还剩11页未读,继续阅读
本资源只提供10页预览,全部文档请下载后查看!喜欢就下载吧,查找使用更方便
文本内容:
年辽宁省营口市西市区考研《英语一》点睛提分卷2023Section IUse ofEnglishDirections:Read the following text.Choose the best wordsfor each numbered blankand markA,B,C orD on the ANSWERSHEET.10pointsJackson livedon topof the hill.From hishouse,he couldsee thesea and the village1,One day,the villagers2something differentabout thesea.The seaseemed to be movingfrom the
3.None of the villagersknew what washappening.海啸Jackson understoodwhatwasgoing on.He hadseen such an4when he was young.A tsunamiwasapproaching and the villagershad to be5,but therewas notime tosend amessage to the wholevillage.Tom!he6to hisgrandson.“7a torchquickly!^^The boydid whathe wastold Jackson took thetorchand sethis8on fire.Immediately,red9shot upwardsand thicksmoke roseinto thesky.Tom criedout,Grandfather!Why areyou settingour houseon fire”Jackson didnot answer.10he stoodquietlyand watchedthe villagers.Suddenly,some villagersnoticed the11and shoutedat everyoneto runup the hill tohelp putout the fire.When Jacksonsaw everyonerunning towards,him,hewasso12,The villagersdid their best but they13to controlthefire.Jacksons housewas completelyburned downbut hestood onthehill14,They thoughtJackson had gone
15.They staredat himin disbelief.Finally,Jackson said,16towards thesea.The villagersturned andsaw a huge17of waterrushingtowards thevillage.They wereshocked to see thewater18the wholevillage anddestroying everythingin its
19.Nothing wasleft of their homes20everyone wassafe onthehill.The villagersrealized whyJacksonhadset fireto hishouse.、1A.above B.through C.below D.off、2A.recognized B.noticed C.overlooked D.expected、3A.land B.hill C.shore D.village、4A.sight B.chance C.alarm D.plot、5A.found B.persuaded C.taught D.warned、6A.rushed outB.figured outC.called outD.made out、7A.Borrow B.Make C.Light D.Buy、8A.boat B.house C.clothes D.tree、、9A.balls B.candles C.signals D.flames10A.Instead B.However C.Furthermore D.ThereforeC.Be sureto double-check thatlock afterthis seeminglyinnocent personleavesD.A simplesolution iskeeping importantdocuments andobjects inyour childsroomE.Decorative glassor largewindows maybe importantfor your front entrancefeng shuiF.If yoususpect that someone istrying tobreak intoyour home,press theTanic^buttonG.In somecities,burglary ratesfor thesystem are much lowerthan thoseof non-ParticipantsAssistant:Students,Home SearchAgency.Kelly:This isKelly Lam.I want to rentan apartment.Assistant:!Kelly:Um...first,it should be onPeace Road.I needit tohave abigger-sized bedroomalong with a smallkitchen,a bathroomor evenastudy.、Assistant:OK.2Please wait.Kelly:OK.Thanks.Assistant:There isone justlike that,but itson GreenLane.、Kelly:3Assistant:Uh-uh.Not exactly.But itsvery closeto publictransportation.工Kelly:Assistant:Sure.Ifs1,000dollars amonth,but theelectricity isntincluded.、Kelly:All right.5When canI moveinAssistant:Any time.A.Where isGreen LaneB.Can youtell methe rentC.How longwould yourentD.What kindwould youlikeE.In the same neighborhoodF.Thats justthe oneI want.G.Let mecheck thecomputer rightnow.参考答案Section IUse ofEnglish、
11.C
2.B
3.A
4.A
5.D
6.C
7.C
8.B
9.D
10.A
11.D
12.C
13.D
14.D
15.B
16.A
17.D
18.C
19.B
20.ASection IIReading Comprehension、
21.A
2.C
3.D
4.D
5.A
6.B、
31.C
2.B
4.B、
41.D
2.C
3.C
4.D、
51.A
2.C
3.D
4.B
5.C、
61.correctly
2.third
3.have gone
4.how
5..women
6.It
7.treated
8.in
9.buying
10.helpful、
71.interested
2.with
3.it
4.which
5..various
6.a
7.making
8..messages
9.be wasted
10.freelySection IIITranslation
2.E
3.A
4.C
5.G、
91.D
2.G
3.E
4.B
5.F
1181、、AA..stoprrcehading B.boy C.sea D.fire
12、A.frightened B・confused C・happy D.crazy
13、A.managed B.refused C.intended D.failed
14、A.crying B.jumping C.shouting D.laughing
15、A.hungry B.mad C.blind D.thirsty
16、A.Look B.Wave C.Head D.Return
