单选题 The first device men had for measuring time was the sundial, which was invented around 700 B.C. The early sundial was a hollow half bowl with a bead (有孔小珠) fixed in the center. As the sun traveled across the sky, the shadow of the bead traveled in and is across the face of the bowl. The bowl was divided into 12 equal parts called hours. The length of these hours varied with the seasons, as days were longer or shorter. In the summer an hour might have been half again as long as our hours now, in the winter only half as long. For 1,600 years this way of measuring hours by dividing the daylight into 12 parts didn't change.
A minute is the sixtieth part of an hour and a second is the sixtieth part of a minute. Both of these measurements are for convenience in dividing time into useful sections. The ancient Babylonians reckoned time more accurately than the people who came after than for several thousand years. They used a water clock, the water running through a hole of a very carefully calculated size from one jar into another. The time it took for the water to drip completely through was the length of the day of the equinox. Day and night are equal at that time, each lasting 12 hours.
Our modem industry depends on clocks and timing. Assembly lines run on exact time schedules. In the manufacture of almost every article around you there are certain processes that must be timed precisely. China must be baked for an exact length of time, glass hardened, paint dried electrically, canned food processed. If you look around your room, you will probably see dozens of other things that had to be timed when they were made, some of them to a millionth of a second. Parts of radio tubes and light bulbs must be timed as exactly as this.
Our whole world runs on a time schedule. Trains and planes, schools and business, radios, traffic lights, and the cake for dessert all depend on the clock.
Flyers make a clock out of the sky, so they can call directions. They imagine it to be a huge clock face with their plane at the center of the dial. The nose of the plane points to 12 o'clock. Then if one man yells "see gull at 2 o'clock", everybody knows exactly where to look.
单选题 The first time-measuring invented around 700 B. C was shaped like a______.
  • A. flying saucer
  • B. bowl
  • C. flat disk
  • D. ball
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】[解析] 依据文章第一段,“The early sundial was a hollow half bowl with…”显然选项B是符合题意的。
单选题 Measured by the sundial, an hour in the summer is______.our hours now.
  • A. only half as long as
  • B. a little longer than
  • C. the same as
  • D. one and a half as long as
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】[解析] 从文中的第一段,“In the summer an hour might have been half again as long as our hours now”很容易看出选项D是正确的。
单选题 The early Babylonians kept fairly accurate time by means of______.
  • A. a standing pole
  • B. a measuring glass
  • C. a clock moved by water
  • D. water jars with measured openings
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】[解析] 文章第二段“They used a water clock,the water running through a hole of a very carefully calculated size from one jar into another”叙述了此题相关内容。选项A,B,C均与原文不符,只有选项D是正确的。
单选题 When they are made, parts of radio tubes must be timed______.
  • A. to a certain length of time
  • B. much longer than light bulbs
  • C. to a millionth of a second
  • D. as exactly as china and glass
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】[解析] 依据文章第三段“some of them to a millionth of a second.Parts of radio tubes and light bulbs must be timed as exactly as this”可知,无线电电子管和灯泡的定时可以精确到百分之一秒。显然选项C符合文章的意思。
单选题 "Flyers make a clock out of sky." means flyers______.
  • A. imagine the sky to be a huge clock face
  • B. tell time by observing the sky
  • C. regard the sky as a sundial
  • D. keep their plane at the center of the sky
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】[解析] 从文章最后一句“Then if one man yells,'see gull at 2 o'clock' everybody knows exactly where to look”可看出飞行员是为了弄清方向才以天空为表,所以选项B正确,而选项A,C,D与原文不符,所以答案是B。