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2017/4/12 16:11:50來源:新航道作者:新航道
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Islamic Art and the Book
The arts of the Islamic book, such as calligraphy and decorative drawing, developed during A.D. 900 to 1500, and luxury books are some of the most characteristic examples of Islamic art produced in this period. This came about from two major developments: paper became common, replacing parchment as the major medium for writing, and rounded scripts were regularized and perfected so that they replaced the angular scripts of the previous period, which because of their angularity were uneven in height. Books became major vehicles for artistic expression, and the artists who produced them, notably calligraphers and painters, enjoyed high status, and their workshops were often sponsored by princes and their courts. Before A.D. 900, manuscripts of the Koran (the book containing the teachings of the Islamic religion) seem to have been the most common type of book produced and decorated, but after that date a wide range of books were produced for a broad spectrum of patrons. These continued to include, of course, manuscripts of the Koran, which every Muslim wanted to read, but scientific works, histories, romances, and epic and lyric poetry were also copied in fine handwriting and decorated with beautiful illustrations. Most were made for sale on the open market, and cities boasted special souks (markets) where books were bought and sold. The mosque of Marrakech in Morocco is known as the Kutubiyya, or Booksellers’ Mosque, after the adjacent market. Some of the most luxurious books were specific commissions made at the order of a particular prince and signed by the calligrapher and decorator.
Papermaking had been introduced to the Islamic lands from China in the eighth century. It has been said that Chinese papermakers were among the prisoners captured in a battle fought near Samarqand between the Chinese and the Muslims in 751, and the technique of papermaking – in which cellulose pulp extracted from any of several plants is first suspended in water, caught on a fine screen, and then dried into flexible sheets – slowly spread westward. Within fifty years, the government in Baghdad was using paper for documents. Writing in ink on paper, unlike parchment, could not easily be erased, and therefore paper had the advantage that it was difficult to alter what was written on it. Papermaking spread quickly to Egypt – and eventually to Sicily and Spain – but it was several centuries before paper supplanted parchment for copies of the Koran, probably because of the conservative nature of religious art and its practitioners. In western Islamic lands, parchment continued to be used for manuscripts of the Koran throughout this period.
The introduction of paper spurred a conceptual revolution whose consequences have barely been explored. Although paper was never as cheap as it has become today, it was far less expensive than parchment, and therefore more people could afford to buy books, Paper is thinner than parchment, so more pages could be enclosed within a single volume. At first, paper was made in relatively small sheets that were pasted together, but by the beginning of the fourteenth century, very large sheets – as much as a meter across – were available. These large sheets meant that calligraphers and artists had more space on which to work. Paintings became more complicated, giving the artist greater opportunities to depict space or emotion. The increased availability of paper, particularly after 1250, encouraged people to develop systems of representation, such as architectural plans and drawings. This in turn allowed the easy transfer of artistic ideas and motifs over great distances from one medium to another, and in a different scale in ways that had been difficult, if not impossible, in the previous period.
Rounded styles of Arabic handwriting had long been used for correspondence and documents alongside the formal angular scripts used for inscriptions and manuscripts of the Koran. Around the year 900, Ibn Muqla, who was a secretary and vizier at the Abbasid court in Baghdad, developed a system of proportioned writing. He standardized the length of alif, the first letter of the Arabic alphabet, and then determined what the size and shape of all other letters should be, based on the alif. Eventually, six round forms of handwriting, composed of three pairs of big and little scripts known collectively as the Six Pens, became the standard repertory of every calligrapher.
Para.1 The arts of the Islamic book, such as calligraphy and decorative drawing, developed during A.D. 900 to 1500, and luxury books are some of the most characteristic examples of Islamic art produced in this period. This came about from two major developments: paper became common, replacing parchment as the major medium for writing, and rounded scripts were regularized and perfected so that they replaced the angular scripts of the previous period, which because of their angularity were uneven in height. Books became major vehicles for artistic expression, and the artists who produced them, notably calligraphers and painters, enjoyed high status, and their workshops were often sponsored by princes and their courts. Before A.D. 900, manuscripts of the Koran (the book containing the teachings of the Islamic religion) seem to have been the most common type of book produced and decorated, but after that date a wide range of books were produced for a broad spectrum of patrons. These continued to include, of course, manuscripts of the Koran, which every Muslim wanted to read, but scientific works, histories, romances, and epic and lyric poetry were also copied in fine handwriting and decorated with beautiful illustrations. Most were made for sale on the open market, and cities boasted special souks (markets) where books were bought and sold. The mosque of Marrakech in Morocco is known as the Kutubiyya, or Booksellers’ Mosque, after the adjacent market. Some of the most luxurious books were specific commissions made at the order of a particular prince and signed by the calligrapher and decorator.
1. Paragraph 1 makes all of the following points about Islamic books EXCEPT:
A) Books were an important form of artistic expression.
B) A wide variety of books with different styles and topics became available.
C) They were sold primarily near mosques.
D) Most books were intended for sale on the open market.
2. The word “sponsored” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A) visited
B) owned
C) praised
D) supported
3. The word “adjacent” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A) major
B) nearby
C) ancient
D) well-known
4. According to paragraph 1, before A.D. 900, books in the Islamic world
A) included a wide range of subjects
B) did not contain any calligraphy or decoration
C) used rounded scripts
D) were usually written on parchment
5. In paragraph 1, why does the author mention the fact that the mosque in Marrakech, Morocco, is known as the Booksellers’ Mosque
A) To cast doubt on the importance of souks in making books available to common people
B) To provide an example of a place where books were made at the order of a particular prince
C) To emphasize how influential and well known the book markets were
D) To demonstrate the need for religious texts in Islamic lands
Para.2 Papermaking had been introduced to the Islamic lands from China in the eighth century. 【】It has been said that Chinese papermakers were among the prisoners captured in a battle fought near Samarqand between the Chinese and the Muslims in 751, and the technique of papermaking – in which cellulose pulp extracted from any of several plants is first suspended in water, caught on a fine screen, and then dried into flexible sheets – slowly spread westward. 【】Within fifty years, the government in Baghdad was using paper for documents. 【】Writing in ink on paper, unlike parchment, could not easily be erased, and therefore paper had the advantage that it was difficult to alter what was written on it. 【】Papermaking spread quickly to Egypt – and eventually to Sicily and Spain – but it was several centuries before paper supplanted parchment for copies of the Koran, probably because of the conservative nature of religious art and its practitioners. In western Islamic lands, parchment continued to be used for manuscripts of the Koran throughout this period.
