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第二节:写作(满分30分) 李华明年参加高考,在校学习成绩很好,但是他在做完作业...

第二节:写作(满分30分)

李华明年参加高考,在校学习成绩很好,但是他在做完作业后喜欢长时间看电视,而他的父母强烈反对,怕看电视会影响成绩,他却不这样认为。请你就此话题写一篇短文。

注意:1. 词数为120--150左右;

2. 开头已为你写好(不计入总词数);

3. 可以适当发挥,以使行文连贯

Li Hua is one of the top students in his school.                                                                                                                                

 

Li Hua is one of the top students in his school. He likes watching TV, but his father disapproves of this because he thinks watching TV will have a negative effect on Li Hua 's studies. However, Li Hua holds a different view. He insists that watching TV should not be banned completely. He believes that he will not get addicted to it and that he can cope with his studies as well as enjoy some entertainment. It is also his belief that watching TV can even be of some benefit to him. Not only does it keep him informed about national and international current affairs, but it also provides other information, which broadens his horizons. What Li Hua believes is that TV itself is not a bad thing as long as people who watch it do not abandon themselves to it. Therefore, he intends to have a word with his father and inform him of his ideas. 【解析】略
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第Ⅱ卷 (共45分)

注意事项:

1.用黑色或蓝色钢笔、圆珠笔直接答在试卷上。

2.答卷前将密封线内的项目填写清楚。

第四部分:书面表达(共两节,满分45分)

第一节:阅读表达(共5小题;每小题3分,共15分)

阅读下面的短文,并根据短文后的要求答题。(请注意问题后的词数要求)

[1]It seems parents have long been right. Going to bed early is key to getting enough sleep and helping adolescents feel on top of the world, a new study reported.

[2]A lack of sleep among youngsters may trigger depression and suicidal thoughts, according to the study by the Columbia University Medical Center.

[3]"Our results are consistent with the theory that inadequate sleep is a risk factor for depression, working with other risk and protective factors through multiple possible causal ways to the development of this mood disorder," said lead author James Gangwisch.

[4]"Adequate quality sleep could therefore be a preventative measure against depression and a treatment for depression," he added in the study published in the Friday issue of Sleep magazine.

[5]The study followed the nightly habits of some 15,659 college and high-school students, and found those who consistently turned in after midnight had a 24 percent higher risk of depression than those who                     before 10:00 pm. Night owls also ran a 20 percent higher risk of battling suicidal thoughts, the study added.

[6]The American Academy of Sleep Medicine recommends that adolescents should sleep at least nine hours or more a night. Those who were tucked in before 10:00 pm reported they slept on average about eight hours and 10 minutes. But that amount of sleep dropped significantly for those in bed after midnight.

[7]And adolescents who slept five hours or less a night were 71 percent more likely to suffer depression and 48 percent more at risk of becoming suicidal, the study said.

[8]"It is a common perception and societal expectation that adolescents do not need as much sleep as pre-adolescents. Yet studies suggest that adolescents may actually require more sleep." said Gangwisch.

[9]"Studies have found that adolescents do not go to bed early enough to make up for earlier school start time. And transitions to earlier school start times have been shown to be associated with significant sleep deprivation."

76. What’s the main idea of the passage? (Please answer within 8 words)

77. What theory are the study results similar to? (Please answer within 20 words)

78. Fill in the blank in Paragraph 5 with proper words. (Please answer within 6 words)

79. Which sentence in the text is the closest in meaning to the following one?

It’s widely accepted that the youngsters needn’t sleep as much as the child.

80. Translate the underlined sentence in Paragraph 9 into Chinese.

 

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Each cell in the human body contains about 25,000 to 35,000 genes, which carry information that determines your traits. Traits are characteristics you inherit from your parents; this means your parents pass some of their characteristics on to you through genes. For example, if both of your parents have green eyes, you might inherit the trait of green eyes from them. Or if your mom has freckles, you might inherit that trait and wind up with a freckled face. And genes aren’t just in humans — all animals and plants have genes, too.

Genes hang out all lined up on thread-like things called chromosomes. Chromosomes come in pairs, and there are hundreds, sometimes thousands of genes in one chromosome. The chromosomes and genes are made of DNA, which is short for deoxyribonucleic acid.

