2024届高考英语二轮专题复习阅读理解极限突破测试卷

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2024届高考英语二轮专题复习阅读理解极限突破测试卷

  高考英语二轮专题复习阅读理解极限突破测试卷(9)

  阅读理解-----(A)

  Sports shoes that out whether their owner has enough exercise to warrant time in front of the television have been devised in the UK.

  The shoes—named Square Eyes—contain an electronic pressure sensor and a tiny computer chip to record how many steps the wearer has taken in a day. A wireless transmitter passes the information to a receiver connected to a television, and this decides how much evening viewing time the wearer deserves, based on the day’s efforts.

  The design was inspired by a desire to fight against the rapidly ballooning waistlines among British teenagers, says Gillian Swan, who developed Square Eyes as a final year design project at Brunel University to London, UK. “We looked at current issues and childhood overweight really stood out,” she says. “And I wanted to tackle that with my design.”

  Once a child has used up their daily allowance gained through exercise, the television automatically switches off. And further time in front of the TV can only be earned through more steps.

  Swan calculated how exercise should translate to television time using the recommended daily amounts of both. Health experts suggest that a child take 12,000 steps each day and watch no more than two hours of television. So, every 100 steps recorded by the Square Eyes shoes equals precisely one minute of TV time.

  Existing pedometers (计步器) normally clip onto a belt or slip into a pocket and keep count of steps by measuring sudden movement. Swan says these can be easily tricked into recording steps through shaking. But her shoe has been built to be harder for lazy teenagers to cheat. “It is possible, but it would be a lot of effort,” she says. “That was one of my main design considerations.”

  (

  ) 1. According to Swan, the purpose of her design project is to ________.

  A. keep a record of the steps of the wearer

  B. deal with overweight among teenagers

  C. enable children to resist the temptation of TV

  D. prevent children from being tricked by TV programs

  (

  ) 2. Which of the following is true of Square Eyes shoes?

  A. They regulate a child’s evening TV viewing time.

  B. They determine a child’s daily pocket money.

  C. They have raised the hot issue of overweight.

  D. They contain information of the receiver.

  (

  ) 3. What is stressed by health experts in their suggestion?

  A. The exact number of steps to be taken.

  B. The precise number of hours spent on TV.

  C. The proper amount of daily exercise and TV time.

  D. The way of changing steps into TV watching time.

  (

  ) 4. Compared with other similar products, the new design ________.

  A. makes it difficult for lazy teenagers to cheat

  B. counts the wearer’s steps through shaking

  C. records the sudden movement of the wearer

  D. sends teenagers’ health data to the receiver

  (

  ) 5. Which of the following would be the best title for the text?

  A. Smart Shoes Decide on Television Time

  B. Smart Shoes Guarantee More Exercise

  C. Smart Shoes Measure Time of Exercise

  D. Smart Shoes Stop Childhood Overweight

  71. B

  这是一道推断题。根据第三段“‘We looked at current issues and childhood overweight really stood out,’she says,‘And I want to tackle that with my design .’”可以推断出这个设计是为了解决孩子超重的问题。

  72. A

  这是一道推断题。根据第四段“Once a child has used up their daily allowance gained through exercise, the television automatically switches off. And further time in front of the TV can only be earned through more steps.”可知这种鞋利用走路的步数来控制孩子看电视的时间。

  73. C

  这是一道推断题。根据第五段“Health experts suggest that a child take 12 000 steps each day and watch no more than two hours of television.”可以推断出健康专家给出了每天合适的运动量和看电视时间。

  74. A

  这是一道推断题。根据最后一段“Swan says these can be easily tricked into recording steps through shaking. But her shoe has been built to be harder for lazy teenagers to cheat.”可以推断出类似产品可以用晃动来作弊,但是她设计的鞋使得懒惰的青少年很难作弊。

  75. A

  这是一道主旨题。本文主要介绍了一款智能运动鞋,利用孩子们每天的走步数来决定看电视的时间,起到控制体重的作用。

  阅读理解-----(B)

  Pacing and Pausing

  Sara tried to befriend her old friend Steve's new wife, but Betty never seemed to have anything to say. While Sara felt Betty didn't hold up her end of the conversation, Betty complained to Steve that Sara never gave her a chance to talk. The problem had to do with expectations about pacing and pausing. /gaokao/beijing

  Conversation is a turn-taking game. When our habits are similar, there's no problem. But if our habits are different, you may start to talk before I'm finished or fail to take your turn when I'm finished. That's what was happening with Betty and Sara.