6. The phrase “extracted from” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A) taken out of
B) produced using
C) discovered in
D) combined with
7. Which of the sentences below best expresses the essential information in the highlighted sentence in the passage? Incorrect choices change the meaning in important ways or leave out essential information.
A) It was several centuries before papermaking techniques spread to faraway areas where parchment was popular and used widely in art.
B) Although papermaking came to Egypt quickly, it took much longer for paper to be used when copying the Koran, probably because of the conservative nature of religious art.
C) Papermaking spread beyond Egypt, Sicily, and Spain, but it was not widely used by artists for centuries, probably because of the conservative nature of art in those countries.
D) Paper replaced parchment in copies of the Koran, probably at the request of conservative practitioners in areas like Egypt, Sicily, and Spain.
Para.3 The introduction of paper spurred a conceptual revolution whose consequences have barely been explored. Although paper was never as cheap as it has become today, it was far less expensive than parchment, and therefore more people could afford to buy books, Paper is thinner than parchment, so more pages could be enclosed within a single volume. At first, paper was made in relatively small sheets that were pasted together, but by the beginning of the fourteenth century, very large sheets – as much as a meter across – were available. These large sheets meant that calligraphers and artists had more space on which to work. Paintings became more complicated, giving the artist greater opportunities to depict space or emotion. The increased availability of paper, particularly after 1250, encouraged people to develop systems of representation, such as architectural plans and drawings. This in turn allowed the easy transfer of artistic ideas and motifs over great distances from one medium to another, and in a different scale in ways that had been difficult, if not impossible, in the previous period.
8. In paragraphs 2 and 3, which of the following is NOT mentioned as an advantage of paper over parchment?
A) It was harder to erase or change what was written on paper.
B) More pages of paper could be bound in a single volume.
C) Paper could be produced in sheets of varying weights and thicknesses.
D) More people could buy books made of paper because it was cheaper.
9. Why does the author include the following information: “At first, paper was made in relatively small sheets that were pasted together, but by the beginning of the fourteenth century, very large sheets – as much as a meter across – were available.”?
A) To provide evidence that the development of papermaking techniques was very slow
B) To explain why paper was never as cheap as it has become today
C) To make the point that paper allowed artists to develop paintings that were more expressive and complex
D) To prove that paper was more popular with artists who used large sheets, than it was with book printers, who used smaller sheets
10. According to paragraph 3, the increased availability of paper and the development of systems of representation
A) encourage more people to make their own drawings
B) made the transfer of artistic ideas to distant people and places much easier
C) made architectural plans more complex and therefore harder to read
D) allowed artists to create paintings that were smaller in scale
Para.4 Rounded styles of Arabic handwriting had long been used for correspondence and documents alongside the formal angular scripts used for inscriptions and manuscripts of the Koran. Around the year 900, Ibn Muqla, who was a secretary and vizier at the Abbasid court in Baghdad, developed a system of proportioned writing. He standardized the length of alif, the first letter of the Arabic alphabet, and then determined what the size and shape of all other letters should be, based on the alif. Eventually, six round forms of handwriting, composed of three pairs of big and little scripts known collectively as the Six Pens, became the standard repertory of every calligrapher.
11. According to paragraph 4, what did Ibn Muqla achieve around the year 900?
A) He modified a set of formal scripts known as the Six Pens into rounded scripts appropriate for correspondence.
B) He created a standardized set of rounded scripts proportional to the size of the first letter of the alphabet.
C) He promoted calligraphy as an art form and encouraged the use of rounded letters in religious texts.
D) He persuaded the court in Baghdad to use rounded styles instead of more angular scripts in their documents.
12. The phrase “composed of” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A) made up of
B) developed from
C) in addition to
D) similar to
13. Look at the four squares 【】 that indicate where the following sentence could be added to the passage.
This change occurred for good reason.
Where does the sentence best fit?
Papermaking had been introduced to the Islamic lands from China in the eighth century. 【】It has been said that Chinese papermakers were among the prisoners captured in a battle fought near Samarqand between the Chinese and the Muslims in 751, and the technique of papermaking – in which cellulose pulp extracted from any of several plants is first suspended in water, caught on a fine screen, and then dried into flexible sheets – slowly spread westward. 【】Within fifty years, the government in Baghdad was using paper for documents. 【】Writing in ink on paper, unlike parchment, could not easily be erased, and therefore paper had the advantage that it was difficult to alter what was written on it. 【】Papermaking spread quickly to Egypt – and eventually to Sicily and Spain – but it was several centuries before paper supplanted parchment for copies of the Koran, probably because of the conservative nature of religious art and its practitioners. In western Islamic lands, parchment continued to be used for manuscripts of the Koran throughout this period.
14. Prose Summary
Islamic books from A.D. 900 to 1500 reflect major changes from the past and important innovations.
Answer Choices:
A) Books became major vehicle of artistic expression for calligraphers and painters, and the subjects of books expanded to include more and more kinds of works.
B) The growing luxuriousness of books meant that the market for them was increasingly dominated by the wealthy and powerful patrons who could afford them.
C) After it was learned from Chinese prisoners, the technique of papermaking spread throughout Islamic lands, where paper gradually replaced parchment.
D) The high status enjoyed by calligraphers and artists made books extremely popular in the cities where books were bought and sold.
E) The popularity of books led to major advances in the development and transfer of new artistic ideas.
F) Around the year 900, a set of rounded styles of Arabic handwriting began replacing angular scripts in copying the manuscripts of the Koran.
答案解析
1. 答案C
解析:否定事實(shí)信息題。原文信息為The mosque of Marrakech in Morocco is known as the Kutubiyya, or Booksellers’ Mosque, after the adjacent market.而不是They were sold primarily near mosques.
迷惑選項(xiàng)
A 對應(yīng)原文信息為Books became major vehicles for artistic expression, ?
B 對應(yīng)原文信息為but after that date a wide range of books were produced for a broad spectrum of patrons. ?
D 對應(yīng)原文信息為Most were made for sale on the open market, and cities boasted special souks (markets) where books were bought and sold
2. 答案D
解析:詞匯題。 ?
sponsored意為“資助,贊助”故選
D: supported 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A visited意為“參觀,拜訪” ?
B owned意為“擁有” ?
C praised意為“稱贊,贊揚(yáng)”
3. 答案B
解析:詞匯題。?
adjacent意為“附近的,臨近的”故選B:
nearby 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A major意為“主要的,重要的” ?
C ancient意為“遠(yuǎn)古的,古代的” ?
D well-known意為“眾所周知的”
4. 答案D
解析:事實(shí)信息題。 ?
