还剩8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:
3.B
4.D、
31.B
2.C
3.C
4.D、
41.D
2.B
3.C、
51.D
2.D
3.D
4.C、
61.enabling
2.which
3.a
4.provides
5..movies
6.for
7.officially
8.and
9.beginning
10.daily、
71.takes
2.and
3.countries
4.whichSection IIITranslation、
81.B
2.F
3.G
4.E
5.C、
91.D
2.E
3.G
4.A
5.F
12、A.with B.for C.to D.on
15、A.newspaper B.report C.advertisement D.poster
1136、、A A..w inics ihdent B.Blo.v aeccidenC t.heart CD..ep vrea nyte Dr.coincidence Section II Reading ComprehensionPart A
1174、、AA..it nimjueredB.Bbe,lo hnag rminfg uslCC..wm ooun nedy eDd.intere Dst.infectedDirections:
18、A.serious B.disturbed C.steady D.stableRead the following fourtexts.Answer the questions below
19、A.before B,afterwards C.then D.later eachtext by choosing A,B,C orD.Mark youranswers onthe()ANSWER SHEET.40points
20、A.store B.hospital C.home D.funeralText1(太空模拟器)Do womenmake BETTERastronauts Russialocks an all-female crewin spacesimulator foreightdays to find out.Six Russianwomen have been sent into a spaceship to begin aunique experimenttesting howanall-female crewwouldrelate toothers on a tripto theMoon andback.“Its interestingfor usto seewhat isspecial about the waya femalecrew communicatesJ saidSergei Ponomaryov,theexperiments leader,it willbe particularlyinteresting interms ofpsychology,“said theinstitutes directorIgor Ushakov.Id liketowish youa lackof conflicts,even thoughthey saythat inone kitchen,two housewivesfind ithard tolive together/9he added.(模仿)The volunteersinclude scientificresearchers,a doctor and apsychologist.The testperiod simulatesa flightto theMoonand back,with the women carryingout10experiments coveringpsychology andhuman biology.Russia sentthe firstwoman into space,Valentina Tereshkova,in1963but hasfallen behindsince.Last year,it sentits fourthfemale astronautintospace,Yelena Serova.Serava complainedof agreat dealof mediainterest inhow shewould washher hairaboard theInternational SpaceStation,pointing outthatmale astronautsdid notface the same lineof questioning.The womenfound themselvesfielding questionsat apress conferenceabout howthey wouldact withoutmen ormakeup foreightdays,uWe arevery beautifulwithout makeup/9said participantDarya Komissarova.Her colleagueAnna Kussmaulwas moredirect:66We aredoing work.When youredoing yourwork,you dontthink aboutmen andwomen.They planto spendtheir11/2hours perdayof freetime watchingfilms,reading andplaying boardgames.Team leaderYelena Luchnitskayasaid sheexpected thewomen todeal with anyconflict.、1In whichcolumn canyou findthis passageonawebsiteA.Education.B.Entertainment.C.Science.D.Economy.、2Whats thepurpose of the experimentA.To showthat womencan dobetter thanmen.B.To testwhether womencan begood astronauts.C.To gatherinformation about the conditionsin space.D.To measurethe distancefrom theearth to the moon.、3What do we knowfrom whatIgor UshakovsaidA.Women cannot livepeacefully inspace at all.B.There maybe conflictsamong thewomen astronauts.C.The femalecrew willdealwith each otherin anew way.D.Being in the samekitchen helpsthewomenlive together.、4Which of thefollowingwas oncesentintospaceA.Sergei Ponomarev.B.Darya Komissarova.C.Anna Kussmaul.D.Valentina Tereshkova.Text2(晶体)Scientists have found livingorganisms trappedin crystalsthat could be50,000years old.The organismswere found in ahot,but beautifulcave systemin Naica,Mexico.These ancientlife formscan beseen onlywith amicroscope.Penelope Boston,who leadsthe AstrobiologyInstitute atNASA,the spaceagency of the UnitedStates,says theancientmicrobes wereable tolive byeating mineralssuch asiron.She spokeabout thediscovery recentlyatameeting of the AmericanAssociation forthe Advancementof Science.If the findingsare confirmed,they willshow howmicrobes cansurvive inextreme conditions.Forty differentkinds ofmicrobes andsome viruseswerefoundin the undergroundarea.The geneticstructures of these organismsare10percent differentfrom thoseof theirnearestrelatives.The caves in Naicaare800kilometers deep.They wereonce usedfor mininglead.Before theminers beganworking inthe caves,the areawas separatedfrom the surface and the outsideworld.Some of the cavesare asbig asthe largereligious centersbuilt duringEuropesMiddle Ages.There arecrystals coveringthe walls.The cavesare sohot thatscientists mustwear specialclothing tokeep cool.