  It may not be coincidental that Betty, who expected relatively longer pauses between turns, is British, and Sara, who expected relatively shorter pauses, is American. Betty often felt interrupted by Sara. But Betty herself became an interrupter and found herself doing most of the talking when she met a visitor from Finland. And Sara had a hard time cutting in on some speakers from Latin America or Israel. /gaokao/beijing

  The general phenomenon, then, is that the small conversation techniques, like pacing and pausing, lead people to draw conclusions not about conversational style but about personality and abilities. These habitual differences are often the basis for dangerous stereotyping (思维定式). And these social phenomena can have very personal consequences. For example, a woman from the southwestern part of the US went to live in an eastern city to take up a job in personnel. When the Personnel Department got together for meetings, she kept searching for the right time to break in--and never found it. Although back home she was considered outgoing and confident, in Washington she was viewed as shy and retiring. When she was evaluated at the end of the year, she was told to take a training course because of her inability to speak up.

  That's why slight differences in conversational style--tiny little things like microseconds of pause-can have a great effect on one's life. The result in this case was a judgment of psychological problems---even in the mind of the woman herself, who really wondered what was wrong with her and registered for assertiveness training.

  (

  ) 1. What did Sara think of Betty when talking with her?

  A. Betty was talkative.

  B. Betty was an interrupter.

  C. Betty did not take her turn. /gaokao/beijing

  D. Betty paid no attention to Sara.

  (

  ) 2. According to the passage, who are likely to expect the shortest pauses between turns?

  A. Americans.

  B. Israelis.

  C. The British.

  D. The Finns.

  (

  ) 3. We can learn from the passage that __

  A. communication breakdown results from short pauses and fast pacing

  B. women are unfavorably stereotyped in eastern cities of the US

  C. one's inability to speak up is culturally determined sometimes

  D. one should receive training to build up one's confidence

  (

  ) 4. The underlined word "assertiveness" in the last paragraph probably means __

  A. being willing to speak one's mind

  B. being able to increase one's power

  C. being ready to make one's own judgment /gaokao/beijing

  D. being quick to express one's ideas confidently

  64.C

  细节题,难题。难在弄不清谁是S谁是B,耐心读,动笔划,从第一段得出正确答案并不难:Sara felt Betty didn't hold up her end of the conversation65.B

  细节排序题,难题。还是耐心读,动笔划。S代表美国人,B代表英国人(加起来?),S比B期待谈话间隙时间更短,又在以色列人(Israelis)说话时插不上嘴,故答案选说话嗒嗒嗒嗒的以色列人。

