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    这是一份五年高考英语真题卷汇编-阅读理解-记叙文和议论文-(含解析),共79页。

    专题02阅读理解之记叙文
    【2020年】
    1.(2020·新课标Ⅱ)D
    I have a special place in my heart for libraries. I have for as long as I can remember. I was always an enthusiastic reader, sometimes reading up to three books a day as a child. Stories were like air to me and while other kids played ball or went to parties, I lived out adventures through the books I checked out from the library.
    My first job was working at the Ukiah Library when I was 16 years old .It was a dream job and I did everything from shelving books to reading to the children for story time.
    As I grew older and became a mother, the library took on a new place and an added meaning in my life. I had several children and books were our main source(来源) of entertainment. It was a big deal for us to load up and go to the local library, where my kids could pick out books to read or books they wanted me to read to them.
    I always read ,using different voices ,as though I were acting out the stories with my voice and they loved it !It was a special time to bond with my children and it filled them with the wonderment of books .
    Now, I see my children taking their children to the library and I love that the excitement of going to the library lives on form generation to generation.
    As a novelist, I’ve found a new relationship with libraries. I encourage readers to go to their local library when they can’t afford to purchase a book. I see libraries as a safe haven(避风港) for readers and writers, a bridge that helps put together a reader with a book. Libraries, in their own way, help fight book piracy(盗版行为) and 1 think all writers should support libraries in a significant way when they can. Encourage readers to use the library. Share library announcements on your social media. Frequent them and talk about them when you can.
    32. Which word best describes the author’s relationship with books as a child?
    A. Cooperative. B. Uneasy. C. Inseparable. D. Casual.
    33. What does the underlined phrase “an added meaning” in paragraph 3 refer to?
    A. Pleasure from working in the library.
    B. Joy of reading passed on in the family.
    C. Wonderment from acting out the stories.
    D. A closer bond developed with the readers.
    34. What does the author call on other writers to do?
    A. Sponsor book fairs. B. Write for social media.
    C. Support libraries. D. Purchase her novels.
    35. Which can be a suitable title for the text?
    A. Reading: A Source of Knowledge
    B. My Idea about writing
    C. Library: A Haven for the Young
    D. My Love of the Library
    【答案】32. C 33. B 34. C 35. D
    【解析】
    本文是夹叙夹议文。文章讲述了作者是一个热情的读者,孩提时热衷读书,第一份工作在图书馆。有了孩子以后,一家人去图书馆读书,阅读的习惯代代传承下去。作为小说家,作者呼吁其他作家支持图书馆,宣传图书馆。
    32.推理判断题。根据第一段的 I was always an enthusiastic reader,sometimes reading up to three books a day as a child. Stories were like air to me and while other kids played ball or went to parties. I lived out adventures through the books I checked out from the library.(我一直是一个热情的读者,孩提时,有时候每天读多达三本书。故事对我来说就像空气,而其他孩子则打球或参加聚会。我通过从图书馆借阅来的书籍经历冒险)可推断,作者小时候与书是密不可分的。故选C。
    33.词句猜测题。根据上文As I grew older and became a mother可知,我长大了成了一位母亲,结合下文I had several children and books were our main source (来源) of entertainment. It was a big deal for us to load up and go to the local library, where my kids could pick out books to read or books they wanted me to read to them(我有几个孩子,书是我们娱乐的主要来源。对于我们来说,坐上车去当地的图书馆是件大事,在那里我的孩子们可以挑选要阅读的书或者想让我给他们读的书)可推断,作者成了母亲以后,带着孩子去图书馆,孩子挑选书籍来阅读,或者作者读给他们听,因此可知图书馆在作者的生活中又增添了新的意义,阅读的乐趣在家庭中代代相传”。故选B。
    34.细节理解题。根据最后一段的I think all writers should support libraries in a significant way when they can. Encourage readers to use the library. Share library announcements on your social media. Frequent them and talk about them when you can.( 我认为所有的作家都应该在他们可以的时候以有意义的方式支持图书馆。鼓励读者使用图书馆。在社交媒体上分享图书馆公告。可以的时候常去图书馆,谈论图书馆)可推断,作者呼吁其他的作家们支持图书馆。故选C。
    35.主旨大意题。纵观全文可知,文章讲述了作者是一名热情地读者,孩提时喜欢阅读,工作在图书馆。有了孩子以后,一家人去图书馆读书,阅读的习惯代代传承下去,作为小说家,作者呼吁其他作家支持图书馆,宣传图书馆。因此推断全文围绕“作者对图书馆的爱”展开讲述。故D项“我对图书馆的爱”为最佳标题。故选D。
    2.(2020·江苏卷)A
    Some important dates in China’s fighting Covid-19 before May 7,2020
    Jan 20, 2020~ Feb 20,2020
    Jan 23: Wuhan declared temporary outbound (向外的) traffic restrictions.
    Jan 24: National medical teams began to be sent to Hubei and wuhan.
    Jan 27: The Central Steering (指导) Group arrived in Wuhan.
    Feb 18: The daily number of newly cured and discharged (出院) patients exceeded that of the newly confirmed cases.
    Feb 21, 2020~ Mar 17,2020
    Feb 21: Most provinces and equivalent administrative units started to lower their public health emergency response level.
    Feb 24: The WHO-China Joint Mission on Covid-19 held a press conference in Beijing.
    Mar 11-17: The epidemic (流行病) peak had passed in China as a whole.
    Mar 18,2020 ~Apr 28,2020
    Apr1: Chinese customs began NAT (核酸检测) on inbound arrivals at all points of entry.
    Apr 8: Wuhan lifted outbound traffic restrictions.
    Apr 26: The last Covid-19 patient in Wuhan was discharged from hospital.
    Apr 29, 2020~ May 7,2020
    Apr 30: The public health emergency response was lowered to Level 2 in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.
    May 7: The State Council released Guidelines on Conducting Covid-19 Prevention and Control on an Ongoing Basis.
    56. What happened between January 20 and February 20?
    A. The Central Steering Group arrived in Wuhan.
    B. The WHO-China Joint Mission on Covid-19 held a press conference.
    C. The last Covid-19 patient in Wuhan was discharged from hospital.
    D. Beijing lowered its emergency response level.
    57. From which date were private cars allowed to go out of Wuhan?
    A. January 23. B. March 11. C. April 8. D. May 7.
    【答案】56. A 57. C
    【解析】
    这是一篇记叙文。文章主要介绍了2020年5月7日前,中国抗击新冠肺炎的重要日期。
    56.细节理解题。根据表格中Jan20, 2020-Feb 20,2020部分 Jan27: The Central Steering (指导) Group arrived in Wuhan.可知,在一月二十号到二月二十号之间,中央领导小组抵达武汉。故选A。
    57.推理判断题。根据表格中Mar18, 2020-Apr28, 2020部分Apr 8: Wuhan lifted outbound traffic restrictions(4月8日:武汉取消出境交通限制)可推知,从四月八日起,私家车被允许离开武汉。故选C。
    3.(2020·江苏卷)D
    I was in the middle of the Amazon (亚马逊) with my wife, who was there as a medical researcher. We flew on a small plane to a faraway village. We did not speak the local language, did not know the customs, and more often than not, did not entirely recognize the food. We could not have felt more foreign.
    We were raised on books and computers, highways and cell phones, but now we were living in a village without running water or electricity It was easy for us to go to sleep at the end of the day feeling a little misunderstood.
    Then one perfect Amazonian evening, with monkeys calling from beyond the village green, we played soccer. I am not good at soccer, but that evening it was wonderful. Everyone knew the rules. We all spoke the same language of passes and shots. We understood one another perfectly. As darkness came over the field and the match ended, the goal keeper, Juan, walked over to me and said in a matter-of-fact way, “In your home, do you have a moon too?” I was surprised.
    After I explained to Juan that yes, we did have a moon and yes, it was very similar to his, I felt a sort of awe (敬畏) at the possibilities that existed in his world. In Juan’s world, each village could have its own moon. In Juan’s world. the unknown and undiscovered was vast and marvelous. Anything was possible.
    In our society, we know that Earth has only one moon. We have looked at our planet from every angle and found all of the wildest things left to find. I can, from my computer at home, pull up satellite images of Juan’s village. There are no more continents and no more moons to search for, little left to discover. At least it seems that way.
    Yet, as I thought about Juan’s question, I was not sure how much more we could really rule out. I am, in part, an ant biologist, so my thoughts turned to what we know about insect life and I knew that much in the world of insects remains unknown. How much, though? How ignorant (无知的) are we? The question of what we know and do not know constantly bothered me.
    I began collecting newspaper articles about new species, new monkey, new spider…, and on and on they appear. My drawer quickly filled. I began a second drawer for more general discoveries: new cave system discovered with dozens of nameless species, four hundred species of bacteria found in the human stomach. The second drawer began to fill and as it did I wondered whether there were bigger discoveries out there, not just species, but life that depends on things thought to be useless, life even without DNA. I started a third drawer for these big discoveries. It fills more slowly, but all the same, it fills.
    In looking into the stories of biological discovery, I also began to find something else, a collection of scientists, usually brilliant occasionally half-mad, who made the discoveries. Those scientists very often see the same things that other scientists see, but they pay more attention to them, and they focus on them to the point of exhaustion (穷尽), and at the risk of the ridicule of their peers. In looking for the stories of discovery, I found the stories of these people and how their lives changed our view of the world.
    We are repeatedly willing to imagine we have found most of what is left to discover. We used to think that insects were the smallest organisms (生物), and that nothing lived deeper than six hundred meters. Yet, when something new turns up, more often than not, we do not even know its name.
    65. How did the author feel on his arrival in the Amazon?
    A. Out of place. B. Full of joy. C. Sleepy. D. Regretful.
    66. What made that Amazonian evening wonderful?
    A. He learned more about the local language.
    B. They had a nice conversation with each other.
    C. They understood each other while playing.
    D. He won the soccer game with the goal keeper.
    67. Why was the author surprised at Juan’s question about the moon?
    A. The question was too straightforward.
    B. Juan knew so little about the world.
    C. The author didn’t know how to answer.
    D. The author didn’t think Juan was sincere.
    68. What was the author’s initial purpose of collecting newspaper articles?
    A. To sort out what we have known.
    B. To deepen his research into Amazonians.
    C. To improve his reputation as a biologist.
    D. To learn more about local cultures.
    69. How did those brilliant scientists make great discoveries?
    A. They shifted their viewpoints frequently.
    B. They followed other scientists closely.
    C. They often criticized their fellow scientists.
    D. They conducted in-depth and close studies.
    70. What could be the most suitable title for the passage?
    A. The Possible and the Impossible .
    B. The Known and the Unknown .
    C. The Civilized and the Uncivilized .
    D. The Ignorant and the Intelligent.
    【答案】65. A 66. C 67. B 68. A 69. D 70. B
    【解析】这是一篇夹叙夹议文。作者和妻子来到了亚马逊,妻子是一名医学研究者。一踏上这里,作者感到非常不适应,通过与当地人的接触,作者了解一些人对外部的世界并不了解。在生物多样性发现的过程中,作者意识到,很多东西是人类已知的,还有很多是人类未知的。
    65.推理判断题。根据第一段“We didn’t speak the local language, did not know the customs and more often than not, didn’t entirely recognize the food. We couldn’t have felt more foreign.”可知,我们不会说当地的语言,不了解当地的风俗习惯,而且往往我们不能完全认识食物,我们感觉非常陌生。由此可知,作者一到达亚马逊感觉格格不入。故选A项。
    66.细节理解题。根据第三段“Everyone knew the rules. We all spoke the same language of passes and shots. We understood one another perfectly.”可知,每个人都知道规则,在传球和射门方面,我们说着同样的语言,彼此非常了解。由此可知,踢球时他们的彼此理解使得他们的亚马逊夜晚很美好。故选C项。
    67.推理判断题。根据第四段“In Juan’s world, the unknown and undiscovered was vast and marvelous.”可知,在胡安的世界里,未知的东西和未被发现的东西是浩瀚而神奇的。由此判断,胡安对这个世界知之甚少。故选B项。
    68.推理判断题。根据第七段“I began collecting newspaper articles about new species, new spider...,and on and on they appear, my drawer quickly filled, I began a second drawer for more general discoveries: new cave system discovered with dozens of nameless species ...I started a third drawer for these big discoveries.”可知,我开始收集报纸上关于新物种、新蜘蛛的文章……它们源源不断地出现,我的抽屉很快就填满了。我开始用第二个抽屉来储存更普遍的发现:在新的洞穴系统发现了几十个无名的物种……我还为这些重大发现准备了第三个抽屉。由此判断,作者收集报纸文章的初始目的是为了分类我们所知道的事情。故选A项。
    69.细节理解题。根据倒数第二段“but they pay more attention to them ,and they focus on them to the point of exhaustion ,and at the risk of the ridicule of their peers.”可知,但他们更多地关注这些发现,他们把注意力集中在这些发现上直到精疲力竭的地步,冒着被同龄人嘲笑的风险。由此可知,杰出的科学家进行深入细致的研究,做出重大的发现。故选D项。
    70.主旨大意题。通读全文可知,作者和妻子来到了亚马逊。一踏上这里,作者感到非常不适应,通过与当地人的接触,作者了解到一些人对外部的世界并不了解。在对这里的风土人情和多样化生物的研究过程中,作者提高了认识,意识到很多东西是人类已知的,还有很多是人类未知的。所以短文的最佳标题为“已知和未知的事物”。故选B项。
    4.(2020·山东卷)B
    Jenifer Mauer has needed more willpower than the typical college student to pursue her goal of earning a nursing degree. That willpower bore fruit when Jennifer graduated from University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and became the first in her large family to earn a bachelor's degree.