17、A.drop B.level C,spray D.wall、B.flowing C.swallowing D.moving19A.course B.path C.shape D.power20A.but B.so C.because D.unlessSection IIReading ComprehensionPartADirections:Read the following fourtexts.Answer the questions beloweach textby choosingA,B,C orD.Mark youranswers on()the ANSWER SHEET.40pointsText1(板栗游戏)British childrenused to play conkersin theautumn whenthe horse-chestnut treesstarted todrop theirshinybrown nuts.They wouldselect a suitable chestnut,drill ahole init andthread itonto astring,then swingtheir conkerat thatof anopponentuntil oneof thembroke.But the game hasfallen outof favour.Children spendless timeoutdoors andrarely haveaccess tochestnuttrees.Besides,many schoolshave bannedconkers games,worried that they mightcause injuriesor nutallergies.(规避风险)That sortof risk-averseness nowspreads throughevery aspectof childhood.Playgrounds haveall theexcitementdesigned outof themto makethem safe.Many governments,particularly insocieties suchas America,have tightenedup theirrules,(监管)requiring parentsto superviseyoung childrenfar moreclosely thanin thepast.Frank Furediof theUniversity ofKent,a criticonmodern parenting,argues that allowing childrentoplayunsupervised orleaving themat homealone is increasingly describedas asymptomof irresponsibleparenting.In part,such increasedcaution is a responseto thehuge waveof changes.Large-scale urbanization,smaller andmore mobilefamilies,the moveof womeninto thelabor marketand thedigitization ofmany aspectsof lifehave unavoidablychanged theway that(精细化的)people bringup their children.There islittle chancethat anyof thesetrends willbe changed,so todaysmore intensiveparenting style islikely togo on.Such parentingpractices nowembraced bywealthy parentsin manyparts of the richworld,particularly inAmerica,go farbeyondan adjustmentto changesin externalconditions.They meana strongbid toensure that the advantagesenjoyed bythe parentsgenerationare passedonto their children.Since successin lifenow turnsmainly oneducation,such parentswill dotheir bestto providetheirchildren with the schooling,the charactertraining andthe socialskills thatwill secureaccess tothebestuniversities andlater themostattractive jobs.To someextent thathas alwaysbeen thecase.But thereare moresuch parentsnow,and they are competingwith each other forwhateconomists callpositional goods.This competitionstarts evenbefore thechildren are born.The wealthyclasses willtake theirtimeto selectasuitablespouse andget married,and willstart afamily onlywhen theyfeel ready for it.Children fromless advantagedbackgrounds,by contrast,often appearbefore theirparents arereadyfor them.In America60%ofbirths tosingle womenunder30are unplanned,and over40%of children arebornoutside marriage.The result,certainly inAmerica,has beento widenalready massivesocial inequalitiesyet further.All theevidence suggeststhat childrenfrom poorerbackgrounds are atadisadvantage almostas soonas theyare bom.By theageof fiveor sixtheyarefar lessschool-ready“than their better-off peers,so anyattempts tohelp themcatch uphave tostart longbeforethey getto school.America hashad somesuccess withvarious schemesinvolving regularhome visitsby nursesor socialworkers tolow-income familieswith newbabies.It alsohas longexperience withprogrammes for young childrenfrom poorfamilies thatcombinesupport forparents withgood-quality childcare.Such programmesdo seemto makea difference.Without extraeffort,children fromlow-income familiesin mostcountries aremuch lesslikely thantheirbetter-off peersto attendpreschool education,even thoughtheyare morelikely tobenefit fromit.And datafrom theOECDs PISAprogramme suggestthat childrenneed atleast twoyears ofpreschooleducation toperform attheirbestwhen theyare
