1、广东高考英语试题三大类型题汇编1. A. natural B. strong C. guilty D. similar2. A. interest B. argument C. link D. knowledge3. A. noisy B. crowded C. messy D. locked4. A. homework B.housework C. problem D. research5. A. washing B. using C. dropping D. replacing6. A. approaches B.contributions C. introductions D. atti
2、tudes7. A. complex B. popular C. scientific D. successful8. A. later B.deliberately C. seldom D. thoroughly9. A. behavior B. taste C. future D. nature10. A. failures B. changes C. consequences D. thrills11. A. defend B. delay C. repeat D. reconsider12. A. communication B. bond C. friendship D. trust
3、13. A. reply B. attend C. attach D. talk14. A. hate B. scold C. frighten D. stop15. A. loving B.observing C. understanding D. praising1)Parents feel that it is difficult to live with teenagers. Then again, teenagers have 1 feelings about their parents, saying that it is not easy living with them. Ac
4、cording to a recent research, the most common 2 between parents and teenagers is that regarding untidiness and daily routine tasks. On the one hand, parents go mad over 3 rooms, clothes thrown on the floor and their childrens refusal to help with the 4 . On the other hand, teenagers lose their patie
5、nce continually when parents blame them for 5 the towel in the bathroom, not cleaning up their room or refusing to do the shopping at the supermarket.The research, conducted by St. George University, shows that different parents have different 6 to these problems. However, some approaches are more 7
6、 than others. For example, those parents who yell at their children for their untidiness, but 8 clean the room for them, have fewer chances of changing their childrens 9 . On the contrary, those who let teenagers experience the 10 of their actions can do better. For example, when teenagers who dont
7、help their parents with the shopping dont find their favorite drink in the refrigerator, they are forced to 11 their actions.Psychologists say that 12 is the most important thing in parent-child relationships. Parents should 13 to their children but at the same time they should lend an ear to what t
8、hey have to say. Parents may 14 their children when they are untidy but they should also understand that their room is their own private space. Communication is a two-way process. It is only by listening to and 15 each other that problems between parents and children can be settled. 一完形填空。36. A. bed
9、 B house C. agency D. office37. A. proud B. please C. nervous D. worried38. A. family B.door C. place D. stage39. A. calmed B.excited C. frightened D. disturbed40. A. as usual B.for a while C. in a minute D. once again41. A. advised B. examined C. informed D. questioned42. A. encouraged B. dissatisf
10、ied C. hopeless D. pleased43. A. place B. job C. advice D. help44. A. difficult B. helpless C. possible D. unusual45. A. ability B. experience C.knowledge D. study46. A. after B. since C.until D. when47. A. Above all B. As a matter of fact C.As a result D. In spite of that48. A. family B. house C.of
11、fice D. restaurant49. A. hire B. accept C.suit D. offer50. A. letter B. name C.note D. number51. A. cook B. help C.teacher D. secretary52. A. almost B. never C.nearly D. really53. A. answered B. promised C.thanked D. told54. A. outside B. local C.closest D. nearest55. A. borrowing B. buying C.readin
12、g D. writing2)Since my family were not going to be helpful, I decided I would look for one all by myself and not tell them about it till Id got one.I had seen an agency (中介机构) advertised in a local newspaper. I rushed out of the 36 in search of it. I was wildly excited, and as 37 as if I were going
13、on the stage. Finding the 38 quite easily, I ran breathlessly through a door which said “Enter without knocking, if you please.”The simple atmosphere of the office 39 me. The woman looked carefully at me 40 through her glasses, and then 41 me in a low voice. I answered softly. All of a sudden I star
14、ted to feel rather 42 .She wondered why I was looking for this sort of 43 I felt even more helpless when she told me that it would be 44 to get a job without 45 I wondered whether I ought to leave, 46 the telephone on her desk rang. I heard her say:“ 47 , Ive got someone in the 48 at this very momen
15、t who might 49 .” She wrote down a 50 , and held it out to me, saying: “Ring up this lady. She wants a 51 immediately. In fact, you would have to start tomorrow by cooking a dinner for ten people.”“Oh yes,” said I 52 having cooked for more than four in my life. I 53 her again and again, and rushed o
16、ut to the 54 telephone box. I collected my thoughts, took a deep breath, and rang the number. I said confidently that I was just what she was looking for.I spent the next few hours 55 cook books.36. A. come B. learn C. suffer D. survive37. A. As usual B. For instance C. In fact D. In other words38.