    Mauer, of Edgar, Wisconsin, grew up on a farm in a family of 10 children. Her dad worked at a job away from the farm, and her mother ran the farm with the kids. After high school, Jennifer attended a local technical college, working to pay her tuition(学费), because there was no extra money set aside for a college education. After graduation, she worked to help her sisters and brothers pay for their schooling.
    Jennifer now is married and has three children of her own. She decided to go back to college to advance her career and to be able to better support her family while doing something she loves: nursing. She chose the UW-Eau Claire program at Ministry Saint Joseph's Hospital in Marshfield because she was able to pursue her four-year degree close to home. She could drive to class and be home in the evening to help with her kids. Jenifer received great support from her family as she worked to earn her degree: Her husband worked two jobs to cover the bills, and her 68-year-old mother helped take care of the children at times.
    Through it all, she remained in good academic standing and graduated with honors. Jennifer sacrificed(牺牲)to achieve her goal, giving up many nights with her kids and missing important events to study. ''Some nights my heart was breaking to have to pick between my kids and studying for exams or papers,'' she says. However, her children have learned an important lesson witnessing their mother earn her degree. Jennifer is a first-generation graduate and an inspiration to her family-and that's pretty powerful.
    4. What did Jennifer do after high school?
    A. She helped her dad with his work.
    B. She ran the family farm on her own.
    C. She supported herself through college.
    D. She taught her sisters and brothers at home.
    5. Why did Jennifer choose the program at Ministry Saint Joseph's Hospital in Marshfield?
    A. To take care of her kids easily. B. To learn from the best nurses.
    C. To save money for her parents. D. To find a well-paid job there.
    6. What did Jennifer sacrifice to achieve her goal?
    A. Her health. B. Her time with family.
    C. Her reputation. D. Her chance of promotion.
    7. What can we learn from Jenifer's story?
    A. Time is money. B. Love breaks down barriers.
    C. Hard work pays off. D. Education is the key to success.
    【答案】4. C 5. A 6. B 7. C
    【解析】
    这是一篇记叙文。文章主要讲述了Jennifer在家里不能提供大学教育的情况下,通过自己的努力,以及家人的帮助完成了四年学位。她的努力不仅让自己以优异的成绩毕业,还给家人,尤其是她的三个孩子树立了榜样,让他们得到了激励。
    4.细节理解题。根据第二段的After high school, Jennifer attended a local technical college, working to pay her tuition, because there was no extra money set aside for a college education.(高中毕业后,Jennifer上了一所当地的技术学院来支付她的学费,因为家里没有额外的钱用来支付大学教育)可知,高中毕业后Jennifer通过自己挣钱来完成大学教学,因为家里没有额外的钱。C. She supported herself through college.(她自食其力读完了大学)符合以上说法,故选C项。
    5.细节理解题。根据第三段的She chose the UW-Eau Claire program at Misnistry Saint Joseph’s Hospital in Marshfield because she was able to pursue her four-year degree close to home. She could drive to class and be home in the evening to help with her kids.(她选择了位于马什菲尔德的圣约瑟夫医院的UW-Eau Claire项目,因为她可以在离家近的地方攻读四年的学位。她可以开车去上课,晚上可以回家照顾孩子)可知,Jennifer选择位于马什菲尔德的圣约瑟夫医院的UW-Eau Claire项目是因为离家近,这样便于照顾她的三个孩子。A. To take care of her kids easily.(为了方便照顾她的孩子)符合以上说法,故选A项。
    6.细节理解题。根据最后一段的Jennifer sacrificed to achieve her goal, giving up many nights with her kids and missing important events to study.(Jennifer为了实现自己的目标牺牲了很多,她放弃了很多个和孩子待在一起的晚上,错过了很多重要的活动)可知,为了实现自己的目标Jennifer放弃了和家人待在一起的时光。B. Her time with family.(她与家人的时光)符合以上说法,故选B项。
    7.推理判断题。根据最后一段的Through it all, she remind in good academic standing and graduated with honors.(虽然经历了这些,但她一直保持着良好的学术地位,并以优异的成绩毕业)和However, her children have learned an important lesson witnessing their mother earn her degree. Jennifer is a first-generation graduate and an inspiration to her family-and that’s the pretty powerful.(然而,她的孩子们在见证母亲获得学位的过程中得到了重要的一课。Jennifer是第一代毕业生,这对她的家庭来说是一种激励--这是非常强大的。)可知,Jennifer在艰苦的环境中通过自己的努力不仅以优异的成绩毕业,还给孩子树立了榜样,同时也让家人得到了激励。由此推测,我们可以从Jennifer的故事中学到:努力总会有回报。C. Hard work pays off.(努力会得到回报)符合以上说法,故选C项。
    5.(2020·山东卷)C
    In the mid-1990s, Tom Bissell taught English as a volunteer in Uzbekistan. He left after seven months, physically broken and having lost his mind. A few years later, still attracted to the country, he returned to Uzbekistan to write an article about the disappearance of the Aral Sea.
    His visit, however, ended up involving a lot more than that. Hence this book, Chasing the Sea: Lost Among the Ghosts of Empire in Central Asia, which talks about a road trip from Tashkent to Karakalpakstan, where millions of lives have been destroyed by the slow drying up of the sea. It is the story of an American travelling to a strange land, and of the people he meets on his way: Rustam, his translator, a lovely 24-year-old who picked up his colorful English in California, Oleg and Natasha, his hosts in Tashkent, and a string of foreign aid workers.
    This is a quick look at life in Uzbekistan, made of friendliness and warmth, but also its darker side of society. In Samarkand, Mr Bissell admires the architectural wonders, while on his way to Bukhara he gets a taste of police methods when suspected of drug dealing. In Ferghana, he attends a mountain funeral(葬礼)followed by a strange drinking party. And in Karakalpakstan, he is saddened by the dust storms, diseases and fishing boats stuck miles from the sea.
    Mr Bissell skillfully organizes historical insights and cultural references, making his tale a well-rounded picture of Uzbekistan, seen from Western eyes. His judgment and references are decidedly American, as well as his delicate stomach. As the author explains, this is neither a travel nor a history book, or even a piece of reportage. Whatever it is, the result is a fine and vivid description of the purest of Central Asian traditions.
    8. What made Mr Bissell return to Uzbekistan?
    A. His friends' invitation. B. His interest in the country.
    C. His love for teaching. D. His desire to regain health.
    9. What does the underlined word “that” in paragraph 2 refer to?
    A Developing a serious mental disease.
    B. Taking a guided tour in Central Asia.
    C. Working as a volunteer in Uzbekistan.
    D. Writing an article about the Aral Sea.
    10. Which of the following best describes Mr Bissell's road trip in Uzbekistan?
    A. Romantic. B. Eventful. C. Pleasant. D. Dangerous.
    11. What is the purpose of this text?
    A. To introduce a book. B. To explain a cultural phenomenon.
    C. To remember a writer. D. To recommend a travel destination.
    【答案】8. B 9. D 10. B 11. A
    【解析】
    本文是记叙文。文章讲述了Bissell写的《追逐大海:迷失在中亚帝国的幽灵》这本书。这本书是Bissell在乌兹别克斯坦做志愿者后写的,是对乌兹别克斯坦人生活的一个快速观察。
    8.细节理解题。根据第一段的”A few years later, still attracted to the country. he returned to Uzbekistan to write an article about the disappearance of the Ara Sea”可知,几年后,Bissell仍然被这个国家所吸引。他回到乌兹别克斯坦写了一篇关于咸海消失的文章。因此推断出对这个国家的兴趣让Bissell先生再次返回乌兹别克斯坦。故选B。
    9.词句猜测题。划线句是第二段首句,that用来指代上文提的事情,因此推断that指代第一段的内容,根据第一段最后一句”A few years later, still attracted to the country, he returned to Uzbekistan to write an article about the disappearance of the Aral Sea(几年后,仍然被这个国家所吸引。他回到乌兹别克斯坦写了一篇关于咸海消失的文章)”可知,that指代写了一篇关于死海消失的文章这件事,故选D。
    10.推理判断题。根据第三段”This is a quick look at life in Uzbekistan, made of friendliness and warmth, but also its darker side of society. In Samarkand, Mr Bissell admires the architectural wonders, while on his way to Bukhara he gets a taste of police methods when suspected of drug dealing. In Ferghana, he attends a mountain funeral(葬礼)followed by a strange drinking party. And in Karakalpakstan, he is saddened by the dust storms, diseases and fishing boats stuck miles from the sea.”可知,在乌兹别克斯坦的旅途中,Mr Bissell既体会到了友善和温暖,也看到了社会的黑暗面。在撒马尔罕,Mr Bissell欣赏到了的建筑奇观。在前往布哈拉的路上,他因为被怀疑进行毒品交易,他尝到了警察的伎俩。在费尔干纳,他参加了一个山区葬礼,然后参加了一个奇怪的酒会。在卡拉卡尔帕克斯坦,他为沙尘暴、疾病和被困在数英里外的渔船而难过。由此可知,在旅途中,他经历了很多事情。结合选项,B选项(充满事件的,多事的)可以表达此意。故选B。
    11.推理判断题。文章第一段提到书的作者的乌兹别克斯坦之行,引出他写的书,接下来三段讲述了他的书《追逐大海:迷失在中亚帝国的幽灵》的故事内容,是乌兹别克斯坦生活的一个快速观察。因此推断本文的写作目的是介绍一本书。故选A。
    6.(2020·天津卷)B
    “They tell me that you’d like to make a statue(塑像) of me-is that correct, Miss Vinnie Ream?”
    The deep, gentle voice helped calm the nervous girl. Asking a favor of the President of the United States was no casual matter, especially for a seventeen-year-old girl.
    “Yes, sir,” she replied, her dark eyes meeting his. “I wouldn’t have duo ask you, but my teacher, Mr. Mills, says I am ready. I plan to make it in an admirable manner. “
    President Lincoln smiled. “Painters, sculptors-they’ve all tried to make the best of this ordinary face, but I’m afraid there’s not much hope. What did you have in mind, Miss Ream? A bust(半身像)?”
    Before Vinnie could say yes, the President hurried on, a shade of apology in his voice.
    “Of course-I shouldn’t have asked. A full-length pose would be much too big a project for a young woman your size. “
    Vinnie’s face turned red. She realized she looked like a child, with her tiny figure. “Small does not mean weak, sir,” she defended herself. “I was born in the country of Wisconsin. I’ve driven teams of horses and carried water. Making a full-length clay(粘土) figure would not exhaust my strength-and that is what I intend to do!”
    The President’s eyes, brightened at her show of spirit. “Sorry, madam, I have underestimated you as I didn’t know your background.”
    But his smile faded as he rubbed his beard with bony fingers, in thought. “Miss Ream,” he sighed, “I’d like to let you do it, but as you know, we are in the middle of a war. How could I possibly take the time to pose for a sculpture now? I hardly have a minute to myself.”
    Vinnie glanced around and noted the size of his office. “I work quickly,” she said. Her voice was soft but confident as she pointed to the corner near the windows. “If I were to bring my clay here and work for three hours every afternoon, I could complete most of the project while you are at your desk.”
    The President seemed to consider her idea seriously. He got up and shook Vinnie’s hand warmly, “I’ve heard that you are a talented young woman, and I have found you charming and intelligent as well. I cannot make my decision immediately, but you will hear from me soon.”
    The very next day, Vinnie received an invitation from the President.
