问题 多项选择题

需要预订舱的货物是()

A.大宗货物

B.鲜活易腐货物

C.危险品

D.机器设备

E.贵重物品

答案

参考答案:A, B, C, E

阅读理解与欣赏

阅读下面的文字,完成问题。

江南的雪

鲁涛

  ①对于一位在江南住惯的人,在严寒的冬天也难得一见雪的踪影,春天下雪便是奇迹了。物以稀为责,今年的春雪就越发显得珍贵。

  ②雪从正月十一下起。刚一开始,雪肆无忌惮如同撒盐般落在广袤的大地上,同时也不停地侧敲着人们的房子、窗户和雨伞,发出吱吱的声音,清脆而幽雅。走在路上的我,感觉这声音是那么的熟悉和美妙,仿佛把我带入了那个远逝的梦幻般的童真年代,在大山里小溪边,我和小伙伴们正在聆听叮叮当当的泉水声。

  ③一阵汹涌的雪过后,接踵而来的是芦絮般的小雪,一小片,一小片的,虽下得不大,但不久地面屋顶上白了一层,宛如覆盖了一丛白毯。树枝上,草坪间,山尖上顶着一串串的小白花,与朦胧的天空灰白相间,很有些中国古代山水画“风烟俱净,天山共色。从流飘荡,任意东西”的韵味。

  ④雪虽然下得不很大,可是整个苍茫的大地比往常宁静了许多。但也不像唐代诗人柳宗元所描绘的“千山鸟飞绝,万径人踪灭”那样冷静。宁静之中也蕴涵着蠕动:漫天的飞雪本身就是一幅时尚的动漫,它在向大地炫耀的同时,也一步一步地浇灭了人们内心的烦躁和不安;还有路上三三两两的车仍在穿梭,与飞雪的纠缠更添大地的娇媚;偶尔还有几个行人匆匆赶路,游离在这寂寥的雪国中。行人的稀少_,我想到了一个原因。那可能是跟人们的爱美有关,生怕太多南行走玷污了这幅天然浑成的山水画,倒不如躲在家中偎倚在火炉旁边,一边嗑着瓜子,一边调侃,享受着雪带起彷徨,咏左思《招隐诗》,忽忆戴安道。时戴在剡,即便夜乘小船就之。经宿方至,造门不前而返。人问其故,王曰:‘吾本乘兴而行,兴尽而返,何必见戴?“我在纳闷,何以使这位鼎鼎大名的书法家而又自命清高的魏晋名士乘兴而行呢?聪明的人一眼就会发现,那就是”雪“惹的”祸“。可见,雪是人们日常生活中的”调剂品“和”开心果“。有了雪,文人就妙笔生花;有了雪,农夫就信心百倍;有了雪,咱们老百姓就真高兴!

  ⑥江南的雪虽韵味十足,意兴盎然。但也有它先天的不足:相比北国的雪,它显得不够刚毅,不够坚强,不够浑厚,娇气、羞涩、短暂也就在所难免了。北京的雪我是见过的,但并不像李白所说”燕山雪花大如席,片片吹落轩辕台“那么夸张。如果真要把江南的雪和北国的雪作个比较的话,我想:北国的雪就好比北方的汉子,豪放、洒脱,洋洋洒洒;而江南的雪如同小家碧玉,娇小、细腻,缠缠绵绵。法国著名思想家孟德斯鸠认为地理与气候决定人的精神气质。从南北雪的形态特征来看,孟德斯鸠的理论确实有道理。

  ⑦雪下了整整一天一夜,到正月十二下午停了。可我的心却没有停止对雪的眷恋,我不仅眷恋雪的洁白,眷恋雪的晶莹剔透,更眷恋雪的那种不夹带一丝丝杂质的纯正。这让我想起了为人处世,人如果能够像雪一样坦坦荡荡,纯正洁白,世间就没有了那么多的恩恩怨怨了,人类也就可以和谐幸福地生活。而人们常常把雪当做”天使“,当做”棉被“,当做好事情的预兆,也就是因为雪代表了人们内心的追求:自然、纯洁、洒脱。虽然有时候人们达不到洁白无瑕的那种境界,但向往她本身也是一件美好的事物。这就是为什么大家都喜欢雪,赞赏雪的原因。

  ⑧这场春雪已经融化了,但它播撒在人们心间的希望种子是不会融化的,到了秋天的时候还会丰收。

1.文章第②③段是从哪些角度来写江南的雪的?这样写有什么作用?请结合具体内容作简要分析。

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2.概括文章第④⑤两段的主要内容。从全文来看,作者这样安排有什么好处?

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3.第⑥段中作者忽然说江南的雪”也有它先天的不足“,并拿它与北国的雪相比较,指出它的”不够刚毅,不够浑厚“,这样写你觉得好吗?

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4.文章第④段中划线词语的使用很有特点,请任选一词作鉴赏。

划线词语:炫耀、浇灭、纠缠、游离。

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5.文章最后说”播撒在人们心间的希望种子是不会融化的“,你怎样理解这句话的含义?请结合文章内容简要说说你的想法。

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单项选择题

A conventional teacher’s licensee usually requires a university degree in education plus an unpaid term of practice teaching. This has never made much sense. It excludes bright students who take degrees in other subjects, and might teach those subjects; it is costly and time-consuming for career-switchers, who must wait a year or more before they can enter a classroom; it is so rigid that private-school teachers or university professors with years of experience have to jump through hoops before they can start teaching in a state school. And there is virtually no evidence that it creates better teachers. For all that, it is ply backed by schools of education, which have a monopoly of teacher-training, and by teachers’ unions, whose members make more money when it is artificially hard for others to get into the profession.

Now, some 45 states and the Districts of Columbia offer an "alternative route" to a teacher’s licensee, up from only a handful in the 1980s. Alternative certification (AC) generally allows individuals with a university degree to begin teaching immediately after passing an entrance examination. These recruits, watched over by a mentor teach the subject they studied at university, and take education courses at a sponsoring university while drawing their salaries.

The traditional sort of American teacher is likely to be young, white and female. Alternative certification attracts more men and more non-whites. In Texas, for instance, roughly 90% of public-school teachers are white, but 40% of those who have joined through alternative certification are non-whites. The AC route also draws teachers willing to go where they are most needed. A survey of Troops to Teachers, a program that turns exsoldiers into public-school teachers (" Proud to serve again"), found that 39% of those taking part are willing to teach in inner-city schools, and 68% in rural areas.

Are they good teachers Officialdom is reluctant to release the details which might answer that question for certain. But anecdotal evidence suggests they do well. In New Jersey, which has been running this sort of program since 1984, rich districts, which can afford to be choosy, consistently hire more AC teachers than poor districts do. In Houston, Texas, where the Teach of America program (TFA) puts recent university graduates into poor communities as teachers, the most effective teachers are generally the TFA ones. " School principals are our biggest fans," Wendy Kopp, TFA’s president, says proudly.

So why not scrap the cumbersome teacher-licensing laws Frederick Hess, a professor at the University of Virginia, has written a paper for the Progressive Policy Institute arguing that teacher-licensing ought to be stripped to the bare essentials. Prospective teachers should be required only to hold a college degree, pass a test of essential skills, and be checked to make sure they do not have a criminal background. Other training is important, argues Mr. Hess, but the market, not state legislators, should decide what that training looks like. This notion of "competitive certification" has drawn favorable attention from the Bush administration.

What does the example of New Jersey ( Para. 4) illustrate()

A. Schools in rich districts are usually choosy

B. Official sources are careful on the success of AC

C. New Jersey has more need for teachers than elsewhere

D. AC has turned out good teachers for schools