购买
下载掌阅APP,畅读海量书库
立即打开
畅读海量书库
扫码下载掌阅APP

1.2 Identifying Negative Facts

FOCUS

阅读下面的文章并回答问题:

题目问的是文章提到哪三个导致土地污染的原因,没有提到哪一个。正确答案应该是文章中没有提到的那一个:the decomposition of organic matter;其他选项都是导致土地污染的原因。

有些托福题会问到虚假信息:文章中没有提到的信息。

STUDY

1. Negative Facts

事实(fact)是真实发生的事件、现象或者其他种类的信息并在文中正确地呈现。虚假信息(negative fact)就是没有说明是正确的信息——可能是错误的或者在文章中根本没有提到的信息。

托福考试中的虚假信息题考查考生能否判断出信息是否在文中出现以及是否正确。虚假信息题题型大致如下:

The passage discusses all of the following EXCEPT _____.

All of the following are mentioned in the passage EXCEPT _____.

All of the following are examples of _____ EXCEPT _____.

_____are characterized by all of the following EXCEPT _____.

According to the passage, all of the following statements are true EXCEPT:

Which of the following is NOT mentioned as _____?

Which of the following is NOT given as a reason for _____?

2. Answer Choices

在带有EXCEPT或NOT字样的问题中,三个选项是正确的,一个选项是错误的或者文章中没有提及。注意这样的选项:

选项信息在文章中没有提到

或者

选项信息是错误的。

浏览(scanning)是一种可以帮助考生回答虚假信息题的常用技巧。题目和选项告诉考生浏览什么样的信息:例子、原因、事情起因、作用或者特点。浏览就是寻找有助于回答问题的特定事实和细节。

3. Sample Question

题干中的重要单词是EXCEPT,它提示考生要找出不是鲱鱼数量下降原因的那个选项。首先在文章中浏览各选项的关键词。哪一个选项不是鲱鱼数量下降的原因?

根据文章可以判断出reduced populations of salmon and harbor seals是不正确的,因此为正确答案。文章指出:More herring might be eaten by greater numbers of predator species such as salmon and harbor seals…

另外三个选项都是鲱鱼数量下降的原因:

Lower numbers of spawning herring may be related to…loss or disruption of critical habitat near shores, especially eelgrass beds on which eggs are deposited.

More herring might be eaten by greater numbers of predator species….

Causes may also include changes in water conditions, such as…dissolved oxygen.

PRACTICE

Exercise 1.2.A

Read the passages and choose the best answer to each question.

QUESTION 1

An important element of drama is that it is a presentation by performers in front of an audience—for example, a ceremony conducted by civic leaders before members of a community. Another aspect is costumes, such as those worn by tribal chiefs who impersonate animals or gods. Moreover, drama involves storytelling—recitation of myths or legends, teaching lessons through stories—to a group of listeners. Sometimes the storyteller imitates the characters in the story by changing his or her voice for different characters.

1. The passage mentions all of the following as aspects of drama EXCEPT

A wearing costumes

B performing before an audience

C writing dialogue for characters

D narrating a story

QUESTION 2

Skin cancer is the most prevalent of all cancers. The principal cause of skin cancer is overexposure to sunlight, according to most medical experts. Chronic sun exposure—especially when it causes sunburn or blistering—results in more skin cancer than does any other risk factor, including exposure to x–rays and a family history of the disease.The most effective preventative measure is sun avoidance.

2. All of the following are factors that can cause skin cancer EXCEPT

A exposure to x–rays

B sun blistering

C family history of skin cancer

D sun avoidance

QUESTIONS 3–4

1 Laughter is a key to a good life and good health: it can diminish feelings of tension, anger, and sadness. Just as exercise conditions our bodies, frequent laughter can train our bodies to be healthier. When laughter is a regular experience, it lowers blood pressure and boosts brain chemicals that fight pain. It can also reduce stress hormones that increase vulnerability to illness, as well as increase hormones that have been shown to help produce restful sleep. Laughter is like an instant vacation in the way it changes our psychobiology.