    41. What gave Vinnie confidence to make her request of President Lincoln?
    A. Her aggressive personality.
    B. Mr. Mills’s encouraging remark.
    C. President Lincoln’s gentle voice.
    D. Her interest in a challenging job.
    42. How did President Lincoln first respond to Vinnie’s request?
    A. Pleased.
    B. Thrilled.
    C. Regretful.
    D. Doubtful.
    43. Vinnie confirmed her ability to make a full-length statue by highlighting ______.
    A. her experience from other projects
    B. her innocent childhood in the country
    C. the heavy labor she had done before
    D. the skill she picked up in Wisconsin
    44. Vinnie wanted to choose the corner near the windows to ______.
    A. achieve effects of natural lighting
    B. keep all her tools within easy reach
    C. observe the President at a right angle
    D. avoid disturbing the president’s work
    45. What message does the story convey?
    A. A strong-willed soul can reach his goal.
    B. Experience helps to promote excellence.
    C. Ups and downs make one strong.
    D. Devotion requires enthusiasm.
    【答案】41. B 42. D 43. C 44. D 45. A
    【解析】
    这是一篇记叙文。文章主要记叙了Vinnie Ream向林肯总统提出给他做一个全身雕像的请求,一开始林肯总统对此表示怀疑,在Vinnie的不断努力争取后,最终第二天Vinnie收到了林肯总统的邀请。
    41.细节理解题。根据第三段中的“I wouldn't have dared to ask you, but my teacher, Mr. Mills, says I am ready. I plan to make it in an admirable manner. “可知,我本来不敢问你,但我的老师Mills先生说我准备好了。我打算用一种令人钦佩的方式来做这件事。由此可知,Mills先生的话给了Vinnie向林肯总统提出要求的底气。故选B。
    42.推理判断题。根据第五段中的“Of course- I shouldn't have asked. A full-length pose would be much too big a project for a young woman your size.”可知,当然-我不应该问的。对于你这种身材的年轻女性来说,全身雕像太大了。由此可推知,林肯总统首先对Vinnie的请求表示怀疑。故选D。
    43.细节理解题。根据第六段中的“I've driven teams of horses and carried water. Making a full-length clay figure would not exhaust my strength-and this is what I intend to do!”可知,我赶过马队,提过水。做一个全身雕像不会耗尽我的力量-我还正想这样呢!此可知,Vinnie通过强调她以前所做的繁重劳动,证实了她有能力制作一个全身雕像。故选C。
    44.推理判断题。根据倒数第四段中的“Miss Ream,” he sighed, “I'd like to let you do it, but as you know, we are in the middle of a war. How could I possibly take the time to pose for a sculpture now? I hardly have a minute to myself. “可知,总统提到自己没有时间摆姿势来让Vinnie做雕像。根据倒数第三段中的“Vinnie glanced around and noted the size of his office. “I work quickly,” she said. Her voice was soft but confident as she pointed to the corner near the windows. “If I were to bring my clay here and work for three hours every afternoon, I could complete most of the project while you are at your desk.”可知,Vinnie环顾四周,注意到了他办公室的大小。“我干得很快,”她说。她指着靠近窗户的那个角落,声音柔和而自信。“如果我把我的粘土带到这里来,每天下午工作三个小时,我就可以在你办公的时候完成大部分的项目。”由此可推知,上文中总统提到自己没有时间摆姿势来让Vinnie做雕像,于是Vinnie想选择靠近窗户的角落,是为了避免干扰总统的工作。故选D。
    45.推理判断题。根据文章主要记叙了Vinnie Ream向林肯总统提出给他做一个全身雕像的请求,一开始林肯总统对此表示怀疑,在Vinnie的不断努力争取后,最终第二天Vinnie收到了林肯总统的邀请。由此可推知,这个故事表达了意志坚强的人能达到目标的思想。故选A。
    7.(2020·天津卷)D
    After years of observing human nature, I have decided that two qualities make the difference between men of great achievement and men of average performance curiosity and discontent. I have never known an outstanding man who lacked either. And I have never known an average man who had both. The two belong together.
    Together, these deep human urges (驱策力) count for much more that ambition. Galileo was not merely ambitious when he dropped objects of varying weights from the Leaning Tower at Pisa and timed their fall to the ground. Like Galileo, all the great names in history were curious and asked in discontent, “Why? Why? Why?”
    Fortunately, curiosity and discontent don’t have to be learned. We are born with them and need only recapture them.
    “The great man,” said Mencius (孟子), “is he who does not lose his child’s heart.” Yet most of us do lose it. We stop asking questions. We stop challenging custom. We just follow the crowd. And the crowd desires restful average. It encourages us to occupy our own little corner, to avoid foolish leaps into the dark, to be satisfied.
    Most of us meet new people, and new ideas, with hesitation. But once having met and liked them, we think how terrible it would have been, had we missed the chance. We will probably have to force ourselves to waken our curiosity and discontent and keep them awake.
    How should you start? Modestly, so as not to become discouraged. I think of one friend who couldn’t arrange flowers to satisfy herself. She was curious about how the experts did it. How she is one of the experts, writing books on flower arrangement.
    One way to begin is to answer your own excuses. You haven’t any special ability? Most people don’t; there are only a few geniuses. You haven’t any time? That’s good because it’s always the people with no time who get things done. Harriet Stowe, mother of six, wrote parts of Uncle Tom’s Cabin while cooking. You’re too old? Remember that Thomas Costain was 57 when he published his first novel, and that Grandma Moses showed her first pictures when she was 78.
    However you start, remember there is no better time to start than right now, for you’ll never be more alive than you are at this moment.
    51. In writing Paragraph 1, the author aims to ________.
    A. propose a definition
    B. make a comparison
    C. reach a conclusion
    D. present an argument
    52. What does the example of Galileo tell us?
    A. Trial and error leads to the finding of truth.
    B. Scientists tend to be curious and ambitious.
    C. Creativity results from challenging authority.
    D. Greatness comes from a lasting desire to explore.
    53. What can you do to recapture curiosity and discontent?
    A. Observe the unknown around you.
    B. Develop a questioning mind.
    C. Lead a life of adventure.
    D. Follow the fashion.
    54. What can we learn from Paragraphs 6 and 7?
    A. Gaining success helps you become an expert.
    B. The genius tends to get things done creatively.
    C. Lack of talent and time is no reason for taking no action.
    D. You should remain modest when approaching perfection.
    55. What could be the best tile or the passage?
    A. Curious Minds Never Feel Contented
    B. Reflections on Human Nature
    C. The Keys to Achievement
    D. Never Too Late to Learn
    【答案】51. D 52. D 53. B 54. C 55. C
    【解析】
    本文是一篇议论文。文章论述了获得成就的两个关键因素——好奇心和不满足。
    51.推理判断题。根据第一段内容After years of observing human nature, I have decided that two qualities make the difference between men of great achievement and men of average performance curiosity and discontent. I have never known an outstanding man who lacked either. And I have never known an average man who had both. The two belong together.可知,作者经过多年对人性的观察,认为成就非凡的人和平庸的人的区别在于好奇心和不满足,而且两者是相辅相成的。由此推知,作者写第一段的目的是提出一个论点。故选D。
    52.推理判断题。根据第二段中的Like Galileo, all the great names in history were curious and asked in discontent, “Why? Why? Why?”可知,像伽利略一样,历史上所有的伟人都感到好奇,并不满地问:“为什么?为什么?为什么?”由此推知,伽利略的例子告诉我们,伟大来自于持久的探索欲望。故选D。
    53.细节理解题。根据第二段中的Like Galileo, all the great names in history were curious and asked in discontent, “Why? Why? Why?”及第四段中的“The great man,” said Mencius (孟子), “is he who does not lose his child’s heart.” Yet most of us do lose it. We stop asking questions. We stop challenging custom. We just follow the crowd.可知,历史上所有的伟人都感到好奇,并不满地问:“为什么?为什么?为什么?”孟子认为“不失去孩子的心,就是伟大的人。”然而,我们大多数人确实失去了它。我们不再问问题。我们不再挑战习俗。我们只是随大流。由此可知,你可以通过培养了一个善于提问的头脑,来重新获得好奇心和不满。故选B。
    54.推理判断题。根据第六段中的How she is one of the experts, writing books on flower arrangement.及第七段中的You haven’t any special ability? Most people don’t; there are only a few geniuses. You haven’t any time? That’s good, because it’s always the people with no time who get things done.以及列举了Thomas Costain在57岁时出版了他的第一部小说,Grandma Moses在78岁时展示了她的第一批照片。由此可知,这两段想告诉我们“缺乏天赋和时间不是不采取行动的理由”。故选C。
    55.主旨大意题。根据第一段内容After years of observing human nature, I have decided that two qualities make the difference between men of great achievement and men of average performance curiosity and discontent. I have never known an outstanding man who lacked either. And I have never known an average man who had both. The two belong together.及下文论述可知,本文主要论述了获得成就的两个关键因素——好奇心和不满足。由此可知,C项The Keys to Achievement(成就的关键)适合做本文最佳标题。故选C。
    【2019年】
    1. 【2019·全国卷I,B】
    For Canaan Elementary’s second grade in Patchogue, N.Y.,today is speech day ,and right now it’s Chris Palaez’s turn. The 8-year-old is the joker of the class. With shining dark eyes, he seems like the of kid who would enjoy public speaking.
    But he’s, nervous.“I’m here to tell you today why you should … should…”Chris trips on the“-ld,”a. pronunciation difficulty for many non-native English speakers. His teacher ,Thomas Whaley ,is next to him, whispering support.“…Vote for …me …”Except for some stumbles, Chris is doing amazingly well. When he brings his speech to a nice conclusion ,Whaley invites the rest of the class to praise him.
    A son of immigrants, Chris stared learning English a little over three years ago. Whaley recalls(回想起)how at the beginning of the year,when called upon to read,Chris would excuse himself to go to the bathroom.
    Learning English as a second language can be a painful experience. What you need is a great teacher who lets you make mistakes. “It takes a lot for any student,” Whaley explains,“especially for a student who is learning English as their new language,to feel confident enough to say,‘I don’t know,but I want to know.’”
    Whaley got the idea of this second-grade presidential campaign project when he asked the children one day to raise their hands if they thought they could never be a president. The answer broke his heart. Whaley says the project is about more than just learning to read and speak in public. He wants these kids to learn to boast(夸耀)about themselves.
    “Boasting about yourself,and your best qualities,” Whaley says,“is very difficult for a child who came into the classroom not feeling confident.”
    24. What made Chris nervous?
    A. Telling a story. B. Making a speech.
    C. Taking a test. D. Answering a question.
    25. What does the underlined word “stumbles” in paragraph 2 refer to?
    A. Improper pauses. B. Bad manners.
    C. Spelling mistakes. D. Silly jokes.
    26. We can infer that the purpose of Whaley’s project is to _________.
    A. help students see their own strengths
    B. assess students’ public speaking skills
    C. prepare students for their future jobs
    D. inspire students’ love for politics
    27. Which of the following best describes Whaley as a teacher?
    A. Humorous. B. Ambitious.
    C. Caring. D. Demanding.
    【语篇解读】本文属于记叙文,讲述Thomas Whaley为了帮助学生学英语以及树立信心专门开展了一个演讲课程。
    24.B 【解析】细节理解题。根据第一段today is speech day和本段最后一句with shining dark eyes, he seems like the kind of kids who would enjoy public speaking. 以及第二段第一句But he’s nervous.可知,Chris眼睛黑亮,似乎是那种喜欢公共演讲的孩子,但是他却很紧张,故可知Chris是因为做演讲紧张,故选B。
    25.A 【解析】词义猜测题。根据第二段 “I’m here to tell you today why you should…should…” Chris trips on the “-ld”, a pronunciation difficulty for many non-native English speakers. 以及后文except for some stumbles, Chris is doing amazingly well 可知, Chris 发ld比较困难,这对于英语不是母语的学习者来说都是一个困难,总体来说Chris做得出奇的好。根据前文可知,ld发音不准,因此有些结巴,停顿得不准,故选A。
    26.A 【解析】推理判断题。根据倒数第二段Whaley says the project is about more than just learning to read and speak in public. He wants these kids to learn to boast about themselves.以及最后一段 “boasting about yourself, and your best qualities,” Whaley says, “is very difficult for a child who came into the classroom not feeling confident.”可知,这个课程不仅仅教孩子阅读以及公共演讲,还要让孩子学会夸耀自己,而夸耀自己对于那些进入教室没有信心的学生来说很困难,故可知,Whaley老师这么做是为了帮助学生认识自己的优势增加信心,故选A。
    27.C 【解析】推理判断题。根据倒数第二段Whaley got the idea of this second-grade presidential campaign project when he asked the children one day to raise their hands if they thought they could never be a president.和最后一段He wants these kids to learn to boast about themselves可知,当他有一天问学生认为自己当不了总统请举手的时候,想到了一个想法,这个课程就是帮助学生树立自己的信心,故可以看出这位老师很关心学生的成长。humorous 幽默的, ambitious 有雄心壮志的;caring 关心的;demanding要求高的。故选C。
    2. 【2019·全国卷II,B】
    “You can use me as a last resort(选择), and if nobody else volunteers,then I will do it.” This was an actual reply from a parent after I put out a request for volunteers for my kids lacrosse(长曲棍球)club.
