教甄◆英文科題庫下載題庫

上一題
IV. Reading Comprehension
Passage 1 Read the following pasage and choose the BEST answer for each question.
        In the remote Amazonian village of Inhube, the moan of the horns means a grueling initiation is about to begin. Several times a year, the Satere-Mawe Indians hold a painful 11-hour ritual in which boys as young as 12 must stick their hands into a pair of specially made gloves, each one infested with a swarm of angry, stinging jungle carnivores—giant tropical bullet ants. No initiate can be considered a true Indian, a warrior, until he has sworn the gloves not just once, but 20 times.
        Ted, one of the 12-year-old initiates, says: “people say that I don’t have the courage to do it. I have and I will do it.” The men face the prospect of getting strung even before the ritual starts when they head off to capture the ants. A stab from this predator’s abdominal spear is 30 times worse than a bee sting.
         The tribe’s medicine men drug the ants by soaking them in an herbal solution. But their stupor will only last long enough for them to be thrust, one by one, stinger first, into the gloves. According to the Satere-Mawe legend, these menaces provide the perfect test of one’s worthiness to take on adult roles.
         In less than an hour, the ants are awake. Trapped in the woven mitt, they writhe in angry desperation. They’re ready to be inserted into the ceremonial gloves. One by one, each young man steps up to the sacred pole and submits his hands to the swarm. Their agony is unmistakable. To help distract them, the medicine man leads them in a dance around the pole.
         To be seen as a true tribal warrior, each must endure the ants’ punishment for more than ten minutes. With each sting, the bullet ants’ neurotoxic venom attacks the nerves, causing paralysis and terrible pain, and this is only the beginning. Once the gloves are off, the stinging and burning will only grow more excruciating. Now, after watching the others suffer, Ted’s moment of truth has arrived.
         Unfazed, he keeps dancing while all around him succumb to the poison. Slowly, the neurotoxic venom is turning their hands into swollen, simmering, paralyzed stumps. Finally, the gloves come off and Ted remains standing. Ted says: My body feels like a motor that’s heating up. If you throw water here, a lot of smoke will come out.
           It takes 24 hours for the toxins to dissipate completely. As the chief sees it, the ritual not only marks the initiate’s entrance into adulthood, it makes them better men. Chief says: “If you live your life without suffering anything or without any kind of effort, it won’t be worth anything to you.” Despite his long hours of agony, Ted has promised the chief he will wear the gloves 19 more times, until he becomes a true adult.

【題組】45. How does the author’s intent influence the way facts or opinions are framed in the passage?
(A) The author presents facts objectively without any influence from their intent.
(B) The author includes a variety of opinions to present a balanced view of the initiation ritual.
(C) The author selectively presents facts to support their intended message about the initiation ritual.
(D) The author’s intent has little impact on the framing of facts or opinions in the passage.


答案:登入後觀看
難度: 計算中

10
 【站僕】摩檸Morning:有沒有達人來解釋一下?
倒數 3天 ,已有 0 則答案


IV. Reading Comprehension Passage 1 Read..-阿摩線上測驗