1、山东单招模拟试题一英语可编辑修改word版2019 年ft东单招英语模拟试题(一)【含答案】第 I 卷第一部分 听力(共两节,满分 30 分) 略。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 A、B、C 和 D 四个选项中,选出最佳选项。AStarting CyclingWe have two services designed to give people the confidence and knowledge to cycle successfully. LessonsAll our instructor
2、s have been trained to National Standards level of “Bikeability”. This means you will be trained to a standard consistent across the whole country.There are 3 levels of skills to progress through. Children would start with levels 1 & 2, progressing from the playground or park to cycle on less busy l
3、ocal roads. Teenager and adult beginners can also learn levels 1 & 2 in an off-road and quiet environment.Confident teenagers and adults can broaden their skills by learning level 3, using multi-lane (多道) roads and larger roundabouts (环岛). We provide both a complete package of lessons for the beginn
4、er or individual lessons tailored to the client. You can ride a bike but dont feel confident about right turns on multi- lane roads. Whatever the needwe can address and practice until perfect! Everyone can be taught to ride a bike!We train both adults and children. We cover London Zones 1 & 2The cos
5、t is 30 per hour.Guided RideWe know that riding on the roads in London can be scary, and if you have to navigate (确定行车路线) as well it can become a real hard task! The Guided Ride service takes all the stress out of it for you by providing the following:Route planned in advance to suit your skill leve
6、l. Route map provided to you.Cycle and equipment checked. We will teach you a simple method to check basic roadworthiness (车辆性能) of your bike that you can perform on a weekly basis.Route discussed and focus given to any areas requiring special attention.Cycle along with the instructor close behind.
7、Here the traffic can be controlled by the instructor and rider observed.Occasionally stopping to discuss events.We currently cover London Zones 1 & 2. Please contact us if your requirements are outside of these areas. Cost 3021.Where can Level 1 & 2 lessons for adult beginners be carried out?A.Off r
8、oad.B.Near large roundabouts.C.On busy local roads.D.On multi-lane roads.22.What service does the Guided Ride mainly provide?.A.They help you to be familiar with London roads.B.They check your cycle and equipment every week.C.They let users experience the busiest road in London.D.They ensure users r
9、ide safely in London Zones 1 & 2.23.Who is the text probably intended for ?A.Bike riding lovers.B.Children and teenagers.C.Travelers in London.D.Parents loving cycling.BI am astonished at the way God knows when to send a special gift of encouragement at just the right time! It might be in a dream, a
10、 lost letter, a memory, or something found that wed forgotten about.My grandmother was from a town in Michigan. And summer after summer I enjoyed staying with my grandparents as a young child. I was from the city and loved the small town where they lived. People knew everyone, their children, their
11、pets, their ancestors.Grandma was always using her hands for something exciting. she would make sandwiches and wed have tea parties, plant flowers and carefully tend them. She loved knitting sweaters as well as making beautiful quilts for her grandchildren. I remember the small thimble (顶针) she woul
12、d place on her finger while doing her needlework.A few years ago, when Grandma left this earth for her new residence in Heaven, I bid farewell to my loving grandmother. How quickly our lives can change! We had just had tea together a couple of months earlier, on her 91st birthday. I missed her very
13、much, but I noticed it mostly on my birthdays, because there was no card from Grandma. Shed never forgotten my birthday!On one particular birthday when I was feeling a little low, something happened made me feel as if she was sharing that special day with me. I was arranging some colorful pillows th
14、at she had made, and suddenly I felt something inside one pillow; it was small and hard. I moved the object to a seam(缝)that I carefully opened, and, to my delight, out came a tiny silver thimble!How happy I was to find something that had been a part of her! Not realizing it had fallen off her finge
15、r, I pictured her sewing it into that little pillow that I just happened to fluff( 抖 松 ), to place on my bedspread(床罩)that day. I carefully laid the thimble alongside the others Id collected over the years. What a precious memory of a very special lady who, somehow, I knew, was laughing in delight a
16、t sewing her thimble into my pillow. I heated the kettle and made some tea, using my best china, as Grandma always did, and then enjoyed my tea and Grandmas thimble. What a wonderful birthday that was!24.In the authors memory, what would her grandmother do?A.She would make sandwiches and hamburgers
