2017年榆树一中高三竞赛试卷
英 语
注意事项:
1. 答题前,务必将自己的姓名、准考证号填写在答题卡规定的位置上。 2. 答选择题时,必须使用2B铅笔将答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑,如需改动,用橡皮擦擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。
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4. 所有题目必须在答题卡上作答,在试题卷上答题无效。
第一部分 阅读理解 (共两节, 满分40分) 第一节(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)
阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C和D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。
A
Orlando, the“Theme Park Capital of the world,”has enough to keep your family entertained for weeks. Four Best gives you a description of what each of these parks has to offer. Aquatica Orlando
Aquatica Orlando brings the best of an aquarium(水族馆), zoo, water park and amusement park together into one experience. With 38 slides, 84, 000 acres of white sand beach, you can easily spend the entire day enjoying the Florida sun with your family. Don’t miss the Dolphin Plunge, a clear tube water slide that takes you through the dolphin habitat. LEGOLAND Florida
LEGOLAND Florida, the largest LEGOLAND park in the world, features 50 rides, shows and attractions spread out over the Lego-strewn 150-acres. If you’re traveling with younger kids, LEGOLAND makes a great choice since it’s designed for kids between the ages of 3 and 12. Besides, Buddy is our walk-around character mascot (吉祥物) of the park. He’s tall, yellow, friendly, and loves taking pictures with LEGOLAND Florida guests.
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Discovery Cove
With guest access restricted to 1,300 per day, Discovery Cove feels more like a resort than a theme park. Without crowds to worry about, you’ll get to enjoy up-close animal meetings with dolphins, sting rays, tropical fish and exotic birds. It’s all-inclusive too, so you won’t have to worry about food, towels or equipment. Disney’s Animal Kingdom
At the Animal Kingdom, Disney changes the concept of a zoological park to something completely new. Here you can take a ride through the wilds of Africa, complete with real animals, raft down the Amazon or ride a runaway train through Mount Everest. The park is home to about 1,500 animals representing 250 species. 21.Which theme park will parents probably choose for their five-year-old child? A. Aquatica Orlando. C. Discovery Cove.
B. LEGOLAND Florida. D. Disney’s Animal Kingdom.
22.What can people do in Disney’s Animal Kingdom? A. Enjoy the Florida sun with their family. C. Watch tropical fish face to face.
B. Take pictures with Buddy. D. Watch real animals.
23.What can we know about the four theme parks? A. Aquatica Orlando has various entertainment facilities. B. You must take towels of your own at Discovery Cove. C. LEGOLAND Florida covers an area of 84,000 acres.
D. Disney’s Animal Kingdom is based on traditional concept of zoo.
B
Compassion (同情) is a desire within us to help others. With effort, we can translate compassion into action.An experience last weekend showed me this is true.I work part-time in a supermarket across from a building for the elderly. These old people are our main customers, and it’s not hard to lose patience over their slowness. But last Sunday, one aged gentleman appeared to teach me a valuable lesson. This untidy man walked up to my register (收款机) with a box of biscuits. He said he was out of cash, had just moved into his room, and had nothing in his cupboards. He asked if we could let him have the food on trust. He promised to repay me the next day.
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I couldn’t help staring at him. I wondered what kind of person he had been ten or twenty years before, and what he would be like if fortune had gone his way. I had a hurt in my heart for this kind of human soul, all alone in the world. I told him that I was sorry, but store rules didn’t allow me to do so. I felt stupid and unkind saying this, but I valued my job.
Just then, another man, standing behind the first, spoke up. If anything, he looked more pitiable.“Charge it to me,” was all he said.
What I had been feeling was pity. Pity is soft and safe and easy.Compassion, on the other hand, is caring in action. I thanked the second man but told him that was not allowed either. Then I reached into my pocket and paid for the biscuits myself.I reached into my pocket because these two men had reached into my heart and taught me compassion.
24. The aged gentleman who wanted to buy the biscuits . A. promised to obey the store rules. B. forgot to take his credit card with him. C. hoped to have the food first and pay later. D. could not afford anything more expensive.