(病菌)The clothingkeeps thecrystals safefrom humangerms orother damage.Boston saidthe researcherscould onlywork for about20minutes ata timebefore theyhad togo toa roomthat was38degrees Celsiusto cooldown.NASA officialswould notlet Bostonshare herfindings withscientific expertsbefore lastweeks announcement.So scientistscouldnot saymuch aboutthefindings.But NorineNoonan,a biologistwith theUniversity ofSouth Florida,said shebelieved them.Why arewe surprised”Noonan asked.As abiologist,I wouldsay life on earthis extremelytough andextremely colorful.”Boston is also studyingmicrobes commonlyfound insidecaves inother countries,such asUkraine and the UnitedStates.Thesemicrobes appearto beimpossible tokill.Boston saidthey show how difficultlifeonearth canbe.、1The existenceof theancient microbesrelies on.A.surrounding insectsB.eating mineralsC.diverse plantsD.absorbing air、2What canwe inferaboutthecavesinNaica from the passageA.The wallswere builtduring MiddleAges.B,The temperatureinthecaves isquite low.C.The environmentinthecaves isdifficult toadapt to.D.The caveshavebeenexplored sincethey wereformed.、3What is the biologistNorine Noonansattitude towards the findingsA.Neutral.B.Doubtful.C.Positive.D.Indifferent.、4Whats themain ideaof thepassageA.Living organismsbring hopeto scientificresearch.B.Caves provideliving environmentfor livingorganisms.C.Microbes showgreat powerto survivein terribleconditions.D.Scientists discover50,000-year-old superlife,,in Mexico.Text3Many ofus havewondered whatEarth islike beneaththesurface.So havewriters andscientists.In Frenchnovelist JulesVernesmasterpiece Journey to the Center of the Earth,explorers godown to Earths centerand discoveramazing wonders.But inreal life,human beingshavent evencome closeto theplanefscore(核,C)・The core is over6,000km down.The deepestholeever created,according to the BBC,istheKola SuperdeepBorehole inRussia,which onlygoes
12.3km down.So howdoweknow abouteverything downbelow withoutany samples(密度),One good way tostart is to thinkaboutthe Earths densitySimon RedfernoftheUniversity ofCambridge inthe UKtoldthe BBC.“The density ofthematerial onEarths surfaceis muchlower thanthe averagedensityofthe wholeEarth,so thattells ustheressomething thathas greaterdensity,Redfern said.The challengeistofind out which heavymaterials the coreismade of.And themain materialscientists havefound isiron.Theidea isthat whenEarth formed
4.5billion yearsago,a lotof ironmade itsway downto the core,taking up about80percent ofit.Todayscientists arestill working on findingoutwhichother materialsthe corecouldbemade upof.(地震学).You mightalso wonderhow weknow thesize ofthecore.Theres aone-word answer:seismologyWhen anearthquake happens,seismic stationsaround the world recordthe shockwavesit sendsthroughout theplanet.Its likehittingone sideoftheplanet witha hugehammer andlistening onthe otherside forthe noise.Early researchfound thatsome shockwaves,called“S-waves”,went missing.S-waves canonly travelthrough solidmaterial,butnot through liquid,so theymust havefound somethingmolten in Earths center.By followingthe S-waves9paths,scientists foundoutthat rocksbecame liquidaround3,000km down.There arestill manyquestions abouttheEarths core toanswer.But thestudy ofthe dark world belowisn9t justfor scientists9curiosity.(有磁力的)The movementof Earthsmolten ironcore buildsupapowerful magneticfield.It protectsus fromradiation from thesun andis neededfor compassesand GPS systems towork.So perhapsnone ofus willever seteyes onthecore,but itsgood toknow itsthere.