原文信息為This came about from two major developments: paper became common, replacing parchment as the major medium for writing
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A 與原文相矛盾,原文信息為 but after that date a wide range of books were produced for a broad spectrum of patrons即在A.D. 900才有更廣范的話題 ?
B 與原文相矛盾,原文信息為Before A.D. 900, manuscripts of the Koran seem to have been the most common type of book produced and decorated即在A.D 900之前有book produced and decorated ?
C 與原文相矛盾,原文信息為rounded scripts were regularized and perfected so that they replaced the angular scripts of the previous period即A.D 900之前是使用angular scripts
5. 答案C
解析:修辭目的題。?
該信息為例子起支援論證的作用,服務(wù)的物件為Most were made for sale on the open market, and cities boasted special souks (markets) where books were bought and sold即為說明book markets的作用
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A,D 原文無提及該信息 ?
B 原文提及該信息Some of the most luxurious books were specific commissions made at the order of a particular prince and signed by the calligrapher and decorator但與被提問的信息無關(guān)系
6. 答案A
解析:詞匯題。?
extracted from意為“從…當(dāng)中提取,從…當(dāng)中抽取”故選A:
taken out of 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
B produced using意為“使用…生產(chǎn)” ?
C discovered in意為“在…發(fā)現(xiàn)” ?
D combined with意為“與…混合”
7. 答案B
解析:句子簡化題。 ?
原句分為兩層,因果關(guān)系。第一層:紙張很快傳到了埃及但是在取代羊皮卷的古蘭經(jīng)之前過了5個(gè)世界。第二層:原因是宗教藝術(shù)和參與者的保守的本質(zhì)。
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A 句內(nèi)資訊的雜糅,原文信息是經(jīng)過幾個(gè)世紀(jì)取代羊皮卷的古蘭經(jīng)而不是It was several centuries before papermaking techniques spread to faraway ?
C 修改原文的語意范圍,原文信息是紙張用于記錄古蘭經(jīng),而不是it was not widely used by artists for centuries ?
D 包含原文未提及的信息,原文無提及probably at the request of conservative practitioners
8. 答案C
解析:否定事實(shí)信息題。原文無提及該信息。
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A 對應(yīng)原文信息為Writing in ink on paper, unlike parchment, could not easily be erased, and therefore paper had the advantage that it was difficult to alter what was written on it ?
B 對應(yīng)原文信息為Paper is thinner than parchment, so more pages could be enclosed within a single volume ?
D 對應(yīng)原文信息為Although paper was never as cheap as it has become today, it was far less expensive than parchment, and therefore more people could afford to buy books.
9. 答案C
解析:修辭目的題。 ?
該信息起解釋說明的作用,服務(wù)的物件為These large sheets meant that calligraphers and artists had more space on which to work. Paintings became more complicated, giving the artist greater opportunities to depict space or emotion
迷惑選項(xiàng)
A,D 原文無提及該信息 ?
B 原文提及該信息,但是與Although paper was never as cheap as it has become today但與被提問信息無關(guān)
10. 答案B
解析:事實(shí)信息題。?
與原文信息This in turn allowed the easy transfer of artistic ideas and motifs over great distances from one medium to another, and in a different scale in ways that had been difficult, if not impossible, in the previous period相符
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A,C,D原文均無提及該信息
11. 答案B
解析:事實(shí)信息題。?
與原文信息Around the year 900, Ibn Muqla, who was a secretary and vizier at the Abbasid court in Baghdad, developed a system of proportioned writing. He standardized the length of alif, the first letter of the Arabic alphabet, and then determined what the size and shape of all other letters should be, based on the alif.相符
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A 偷換概念,原文信息為developed a system of proportioned writing而不是選項(xiàng)描述的He modified a set of formal scripts ?
C,D 原文無提及該信息
12. 答案A
解析:詞匯題。?
composed of意為“由…組成,由…構(gòu)成”故選A:
made up of 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
B developed from意為“從…發(fā)展起來” ?
C in addition意為“此外…” ?
D similar to意為“與…相似”
13. 答案C
解析:句子插入題。 ?
被插入句子前接This change的具體內(nèi)容。后接for good reasons.的具體內(nèi)容
14. 答案ACE
Islamic books from A.D. 900 to 1500 reflect major changes from the past and important innovations.
Answer Choices:
A.Books became major vehicle of artistic expression for calligraphers and painters, and the subjects of books expanded to include more and more kinds of works.
解析:書籍變?yōu)樗囆g(shù)表達(dá)的工具以及包含更多話題的圖書。
B. The growing luxuriousness of books meant that the market for them was increasingly dominated by the wealthy and powerful patrons who could afford them. ?
解析:原文無提及the market for them was increasingly dominated by the wealthy and powerful patrons
C. After it was learned from Chinese prisoners, the technique of papermaking spread throughout Islamic lands, where paper gradually replaced parchment.
解析:紙張技術(shù)的快速擴(kuò)展以及紙張最終取代羊皮卷
D.The high status enjoyed by calligraphers and artists made books extremely popular in the cities where books were bought and sold. 解析:細(xì)節(jié)性質(zhì)選項(xiàng)
E.The popularity of books led to major advances in the development and transfer of new artistic ideas. 解析:書籍的流行帶來的影響
F.Around the year 900, a set of rounded styles of Arabic handwriting began replacing angular scripts in copying the manuscripts of the Koran.解析:細(xì)節(jié)性質(zhì)選項(xiàng)
Protection of Plants by Insects
Many plants – one or more species of at least 68 different families – can secrete nectar even when they have no blossoms, because they bear extrafloral nectaries (structures that produce nectar) on stems, leaves, leaf stems, or other structures. These plants usually occur where ants are abundant, most in the tropics but some in temperate areas. Among those of northeastern North America are various plums, cherries, roses, hawthorns, poplars, and oaks. Like floral nectar, extrafloral nectar consists mainly of water with a high content of dissolved sugars and, in some plants, small amounts of amino acids. The extrafloral nectaries of some plants are known to attract ants and other insects, but the evolutionary history of most plants with these nectaries is unknown. Nevertheless, most ecologists believe that all extrafloral nectaries attract insects that will defend the plant.