2 To make laughter a regular part of your life, try keeping a humor journal in which you record some of the amusing things that happen to you. Another technique is to create a weekly fun time to look forward to, such as watching a comedy video or having a dinner with friends that features joke telling. Another sure source of laughter is spending time with children and animals.

3. According to the passage, laughter provides all of the following benefits EXCEPT

A elevating brain chemicals that prevent pain

B increasing the body’s vulnerability to illness

C promoting a more restful kind of sleep

D reducing feelings of stress and anger

4. The author recommends all of the following EXCEPT

A playing tricks on family and friends

B planning a special fun time every week

C enjoying time with pets and children

D writing down humorous experiences

QUESTIONS 5–6

Nearly all animals have a good sense of their own bodies, the trait of physical self–awareness. For this reason, animals do not generally bump into things. Horses know how much room they have around them when they move through narrow spaces. A horse can run between two trees or around large rocks in a way that clearly shows the horse’s knowledge of its own body size. Animals show self–awareness in how they respond to discomfort. A dog, for example, has no trouble knowing where to scratch itself to kill a flea. Many animals show self–awareness when they recognize their own reflection. While looking at itself in a mirror, an elephant may move its trunk over different parts of its body. A chimpanzee will make faces, look inside its mouth, or stick out its tongue in front of a mirror.

5. The passage describes all of the following animals as self–aware EXCEPT

A horses

B dogs

C fleas

D elephants

6. Which of the following is NOT given as an example of self–awareness?

A Running between trees without touching them

B Using sign language to communicate

C Scratching to relieve discomfort

D Making faces in front of a mirror

QUESTIONS 7–8

1 Indian filmmaker Satyajit Ray is still regarded by many film critics as one of the world’s great directors. Ray’s films are known for their compassion, honesty, and quiet dignity. His Apu Trilogy, three films about Bengali life, was hailed as a national epic in the 1950s. The first film, Pather Panchali, is the story of a Bengali family’s noble struggle against poverty and the heartbreaks of life. It was followed by Aparajito, in which the son of the family, Apu, grows to manhood. In the final film, The World of Apu,the young man marries, but fails at his life’s ambitions, and then, after losing his wife, he wanders across the country for several years before returning home to claim his son.

2 Satyajit Ray’s movies have never been very popular in India itself, but those who appreciate his unobtrusive technique and his compassion for his characters view his films as a poetic record of Indian life.

7. According to the passage, the films of Satyajit Ray are characterized by all of the following EXCEPT

A adventure

B honesty

C compassion

D dignity

8. The third film of the Apu Trilogy deals with all of the following themes EXCEPT

A failure at a major goal

B loss of a spouse

C struggle against poverty

D going home after a long absence

QUESTIONS 9–10

1 Archaeology is the study of prehistoric and historic cultures through the analysis of material remains. Archaeologists interpret the past from the objects made by past peoples. Often these objects lie buried in the ground, so our image of the archaeologist is of a scientist who is always digging. Archaeological digs include ruins of buildings and monuments, and also objects made by people who often had no written language and therefore no other record of their way of life. Tools, weapons, body ornaments, household furnishings, and items used in religious ceremonies are all examples of artifacts that typically turn up in digs.

2 Like historians, archaeologists establish the sequence of events that occurred in a given place and time period. But unlike historians, they take on a time span of roughly half a million years. Archaeologists try not only to piece together what happened in a particular setting but also to fit these small pieces into a much bigger picture. They aim to document how big changes occurred in the way peoples exploited their environment and one another.

9. The passage mentions all of the following as studied by archaeologists EXCEPT

A weapons

B religious objects

C diaries

D remains of buildings

10. Archaeologists do all of the following EXCEPT

A plan and design more efficient uses for objects and materials

B determine what took place in a specific place and time period

C dig up the remains of objects that are buried in the ground

D explain how past humans related to others and their environment

Exercise 1.2.B

Read the passages and choose the best answer to each question.

