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    In an American classroom, a Chinese girl was asked to answer a question. She stood up and smiled, without

making any sound. The American teacher looked at himself and didn't see anything funny. So he asked her the

question again. The girl just smiled but said nothing. The teacher was angry. He didn't know that the girl smiled

to cover her embarrassment (尴尬) because she wasn't able to answer the question.

    In a dining room in Beijing, an Englishman was careless and dropped a plate. The Chinese who had seen this

began to laugh. The Englishman felt uncomfortable and even got angry. "They are laughing at me," he thought.

In fact, the Chinese laughed not at the Englishman or his bad luck-whether he is a foreigner or a Chinese. The

laughter has several feelings, don't take it so seriously; laugh it off, it's nothing; such things can happen to any

of us, etc.

1. The Chinese girl smiled in an American classroom because             . [ ]

A. she was asked to answer a question

B. she was asked to stand up

C. she couldn't answer the question

D. the teacher looked funny

2. Which feeling is NOT included in the laughter when the Englishman dropped a plate? [ ]

A. Don't take it seriously.

B. Bad luck!

C. It's nothing.

D. It can happen to any of us.

3. What does the writer want to tell us? [ ]

A. Smiles and laughter don't mean the same thing to different people.

B. Smiles and laughter always bring happiness.

C. American people are easy to get angry.

D. Chinese students are impolite.

答案

1-3: CBA

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Fate has not been kind to the western grey whale. Its numbers have dwindled to 130 or so, leaving it “critically endangered” in the eyes of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. Fishing-nets, speeding ships, pollution and coastal development threaten the few that remain. Most recently, drilling for oil and gas in their main summer feeding grounds, near Sakhalin island off Russia’s Pacific coast, has brought fresh risks for the luckless creatures. Yet the rush to develop Sakhalin’s offshore fields may yet be the saviour of the species.

When drilling was first discussed in the 1990s, there were muted complaints. When a consortium called Sakhalin. Energy, led by Royal Dutch Shell, announced plans to build an oil platform and lay pipelines in the only bay where the whales were known to congregate, these protests proliferated.

In response, the consortium established an independent panel to advise it on how best to protect the whales and promised to fund its work. It subsequently agreed to change the route of the pipeline at the panel’s suggestion, although it refused to move the platform, as other critics had demanded. It also agreed either to follow the panel’s recommendations in future or to explain publicly why it was rejecting them.

The platforms and pipelines are now complete. Sakhalin Energy exported its first cargo of liquefied natural gas last week. The project, says Shell, is an engineering triumph and a commercial success despite all the controversy.

But has it been a success for the whales Sakhalin Energy says their number seems to be growing by 2.5% a year, although Ian Craig, the firm’s boss, admits that the cause might be greater scrutiny rather than population growth. The scientists on the panel still seem worried. They complain that the firm has not always provided the information they need to assess the threat to the whales. It also has not always followed advice, the scientists’ advice about how noisy construction might scare the animals away, for example, or the speed that boats should travel to minimize the risk of hitting the whales. The scientists warn that the loss of just a few fertile females would be enough to tip the population into irrevocable decline. Last summer, there seemed to be far fewer whales around than normal.

On the other hand, the panel knows this only because Sakhalin Energy funds lots of research on the whales. As a result, it has discovered that they have a wider range than originally thought, which might explain why so few of them showed up off Sakhalin island last year.

Therefore, it is hard to escape the conclusion that, for creatures with a lot as sorry as the western grey whale, a nearby oil project is something of a blessing.

Scientists are sure that()

A. the number of the whales is rising slowly by a small percentage

B. greater scrutiny of the whale population explains the growing number

C. the whales are in an irrevocable decline despite all their efforts

D. the whales have other summer habitats besides Sakhalin’s offshore