Chromosomes are found inside cells, the very small units that make up all living things. A cell is so tiny that you can only see it through the lens of a strong microscope, and there are billions of cells in your body. Most cells have one nucleus. The nucleus, which is sort of egg-shaped, is like the brain of the cell. It tells every part of the cell what to do. How does the nucleus know so much? It contains our chromosomes and genes. Tiny as it is, the nucleus has more information in it than the biggest dictionary you’ve ever seen.

71. What is the best title of this passage?

A. What Is a Gene?                    B. How Do Genes Work?

C. What Does A Gene Consist of?         D. How Do Nucleus Command Cells?

72. What does the underlined word “inherit” probably mean in the first paragraph?

A. carry          B. send        C. obtain           D. pass

73. Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?

A. The parents pass some characteristics on to their children.

B. All living things receive traits from the old generations.

C. One’s green eyes might be passed on from the parents.

D.A mother’s freckled face might affect her young’s face.

74. From the passage we can know that______________.

A. genes can decide all your characteristics from parents.

B. genes exist inside cells that make up all living things.

C. genes tells every part of the cell what to do .

D. Chromosomes come in pairs containing genes.

75. From the passage we can conclude that ___________.

A. not all cells have one nucleus inside .

B. not all living things are made up of cells.

C. genes aren’t in humans but in animals and plants.

D. DNA is made of chromosomes and genes.

 

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After blogging regularly for two months, people felt they had better social support and friendship networks than those who didn’t blog. Blogging can help you feel less isolated, more connected to a community and more satisfied with your friendships. Both online and face-to-face, a new Australian research has found

Researchers James Baker and Professor Susan Moore from Swinburne have written two papers investigating the psychological benefits of blogging-regularly updating personal web pages with information that invites others to comment.

The first, published in the latest issue of the journal CyberPsychology and Behaviour.  compares the mental health of people intending to blog with that of people not planning to blog. Moore says the researchers messaged 600 MySpace users personally and directed them to an online survey. A total of 134 completed the questionnaire. 84 intended to blog and 50 didn’t.

“We found potential bloggers were less satisfied with their friendships and they felt less socially integrated; they didn’t feet as much part of a community as the people who weren’t interested in blogging …”Moore says. “It was as if they were saying ‘I’m going to do this blogging and it’s going to help me’.”

And it seemed to do the trick, as the researchers’ second study shows. This study which is yet to be published, was conducted two months later. The researchers sent out questionnaires(调查问卷)to the same group of MySpace users, this time 59 responded Bloggers reported a greater sense of belonging to a group of like-minded people and feeling more confident because they could rely on others for help. All respondents, whether or not they blogged, reported feeling less anxious, depressed and stressed after two months of online social networking.

“So going onto MySpace had lifted the mood of all participants in some way,” Moore says. “Maybe they’d just made more social connections.”

Moore acknowledges this is early research and hopes to follow a larger group of people for a longer period time to test some of the research findings.

66. What does the passage mainly tell us?

A. The mental health of bloggers.

B. Blogging improves one’s social life.

C. What kind of people are likely to blog.

D. Blogging has become more and more popular.

67. It can be inferred from the fourth paragraph that _________.

A. those who were not interested in blogging didn’t have good mental health

B. people were likely to become bloggers if they felt socially isolated

C. potential bloggers were those who had mental health problems

D. potential bloggers usually held a wrong view about blogging

68.The purpose of the second study is to find out _________.

A. what people do on MySpace

B. how many people became bloggers

C. how people felt after blogging for two months

D. how many people kept blogging after two months

69. The second study shows that________.

A. online social networking can do people good

B. only bloggers benefit from online social networking

C. not many potential bloggers became real bloggers

D. not all bloggers found the help they needed

70. The main purpose of people going onto MySpace is probably to _______.

A. exchange goods                  B. entertain themselves

C. seek help                           D. exchange views

 

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One of the founding fathers of the internet has predicted the end of traditional television. Vint Serf, who helped to build the internet while working as a researcher in America, said that television was approaching its “iPod moment.”

In the same way that people now download their favorite music onto their iPods, he said that viewers would soon be downloading most of their favorite programmers onto their computers. “85 percent of all video we watch is pre-recorded, so you can set your system to download it at any time,”said Mr. Cerf, who is now the vice-president of Goggle.

