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课文内容填空 Middle English is the name 1.(giv...

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Middle English is the name 1.(give) to the English used from around the 12th to the 15th centuries. Many things played a part in the 2.(develop) of this new type of English. The most important 3.(贡献) was from the Normans, a 4. (French speak) people who5. (打败) England and took control of the country in 1066. 6., the Norman Conquest did not affect English as much as the Angles and the Saxons’ victory about 600 years earlier, which led to Old English 7. (replace) Celtic. Even though the Normans spoke French for the e8. 250 years they ruled England, French did not replace English 9. the first language. On the other hand, the English language did borrow many words from French. This resulted in even more words with similar meanings, such as answer (from Old English) and reply (from Old French). It is interesting to learn 10. the words for animals and meat developed.

 

1.given 2.development 3.contribution 4.French-speaking 5.defeated 6.However 7.replacing 8.entire 9.as 10.how 【解析】 本文介绍英语语言的变迁。 1.考查非谓语动词。句意:中世纪英语是指12世纪到15世纪期间的英语。分析句子可知,give作定语修饰name,与其为动宾关系,故用过去分词形式given。 2.考查名词。句意:很多事情在这种新的英语演变过程中起的作用。冠词放在名词前面,修饰名词,故填development。 3.考查名词。句意:最重要的贡献来自于罗曼人,一个说法语的民族,在1066年打败英国,接管了英国。由于The most important修饰,同时谓语为was,故用单数名词contribution。 4.考查非谓语动词。句意:最重要的贡献来自于罗曼人,一个说法语的民族,在1066年打败英国,接管了英国。本句需要形容词修饰people,为短语French-speaking说法语的,故用French-speaking。 5.考查动词时态和语态句意:最重要的贡献来自于罗曼人,一个说法语的民族,在1066年打败英国,接管了英国。。此处用一般过去时态,故填defeated。 6.考查副词。句意:但是,诺曼人征服英国对英语的影响没有600年以前盎格鲁撒克逊人征服的影响大,当时英语替代了凯尔特语。分析句子可知,前后句为转折关系,故用副词however。 7.考查非谓语动词。句意:但是,诺曼人征服英国对英语的影响没有600年以前盎格鲁撒克逊人征服的影响大,当时英语替代了凯尔特语。分析句子可知,本句为lead to的用法 lead to sb doing sth,故用现在分词形式replacing。 8.考查形容词。句意:尽管在法国统治的250年间,诺曼人一直说法语,法语没有取代英语成为第一语言。修饰名词250 years用形容词,故用entire。 9.考查介词。句意:尽管在法国统治的250年间,诺曼人一直说法语,法语没有取代英语成为第一语言。本句为replace 短语replace …as 取代成为,故用介词as。 10.考查名词性从句。句意:了解动物和肉类词汇的演变是很有意思的。分析句子可知,the words for animals and meat developed作learn的宾语,从句缺乏方式状语,故用连接副词how。
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阅读下面短文,在空白处填入 一个适当的单词或用括号内单词的正确形式填空,使整个文段句意完整,语法正确。

Wolf Warriors II is putting China in the global spotlight. It’s also the first film 1.( taste) success both in terms of box office earnings and promoting Chinese values.

Since its release on July 27, it 2.( earn) an unimaginable 4.5 billion yuan, 3. ( set) a record for domestic movies at the box office. The film focuses on a rescue operation in Africa, 4.( lead) by former special forces soldier Leng Feng—played by Wu Jing —who helps Chinese workers and local African 5.(flee) a war-torn and plague-ravaged(瘟疫肆虐的) country.

Wolf Warriors II links art to reality, and reminds people of the massive evacuation(撤离) of Chinese people from Libya 6. civil war broke out there in 2011, and from Yemen in 2015, as well as the challenges the Ebola virus created in West Africa from 2013 to 2016.

The film describes 7. the Chinese government aims to protect overseas Chinese citizens. Just8. the message at the end of the film reads, “Citizens of the People’s Republic of China, when you encounter danger in a foreign land, do not give up! People remember! At your back 9.(stand) a strong motherland.”

Thanks to China’s increasing participation in global affairs, the president could be considered as modern Chinese hero. 10.holdup a banner(旗帜) of peace, friendship and responsibility, Wolf Warriors II should be seen as a brave effort to promote Chinese values around the world.

 

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    Devon Gallagher, a college graduate from Philadelphia, wants the world to know where she’s been during her great worldwide vacation in a(n) ______way.