、1The authormentions JulesVernes novelJourneyto theCenteroftheEarth inthe firstparagraph to.A.discuss thepossibility ofgoing downtoEarthscenterB,showhowmuch humanshave discoveredabout EarthC.paint apicture inour imaginationofthedarkworldbelowD.show humans,deep interestinEarthscenter、2We canlearn from the articlethat S-waves“.A.are oftenused topredict earthquakesB・cannot travelthroughliquidmaterialC.are the most noticeableshockwaves producedby earthquakesD.can travelmost rapidlyat3,000kilometers belowEarths surface、3We caninfer fromthe lastthree paragraphsthat.A.research intoEarths corehas hardlymade anyprogress inrecent yearsB,improvements inGPSsystemscould helppeople find out moreabout EarthC.Earthscorehelps toprotect humansfrom harmD.scientists arelikely toreach Earthscenter withindozens ofyearsText4Mid-afternoon ona particularlybusy Tuesday,I tookleave ofmy deskat work and walkedinto alocal Starbucks,only tofind(客户)aspacewhere neithermy clientsnor mychildren wouldask meto dosomething.Inside,I raninto Kate,a co-worker ofmine.The topicof parenthoodcame up.I complainedabout howpacked myschedule was.From theminute Iwoke uptotheminute Ifell asleep,I wasconstantly indemand andalways hadsomeone knockingat thedoor.But abitof sadnessseemed tocome overKates face.“Well,my daughtersin SanFrancisco andshe doesntseem toneed meat allthese days.Kate said.It wasin thatmoment thatIrealized althoughI mightoften feelin highdemand,there willcome a day whenril actuallymiss thatsame stressI nowcomplain about.And asour conversationcontinued,it turnedto ourchildrens youngeryears,with Katesmiling proudly,thinking ofthe littleboyand girlshe raisedwho arenow aman anda woman.But Inoticed hersmile wasmarked withregret.She explainedthat sheoftenwondered aboutwhat she could have done differentlywhen herchildren werein theirearlier years.(注脚)This gotme thinkingIs regretan unfortunatefootnote toparenthood Withthat inmind,I askedsix olderparents onequestion:What isyour biggestregret fromyour earlydays asa parentItturned outthat allof themthought theycould havedone itbetter.But,each ofthem alsohas astrong,healthy relationshipwiththeir kids.Whatever regretstheir parentsmight havehad about their upbringing,one thingis clear—it didntaffect themin ameaningfulway.The bottomline is,we allfeel likewe couldbe doingthis parentingthing better,And quiteclearly,years later,were stillgoing to、look backand wishwe triedthings differently.But thepast cantbe changed,and neithershould it1What canbe inferredfromthefirstthree paragraphsA.Kate hadthesameproblem asthe authors.B.The twopeople hadarranged tomeet inthe coffee shop.C,Kate went tothe coffeeshopso noone couldfind herthere.D.The authorwenttothecoffeeshop toescape fromthe pressuresaround him.、2Why didKate feelsad andregretfulA.Because sheand herdaughter hada fight.B.Because shehadnt paidenough attention to herkids.C.Because shewas disappointedwith herkids perfonnance.D.Because shethought thatshecouldhavedonebetter inraising herkids.、3What didthe authorfind whenhe spoketo sixolder parentsA.Some ofthe parentshave abad relationshipwith their kids.B.He wasmoved bythe loveof theseparents fortheir children.C.These parentsimproved their behavior aftertheir kidsgrew up.D.None ofthe parentswere completelysatisfied withthe waythey raisedtheir kids.、4What shouldparents doaccording tothe lastparagraph A.Give morelove to theirkids.B.Let yourchildren growup withfreedom.C.Cherish thepresent timeand doones bestto bea parent.D.Never stoplearning howtobea goodparent fromothers.Part BDirections:Read thefollowing textand answerthequestionsbychoosingthemostsuitable subheadingfromthelist A-G foreachnumbered paragraph41—
45.There aretwo extrasubheadings whichyou donot needto use.Mark youranswerson the ANSWER SHEET.10pointsAn appaimed at
1.enable peopleto learnmore sothey canmake thecountry strongerhas become popular recent1yThe app,2_focuses onpromoting theXi JinpingThought onSocialism withChinese CharacteristicsforaNew Braand thespiritJof the19th NationalCongress ofthe CommunistParty ofChina,is3-platform thatenables Partymembers andthe publicto raisetheir思想的ideological consciousness:sense ofcivic dutyand scientificliteracyThe learning platform,which includesseveral channels,
4.provide ahuge amount of textand videomaterial includingnews,periodicals,books,open courses,songs and5,movie forthe publicto browseand study
6.freeThe learningplatform was7_official openedtothepublic onJan1this year,8-it hasbecomepopularamong thepublic withinaJshort timeAccording tothe media,till the