    I guess that there's probably some demanding work schedule, or social anxiety around stepping up to help for an unknown sport. She may just need a little persuading. So I try again and tug at the heartstrings. I mention the single parent with four kids running the show and I talk about the dad coaching a team that his kids aren’t even on … At this point the unwilling parent speaks up,“Alright. Yes, I’ll do it.”
    I’m secretly relieved because I know there’s real power in sharing volunteer responsibilities among many. The unwilling parent organizes the meal schedule, sends out emails, and collects money for end-of-season gifts. Somewhere along the way, the same parent ends up becoming an invaluable member of the team. The coach is able to focus on the kids while the other parents are relieved to be off the hook for another season. Handing out sliced oranges to bloodthirsty kids can be as exciting as watching your own kid score a goal.
    Still, most of us volunteers breathe a sigh of relief when the season comes to a close. That relief is coupled with a deep understanding of why the same people keep coming back for more: Connecting to the community(社区)as you freely give your time, money, skills, or services provides a real joy. Volunteering just feels so good.
    In that sense, I’m pretty sure volunteering is more of a selfish act than I’d freely like to admit. However, if others benefit in the process, and I get some reward too, does it really matter where my motivation lies?
    24. What can we infer about the parent from her reply in paragraph l?
    A. She knows little about the club.
    B. She isn't good at sports.
    C. She just doesn't want to volunteer.
    D. She's unable to meet her schedule.
    25. What does the underlined phrase “tug at the heartstrings” in paragraph 2 mean ?
    A. Encourage team work.
    B. Appeal to feeling.
    C. Promote good deeds.
    D. Provide advice.
    26. What can we learn about the parent from paragraph 3?
    A. She gets interested in lacrosse.
    B. She is proud of her kids.
    C. She’ll work for another season.
    D. She becomes a good helper.
    27. Why does the author like doing volunteer work?
    A. It gives her a sense of duty.
    B. It makes her very happy.
    C. It enables her to work hard.
    D. It brings her material rewards.
    【语篇解读】本文是一篇记叙文。文中讲述了作者成功说服了一个家长参加志愿者团队,作为一名志愿者作者发挥了自己的作用,并获得了快乐。
    24.C 【解析】推理判断题。根据文章第一段中的 You can use me as a last resort(选择), and if nobody else volunteers,then I will do it.可知,你可以当我是最后的候选人,如果没有其他的志愿者,那么我就做。由此可推断出,她不想做自愿者。故选C。
    25.B 【解析】词义猜测题。根据划线前句she may just need a little persuading.和下面的一句话I mention the single parent with four kids running the show and I talk about the dad coaching a team that his kids aren't even on ...可知,作者为了劝服这位家长,举了两个例子。故可知,划线句此处应是“煽情”之意。故选B。
    26.D 【解析】细节理解题。根据第三段中这位家长作出的贡献及the same parent ends up becoming an invaluable member of the team可知,她最终成为了志愿者队伍中的重要的一员,也即是说,她成了一个好帮手。故选D。
    27.B 【解析】细节理解题。题干问作者为什么喜欢做志愿者工作。根据第四最两句Connecting to the community(社区)as you freely give your time, money, skills, or services provides a real joy. Volunteering just feels so good.可知,为社区做贡献可以带来真正的快乐, 参加志愿者活动活动能让人感觉快乐。故选B。
    3. 【2019·北京卷,B】
    Alice Moore is a teenager entrepreneur(创业者), who in May 2015 set up her business AilieCandy. By the time she was 13,her company was worth millions of dollars with the invention of a super-sweet treat that could save kids' teeth,instead of destroying them.

    It all began when Moore visited a bank with her dad. On the outing, she was offered a candy bar. However, her dad reminded her that sugary treats were bad for her teeth. But Moore was sick of missing out on candies. So she desired to get round the warning, "Why can't I make a healthy candy that's good for my teeth so that my parents can't say no to it?" With that in mind, Moore asked her dad if she could start her own candy company. He recommended that she do some research and talk to dentists about what a healthier candy would contain.
    With her dad's permission, she spent the next two years researching online and conducting trials to get a recipe that was both tasty and tooth-friendly. She also approached dentists to learn more about teeth cleaning. Consequently, she succeeded in making a kind of candy only using natural sweeteners, which can reduce oral bacteria.
    Moore then used her savings to get her business of the ground. Afterwards, she and her father secured their first business meeting with a supermarket owner, who finally agreed to sell Moore's product-Cancandy.
    As CanCandy's success grows, so does Moore's credibility as a young entrepreneur. Moore is enthusiastic about the candy she created, and she's also positive about what the future might bring. She hopes that every kid can have a clean mouth and a broad smile.
    Meanwhile, with her parents' help, Moore is generally able to live a normal teenage life. Although she founded her company early on in life, she wasn't driven primarily by profit. Moore wants to use her unique talent to help others find their smiles. She donates 10% of AilicCandy's profits to Big Smiles. With her talent and determination, it appears that the sky could be the limit for Alice Moore.
    34. How did Moore react to her dad's warning?
    A. She argued with him. B. She tried to find a way out.
    C. She paid no attention. D. She chose to consult dentists.
    35. What is special about CanCandy?
    A. It is beneficial to dental health. B. It is free of sweeteners.
    C. It is sweeter than other candies. D. It is produced to a dentists' recipe.
    36. What does Moore expect from her business?
    A. To earn more money. B. To help others find smiles.
    C. To make herself stand out. D. To beat other candy companies.
    37. What can we learn from Alice Moore's story?
    A. Fame is a great thirst of the young.
    B. A youth is to be regarded with respect.
    C. Positive thinking and action result in success.
    D. Success means getting personal desires satisfied
    【文章大意】这是一篇记叙文。主要讲述了Alice Moore,一个年轻有为的创业者的故事,故事告诉我们:积极的思考和行动会带来成功。
    34.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据第二段的But Moore was sick of missing out on candies. So she desired to get round the warning, "Why can’t I make a healthy candy that's good for my teeth so that my parents can't say no to it? "及下文她想方设法最终制作出了叫CanCandy的糖果可知,她对父亲的警告的反应是:她试图找到一条出路。故选B。
    35.A 【解析】细节理解题。根据第三段的Consequently, she succeeded in making a kind of candy only using natural sweeteners, which can reduce oral bacteria.可知,因此,这种糖只使用天然甜味剂,可以减少口腔细菌,因此它对牙齿有利。故选A。
    36.B 【解析】细节理解题。根据最后一段的Moore wants to use her unique talent to help others find their smiles.可知,Moor想用她独特的才能帮助别人找到他们的笑容。故选B。
    37.C 【解析】推理判断题。文章主要讲述了Moor的创业故事,她之所以能成功源于面对问题和困难时,她乐观的看待问题,积极的想方设法去解决问题。因此,通过她的故事让我们懂得积极的思考和行动会带来成功。故选C。
    4. 【2019·天津卷,B】
    I must have always known reading was very important because the first memories I have as a child deal with books. There was not one night that I don't remember mom reading me a storybook by my bedside. I was extremely inspired by the elegant way the words sounded.
    I always wanted to know what my mom was reading. Hearing mom say," I can't believe what's printed in the newspaper this morning," made me want to grab it out of her hands and read it myself. I wanted to be like my mom and know all of the things she knew. So I carried around a book, and each night, just to be like her, I would pretend to be reading.
    This is how everyone learned to read. We would start off with sentences, then paragraphs, and then stories. It seemed an unending journey, but even as a six-year-old girl I realized that knowing how to read could open many doors. When mom said," The C-A-N-D-Y is hidden on the top shelf," I knew where the candy was. My progress in reading raised my curiosity, and I wanted to know everything. I often found myself telling my mom to drive more slowly, so that I could read all of the road signs we passed.
    Most of my reading through primary, middle and high school was factual reading. I read for knowledge, and to make A's on my tests. Occasionally, I would read a novel that was assigned, but I didn't enjoy this type of reading. I liked facts, things that are concrete. I thought anything abstract left too much room for argument.
    Yet, now that I'm growing and the world I once knew as being so simple is becoming more complex, I find myself needing a way to escape. By opening a novel, I can leave behind my burdens and enter into a wonderful and mysterious world where I am now a new character. In these worlds I can become anyone. I don't have to write down what happened or what technique the author was using when he or she wrote this. I just read to relax.
    We're taught to read because it's necessary for much of human understanding. Reading is a vital part of my life. Reading satisfies my desire to keep learning. And I've found that the possibilities that lie within books are limitless.
    41. Why did the author want to grab the newspaper out of mom's hands?
    A. She wanted mom to read the news to her.
    B. She was anxious to know what had happened.
    C. She couldn't wait to tear the newspaper apart.
    D. She couldn't help but stop mom from reading.
    42. According to Paragraph 3,the author's reading of road signs indicates___________
    A. her unique way to locate herself
    B. her eagerness to develop her reading ability
    C. her effort to remind mom to obey traffic rules
    D. her growing desire to know the world around her.
    43. What was the author's view on factual reading?
    A. It would help her update test-taking skills.
    B. It would allow much room for free thinking.
    C. It would provide true and objective information.
    D. It would help shape a realistic and serious attitude to life.
    44. The author takes novel reading as a way to___________.
    A. explore a fantasy land
    B. develop a passion for leaning
    C. learn about the adult community
    D. get away from a confusing world
    45. What could be the best title for the passage?
    A. The Magic of Reading B. The Pleasure of Reading
    C. Growing Up with Reading D. Reading Makes a Full Man
    【语篇解读】本文为夹叙夹议文,作者讲述了自己的读书经历和感悟。
    41.B 【解析】细节理解题。根据第二段主题句I always wanted to know what my mom was reading.和Hearing mom say … made me want to grab it out of her hands and read it myself可知,作者一直想知道妈妈在读什么。作者抢过妈妈读的报纸,因为作者自己迫切想看一看报纸上写的内容,故选B。
    42. D【解析】推理判断题。根据第三段My progress in reading raised my curiosity, and I wanted to know everything,可以推断出,让妈妈开车开慢一点,他能够读出所有路标,正是作者在阅读方面的进步引起了他的好奇心,想要了解周围的一切,故选D。
    43.C 【解析】推理判断题。根据第四段第一句Most of my reading through primary, middle and high school was factual reading. I read for knowledge, and to make A’s on my test.可知,小学和中学阶段的阅读都是事实性阅读,读书是为了获取知识,考试得A。因此事实性阅读能够提供真实的客观的信息,故选 C。
    44. D 【解析】细节理解题。根据第五段By opening a novel, I can leave behind my burdens and enter into a wonderful and mysterious world where I am now a new character. In these worlds I can become anyone.( 打开一本小说,我可以摆脱我的负担,进入一个奇妙而神秘的世界,我现在是一个新的角色。在这个世界上,我可以成为任何人。) 可知,阅读小说可以让作者避开复杂的现实而投入到小说中的世界中去,故选D。
    45.C 【解析】主旨大意题。根据上下文可知,作者以时间顺序回忆了自己的阅读经历和感悟,伴着阅读成长,故选项C符合题意。
    5. 【2019·江苏卷,D】
    The 65-year-old Steve Goodwin was found suffering from early Alzheimer’s(阿尔楚海默症). He was losing his memory.
    A software engineer by profession, Steve was a keen lover of the piano, and the only musician in his family. Music was his true passion, though he had never performed outside the family.
    Melissa, his daughter, felt it more than worthwhile to save his music, to which she fell asleep catch night when she was young. She thought about hiring a professional pianist to work with her father.
    Naomi, Melissa’s best friend and a talented pianist, got to know about this and showed willingness to help.
    “Why do this?” Steve wondered.
    “Because she cares.” Melissa said.
    Steve nodded, tears in eye.
    Naomi drove to the Goodwin home. She told Steve she’d love to hear him play. Steve moved to the piano and sat at the bench, hands trembling as he gently placed his fingers on the keys.
    Naomi put a small recorder near the piano, Starts and stops and mistakes. Long pauses, heart sinking. But Steve pressed on, playing for the first time in his life for a stranger.
    “It was beautiful." Naomi said after listening to the recording. “The music was worth saving.”
    Her responsibility, her privilege, would be to rescue it. The music was still in Steve Goodwin. It was bidden in rooms with doors about to be locked.
    Naomi and Steve met every other week and spent hours together. He’d move his fingers clumsily on the piano, and then she’d take his place. He struggled to explain what he heard in his head. He stood by the piano, eyes closed, listening for the first time to his own work being played by someone else.
    Steve and Naomi spoke in musical code lines, beats, intervals, moving from the root to end a song in a new key. Steve heard it. All of it. He just couldn’t play it.
