问题 阅读理解

阅读理解。

                                                    VISIT THE EAST GARDEN ZOO

     Come and see the new polar bears from Canada. The pandas are waiting to meet you, and the dolphins

are waiting to swim for you. The cranes are waiting to sing for you and the mynahs are waiting to say

hello to you. The snakes are waiting to dance for you. 

     Tickets: Adults(成人): $4                Children: Over 12 $2; Under 12 $1

     Opening Time: 9:00-16:00 on weekdays 9:30-17:00 at weekends

      KEEP THE ZOO CLEAN!                DO NOT FEED THE ANIMALS

1. What can the animals do there? [ ]

A. Swim.

B. Sing.

C. Dance.

D. All the above.

2. Where do the polar bears come from? [     ]

A. They come from China.

B. They come from England.

C. They come from the USA.

D. They come from Canada.

3. When can you visit the zoo? [ ]

A. At 4:30 in the afternoon on Saturdays.

B. At 8:30 in the morning on Wednesday.

C. At 9:00 in the evening on Mondays.

D. At 9:00 in the morning on Sundays.

4. What should a visitor do in the East Garden Zoo?[ ]

A. Play with the animals.

B. Leave no litter.

C. Feed the animals.

D. Go near the animals.

5. Mrs. Smith wants to take her 4-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter to the zoo.

    How much should she pay? [ ]

A. $4

B. $6

C. $7

D. $8

答案

1-5  DDABC

完形填空

Read the passage carefully. Then answer the questions or complete the statements in no more than ten words:

Just Ask Grandma

We read and hear a lot about healthy eating in newspapers and on TV nowadays. Experts and nutritionists tell us what to eat, when to eat and how to eat to stay healthy, Some of the their advice seems reasonable. Some just sounds strange. Who can we rely on?

Well, ask yourself another question: How did people choose foods and stay healthy before there were nutrition experts? We relied on culture, which is another way of saying: on tradition and common sense.

All of us carry around rules of thumb about eating that have been passed down in our families or plucked(采集) from culture. Earlier this year, US writer Michael Pollen posted a request about these rules on The New York Times website. Within days, he received more than 2,500 responses. Not all of them have stood the test of time or been confirmed by science, but all of them have something to teach us, Pollen said.

Here are some of Pollen’s favorites:

My parents are both from Italy, and one of our family rules was that you could not leave the table until you had finished your fruit. It was a great way to put fruit into our diets and also helped satiate(满足)our sweet tooth, keeping us away from less healthful sweets. – Marta C. Larusso

From my Romanian grandmother: “Breakfast, you should eat alone. Lunch, you should share with a friend. Dinner, give to your enemy.” – Irina A. Dumitrescu

Don’t eat anything that took more energy to ship than to grow. – Carrie Cizauskas

“It’s better to pay the grocer(食品商) than the doctor” was the saying that my Italian grandmother would frequently use to remind us of the love and attention to detail that went in to her cooking – John Forti

If you are not hungry enough to eat an apple, then you are not hungry. – Emma Fogt

“Make and take your own lunch to work.” My father has always done this, and so have I. It saves money and you know what you are eating. – Hope Donovan Rider

Never eat something that is pretending to be something else, e.g.: chocolate-flavor sauce that doesn’t contain chocolate. – Sonya Legg

小题1:Other than health experts, which other sources are there for us to turn to for advice on diet?

小题2:What does the underlined sentence imply?

小题3:According to Marta C. Larusso, we can both satiate our sweet tooth and keep away from less healthful sweets by_________________________________

小题4:What did John Forti’s grandmother mean when she said, “It’s better to pay the grocer than the doctor.”?

多项选择题