Ants are portably the most frequent and certainly the most persistent defenders ofplants. ¢Since the highly active worker ants require a great deal of energy, plants exploit this need by providing extrafloral nectar that supplies ants with abundant energy. ¢To return this favor, ants guard the nectaries, driving away or killing intruding insects that might compete with ants for nectar. ¢Many of these intruders are herbivorous and would eat the leaves of the plants. ¢
Biologists once thought that secretion of extrafloral nectar has some purely internal physiological function, and that ants provide no benefit whatsoever to the plants that secrete it. This view and the opposing “protectionist” hypothesis that ants defend plants had been disputed for over a hundred years when, in 1910, a skeptical William Morton Wheeler commented on the controversy. He called for proof of the protectionist view: that visitations of the ants confer protection on the plants and that in the absence of the insects a much greater number would perish or fail to produce flowers or seeds than when the insects are present. That we now have an abundance of the proof that was called for was established when Barbara Bentley reviewed the relevant evidence in 1977, and since then many more observations and experiments have provided still further proof that ants benefit plants.
One example shows how ants attracted to extrafloral nectaries protect morning glories against attacking insects. The principal insect enemies of the North American morning glory feed mainly on its flowers or fruits rather than its leaves. Grasshoppers feeding on flowers indirectly block pollination and the production of seeds by destroying the corolla or the stigma, which receives the pollen grains and on which the pollen germinates. Without their colorful corolla, flowers do not attract pollinators and are not fertilized. An adult grasshopper can consume a large corolla, about 2.5 inches long, in an hour. Caterpillars and seed beetles affect seed production directly. Caterpillars devour the ovaries, where the seeds are produced, and seed beetle larvae eat seeds as they burrow in developing fruits.
Extrafloral nectaries at the base of each sepal attract several kinds of insects, but 96 percent of them are ants, several different species of them. When buds are still small, less than a quarter of an inch long, the sepal nectaries are already present and producing nectar. They continue to do so as the flower develops and while the fruit matures. Observations leave little doubt that ants protect morning glory flowers and fruits from the combined enemy force of grasshoppers, caterpillars, and seed beetles. Bentley compares the seed production of six plants that grew where there were no ants with that of seventeen plants that were occupied by ants. Unprotected plants bore only 45 seeds per plant, but plants occupied by ants bore 211 seeds per plant. Although ants are not big enough to kill or seriously injure grasshoppers, they drive them away by nipping at their feet. Seed beetles are more vulnerable because they are much smaller than grasshoppers. The ants prey on the adult beetles, disturb females as they lay their eggs on developing fruits, and eat many of the eggs they do manage to lay.
Para.1 Many plants – one or more species of at least 68 different families – can secrete nectar even when they have no blossoms, because they bear extrafloral nectaries (structures that produce nectar) on stems, leaves, leaf stems, or other structures. These plants usually occur where ants are abundant, most in the tropics but some in temperate areas. Among those of northeastern North America are various plums, cherries, roses, hawthorns, poplars, and oaks. Like floral nectar, extrafloral nectar consists mainly of water with a high content of dissolved sugars and, in some plants, small amounts of amino acids. The extrafloral nectaries of some plants are known to attract ants and other insects, but the evolutionary history of most plants with these nectaries is unknown. Nevertheless, most ecologists believe that all extrafloral nectaries attract insects that will defend the plant.
1. According to paragraph 1, floral nectar and extrafloral nectar are alike in that
A) they are likely to be produced by the same plants
B) they basically consist of the same chemical components
C) they attract only insects that will defend the plant
D) they are produced by the same parts of the plant
Para.2 Ants are portably the most frequent and certainly the most persistent defenders of plants. Since the highly active worker ants require a great deal of energy, plants exploit this need by providing extrafloral nectar that supplies ants with abundant energy. To return this favor, ants guard the nectaries, driving away or killing intruding insects that might compete with ants for nectar. Many of these intruders are herbivorous and would eat the leaves of the plants.
2. To say that ants are “persistent” defenders of plants means that
A) they defend plants against a wide variety of threats
B) they continue to defend plants for as long as the plants are threatened
C) they are successful defenders of plants
D) they are easily observable defenders of plants
3. What can be inferred from paragraph 2 about the ants that are attracted to the extrafloral nectaries?
A) They do not eat the leaves of the plants that produce extrafloral nectar.
B) They live almost entirely on extrafloral nectar.
C) They spend most of their energy guarding extrafloral nectaries.
D) They frequently fight among themselves over extrafloral nectar.
Para.3 Biologists once thought that secretion of extrafloral nectar has some purely internal physiological function, and that ants provide no benefit whatsoever to the plants that secrete it. This view and the opposing “protectionist” hypothesis that ants defend plants had been disputed for over a hundred years when, in 1910, a skeptical William Morton Wheeler commented on the controversy. He called for proof of the protectionist view: that visitations of the ants confer protection on the plants and that in the absence of the insects a much greater number would perish or fail to produce flowers or seeds than when the insects are present. That we now have an abundance of the proof that was called for was established when Barbara Bentley reviewed the relevant evidence in 1977, and since then many more observations and experiments have provided still further proof that ants benefit plants.
4. According to paragraph 3, what was the position of the opponents of the “protectionist” hypothesis?
A) Extrafloral nectar provides plants with a direct defense against attack by insects.
B) Ants substantially benefit plants that secrete extrafloral nectar.
C) The secretion of extrafloral nectar plays a role in the plant’s internal functioning.
D) Ants visit plants that secrete extrafloral nectar as often as they visit plants that do not.
5. The word “skeptical” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A) curious
B) doubtful
C) open-minded
D) practical
6. Which of the sentences below best expresses the essential information in the highlighted sentence in the passage? Incorrect choices change the meaning in important ways or leave out essential information.
A) We now have ample proof that ants benefit plants.
B) Barbara Bentley has called for additional proof that ants benefit plants.
C) In 1977 Barbara Bentley conducted research that proved that all prior studies were wrong.
D) Proof that ants benefit plants will require many more observations and experiments.
Para.4 One example shows how ants attracted to extrafloral nectaries protect morning glories against attacking insects. The principal insect enemies of the North American morning glory feed mainly on its flowers or fruits rather than its leaves. Grasshoppers feeding on flowers indirectly block pollination and the production of seeds by destroying the corolla or the stigma, which receives the pollen grains and on which the pollen germinates. Without their colorful corolla, flowers do not attract pollinators and are not fertilized. An adult grasshopper can consume a large corolla, about 2.5 inches long, in an hour. Caterpillars and seed beetles affect seed production directly. Caterpillars devour the ovaries, where the seeds are produced, and seed beetle larvae eat seeds as they burrow in developing fruits.
7. According to paragraph 4, what effect does the destruction of the corolla have on plants?
A) It leaves the seeds exposed and unprotected.
B) It prevents the stigma from developing.
C) It keeps pollen grains from attaching properly.
D) It prevents the flower from attracting pollinators.