    Working with Naomi did wonders for Steve. It had excited within him the belief he could write one last song. One day, Naomi received an email. Attached was a recording, a recording of loss and love, of the fight. Steve called it “Melancholy Flower”.
    Naomi heard multiple stops and starts, Steve struggling, searching while his wife Joni called him “honey” and encouraged him. The task was so hard, and Steve, angry and upset, said he was quitting. Joni praised him, telling her husband this could be his signature piece.
    Naomi managed to figure out 16 of Steve’s favorite, and most personal songs. With Naomi’s help, the Goodwin family found a sound engineer to record Naomi playing Steve’s songs. Joni thought that would be the end. But it wasn’t.
    In the months leading up to the 2016 Oregon Repertory Singers Christmas concert, Naomi told the director she had a special one in mind: “Melancholy Flower”
    She told the director about her project with Steve. The director agreed to add it to the playing list. But Naomi would have to ask Steve’s permission. He considered it an honor.
    After the concert, Naomi told the family that Steve’s music was beautiful and professional. It needed to be shared in public.
    The family rented a former church in downtown Portland and scheduled a concert. By the day of the show, more than 300 people had said they would attend.
    By then, Steve was having a hard time remembering the names of some of his friends. He knew the path his life was now taking. He told his family he was at peace.
    Steve arrived and sat in the front row, surrounded by his family. The house lights faded. Naomi took the stage. Her fingers. His heart.
    65. Why did Melissa want to save her father’s music?
    A. His music could stop his disease from worsening.
    B. She wanted to please her dying old father.
    C. His music deserved to be preserved in the family.
    D. She wanted to make her father a professional.
    66. After hearing Steve’s playing, Naomi ________.
    A. refused to make a comment on it
    B. was deeply impressed by his music
    C. decided to free Steve from suffering
    D. regretted offering help to her friend
    67. How can the process of Steve’s recording be described?
    A. It was slow but productive.
    B. It was beneficial to his health.
    C. It was tiresome for Naomi.
    D. It was vital for Naomi’s career.
    68. Before Steve finished “Melancholy Flower," his wife Joni _______.
    A. thought the music talent of Steve was exhausted
    B. didn’t expect the damage the disease brought about
    C. didn’t fully realize the value of her husband’s music
    D. brought her husband’s music career to perfection
    69. How did Steve feel at the concert held in downtown Portland?
    A. He felt concerned about his illness.
    B. He sensed a responsibility for music.
    C. He regained his faith in music.
    D. He got into a state of quiet.
    70. What can be a suitable title for the passage?
    A. The Kindness of Friends B. The Power of Music
    C. The Making of a Musician D. The Value of Determination
    【语篇解读】本文属于记叙文,主要讲述一个钢琴师帮助一个患老年痴呆症的老人录制音乐的故事,其录制过程比较艰苦,但是录制的音乐很成功,也让老人对音乐充满了信心。
    65.C 【解析】细节理解题。根据第二段可知,Steve的专业软件工程,还是一个钢琴的热爱者,是家里唯一的音乐家,音乐是他真正热爱的东西,尽管没有在家以外的地方弹奏过钢琴。根据第三段Melissa, his daughter ,felt it more than worthwhile to save his music.可知他的女儿Melissa觉得保存他的音乐很有价值,故选C。
    66.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据第十段 “it was beautiful,” Naomi said after listening to the recording. “ the music was worth saving.”可知,听了录音之后Naomi说很美,值得保存,故可以得出Naomi对Steve的音乐印象深刻,故选B。
    67.A 【解析】推理判断题。根据第十二段He’d move his fingers clumsily on the piano, and then she’d take his place. He struggled to explain what he heard in his head.以及第十三段Steve and Naomi spoke in musical code: lines, beats, intervals, moving from the root to end a song in a new key. Steve heard it. All of it, he just couldn’t play it.可知,Steve会笨拙地把手指放在钢琴上,然后Naomi把手指放在他放的地方,并且Steve努力解释脑海里的内容,所有的这些,都是Naomi在弹奏,而Steve在听,故可知这个录制过程很慢。根据第十六段Naomi managed to figure out 16 of Steve’s favorite, and most personal songs.可知作品很多。故选A。
    68.C 【解析】推理判断题。根据第十六段Joni thought that would be the end. But it wasn’t. 以及后文Steve取得的成就可知在完成Melancholy Flower之前,他的妻子还没完全意识到丈夫的音乐的真正价值,故选C。
    69.D 【解析】推理判断题。根据倒数第二段He knew the path his life was now taking. He told his family he was at peace.可知,他知道自己一生要选择的路,告诉家人他很平静,故可知,家乡的音乐会让他重新坚定了对音乐的信念,故选D。
    70.B 【解析】标题归纳题。本文主要讲述一个钢琴师帮助一个患老年痴呆症的人录制音乐的故事,其录制过程比较艰苦,但是录制的音乐很成功,也让老人对音乐充满了信心。B项“音乐的力量”概括了全文内容,是最佳标题。故选B。
    6. 【2019·浙江卷,A】
    Zachariah Fike has an unusual hobby. He finds old military(军队的)medals for sale in antique stores and on the Internet.But unlike most collectors, Zac tracks down the medals’ rightful owners, and returns them.
    His effort to reunite families with lost medals began with a Christmas gift from his mother, a Purple Heart with the name Corrado A. G. Piccoli, found in an antique shop. Zac knows the meaning of a Purple Heart-he earned one himself in a war as a soldier. So when his mother gave him the medal, he knew right away what he had to do.
    Through the Internet, Zac tracked down Corrado’s sister Adeline Rockko. But when he finally reached her, the woman flooded him with questions: "Who are you?What antique shop?" However, when she hung up, she regretted the way she had handled the call. So she called Zac back and apologized. Soon she drove to meet Zac in Watertown, N.Y. "At that point, I knew she meant business, " Zac says. "To drive eight hours to come to see me."
    The Piccolis grew up the children of Italian immigrants in Watertown. Corrado, a translator for the Army during WWII, was killed in action in Europe.
    Before hearing from Zac, Adeline hadn’t realized the medal was missing. Like many military medals, the one Zac’s mother had found was a family treasure." This medal was very precious to my parents. Only on special occasions(场合)would they take it out and let us hold it in our hands," Adeline says.
    As a child, Adeline couldn't understand why the medal was so significant. “But as I grew older,” Adeline says, "and missed my brother more and more, I realized that was the only thing we had left." Corrado Piccoli’s Purple Heart medal now hangs at the Italian American Civic Association in Watertown.
    Zac recently returned another lost medal to a family in Alabama. Since he first reunited Corrado’s medal, Zac says his record is now 5 for 5.
    21. Where did Zac get a Purple Heart medal for himself?
    A. In the army.
    B. In an antique shop.
    C. From his mother.
    D. From Adeline Rockko.
    22. What did Zac realize when Adeline drove to meet him?
    A. She was very impolite.
    B. She was serious about the medal.
    C. She suspected his honesty.
    D. She came from a wealthy family.
    23. What made Adeline treasure the Purple Heart?
    A. Her parents’ advice.
    B. Her knowledge of antiques.
    C. Her childhood dream.
    D. Her memory of her brother.
    【语篇解读】这是一篇记叙文。Zachariah Fike有一个不同寻常的业余爱好:他在网上和古董店里寻找旧的军队勋章,然后将这些勋章归还它们的合法主人。文章主要叙述了他这一爱好的起源。
    21.A 【解析】细节理解题。根据第二段中的“Zac knows the meaning of a Purple Heart—he earned one himself in a war as a soldier”可知,当Zac还是一名士兵的时候,在一次战争中他获得了一枚Purple Heart。故A选项正确。
    22.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据第三段中的“To drive eight hours to come to see me”可以推知,Adeline为了那枚Purple Heart开车八个小时来见Zac,由此可知,她对于这件事是认真地。因此,At that point, I knew she meant business应该指的是Zac意识到Adeline对这枚勋章是认真的。故B选项正确。
    23.D 【解析】推理判断题。根据第四段中的“Corrado, a translator…was killed in action in Europe”和倒数第三段中的“as I grew older…and missed my brother more and more, I realized that was the only thing we had left ”这枚勋章寄托了Adeline对于去世的哥哥Corrado的回忆和思念,这是他们家留下的唯一关于哥哥的东西了。因此她很珍惜这枚勋章。故D选项正确。
    7. 【2019·浙江卷,B】
    Money with no strings attached. It’s not something you see every day. But at Union Station in Los Angeles last month, a board went up with dollar bills attached to it with pins and a sign that read, "Give What You Can, Take What You Need."
    People quickly caught on. And while many took dollars, many others pinned their own cash to the board. “People of all ages, races, and socio-economic(社会经济的)backgrounds gave and took, ”said Tyler Bridges of The Toolbox, which created the project. "We even had a bride in her wedding dress come up to the board and take a few dollars." Most of the bills on the board were singles, but a few people left fives, tens and even twenties. The video clip(片段)shows one man who had found a $ 20 bill pinning it to the board.
    “What I can say for the folks that gave the most, is that they were full of smiles,” Bridges said. “There’s a certain feeling that giving can do for you and that was apparent in those that gave the most." Most people who took dollars took only a few, but Bridges said a very small number took as much as they could.
    While the clip might look like part of a new ad campaign, Bridges said the only goal was to show generosity and sympathy. He added that he hopes people in other cities might try similar projects and post their own videos on the Internet.
    “After all, everyone has bad days and good days," he said. “Some days you need a helping hand and some days you can be the one giving the helping hand.”
    24. What does the expression "money with no strings attached" in paragraph 1 mean?
    A. Money spent without hesitation.
    B. Money not legally made.
    C. Money offered without conditions.
    D. Money not tied together.
    25. What did Bridges want to show by mentioning the bride?
    A. Women tended to be more sociable.
    B. The activity attracted various people.
    C. Economic problems were getting worse.
    D. Young couples needed financial assistance.
    26. Why did Bridges carry out the project?
    A. To do a test on people’s morals.
    B. To raise money for his company.
    C. To earn himself a good reputation.
    D. To promote kindness and sympathy.
    【语篇解读】上个月在洛杉矶的联合车站,一块牌子上别针别满了美元,上面写着“给予你所能给与的,拿走你所需要的”。这样的活动吸引了各种各样的人,组织者希望通过这样的活动来提倡仁慈和同情。
    24.C 【解析】词义猜测题。由第一段“But at Union Station in Los Angeles last month, a board went up with dollar bills attached to it with pins and a sign that read, "Give What You Can, Take What You Need.”可知,但是上个月在洛杉矶的联合车站,一块牌子上别针别满了美元,上面写着“给予你所能给与的,拿走你所需要的”。所以通过下文的语境,判断出第1段中的money with no strings attached是“无条件提供的钱”的意思。故B选项正确。
    25.B 【解析】推理判断题。由第二段““People of all ages, races, and socio-economic(社会经济的)backgrounds gave and took, ”said Tyler Bridges of The Toolbox, which created the project. "We even had a bride in her wedding dress come up to the board and take a few dollars.”可知,发起该项活动的泰勒·布里奇斯说:“所有年龄、种族和社会经济背景的人都会付出和索取。”甚至有一位穿着婚纱的新娘来到了牌子前,拿走了一些钱。所以通过泰勒·布里奇斯所说的,可以判断出,他提到新娘就是想说明这项活动吸引了各种各样的人。故B选项正确。
    26.D 【解析】细节理解题。由倒数第二段“While the clip might look like part of a new ad campaign, Bridges said the only goal was to show generosity and sympathy”可知,尽管这段视频看起来像是一项新的广告活动的一部分,但是布里奇斯说这次活动唯一的目标是表现出慷慨和同情。所以布里奇斯实施这个活动是为了提倡仁慈和同情。故D选项正确。
    8. 【2019·全国卷II,C】
    Marian Bechtel sits at West Palm Beach’s Bar Louie counter by herself, quietly reading her e-book as she waits for her salad. What is she reading? None of your business! Lunch is Bechtel’s “me” time. And like more Americans, she’s not alone.
    A new report found 46 percent of meals are eaten alone in America. More than half(53 percent)have breakfast alone and nearly half(46 percent)have lunch by themselves. Only at dinnertime are we eating together anymore,74 percent,according to statistics from the report.
    “I prefer to go out and be out. Alone,but together,you know?”Bechtel said,looking up from her book. Bechtel,who works in downtown West Palm Beach,has lunch with coworkers sometimes,but like many of us,too often works through lunch at her desk. A lunchtime escape allows her to keep a boss from tapping her on the shoulder. She returns to work feeling energized. “Today,I just wanted some time to myself,”she said.
    Just two seats over,Andrew Mazoleny,a local videographer,is finishing his lunch at the bar. He likes that he can sit and check his phone in peace or chat up the barkeeper with whom he's on a first-name basis if he wants to have a little interaction(交流). “I reflect on how my day's gone and think about the rest of the week,” he said. “It's a chance for self-reflection, You return to work recharged and with a plan.”
