It was 5 pounds heavier than that of 1982. |
| D.It was 5 pounds heavier than Dill’s biggest one that year. |
| A.$2210 | B.$442 | C.$1000 | D.$1469 |
| A.how to do a soil test | B.how to plant the giant pumpkin seed |
| C.when to water the pumpkin | D.how to grow a giant pumpkin |
| A.Howard Dill is well trained in genetics. |
| B.Howard Dill grows pumpkins just for competiton. |
| C.Dill felt proud of Larry Checkon’s champion pumpkin. |
| D.Dill’s favorite pumpkin is the heaviest of all those he has ever grown. |
| A.Gardening Giant: Howard Dill | B.World Champion Pumpkin |
| C.Dill Atlantic Giant Seeds | D.How to Grow Giant Pumpkins |
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