问题 阅读理解与欣赏

阅读下面一篇文章,完成下列各题。

温暖的小刀

马德

       那年春末,我到一所中学去监考。   

       发卷的时候,我发现,靠近讲台的一个女生怪怪的,左手藏在袖口里,遮遮掩掩,不愿伸出来。和我一起监考的,是另一所学校的一位女老师。大约,她也注意到了这个细节。随后,我俩便开始留意这个女生。在我们想来,她袖口里的那只不愿示人的手,一定藏着什么秘密。   

       考场里静悄悄的,学生们都在全神贯注地答题。只有这个女生,一边答题,一边有意紧握着她的那只手,一边还不自觉地环顾着左右,神色紧张而怪异。这愈加坚定了我们的怀疑:她的手里一定攥着小纸条或者其他用来作弊的东西。   

       然而,我们错了。半小时后,也许女生做题做得太过专注,一不小心,露出了自己的左手——天哪,这个女生的左手居然没有手指头。   

       原来,她竟是一个有残疾的学生!   

       这多少有些出乎我们的意料。愧疚之余,不禁心生悲悯。那位女老师,更是一脸的痛楚,小声地嘟囔着:“                          A                          。”   

       考试进行到一半的时候,有一道地理题需要改动。办公室送来了一沓纸片,纸片上,印着一个阿拉伯国家的地形图。我们分发给了学生,然后让他们各自粘贴在试卷的答卷纸上。由于是临时赶印出来的,太过匆忙,这些纸片裁剪得很粗糙,考生们只有自己动手把四个毛边撕去,大小合适,才能贴在试卷上。   

        这下可难为了这个女生。大约,她还是不愿让别人看到她的那只手,就用左胳膊使劲压紧纸片,右手一点一点地撕。可是,那张小纸片仿佛不听话,只要她一用力,就从她的胳膊下跑出来,再压下去,再跑出来。她急得都有些冒汗了。   

       “这位女同学,我可以帮你吗?”女老师走过去,俯下身子,声音低低地征询女生的意见。女生抬起头,看了看,迟疑了一下,还是把纸片给了她。   

        女老师并没有立即动手,她把那张纸片放在讲台上后,便在满考场里寻找着什么。我有些纳闷,这不是很简单的一件事嘛,她究竟想要干什么呢?   

        不一会儿,女老师从一个学生那里找到了一把小刀。然后,她坐在讲台前,一点一点小心翼翼地裁着那张纸片,“哧——哧——”,小刀割裂纸片的声音很好听。我和女生看着她做这一切。她专注的神情,仿佛是在完成一件精致的手工艺品。   

        随后,她微笑着把这张小纸片轻轻地放在女生的桌子上。女生欠了欠身子,低低地说了声谢谢。她拍了拍女生的肩膀,说:“赶紧答题吧”,便走开了。   

        然而,我还在纳闷着:                    B                            。   

       考试结束后,我道出了心中的不解。那位女老师笑了,说:“这个女生所残缺的,是一只手。我不想在她面前,用自己灵巧的手指头去撕那张纸片,那样的话,会撕碎这个女孩的心。我满考场去寻找一把小刀,就是想借助小刀,避开对她的这种伤害。” 一直以来,小刀在我心中不过是一片冰冷的铁片而已。而那年春天我懂得了,原来即便是锋利而冰冷的一片小刀,也会折射出人性的光辉。 ——摘自《风流一代》2008.7(上)

1.通读全文,用简洁的语言概括文章所讲述的故事: 

__________________________________________

2.理解第②段末句中“秘密”在文中具体指:

__________________________________________

3.联系上下文,揣摩A、B两处人物心理,写在下面的横线上(各不超过30个字)

     A:__________________________________________  

     B:__________________________________________  

4.根据全文内容,说说用“温暖的小刀”作标题的妙处。

__________________________________________

5.本文写了3个人物——“女老师”、“我”、“女生”,请任选一人,结合文中具体情节,联系课文《论美》选段,作简单评价。

       仔细考究起来,形体之美要胜于颜色之美,而优雅行为之美又胜于形体之美。最高的美是画家所无法表现的,因为它是难于直观的。这是一种奇妙的美。

 __________________________________________

答案

1.女老师用小刀帮左手残疾的女生裁小纸片,保护她脆弱的心,令人倍感温暖。 ( 大意对即可)

2.①她的手里一定攥着小纸条或者其他用来作弊的东西。

     ②这个女生的左手居然没有手指头。

3.示例:A:怎么会是这样,多可怜的孩子啊,多可怜的孩子啊!

