问题 阅读理解与欣赏

课内阅读题(毎小题3分,共9分)

我已经说过:我向来是不惮以最坏的恶意来推测中国人的。但这回却很有几点出于我的意外。一是当局者竟会这样地凶残,一是流言家竟至如此之下劣,一是中国的女性临难竟能如是之从容。

我目睹中国女子的办事,是始于去年的,虽然是少数,但看那干练坚决,百折不回的气概,曾经屡次为之感叹。至于这一回在弹雨中互相救助,虽殒身不恤的事实,则更足为中国女子的勇毅,虽遭阴谋秘计,压抑至数千年,而终于没有消亡的明证了。倘要寻求这一次死伤者对于将来的意义,意义就在此罢。

苟活者在淡红的血色中,会依稀看见微茫的希望;真的猛士,将更奋然而前行。

呜呼,我说不出话,但以此记念刘和珍君!

小题1:作者先说明“我向来是不惮以最坏的恶意来推测中国人的”,然后笔锋一转,说“但这回却很有几点出于我的意外”。作者这样写的用意是什么?

                                                                                          

小题2:“曾经屡次为之感叹”中的“之”指代什么?

                                                                                          

小题3:“呜呼,我说不出话。”为什么作者会“说不出话”?

                                                                                         

答案

小题1:突出当局者的凶残、流言家的下劣和中国女子临难时的从容。

小题2:少数中国女子干练坚决、百折不回的气概。

小题3:对刘和珍等人牺牲的无比悲痛和对当局者、流言家的无比愤怒使作者“说不出话”。

小题1:

题目分析:本题考查品味精彩的语言表达艺术。抓住第1段最后一句“一是当局者竟会这样地凶残,一是流言家竟至如此之下劣,一是中国的女性临难竟能如是之从容”就可品味出作者的写作用意。

小题2:

题目分析:本题考查对句中重要词语的理解。回到语境中不难确定“之”指代的内容是“那干练坚决,百折不回的气概”。解答时不要仅仅局限于本句的理解,要结合上下文揣摩,还要考虑全文的中心。

小题3:

题目分析:本题考查体会重要语句的丰富含意。解答应从两方面来分析,一是对刘和珍等人牺牲的态度,一是对当局者、流言家的态度。

单项选择题
单项选择题

Every day of our lives we are in danger of instant death from small high-speed missiles from space—the lumps of rocky or metallic debris which continuously bombard the Earth. The chances of anyone actually being hit, however, are very low, although there are recorded instances of "stones from the sky" hurting people, and numerous accounts of damage to buildings and other objects. At night this extraterrestrial material can be seen as "fireballs" or "shooting stars", burning their way through our atmosphere. Most, on reaching our atmosphere, become completely vaporised.

The height above ground at which these objects become sufficiently heated to be visible is estimated to be about 60-100 miles. Meteorites that have fallen on buildings have sometimes ended their long lonely space voyage incongruously under beds, inside flower pots or even, in the case of one that landed on a hotel in North Wales, within a chamber pot. Before the era of space exploration it was confidently predicted that neither men nor space vehicles would survive for long outside the protective blanket of the Earth’s atmosphere. It was, thought that once in space they would be seriously damaged as a result of the incessant downpour of meteorites falling towards our planet at the rate of many millions every day. Even the first satellites showed that the danger from meteorites had been greatly overestimated by the pessimists, but although it has not happened yet, it is certain that one day a spacecraft will be badly damaged by a meteorite.

The greatest single potential danger to life on Earth undoubtedly comes from outside our planet. Collision with another astronomical body of any size or with a "black hole" could completely destroy the Earth almost instantly.

Near misses of bodies larger than or comparable in size to our own planet could be equally disastrous to mankind as they might still result in total or partial disruption. If the velocity of impact were high, collision with even quite small extraterrestrial bodies might cause catastrophic damage to the Earth’s atmosphere, oceans and outer crust and thus produce results inimical to life as we know it. The probability of collision with a large astronomical body from outside our Solar System is extremely low, possibly less than once in the lifetime of an average star. We know, however, that our galaxy contains great interstellar dust clouds and some astronomers have suggested that there might also be immense streams of meteorite matter in space that the Solar system may occasionally encounter. Even if we disregard this possibility, our own Solar system itself contains a great number of small astronomical bodies, such as the minor planets or asteroids and the comets, some with eccentric orbits that occasionally bring them close to the Earth’s path.

According to the writer, the Earth is being continuously bombarded by()

A.big bright stars from space

B.man-made space vehicles

C.great interstellar dust clouds

D.small high-speed pieces of rock from space