满分5 > 高中英语试题 >

Afel was only a very small boy when he f...

    Afel was only a very small boy when he first saw snow in a picture book. It had lots of pictures of children _______ in big white fields. He asked, “Mum, what are those white fields?” His mother laughed, “That’s snow, and they are making a snowman!” She tried to _______

What snow was. Afel didn’t really _______ because there was no real snow where he lived. But he showed great interest.

One day when he was 12, Afel was watching a programme on TV at his uncle’s house. The programme was full of snow. And not only snow—there were people _______ across the snow. They looked like fantastic birds. They had hats covering all their heads and big goggles over their eyes. And on their feet, they had _______ shoes.

“What are those?” he asked his uncle excitedly. “Skis,” replied his uncle. “And those people are called skiers.” At that moment, he _______ to be a skier. He asked his uncle what the programme was. “The Winter Olympics,” said his uncle. “It’s like the normal Olympics, but for _______ where you need snow—ski jumping, bobsleigh(长橇), those sorts of things. They have it every four years.”

Afel found out that the next Winter Olympics would be in Beijing, in 2022. “Perfect,” he thought. “Enough _______ for me to become a brilliant skier.”

“But there’s no snow here!” people told him. “Where are you going to ski?” Afel _______ them. He made himself a pair of skis from two pieces of wood. He tied them to his feet and practised skiing _______ two sticks in his hands. He practised again and again until he could _______ quite quickly across the sand. He _______ to fly down the hills like the people on TV, but he couldn’t.

“Never mind,” he thought. “It’s a _______

“How will you go to the Olympics?” people asked him. “Our country doesn’t even have a team that goes to the Winter Olympics. We have good runners and win lots of medals at the Olympics. But no skiing, no.” Afel didn’t care.

So every night, out in the middle of the desert, Afel now practises skiing down sand hills. He _______ that the yellow sand and brown earth are as gold as the medal he will bring home with him, when he is the _______.

1.A.drawing B.playing C.dancing D.hiking

2.A.announce B.stress C.conclude D.explain

3.A.mind B.respond C.understand D.regret

4.A.walking B.riding C.running D.flying

5.A.strong B.strange C.fashionable D.comfortable

6.A.promised B.claimed C.agreed D.decided

7.A.projects B.fields C.sports D.courses

8.A.time B.energy C.experience D.determination

9.A.avoided B.ignored C.corrected D.criticized

10.A.pushing B.pulling C.holding D.waving

11.A.roll B.march C.jump D.move

12.A.needed B.prepared C.pretended D.attempted

13.A.start B.chance C.solution D.strategy

14.A.dreams B.predicts C.assumes D.realizes

15.A.authority B.champion C.genius D.celebrity

 