25. Which of the following best describes the old gentleman? A. Kind and lucky C. Friendly and helpful
B. Poor and lonely D. Hurt and disappointed
26. Why did the author refuse the old gentle man’s request first? A. He wanted to keep his present job. B. He felt no pity for the old gentleman. C. He considered the old man dishonest. D. He expected someone else to pay for the old man. 27. What lesson did the author learn from this experience? A. Wealth is most important in older age. B. Helping others is easier said than done. C. Pity is better gained through practice.
D. Obeying the rules means more than compassion.
C
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Walk through the Amazon rainforest today and you will find it is steamy, warm, damp and thick. But if you had been around 15, 000 years ago, during the last ice age, would it have been the same? For more than 30 years, scientists have been arguing about how rainforests like the Amazon might have reacted to the cold, dry climates of the ice ages, but until now, no one has reached a satisfying answer.
Rainforests like the Amazon are important for mopping up CO2 from the atmosphere and helping to slow global warming. Currently the trees in the Amazon take in around 500 million tons of CO2 each year: equal to the total amount of CO2 giving off in the UK each year. But how will the Amazon react to future climate change? If it gets drier, will it still survive and continue to draw down CO2?
Scientists hope that they will be able to learn in advance how the rainforest will manage in the future by understanding how rainforests reacted to climate change in the past. Unfortunately, getting into the Amazon rainforest and collecting information are very difficult. To study past climate, scientists need to look at fossilized pollen, kept in lake mud. Going back to the last ice age means drilling deep down into lake sediments (沉淀物) which requires specialized equipment and heavy machinery. There are very few roads and paths, or places to land helicopters and aeroplanes. Rivers tend to be the easiest way to enter the forest, but this still leaves vast areas between the rivers completely unsampled (未取样). So far, only a handful of cores have been drilled that go back to the last ice age and none of them provide enough information to prove how the Amazon rainforest reacts to climate change.
28. What does the underlined phrase “mopping up” in the second paragraph mean? A. Giving up B. Taking in C. Wiping out D. Giving out 29. How will the Amazon rainforest react to future climate change? A. It’ll get drier and continue to remove CO2. B. It’ll remain steamy, warm, damp and thick. C. It’ll get warmer and then colder and drier. D. There is no exact answer up to present. 30. What’s the main idea of the last paragraph?
A. It’s hard to collect information for studies of the past climate in the Amazon rainforest.
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B. It’s impossible to prove how climate changes in the Amazon rainforest. C. It’s important to drill deep down into lake sediments to collect information. D. It’s necessary to have specialized equipment and machinery to study the past climate.
31. What is the best title for this passage?
A. Studies of the Rainforests B. Climates of the Amazon C. Secrets of the Ice Age D. Changes of the Rainforests
D
Food picked up just a few seconds after being dropped is less likely to contain bacteria than if it is left for longer periods of time, according to the findings of research carried out at Aston University’s School of Life and Health Sciences. The findings suggest there may be some scientific basis of the \rule\the belief about it being fine to eat food that has only had contact with the floor for five seconds or less. Although people have long followed the “5-second rule”, until now it was unclear whether it actually helped.
The study, undertaken by final year Biology students and led by Anthony Hilton, Professor of Microbiology at Aston University, monitored the transfer of the common bacteria from a variety of indoor floor types as carpet, cement floor to toast, pasta, biscuit and a sticky sweet when contact was made from 3 to 30 seconds. The results showed that: time is a significant factor in the transfer of bacteria from a floor surface to a piece of food, and the type of flooring the food has been dropped on has an effect, with bacteria least likely to transfer from carpeted surfaces and most likely to transfer from cement flooring surfaces to moist foods making contact for more than 5 seconds. Professor Hilton said, \food dropped on the floor still carries an infection risk as it very much depends on which bacteria are present on the floor at the time.\
The Aston team also carried out a survey of the number of people who employ the “five-second rule”. The survey showed that: 87% of the people surveyed said they would eat food dropped on the floor, or already have done so. 55% of those that would, or have eaten food dropped on the floor are women. 81% of the women who would eat food from the floor would follow the “5-second rule”. Professor Hilton
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