9.begin ofApril,the totalamountofregistered usersofthelearningplatformhas exceeded100million,andthe
10.day activeusers accountfor ashigh as40to60percent ofthe totalusers倾斜We getour warmthfromthe sun TheEarth
1.take oneyear togo around thesunIt is always tiltedto oneside WhentheNorth Poleis tiltedtowardsthesun,the northernpart ofthe worldhas summer
2.it iswinter inthe southThe in-between timesarespring andautumn However,not everywherehas summerand winterIn someparts oftheworld,the weatherisalwayshot,and winternevercomes Theseare the
3.country aroundthe equator,4,isaline drawnaroundthemiddle ofa globeoftheEarthSection IIITranslationDirections:Translate thefollowing textinto Chinese.Write yourtranslation ontheANSWERSHEET.15points、,You probablythink thatyou arealready efficientand skilledin what you aredoing,and perhapsyou areright.1Improvement isindeed veryimportant becauseit keepsyou longingfor success,and it is whatprevents youfrom tiring.So,make thebestof whoyou are,and usethese practicaltips.、Spare afew minutesadayto learnnew things.2You mayconsider readingblogs,magazines,or tradejournals thatcan enrichyourknow ledgeabout yourfield.No matterwhatyoudo,though,make sureit issomething beneficialto yourprofessional growth.Learn to pay closeattentiontodetail.It isa factthat oncepeople havebecome accustomedtotheirregular tasks,they rarelycheck、the detailsabout certainaspects intheir job.3Get inspiredand startworkingonyour disadvantages.You shouldbe abletopaymore attentionto yourperformance inthe job,、and findways to improve yourself.If youfind yourselfquite emotionalor stressedout,then maybe whatyou needis aninspiration.4By doingso,you cancontinue improvementand eventuallybecome muchbetter atthis task.、5This stepmay seemvery simple,yet itcan getquite challengingtofindpeople whoare excellentand havea goodreputation inyourcompany.Once youhavefoundthese inspiringpeople,you shouldtry tocooperate withthem moreoften andcomplete aprojectthat coulddo wondersto yourorganization andyour personalgrowth.A.Give yourselfa break,B.However,you maynot bethe bestyou canpossibly be.C.Be withthe rightpeople andalways trytoimproveyourself.D.If so,youre notliving theabundant lifethat Godintends foryou tolive.E.You mayconsider lookingat greatworkandperformance forsome inspiration.F.It isimportant thatyou devoteplenty of your time to learningand researching.G.Unfortunately,this maylead tomisunderstanding andnegative consequences.Maybe youoften havearguments with your parents about clothes,homework,friends andmany otherpersonal things.RMost teenagersmust besorry oreven frightenedwhen theirparents fight.They mightthink theirparents don*t loveeach otheranymore andthat itwould resultin divorce.、2They mightdisagree aboutimportant thingslike jobsor majorfamily decisions.They mighteven disagreeabout littlethingsthat dontseem importantat all-Like whatsfbr dinneror whattime someonegets home.Maybe sometimesparents canfeel sostrongly、abouttheirdifferences thatit maylead toarguments.However,these arguments are oftenover quickly.3As afamily member,you shouldfindoutwhat itreally meanswhen your parents fight.When yourparents getupset witheachother,they mightcry orsay thingsthey dontreally mean.Most peoplelose theircool nowand then,so ifyourparentsarc fighting,dont、worry toomuch aboutit.4If yourparents*fight reallybothers you,you mightfind ithard tosleep orgo toschool.5They maynot evenrealize howupsetyou areuntil youtell themhow theirarguments affectyou.You canalso tellother relatives,a teacherorafriend.Just rememberthat nofamily isperfect andargumentsarecommon inevery family.A.Try tofind agoodwayto solveit.B.Parents mightfight oversmall thingsC.You shouldnever arguewithyourparents.D.But whatsgoing onwhen yourparents fightwitheachotherE.In fact,itisnormal forparents todisagree andargue fromtimetotime.F.If thishappens,try talkingto oneor bothofyourparentsabouttheirbehavior.G.Parent mayapologize andmake upandthefamily getsback intoits usualway.参考答案SectionIUse ofEnglish、
11.A
2.B
3.C
4.D
5.B
6.A
7.D
8.A
9.C
10.B
11.A
12.B
13.D
14.C
15.A
16.B
17.A
18.A
19.D
20.DSection IIReadingComprehension、
21.C
2.B。