“You’re still going to need live television for certain things--like news, sporting events and emergencies--but increasingly it will be almost like iPod, where you download content to look at later.”

Although television-on-demand has not yet become a main activity in the UK, the BBC, 1TV and Channel 4 have all invested a lot of money in technology which Mr. Cerf think will enable viewers to watch their favorite shows on their computers.

However, some critics(批评家)have warned that the Internet will collapse(崩溃)if millions of people try to download programmers at the same time.

Over the next four years, scientists think the number of videos watched over the Internet will double, with people moving from short chips to hour-long programmes.

Broadband companies claim that the service will cause“traffic jams”,which will cost millions of pounds to solve. Mr. Cerf dismissed these warnings, saying that critics had predicted 20 years ago that the net would collapse when people all around the world started to use it at the same time, “We’re far from exhausting (用尽)the capacity,” he said.“I want every one of the six billion people in the planet to be able to connect to the Internet.”

61.Vint Cerf is all the following EXCEPT that ___________.

A. a researcher in the United States

B. the vice-president of Goggle

C. one of the founders of the Internet

D. a manager of a broadband company

62. Which of the following is NOT something Vint Cerf has predicted?

A. Traditional television will soon have its iPod moment.

B. The number of videos watched over the Internet will double.

C. Viewers will be able to download TV programmers onto their iPods.

D. Viewers will be able to watch their favorite TV shows on the Internet.

63. According to the passage, people can always do all the following EXCEPT ____________.

A. watch short clips over the Internet

B. download live TV over the Internet

C. download per-recorded videos over the Internet

D. listen to their favorite music on their computers

64. Some critics are now predicting __________.

A. the Internet will collapse if millions of people use it at the same time

B. people all over the world will be able to connect to the Internet

C. the Internet will crash if  too many people download TV programmes at the same time

D. the videos people watch over the Internet

65. This passage mainly tells us __________.

A. a Goggle expert is predicting the end of traditional television

B. the Internet will never be used to download people's favourite shows

C. the Internet will become more popular

D. something about Vint Cerf

 

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第三部分阅读理解(共20小题;每小题2分,满分40分)

阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

On some level, I always knew that I wanted to be a doctor--at least from the age of eight or ten years old, anyway.

Although my father wasn’t a doctor, he made his own brand of “house calls. I followed  him as he brought a plate of my mother’s home cooking to an elderly man named Frank on all major holidays and when Frank was sick. As far as I know, their only connection was that Frank was an occasional customer at Dad’s small gas station. Frank’s home was a two-room house on the rough side of town with an old front porch(门廊) where you could fall if you weren’t careful. Frank had no relatives and as far as I could tell, no other visitors either. Through his attitude of caring, my father was teaching me to be a doctor, although neither of us knew it at the time.

When I was 13, my father developed lung cancer. He brought home a diagram the doctor had drawn showing where his cancer was and told me that he was going to die. He asked me to take care of my mother when he was gone. I was an only child. He said he loved me on the night when he died.

When you’re 13 and your father dies, you have some choices to make. You can use the situation as an excuse for letting your actions and grades go down, or you can honor his memory and try to do something positive with yourself. I focused my energy on my schoolwork and my goal of becoming a doctor.

56. What was the father’s“own brand of ‘house calls’”?

A. His treatment for Frank’s serious illness.    B. Being kind to Frank.

C. His attitude towards the author.              D. His wish that his son would be a doctor.

57. The author did something to realize his dream to be a doctor when ________.

A. Father helped Frank regularly

B. Father developed lung cancer

C. Father asked him / her to take care of Mother

D. Father died

58. What influence did his father’s death have on the author?

A. The author began to think seriously about his career.

B. The author was too sorrowful to go on studying.

C. The author used the situation as an excuse to quit school.

D. The author worked harder to achieve his goal of becoming a doctor.

59. Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?

A. Father taught the author how to be a doctor by making house calls on Frank.

B. In return for Father's help, Frank usually came up at his gas station.

C. The author had no sisters or brothers.

D. The author was deeply influenced by Father's doctor who treated his cancer.

60. What's the best title for the passage?

A. What Made Father Respectable              B. What Led Me to Be a Doctor

C. How to Help Strangers                   D. How to Deal with Death

 

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