You could benefit from flipping through the pages of I Can"t Believe You Asked That, a book by author Phillip Milano that"s subtitled, A No-Holds-Barred Q&A A bout Race, Sex, Religion, and Other Terrifying Topics. For the past seven years, Milano—who describes himself as "a straight, white middle class married guy raised in an affluent suburb of Chicago"—as operated yforum.com, a Website that was created to get us talking. Through the posting of probing, provocative and sometimes simply inane questions and the answers they generate, people are encouraged to have a no-holds-barred exchange on topics across racial, ethnic and cultural lines. More often than not, the questions grow out of our biases and fears and the stereotypes that fuel misunderstanding among us. As with the Web site, Milano hopes his book will be a social and cultural elixir. "The time is right for a new "culture of curiosity" to begin to unfold, with people finally breaking down the last barrier to improve race and cultural relations" by actually talking to each other about their differences, Milano said in an e-mail message to me. Milano wisely used the Internet to spark these conversations. In seven years, it has generated 50,000 postings—many of them questions that people find hard to ask in a face-to-face exchange with the subjects of their inquiries. But in his book, which was published earlier this month, Milano gives readers an opportunity to read the questions and a mix of answers that made it onto his Web site. "I am curious about what people who have been blind from birth "see" in their dreams," a 13-year old boy wanted to know. "Why do so many mentally disabled people have such poor-looking haircuts and "nerdy" clothes?" a woman asked. "How do African-Americans perceive God?" a white teenager wanted to know. "Do they pray to a white God or a black God?" Like I said, these questions can generate a range of emotions and reactions. But the point of Milano"s Web site, and his book, is not to get people mad, but to inform us "about the lives and experiences" of others. Though many of the answers that people offered to the questions posed in his book are conflicting, these responses are balanced by the comments of experts whose responses to the queries also appear in the book. Getting people to openly say what they are thinking about things that give rise to stereotypes and bigotry has never been easy. Most of us save those conversations for gatherings of people who look or think like us.
单选题 The purpose of the website is to
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】解析:这是一道细节题。根据第二段内容可知,网站设立的意图是让人们在没有民族、宗教等障碍的情况下自由交流。"给人们明确大胆地表述看法的机会"不准确,过于笼统。其他选项没有文章依据。
单选题 The "last barrier"(Para. 3) mentioned in Milano"s e-mail refers to
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:这是一道词义题。依据上下文"人们被鼓励着就涉及不同种族、民族和文化的话题进行无保留、无障碍的交流"可以判断,所谓的"last barrier"指的是不同种族和宗教的人们缺乏直接沟通这层障碍。
单选题 The quotations in Paragraph 4 are intended to
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】解析:本题涉及段落中引语的列举意图,难度很大。引用某人的话语和举例子一样,都是为了证明或阐述前述或后续观点,找到观点句就找到了答案。就本题而言,第四段列举网上的所提问题只不过是为了说明段落开头的主题观点句(但在他本月早些时候出版的书中,Milano给了读者一个机会去阅读网上所贴的问题及其五花八门的回答),故"举例说明人们在网上所作的提问"即为答案。"证明人们头脑中所存在的成规陋见"与文义不符,"说明不同的人有不同的关注"于常识似乎是对的,但与该段开头的主题观点部分毫不相关,故排除。
单选题 The author"s positive attitude towards Milano"s work is shown in
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:这是一道细节题,问"何以见得作者对Milano的工作持积极态度"。依据第五段 abut"一句可以看出,作者通过对Milano的网站和出书的意图(point)进行解释来表示自己对其是赞赏的。其它选项均没有依据。
单选题 What is the main idea of this passage?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】解析:本题问文章主题。本文主要是介绍一本由网站所滋生出的书,书(包括网站)中所列的问题和回答的最终目的都是为了解决人们相互之间的成见,故答案为"带有尖锐提问的一本书帮助人们面对成见"。选项"一个网站缩小了不同文化之间的隔阂"不对,因为文章的主旨不是说一个网站,而是一本书。选项"经过持续的努力,最后的屏障瓦解了"不对,因为这只是文章中提到的部分细节,不能作为全文的主旨。"一个人致力于人们之间的理解"也非文章主旨,排除。