  66.C

  变态细节题,较难题。A不符原文,B无中生有,D无中生有,C关键要理解culturally determined,由文化决定或者受文化影响。

  67.A

  词义猜测题,较难。难点在于A选项的干扰作用。原文说那位MM的inability to speak up注意别人认为她没能力,不是说她不愿意。所以D比A好,此处用反义对比方法。Passage Nine(Holmes’ Knowledge) His ignorance was as remarkable as his knowledge. Of contemporary literature, philosophy and politics he appeared to know next to nothing. Upon my quoting Thomas Carlyle, he inquired in the naivest way who he might be and what he had done. My surprise reached a climax, however, when I found incidentally that he was ignorant of the Copernican Theory and of the composition of the Solar system.   “You appear to be astonished, ” Holmes said, smiling at my expression. “Now that I do know it I shall do my best to forget it. You see, I consider that a man’s brain originally is like a little empty attic, and you have to stock it with such furniture as you choose: A fool takes in all the lumber of every sort that he comes across, so that the knowledge which might be useful to him gets crowded out, or at best jumbled up with a lot of other things, so that he has difficulty in laying his hand upon it. It is a mistake to think that the little room has elastic walls and can distend to any extent. Depend upon it, there comes a time when for every addition of knowledge you forget something that you know before. It is of the highest importance, therefore, not to have useless facts elbowing out the useful ones.”   “But the Solar System! ” I protested.   “What the deuce is it to me?” he interrupted impatiently.   One morning, I picked up a magazine from the table and attempted to while away the time with it, while my companion munched silently at his toast. One of the articles had a pencil mark at the heading, and I naturally began to run my eye through it.   Its somewhat ambitious title was “The Book of Life, ” and it attempted to show how much an observant man might learn by an accurate and systematic examination of all that came in his way. It struck me as being a remarkable mixture of shrewdness and of absurdity. The reasoning was close and intense, but the deduction appeared to me to be far-fetched and exaggerated. The writer claimed by a momentary expression, a twitch of a muscle or a glance of an eye, to fathom a man’s inmost thought. Deceit, according to him, was impossibility in the case of one trained to observation and analysis. His conclusions were as infallible as so many propositions of Euclid. So startling would his results appear to the uninitiated that until they learned the processes by which he had arrived at them they might well consider him as a necromancer.   “From a drop of water, ”said the writer, “a logician could infer the possibility of an Atlantic. So all life is a great chain, the nature of which is known whenever we are shown a single link of it. Like all other arts, the science of Deduction and Analysis is one which can be acquired by long and patient study, nor is life long enough to allow any mortal to attain the highest possible perfection in it. ”   This smartly written piece of theory I could not accept until a succession of evidences justified it. 1.What is the author’s attitude toward Holmes? [A]Praising. Critical. [C]Ironical. [D]Distaste. 2.What way did the author take to stick out Holmes’ uniqueness? [A]By deduction. By explanation. [C]By contrast. [D]By analysis. 3.What was the Holmes’ idea about knowledge-learning? [A]Learning what every body learned. Learning what was useful to you. [C]Learning whatever you came across. [D]Learning what was different to you. 4.What did the article mentioned in the passage talk about? [A]One may master the way of reasoning through observation. One may become rather critical through observation and analysis. [C]One may become rather sharp through observation and analysis. [D]One may become practical through observation and analysis. Vocabulary 1.Thomas Carlyle           托马斯•卡莱尔 1795-1881美国作家、历史家、哲学家 2.jumble (up)           搞乱,使混乱 3.lay hand on (upon) sth.  抓住,找到 4.at best                  最好的情况下 5.elbow out (off)           用胳膊肘挤出,推出 6.deuce = devil          what the deuce is it to me?                              这里表示福尔摩斯的厌恶心理。                          义:这倒霉的词儿与我有什么关系?             7.while away the time          消磨/打发时间 8.shrewdness          机敏,敏锐,犀利 9.far-fetched          牵强附会,不自然 10.fathom                看穿/透,推测,探索 11.infallible          一贯正确 12.uninitiated         对某事无知的 13.Euclid               欧几里德(古希腊数学家) 14.necromancer         巫师 难句译注 1.A fool takes in all the lumber of every sort that he comes across, so that the knowledge which might be useful to him gets crowded out, or at best jumbled up with a lot of other things, so that he has difficulty in laying his hand upon it. 【结构简析】主从句结构,主句A fool … 后跟lumber的定从that he comes across。从句so that 中有一knowledge的定从which; or链接前后两个分词crowded out 与jumbled up;但第一个so that 从句又是后面so that 的主句。 【参考译文】蠢人把他碰到的每种木材(制家具)都拿进来。这样,可能对他有用的知识都被挤出去;最好的情况下,也是和其他种种事情混在一起,所以他就很难抓住知识。 2.Its somewhat ambitious title was “The Book of Life, ” and it attempted to show how much an observant man might learn by an accurate and systematic examination of all that came in his way. 【结构简析】并列句,连词and后的句中有宾从how much…。 【参考译文】这片文章稍有炫耀的标题是“生命之书”。它想证明一个善于观察的人通过对他经历到的一切事情都进行真正地系统地考察可以学到多少东西。 3.So startling would his results appear to the uninitiated that until they learned the processes by which he had arrived at them they might well consider him as a necromancer. 【结构简析】复合主从句,so that句型。So句是倒装。正常句型应为:His results would appear so startling to the uninitiated that…,that句中又是主从句,从句用until连接,中插by which定语从句修饰 the processes。 【参考译文】他的结论对无知的人来说是那么惊人,所以他们很可能认为他是个巫师,除非他们学会了他用以得出结论的过程。 4.Like all other arts, the Science of Deduction and Analysis is one which can be acquired by long and patient study, nor is life long enough to allow any mortal to attain the highest possible perfection in it. 【结构简析】并列句,nor连接。前一句中有定语从句which修饰one,后一句nor为否定词。 【参考译文】像所有的其他艺术一样,演绎分析科学是一种通过长期默默的研究,可以习得的学问,而我们的生命并不长得足以使任何凡人都能在这一领域取得可能是臻美的成就。 写作方法与文章大意 这是一篇“传记”,作者采用以反衬正的对比手法写出了福尔摩斯之惊人才华。第一句话开明宗旨“他的无知和他的有知一样卓越惊人”,接着就是种种无知,达到突出其有知的成就。两方面表达,一是福尔摩斯对无知的解释:不能照单全收;二是作者的反对见解衬托福之才华超人,能一滴水见大海。 答案详解 1.A 赞扬。作者以无知烘托人物之有知,以他本人的反对批评观点来证明人物的正确。否定及所谓机刺旨在铺垫。正反对比赞扬福之精明强悍,才智超人,洞察力强。 2.C 作者采用对比手法。 3.B 学习对你有用之物。第二段福之表白,他把头脑比作一个小小的空屋,不能随意选择家具(知识)塞满空间,应选择“有用之才”,免得填满了废物,把有用之才挤出去。 4.C 通过观察和分析人会变得很敏锐。最后二段都是讲福所写文章的内容。善于观察和分析的人可以一眼看透人之本质,一点水能知大西洋。这种一叶知秋的本领是通过长期观察、分析研究而得。也就是说,通过观察分析,人可以变得敏感聪慧,因为万物都有联系。