1.B 2.D 3.C 4.D 5.B 6.D 7.C 8.A 9.B 10.C 11.D 12.D 13.A 14.A 15.B 【解析】 本文是记叙文。文章主要讲述了Afel从未见过雪以及与雪相关的运动因此产生了极大的兴趣,他把成为滑雪运动员当成梦想。 1.考查动词词义辨析。句意:它有很多图片,图片中孩子们在宽阔的雪地上玩耍。A. drawing 画画;B. playing玩耍;C. dancing跳舞;D. hiking 远足。根据后文“That’s snow, and they are making a snowman!”可知,图片里的孩子们是在雪地玩耍。故选B。 2.考查动词词义辨析。句意:他的母亲笑着说:“那是雪,他们在堆雪人!”她尽力解释着。A. announce宣布;B. stress强调;C. conclude得出结论;D. explain解释。根据上一句“Mum, what are those white fields?”可知,Afel是在问问题,因此妈妈是在为他进行解释。故选D。 3.考查动词词义辨析。句意:Afel并没有理解妈妈的解释因为他所生活的地方没有雪。A. mind头脑,大脑;B. respond回应;C. understand理解;D. regret后悔。根据本句的“ because there was no real snow where he lived”可知,Afel因为没有见过真正的雪,所以并不懂得妈妈的解释。故选C。 4.考查动词词义辨析。句意:不仅有雪,还有人在雪地上飞奔。A. walking步行;B. riding骑,乘;C. running跑步;D. flying飞行。根据后一句“ They looked like fantastic birds”可知,人们像鸟一样在雪地上飞奔。同时,后文的“He 12 to fly down the hills like the people on TV, but he couldn’t.”这句话中出现了fly,这是原词复现。故选D。 5.考查形容词词义辨析。句意:他们的脚上穿有奇怪的鞋子。A. strong强大的;B. strange奇怪的;C. fashionable时髦的;D. comfortable舒适的。由下文的“what are those?”可知,他问这样的问题说明当他看到人们在雪地中穿的鞋子时会觉得这鞋子很奇怪。故选B。 6.考查动词词义辨析。句意: 那时,他决定成为一名滑雪者。A. promised答应;B. claimed声称;C. agreed同意;D. decided决定。根据下文“Enough 8 for me to become a brilliant skier.”可知,Afel在这一刻决定将来成为一名滑雪运动员。故选D。 7.考查名词词义辨析。句意:冬奥会就像正常的奥林匹克运动会,但是对于它的运动项目而言是需要雪才能进行的。A. projects计划;B. fields领域;C. sports运动;D. courses课程。根据前句中出现的“ The next Winter Olympics”可知,此处应为与雪有关的运动。故选C。 8.考查名词词义辨析。句意:有足够的时间使我成为一名出色的滑雪者。A. time 时间;B. energy能源;C. experience经验;D. determination决心。根据上文“ every four years”得知,冬奥会每四年举办一次,下一届冬奥会是2022年,由此可推知,Afel说的是他有足够的时间来成为一名杰出的滑雪者。故选A。 9.考查动词词义辨析。句意:Afel并未理睬人们说的话。A. avoided避免;B. ignored忽略,忽视;C. corrected更正;D. criticized批评。根据后文“ He made himself a pair of skis from two pieces of wood.”可以得知,他做了一对滑雪板,要练习滑雪。说明Afel并未理睬人们说的话,即忽略了他们。故选B。 10.考查动词词义辨析。句意:他把滑雪板绑在脚上,双手握着两根滑雪杖开始练习滑雪。A. pushing推动;B. pulling拉;C. holding保持,握着;D. waving挥手。根据常识可知,滑雪时应该是双手握着滑雪杖。故选C。 11.考查动词词义辨析。句意:他一次又一次地练习,直到能很快在沙滩上移动。A. roll滚动;B. march游行;C. jump跳;D. move移动。此处为“滑雪”的动作,应该是快速地移动。故选D。 12.考查动词词义辨析。句意:他尝试像电视上的人一样飞下山坡,但他做不到。A. needed需要;B. prepared准备;C. pretended假装;D. attempted企图,试图。根据本句的“ but he couldn’t.”可知,他试图模仿电视上的人一样飞下山去,但是没能做得到。故选D。 13.考查名词词义辨析。句意:这是开始而已。A. start开始;B. chance机会;C. solution解决;D. strategy战略。从最后一段的“Afel now practises skiing down sand hills.”可知,他练习要像电视上的人一样飞下山去,因此此前的失败只是开始。故选A。 14.考查动词词义辨析。句意:他梦想着,等他成了冠军时,他带回来的奖牌就像眼前这黄沙褐土一样金光闪闪。A. dreams梦想;B. predicts预言;C. assumes假设;D. realizes意识到。根据前文提到的“ Afel now practises skiing down sand hills.”可知,他现在还在练习,所以获奖应该是梦想中的事情。故选A。 15.考查名词词义辨析。句意:他梦想着,等他成了冠军时,他带回来的奖牌就像眼前这黄沙褐土一样金光闪闪。A. authority权威;B. champion冠军;C. genius天才;D. celebrity名人。结合选项可知,他成为冠军的时候才能获得奖牌。故选B。
复制答案
考点分析:
相关试题推荐

    An interview is a discussion with someone in which you try to get information from them. 1. There are three basic sub-types of interview: structured interviews, unstructured interviews and semi-structured interviews. 2. Incidentally, “respondent” and “informant” are words that are sometimes used instead of “interviewee”.

A great deal is provided by this personal contact: you are another human being, and interviewees will respond to you, in bodily presence, in an entirely different way from the way that they would have reacted to questionnaires that came through their letterboxes or to emails. 3. Most people want to help and give their opinions, and they will usually be energized to help by your physical presence.

If you take the trouble to schedule a visit, you can be more or less guaranteed of a response. Most importantly, though, you will be able to relate to interviewees while you are talking to them. 4. You will be able to watch their behaviour which will give you important clues about how they feel about a topic. Because of the primacy of the personal contact, your appearance and tone are important—how do you want to be seen? As “one of us”? As a person in authority? As an observer? …Or what? 5. However you decide to present yourself, it is good practice of course to try to put the interviewee at ease before the interview begins — to talk about the weather, about your journey, about anything that will break the ice.

A.This is a ready-made support for you.

B.Its nature varies with the nature of the interviews.

C.You will be able to hear and understand what they are saying.

D.Your decision should influence the way that you look, sound and behave.

E.The information may be facts or opinions or attitudes or any combination of these.

F.Each involves the interviewer in fact-to-face contact or telephone contact with another person.

G.You will be using these clues to make informed guesses about what the interviewees might really mean.

 

查看答案

    For several decades, there has been an extensive and organized campaign intended to generate distrust in science, funded by those whose interests and ideologies are threatened by the findings of modern science. In response, scientists have tended to stress the success of science. After all, scientists have been right about most things.