QUESTION 1

In the 1930s, the Great Plains of North America came to be called the Dust Bowl after several large dust storms destroyed the region. The Dust Bowl was the result of human activity and bad weather that led to soil erosion. In the previous decade, farmers had plowed millions of acres of grassland to make room for growing wheat. Consequently, when a period of dry weather struck the region, there were no native grasses to hold the soil in place. The wind lifted the dry soil and carried it away in great clouds. The Dust Bowl was an ecological and economic disaster, resulting in severe soil loss, crop failures, and economic hardship.

1. Which of the following is NOT given as a cause of the Dust Bowl?

A Cold weather

B Soil erosion

C Loss of native grasses

D Lack of rain

QUESTIONS 2–3

Political parties are necessary in the exercise of democracy in nation states. The enlargement of the electorate—the body of qualified voters—has increased the importance of parties to the point where it is practically impossible for a candidate to get elected without the support of a party organization. This is because the variety of issues facing nation states has complicated the problem of creating an informed electorate that can use its vote responsibly. The job of influencing popular opinion through newspapers, television, the Internet, and other mass media is too complicated and costly for an individual candidate to undertake. Although individual candidates continue to appear at public meetings—to answer questions and shake hands with voters—the influencing of public opinion on a mass scale has become a specialized technique.Building political support on a nation–wide scale carries a high cost, and it requires nationally organized and well–financed parties. Party organizations thus have come to occupy a prominent place in the functioning of democracies.

2. According to the passage, what is one effect of the enlargement of the electorate?

A There are more political parties than ever before.

B Candidates need political parties to get elected.

C Political parties control all forms of mass media.

D It is impossible to have a perfect democracy.

3. All of the following are given as reasons for the necessity of political parties EXCEPT:

A Influencing popular opinion through the media is a large and complex job.

B It is difficult to inform voters about the variety of important issues.

C Building nation–wide support is too expensive for individual candidates.

D Voters prefer candidates that express the values of an established party.

QUESTION 4

The music called “blues” has deep roots in African–American history. In the Mississippi Delta, men working in the cotton fields and on construction crews chanted and sang as they worked. These work songs and “field hollers” expressed the pain and sorrow of the workers and helped to pass the time. During the evenings, the workers sang these songs, accompanied by guitar and banjo. Live dance bands started playing blues songs, and female singers further developed the style. The blues spread from its birthplace in the Mississippi Delta to other rural areas of the South. Eventually, the music traveled northward with African Americans who moved from the South to cities in the North. The blues contributed to the development of other types of music, such as the big–band jazz of the 1930s.

4. According to the passage, all of the following statements are true EXCEPT:

A Field hollers and songs helped workers to pass the time.

B Blues music originated in the Mississippi Delta.

C Dance bands in northern cities invented the blues.

D The blues had an influence on big–band jazz music.

QUESTIONS 5–6

1 Coral reefs are one of the earth’s most ancient ecosystems and also the richest, most diverse, and most beautiful ecosystems in any ocean. The huge cities built by corals provide shelter and food for billions of other marine animals. A quarter of all sea creatures depend on coral reefs during some part of their life cycles.

2 In the past century, the ocean’s surface temperature has risen an average of 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit. It has taken only this slight increase in sea–surface temperature to sicken the world’s coral reefs. The brilliant blue, purple, green, gold, and pink have begun to disappear as a disease called bleaching drains the color and the life from the reefs. Scientists have reported mass bleaching on reefs in the Caribbean, in southern Japan, in Indonesia, and on the world’s largest coral reef, the Great Barrier Reef, where the corals have bleached to a dirty white.

