满分5 > 高中英语试题 >

Imagine you are on a long car trip. It i...

    Imagine you are on a long car trip. It is night and you take a wrong turn onto a dark country road. With a sinking feeling, you realize that you have no idea where you are.

1., and the answer is written in light. A shining compass face, with north, south, east and west at the four points, and a big needle are pointing at north. What a relief! You turn your car around and head in the right direction guided by the sky.

For migrating birds, finding their way over long distances through the darkest nights is their second nature. 2. — directions written by light and magnetism (磁力). Some birds journey thousands of miles in their twice-yearly journeys. 3., like mountain ranges and rivers, to help decide the directions; but birds may also navigate using the stars, and by sensing — or even “seeing” — the Earth’s invisible magnetic field.

For many years, scientists have been studying what’s behind the strong ability of migrating birds to find their way to their winter and summer homes. Here is one thing that they agree on. 4.. This compass leads them to make their very first autumn flight in the direction that has been long-travelled by the rest of their species. 5..

A.Then you glance up at the sky

B.So birds are born knowing which way home is

C.They do it in part by reading directions in the sky

D.Magnetism is important for all animals, especially birds and fishes

E.When they’re on the way, they take the advantage of familiar landmarks

F.Migratory baby birds are already equipped with a kind of present inner compass

G.In birds, migration means two-way journeys — onward journey and backward journey

 

1.A 2.C 3.E 4.F 5.B 【解析】 这是一篇说明文。文章主要讲述了候鸟为何拥有寻找方向的能力的原因。 1.根据后文“You turn your car around and head in the right direction guided by the sky.( 你把车掉头,在天空的指引下朝着正确的方向行驶。)”可知,设空内容应与天空有关。选项A“Then you glance up at the sky(然后你仰望天空)”符合语境,且对应后文“and the answer is written in light”中light(光)。故选A项。 2.根据后文“directions written by light and magnetism(由光和磁指示方向)”可知,设空内容与指示(directions)有关。C项“”符合语境。故选C项。 3.根据后文“like mountain ranges and rivers, to help decide the directions(像山脉和河流一样,帮助决定方向)”,可知,E项“When they’re on the way, they take the advantage of familiar landmarks”中的landmarks与mountain ranges and rivers相呼应。故选E项。 4.根据后文“This compass leads them to make their very first autumn flight in the direction that has been long-travelled by the rest of their species.( 这个指南针指引着它们第一次在秋天朝着其他物种早已走过的方向飞行。)”可知,空后句中的compass有定冠词the作限定词,表特指,因此设空内容应与指南针有关。选项F“Migratory baby birds are already equipped with a kind of present inner compass.( 候鸟宝宝已经具备了一种现有的内在指南针)”符合分析。故选F项。 5.根据前一句内容“This compass leads them to make their very first autumn flight in the direction that has been long-travelled by the rest of their species.( 这个指南针指引着它们第一次在秋天朝着其他物种早已走过的方向飞行。)”可知,设空句应是对前文的承接总结。选项B“B. So birds are born knowing which way home is(所以鸟儿生来就知道回家的路)”符合分析。故选B项。
复制答案
考点分析:
相关试题推荐

    Rivers are the veins of the Earth, transporting the water and nutrients (营养物) needed to support the planet’s ecosystems, including human life. While many nutrients are essential to the survival of life, there is one element transported by water in rivers that holds the key to life and to the future of our planet — carbon.

Carbon is everywhere and understanding the way it moves and is either released or stored by the Earth system is a complex science in itself. Carbon starts its journey downstream when natural acid rain, which contains carbon dioxide from the atmosphere,  melts minerals in rocks. This helps transform carbon dioxide to bicarbonate (碳酸氢盐) in the water that then flows in our rivers. This is a very long process, which is one of the main ways carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere. Carbon is transported by rivers to oceans and once that carbon reaches the ocean, it is stored naturally in deep sea sediments (沉淀物) for millions of years.

As carbon travels down a river, different processes may impact whether it continues to flow downstream or whether it is released into the atmosphere. For example, human engineering, like extensive dam construction, will result in dramatic changes to how water and sediments travel down the river. Some carbon that fails to reach the sea may return to the atmosphere in some way, which causes more warming.

Earth’s climate is closely related to the carbon cycle. We all know about the essential role of plants in consuming carbon dioxide, but do we know enough about rivers? Changing the chemistry and the course of rivers may have significant impacts on how they transport carbon. Remember: wherever we live, we all live downstream.

1.Where is the carbon in rivers originally from?

