试题与答案

阅读下列唐诗,完成下面问题。 出塞 马戴 金带连环束战袍,马头冲雪过临洮。 卷旗

题型:阅读理解与欣赏

题目:

阅读下列唐诗,完成下面问题。

出塞

马戴

金带连环束战袍,马头冲雪过临洮。

卷旗夜劫单于帐,乱斫胡兵缺宝刀。

1、有人说,第二句中的“冲”字与第四句中的“缺”字用的很传神,请结合诗句具体分析。

 _________________________________________________________________________________

2、这首诗描写了一次边塞战事,请结合全诗分析作者塑造了戍边将士怎样的形象。

 _________________________________________________________________________________

答案:

1、第二句的冲字写将士顶风冒雪奔赴战场的情形,表现出戍边战士一往直前的英雄气概。第四句的缺字运用使动用法,写战士宝刀砍到缺口,言极战争惨烈,战斗时间长。(意对即可)

2、塑造了戍边将士信心百倍、斗志昂扬、英勇无畏的形象。(意对即可)

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题型:填空题

解释下列语句中加粗字的含义,有活用现象的写出活用类型。 

①樊於期乃曰(“前”,______)   

②其人居未来?(“远”,______) 

③乃遂收盛樊於期之首,封之(“函”,______)   

④顷之未发,太子之(“迟”,______) 

⑤丹不忍以己之(“私”,______)   

⑥皆白衣冠以送之(“衣冠”,______) 

⑦发尽指冠(“上”,______)   

⑧群臣之(“怪”,______) 

⑨秦王惊,自引而起,袖(“绝”,______)   

⑩(秦王)乃朝服(“朝服”,______)

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题型:填空题

Small, Imperfectly Formed


One has to look a long time for an American politician of any political stripe who has failed to laud small businesses. Still, many have little clue as to what makes such businesses succeed or fail.
Federal agencies aimed at helping small business, such as the Small Business Administration and the Minority Business Development Agency, have been around for half a century, yet persistent differences remain between the performance of businesses founded by white, male entrepreneurs and the rest. Blacks are less likely to be self-employed, for example, and when they are their businesses, on average, have lower sales and profits than do their white-or Asian-owned counterparts. If researchers could explain the causes of these differences, policy-makers could (at least in theory) supply small businesses with more useful help.
Two researchers for the Census Bureau’s Centre for Economic Studies, Ron Jarmin and C.J. Krizan, recently published a working paper attempting to understand demographic differences behind small businesses’ success and failure. They concentrated on the years 2002 to 2005, with three databases at their disposal: the Survey of Business Owners, conducted every five years; the Longitudinal Foreign Trade Transaction Database, which includes every US export transaction between 1992 and 2005; and a database co-developed by Mr. Jarmin, which allowed the authors to track whether the owners of the firms in their sample had prior experience being their own bosses. By drawing from on the power of the Census’s data collection efforts, the authors hoped to create a more nuanced picture of business survival.
Some of their findings were not terribly surprising. A firm’s chances of survival, regardless of the race or sex of its owner, decreased in poorer areas; and the better the education of the founder, the more likely it was to succeed. Businesses owned by Asians, Hispanics, or Pacific Islanders were more likely to be exporters. Older entrepreneurs were more likely to use personal savings to start their businesses; younger owners were more likely to have to close up shop during the study period than were their middle-aged rivals.
However, the data also confirmed that black-and female-owned businesses tended to perform worse than the average. They were also less likely to have been funded by bank loans. Still, the businesses that survived, regardless of the owner’s race, tended to add employees at similar rates. Furthermore, after controlling for factors such as the education and race of the owner, there was no statistically significant difference in firms’ abilities to expand into different locations. Finally, black entrepreneurs were more likely to have a history of self-employment than their white counterparts. Messrs Jarmin and Krizan’s paper is not the first to suggest that black entrepreneurs, less likely to have other business owners in their family or personal networks, tend to "start small" when they venture out on their own.
Most researchers get to end their papers by speculating, usually without much fear of consequence, as to the policy implications of their work. The authors of this paper, not wishing to imply that the Census Bureau might have policy opinions, declined to do so. But the reader can make some guesses. One is that mentorship programmes may be particularly useful for promoting entrepreneurship among blacks. Another is that reaching out to businesses based on the owner’s race might be less useful than supporting businesses in poorer areas. And small businesses of all stripes would be helped by improving that other institution lauded by politicians: America’s education system.

Which of the following statements is true
A. Most small businesses are operated by white people.
B. Federal agencies have failed in giving small businesses much help.
C. Small businesses run by white male people are generally more profitable.
D. More federal agencies aimed at helping small businesses will be established.

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