  高考英语二轮专题复习阅读理解极限突破测试卷(9)

  阅读理解-----(A)

  Sports shoes that out whether their owner has enough exercise to warrant time in front of the television have been devised in the UK.

  The shoes—named Square Eyes—contain an electronic pressure sensor and a tiny computer chip to record how many steps the wearer has taken in a day. A wireless transmitter passes the information to a receiver connected to a television, and this decides how much evening viewing time the wearer deserves, based on the day’s efforts.

  The design was inspired by a desire to fight against the rapidly ballooning waistlines among British teenagers, says Gillian Swan, who developed Square Eyes as a final year design project at Brunel University to London, UK. “We looked at current issues and childhood overweight really stood out,” she says. “And I wanted to tackle that with my design.”

  Once a child has used up their daily allowance gained through exercise, the television automatically switches off. And further time in front of the TV can only be earned through more steps.

  Swan calculated how exercise should translate to television time using the recommended daily amounts of both. Health experts suggest that a child take 12,000 steps each day and watch no more than two hours of television. So, every 100 steps recorded by the Square Eyes shoes equals precisely one minute of TV time.

  Existing pedometers (计步器) normally clip onto a belt or slip into a pocket and keep count of steps by measuring sudden movement. Swan says these can be easily tricked into recording steps through shaking. But her shoe has been built to be harder for lazy teenagers to cheat. “It is possible, but it would be a lot of effort,” she says. “That was one of my main design considerations.”

  (

  ) 1. According to Swan, the purpose of her design project is to ________.

  A. keep a record of the steps of the wearer

  B. deal with overweight among teenagers

  C. enable children to resist the temptation of TV

  D. prevent children from being tricked by TV programs

  (

  ) 2. Which of the following is true of Square Eyes shoes?

  A. They regulate a child’s evening TV viewing time.

  B. They determine a child’s daily pocket money.

  C. They have raised the hot issue of overweight.

  D. They contain information of the receiver.

  (

  ) 3. What is stressed by health experts in their suggestion?

