问题 阅读理解与欣赏

我爱这土地

艾 青

假如我是一只鸟,

我也应该用嘶哑的喉咙歌唱:

这被暴风雨所打击着的土地,

这永远汹涌着我们的悲愤的河流,

这无止息地吹刮着的激怒的风,

和那来自林间的无比温柔的黎明……

——然后我死了,连羽毛也腐烂在土地里面。

为什么我的眼里常含泪水?因为我对这土地爱得深沉……

1938年11月17日

1.这首诗写于抗战开始后的一九三八年,当时日军攻占了华北、华东、华南地区,中国人民奋起抵抗。诗人在这国土沦丧、民族存亡关头,满怀对祖国的____________和对侵略者的____________写下此诗。诗歌用一只鸟儿生死眷恋土地作比喻,表达____________的情感。

2.赏读诗歌,理解诗歌运用的象征手法。说说“暴风雨打击着的土地”“悲愤的河流”“激怒的风”“温柔的黎明”各有什么象征意义?

                                                                                                                                                         

3.“为什么我的眼里常含泪水?因为我对这土地爱得深沉……”运用了什么修辞方法?试说说你对这句话的理解。

                                                                                                                                                         

                                                                                                                                                         

4.在国家危难之时,像《雷电颂》《我爱这土地》都曾激励无数志士奋起救国。“为什么我的眼里常含泪水?因为我对这土地爱得深沉……”这样精粹的语言几乎众所皆知。你还知道哪些脍炙人口的爱国名句,试写几句。

                                                                                                                                                           

                                                                                                                                                            

答案

1.挚爱(或热爱) 痛恨(或仇恨) 诗人对祖国的挚爱(或表达诗人愿为祖国母亲奉献一切)

2.“暴风雨打击着的土地”象征正遭受苦难的祖国大地;“悲愤的河流”“激怒的风”象征悲愤和激怒的人民。“温柔的黎明”隐喻对光明的向往和希冀。

3.设问。诗人自问自答,直抒胸臆,以“我的眼里常含泪水”的情状,托出了他那颗真挚炽热的爱国心。

4.答案举例:“人生自古谁无死,留取丹心照汗青。”“天下兴亡,匹夫有责。”

单项选择题
单项选择题

An official report, addressing concerns about the many implications of genetic testing, outlined policy guidelines and legislative recommendations intended to avoid involuntary and/or ineffective testing, and to protect confidentiality. The report identified urgent concerns, such as quality control measures (including federal oversight for testing laboratories) and better genetics training for medical practitioners. It recommended voluntary screening, urged couples in high-risk populations to consider carrier screening, and advised caution in using and interpreting pre-symptomatic or predictive tests, because certain information could easily be misused or misinterpreted.

About three in every 100 children are born with a severe disorder presumed to be genetic or partially genetic in origin. Genes, often in concert with environmental factors, are being linked to the causes of many common adult diseases such as heart disease, hypertension (high blood pressure), various cancers, Alzheimer’s disease, etc. Tests to determine predisposition to a variety of conditions are under study, and some are beginning to be applied.

The report recommended that all screening, including screening of newborns, be voluntary. Citing the results of two different voluntary newborn screening programs, the report said these programs can achieve compliance rates equal to or better than those of obligatory programs. State health departments could eventually require the offering of tests for diagnosing treatable conditions in newborns, however, careful pilot studies for conditions diagnosable at birth need to be done first.

Although the report asserted that it would prefer that all screening be voluntary, it did note that if a state requires newborn screening for a particular condition, the state should do so only if there is p evidence that a newborn would benefit from effective treatment at the earliest possible age. Newborn screening is the most common type of genetic screening today. More than four million newborns are tested annually so that effective treatment can be started in a few hundred infants.

Prenatal (preceding birth) testing can pose the most difficult issues. The ability to diagnose genetic disorders in the fetus(胎儿)far exceeds any ability to treat or cure them. Parents must be fully informed about risks and benefits of testing procedures, the nature and variability of the disorders they would disclose, and the options available if test results are positive.

Obtaining informed consent—a process that would include educating participants, not just processing documents—would enhance voluntary participation. When offered testing, parents should receive comprehensive counseling, which should be nondirective. Relevant medical advice, however, is recommended for treatable or preventable conditions.

Genetics also can predict whether certain diseases might develop later in life. For single-gene diseases, population screening should only be considered for treatable or preventable conditions of relatively high frequency. Children should be tested only for disorders for which effective treatments or preventive measures could be applied early in life.

The report aims to()

A. offer a detailed description of genetic testing process

B. stress the need for caution in the use of newborn screening

C. interpret the significance of genetic testing to the public

D. state the chief points of the policy guidelines on genetic screening