15.So the most promisingway toensure greaterequality maybe tomake early-years educationand carefor morewidely availableandmore affordable,as it isin the Nordics.Some governmentsare alreadyrethinking theireducational priorities,shifting someof theirspendingtotheearly years.Most richcountries decidedmore thana centuryago thatfree,compulsory educationfor allchildren was a worthwhileinvestmentfor society.There isnow anargument forstarting preschooleducation earlier,as somecountries havealready done.In theface ofcrushingnew inequalities,a modernversion of that approachis worthtrying.、1What canwe learn from the first twoparagraphsA.More attentionis placedon childrenssafety.B.More andmore parents are becomingirresponsible.C.Children areno longerinterested inoutdoor activities.D.Parents areadvised tospend more time with theirchildren.、2Which of thefollowingabout intensiveparentingstyleis TRUEA.Chances arethat thisstyle couldbe changed.B.Financial pressureforces parentstobestricter.C.Rich familiesadopt suchstyle tokeep theiradvantages.D.Such styleis largelyinfluenced bythe size of thefamily.、3What doesthe underlinedsentence implyA.Economists offerpractical adviceto guideparenting.B.A happymarriage secureschildrens socialpositions.C.Unfair divisionof socialresources drivesparents mad.D.Parents arestruggling for their childrensedge overpeers.、4Which isthe propermeasure tonarrow thegap betweenthe richandthepoorA.Parents arepersuaded togive birthto babiesin theirlater years.B.Funds areprovided forpoor childrenafter theyare admittedto school.C.New babiesin low-income familiesare sentto nursesor socialworkers.D.Children fromlow-income familiesare ensuredto receiveearly education.、5Whafs the authors attitudetowards investmentin pre-school educationA.Supportive B.DisapprovingC.Skeptic D.Unconcerned、6The authorbegins thepassage with thegameof conkersto.A.show competitionoverweighs cooperationB,imply educationalinequalities shouldbe brokenC・make readersaware of the rulesof thegameD.indicate thegame haslost itsappeal tochildrenText2The word OK isthe mostfrequently spokenall-purpose expressionontheplanet-and itsturning176years oldon March(缩写)23,
2015.The termwas bornduring a19th-century abbreviationcraze andwent onto internationalfame withits ownhandgesture.Last year,Henry Nass,a64-year-old retiredEnglish teacher,a NewYorker hadspent thelast fewweeks handingout cardschampioningGlobal OK Day in advance of the cominganniversary.“No matterwhere peopleare from they use the word OK,but theydont knowwhere it comes from,Hsays Nass.nThe problemisbecause ifsjustyou know,OK.”The wordis OK,perhaps,but itshistory isdefinitely betterthan average.Late etymologistAllen WalkerRead tracedthe two-letterword to1839,when editorsattheBoston MorningPost signedoff onarticles as“all correct“with asimple wordHOKn.The wordmade itinto printon March23ofthatyear,during anarticle againsta rivaleditor inProvidence whohad statedwronglythat aband ofBostonians headingto NewYork wouldpass throughthe RhodeIsland capital.“We saidnot aword aboutour teampassing throughthe city*of Providence,nthe MorningPost reported.nO.K.一all correct.n(隐含)The humoroftheProvidence-Boston jokehas beenlost tohistory-butthe word OKtook offfrom there,soon connotingagreement,acceptance,averageness,quality orlikability.By1840,it servedasaslogan forPresident MartinVan Burensunsuccessful reelectioncampaign.nOld Kinderhookis OK,postersstated,a referencetothe eighth presidentsbirthplace andhis supporters5belief inhis satisfactoryperformance.
1、Why didHenry Nasshandout cardsA.To letpeople understandthe historyofthe word OK”.B.To callon people to usethewordOK properly.C,To appealto peopleto celebrateOKDay.D.To attractpeoples attention.、2What doesthe authorwant toconvey inParagraph4A.The historyofthewordOK is knownto averagepeople.B.The historyoftheword“OKisunfamiliar topeople.C.People frequentlyusethewordOKin history.D.People arefond ofthewordnOK inhistory.