The traveler, who was ______ with a bone disease, had her right leg ______ at the age of four. ______ the amputation (截肢) caused hardships for Gallagher early on, she, at the age of 22 now, _____ it as an inspiration for making the ______ of her life.

To spread that ______, Gallagher has ______ to social media, ______ she shares photos of her travels across the world, but instead of ______ using a geotag (地理标签), she draws her location across her artificial leg before taking a picture.

Now she has been taking pictures ______ Europe. “I get a new leg every two years and I can choose the design on it. One day I had a sudden ______ that my new leg could be used as a blackboard,” Gallagher said. “My mum and grandmother weren’t too ______ the idea, but my friends thought it was great and told me to go for it, so I did.”

Gallagher said people often stare when she’s ______ on her leg, but once she shares the photos, she ______ only praise and encouragement. “My leg hasn’t ______ me from doing anything I’ve wanted to do,” she said. “I don’t know ______ it is my determination to prove to myself that I can do it, but anyhow, I’ve been able to ______ up with my peers and lead a pretty great life.”

Gallagher shows us that you should never let anything stand in the ______ of your dream. And if you meet with an obstacle (障碍), get ______ with it— if life gives you an artificial leg, make art.

1.A. common B. right C. simple D. special

2.A. born B. charged C. filled D. linked

3.A. cured B. treated C. cut D. kept

4.A. Unless B. Although C. Once D. Since

5.A. considers B. thinks C. treats D. looks

6.A. coolest B. best C. worst D. fullest

7.A. evidence B. news C. message D. schedule

8.A. applied B. belonged C. stuck D. turned

9.A. which B. that C. as D. where

10.A. simply B. officially C. enthusiastically D. reasonably

11.A. across B. through C. about D. for

12.A. attitude B. thought C. belief D. opinion

13.A. curious about B. fond of C. patient with D. afraid of

14.A. walking B. reporting C. writing D. standing

15.A. accepts B. takes C. likes D. receives

16.A. protected B. preserved C. stopped D. defended

17.A. why B. that C. if D. what

18.A. make B. come C. put D. keep

19.A. way B. corner C. course D. bottom

20.A. satisfied B. creative C. familiar D. connected

 

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    For some people, walking or running outdoors is a great way to exercise. What may not be so great is seeing rubbish all over the ground. Well, some people are doing something about it. 1. “Plogging” began in Sweden. The name connects the Swedish word “plocka,” which means to pick up, and the word “jogging,” which means to run slowly.

A Swedish man named Erik Ahlström, started the movement in 2016. He moved to Stockholm from a small community (社区) in northern Sweden. Each day he would ride his bike to work. He became worried about the amount of rubbish and litter he saw each day on his way to work. So, he took matters into his own hands. He began picking up the rubbish. 2.

Today, plogging is an official activity, which is becoming more and more popular. People of all ages are welcome to plog. Exercise while helping your community. 3. It can also build closer social connections in a community. When the street looks bad and it’s dirty, you're going to feel bad about the community. You may even feel less safe because of that. So if we’re all doing our part and picking it up, it’s very easy to help beautify it, and help build those social connection. 4. You get to feel some social duty when you do this.

Along with cleaning up the environment, there may be another reason to choose plogging instead of just jogging. You may get a better workout. One fitness app, Lifesum, records one hour of plogging as burning 288 calories. 5.

As can be seen, cities around the world now hold plogging events. The goal is to spread the idea that littering is not acceptable. People would think twice before dropping a garbage on the ground.

A. Plogging is equal parts of exercise and community service.

B. And that is how plogging was born!

C. And plogging does good to your health.

D. Usual jogging burns about 235 calories.

E. They are plogging!

F. There are people all around the world doing this.

G. You get to know your neighbors.

 

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    New Zealand’s chief conservation (环保) officer, Lou Sanson, caused an argument in October by suggesting that it should be time to start charging tourists for entering national parks. New Zealanders are keen fans of these parks. Many would be annoyed at having to pay. But many also worry about the incoming foreign tourists who have been seeking the same fun.

In 2016 New Zealand hosted 3.5m tourists from overseas; by 2022 more than 4.5m are expected every year — about the same as the country’s population. Tourism has become the biggest export. The national parks, which make up about one-third of the country, are a huge draw. About half of the foreign tourists visit one. They are keen to experience the natural beauty promised by the country’s “100% Pure New Zealand” advertising campaign (and shown off in the film adaptations of “The Lord of the Rings”

 

and  “The Hobbit”, which were shot in New Zealand’s breath-taking wilderness).

