阿摩:珍惜才會擁有,感恩才能天長地久
100
(2 分33 秒)
1(B).

18.While Amy and I were talking, my son ________ to tell me about an accident.
(A) calmed down
(B) broke in
(C) sobered up
(D) eased up


2(C).

9. Since the road is wet this morning, _________ last night.
(A) it must rain
(B) it must be raining
(C)it must have rained
(D) it must have been rain


3(C).

39. W: Hi, I thought your article on the school newspaper was right on target. You certain convinced me anyway. M: Thanks. However, based upon the general response, you and I are definitely in the minority. Q: What does the man mean?
(A) Very few people have read the article.
(B) He doesn’t expect the article to be published.
(C) Few people agreed with his idea in the article.
(D) She doesn’t fully understand his idea in the article.


4(B).

Questions 46-50 Feather cloaks are the most spectacular of all objects of native Hawaiian manufacture. In the highly stratified society of the islands before their discovery by Captain James Cook in 1788, the cloaks were visual symbols of power and prestige, worn only by ranking male chiefs on state occasions and in battle. They were never very numerous, but powerful chiefs often acquired several through inheritance or as battle prizes. Although the feathers were gathered by the common people to defray part of their taxes and women were permitted to clean and sort them, only men of high rank, surrounded by sacred taboos, were allowed to make the cloaks. The manufacturing process involved tying small bunches of red, yellow, green, or black feathers with olona fiber. Large cloaks like the royal robe worn by Kamehameha I, the first king of all the islands, required some half-million feathers. Today these cloaks are ethnological treasures, but to the early ship captain they were little more than seemingly plentiful curiosities that the Hawaiians highly valued but gave away or traded for such trifles as iron knives. In turn, the Europeans traded these curiosities. This practice began with Cook’s officers, who traded the cloak in Leningrad in exchange for provisions. In 1825, Lord Byron, commander of the British ship Blonde, predicted that “the splendid war-cloak” would soon be more easily found in Europe than in Hawaii. Brigham found only five in Hawaii when he made his featherwork survey in 1899. Today twenty of the fifty known cloaks are still in the British Isles.
【題組】47. The passage states that Hawaiian feather cloaks were made only by _______.
(A) battle prisoners
(B) men of high status
(C) traders
(D) ordinary citizens


5(C).

13. If Mr. Jones ____ last month, I ____ the last course yesterday.
(A) start… will give
(B) start… would give
(C) had started… would have given
(D) started… would give


6(B).

        Many people depend on volcanoes for their survival. The geothermal energy of a volcano can power technological systems for nearby communities. Soil near active volcanoes is often rich in mineral deposits and provides excellent farming opportunities. Lots of people visit volcanoes each year, so jobs often pop up nearby in hotels, restaurants, gift shops, and as tour guides. And some people simply do not have the financial resources to move. 
        Many residents of the area around Kilauea may also think it’s worth the risk, given the beauty, community, and remoteness of Hawaii. Volcanoes also tend to give notice that something is about to happen—Kilauea’s small earthquakes, increasing amounts of lava at the summit, and a change in the slope of the volcano all indicated in recent weeks that an eruption may happen soon. This isn’t necessarily the case in other parts of the world, where earthquakes, tornadoes, fires, and floods can spring up without warning. 
        The evacuation of nearby communities because of Kilauea’s eruption isn’t the only instance in recent months of people leaving their homes to get out of the path of an erupting volcano. When Mount Mayon in the Philippines began spewing ash into the air in January, tens of thousands of people needed to evacuate. Over 100,000 people in northeast Bali were evacuated in November when Indonesia’s Mount Agung began rumbling, and thousands of tourists also fled.

【題組】48. Volcano ashes are great for?
(A) building
(B) farming
(C) piling
(D) dumping


7(C).

19. _____, North America had lost a significant portion of its primary forests.
(A) The arrival of even European settlers before
(B) Before the arrival of European settlers even
(C) Even before the arrival of European settlers
(D) European settlers even before they arrived 


8(A).

8. Personal interest is not always ___ with public interest.
(A) compatible
(B) counsel
(C) adversity
(D) bland


9(B).

22. This bird has mistakenly eaten a plastic product _____ on the ocean surface.
(A) floats
(B) floating
(C) floated
(D) float


10(B).

35. It is an activity often used in language teaching where one student has information that the other student does not have but needs. Students must interact with others by using the target language as means to complete the task. It’s called _____.
(A) shadow technique
(B) information gap
(C) switching method
(D) manipulatives


11(D).

14. You didn’t look well yesterday. You _____ come to the class today if you don’t want to.
(A) didn’t have to
(B) haven’t
(C) should have
(D) don’t have to


12(B).

40. If he ________ the detective honestly, he would not have been arrested.
(A) would have answered
(B) had answered
(C) answered
(D) should answer


快捷工具
完全正確!

今日錯題測驗-教甄◆英文-國小-阿摩線上測驗

yummy983kimo剛剛做了阿摩測驗,考了100分