高二反馈性练习(英语).docx

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1、高二反馈性练习(英语)一、单项选择(共25分,每题1分)1. From his _ look, we could see that the professor hadnt expected that we could raise such _ questions to him. A. confusing; confusingB. confused; confused C. confusing; confusedD. confused; confusing2. A warm thought suddenly came to me_ I might use the pocket money to

2、buy some flowers for my mothers birthday. A. ifB. whenC. thatD. which 3. The reason _ he gave for his being away for such a long time is _ his mother was ill. A. why; thatB. that; thatC. that; becauseD. why; because4. The visitors looked quite _ by the beautiful view at the top of Mount Tai. A. tire

3、dB. impressedC. worriedD. puzzled5. My father is _to come to my house for this winter. A. likelyB. possibleC. probableD. perfect6. After a heavy ads campaign, our market share has increased _15% _ 60% in Asian market. A. with, toB. to, byC. at, above D. by, to7. You cant imagine _ boy can do _ work.

4、 A. so little, so muchB. such little, such much C. so little a, such muchD. such a little, so much8. A new iPhone costs about of a second-hand one. A. the price of three timesB. three times more than the price C. three times the price D. as much as the three times price9. -Where did you come across

5、your old classmate Jane? -It was in the supermarket _ she worked _ I came across her. A. where; thatB. that; whenC. that; thatD. where; when10.Mary, how did your Math test go? I had thought I _, but in fact I came in the top 10 in my class. A.should have failedB.couldnt have failed C.might have fail

6、edD.shouldnt have failed11. I still remember my happy childhood when my mother _ take me to Disneyland at weekends. A. mightB. mustC. wouldD. should12. I promise her daughter _ get a nice present on her birthday. Will it be a big surprise to her? A. shouldB. mustC. wouldD. shall13. Jane wont join us

7、 for dinner tonight and _.A. neither wont TomB. Tom wont either C. Tom will too D. so will Tom14. _ that the Chinese National womens volleyball team won the gold medal at the Rio Olympics thrilled the whole nation. A. Word B. The word C. Words D. The words15. 1. She admitted _ the car without the dr

8、iving license. A. to drive B. driving C. to have driven D. having driven二、完形填空(共20分,每题1分) When I was about five years old, I used to watch a bird in the skies of southern Alberta from the Blackfoot Blood Reserve in northern Montana where I was bornI loved this bird; I would 16 him for hoursHe would

9、17 effortlessly in that gigantic sky, or he would come down and light on the 18 and float there beautifullySometimes when I watched him, he would not make a sound and liked to move 19 into the grassesWe called him meksikatsi, which in the Blackfoot language 10 “pink-colored feet”; meksikatsi and I b

10、ecame very good friends The bird had a very particular significance to me 21 I desperately wanted to be able to fly tooI felt very much as if I was the kind of person who had been born into a world where 22 was impossibleAnd most of the things that I 23 about would not be possible for me but would b

11、e possible only for other people When I was ten years old, something unexpected 24 my life suddenly. I found myself become an 25 child in a family I was not born into; I found myself in a 26 position that many native Americans find themselves in, living in a city that they do not understand at all,

12、not in another culture but 27 two cultures A teacher of the English language told me that meksikatsi was not called meksikatsi, even though that is what 28 people have called that bird for thousands of yearsMeksikatsi, he said, was really “duck”I was very 29 with EnglishI could not understand itFirs

13、t of all, the bird did not look like “duck”, and when it made a 30 , it did not sound like “duck”, I was even more 31 when I found out that the meaning of the verb “to duck” came from the bird As I 32 to understand English better, I understand that it made a great deal of 33 , but I never forgot tha

14、t meksikatsi made a different kind of meaningI 34 that languages are not just different words for the same things but totally different 35 , totally different ways of experiencing and looking at the world16AkeepBwatchCfollowDsearch17AjumpBdiveCcircleDwander18AnestBhillCwaterDroad19AquicklyBnaturally