3 Bleaching has killed more corals than all other causes combined. More than 16 percent of the world’s corals have sickened and died from bleaching. Millions of aquatic animals that depend directly or indirectly on corals have died as well—anemones, sponges, mollusks,shrimp, crabs, fish, turtles, and seabirds—making the loss of corals a catastrophe for the natural world.

5. Which of the following is NOT stated about coral reefs?

A They are among the oldest ecosystems in the world.

B They have caused sea–surface temperatures to rise.

C They are brilliantly colored when they are healthy.

D They supply shelter for a diversity of marine life.

6. All of the following are effects of the bleaching of coral reefs EXCEPT

A fading colors

B loss of dependent animals

C death of corals

D rising water level

QUESTIONS 7–8

1 What made Native American and European subsistence cycles so different from one another in colonial America had less to do with their use of plants than with their use of animals. Domesticated grazing animals and the plow were the most distinguishing characteristics of European agricultural practices. The Native Americans’ relationship to the deer, moose, and beaver they hunted was far different from that of the Europeans to the pigs, cows, sheep, and horses they owned.

2 Where Natives had contented themselves with burning the woods and concentrating their hunting in the fall and winter months, the English sought a much more total and year–round control over their animals’ lives. The effects of that control could be seen in most aspects of New England’s rural economy. By the end of the colonial period, the Europeans were responsible for a host of changes in the New England landscape: endless miles of fences, a system of country roads, and new fields covered with grass, clover,and buttercups.

7. What point does the author make about Native Americans and Europeans?

A They competed over the same plants and animals.

B They both tried to control New England’s animals.

C They taught each other techniques for hunting animals.

D They differed in their attitudes toward animals.

8. All of the following were agricultural practices of Europeans in New England EXCEPT

A constructing fences

B burning the woods

C plowing fields

D planting grass and clover

QUESTIONS 9–10

1 Landscape architects design landscapes in residential areas, public parks, and commercial zones. They are hired by many types of organizations, from real estate firms starting new developments to municipalities constructing airports or parks. They usually plan the arrangement of vegetation, walkways, and other natural features of open spaces.

2 In planning a site, landscape architects first consider the nature and purpose of the project, the funds available, and the proposed elements. Next, they study the site and map such features as the slope of the land, the positions of existing buildings, existing utilities,roads, fences, walkways, and trees. Then, working either as the leader of a design team or in consultation with the project architect or engineer, they draw up plans to develop the site. If the plans are approved, they prepare working drawings to show all existing and proposed features. They outline the methods of con structing features and draw up lists of building materials.

3 Newcomers to the field usually start as junior drafters, tracing drawings and doing other simple drafting work for architectural, landscape architec tural, or engineering firms.After two or three years, they can carry a design through all stages of development. Highly qualified landscape architects may become associates in private firms, but usually those who progress this far open their own offices.

9. Landscape architects do all of the following EXCEPT

A design landscapes in residential and commercial zones

B decide where to build walkways in public parks

C draw or paint scenes from the natural environment

D plan the arrangement of vegetation and other natural features

10. All of the following are listed as stages in the landscape design process EXCEPT

A thinking about the project’s purpose and the funding

B building a fence around the construction site

C making drawings that include old and new features

D preparing lists of building materials and methods

Answers to Exercises 1.2.A through 1.2.B are on pages 634–635.

EXTENSION

事实还是观点?从下列资源中选择一篇文章。

a science textbook the international page of a newspaper

a book of essays the editorial page of a newspaper

确保班里每位同学都拿到一份文章的复印件。在课上,找出文章中描述的事实和表达的观点。讨论下列问题:

a. 事实是什么?

b. 对每个人来说,事实总是对的吗?

c. 观点是什么?

d. 作者是如何运用事实和观点的?

e. 你是如何区分事实和观点的? sYCLkIaLM/ABD7RPqAYwywp7QV9jFX2zYKIVgWrmZPJmWvtXgg9xUKiNSapbgrdW

点击中间区域
呼出菜单
上一章
目录
下一章
×