17、A. by B. in C. to D. under39. A. childhood B. poverty C. spirit D. survival40. A. adults B. fathers C. neighbours D. relatives41. A. Anyhow B. However C. Instead D. Still42. A. away B. alone C. along D. nearby43. A. growing up B. living through C. playing D. working44. A. activity B. life C. study D
18、. work45. A. by B. from C. through D. with46. A. and B. but C. or D. so47. A. Eastern B. good C. poor D. Western48. A. at any moment B. at the same time C. on the other hand D. on the whole49. A. easiest B. earliest C . happiest D. quickest50. A. care B. fear C. hurry D. worry51. A. dare B. expect C
19、. have D. require52. A. control B. danger C. disappointment D. freedom53. A. anxiously B. eagerly C. impatiently D. proudly54. A. Above all B. In the end C. Of course D. Whats more55. A. bad B. good C. rich D. poor3)The survey about childhood in the Third World shows that the struggle for survival i
20、s long and hard. But in the rich world, children can 36 from a different kind of povertyof the spirit. 37 , one Western country alone now sees 14, 000 attempted suicides (自杀)every year by children under 15, and one child 38 five needs psychiatric(心理)advice.There are many good things about 39 in the
21、Third World. Take the close and constant relation between children and their parents, relatives and neighbours for example.In the West,the very nature of work puts distance between 40 and children.But in most Third World villages mother and father do not go miles away each day to work in offices. 41
22、 ,the child sees mother and father, relations and neighbours working 42 and often shares in that work.A child 43 in this way learns his or her role through joining in the communitys 44 :helping to dig or build,look after animals or babies-rather than 45 playing with water and sand in kindergarten, k
23、eeping pets 46 playing with dolls.These children may grow up with a less oppressive sense of space and time than the 47 children. Their sense of days and time has a lot to do with the change of seasons and positions of the sun or the moon in the sky. Children in the rich world, 48 , are provided wit
24、h a watch as one of the 49 signs of growing up, so that they can 50 along with their parents about being late for school times, meal times, bed times, the times of TV showsThird World children do not usually 51 to stay indoors, still less in highrise apartments(公寓).Instead of dangerous roads,keep of
25、f the grass signs and dont speak to strangers,there is often a sense of 52 to study and play. Parents can see their children outside rather than observe them 53 from ten floors up.54 , twelve million children under five still die every year through hunger and disease.But childhood in the Third World
26、 is not all 55 .4)Tales of the supernatural are common in all parts of Britain.In particular,there was (and perhaps still is a belief in fairies(仙女).Not all of these 21 are the friendly,people-loving characters that appear in Disney films,and in some folktales they are 22 and cause much human suffer
27、ing.This is true in the tales about the Changeling.These tell the story of a mother whose baby grows 23 and pale and has changed so much that it is almost 24 to the parents.It was then 25 that the fairies had come and stolen the baby away and 26 the human baby with a fairy Changeling.There were many
28、 ways to prevent this from happening:hanging a knife over the babys head while he slept or covering him with some of his fathers clothes were just two of the recommended 27 .However,hope was not lost even if the baby had been 28 .In those cases there was often a way to get the 29 baby back.You could
29、 30 the Changeling on the firethen it would rise up the chimney,and you would hear the sound of fairies laughter and soon after you would find your own child safe and sound nearby.21.A.babies B.believers C.fairies D.supermen22.A.powerful B.cruel C.frightened D.extraordinary23.A.sick B.slim C.short D
30、.small24.A.uncomfortable B.unbelievableC.unacceptable D.unrecognizable25.A.feared B.predicted C.heard D.reported26.A.covered B.changed C.replaced D.terrified27.A.cases B.tools C.steps D.methods28.A.missed B.stolen C.found D.lost29.A.little B.pale C.sad D.real30.A.seize B.burn C.place D.hold5)Alfred
31、Nobel became a millionaire and changed the ways of mining,construction,and warfare as the inventor of dynamite(炸药). On April 12,1888,Alfreds brother Ludwig died of heart attack. A major French newspaper _21_ his brother for him and carried an article _22_ the death of Alfred Nobel. “The merchant of
32、death is dead. ”the article read. “Dr. Alfred Nobel,who became _23_ by finding ways to kill more people faster than ever before,died yesterday. ”Nobel was _24_ to find out not that he had died,but that,when his time was up, he would be thought of only as one who profited from _25_ and destruction. To make su
copyright@ 2008-2022 冰豆网网站版权所有
经营许可证编号:鄂ICP备2022015515号-1