B.To tell about his family history.
C.To express his longing for family reunion. D.To show his love for Bob Dylan.
´ð°¸ D [ÍÆÀíÅжÏÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝÎÄÖÐTracks from The Basement Tapes and Desire became...was my dad¡¯s gift to me.ºÍDylan¡¯s music as a gift£¬passed down the generationsµÈÐÅÏ¢½²ÊöÁË×÷Õß´ÓСµ½´óÒ»Ö±ÒÔÀ´¶ÔBob DylanµÄϲ»¶ºÍÈȰ®£¬¹ÊÑ¡D¡£]
7.The underlined word ¡°ritual¡±in the second paragraph means ¡°________¡±. A.passion C.memory
B.ceremony D.belief
´ð°¸ B [²Â²â´ÊÒåÌâ¡£´Ë´¦Ö¸¸¸Ç×È¥ÊÀºóÎÒÃǵÄЦÉùÏûʧÁË£¬µ«ÎÒÃǼÌÐø²¥·ÅBob DylanµÄ³ªÆ¬£¬Õâ³ÉÁËÎÒÃÇΨһµÄ¼ÇÒäÒÇʽ¡£¡°ritual¡±Ö¸ÒÇʽ£¬ÓëceremonyͬÒ壬AÏîΪ¡°¼¤Ç飬ÈÈÇ顱£»CÏîΪ¡°¼ÇÒ䡱£»DÏîΪ¡°ÐÅÈΣ¬ÐÅÑö¡±¡£¹ÊÑ¡B¡£] 8.How did the author raise money in his childhood? A.By singing a Dylan¡¯s song at church gatherings. B.By providing cheese and wines to church prayers. C.By playing a private in church performances. D.By accepting donations from the church.
´ð°¸ A [ϸ½ÚÍÆÀíÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝµÚÈý¶ÎI would sing this at church cheese and wines to the assembled audience.A lot of donations were made.¿ÉÖª×÷ÕßÔÚͯÄêµÄʱºòͨ¹ýÔÚ½ÌÌþۻáÉϳªµÏÂ׵ĸèÀ´³ïÇ®£¬¹ÊÑ¡A¡£]
9.The recent visit of the author¡¯s brother indicates that ________. A.his nephew was ever invited to play in Dylan¡¯s concert B.his brother has never seen a live performance of Dylan C.Dylan¡¯s music has influenced three generations of his family D.Subterranean Homesick Blues is always his favorite song
´ð°¸ C [ÍÆÀíÅжÏÌâ¡£¸ù¾Ý×îºóÒ»¶ÎBut he was up for a visit...Subterranean Homesick Blues for us.ºÍDylan¡¯s music as a gift£¬passed down the generations.ÃèÊö¸ç¸ç´ø×Ŷù×Ó°Ý·ÃBob Dylan¼°¶ù×ÓÑݳªËûµÄ¸è±íÃ÷Bob Dylan¶Ô×÷ÕßÒ»
¼ÒÈý´úÈ˵ÄÓ°Ïì¡£¹ÊÑ¡C¡£]
Ìâ×éÈý ˵Ã÷ÎÄ
A
(2018¡¤±±¾©¸ß¿¼)
Preparing Cities for Robot Cars
The possibility of self-driving robot cars has often seemed like a futurist¡¯s dream, years away from materializing in the real world.Well, the future is apparently now.The California Department of Motor Vehicles began giving permits in April for companies to test truly self-driving cars on public roads.The state also cleared the way for companies to sell or rent out self-driving cars, and for companies to operate driverless taxi services.Cali-fornia, it should be noted£¬isn¡¯t leading the way here.Companies have been testing their vehicles in cities across the country.It¡¯s hard to predict when driverless cars will be everywhere on our roads.But however long it takes£¬the technology has the potential to change our transportation systems and our cities, for better or for worse, depending on how the transformation is regulated.
While much of the debate so far has been focused on the safety of driverless cars (and rightfully so), policymakers also should be talking about how self-driving vehicles can help reduce traffic jams, cut emissions (ÅÅ·Å) and offer more convenient, affordable mobility options.The arrival of driverless vehicles is a chance to make sure that those vehicles are environmentally friendly and more shared.
Do we want to copy¡ªor even worsen¡ªthe traffic of today with driverless cars? Imagine a future where most adults own individual self-driving vehicles.They tolerate long, slow journeys to and from work on packed highways because they can work, entertain themselves or sleep on the ride, which encourages urban spread.They take their driverless car to an appointment and set the empty vehicle to circle the building to avoid paying for parking.Instead of walking a few blocks to pick up a child or the dry cleaning, they send the self-driving minibus.The convenience even leads fewer people to take public
transport¡ªan unwelcome side effect researchers have already found in ride-hailing(½Ð³µ) services.