Stressing successes isn’t wrong, but for many people it’s not persuasive. An alternative answer to the question “Why trust science?” is that scientists use the so-called scientific method. If you’ve got a high school science textbook lying around, you’ll probably find that answer in it. But what is typically thought to be the scientific method — develop a hypothesis (假设), then design an experiment to test it — isn’t what scientists actually do. Science is dynamic: new methods get invented; old ones get abandoned; and sometimes, scientists can be found doing many different things.

If there is no identifiable scientific method, then what is the reason for trust in science? The answer is how those claims are evaluated. The common element in modern science, regardless of the specific field or the particular methods being used, is the strict scrutiny (审查) of claims. It’s this tough, sustained process that works to make sure faulty claims are rejected. A scientific claim is never accepted as true until it has gone through a lengthy “peer review” because the reviewers are experts in the same field who have both the right and the obligation (责任) to find faults.

A key aspect of scientific judgment is that it is done collectively. No claim gets accepted until it has been vetted by dozens, if not hundreds, of heads. In areas that have been contested, like climate science and vaccine safety, it’s thousands. This is why we are generally justified in not worrying too much if a single scientist, even a very famous one, disagrees with the claim. And this is why diversity in science — the more people looking at a claim from different angles — is important.

Does this process ever go wrong? Of course. Scientists are humans. There is always the possibility of revising a claim on the basis of new evidence. Some people argue that we should not trust science because scientists are “always changing their minds.” While examples of truly settled science being overturned are far fewer than is sometimes claimed, they do exist. But the beauty of this scientific process is that it explains what might otherwise appear paradoxical (矛盾的): that science produces both novelty and stability. Scientists do change their minds in the face of new evidence, but this is a strength of science, not a weakness.

1.How does the author think of the scientific method?

A.Stable. B.Persuasive.

C.Unreliable. D.Unrealistic.

2.What does the underlined word “vetted” in Paragraph 4 probably mean?

A.Explained. B.Examined.

C.Repeated. D.Released.

3.According to the passage, the author may agree that ______.

A.it is not persuasive to reject those faulty claims

B.settled science tends to be collectively overturned

C.a leading expert cannot play a decisive role in a scrutiny

D.diversity in knowledge is the common element in science

4.Which of the following would be the best title for the passage?

A.Put Your Faith in Science B.Defend the Truth in Science

C.Apply Your Mind to Science D.Explore A Dynamic Way to Science

 

查看答案

    A group of blue-faced birds step through the grass shoulder to shoulder, red eyes looking around. They look like middle schoolers seeking a cafeteria table at lunchtime. Perhaps they’re not so different.

A new study, led by Damien Farine, an ornithologist who studies collective behaviour, shows that the vulturine guineafowl of eastern Africa, like humans, have multilevel societies. In the past, scientists assumed such social structures required a lot of brainpower. But the pea-brained guineafowl are revealing the faults in that assumption.

These large birds wander across the landscape in packs, often walking so closely that their bodies touch. They may fight each other to maintain their strict hierarchies (等级制度), but at other times they engage in friendly behaviours like sharing food.

Suspecting the guineafowl might have a social structure, Dr. Farine and his colleagues began a thorough study of their society. For a whole year, they made daily observations of 441 birds. Coloured leg bands in unique combinations let researchers tell the black-and-blue birds apart. They also attached GPS devices to the backs of 58 birds, which let them see exactly where every group went, 24 hours a day.

The findings of the research suggest that the vulturine guineafowl have a multilevel society. There are groups within groups within the population as a whole. There even seem to be groups of friends within the small groups. This is the first time anyone has observed such a society in a bird.

And Dr. Farine emphasizes this particular bird’s tiny brain size: “They don’t only have small brains relative to mammals (哺乳动物), they also have quite small brains relative to other birds,” he said.

According to him, living in this kind of society might actually make it easier to keep track of the social order. For example, if groups are stable and a bird can identify just one or two individuals within a group, it knows which group it’s looking at — no need for a brain that can recognize every single animal. Multilevel societies also let animals adjust their group sizes based on whatever challenges they’re facing. Depending on what enemies or resources are around, it might make sense to travel in a combined group rather than a smaller one.

“Having a multilevel structure may not require having a large brain,” Dr. Farine said. There may be more birds and other animals out there that, although small-brained, have societies as many-leveled as our own.

1.According to the passage, what inspired Dr. Farine to carry out the study?

A.The guineafowl’s social behaviour.

B.Previous assumptions about birds.

C.His interest in animal brainpower.

D.The faults in earlier research.

2.What is Paragraph 4 mainly about?

A.The research subjects. B.The research methods.

C.The research findings. D.The research equipment.

3.What can be learned from the passage?

A.Complex social systems can be a disadvantage to the guineafowl.