8. The word “devour” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A) attack
B) eat
C) damage
D) prefer
Para.5 Extrafloral nectaries at the base of each sepal attract several kinds of insects, but 96 percent of them are ants, several different species of them. When buds are still small, less than a quarter of an inch long, the sepal nectaries are already present and producing nectar. They continue to do so as the flower develops and while the fruit matures. Observations leave little doubt that ants protect morning glory flowers and fruits from the combined enemy force of grasshoppers, caterpillars, and seed beetles. Bentley compares the seed production of six plants that grew where there were no ants with that of seventeen plants that were occupied by ants. Unprotected plants bore only 45 seeds per plant, but plants occupied by ants bore 211 seeds per plant. Although ants are not big enough to kill or seriously injure grasshoppers, they drive them away by nipping at their feet. Seed beetles are more vulnerable because they are much smaller than grasshoppers. The ants prey on the adult beetles, disturb females as they lay their eggs on developing fruits, and eat many of the eggs they do manage to lay.
9. What role does paragraph 5 play in the passage?
A) It offers various kinds of evidence for the protectionist view.
B) It presents the study that first proved that ants benefit plants.
C) It explains how insects find sources of nectar.
D) It presents information that partly contradicts the protectionist view.
10. The word “vulnerable” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A) numerous
B) harmful
C) open to attack
D) difficult to locate
11. According to paragraph 5, what did Bentley’s comparative study show?
A) Many more plants grew in places where ants were present than where they were absent.
B) The ants preferred plants with low seed production to plants with high seed production.
C) The plants occupied by ants produced many more seeds than those that were not occupied by ants.
D) The plants that grew in places without ants were much smaller and weaker than those that grew in places where ants were present.
12. According to paragraph 5, ants defend morning glory plants from seed beetles in each of the following ways EXCEPT
A) driving adult beetles off the plants by nipping at their feet
B) catching and eating adult beetles
C) eating beetle eggs they find on developing fruits
D) making it difficult for beetles to lay eggs on developing fruits
13. Look at the four squares 【】 that indicate where the following sentence could be added to the passage.
Sometimes they capture the insects to feed their protein-hungry larvae.
Where does the sentence best fit?
Ants are portably the most frequent and certainly the most persistent defenders of plants. 【】Since the highly active worker ants require a great deal of energy, plants exploit this need by providing extrafloral nectar that supplies ants with abundant energy. 【】To return this favor, ants guard the nectaries, driving away or killing intruding insects that might compete with ants for nectar. 【】Many of these intruders are herbivorous and would eat the leaves of the plants. 【】
14. Prose Summary
Many plants have extrafloral nectaries that produce nectar even during periods in which the plant is not flowering.
Answer Choices
A) Evolutionary history shows that plants that produce extrafloral nectar originated in the tropics.
B) Extrafloral nectar has a higher concentration of sugar than floral nectar and is more attractive to ants and other insects.
C) The protectionist hypothesis is that extrafloral nextar attracts ants, and that the ants, in order to preserve this energy-rich food source, attack insects that might harm the plant.
D) Evidence accumulated during the twentieth century proved that ants provide significant benefits for plants with extrafloral nectaries.
E) Research has shown that American morning glory plants that are protected by ants produce significantly more seeds than morning glory plants that are not protected by ants.
F) Ants generally ignore small insects, but they will eat the adults of large insect species as well as their eggs and larvae.
答案解析:
1. 答案B
解析:推斷題。
因果類infer,原文信息為Because of the growth of population, most of the great forests of medieval Britain had long ago been replaced by fields of grain and hay即因?yàn)槿丝谠鲩L,森林被農(nóng)田給替代。
迷惑選項(xiàng)
A,C,D 原文均無提及該信息
2. 答案B,D
解析:事實(shí)信息題。
與原文信息Vast forests enabled Russia to become the world’s leading producer of iron, much of which was exported to Britain. 以及But Russia’s potential for growth was limited too, and in a few decades Russia would reach the barrier of inadequate energy that was already holding England back相符
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A 偷換概念,原文信息為by 1740 the British iron industry was stagnating.即英國的鋼鐵業(yè)已經(jīng)停滯,而俄羅斯則進(jìn)入become the world’s leading producer of iron ?
C 原文無提及該信息
3. 答案B
解析:詞匯題。 ?
abundant意為“豐富的,大量的”故選B:
plentiful 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A reliable 意為“可信的,可靠的” ?
C well-preserved意為“保存很好的,完好保存” ?
D existing意為“存在的,現(xiàn)存的”
4. 答案D
解析:修辭目的題。 ?
該信息為例子,起支援論證的作用。服務(wù)的物件為Coal was first used in Britain in the late Middle Ages as a source of heat
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A,B,C原文均無提及
5. 答案A
解析:否定事實(shí)信息題。 ?
原文無提及該信息。
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
B,C,D對應(yīng)原文信息為Both engines were extremely inefficient. Both burned coal to produce steam, which was then used to operate a pump相符
6. 答案B
解析:詞匯題。?
gifted意為“有天賦的”故選B: talented
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A independent 意為“獨(dú)立的” ?
C famous意為“著名的” ?
D ambitious 意為“有雄心壯志的”
7. 答案C
解析:事實(shí)信息題。 ?
與原文信息After a series of observations, Watt saw that the New comen’s waste of energy could be reduced by adding a separate condenser.相符 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A 信息雜糅,原文無提及apply his understanding of physics to invent a variety of scientific instruments ?
C 原文無提及該信息 ?
D 與原文想矛盾,原文信息為waste of energy could be reduced by adding a separate condenser而不是it no longer needed a separate condenser.
8. 答案C
解析:詞匯題。 ?
splendid意為“輝煌的;燦爛的”故選C:
magnificent 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A original 意為“原始的,最初的” ?
B necessary 意為“必須的,必要的” ?
D popular意為“流行的,受歡迎的”
9. 答案C
解析:否定事實(shí)信息題。 ?
原文無提及該信息
迷惑選項(xiàng)
A,B 對應(yīng)原文信息為The use of powerful, steam-driven bellows in blast furnaces helped iron makers switch over rapidly from limited charcoal to unlimited coke (which is made from coal) in the smelting of pig iron ?
D 對應(yīng)原文信息為Cort also developed heavy-duty, steam-powered rolling mills, which were capable of producing finished iron in every shape and form.
10. 答案C
解析:修辭目的題。?
該信息起支援論證的作用,服務(wù)的物件為The economic consequence of these technical innovations in steam power was a great boom in the British iron industry.
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A,B,D原文均無提及該信息
11. 答案B
解析:詞匯題。?
indispensable意為“重要的,不可分割的”故選B:
essential 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A advantageous 意為“有優(yōu)勢的” ?