3、What doesthe underlinedphrase Htookoff finParagraph7probably meanA.Got offB.Set upC.Moved offD.Become popular、4We can learnfrom the textthat Kinderhookis oftheeighthAmerican president.A.the nameB.the birthplaceC.the policyD.the beliefText3When itcomes toeating,most ofus donthave togo veryfar.But formany birdspecies,finding foodmay meantravelinghundreds of thousands ofkilometers.(追踪)A teamof researchersfrom institutionsin theUK andIreland spentfive yearstracking four species ofseabird tomonitortheir travel patterns.It wasdiscovered thatover thefive years,the speciescovered anarea of
1.5million squarekilometers whenhuntingfor food-almost fourtimes thesizeofJapan.The findingswere publishedrecently in the journalEcological Applications.As partofthestudy,over1,300birds werefitted withGPStags to track theirmovements.It wasdiscovered thatmost ofthem searchfor fish in the same place-waters offthe coastofScotland.()As aresult ofthis,organizations suchas the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds RSPBwill spendmoretimetrying topreservecoastal Scotland.(繁殖群体)“For thefirst time,this studyprovides uswithafull mapfor eachbreeding colonyofthefeeding areasfor someofour mostimportant seabirdspecies,“wrote thestudys leadauthor EwanWakefield,from theUniversity ofGlasgow.“That meanswe cannow protectthe placesthese birdscatch thefish theyneed tofeed theirhungry chicks.^^(满轮机).The findingscould alsoaffect the future building of offshorewind turbinesAlthough wind turbines helpto fight(刀片)climate changeby providinga greensource ofenergy,their hugeblades areblamed forthe deathsofthousands of birdseachyear,as theyoften flyinto them.Stuart Housden,director ofRSPB Scotland,said ina newsrelease thatalthough climatechange is ahugethreat toboth humansandnature alike,we should invest inan energysystem thatworks forboth peopleand ournatural heritage.,9To protectboth natureandtheenvironment,the RSPBsupports thebuildingofturbines inareas thatwont havesignificant(不利的)adverse impactson importantbird populationsortheirhabitats,it wroteon itswebsite.、1What didthe scientistsfrom theUK andIreland findabout thefourspeciesof seabirdA.They havetotally differenttravelpatterns.B.They preferto catchfishinplaces neartheir nests.C.Climate changehas influencedtheir huntingdistance.D.They cantravel avery longdistance tofind food.、2According tothe article,why isthe researchimportantA.It showswhat aperfect livingenvironment forseabirds is.B.It wasthefirstto useGPS technologytotrackseabirds.C.It couldguide peopleon howto betterprotect seabirds.D.It providesmore informationabout thediet ofseabirds.、3Wind turbinesareathreat toseabirds because.A.they producenoise thatcould disturbseabirdsB.their strongairflow couldinfluence theflight ofseabirdsC.their bigblades maykill theseabirds thattly byD.they forceseabirds tomove awayfrom theirhabitats、4According totheRoyalSocietyfortheProtectionofBirds,.A.no morewindturbinesshouldbebuilt inthe futureB,we shouldthink ofmore measuresto protectthe climateC,the governmentshouldinvestmore moneyto protectseabirds D.weshould considerwildlife whenwe buildturbines inthefutureText4I heardmany parentscomplaining thattheir teenagechildrenarerebelling(叛逆)・Iwish itwere so.At yourage yououghtto begrowing awayfrom yourparents.You shouldbe learningto standon yourown hvofeet.But takea goodlook atthe presentrebellion.It seemsthat teenagersare takingthe sameway ofshowing thatthey disagreewith theirparents.Instead ofstriking outboldly(紧握)on their own,most ofthem areclutching atone anothershands forreassurance.They claimthey want to dressas theyplease.But theyall wearthe sameclothes.Then setoff innew directionsin music.Butsomehow theyall endup withlistening tothesamerecord together.Their reasonfor thinkingor actingin thus-and-suchaway isthat(茧)many peopleare doingit.They havecome outof theircocoon intoa largercocoon.It hasbecome harderand harderfor a teenager tostand upagainst the popularity waveand gohis or her ownway.Industry hasfirmlycarved outateenagemarket.These daysevery teenagercanlearnfromtheadvertisements whata teenagershould haveand be.And manyof todaysparents havecome toaward highmarks forthe popularityof theirchildren.All thisadds toa greatbarrier(障碍)fortheteenager whowants tofind hisor herown path.But thebarrier is worth climbingover.The pathisworthfollowing,You maywanttolisten toclassical musicinstead ofgoing toaparty.You maywanttocollect rockswhen everyoneelse iscollecting records.You mayhave somethoughts thatyou dontcare tosharewith yourclassmates atonce,well,go toit.Find yourself.Popularity willcome-withthepeople whorespect youfor whoyou are.That isthe onlykind ofpopularity that really counts.