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英语六级考试阅读强化题附答案

时间: 焯杰2 阅读理解

  英语六级考试阅读强化题(一)

  If we compare mountaineering and other more familiar sports, we might think that one big difference is that mountaineering is not a "team game". We should be mistaken in this. There are, it is true, no " matches" between "teams" of climbers, but when climbers are on a rock face linked by a rope on which their lives may depend, there is obvious teamwork.

  The mountain climber knows that he may have to fight forces that are stronger and more powerful than man. He has to fight the forces of nature. His sport requires high mental and physical qualities.

  A mountain climber continues to improve in skill year after year. A skier (滑雪手) is probably past his best by the age of thirty, and most international tennis champions are in their early twenties. But it is not unusual for a man of fifty or sixty to climb the highest mountains in the Alps. They may take more time than younger men, but they probably climb with more skill and less waste of efforts, and they certainly experience equal enjoyment.

  26. Mountaineering involves_______.

  A. cold B. hardship

  C. physical risk D. all of the above

  27. The difference between a sport and a game has to do with the kind of

  A. activity B. rules

  C. uniform D. participants

  28. Mountaineering can be called a team sport because

  A. it is an Olympic event

  B. teams compete against each other

  C. mountaineers depend on each other while climbing

  D. there are 5 climbers in each team

  29. Mountaineers compete against_______.

  A. nature B. each other

  B. other teams D: international standards

  30. The best title for the passage is_______.

  A. Mountaineering Is Different from Golf and Football

  B. Mountaineering Is More Attractive than Other Sports

  C. Mountaineering

  D. Mountain Climbers

  英语六级考试阅读强化题答案

  26. D 27. B 28. C 29. A 30. C

  英语六级考试阅读强化题(二)

  In the early days of nuclear power, the United States make money on it. But today opponents (反对者 ) have so complicated its development that no nuclear plants have been ordered or built here in 12 years.

  The greatest fear of nuclear power opponents has always been a reactor "meltdown". Today, the chances of a meltdown that would threaten U. S. public health are very little. But to even further reduce the possibility, engineers are testing new reactors that rely not on human judgment to shut them down but on the laws of nature. Now General Electric is already building two advanced reactors in Japan. But don't expect them even on U. S. shores unless things change in Washington.

  The procedure for licensing nuclear power plants is a bad dream. Any time during, or even after, construction, an objection by any group or individual can bring everything to a halt while the matter is investigated or taken to court. Meanwhile, the builder must add nice-but-not-necessary improvements, some of which force him to knock down walls and start over. In every case when a plant has been opposed, the Nuclear Regulation Commission has ultimately granted a license to construct or operate. But the victory often costs so much that the utility ends up abandoning the plant anyway.

  A case in point is the Shoreham plant on New York's Long Island. Shoreham was a virtual twin to the Millstone plant in Connecticut, both ordered in the mid-60's. Millstone, completed for $ 101 million, has been generating electricity for two decades. Shoreham, however, was singled out by antinuclear activists who, by sending in endless protests, drove the cost over $ 5 billion and delayed its use for many years.

  Shoreham finally won its operation license. But the plant has never produced a watt power. Governor Mario Cuomo, an opponent of a Shoreham start up, used his power to force New York's public-utilities commission to accept the following settlement: the power company could pass the cost of Shoreham along to its consumers only if it agreed not to operate the plant. I'oday, a perfectly good facility, capable of servicing hundreds of thousands of homes, sits rusting.

  21.The author's attitude toward the development of nuclear power is______.

  A. negative B. neutral

  C. positive D. questioning

  22.What has made the procedure for licensing nuclear power plants a bad dream?

  A. The inefficiency of the Nuclear Regulation Commission. B. The enormous cost of construction and operation.

  C. The length of time it takes to make investigations.

  D. The objection of the opponents of nuclear power.

  23.It can be inferred from Paragraph 2 that______.

  A. there are not enough safety measures in the U. S. for running new nuclear power plants

  B. it is not technical difficulties that prevent the building of nuclear power plants in the U. S.

  C. there are already more nuclear power plants than necessary in the U. S.

  D. the American government will not allow Japanese nuclear reactors to be installed in the U. S.

  24. Governor Mario Cuomo's chief intention in proposing the settlement was to_______.

  A. stop the Shoreham plant from going into operation

  B. urge the power company to further increase its power supply

  C. permit the Shoreham plant to operate under certain conditions

  D. help the power company to solve its financial problems

  25. The phrase "single out" is closest in meaning to_______.

  A. delay B. end up

  C. complete D. separate

  英语六级考试阅读强化题答案

  21. C 22. D 23. B 24. A 25. D

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