C less costly 意為“代價(jià)較小的,價(jià)格低廉的” ?
D highly stimulating意為“極強(qiáng)刺激的”
12. 答案C
解析:事實(shí)信息題。 ?
根據(jù)全文,原文提及增加煤的產(chǎn)量發(fā)明了第一臺(tái)蒸汽機(jī),然后繼續(xù)改良帶來的蒸汽的發(fā)展。 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A 原文無提及when steam-powered machinery was being tried in farming activities ? B 原文無提及Russia and Britain developed steam-power technology simultaneously
D 原文無提及Adaptations to steam engines required for their use in cotton-spinning mills led to radical developments
13. 答案A
解析:句子插入題。?
被插入句子前文接Energy在英國的情況,后接vast forests在英國的情況。
14. 答案CDF By the eighteenth century, Britain was experiencing a severe shortage of energy
Answer Choices:
A.The development of blast furnaces for the manufacture of pig iron made the Britain less dependent on wood. 解析:原文無提及該信息
B.After the medieval period, both Russia and Britain began to look for alternative sources of energy, such as steam power, in order to maintain the growth of their iron industries. 解析:原文無提及both Russia and Britain began to look for alternative sources of energy
C.Two inventors designed the first steam engines in order to overcome the disadvantages of relying on horses to power the pumps used in mining coal.解析:第一代蒸汽機(jī)的發(fā)明
D.James Watt was able to improve upon the efficiency of the steam engine and make it useful to several industries. 解析:瓦特對蒸汽機(jī)的改良
E.The puddling furnace increased the availability of charcoal to a variety of industries from cotton to iron production. 解析:細(xì)節(jié)性質(zhì)選項(xiàng)The puddling furnace increased the availability of charcoal to a variety of industries
F.Steam power increased coal production, which in turn allowed extraordinary growth of the iron industry and the British economy. 解析:蒸汽機(jī)帶來的煤產(chǎn)量的增長及其影響
The Development of Steam Power
By the eighteenth century, Britain was experiencing a severe shortage of energy. Because of the growth of population, most of the great forests of medieval Britain hadlong ago been replaced by fields of grain and hay. Wood was in ever-shorter supply,yet it remained tremendously important. It served as the primary source of heat for allhomes and industries and as a basic raw material. Processed wood (charcoal) was thefuel that was mixed with iron ore in the blast furnace to produce pig iron (raw iron). Theiron industry’s appetite for wood was enormous, and by 1740 the British iron industrywas stagnating. Vast forests enabled Russia to become the world’s leading producer ofiron, much of which was exported to Britain. But Russia’s potential for growth waslimited too, and in a few decades Russia would reach the barrier of inadequate energythat was already holding England back.
As this early energy crisis grew worse, Britain looked toward its abundant andwidely scattered reserves of coal as an alternative to its vanishing wood. Coal was firstused in Britain in the late Middle Ages as a source of heat. By 1640 most homes inLondon were heated with it, and it also provided heat for making beer, glass, soap, andother products. Coal was not used, however, to produce mechanical energy or to powermachinery. It was there that coal’s potential wad enormous.
As more coal was produced, mines were dug deeper and deeper and wereconstantly filling with water. Mechanical pumps, usually powered by hundreds of horseswaling in circles at the surface, had to be installed. Such power was expensive andbothersome. In an attempt to overcome these disadvantages, Thomas Savery in 1698and Thomas Newcomen in 1705 invented the first primitive steam engines. Both engineswere extremely inefficient. Both burned coal to produce steam, which was then used tooperate a pump. However, by the early 1770s, many of the Savery engines and hundredsof the Newcomen engines were operating successfully, though inefficiently, in Englishand Scottish mines.
In the early 1760s, a gifted young Scot named James Watt was drawn to a criticalstudy of the steam engine. Watt was employed at the time by the University of Glasgowas a skilled crafts worker making scientific instruments. In 1763, Watt was called on torepair a Newcomen engine being used in a physics course. After a series of observations,Watt saw that the Newcomen’s waste of energy could be reduced by adding a separatecondenser. This splendid invention, patented in 1769, greatly increased the efficiency ofthe steam engine. The steam engine of Watt and his followers was the technologicaladvance that gave people, at least for a while, unlimited power and allowed theinvention and use of all kinds of power equipment.
The steam engine was quickly put to use in several industries in Britain. It drainedmines and made possible the production of ever more coal to feed steam engineselsewhere. The steam power plant began to replace waterpower in the cotton-spinningmills as well as other industries during the 1780s, contributing to a phenomenal rise inindustrialization. The British iron industry was radically transformed. The use of powerful,steam-driven bellows in blast furnaces helped iron makers switch over rapidly fromlimited charcoal to unlimited coke (which is made from coal) in the smelting of pig iron(the process of refining impure iron) after 1770 in the 1780s, Henry Cort developed thepuddling furnace, which allowed pig iron to be refined in turn with coke. Cort alsodeveloped heavy-duty, steam-powered rolling mills, which were capable of producingfinished iron in every shape and form.
The economic consequence of these technical innovations in steam power was agreat boom in the British iron industry. In 1740 annual British iron production was only17,000 tons, but by 1844, with the spread of coke smelting and the impact of Cort’sinventions, it had increased to 3,000,000 tons. This was a truly amazing expansion. Oncescarce and expensive, iron became cheap, basic, and indispensable to the economy.
Para.1 By the eighteenth century, Britain was experiencing a severe shortage of energy. 【】 Because of the growth of population, most of the great forests of medieval Britain had long ago been replaced by fields of grain and hay. 【】Wood was in ever-shorter supply, yet it remained tremendously important. 【】It served as the primary source of heat for all homes and industries and as a basic raw material. 【】Processed wood (charcoal) was the fuel that was mixed with iron ore in the blast furnace to produce pig iron (raw iron). The iron industry’s appetite for wood was enormous, and by 1740 the British iron industry was stagnating. Vast forests enabled Russia to become the world’s leading producer of iron, much of which was exported to Britain. But Russia’s potential for growth was limited too, and in a few decades Russia would reach the barrier of inadequate energy that was already holding England back.
1.What can be inferred from paragraph 1 about Britain’s short supply of wood in the eighteenth century?
A)Wood from Britain’s great forests was being exported to other countries forprofit.
B)A growing population had required cutting down forests to increase availableland for farming.
C)Larger families required the construction of larger homes made from wood.
D)What was left of the great forests after the medieval period was being strictlyprotected.
2.Select TWO answer choices that, according to paragraph 1, are true statements about Russia’s iron industry in the eighteenth century.