、1In thispassage,the authorwants totell.A.teenagers howto learnto decidethings forthemselvesB.readers howtobepopular withpeople aroundC.parents howto controland guidetheir childrenD.people howto understandand respecteachother、2According tothe author,many teenagersthink theyare braveenough toact on their own,but infact,most ofthem.A.have muchdifficulty understandingeach otherB,lack confidence(处理)C,dare notcope withproblems single-handedD.aremuchafraid ofgetting lost、3Which ofthefollowingis trueaccording tothe passageA.There isno popularitythatreallycounts.B・What manyparentsaredoing ishelping theirchildren findtheirownpaths.C.It isbad fora teenagerto disagreewith hisorherclassmates.D.Most teenagersclaim thatthey wantto dowhat theylike to,but theyare actuallydoing thesame.、4What doestheauthorthink ofadvertisementsA.Convincing.B.Influential.权威的.C.Instructive.D.Authoritative、5During theteenage years,one shouldlearn toA.differ fromothers inas manyways aspossibleB.get intothe rightreason andbecome popularC.find onesreal selfD.rebel againstparents andthepopularitywavePart BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsby choosingthemostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G for一eachnumberedparagraph
4145.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyou donot needto use.Mark youranswerson the ANSWERSHEET.10points」Fewer thanone inseven peoplecan1correct identifycommon washingsymbols whilea
2.three ofpeople admit标签」they nevercheck instructionlabels Someseven inten saythey everhad machine-washed clothesthat should3go tothe drycleanersbecause theyfailed tolook atthe labelsTheignorance about
4.clothes shouldbe cleanedcan costfamilies thousandsof pounds,according toa sampletest ofhouseholdersby aschool uniformsupplierMen arethe worstoffenders withmore thanthree quartersalways usingthesameprogram ona washingmachineregardless ofthe instructionsAlmost halfof
5.woman usedjust threeprograms
6.is saidthatthelack ofunderstandingover symbolsis destroyingthousandsofpounds worthof clothing
7.treat improperlyWhilealmost eight8-ten peoplebelieve itis importantto checkthe labelsontheirclothes,less thanhalf lookat themwhen
9.buy newclothes Somenine outof tensaid theywere unawarethatsomeclothing shouldnever beput inthe drierThelabels arethere toshow howclothes shouldbe treatedThis10,help informationcan savetime andensure clothestolast longer语法填空Just now,I enteredthe website“Topic forToday”I feel1」interest inthe reporton middleschool students9usingcell-phones oncampus Infact,more studentsnow cometo school
2.cell-phones Myschoolmates havedifferent opinionsSomethink3,is convenientto getin touchwith otherswiththe cell-phone,
4.also makesthem feelsafe especiallyin timeof troubleBesides,itisnice toenjoy
5.variety functionsof differentcell-phones二Others thinkdifferently First,the cell-phone is not6-must inschool,as thereare someIC phonesthere,7make it easy tocall」others Second,many studentsoften playe-games andsendS messagewiththeircell-phones,even inclass,which willsurely havebadeffects ontheir studyWhats more,a largeamount oftime andmoney will9_;_wasteIn myopinion,thecell-phone isa usefultoolin ourdaily lifeBut itdoesnt meanwe canuse it
10.free inschoolA fewmonths afterreturning theUS fromGermany,T tookpart ina collegecourse inFrench SinceI hadlearned tospeak Germangoodin Germany,I thoughtthat itmight beinterested tobegin studyinganother languageSectionIII TranslationDirections:Secure yourhomeTranslate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15pointswith theseexpert-advised homesafety tipsthat turnburglars intolosers.♦Store valuablescarefullyThieves alreadyknow you9re storingvaluables,so upgradeyour secrethiding placesto onesthat areharder todetect.、
1.Thieves oftensearch drawersinthemaster bedroombut tendto leavekids roomsuntouched.Just makesure ifsa placeyour childcanteasily access,like ona highcloset shelf.♦Install yoursecurity systemintheright spot、,2but theyalso makeiteasyfor burglarsto seeinside yourhome.Install yoursecurity keypadinaspot thatisnotvisible fromthedoorstep sono onecan seeif youralarm isset.、♦3Knowing yourhouse iscompletely unattendedcan makeyour vacationunnecessarily stressful.Whether youregoing awayfortwo weeksor justa longweekend,ask aneighbor tocheck dailyfor flyersstuck inyourfrontdoor.Foxy criminalshave beenknown toleavepizza adsin doorstosee how longit takesfor residentsto removethem.Stopping newspapersand maildelivery forthe durationofyour tripisasure wayto preventmail frompiling upat yourdoorstep.♦Pay attentionto bathroomwindowsBurglars areoften peopleyouve seenbefore,like aserviceman workingon yourhouse.If ayard workeror unknownvisitor uses、,the bathroom,he mayopen thewindow sohe cangain entrylater.4♦Join ina community-wide crimeprevention programCopsare gettingcreative whenitcomesto catchingcriminals,and thereare lotsof opportunitiesforyouto doyour partto keepyourcommunity safe.Operation Identificationisanationwide projectthat encouragespeopletomark theirproperty tofight against、burglary andtheft.
5.Also lookinto groupslike NeighborhoodWatch toseehowyou canget involved.A.Let yourneighbors beyour eyesB.Lower thevolume ofyour telephonefinger。