15、CfreelyDquietly20AmeansBreadsCshowsDstates21AthoughBbecauseCwhileDuntil22AcommunicationBimaginationCbeliefDflight23AdreamedBworriedCknewDargued24AimprovedBenrichedCchangedDruined25AeducatedBadoptedCoutgoingDindependent26AweakBcomfortableCterribleDcentral27AbetweenBagainstCwithoutDbeyond28AmostBfewCt

16、heirDmy29AdesperateBboredCuncomfortableDdisappointed30AnoiseBcallCdecisionDchoice31AashamedBconfusedCembarrassedDfrightened32AtriedBcameCdeterminedDexpected33AevidenceBdistinctionCprofitDsense34AidentifiedBconfirmedCrealizedDpredicted35AconceptsBregulationsCmessagesDevaluations三、阅读理解(共30分,每题2分)AFren

17、ch surgeons have performed what they said on Wednesday was the worlds first partial face transplant- giving a new nose, chin and lips to a woman attacked by a dog.Specialists from two French hospitals carried out the operation on a 38-year-old woman on Sunday in the northern city of Amiens by taking

18、 the face from a brain-dead woman, who had hanged herself just hours before the operation. Her family agreed on the operation.“The patient is in an excellent state and the transplant looks normal,” the hospitals said in a brief statement after waiting three days to announce the pioneering surgery.Th

19、e woman had been left without a nose and lips after the dog attacked her last May, and was unable to talk or chew properly. Such injuries are “extremely difficult, if not impossible” to repair using normal surgical techniques, the statement said.The statement did not say what the woman would look li

20、ke when she had fully recovered, but medical experts said she was unlikely to resemble the woman who had been the source of her new face.The operation was led by Jean-Michel Dubernard, a specialist from a hospital in Lyon who has also carried out hand transplants,Skin transplants have long been used

21、 to treat burns and other injuries, but operations around the mouth and nose have been considered very difficult because of the areas high sensitivity to foreign tissue.Teams in France, the United States and Britain had been developing techniques to make face transplants a realityThere was a short-t

22、erm risk for the patient if blood vessels became blocked, a medium-term danger of her body rejecting the new skin and a long-term possibility that the drugs used could cause cancers.Experts say that although such medical advances should be celebrated, the transplant had thrown up moral(道德的)and ethic

23、al(伦理的)issues. Little is known about the psychological effect of the transplant.36. The best title for the passage would be _. A. First Face Transplant Opens Debate B. French Woman has First Partial Face Transplant C. A Complete Face Transplant of a French Woman D. Risks and Ethical Problems of a Fa

24、ce Transplant37. Which of the following is NOT one of the risks of the operation? A. Heart damage. B. Organ rejection C. Block of blood vessels. D. Side effect of the drugs38. What can we learn about the operation? A. There has arisen a debate about the operation. B. The woman had used the dead woma

25、n s whole face. C. The woman will suffer from psychological damage soon. D. Such transplants have been performed by doctors.BThe largest campaign of killing rats in history is set to poison millions of rats on the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia. Scientists say the campaign planned for 2013man

26、d 2014 will restore beautiful South Georgia to the position it once held as the worlds most important nesting sites for seabirds.It was sailors in the late 18th century who unintentionally introduced rats to what had been a fresh environment. “If we can destroy the rats, at least 100 million birds w

27、ill return to their home on South Georgia,” says Tony Martin, a biology professor at the University of Dundee who was invited to lead the project.South Georgia is by far the largest island to get rid of animals that destroy native wildlife after being introduced deliberately or accidentally by peopl

28、e. Though rats and mice have done the most damage, cats, foxes, goats, deer, rabbits and other species have been targeted in the campaigns around the world.South Georgia is seven times the size of New Zealands Campbell Island, currently the largest area ever killing rats. The successful war against

29、Campbell Island rats was carried our in 2001 with 132 tons of poison dropped from five helicopters.“New Zealand pioneered the techniques for ridding islands of rats and in fact our operation on South Georgia is based on New Zealands technology.” Says Martin. “Some New Zealanders will be helping our