    That freedom to choose is one reason more people like to eat alone. There was a time when people may have felt awkward about asking for a table for one,but those days are over. Now,we have our smartphones to keep us company at the table. “It doesn't feel as alone as it may have before al the advances in technology,” said Laurie Demerit, whose company provided the statistics for the report.
    28. What are the statistics in paragraph 2 about?
    A. Food variety B. Eating habits.
    C. Table manners. D. Restaurant service.
    29. Why does Bechtel prefer to go out for lunch?
    A. To meet with her coworkers.
    B. To catch up with her work.
    C. To have some time on her own.
    D. To collect data for her report.
    30. What do we know about Mazoleny?
    A. He makes videos for the bar.
    B. He’s fond of the food at the bar.
    C. He interviews customers at the bar.
    D. He’s familiar with the barkeeper.
    31. What is the text mainly about?
    A. The trend of having meals alone.
    B. The importance of self-reflection.
    C. The stress from working overtime.
    D. The advantage of wireless technology.
    【语篇解读】本文通过一份调查结果显示,很大比例的人选择独自用餐,原因很多,比如逃离工作氛围,或者反思自己,但是独自用餐正慢慢成为一种趋势。
    28.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据第二段可知,在美国,约有46%的人们独自用餐,53%的人们独自吃早餐,46%的人们独自吃午餐,只有74%的人们晚餐不是独自享用,故可知本段的数据是关于用餐习惯,故选B。
    29.C【解析】细节理解题。根据第三段A lunchtime escape allows her to keep a boss from tapping her on the shoulder. Today, I just wanted some time to myself.可知,Bechtel一个人吃午饭可以让她逃离老板的关注,给自己留一些自由时间,故选C。
    30.D【解析】推理判断题。根据第四段he likes that he can sit and check his phone in peace or chat up the barkeeper with whom he’s on a first-name basis if he wants to have a little interaction.可知Mazoleny喜欢这样的气氛,因为可以坐在那里,查看手机信息,或者想聊天了,可以直呼吧台服务员名字和他聊天,故可知,他与服务员很熟悉,可以直呼对方名字,故选D。
    31.A【解析】主旨大意题。本文通过一份调查结果显示,很大比例的人选择独自用餐,原因很多,比如逃离工作氛围,或者反思自己,但是独自用餐正慢慢成为一种趋势,故选A。
    9. 【2019·全国卷III,B】
    For Western designers, China and its rich culture have long been an inspiration for Western creative.
    "It's no secret that China has always been a source(来源)of inspiration for designers," says Amanda Hill, chief creative officer at A+E Networks, a global media company and home to some of the biggest fashion(时尚)shows.
    Earlier this year, the China Through A Looking Glass exhibition in New York exhibited 140 pieces of China-inspired fashionable clothing alongside Chinese works of art, with the aim of exploring the influence of Chinese aesthetics(美学)on Western fashion and how China has fueled the fashionable imagination for centuries. The exhibition had record attendance, showing that there is huge interest in Chinese influences.
    "China is impossible to overlook," says Hill. "Chinese models are the faces of beauty and fashion campaigns that sell dreams to women all over the world, which means Chinese women are not just consumers of fashion — they are central to its movement. "Of course, only are today's top Western designers being influenced by China-some of the best designers of contemporary fashion are themselves Chinese." Vera Wang, Alexander Wang, Jason Wu are taking on Galiano, Albaz, Marc Jacobs-and beating them hands down in design and sales," adds Hil.
    For Hill, it is impossible not to talk about China as the leading player when discussing fashion. "The most famous designers are Chinese, so are the models, and so are the consumers," she says. "China is no longer just another market; in many senses it has become the market. If you talk about fashion today, you are talking about China-its influences, its direction, its breathtaking clothes, and how young designers and models are finally acknowledging that in many ways."
    24. What can we learn about the exhibition in New York?
    A. It promoted the sales of artworks.
    B. It attracted a large number of visitors.
    C. It showed ancient Chinese clothes.
    D. It aimed to introduce Chinese models.
    25. What does Hill say about Chinese women?
    A. They are setting the fashion. B. They start many fashion campaigns.
    C. They admire super models. D. They do business all over the world.
    26. What do the underlined words "taking on" in paragraph 4 mean?
    A. learning from B. looking down on
    C. working with D. competing against
    27. What can be a suitable title for the text?
    A. Young Models Selling Dreams to the World
    B. A Chinese Art Exhibition Held in New York
    C. Differences Between Eastern and Western Aesthetics
    D. Chinese Culture Fueling International Fashion Trends
    【语篇解读】这是一篇议论文。文章主要讲了中国文化对世界时尚届的影响,中国年轻的设计师和模特如何最终在许多方面被认可。中国成了世界时尚的风向标。
    24.B 【解析】细节理解题。答案定位在第三段The exhibition had record attendance, showing that there is huge interest in Chinese influences.(此次展览吸引的参观者人数创下了记录,显示出人们对中国影响的浓厚兴趣。)由此可知,纽约的展览吸引了许多参观者,故选B。
    25.A 【解析】细节理解题。答案定位在第四段Chinese models are the faces of beauty and fashion campaigns that sell dreams to women all over the world, which means Chinese women are not just consumers of fashion-they are central to its movement . (中国模特是向全世界女性推销梦想的美和时尚活动的代言人,这意味着中国女性不仅仅是时尚的消费者——她们是这场运动的核心。)由此可知,Hill说中国女性开创了新时尚,故选A。
    26.D 【解析】词义猜测题。下文and beating them hands down in design and sales说并在设计和销售上击败他们。由此推断出上文Vera Wang, Alexander Wang, Jason Wu are taking on Galliano, Albaz, Mare Jacobs的意思是Vera Wang、Alexander Wang和Jason Wu正在与Galliano、Albaz和 Mare Jacobs竞争。taking on意思是“竞争”,故选D。
    27.D 【解析】主旨大意题。根据文章第一段china and its culture have long been an inspiration for western creations.以及最后一段If you talk about fashion today , you are talking about China - its influences , its direction, its breathtaking clothes, and how young designers and models are finally acknowledging that in many ways."(如果你今天谈论时尚,你谈论的是中国——它的影响,它的方向,它令人惊叹的服装,以及年轻的设计师和模特如何最终在许多方面被认可。),结合全文内容,可知这篇文章最恰当的题目是“中国文化助力国际时尚潮流”,故选D。
    10. 【2019·天津卷,D】
    Would you BET on the future of this man?He is 53 years old. Most of his adult life has been a losing struggle against debt and misfortune. A war injury has made his left hand stop functioning,and he has often been in prison. Driven by heaven-knows-what motives,he determines to write a book.
    The book turns out to be one that has appealed to the world for more than 350 years. That former prisoner was Cervantes,and the book was Don Quixote(《堂吉诃德》). And the story poses an interesting question: why do some people discover new vitality and creativity to the end of their days,while others go to seed long before?
    We've all known people who run out of steam before they reach life's halfway mark. I'm not talking about those who fail to get to the top. We can't all get there. I'm talking about people who have stopped learning on growing because they have adopted the fixed attitudes and opinions that all too often come with passing years.
    Most of us,in fact,progressively narrow the variety of our lives. We succeed in our field of specialization and then become trapped in it. Nothing surprises us. We lose our sense of wonder. But,if we are willing to lean,the opportunities are everywhere.
    The things we learn in maturity seldom involve information and skills. We learn to bear with the things we can't change. We learn to avoid self-pity. We learn that however much we try to please,some people are never going to love us-an idea that troubles at first but is eventually relaxing.
    With high motivation and enthusiasm,we can keep on learning. Then we will know how important it is to have meaning in our life. However,we can achieve meaning only if we have made a commitment to something larger than our own little egos(自我),whether to loved ones,to fellow humans,to work,or to some moral concept.
    Many of us equate(视……等同于)“commitment” with such “caring” occupations as teaching and nursing. But doing any ordinary job as well as one can is in itself an admirable commitment. People who work toward such excellence whether they are driving a truck,or running a store-make the world better just by being the kind of people they are. They've learned life's most valuable lesson.
    51. The passage starts with the story of Cervantes to show that_________.
    A. loss of freedom stimulates one's creativity
    B. age is not a barrier to achieving one's goal
    C. misery inspires a man to fight against his fate
    D. disability cannot stop a man's pursuit of success
    52. What does the underlined part in Paragraph 3 probably mean?
    A. End one's struggle for liberty.
    B. Waste one's energy taking risks.
    C. Miss the opportunity to succeed.
    D. Lose the interest to continue learning.
    53. What could be inferred from Paragraph 4?
    A. Those who dare to try often get themselves trapped.
    B. Those who tend to think back can hardly go ahead.
    C. Opportunity favors those with a curious mind.
    D. Opportunity awaits those with a cautious mind.
    54. What does the author intend to tell us in Paragraph 5?
    A. A tough man can tolerate suffering.
    B. A wise man can live without self-pity
    C. A man should try to satisfy people around him.
    D. A man should learn suitable ways to deal with life
    55. What is the author's purpose in writing the passage?
    A. To provide guidance on leading a meaningful adult life.
    B. To stress the need of shouldering responsibilities at work.
    C. To state the importance of generating motivation for learning.
    D. To suggest a way of pursuing excellence in our lifelong career.
    【语篇解读】本文属于议论文,讲述要成功,就需要不断的学习,这样的生活才会有意义。
    51.B 【解析】推理判断题。第一段讲述塞万提斯一生不幸,负债累累,因为战争受伤左手残疾,同时还身陷囹圄,在53岁的时候决定写书,最终写出成名作《唐吉柯德》,根据后文可知,所有的困境都没有阻挡他的成功,年龄也是如此,故选B。
    52.D【解析】词义猜测题。根据第三段I’m talking about people who have stopped learning on growing because they have adopted the fixed attitudes and opinions that all too often come with passing years.故可知,作者谈论的不是那些没有到达巅峰的人,而是谈论那些不再学习成长的人,故可知run out of steam可知,停止学习,故选D。
    53.C【解析】推理判断题。根据第四段we lose the sense of wonder. But, if we are willing to learn, the opportunities are everywhere.可知,我们失去了好奇感,但是如果我们愿意学习,机会无处不在,故可知,机会总是留给那些好奇心的人,故选C。
    54. D【解析】推理判断题。根据第五段we learn to bear with the things we can’t change. We learn to avoid self-pity. We learn that however much we try to please, some people are never going to love us—an idea that troubles at first but is eventually relaxing.可知,我们学会承受那些无法改变的事情,学会避免自怜,也学会了无论我们怎么去取悦别人,有些人是无法喜欢我们的,这个观点起初让我们苦恼,但是之后会让我们释怀,故可知,本段作者告诉我们要学会使用恰当的方式来对待生活,故选D。
    55.A 【解析】主旨大意题。本文讲述要成功,就需要不断的学习,这样的生活才会有意义,故本文作者的目的是为了指导我们过一个有意义的成年人生活,故选A。
    11. 【2019·江苏卷,C】
    Who cares if people think wrongly that the Internet has had more important influences than the washing machine? Why does it matter that people are more impressed by the most recent changes?
    It would not matter if these misjudgments were just a matter of people's opinions. However, they have real impacts, as they result in misguided use of scarce resources.
    The fascination with the ICT(Information and Communication Technology) revolution, represented by the Internet, has made some rich countries wrongly conclude that making things is so "yesterday" that they should try to live on ideas. This belief in "post-industrial society" has led those countries to neglect their manufacturing sector(制造业) with negative consequences for their economies.
    Even more worryingly, the fascination with the Internet by people in rich countries has moved the international community to worry about the "digital divide" between the rich countries and the poor countries. This has led companies and individuals to donate money to developing countries to buy computer equipment and Internet facilities. The question, however, is whether this is what the developing countries need the most. Perhaps giving money for those less fashionable things such as digging wells, extending electricity networks and making more affordable washing machines would have improved people's lives more than giving every child a laptop computer or setting up Internet centres in rural villages, I am not saying that those things are necessarily more important, but many donators have rushed into fancy programmes without carefully assessing the relative long-term costs and benefits of alternative uses of their money.
    In yet another example, a fascination with the new has led people to believe that the recent changes in the technologies of communications and transportation are so revolutionary that now we live in a "borderless world". As a result, in the last twenty years or so, many people have come to believe that whatever change is happening today is the result of great technological progress, going against which will be like trying to turn the clock back. Believing in such a world, many governments have put an end to some of the very necessary regulations on cross-border flows of capital, labour and goods, with poor results.
    Understanding technological trends is very important for correctly designing economic policies, both at the national and the international levels, and for making the right career choices at the individual level. However, our fascination with the latest, and our under valuation of what has already become common, can, and has, led us in all sorts of wrong directions.