A.The atmosphere. B.The rocks.

C.The acid rain. D.The upstream areas.

2.Why is human engineering mentioned in Paragraph 3?

A.To show how important to life carbon is.

B.To explain how necessary it is to build dams.

C.To show how a natural process is interrupted.

D.To explain how humans fight global warming.

3.What does the author want to convey in the last paragraph?

A.We’d better move upstream to live.

B.We should protect plants along rivers.

C.We’d better seek more help from plants.

D.We should be cautious about river management.

4.What is the best title for the text?

A.What Humans Do with Rivers

B.How Rivers’ Transporting Carbon Counts

C.What the Carbon Cycle Means to Us

D.How Living Downstream Affects the Earth

 

查看答案

    In the winter of 1664-65, a bitter cold fell on London in the days before Christmas. Above the city, an unusually bright comet (彗星) shot across the sky, exciting much prediction of a snow storm. Outside the city wall, a woman was announced dead of a disease that was spreading in that area. Her house was locked up and the phrase “Lord Have Mercy On Us” was painted on the door in red.

By the following Christmas, the virus that had killed the woman would go on to kill nearly 100,000 people living in and around London — almost a third of those who did not flee.

In The Great Plague (瘟疫), historian A. Lloyd Moote and microbiologist Dorothy C. Moote provide a deeply informed account of this plague year. Reading the book, readers are taken from the palaces of the city’s wealthiest citizens to the poor areas where the vast majority of Londoners were living, and to the surrounding countryside with those who fled. The Mootes point out that, even at the height of the plague, the city did not fall into chaos. Doctors, nurses and the church staff remained in the city to care for the sick; city officials tried their best to fight the crisis with all the legal tools; and commerce continued even as businesses shut down.

To describe life and death in and around London, the authors focus on the experiences of nine individuals. Through their letters and diaries, the Mootes offer fresh descriptions of key issues in the history of the Great Plague: how different communities understood and experienced the disease; how medical, religious, and government bodies reacted; how well the social order held together; the economic and moral dilemmas people faced when debating whether to flee the city; and the nature of the material, social, and spiritual resources supporting those who remained. Based on humanity (人性), the authors offer a masterful portrait of a city and its inhabitants attacked by — and daringly resisting — unimaginable horror.

1.What can we learn from Paragraph 1?

A.A comet always follows a storm.

B.London was under an approaching threat.

C.London was prepared for the disease.

D.The woman was the beginning of the disease.

2.What do the Mootes say about London during the Great Plague?

A.The city remained organized.

B.The plague spared the rich areas.

C.The people tried a lot in vain.

D.The majority fled and thus survived.

3.Why do the Mootes focus on the nine individuals?

A.They were famous people in history.

B.They all managed to survive the Plague.

C.They provided vivid stories of humanity.

D.They united by thinking and acting as one.

4.What’s the purpose of this text?

A.To introduce a new book.

B.To correct a misunderstanding.

C.To report a new research.

D.To show respect to the authors.

 

查看答案

    One day after more than a month of classes, I read aloud a paragraph from my book, recognizing all of the characters smoothly except for one. I sat back and started to register the achievement: I was actually reading Chinese. The language was starting to make sense. But before the sense of satisfaction was half formed, Teacher Liao said, “Budui!”

It meant, literally, “Not correct.” You could also translate it as no, wrong, nope, uh-uh. Flatly and clearly incorrect. There were many Chinese words that I didn’t know, but I knew that one well.

A voice in my head whined: All of the rest of them were right; isn’t that worth something? But for Teacher Liao it didn’t work like that. If one character was wrong it was simply budui.

“What’s this word?” I asked, pointing at the character I had missed.

“Zhe — the zhe in Zhejiang.”

“Third tone?”

“Fourth tone.”

I breathed deeply and read the section again, and this time I did it perfectly. That was a victory — I turned to Teacher Liao and my eyes said (or at least I imagined them saying): How do you like me now? There seemed to be some satisfaction in her eyes, but she simply said, “Read the next one.”

It was her way of teaching. Success was expected and failure criticized and immediately corrected. You were right or you were budui; there was no middle ground.

I grew to hate budui. The bu was a rising tone and the dui dropped abruptly, like building my confidence and then breaking down all at once. And it bothered me all the more because I knew that Teacher Liao was only telling the truth: everything I did with the language was budui. I was an adult, and as an adult I should be able to accept criticism where it was needed. But that wasn’t the American way; I wanted to be praised for my effort; I didn’t mind criticism as long as it was candy-coated. In China, the single B on the report card matters much more than all the As that surround it. Keep working; you haven’t achieved anything yet.