But for every happy foreign couple posting for a selfie next to a tuatara (楔齿蜥) there is a New

Zealander who remembers the way things used to be — when you could walk the tracks without running into crowds at every clearing. Many locals now wonder why their taxes, as they see it, are paying for someone else’s holiday. Mr. Sanson would seem to agree. Entry fees could be used to upgrade facilities such as car parks and trails. A charge could also help reduce numbers at some of the popular locations by making it cheaper to use lesser-known, but no less beautiful, trails far away from home.

Some are not so sure it would work. Hugh Logan, a former chief of conservation for the government who now runs a mountain climbing club, worries it would cost too much to employ staff to take money from hikers at entrances. It would also be difficult to prevent tourists from entering the parks without paying.

Some argue that it would be easier to charge visitors a “conservation tax” when they enter the country. The Green Party, the third-largest in parliament (议会), says that adding around NZ$18 ($12.50) is still acceptable to foreign tourists. But some travel companies don’t quite agree with the idea. They note that tourists already contribute around NZ$1.1bn through the country’s 15% sales tax. Better, such firms say, to use foreign tourists’ contribution to this tax for the protection of the parks.

Among the fiercest critics of a charge are those who point out that free access to wilderness areas is an important principle for New Zealanders. It is documented in a National Parks Act (法案) which inspires almost constitution-like devotion among the country’s nature-lovers. Mr. Sanson has a rocky path ahead.

1.Why do some people support charging tourists visiting national parks?

A. Breath-taking wilderness deserves higher charge.

B. Locations become more popular because of movies.

C. Tourists have disturbed the peace of the locals.

D. The government needs more money to upgrade facilities.

2.What does the underlined word “draw” in Paragraph 2 probably mean?

A. Shelter. B. Attraction

C. Business D. Puzzle.

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A. It may not be easy to collect the entry fee in some cases.

B. It would be more practical to charge at the border of the country.

C. It would be more acceptable if only foreign visitors are charged.

D. It may not be reasonable to charge as tourists have already paid taxes.

4.What type of writing is this passage?

A. social documentary. B. A news report.

C. A scientific paper. D. A travel leaflet.

 

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    Wolves travel shorter distances and move slower during snowfall events, according to new research by University of Alberta biologists. The effects were most pronounced at night, when wolves hunt, and behaviour returned to normal within a day. Wolf tracks across snow in northeastern Alberta.

“Our findings suggest that there is something about actively falling snow that causes wolves to slow down,” said Amanda Droghini, a former MSc student in the Department of Biological Science and lead author on the study. “We don’t know the exact mechanism behind that. It’s unlikely that they were staying still because they were feasting on a recent kill. Instead, active precipitation(降雪量)might affect wolves’ hunting abilities. Like rain, snow clears the air column of scent molecules. So, maybe falling snow makes it harder for wolves to detect the smell of prey.”

Over the course of two winters, the researchers used remote cameras to disclose snowfall events and estimate snow depth. To study wolf movement, they collected telemetry(测距仪) data from 17 wolves to calculate travel speed and duration, as well as resting periods. It is the first study to examine how large flesh-eating animals respond to snowfall events.

With the effects of climate change on precipitation in the north forest region uncertain, it is difficult to predict the implications for wolf populations. Studies such as these increase our understanding of how large mammals react to normal snowfall events, but the type and amount of winter precipitation will likely have an impact on animal behavior and the energetic cost of movement.

“Winter is already challenging for many wildlife species because moving through snow requires more energy. Snow can also make it harder for animals to access food resources,” said Droghini, who conducted the research under the supervision of Professor Stan Boutin, Alberta Biodiversity Conservation Chair.

“Anything that increases those costs, such as increased rain-on-snow events, could lead to lacking in nutrition, poor body condition, and even starvation as animals are unable to make up for those additional costs. That is one of the worst-case scenarios(设想)but, in truth, we know very little about potential changes to precipitation patterns and how wildlife will respond to those changes.”

1.Which one is the closest to the underlined word “disclose” in paragraph 3?

A. identify B. overlook

C. overcome D. disturb

2.Increased precipitation might have the following effects on animals except _______.

A. poor health B. nutritional shortage

C. hunting ability D. losing appetite(食欲)

3.It can be inferred from the passage that _______.

A. researchers find it difficult to predict the implications for wolves

B. researchers have found the mechanism behind the phenomenon

C. researchers have collected data by using modern technologies

D. researchers will most probably go on studying the phenomenon

4.Where can we probably find this article?

A. tourist leaflets. B. sports newspapers.

C. science magazines. D. advertising posters.

 

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