Most students try to learn English grammar using grammar textbooks. They study grammar rules and take grammar tests. They use an analytical approach, attempting to memorize, and then apply, a great number of rules.
However, research has proved this method inefficient and ineffective. The truth is, the human brain simply cannot consciously remember process and use hundreds of or thousands of grammar rules. Real speech is too fast.
Native speakers do not learn grammar in this way, but rather intuitively (憑直覺(jué)地) and unconsciously. They learn in a complete way, not by attempting to memorize individual grammar rules. As a result, native speakers use correct grammar fluently and easily.
Fortunately, it is possible for English learners to learn grammar this way. Language teacher Blaine Ray has developed a unique "intuitive" approach to teach English grammar. Her system uses "point of view" stories to teach the patterns of English grammar, allowing students unconsciously to acquire correct grammar without ever studying grammar rules.
In this system, the teacher first tells a simple story from one point of view. It may be told about the past, then repeated, but beginning with "since he was a child"; then repeated again, but this time about the future.
Listening to these stories allows students intuitively and effortlessly to learn English grammar and makes them be able to use it correctly when they speak.
Point of View Stories is a creative new way to study English grammar, and offers hope to millions of frustrated English learners.
小題1:Which of the following ways is approved by the author?
A.Remembering grammar rules
B.Taking grammar tests.
C.Analyzing grammatical structure
D.Applying language to situations.
小題2:What does the underlined part "this way" in the fourth paragraph refer to?
A.Talking to native speakers when learning.
B.Learning English grammar in a complete way.
C.Using correct English grammar.
D.Learning English grammar 4from a teacher.
小題3:From this passage we learn that ______.
A.native speakers learn English grammar by listening to stories
B.Blaine Ray’s method gets students to grasp correct grammar unconsciously
C.Blaine Ray teaches grammar rules by asking students to tell stories
D.it’s hard for students to speak correct English in the new system
小題4: This passage wants to ______.
A.criticize the traditional way of learning grammar
B.introduce a new way to study English grammar
C.a(chǎn)sk students to learn English grammar by listening to stories
D.tell us how the native speakers learn English grammar
小題5:why shouldn’t the English learners use an analytical approach?
A.because the analytical approach can let them learn English grammar effortlessly
B.because the analytical approach makes them be able to use English correctly when they speak.
C.because the analytical approach can’t let them memorize and then apply a great number of rules.
D.because Real speech is too fast.