  A. The exact number of steps to be taken.

  B. The precise number of hours spent on TV.

  C. The proper amount of daily exercise and TV time.

  D. The way of changing steps into TV watching time.

  (

  ) 4. Compared with other similar products, the new design ________.

  A. makes it difficult for lazy teenagers to cheat

  B. counts the wearer’s steps through shaking

  C. records the sudden movement of the wearer

  D. sends teenagers’ health data to the receiver

  (

  ) 5. Which of the following would be the best title for the text?

  A. Smart Shoes Decide on Television Time

  B. Smart Shoes Guarantee More Exercise

  C. Smart Shoes Measure Time of Exercise

  D. Smart Shoes Stop Childhood Overweight

  71. B

  这是一道推断题。根据第三段“‘We looked at current issues and childhood overweight really stood out,’she says,‘And I want to tackle that with my design .’”可以推断出这个设计是为了解决孩子超重的问题。

  72. A

  这是一道推断题。根据第四段“Once a child has used up their daily allowance gained through exercise, the television automatically switches off. And further time in front of the TV can only be earned through more steps.”可知这种鞋利用走路的步数来控制孩子看电视的时间。

  73. C

  这是一道推断题。根据第五段“Health experts suggest that a child take 12 000 steps each day and watch no more than two hours of television.”可以推断出健康专家给出了每天合适的运动量和看电视时间。

  74. A

  这是一道推断题。根据最后一段“Swan says these can be easily tricked into recording steps through shaking. But her shoe has been built to be harder for lazy teenagers to cheat.”可以推断出类似产品可以用晃动来作弊,但是她设计的鞋使得懒惰的青少年很难作弊。

  75. A

  这是一道主旨题。本文主要介绍了一款智能运动鞋,利用孩子们每天的走步数来决定看电视的时间,起到控制体重的作用。

  阅读理解-----(B)

  Pacing and Pausing

  Sara tried to befriend her old friend Steve's new wife, but Betty never seemed to have anything to say. While Sara felt Betty didn't hold up her end of the conversation, Betty complained to Steve that Sara never gave her a chance to talk. The problem had to do with expectations about pacing and pausing. /gaokao/beijing

  Conversation is a turn-taking game. When our habits are similar, there's no problem. But if our habits are different, you may start to talk before I'm finished or fail to take your turn when I'm finished. That's what was happening with Betty and Sara.

  It may not be coincidental that Betty, who expected relatively longer pauses between turns, is British, and Sara, who expected relatively shorter pauses, is American. Betty often felt interrupted by Sara. But Betty herself became an interrupter and found herself doing most of the talking when she met a visitor from Finland. And Sara had a hard time cutting in on some speakers from Latin America or Israel. /gaokao/beijing

  The general phenomenon, then, is that the small conversation techniques, like pacing and pausing, lead people to draw conclusions not about conversational style but about personality and abilities. These habitual differences are often the basis for dangerous stereotyping (思维定式). And these social phenomena can have very personal consequences. For example, a woman from the southwestern part of the US went to live in an eastern city to take up a job in personnel. When the Personnel Department got together for meetings, she kept searching for the right time to break in--and never found it. Although back home she was considered outgoing and confident, in Washington she was viewed as shy and retiring. When she was evaluated at the end of the year, she was told to take a training course because of her inability to speak up.

  That's why slight differences in conversational style--tiny little things like microseconds of pause-can have a great effect on one's life. The result in this case was a judgment of psychological problems---even in the mind of the woman herself, who really wondered what was wrong with her and registered for assertiveness training.

  (

  ) 1. What did Sara think of Betty when talking with her?

  A. Betty was talkative.

  B. Betty was an interrupter.

  C. Betty did not take her turn. /gaokao/beijing

  D. Betty paid no attention to Sara.

  (

  ) 2. According to the passage, who are likely to expect the shortest pauses between turns?