To obtain credit, you mustselect TWO answer choices.
A)Russia reached its maximum production of iron at the same time as Britain.
B)Russia exported much of its iron production to Britain.
C)Russia’s appetite for iron increased rapidly after 1740.
D)Russia’s energy resources eventually became insufficient and limited the growthof its iron industry.
Para.2 As this early energy crisis grew worse, Britain looked toward its abundant and widely scattered reserves of coal as an alternative to its vanishing wood. Coal was first used in Britain in the late Middle Ages as a source of heat. By 1640 most homes in London were heated with it, and it also provided heat for making beer, glass, soap, and other products. Coal was not used, however, to produce mechanical energy or to power machinery. It was there that coal’s potential wad enormous.
3.The word “abundant” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A)reliable
B)plentiful
C)well-preserved
D)existing
4.Why are “beer, glass, soap, and other products” mentioned in the discussion ofBritain’s energy?
A)To help explain why the energy crisis was so severe
B)To show that despite the energy crisis and as early as 1640, London homes wereadvanced and well supplied
C)To emphasize that after 1640, British homes required energy for more than heat
D)To indicate that coal had been used for the production of certain products before the eighteenth century
Para.3 As more coal was produced, mines were dug deeper and deeper and were constantly filling with water. Mechanical pumps, usually powered by hundreds of horses waling in circles at the surface, had to be installed. Such power was expensive and bothersome. In an attempt to overcome these disadvantages, Thomas Savery in 1698 and Thomas Newcomen in 1705 invented the first primitive steam engines. Both engines were extremely inefficient. Both burned coal to produce steam, which was then used to operate a pump. However, by the early 1770s, many of the Savery engines and hundreds of the Newcomen engines were operating successfully, though inefficiently, in English and Scottish mines.
5.According to paragraph 3, all of the following are ways in which the Savery and Newcomen engines were similar EXCEPT:
A)Both became relatively inexpensive after the 1770s.
B)Both produced steam by burning coal.
C)Both were used to operate pumps.
D)Both were very inefficient.
Para.1 In the early 1760s, a gifted young Scot named James Watt was drawn to a critical study of the steam engine. Watt was employed at the time by the University of Glasgow as a skilled crafts worker making scientific instruments. In 1763, Watt was called on to repair a Newcomen engine being used in a physics course. After a series of observations, Watt saw that the Newcomen’s waste of energy could be reduced by adding a separate condenser. This splendid invention, patented in 1769, greatly increased the efficiency of the steam engine. The steam engine of Watt and his followers was the technological advance that gave people, at least for a while, unlimited power and allowed the invention and use of all kinds of power equipment.
6.The word “gifted” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A)independent
B)talented
C)famous
D)ambitious
7.According to paragraph 4, what was James Watt’s major achievement?
A) He was able to apply his understanding of physics to invent a variety of scientificinstruments and tools for skilled crafts workers.
B)He taught university physics courses to outstanding students whose observationsled to many patented inventions.
C)He improved the efficiency of Newcomen’s engine by preventing energy frombeing lost.
D)He redesigned Newcomen’s engine so that it no longer needed a separate condenser.
8.The word “splendid” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A)original
B)necessary
C)magnificent
D)popular
Para.2 The steam engine was quickly put to use in several industries in Britain. It drained mines and made possible the production of ever more coal to feed steam engines elsewhere. The steam power plant began to replace waterpower in the cotton-spinning mills as well as other industries during the 1780s, contributing to a phenomenal rise in industrialization. The British iron industry was radically transformed. The use of powerful, steam-driven bellows in blast furnaces helped iron makers switch over rapidly from limited charcoal to unlimited coke (which is made from coal) in the smelting of pig iron (the process of refining impure iron) after 1770 in the 1780s, Henry Cort developed the puddling furnace, which allowed pig iron to be refined in turn with coke. Cort also developed heavy-duty, steam-powered rolling mills, which were capable of producing finished iron in every shape and form.
9.Which of the following is NOT mentioned in paragraph 5 as a development thatgreatly changed the production of iron?
A)The use of coke in the smelting of pig iron
B)The invention of a furnace that used coke to refine iron
C)The discovery of a method for increasing the production of charcoal
D)The invention of powerful machinery that could shape, form, and finish iron
Para.3 The economic consequence of these technical innovations in steam power was a great boom in the British iron industry. In 1740 annual British iron production was only 17,000 tons, but by 1844, with the spread of coke smelting and the impact of Cort’s inventions, it had increased to 3,000,000 tons. This was a truly amazing expansion. Once scarce and expensive, iron became cheap, basic, and indispensable to the economy.
10. In paragraph 6, why does the author compare British iron production in 1740 withthat of 1844?
A)To contrast the amounts of iron needed in Britain in two different centuries
B)To illustrate how easy it was to make money using Cort’s invention
C)To demonstrate the tremendous growth of the iron industry in Britain
D)To demonstrate how inexpensive coal had become
11. The word “indispensable” in the passage is closest in meaning to
A)advantageous
B)essential
C)less costly
D)highly stimulating
12. According to the passage, which of the following is true about the development ofsteam power?
A)The steam engine’s basic technology can be traced back to medieval Britain whensteam-powered machinery was being tried in farming activities.
B)Although Russia and Britain developed steam-power technology simultaneously,Britain was first to try it in a large-scale industry due to a greater need for iron.
C)Steam-power technology was largely the result of improvements developed toincrease the supply of coal as a primary source of energy.
D)Adaptations to steam engines required for their use in cotton-spinning mills ledto radical developments in machinery used in the iron industry.
13. Look at the four squares 【】 that indicate where the following sentence could beadded to the passage.
Energy had not been a problem for Britain in the past because it relied on a richsource of energy: its vast forests.
Where does the sentence best fit?
Para.1 By the eighteenth century, Britain was experiencing a severe shortage of energy. 【】 Because of the growth of population, most of the great forests of medieval Britain had long ago been replaced by fields of grain and hay. 【】Wood was in ever-shorter supply, yet it remained tremendously important. 【】It served as the primary source of heat for all homes and industries and as a basic raw material. 【】Processed wood (charcoal) was the fuel that was mixed with iron ore in the blast furnace to produce pig iron (raw iron). The iron industry’s appetite for wood was enormous, and by 1740 the British iron industry was stagnating. Vast forests enabled Russia to become the world’s leading producer of iron, much of which was exported to Britain. But Russia’s potential for growth was limited too, and in a few decades Russia would reach the barrier of inadequate energy that was already holding England back.
14. Prose Summary
By the eighteenth century, Britain was experiencing a severe shortage of energy.
