1、学年高中英语上学期第13周周训练题题号分值考点识记理解简单运用综合运用难易程度11.5动词辨析易21.5动词辨析易31.5时态辨析易41.5名词辨析易51.5形容词辨析中61.5时态辨析易71.5动词辨析中81.5名词辨析难91.5副词辨析易101.5介词辨析难111.5动词辨析中121.5动词辨析中131.5副词辨析难141.5代词辨析易151.5动词辨析易161.5连词辨析中171.5形容词辨析中181.5连词辨析中191.5介词辨析中201.5名词辨析中212细节理解题难222语境运用易232推理判断题易242推理判断题中251.5语境运用易261.5考查副词中271.5考查介词难281
2、.5考查动词时态易291.5考查搭配易301.5考查动词搭配中311.5考查连词中321.5考查形容词、副词中331.5考查时态中341.5考查连词中351.5考查非谓语难Module 5 A Lesson in a Lab单元测试题二第卷第二部分: 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,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。ACalvin Gillian didnt believe that Norway was the place for an adventurous holiday. However, some fri
3、ends told him to go there and he loved it.“Im an extreme-sports maniac. Ive traveled to many different countries, but I didnt expect Norway to be a good place for an extreme holiday. Tourists usually visit Norway because of its old Viking history or to go fishing and boating in the famous fjords (峡湾
4、) to enjoy a relaxing holiday, or to go climbing to enjoy the beauty of nature. But I didnt go for fishing; I wanted adventure.“Skiing (滑雪) is the best thing you can do in Norway. Svartisen, the Black Ice glacier (冰川), is wonderful. The ice is not the usual white but a deep blue color, like the sea.
5、 However, you have to wear special clothes, because skiing on a million-year-old glacier can be very dangerous.“Then, there is Hunderfossen Family Park or Troll Park. You can go water skiing and ice skating. It is certainly a beautiful place but it is more expensive than visiting other parts of Norw
6、ay.“I also visited the Holmenkollen Ski Jump in Oslo. The view from the top of the ski jump was wonderful and the ski museum was very interesting. I wanted to try a jump but unfortunately, its only for professional ski-jumpers. Anyway, I was very tired and I needed a break, so I went back to my hote
7、l and got some sleep.“Next year, I am going to take my girlfriend to Norway, too. She is having her holiday in Australia now and she wants to have a different type of adventure for next year.”21. How did Calvin Gillian feel about his trip?A. Bored. B. Relaxed. C. Satisfied. D. Disappointed.22. The u
8、nderlined word “maniac” (in Para. 2) refers to someone who _.A. has a strong interest in somethingB. has a bad opinion of somethingC. expects things to be successfulD. likes to compete with others23. What did Calvin Gillian do in Norway?A. Ski-jumping. B. Climbing. C. Fishing. D. Skiing.24. Whats th
9、e best title for the text?A. Calvin Gillians Holiday PlansB. Travel in Different CountriesC. Historical Places in NorwayD. A Norwegian AdventureBScientists have been working to grow meat “in vitro,” or in a laboratory, for many years. In the laboratory, they mix cells (细胞) from a horse and a pig. Th
10、ey feed the cells to help them increase in number and grow into a small piece of meat.Right now, the meat that scientists have made is very small and looks gray because in vitro meat does not need blood to grow. But this is not its only problem. It takes a long time for the meat to grow and scientis
11、ts do not know how to make a large amount (数量). It also costs a lot of money to make in vitro meat. Making enough for one meal would cost $250,000.Although producing in vitro meat has many problems, scientists continue to work because in vitro meat would have many advantages. Since we have 7,000,000
12、,000 people on the planet to feed, in vitro meat can help lower the need for the earths resources (资源).Besides, “Moving the production of meat from farms to laboratories would help cut down the huge amount of harmful (有害的) gases produced by farm animals,” says reporter Nick Collins.In vitro meat cou
13、ld solve (解决) many of the problems of animal meat. But can humans eat this in vitro meat? Scientists do not know if it even tastes like real meat. Because of food research laws, they are not yet able to taste their meat. But they hope someday people can buy it in their local market. They say it is r
14、eal meat and it is just made in a different way.A lot of people are still worried about in vitro meat. However, it will be years before the meat is ready to sell. Kate Shepard, a writer for Mother Jones magazine, says, “It will require hard testing before it can be fed to humans. It is still such a
15、new idea that we do not know yet what health problems it may have. Right now, there are no rules for in vitro meat.”25. What are the scientists trying to find out in their experiment?A. How to get a new kind of animal. B. How to make a new kind of meat.C. How to make animal meat taste better.D. How