30、campaign, including our chief pilot, Peter Garden, who was also chief pilot for the projects at Campbell Island and Rat Island, in the Aleutian chain of the north Pacific.”The second and third stages in 2013 and 2014 will involve dropping as much as 300 tons of poison from the air onto every part of

31、 the island where rats might live. It is a huge operation, carried out during the stormy southern autumn when the rats are hungry and the risks of poisoning native wildlife are less than in the spring and summer months. “Ideally wed do in winter but the weather makes that too risky,” Martin says.The

32、 ecological payback will be priceless. But Martin says, “The full benefits will take decades to arrive, because some of these birds are slow to hatch.”39. According to the passage, how did the rats appear on the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia ? A. They were introduced there by sailors acciden

33、tally. B. They escaped there from Campbell Island. C. They were attracted there by wildlife. D. They were brought in by people deliberately.40. Which of the following is True about Peter Garden ? A. He is in charge of the campaign on the sub-Antarctic island. B. He will be the only pilot for the pro

34、ject on the sub-Antarctic island. C. He will benefit a lot from the campaign on the sub-Antarctic island. D. He made great contributions to the project at Campbell Island and Rat Island.41. The operation of ridding South Georgia of rats is to carried out in autumn because _. A. the war against Campb

35、ell Island rats failed in all seasons except autumn. B. only then do the New Zealanders to help the operation have the spare time. C. the poison kills rats more effectively than it does in any other season. D. rats then need more food and the operation does less harm to native wildlife.42. What can

36、we infer from the passage?. A. Rats arent the only species to be blamed for the disappearance of wildlife. B. The campaign of killing rats will benefit the native wildlife in a short time. C. The first stage of killing rats on the sub-Antarctic island didnt make great achievements. D. The campaign i

37、n South Georgia will fully follow in the footsteps of that on Campbell Island. CAustralia has promised to introduce the most comprehensive (全面的) carbon trading program outside Europe in 2010. The government in Canberra plans to cut greenhouse gas emissions (排放) by at least five percent by 2020, but

38、it could make bigger reductions if other countries agree to tougher targets. The Australian government warns that without tough environmental measures the country could lose key industries and jobs. Climate Change Minister Penny Wong says the economy is under threat and decisive action is needed.Cen

39、tral to the governments climate change plan is a carbon emissions trading program that will be introduced within two years. It would involve one thousand of the nations biggestcompanies and would cover about three-quarters of Australias greenhouse gas emissions.Many scientists believe that greenhous

40、e gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane, contribute to global warming. Many of them are released by burning fuels such as coal and oil.Companies will be required to buy permits for each ton of carbon they emit, although big polluting exporters will receive up to 90 percent of their carbon licens

41、es free.Many business leaders want the government to delay the plan because of the current global financial crisis, which is slowing the Australian economy. Peter Anderson from the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry says it is irresponsible to bring in a carbon trading plan now.Environmenta

42、lists, on the other hand, say Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has not properly addressed the threat of climate change. Activists had sought a minimum emissions cut of 25 percent.Instead, the Rudd government aims to cuts carbon emissions by at least five percent of 2000 levels by 2020. That amount could ri

43、se to 15 percent, if future global agreements set such a target.Ray Nias of the environmental group WWF says Australia will pay the price for low targets. “This is a deeply, deeply disappointing target,” Nias said. “It commits Australia to long-term climate change. It will make Australias ability to

44、 negotiate (协商) global agreements very, very difficult. It is much lower than even we had imagined.”Australia has one of the highest per-person greenhouse emissions rates in the world because of its reliance on coal for electricity.Some scientists warn that the vast, dry Australian continent, which

45、has been suffering a series of droughts in recent years, could be one of the regions hardest hit by global warming.43. Which group supports to cut carbon emissions by at least 25%? A. Environmentalists B. The government C. Business leaders D. Scientists44. Who most probably agrees to a higher goal o

46、f carbon emissions? A. Penny Wong B. Peter Anderson C. Kevin Rudd D. Ray Nias45. Many business leaders are against the Australian program because_. A. they believe the program will only benefit the big companies B. they believe the program will cause the global warming C. they dont want to pay extra money for carbon emissions D. they dont think carbon emissio

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