Answer Choices:
A)The development of blast furnaces for the manufacture of pig iron made theBritain less dependent on wood.
B)After the medieval period, both Russia and Britain began to look for alternativesources of energy, such as steam power, in order to maintain the growth of theiriron industries.
C)Two inventors designed the first steam engines in order to overcome the disadvantages of relying on horses to power the pumps used in mining coal.
D)James Watt was able to improve upon the efficiency of the steam engine and make it useful to several industries.
E)The puddling furnace increased the availability of charcoal to a variety of industries from cotton to iron production.
F)Steam power increased coal production, which in turn allowed extraordinary growth of the iron industry and the British economy.
答案解析:
1. 答案B
解析:事實(shí)信息題。
與原文信息Like floral nectar, extrafloral nectar consists mainly of water with a high content of dissolved sugars and, in some plants, small amounts of amino acids.相符 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A 原文無提及該信息
C 答非所問,原文提及該信息all extrafloral nectaries attract insects that will defend the plant但是為extrafloral nectaries的特點(diǎn) ?
D 原文無提及該信息
2. 答案B
解析:詞匯題。
persistent意為“持續(xù)的,持久的,固執(zhí)的”故選B: they continue to defend plants for as long as the plants are threatened
3. 答案A
解析:推斷題。
取非類infer. 原文信息為To return this favor, ants guard the nectaries, driving away or killing intruding insects that might compete with ants for nectar. 以及Many of these intruders are herbivorous and would eat the leaves of the plants.即為螞蟻吃花蜜但是不吃葉子
迷惑選項(xiàng)
B 偷換概念,原文提及螞蟻吃花蜜但是原文無提及l(fā)ive almost entirely on extrafloral nectar ?
C 偷換概念,原文提及guard the nectaries但是原文無提及spend most of their energy guarding extrafloral nectaries ?
D 原文無提及fight among themselves over extrafloral nectar
4. 答案C
解析:事實(shí)信息題。 ?
與原文信息Biologists once thought that secretion of extrafloral nectar has some purely internal physiological function, and that ants provide no benefit whatsoever to the plants that secrete it.相符
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A,D 原文均無提及該信息
B 答非所問,原文提及Ants substantially benefit plants但是題干提問物件為the position of the opponents of the “protectionist” hypothesis?
5. 答案B
解析:詞匯題。
skeptical意為“懷疑的,有疑問的”故選B: doubtful
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A curious意為“充滿好奇心的” ?
C open-minded意為“思維開放的” ?
D practical意為“實(shí)際的,實(shí)用的”
6. 答案A
解析:句子簡化題。 ?
被簡化的句子核心為一層:Barbara Bentley整理了相關(guān)的證據(jù)證明螞蟻對植物有利 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
B 信息錯(cuò)誤,原句不包含called for additional proof的相關(guān)信息 ?
C 信息錯(cuò)誤,原文無提及proved that all prior studies were wrong. ?
D 信息錯(cuò)誤,原文無提及require many more observations and experiments
7. 答案D
解析:事實(shí)信息題。?
與原文信息Without their colorful corolla, flowers do not attract pollinators and are not fertilized相符 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A,B,D 原文無提及該信息
8. 答案B
解析:詞匯題。?
devour意為“吞食;毀滅”,故選B:
eat 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A attack意為“攻擊,襲擊” ?
C damage意為“破壞,損壞” ?
D prefer意為“更喜歡,傾向于”
9. 答案A
解析:修辭目的題。 ?
針對關(guān)系提問的修辭目的題,上段提出One example shows how ants attracted to extrafloral nectaries protect morning glories against attacking insects,本段承接繼續(xù)解釋ants如何保護(hù)植物免受其他昆蟲的侵害
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
B 信息概括錯(cuò)誤,原文無提及first proved that ants benefit plants. ?
C 信息概括錯(cuò)誤,原文無提及how insects find sources of nectar ?
D 關(guān)系概括錯(cuò)誤,原文無提及information that partly contradicts the protectionist view
10. 答案C
解析:詞匯題。 ?
vulnerable意為“易受攻擊的,脆弱的”故選C:
open to attack 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A numerous意為“數(shù)量巨大的” ?
B harmful意為“有害的,傷害的” ?
D difficult to locate意為“很難定位的”
11. 答案C
解析:事實(shí)信息題。
與原文信息Bentley compares the seed production of six plants that grew where there were no ants with that of seventeen plants that were occupied by ants. Unprotected plants bore only 45 seeds per plant, but plants occupied by ants bore 211 seeds per plant相符 迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
A 偷換概念,原文信息為bore more seeds而不是選項(xiàng)提及的Many more plants grew in places where ants were present ?
B 原文無提及The ants preferred plants with low seed production ?
D 原文無提及The plants that grew in places without ants were much smaller and weaker
12. 答案A
解析:否定事實(shí)信息題。
原文提及Although ants are not big enough to kill or seriously injure grasshoppers, they drive them away by nipping at their feet而不是選項(xiàng)的driving adult beetles
迷惑選項(xiàng) ?
B,C,D對應(yīng)原文信息為The ants prey on the adult beetles, disturb females as they lay their eggs on developing fruits, and eat many of the eggs they do manage to lay
13. 答案C
解析:句子插入題。 ?
被插入句子前接they的指代對象,且承接sometimes舉例子,后接capture the insects后的相關(guān)內(nèi)容
14. 答案CDE
Many plants have extrafloral nectaries that produce nectar even during periods in which the plant is not flowering.
Answer Choices:
A.Evolutionary history shows that plants that produce extrafloral nectar originated in the tropics. 解析:細(xì)節(jié)性質(zhì)的選項(xiàng)
B.Extrafloral nectar has a higher concentration of sugar than floral nectar and is more attractive to ants and other insects. 解析:細(xì)節(jié)性質(zhì)的選項(xiàng)
C.The protectionist hypothesis is that extrafloral nextar attracts ants, and that the ants, in order to preserve this energy-rich food source, attack insects that might harm the plant. 解析:protectionist hypothesis即螞蟻保護(hù)植物的具體內(nèi)容
D.Evidence accumulated during the twentieth century proved that ants provide significant benefits for plants with extrafloral nectaries. 解析:protectionist hypothesis及其證據(jù) E.Research has shown that American morning glory plants that are protected by ants produce significantly more seeds than morning glory plants that are not protected by ants. 解析:關(guān)于螞蟻對于植物保護(hù)的研究
F.Ants generally ignore small insects, but they will eat the adults of large insect species as well as their eggs and larvae. 解析:原文無提及Ants generally ignore small insects
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