小題1:D
小題2:B
小題3:B
小題4:B
小題5:D

試題分析:本文介紹了一種新的學(xué)習(xí)英語(yǔ)語(yǔ)法的方法叫"point of view"教師首先從一個(gè)觀點(diǎn)出發(fā)來(lái)講一個(gè)簡(jiǎn)單的故事。這個(gè)故事從過(guò)去開(kāi)始講起接著讓學(xué)生重復(fù),然后講到未來(lái),讓學(xué)生不斷地重復(fù),這樣就在不知不覺(jué)中領(lǐng)會(huì)了語(yǔ)法的使用。
小題1:細(xì)節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)Native speakers do not learn grammar in this way, but rather intuitively (憑直覺(jué)地) and unconsciously. They learn in a complete way, not by attempting to memorize individual grammar rules. 把語(yǔ)言運(yùn)用到實(shí)際的生活中,故選D。
小題2:詞義猜測(cè)題。根據(jù)上文They learn in a complete way, 這種方式指的是學(xué)英語(yǔ)語(yǔ)法是以一種完全不同的方式,故選B。
小題3:細(xì)節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)Her system uses "point of view" stories to teach the patterns of English grammar, allowing students unconsciously to acquire correct grammar without ever studying grammar rules. Blaine Ray是讓學(xué)生無(wú)意識(shí)地不知不覺(jué)中能夠?qū)W到語(yǔ)法,故選B。
小題4:寫作意圖題。根據(jù)短文的內(nèi)容給我們介紹了一種新的學(xué)習(xí)英語(yǔ)語(yǔ)法的方法,故選B。
小題5:細(xì)節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)Real speech is too fast.因?yàn)樵趯?shí)際講英語(yǔ)的過(guò)程中英語(yǔ)是很快的,故選D。
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C.EnglandD.The United Kingdom
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B.4 parts: Scotland, Wales, England and Ireland
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“Singapore is a wealthy country with excellent healthcare. Favorite pastimes(消遣) are eating and shopping, so the findings should apply to other western countries.” he said.
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A.the healthcare in Singapore should be greatly improved
B.2 soft drinks a day are considered harmful to health
C.87 out of 140 volunteers developed pancreatic cancer
D.sugar might not be the only cause of pancreatic cancer.
小題2:How does Susan seem to feel about the findings of the study?
A.SatisfiedB.DoubtfulC.WorriedD.Hopeful
小題3:The best title of the text might be_______
A.The Deadliest Forms of Cancer
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Their most amazing suggestion was that what controlled the gate was not just signals from sensory nerves but also emotions and other “output” from the brain. They were saying that pulling on the rope need not make the bell ring. The bell itself—the mind— could stop it. This theory led to a great deal of research into how such factors as mood, gender, and beliefs influence the experience of pain. In a British study, for example, researchers measured pain threshold and tolerance levels in 53 ballet dancers and 53 university students by using a common measurement: after immersing your hand in body-temperature water for two minutes to establish a baseline condition, you put your hand in a bowl of ice water and start a clock running. You mark the time when it begins to hurt: that is your pain threshold. Then you mark the time when it hurts too much to keep your hand in the water: that is your pain tolerance. The test is always stopped at 120 seconds, to prevent injury.
The results were striking. On average female students reported pain at 16 seconds and pulled their hands out of the ice water at 37 seconds. Female dancers were almost three times as long on both counts. Men in both groups had a higher threshold and tolerance for pain, but the difference between male dancers and male nondancers was nearly as large. What explains that difference? Probably it has something to do with the psychology of ballet dancers—a group known for self-discipline, physical fitness, and competitiveness, as well as by a high rate of chronic(慢性) injury. Their driven personalities and competitive culture evidently accustom them to pain. Other studies along these lines have shown that outgoing people have greater pain tolerance and that, with training, one can reduce one’s sensitivity to pain.
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小題1:The primary purpose of the passage is to               .
A.describe how modern research has updated an old explanation
B.support a traditional view with new data
C.promote a particular attitude towards physical experience
D.suggest a creative treatment for a medical condition
小題2:Which statement best describes Descartes theory of pain presented in paragraph 1?
A.The brain can shut pain off at will.
B.The brain plays no part in the body’s experience of pain.
C.Pain can be caused in many different ways.
D.Pain is an automatic response to bodily injury.
小題3:The author implies that the reason why the gate control was “amazing” was that it        .
A.offered an extremely new and original explanation
B.was just opposite to people’s everyday experiences
C.was grounded in an ridiculous logic
D.was so sensible it should have been proposed centuries before
小題4:The author refers to “chronic back pain” as an example of something that is        .
A.costly, because it troubles millions of people
B.puzzling, because it sometimes has no obvious cause
C.disappointing, because it does not improve with treatment
D.worrying, because it lies beyond the reach of medicine
小題5:The last sentence of the passage serves mainly to express that         .
A.scientific judgments are difficult to understand
B.theoretical investigations are generally useless
C.researchers still have a long way to go before the puzzle is made clear
D.there is always something puzzling at the heart of science

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To many web-building spiders, most of whom are nearly blind, the web is their essential window on the world: their means of communicating, capturing prey, meeting mates and protecting themselves. A web-building spider without its web is like a men cast away on an island of solid rock,totally out of touch and destined to starve to death. So important is the web to an orb-web spider's survival that the animal will continue to construct new webs daily even if it is being starved. For 16 days the starving spider builds completely normal webs. Then, as the animal gets scrawnier, it constructs a wider-meshed (網(wǎng)孔、網(wǎng)眼)web using fewer strands(線). Such webs would only trap larger prey, which is more economical from the perspective of a starving spider. The spider stores energy by recycling web protein. It simply eats its own web each evening and reuses it to produce new silk. In studies with radioactivity, labeled materials, it was found that 95 percent of web protein reappears in the next day web. Most of the energy needed for web-building is used in walking over the strands as they are laid down. Scientists are impressed by the adaptability of the spider's highly preprogrammed brain, which is larger for its size than the brain of any other invertebrate(無(wú)脊推動(dòng)物). If web-building is interrupted, or if some of the existing strands are destroyed, the spider simply goes back to see where the web is left off and then finishes building a normal web. One spider will finish building the incomplete web of another.
小題1:Which of the following best expresses the main ideas of the passage?
A.Secrets of Spiders' Adaptability
B.Importance of Webs to Spiders
C.Secrets of the Spiders' Life
D.Spiders' Highly Preprogrammed Brain
小題2:According to the passage, which of the following statements is TRUE?
A.Most spiders will stop conducting webs when hungry.
B.One Web-building spider usually conducts one web.
C.Web-building spiders will probably die without their webs.
D.Web-building spiders have good eyesight.
小題3:The underlined word “scrawnier” in the second paragraph probably means ______. 
A.weaker but good-looking
B.fatter and stronger
C.nice and healthier
D.thinner and bony
小題4:A spider's ability to finish an incomplete web proves that ______.
A.it has a highly preprogrammed brain
B.it reuses its web protein to reproduce new silk
C.the web is everything for a spider
D.it is able to rebuild a destroyed web

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