17、for her family.B.She would wear a thimble for needlework every day.C.She would make beautiful quilts for money.D.She would look after the flowers in the garden.25.What does the underlined word, “it”, in Paragraph 4, refer to?A.The modern worlds fast-changing life.B.The fact that the grandmother had
18、passed away.C.The authors missing her grandmother.D.The love the author got from her grandmother.26.How did the author feel when she found the thimble?A. Surprised and joyful. B. Delighted but regretful.C. Guilty and sad. D. Joyful but lonely.27.Which of the following might be the best title for the
19、 passage?A.Grandmas Thimble.B.Grandmas Life Story.B. The Joy of Finding Something Lost.C. The Importance of Putting Things Away.CSydneys Royal Botanic Gardens are to start a war on gray-headed flying foxes. These super bats have invaded one of Australias most famous public spaces. Officials have sai
20、d the animals are destroying trees and have to move on.These unwanted guests at Sydneys Royal Botanic Gardens look like tiny foxes with wings. Officials have estimated there are about 11,000 of them living in the picturesque harbor-side park. After inspecting damage to dozens of trees they now belie
21、ve there are twice as many as previously thought. Branches have been breaking under the weight of these furry invaders and their droppings have been poisoning plants.Help may well be at hand, however, in the shape of the ordinary garbage bin. The gardens director Dr. Tim Entwistle hopes the unpleasa
22、nt sounds of crashing bin lids will agitate the flying foxes and force them to move on. “The way to disturb them is to use noises, so weve used the loud noises made by rubbish bins in the past. You can also use speakers as long as you move the noise around, and what well do is have a series of noise
23、s, at the beginning and end of the day. What weve found in the past is that the flying foxes leave the gardens and go somewhere else,” said Tim.The gray-headed flying fox is Australias largest bat. It flies around at night using its eyes and a powerful sense of smell to search for fruit and flowers.
24、 Officials at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Sydney have said theyre optimistic the unwelcome colony can be uprooted. If and when the bats do move to other parts of the city they will of course then become someone elses problem.28.According to the passage, Why do people want to get rid of the flying f
25、oxes ?A.Because the garden are important public places.B.Because they are polluting the city.C.Because many garbage bins have been damaged by them.D.Because theyre threatening the survival of trees and other plants.29.In order to get rid of the flying foxes, what are people doing?A.They are shooting
26、 them.B.They are using rubbish containers.C.They are shaking the trees hard.D.They are cutting some trees down.30.Which of the following can replace the underlined “agitate” in Paragraph 3?A.Excite B.kill C.disturb D. discourage31.What does the writer imply from the last paragraph?A.The bats will st
27、ill stay in the gardens.B.Some area will have to deal with the bats.C.The grey-headed flying fox often eat treesD.The damage caused by the bats is serious DThe year 2114 will be an eventful one for art. In May of that year in Berlin, the philosopher-artist Jonathon Keats “century cameras” cameras wi
28、th a 100-year-long exposure ( 曝 光 )time will be brought back from hiding places around the city to have their results developed and exhibited. Six months after that, the Future Library in Oslo, Norway, will open its doors for the first time, presenting 100 books printed on the wood of trees planted
29、in the distant past of 2014.As Katie Paterson, the creator of the Future Library, puts it: “Future Library is an artwork for future generations.” These projects, more than a century in the making, are part of a new wave of “slow art” intended to push viewers and participants to think beyond their ow
30、n lifetimes. They aim to challenge todays short-term thinking and the brief attention spans of modern consumers, forcing people into considering works more deliberately. In their way, too, they are fighting against modern culture not just regarding money, but also the way in which artistic worth is
31、measured by attention.In a similar fashion, every April on Slow Art Day, visitors are encouraged to stare at five works of art for 10 minutes at a time a tough task for the average museum visitor, who typically spends less than 30 seconds on each piece of art.Like the Future Library, the century cam
32、eras are very much a project for cities, since its in cities that time runs fastest and the pace of life is fastest. “Since I started living in a city, Ive somehow been quite disconnected,” Anne Beate Hovind, the Future Library project manager, who described how working on the library drew her back to the pace of life she knew when she was growing up on a farm in her youth, told The Atlantic magazine.32.According to the first paragraph, what will NOT happen in 2114 ?A.A camera
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