  A. Americans.

  B. Israelis.

  C. The British.

  D. The Finns.

  (

  ) 3. We can learn from the passage that __

  A. communication breakdown results from short pauses and fast pacing

  B. women are unfavorably stereotyped in eastern cities of the US

  C. one's inability to speak up is culturally determined sometimes

  D. one should receive training to build up one's confidence

  (

  ) 4. The underlined word "assertiveness" in the last paragraph probably means __

  A. being willing to speak one's mind

  B. being able to increase one's power

  C. being ready to make one's own judgment /gaokao/beijing

  D. being quick to express one's ideas confidently

  64.C

  细节题,难题。难在弄不清谁是S谁是B,耐心读,动笔划,从第一段得出正确答案并不难:Sara felt Betty didn't hold up her end of the conversation65.B

  细节排序题,难题。还是耐心读,动笔划。S代表美国人,B代表英国人(加起来?),S比B期待谈话间隙时间更短,又在以色列人(Israelis)说话时插不上嘴,故答案选说话嗒嗒嗒嗒的以色列人。

  66.C

  变态细节题,较难题。A不符原文,B无中生有,D无中生有,C关键要理解culturally determined,由文化决定或者受文化影响。

  67.A

  词义猜测题,较难。难点在于A选项的干扰作用。原文说那位MM的inability to speak up注意别人认为她没能力,不是说她不愿意。所以D比A好,此处用反义对比方法。Passage Nine(Holmes’ Knowledge) His ignorance was as remarkable as his knowledge. Of contemporary literature, philosophy and politics he appeared to know next to nothing. Upon my quoting Thomas Carlyle, he inquired in the naivest way who he might be and what he had done. My surprise reached a climax, however, when I found incidentally that he was ignorant of the Copernican Theory and of the composition of the Solar system.   “You appear to be astonished, ” Holmes said, smiling at my expression. “Now that I do know it I shall do my best to forget it. You see, I consider that a man’s brain originally is like a little empty attic, and you have to stock it with such furniture as you choose: A fool takes in all the lumber of every sort that he comes across, so that the knowledge which might be useful to him gets crowded out, or at best jumbled up with a lot of other things, so that he has difficulty in laying his hand upon it. It is a mistake to think that the little room has elastic walls and can distend to any extent. Depend upon it, there comes a time when for every addition of knowledge you forget something that you know before. It is of the highest importance, therefore, not to have useless facts elbowing out the useful ones.”   “But the Solar System! ” I protested.   “What the deuce is it to me?” he interrupted impatiently.   One morning, I picked up a magazine from the table and attempted to while away the time with it, while my companion munched silently at his toast. One of the articles had a pencil mark at the heading, and I naturally began to run my eye through it.   Its somewhat ambitious title was “The Book of Life, ” and it attempted to show how much an observant man might learn by an accurate and systematic examination of all that came in his way. It struck me as being a remarkable mixture of shrewdness and of absurdity. The reasoning was close and intense, but the deduction appeared to me to be far-fetched and exaggerated. The writer claimed by a momentary expression, a twitch of a muscle or a glance of an eye, to fathom a man’s inmost thought. Deceit, according to him, was impossibility in the case of one trained to observation and analysis. His conclusions were as infallible as so many propositions of Euclid. So startling would his results appear to the uninitiated that until they learned the processes by which he had arrived at them they might well consider him as a necromancer.   “From a drop of water, ”said the writer, “a logician could infer the possibility of an Atlantic. So all life is a great chain, the nature of which is known whenever we are shown a single link of it. Like all other arts, the science of Deduction and Analysis is one which can be acquired by long and patient study, nor is life long enough to allow any mortal to attain the highest possible perfection in it. ”   This smartly written piece of theory I could not accept until a succession of evidences justified it. 1.What is the author’s attitude toward Holmes? [A]Praising. Critical. [C]Ironical. [D]Distaste. 2.What way did the author take to stick out Holmes’ uniqueness? [A]By deduction. By explanation. [C]By contrast. [D]By analysis. 3.What was the Holmes’ idea about knowledge-learning? [A]Learning what every body learned. Learning what was useful to you. [C]Learning whatever you came across. [D]Learning what was different to you. 4.What did the article mentioned in the passage talk about? [A]One may master the way of reasoning through observation. One may become rather critical through observation and analysis. [C]One may become rather sharp through observation and analysis. [D]One may become practical through observation and analysis. Vocabulary 1.Thomas Carlyle           托马斯•卡莱尔 1795-1881美国作家、历史家、哲学家 2.jumble (up)           搞乱,使混乱 3.lay hand on (upon) sth.  抓住,找到 4.at best                  最好的情况下 5.elbow out (off)           用胳膊肘挤出,推出 6.deuce = devil          what the deuce is it to me?                              这里表示福尔摩斯的厌恶心理。                          义:这倒霉的词儿与我有什么关系?             7.while away the time          消磨/打发时间 8.shrewdness          机敏,敏锐,犀利 9.far-fetched          牵强附会,不自然 10.fathom                看穿/透,推测,探索 11.infallible          一贯正确 12.uninitiated         对某事无知的 13.Euclid               欧几里德(古希腊数学家) 14.necromancer         巫师 难句译注 1.A fool takes in all the lumber of every sort that he comes across, so that the knowledge which might be useful to him gets crowded out, or at best jumbled up with a lot of other things, so that he has difficulty in laying his hand upon it. 【结构简析】主从句结构,主句A fool … 后跟lumber的定从that he comes across。从句so that 中有一knowledge的定从which; or链接前后两个分词crowded out 与jumbled up;但第一个so that 从句又是后面so that 的主句。 【参考译文】蠢人把他碰到的每种木材(制家具)都拿进来。这样,可能对他有用的知识都被挤出去;最好的情况下,也是和其他种种事情混在一起,所以他就很难抓住知识。 2.Its somewhat ambitious title was “The Book of Life, ” and it attempted to show how much an observant man might learn by an accurate and systematic examination of all that came in his way. 【结构简析】并列句,连词and后的句中有宾从how much…。 【参考译文】这片文章稍有炫耀的标题是“生命之书”。它想证明一个善于观察的人通过对他经历到的一切事情都进行真正地系统地考察可以学到多少东西。 3.So startling would his results appear to the uninitiated that until they learned the processes by which he had arrived at them they might well consider him as a necromancer. 【结构简析】复合主从句,so that句型。So句是倒装。正常句型应为:His results would appear so startling to the uninitiated that…,that句中又是主从句,从句用until连接,中插by which定语从句修饰 the processes。 【参考译文】他的结论对无知的人来说是那么惊人,所以他们很可能认为他是个巫师,除非他们学会了他用以得出结论的过程。 4.Like all other arts, the Science of Deduction and Analysis is one which can be acquired by long and patient study, nor is life long enough to allow any mortal to attain the highest possible perfection in it. 【结构简析】并列句,nor连接。前一句中有定语从句which修饰one,后一句nor为否定词。 【参考译文】像所有的其他艺术一样,演绎分析科学是一种通过长期默默的研究,可以习得的学问,而我们的生命并不长得足以使任何凡人都能在这一领域取得可能是臻美的成就。 写作方法与文章大意 这是一篇“传记”,作者采用以反衬正的对比手法写出了福尔摩斯之惊人才华。第一句话开明宗旨“他的无知和他的有知一样卓越惊人”,接着就是种种无知,达到突出其有知的成就。两方面表达,一是福尔摩斯对无知的解释:不能照单全收;二是作者的反对见解衬托福之才华超人,能一滴水见大海。 答案详解 1.A 赞扬。作者以无知烘托人物之有知,以他本人的反对批评观点来证明人物的正确。否定及所谓机刺旨在铺垫。正反对比赞扬福之精明强悍,才智超人,洞察力强。 2.C 作者采用对比手法。 3.B 学习对你有用之物。第二段福之表白,他把头脑比作一个小小的空屋,不能随意选择家具(知识)塞满空间,应选择“有用之才”,免得填满了废物,把有用之才挤出去。 4.C 通过观察和分析人会变得很敏锐。最后二段都是讲福所写文章的内容。善于观察和分析的人可以一眼看透人之本质,一点水能知大西洋。这种一叶知秋的本领是通过长期观察、分析研究而得。也就是说,通过观察分析,人可以变得敏感聪慧,因为万物都有联系。