                B:一张小纸片,用手也完全可以撕得很整齐,为什么一定要找把小刀来呢?

              ( 大意对即可)

4.用拟人手法,形象生动,吸引读者 ;点明文章主旨。 (大意对即可)

5.说出人物具有美德 (或优雅行为之美),如:小女生具有坚强的性格等联系情节 

问答题
单项选择题

If you think you can make the planet better by clever shopping, think again. You might make it worse.

You probably go shopping several times a month, providing yourself with lots of opportunities to express your opinions. If you are worried about the environment, you might buy organic food; if you want to help poor farmers, you can do your bit by buying Fairtrade products; or you can express a dislike of evil multinational companies and rampant globalization by buying only local produce. And the best bit is that shopping, unlike voting, is fun; so you can do good and enjoy yourself at the same time.

Sadly, it’s not that easy. (41) . People who want to make the world a better place cannot do so by shifting their shopping habits: transforming the planet requires duller disciplines, like politics.

Organic food, which is grown without man-made pesticides and fertilisers, is generally assumed to be more environmentally friendly than conventional intensive farming, which is heavily reliant on chemical inputs. But it all depends on what you mean by "environmentally friendly". Farming is inherently bad for the environment: since humans took it up around 11 000 years ago, the result has been deforestation on a massive scale.

(42) . Organic methods, which rely on crop rotation, manure and compost in place of fertiliser, are far less intensive. So producing the world’s current agricultural output organically would require several times as much land as is currently cultivated. There wouldn’t be much room left for the rainforest.

Fairtrade food is designed to raise poor farmers’ incomes. It is sold at a higher price than ordinary food, with a subsidy passed back to the farmer. But prices of agricultural commodities are low because of overproduction, (43) .

Surely the case for local food, produced as close as possible to the consumer in order to minimise "food miles" and, by extension, carbon emissions, is clear Surprisingly, it is not. A study of Britain’s food system found that nearly half of food-vehicle miles (i. e. , miles travelled by vehicles carrying food) were driven by cars going to and from the shops. Most people live closer to a supermarket than a farmer’s market, so more local food could mean more food-vehicle miles. Moving food around in big, carefully packed lorries, as supermarkets do, may in fact be the most efficient way to transport the stuff

What’s more, once the energy used in production as well as transport is taken into account, local food may turn out to be even less green. (44) . And the local-food movement’s aims, of course, contradict those of the Fairtrade movement, by discouraging rich-country consumers from buying poor-country produce. But since the local-food movement looks suspiciously like old-fashioned protectionism masquerading as concern for the environment, helping poor countries is presumably not the point.

(45) . The problems lie in the means, not the ends. The best thing about the spread of the ethical-food movement is that it offers grounds for hope. It sends a signal that there is an enormous appetite for change and widespread frustration that governments are not doing enough to preserve the environment, reform world trade or encourage development.

45()

A.The aims of much of the ethical-food movement--to protect the environment, to encourage development and to redress the distortions in global trade--are admirable.

B.By maintaining the price, the Fairtrade system encourages farmers to produce more of these commodities rather than diversifying into other crops and so depresses prices--thus achieving, for most farmers, exactly the opposite of what the initiative is intended to do.

C.Proper free trade would be by far the best way to help,poor farmers. Taxing carbon would price the cost of emissions into the price of goods, and retailers would then have an incentive to source locally if it saved energy.

D.There are good reasons to doubt the claims made about three of the most popular varieties of "ethical" food: organic food, Fairtrade food and local food.

E.But following the "green revolution" of the 1960s greater use of chemical fertiliser has tripled grain yields with very little increase in the area of land under cultivation.

F.And since only a small fraction of the mark-up on Fairtrade foods actually goes to the farmer--most goes to the retailer-the system gives rich consumers an inflated impression of their largesse and makes alleviating poverty seem too easy.

G.Producing lamb in New Zealand and shipping it to Britain uses less energy than producing British lamb, because fanning in New Zealand is less energy-intensive.