B.The guineafowl are good at recognizing individuals in a group.

C.Birds maintain social order by travelling in combined groups.

D.Small-brained animals can form multilevel societies.

4.What is the main purpose of the passage?

A.To present the findings of a study of the guineafowl.

B.To explain the interaction patterns in multilevel societies.

C.To introduce a new approach to observing the guineafowl.

D.To uncover clues about how complex societies are formed.

 

查看答案

    Growing up, Deka Ismail says she let labels define what she could be. “I was a black girl, from a refugee (难民) family,” Deka said. “It was as if I was only allowed to explore in this predetermined box.”

After a high school chemistry class inspired her to think about a career in science and gave her confidence in the field, Deka learned to live outside labels and began making big plans for her future. Now she is about to begin her freshman year at the University of California, planning to become a professor.

Born and raised in San Diego’s City Heights neighbourhood, Deka is the daughter of a Somali refugee couple. While some might say Deka’s success happened in spite of her background, she would say differently, that her experiences shaped her and inspired her to be the driven, young scientist that she is today.

When Deka was eight years old, her mother got a job by studying hard back in school in order to support the whole family. That made Deka realize that education could make a difference to one’s life. She spent a lot of time in the library reading books, and didn’t do many of the things her peers did, like partying or having romantic relationships.

“I always felt like I had to be the perfect girl for my family,” Deka said. “You have to not even do your best but two times better than everyone else. I felt like the whole world was waiting for me to mess up.”

Deka’s efforts paid off. The summer before her senior year of high school, she was accepted to the American Chemical Society Project SEED Programme. “She brought both enthusiasm and focus,” Botham, a researcher at this research institute, recalled. “She arrived every day ready to work, ready to learn and ready to tackle new challenges regardless of whether or not she had done anything similar.”

When asked what advice she would give to others like her, Deka warned them not to underestimate themselves. “Don’t tell yourself that scholarship is too big or this programme is too competitive or I’ll never get into this school, ” she said. “I was not sure whether I could make it until I started seeing the acceptance letters rolling in.”

1.From the passage, we can learn that ______.

A.Deka was adopted by a refugee family

B.Deka spent a lot of time going to parties

C.Deka became a professor after graduation

D.Deka’s experiences drove her to work hard

2.Deka realized the importance of education ______.

A.from her mother’s experience B.after her chemistry class

C.by reading books in the library D.through working at the institute

3.According to the last paragraph, Deka advised that students be ______.

A.patient B.confident

C.ambitious D.generous

4.What does the story intend to tell us?

A.Life is not all roses.

B.Practice makes perfect.

C.Well begun is half done.

D.Hard work leads to success.

 

查看答案

    If you’re looking to buy a gift for your children, why not keep up with the trend and get the best hoverboard?

What is a Hoverboard?

A hoverboard is a two-wheeled personal transportation device. It’s electrical, portable and became highly popular in 2015 in reference to a popular 1980’s movie. Typically, this self-balancing device operates like a powered skateboard.

How Does a Hoverboard Work?

The device may have many designs, but the mechanism itself isn’t complicated. Basically, a standard hoverboard contains:

•Battery: stores the electrical power. Almost all hoverboards use a high-watt lithium-ion battery.

•Gyroscope (one for each wheel): allows riders to tilt (倾斜) the hoverboard while maintaining balance and adjusting their direction.

•Motor (one in each wheel): provides the power to the wheels to keep the rider balanced and upright.

•Logic board: functions as the hoverboard brain. It processes data — your speed, tilt, etc. — and sends information to the motors. This unit controls the power of the board so riders can adjust their speed.

All the above components work together to control the power and tilt of the hoverboards so the rider is balanced, upright and moving at a controlled speed.

Why Buy a Hoverboard?

Undoubtedly, hoverboards are cool. You’ve probably seen kids riding one around the house. They’re a phenomenon and everybody wants in. So, why deny your kids and prevent them from being part of this trend?

Where is a hoverboard legal?

Despite their wild popularity, hoverboards have yet to become “street-legal”. Currently, some places prohibit anyone under 16 from using these devices, and hoverboards are banned in academic institutions and public places, like campus buildings, parks, shopping malls and subway stations. Some places have also put speed limits on the devices and restricted their use to bike paths. However, open areas — including your yard — are free of these restrictions.

1.The logic board of a hoverboard can ______.

A.store electricity

B.power the wheels

C.send information to the riders

D.receive data and give command

2.According to the passage, a hoverboard can be used ______.

A.on campus B.in parks

C.on bike paths D.in shopping malls

3.What is the main purpose of this passage?

A.To evaluate a gift’s quality.

B.To recommend a gift choice.

C.To compare new hoverboard models.

D.To clarify functions of the latest hoverboards.

 

查看答案
试题属性

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