16、to greatly increase animals numbers.26. Whats Paragraph 2 mainly about?A. The ways to improve the experiment.B. The bad influence the experiment brings.C. The problems scientists face in the experiment.D. The difficulty in collecting money for the experiment.27. What does Nick think of in vitro meat
17、?A. It stops peoples cruelty to animals.B. It is environmentally friendly.C. It is against the rules.D. It worries him a lot.28. According to scientists, in vitro meat _.A. is safe to eatB. tastes like real meatC. may be successful in the futureD. will soon be available on the marketCCALGARY, CANADA
18、 It was one of the most important phone calls Bruce Burrell has ever received, a call warning that a flood (水灾) was headed Calgarys way.“I got a phone call about five in the morning on Thursday from Len McCharles, who was on watch at the time, and he said there has been big flooding in Canmore and i
19、ts heading this way,” said Burrell, the head of the Calgary Emergency Management Agency.“I got up immediately, turned on the morning news, saw the pictures from Canmore and then called McCharles back. I said open the Emergency Operations Centre.”Burrell was in the EOC for 48 hours straight and it wa
20、snt until Burrell left the centre for the first time that the disaster (灾难) hit him.“Once you step outside and you actually see it and hear it, it paints a completely different picture from what you thought you would be dealing with.”Calgary firefighters came to help the Calgarians who were influenc
21、ed by floodwaters. Keal Prince, captain of the Calgary Fire Department remembers how a young boy lost his finger while helping a woman remove debris (瓦砾) out of her house.“As his finger got cut off it went into a fully loaded dumpster (装好的垃圾箱),” Prince said. “People had worked hours to get the dumps
22、ter loaded and now theyre working tirelessly, quickly, to unload that dumpster, looking for that finger.”“We had to remove a lot of debris to find that finger. Luckily, the finger was found and it was reattached (重新接上),” Prince added.Burrell is proud of what the city has achieved so far. And he says
23、 the city couldnt have done it without hundreds of unsung heroes. “There were a lot of unbelievable things that went on during the flood and I think that is what Calgarians need to be proud of.”29. On the morning of Thursday, Burrell _.A. recognised his house was floodedB. was called to go to Canmor
24、e to help peopleC. got to know from others about a coming disasterD. opened his house and found something was wrong30. Hearing what had happened, Burrell _.A. called the centre to collect picturesB. reported the event to the TV stationC. went to the flooded areas immediatelyD. gave orders for work t
25、o be started at once31. It seemed that the young boy _.A. was a great helpB. had a happy endingC. looked for his finger for hours aloneD. was hurt while unloading the dumpster32. We can infer from the last paragraph that Burrell _.A. thinks highly of people in CalgaryB. has received praise from Calg
26、ariansC. thinks its his duty to protect the cityD. feels the firefighters need more trainingDDebby Harris says she would never have started going to the Glastonbury Festival if her friend who runs a food stall (小吃摊) hadnt needed a hand a few years back. “I thought it would just be all noise, and I n
27、ever liked rock music.” Now she says she would pay her friend to allow her to work on her stall! “The tickets sell like hot cakes, so its the best way of making sure I can get to the five-day festival in June,” she points out.Nick Hendon has been going to the Cambridge Folk Festival, which takes pla
28、ce over a long weekend in summer at Cherry Hinton Hall, for over twenty years. His favourite festival area is the Club Tent where, as well as the invited artists, members of the audience (观众) can get up and perform. “My wife usually takes part. She has a beautiful voice,” he says proudly.Joan Mitche
29、ll does her best to get to the International Eisteddfod, a dance and music festival which takes place every year during the second week of July in Wales. The festival is also famous for the final Sunday Evening Gala concert which usually has some of the biggest names in opera (歌剧) as guest performer
30、s. “Ive seen Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, James Galway and Montserrat Caballe, but no one could ever match up to Luciano Pavarotti. He was truly breathtaking!”Graham Crosby tries to get to as many concerts as possible during the eight-week summer season of the Proms festival every year. The Proms is the largest classical (古典的) music festival in the world. “The atmosphere (氛围) is much more relaxed than at other classical concerts. In fa
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