A study from the University of California at Davis suggested that replacing petrol-powered private cars worldwide with electric, self-driving and shared systems could reduce carbon emissions from transportation 80% and cut the cost of transportation infrastructure(»ù´¡ÉèÊ©) and operations 40% by 2050.Fewer emissions and cheaper travel sound pretty appealing.The first commercially available driverless cars will almost certainly be fielded by ride-hailing services, considering the cost of self-driving technology as well as liability and maintenance issues (ÔðÈÎÓëά»¤ÎÊÌâ).But driverless car ownership could increase as the prices drop and more people become comfortable with the technology.
Policymakers should start thinking now about how to make sure the appearance of driverless vehicles doesn¡¯t extend the worst aspects of the car-controlled transportation system we have today.The coming technological advancement presents a chance for cities and states to develop transportation systems designed to move more people, and more affordably.The car of the future is coming.We just have to plan for it.
¡¾ÓïÆª½â¶Á¡¿ ±¾ÎÄÌÖÂÛÁËÓйØÎÞÈ˼ÝÊ»Æû³µµÄÎÊÌâ¡£
1.According to the author, attention should be paid to how driverless cars can ________.
A.help deal with transportation-related problems B.provide better services to customers C.cause damage to our environment D.make some people lose jobs
´ð°¸ A [ϸ½ÚÀí½âÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝµÚ¶þ¶ÎÖеġ°While much of the debate...mobility options¡±ÒÔ¼°µÚÈý¶ÎÖеġ°Do we want to copy...with driverless cars¡±¿ÉÖª£¬Ó¦¸Ã×¢Òâ°éËæÎÞÈ˼ÝÊ»Æû³µ³öÏÖµÄÎÊÌâ¡£¹ÊÑ¡A¡£]
2.As for driverless cars, what is the author¡¯s major concern? A.Safety.
B.Side effects.
C.Affordability. D.Management.
´ð°¸ D [ϸ½ÚÀí½âÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝµÚÒ»¶ÎÖеġ°But however long it takes...how the transformation is regulated¡±¿ÉÖª£¬×÷Õß×î¹ØÐÄ×Ô¶¯¼ÝÊ»µÄ¼à¹ÜÎÊÌâ¡£¹ÊÑ¡D¡£] 3.What does the underlined word ¡°fielded¡± in Paragraph 4 probably mean? A.Employed. C.Shared.
B.Replaced. D.Reduced.
´ð°¸ A [´ÊÒå²Â²âÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝÉÏÏÂÎÄ¿ÉÖª£¬´Ë´¦±íʾ¡°¿¼Âǵ½ÎÞÈ˼ÝÊ»¼¼ÊõµÄ³É±¾ºÍÔðÈÎÓëά»¤ÎÊÌ⣬½Ð³µ·þÎñ(¹«Ë¾)½«ÔËÓõÚÒ»Åú¿ÉʹÓõÄÉÌÒµÎÞÈ˼ÝÊ»Æû³µ¡±£¬fieldedÕâÀïÒýÉêΪ¡°Ê¹Óã¬Ó¦Óá±Ö®Ò⣬¹ÊÑ¡A¡£]
4.What is the author¡¯s attitude to the future of self-driving cars? A.Doubtful. C.Disapproving.
B.Positive. D.Sympathetic.
´ð°¸ B [¹Ûµã̬¶ÈÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝµÚÒ»¶ÎÖеġ°Well£¬the future is apparently now¡±£¬µÚ¶þ¶ÎÖеġ°The arrival of...and more shared¡±ÒÔ¼°×îºóÒ»¶ÎÖеġ°The coming technological advancement...plan for it¡±¿ÉÖª£¬×÷Õß¶ÔÎÞÈ˼ÝÊ»Æû³µµÄδÀ´³Ö»ý¼«ÕýÃæµÄ̬¶È¡£¹ÊÑ¡B¡£]
B
(2018¡¤ÄϾ©ÊиßÈýÈýÄ£)
Humanity has begun wrestling with the dangers of global threats such as climate change.But few authorities are planning for catastrophic solar storms¡ªhuge eruptions of mass and energy from the sun that destroy Earth¡¯s magnetic field.In a recent paper£¬two Harvard University scientists estimate the potential economic damage from such an event will increase in the future and could equal the current U.S.GDP-about $20 trillion-150 years from now. This kind of storm has happened before.The so-called Carrington Event in 1859£¬the most intense magnetic storm ever recorded on Earth£¬caused auroras (¼«¹â)in the atmosphere and even delivered electric shocks to telegraph operators.But a Carrington-scale storm today would cause far more harm because society now depends so heavily on electrical power grids£¬communications satellites and GPS.