    61. Misjudgments on the influences of new technology can lead to __________.
    A. a lack of confidence in technology
    B. a slow progress in technology
    C. a conflict of public opinions
    D. a waste of limited resources
    62. The example in Paragraph 4 suggests that donators should __________.
    A. take people's essential needs into account
    B. make their programmes attractive to people
    C. ensure that each child gets financial support
    D. provide more affordable internet facilities
    63. What has led many governments to remove necessary regulations?
    A. Neglecting the impacts of technological advances.
    B. Believing that the world has become borderless.
    C. Ignoring the power of economic development.
    D. Over-emphasizing the role of international communication.
    64. What can we learn from the passage?
    A. People should be encouraged to make more donations.
    B. Traditional technology still has a place nowadays.
    C. Making right career choices is crucial to personal success.
    D. Economic policies should follow technological trends.
    【语篇解读】本文属于议论文,讲述对信息技术的过分迷恋对国家,对个人,对慈善事业都会有不利的影响。
    61.D【解析】细节理解题。根据第二段However, they have reak impacts, as they result in misguided use of scarce resources. 可知,对信息技术的错误判断会导致有限资源的错误使用,也就是资源的浪费,故选D。
    62.A 【解析】推理判断题。根据第四段Perhaps giving money for those less fashionable things such as digging wells, extending electricity networks and making more affordable washing machines would have improved people's lives more than giving every child a laptop computer or setting up Internet centres in rural villages, I am not saying that those things are necessarily more important, but many donators have rushed into fancy programmes without carefully assessing the relative long-term costs and benefits of alternative uses of their money.可知,与其给那些贫困地区孩子笔记本电脑或者建网络中心,还不如给钱打井,铺电网或者生产他们买得起的洗衣机,这些东西更能改善他们的生活。作者不是说这些东西一定更重要,但是很多捐赠者没有仔细考虑捐赠的东西的长期成本,因此作者建议捐赠者要考虑接受捐赠的人的实际情况,而不是一味地追求信息化,故选A。
    63.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据第五段In yet another example, a fascination with the new has led people to believe that the recent changes in the technologies of communications and transportation are so revolutionary that now we live in a "borderless world". 以及Believing in such a world, many governments have put an end to some of the very necessary regulations on cross-border flows of capital, labour and goods, with poor results.可知,对新东西的迷恋让人们认为如今通讯技术和交通的变革让我们生活在一个无国界的世界。正是认为我们生活在这样一个世界,很多政府取消了关于跨国界的资本、劳动力以及商品流动的法律法规,故选B。
    64.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据第三段The fascination with the ICT(Information and Communication Technology) revolution, represented by the Internet, has made some rich countries wrongly conclude that making things is so "yesterday" that they should try to live on ideas. This belief in "post-industrial society" has led those countries to neglect their manufacturing sector(制造业) with negative consequences for their economies.可知,对互联网呈现的通讯技术变革的迷恋让很多富裕国家做出一个错误的结论,制造产品已经过时了,他们应该靠创意生活,因而忽略了制造业,从而对经济造成不利影响,故可知传统的技术依然传统的技术依然有它的地位,不能新兴的信息技术取代,故选B。
    【2018年】
    1. 【2018·全国卷III,C】
    While famous foreign architects are invited to lead the designs of landmark buildings in China such as the new CCTV tower and the National Center for the Performing Arts, many excellent Chinese architects are making great efforts to take the center stage.
    Their efforts have been proven fruitful. Wang Shu, a 49-year-old Chinese architect, won the 2012 Pritzker Architecture Prize — which is often referred to as the Nobel Prize in architecture — on February 28. He is the first Chinese citizen to win this award.
    Wang serves as head of the Architecture Department at the China Academy of Art (CAA). His office is located at the Xiangshan campus(校园) of the university in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province. Many buildings on the campus are his original creations.
    The style of the campus is quite different from that of most Chinese universities. Many visitors were amazed by the complex architectural space and abundant building types. The curves(曲线) of the buildings perfectly match the rise and fall of hills, forming a unique view.
    Wang collected more than 7 million abandoned bricks of different ages. He asked the workers to use traditional techniques to make the bricks into walls, roofs and corridors. This creation attracted a lot of attention thanks to its mixture of modern and traditional Chinese elements(元素).
    Wang’s works show a deep understanding of modern architecture and a good knowledge of traditions. Through such a balance, he had created a new type of Chinese architecture, said Tadao Ando, the winner of the 1995 Pritzker Prize.
    Wang believes traditions should not be sealed in glass boxes at museums. "That is only evidence that traditions once existed," he said.
    "Many Chinese people have a misunderstanding of traditions. They think tradition means old things from the past. In fact, tradition also refers to the things that have been developing and that are still being created, " he said.
    "Today, many Chinese people are learning Western styles and theories rather than focusing on Chinese traditions. Many people tend to talk about traditions without knowing what they really are, " said Wang.
    The study of traditions should be combined with practice. Otherwise, the recreation of traditions would be artificial and empty, he said.
    28. Wang’s winning of the prize means that Chinese architects are ___________.
    A. following the latest world trend
    B. getting international recognition
    C. working harder than ever before
    D. relying on foreign architects
    29. What impressed visitors to the CAA Xiangshan campus most?
    A. Its hilly environment. B. Its large size.
    C. Its unique style. D. Its diverse functions.
    30. What made Wang’s architectural design a success?
    A. The mixture of different shapes.
    B. The balance of East and West.
    C. The use of popular techniques.
    D. The harmony of old and new.
    31. What should we do about Chinese traditions according to Wang?
    A. Spread them to the world. B. Preserve them at museums.
    C. Teach them in universities. D. Recreate them in practice.
    【文章大意】文章主要讲述了中国建筑设计师王澍在其作品中融合中国传统建筑文化,获得了建筑界的诺贝尔奖——普利策奖,这让中国建筑现在得到了国际认可。
    28.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据文章第二段的内容可知,王澍获得2012年普利策奖,而普利策奖相当于建筑界的诺贝尔奖,他是第一个获此奖的中国人,故推知中国建筑现在得到了国际认可。故B项正确。
    29.C 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第四段对CAA校园的描述可知,它的设计风格独特,与大多数中国大学的校园很不同,许多游客感对复杂的建筑空间和丰富的建筑类型感到吃惊,故C正确。
    30.D 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第六段1995年普利策奖的获得者Tadao Ando的评语可知,王澍设计的成功之处是把中国传统元素融入现代设计,并保持两者的和谐,故D正确。
    31.D 【解析】推理判断题。根据文章最后一段和倒数第三段中In fact, tradition also refers to the things that have been developing and that are still being created可知,传统的研究要与实践相结合,在实践中进行再创造,否则就会是人工的和空的,故D正确。
    2. 【2018·北京卷,A】
    My First Marathon(马拉松)
    A month before my first marathon, one of my ankles was injured and this meant not running for two weeks, leaving me only two weeks to train. Yet, I was determined to go ahead.
    I remember back to my 7th year in school. In my first P.E. class, the teacher required us to run laps and then hit a softball. I didn’t do either well. He later informed me that I was "not athletic".
    The idea that I was "not athletic" stuck with me for years. When I started running in my 30s, I realized running was a battle against myself, not about competition or whether or not I was athletic. It was all about the battle against my own body and mind. A test of wills!
    The night before my marathon, I dreamt that I couldn’t even find the finish line. I woke up sweating and nervous, but ready to prove something to myself.
    Shortly after crossing the start line, my shoe laces(鞋带) became untied. So I stopped to readjust. Not the start I wanted!
    At mile 3, I passed a sign: "GO FOR IT, RUNNERS!"
    By mile 17, I became out of breath and the once injured ankle hurt badly. Despite the pain, I stayed the course walking a bit and then running again.
    By mile 21, I was starving!
    As I approached mile 23, I could see my wife waving a sign. She is my biggest fan. She never minded the alarm clock sounding at 4 a.m. or questioned my expenses on running.
    I was one of the final runners to finish. But I finished! And I got a medal. In fact, I got the same medal as the one that the guy who came in first place had.
    Determined to be myself, move forward, free of shame and worldly labels(世俗标签), I can now call myself a "marathon winner".
    36. A month before the marathon, the author ____________.
    A. was well trained B. felt scared
    C. made up his mind to run D. lost hope
    37. Why did the author mention the P.E. class in his 7th year?
    A. To acknowledge the support of his teacher.
    B. To amuse the readers with a funny story.
    C. To show he was not talented in sports.
    D. To share a precious memory.
    38. How was the author’s first marathon?
    A. He made it. B. He quit halfway.
    C. He got the first prize. D. He walked to the end.
    39. What does the story mainly tell us?
    A. A man owes his success to his family support.
    B. A winner is one with a great effort of will.
    C. Failure is the mother of success.
    D. One is never too old to learn.
    【文章大意】本文为一篇记叙文。讲述了自己第一次跑马拉松,凭借自己的意志力成功跑完全程的励志故事。
    36.C 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第一段最后一句Yet, I was determined to go ahead. 可知,马拉松赛前一个月尽管作者脚踝受伤使得训练时间缩短,但作者仍下定决心参赛。故选C。
    37.C 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第二段I didn’t do either well. He later informed me that I was "not athletic"可知,作者提到7年级的事情是为了证明自己真的没有运动天赋。故选C。
    38.A 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第10段I was one of the final runners to finish. But I finished! And I got a medal. In fact, I got the same medal as the one that the guy who came in first place had. 可知,作者坚持到了最后,而且得到了一块奖牌,虽然不是第一名,由此可见他成功地跑完了马拉松。故选A。
    39.B 【解析】主旨大意题。通读全文可知,作者在讲述自己跑马拉松的经历,再根据最后一段Determined to be myself, move forward, free of shame and worldly labels(世俗标签), I can now call myself a "marathon winner". 可知,作者成功跑完马拉松源于自己的意志。故选B。
    3. 【2018·天津卷,B】
    When I was 17, I read a magazine article about a museum called the McNay, once the home of a watercolorist named Marian McNay. She had requested the community to turn it into a museum upon her death. On a sunny Saturday, Sally and I drove over to the museum. She asked, "Do you have the address? ""No, but I’ll recognize it, there was a picture in the magazine. "
    "Oh, stop. There it is!”
    The museum was free. We entered, excited. A group of people sitting in the hall stopped talking and stared at us.
    "May I help you?" a man asked. "No, "I said. "We’re fine.” Tour guides got on my nerves. What if they talked a long time about a painting you weren’t that interested in? Sally had gone upstairs. The people in the hall seemed very nosy(爱窥探的), keeping their eyes on me with curiosity. What was their problem? I saw some nice sculptures in one room. Suddenly I sensed a man standing behind me. "Where do you think you are? " he asked. I turned sharply. "The McNay Art Museum!" He smiled, shaking his head. "Sorry, the McNay is on New Braunfels Street." "What’s this place?” I asked, still confused. "Well, it’s our home." My heart jolted(震颤). I raced to the staircase and called out, "Sally! Come down immediately! "
    "There’s some really good stuff(艺术作品) up there." She stepped down, looking confused. I pushed her toward the front door, waving at the family, saying, "Sorry, please forgive us, you have a really nice place." Outside, when I told Sally what happened, she covered her mouth, laughing. She couldn’t believe how long they let us look around without saying anything.
    The real McNay was splendid, but we felt nervous the whole time we were there. Van Gogh, Picasso. This time, we stayed together, in case anything else unusual happened.
    Thirty years later, a woman approached me in a public place. "Excuse me, did you ever enter a residence, long ago, thinking it was the McNay Museum? "
    "Yes. But how do you know? We never told anyone. "
    "That was my home. I was a teenager sitting in the hall. Before you came over, I never realized what a beautiful place I lived in. I never felt lucky before. You thought it was a museum. My feelings about my home changed after that. I’ve always wanted to thank you."