And so I studied. I was frustrated but I was also stubborn; I was determined to show Teacher Liao that I was dui.

1.Which of the following can best replace “whined” in Paragraph 3?

A.burst out. B.gave in.

C.returned. D.complained.

2.What did the writer expect from Teacher Liao after he tried again?

A.Immediate correction. B.A new challenge.

C.An encouraging response. D.A strict comment.

3.How did the writer feel about the Chinese way of teaching?

A.Candy-coated. B.Weakness-focused.

C.Interest-driven. D.Criticism-absent.

4.What can we infer from the text?

A.The writer was struggling with Liao’s teaching.

B.The American way of teaching is better for adults.

C.The writer was not gifted in language learning.

D.Teacher Liao was not friendly with her students.

 

查看答案

    An increasing number of students worldwide are considering studying abroad. The application process varies from country to country. If you’re looking for a university with a strong international outlook but feel swept over by all the application options, here is some guidance to get you started.

UK

International students must apply to universities in the UK through a system known as Ucas. This system allows students to apply to up to five universities with just one application. It costs £20 for a single choice or £25 for more than one choice.

The application consists of a series of questions to determine the student’s schooling and predicted grades. The biggest part of the application form is the personal statement, in which applicants should describe their personal interests and related experiences.

Switzerland

Switzerland has four official languages and is bordered by five countries so it is no surprise that its universities are among the most international in the world. International applicants may need to take an entrance exam if they have a foreign school certificate, and must also prove that they have a good grasp of the French language, usually through taking a language exam. The full application costs 50 Swiss Francs for a holder of a Swiss diploma and 150 Swiss Francs for holders of foreign diplomas.

Canada

International applicants have to write up a personal profile as part of their application, which is very similar to the personal statement required for a UK university application. Students will also have to prove their English-language competency—there are nine ways to meet the English Language Admission Standard, which are listed on many university websites.

Singapore

The process of applying to a Singaporean university is very much alike, but overseas students may be delighted to find that the domestic applicants have to cover the same procedures: filling out an online application form and submit identification documents, supporting documents and an application fee of S$20.

1.Which country requires international applicants know French well?

A.UK. B.Switzerland.

C.Canada. D.Singapore.

2.What part of the application is similar between the UK and Canada?

A.The application system. B.The number of universities.

C.The application cost. D.The personal statement.

3.What’s special about the application process in Singapore?

A.Applicants need to pay a lot. B.It is much simpler than elsewhere.

C.It’s no different for native students. D.The competition is even more fierce.

 

查看答案

阅读下面短文, 根据所给情节进行续写, 使之构成一个完整的故事.

Twenty years ago I drove a taxi for a living One night I went to pick up a passenger at 230 a m When I arrived to collect her I found the building was dark except for a single light in a ground floor window

I walked to the door and knocked "Just a minute" answered a weak elderly voice

After a long time the door opened A small woman in her eighties stood before me By her side was a small suitcase

I took the suitcase to the car and then returned to help the woman She took my arm and we walked slowly towards the car

She kept thanking me for my kindness "It's nothing" I told her "I just try to treat my passengers the way I would want my mother treated"

"Oh you're such a good man" She said When we got into the taxi she gave me an address and then asked "Could you drive through downtown"

"It's not the shortest way" I answered quickly

"Oh I'm in no hurry" she said "I'm on my way to a hospice  (临终医院). I don't have any family left The doctor says I don't have very long "

I quietly reached over and shut off the meter (计价器). For the next two hours we drove through the city She showed me the building where she had once worked the neighborhood where she had lived and the furniture shop that had once been a ballroom where she had gone dancing as a girl

Sometimes she'd ask me to slow down in front of a particular building and would sit staring into the darkness saying nothing

At dawn she suddenly said "I'm tired Let's go now" We drove in silence to the address she had given

"How much do I owe you" she asked

"Nothing" I said

"You have to make a living" she answered "Oh there are other passengers" I answered She said thanks to me but she looked so sad

 

注意:

1.所续写的短文词数应为150左右;

2.应使用5个以上短文中标有下划线的关键词语;

3.续写部分分为二段,每段的开头语已经为你写好;

4.续写完成后,请用下划线标出你所使用的关键词语.

Para 1

Almost without thinking I bent and gave her a hug

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Para 2

I was on my way to visit her

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

查看答案
试题属性

Copyright @ 2008-2019 满分5 学习网 ManFen5.COM. All Rights Reserved.