    41. What do we know about Marian McNay?
    A. She was a painter.
    B. She was a community leader.
    C. She was a museum director.
    D. She was a journalist.
    42. Why did the author refuse the help from the man in the house?
    A. She disliked people who were nosy.
    B. She felt nervous when talking to strangers.
    C. She knew more about art than the man.
    D. She mistook him for a tour guide.
    43. How did the author feel about being stared at by the people in the hall?
    A. Puzzled. B. Concerned. C. Frightened. D. Delighted.
    44. Why did the author describe the real McNay museum in just a few words?
    A. The real museum lacked enough artwork to interest her.
    B. She was too upset to spend much time at the real museum.
    C. The McNay was disappointing compared with the house.
    D. The event happening in the house was more significant.
    45. What could we learn from the last paragraph?
    A. People should have good taste to enjoy life.
    B. People should spend more time with their family.
    C. People tend to be blind to the beauty around them.
    D. People tend to educate teenagers at a museum.
    【文章大意】本文是一篇记叙文。文章作者和朋友原想参观McNay博物馆,到了之后参观的时候,发现很多人奇怪的看着她,最后才发现自己误将一个私人住宅当成McNay博物馆。30年后,一位女士认出误撞入自己住宅的作者,指出正是因为作者的误撞入才让她意识到自己住的地方有多么美丽。
    41.A 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第一段When I was 17, I read a magazine article about a museum called the McNay, once the home of a watercolorist named Marian McNay.可知,Marian McNay是一名水彩画家。故选A。
    42.D 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第四段"May I help you?" a man asked. "No, "I said. "We're fine.” Tour guides got on my nerves.可知,导游令作者心烦,作者误认为屋子里的男人是位导游。故选D。
    43.A 【解析】推理判断题。根据文章第四段The people in the hall seemed very nosy(爱窥探的), keeping their eyes on me with curiosity. What was their problem?(大厅的人看起来都非常爱窥探的,眼睛不停的好奇的看着我。他们有什么问题?)可以推断出,作者当时感到困惑不解。故选A。
    44.D 【解析】推理判断题。根据全文可知,作者着墨点主要在叙述参观误当成McNay博物馆的私人住宅上,故这才是文章的重心,所以将真正的McNay博物馆叙述一带而过。故选D。
    45.C 【解析】推理判断题。根据文章最后一段Before you came over, I never realized what a beautiful place I lived in.可知,在作者未造访她家之前,这位女士从未意识到自己住的地方多么美丽,从而可以推断出,人们往往对周围的美而不见。故选C。
    4. 【2018·浙江卷,A】
    In 1812, the year Charles Dickens was born, there were 66 novels published in Britain. People had been writing novels for a century—most experts date the first novel to Robinson Crusoe in 1719—but nobody wanted to do it professionally. The steam-powered printing press was still in its early stages; the literacy(识字) rate in England was under 50%. Many works of fiction appeared without the names of the authors, often with something like “By a lady.”Novels, for the most part, were looked upon as silly, immoral or just plain bad.
    In 1870, when Dickens died, the world mourned him as its first professional writer and publisher, famous and beloved, who had led an explosion in both the publication of novels and their readership and whose characters — from Oliver Twist to Tiny Tim— were held up as moral touchstones. Today Dickens’ greatness is unchallenged. Removing him from the pantheon(名人堂) of English literature would make about as much sense as the Louvre selling off the Mona Lisa.
    How did Dickens get to the top? For all the feelings readers attach to stories, literature is a numbers game, and the test of time is extremely difficult to pass. Some 60,000 novels were published during the Victorian age, from 1837 to1901; today a casual reader might be able to name a half-dozen of them. It’s partly true that Dickens’ style of writing attracted audiences from all walks of life. It’s partly that his writings rode a wave of social, political and scientific progress. But it’s also that he rewrote the culture of literature and put himself at the center. No one will ever know what mix of talent, ambition, energy and luck made Dickens such a distinguished writer. But as the 200th anniversary of his birth approaches, it is possible — and important for our own culture—to understand how he made himself a lasting one.
    21. Which of the following best describes British novels in the 18th century?
    A. They were difficult to understand.
    B. They were popular among the rich.
    C. They were seen as nearly worthless.
    D. They were written mostly by women.
    22. Dickens is compared with the Mona Lisa in the text to stress________.
    A. his reputation in France
    B. his interest in modern art
    C. his success in publication
    D. his importance in literature
    23. What is the author’s purpose in writing the text?
    A. To remember a great writer.
    B. To introduce an English novel.
    C. To encourage studies on culture.
    D. To promote values of the Victorian age.
    【文章大意】本文是一篇人物传记,主要介绍了Charles Dickens在英国小说方面的重要贡献和深远影响。在他200年诞辰之际,让我们永远记住这位对文学艺术做出重大贡献的小说家。
    21.C 【解析】细节理解题。根据第一段对当时情况的描写nobody wanted to do it professionally. The steam-powered printing press was still in its early stages; the literacy(识字)rate in England was under 50%. Many works of fiction appeared without the names of the authors... Novels, for the most part, were looked upon as silly, immoral, or just plain bad.印刷技术落后,人们识字率低,作品上没有作者名字,小说被认为是愚蠢的不正常的,毫无价值可言。故选C。
    22.D 【解析】推理判断题。根据第二段Dickens’ greatness is unchallenged.和列举的Charles Dickens小说的影响可知,把他和Mona Lisa相比是为了说明Charles Dickens在英国小说方面的重要性和Mona Lisa在绘画方面的重要性是一样的,故选D。
    23.A 【解析】写作意图题。根据文中对Charles Dickens及其作品在英国小说史上重要性的描写,和文章最后But as the 200th anniversary of his birth approaches, it is possible — and important for our own culture—to understand how he made himself a lasting one.可知本文是写于Charles Dickens诞辰200周年前夕,由此可知作者写本文是为了纪念这位伟大的作家。故选A。
    5.【2018·全国I,C】
    Languages have been coming and going for thousands of years, but in recent times there has been less coming and a lot more going. When the world was still populated by hunter-gatherers, small, tightly knit (联系)groups developed their own patterns of speech independent of each other. Some language experts believe that 10,000 years ago, when the world had just five to ten million people, they spoke perhaps 12,000 languages between them.
    Soon afterwards, many of those people started settling down to become farmers, and their languages too became more settled and fewer in number. In recent centuries, trade, industrialization, the development of the nation-state and the spread of universal compulsory education, especially globalisation and better communications in the past few decades, all have caused many languages to disappear, and dominant languages such as English, Spanish and Chinese are increasingly taking over.
    At present, the world has about 6,800 languages. The distribution of these languages is hugely uneven. The general rule is that mild zones have relatively few languages, often spoken by many people, while hot, wet zones have lots, often spoken by small numbers. Europe has only around 200 languages; the Americas about 1,000; Africa 2 400; and Asia and the Pacific perhaps 3,200, of which Papua New Guinea alone accounts for well over 800. The median number (中位数)of speakers is a mere 6,000, which means that half the world’s languages are spoken by fewer people than that.
    Already well over 400 of the total of, 6,800 languages are close to extinction(消亡), with only a few elderly speakers left. Pick, at random, Busuu in Cameroon (eight remaining speakers),Chiapaneco in Mexico(150), Lipan Apache in the United States(two or three)or Wadjigu in Australia (one, with a question-mark): none of these seems to have much chance of survival.
    28. What can we infer about languages in hunter-gatherer times?
    A. They developed very fast. B. They were large in number.
    C. They had similar patterns. D. They were closely connected.
    29. Which of the following best explains "dominant " underlined in paragraph 2?
    A. Complex. B. Advanced.
    C. Powerful. D. Modern.
    30. How many languages are spoken by less than 6, 000 people at present?
    A. About 6,800 B. About 3,400
    C. About 2,400 D. About 1,200
    31. What is the main idea of the text?
    A. New languages will be created.
    B. People’s lifestyles are reflected in languages.
    C. Human development results in fewer languages.
    D. Geography determines language evolution.
    【文章大意】本文是一篇议论文。文章讲述了随着社会的发展人类语言越来越少及其原因。
    28.B【解析】推理判断题。根据文章第一段中的When the world was still populated by hunter-gatherers, small, tightly knit (联系) groups developed their own patterns of speech independent of each other... when the world had just five to ten million people, they spoke perhaps 12,000 languages between them.可知,当世界以依靠狩猎为生的人居住的时候,小而联系紧密的群落形成了他们彼此之间独立的讲话模式。当世界上的人口数量不到一千万时,语言种类达到了12000种。由此推知,当时的语言种类很多。故选B。
    29.C【解析】猜测词义题。根据文章第二段中的dominant languages such as English, Spanish and Chinese are increasingly taking over.可知,英语、西班牙语和汉语正在替代其他语言。由此推知dominant languages意为:强有力的语言。故选C。
    30.B【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第三段中的At present, the world has about 6,800 languages.和The median number (中位数) of speakers is a mere 6,000, which means that half the world’s languages are spoken by fewer people than that. 可知,目前世界上大约有6800种语言,但是讲的人数少于6000人的占一半即3400.故选B。
    31.C【解析】主旨要义题。根据文章第一段中的主题句Languages have been coming and going for thousands of years, but in recent times there has been less coming and a lot more going.可知,语言的产生和消失进行了几千年,但最近时代语言产生的少,消失的太多。故选
    6.【2018·全国卷II,B】
    Many of us love July because it’s the month when nature’s berries and stone fruits are in abundance. These colourful and sweet jewels form British Columbia’s fields are little powerhouses of nutritional protection.
    Of the common berries, strawberries are highest in vitamin C, although, because of their seeds, raspberries contain a little more protein (蛋白质), iron and zinc (not that fruits have much protein). Blueberries are particularly high in antioxidants (抗氧化物质). The yellow and orange stone fruits such as peaches are high in the carotenoids we turn into vitamin A and which are antioxidants. As for cherries (樱桃), they are so delicious who cares? However, they are rich in vitamin C.
    When combined with berries of slices of other fruits, frozen bananas make an excellent base for thick, cooling fruit shakes and low fat “ice cream”. For this purpose, select ripe bananas for freezing as they are much sweeter. Remove the skin and place them in plastic bags or containers and freeze. If you like, a squeeze of fresh lemon juice on the bananas will prevent them turning brown. Frozen bananas will last several weeks, depending on their ripeness and the temperature of the freezer.
    If you have a juicer, you can simply feed in frozen bananas and some berries or sliced fruit. Out comes a “soft-serve” creamy dessert, to be eaten right away. This makes a fun activity for a children’s party; they love feeding the fruit and frozen bananas into the top of the machine and watching the ice cream come out below.
    24. What does the author seem to like about cherries?
    A. They contain protein. B. They are high in vitamin A.
    C. They have a pleasant taste. D. They are rich in antioxidants.
    25. Why is fresh lemon juice used in freezing bananas?
    A. To make them smell better. B. To keep their colour.
    C. To speed up their ripening. D. To improve their nutrition.
    26. What is “a juicer” in the last paragraph?
    A. A dessert. B. A drink.
    C. A container. D. A machine.
    27. From which is the text probably taken?
    A. A biology textbook. B. A health magazine.
    C. A research paper. D. A travel brochure.
    【文章大意】本文是一篇日常生活类说明文。文章主要介绍并比较了几种水果各自的营养价值和健康功效,并列出了一些食用这些水果的方法。
    24.C【解析】细节理解题。题干问的是,作者喜欢樱桃什么。根据第二段中As for cherries (樱桃), they are so delicious who cares?(至于樱桃,因为它们很好吃谁在乎呢?)可知,作者在乎的是它的美味。故选C。
    25.B【解析】细节理解题。根据第三段中的If you like, a squeeze of fresh lemon juice on the bananas will prevent them turning brown.可知,往香蕉上滴新鲜的柠檬汁是为了防止香蕉变成褐色,故新鲜的柠檬汁是被用来保持香蕉的颜色的。故选B。
    26.D【解析】词义猜测题。根据最后一段中they love feeding the fruit and frozen bananas into the top of the machine and watching the ice cream come out below可知,孩子们喜欢把一些水果和冷冻的香蕉放入到这台机器的上部,然后看到冰激凌从下面出来。故可以推出a juicer就是一台机器。故选D。
    27.B【解析】文章出处题。文章首先指出七月是水果盛产的季节,并指出各种水果富含的营养,最后一段指出我们可以用a juicer为孩子们做一些甜点和冰激凌,故最可能是从健康杂志上摘取的文章。A项意为:生物教科书;B项意为:一本健康杂志;C项意为:一篇研究论文;D项意为:一本旅游手册。故选B。
    7.【2018·全国卷II,C】
    Teens and younger children are reading a lot less for fun, according to a Common Sense Media report published Monday.
    While the decline over the past decade is steep for teen readers, some data in the report shows that reading remains a big part of many children’s lives, and indicates how parents might help encourage more reading.
    According to the report’s key findings, “the proportion (比例) who say they ‘hardly ever’ read for fun has gone from 8 percent of 13-year-olds and 9 percent of 17-year-olds in 1984 to 22 percent and 27 percent respectively today.”
    The report data shows that pleasure reading levels for younger children, ages 2—8, remain largely the same. But the amount of time spent in reading each session has declined, from closer to an hour or more to closer to a half hour per session.
    When it comes to technology and reading, the report does little to counsel(建议) parents looking for data about the effect of e-readers and tablets on reading. It does point out that many parents still limit electronic reading, mainly due to concerns about increased screen time.
    The most hopeful data shared in the report shows clear evidence of parents serving as examples and important guides for their kids when it comes to reading. Data shows that kids and teens who do read frequently, compared to infrequent readers, have more books in the home, more books purchased for them, parents who read more often, and parents who set aside time for them to read.
    As the end of school approaches, and school vacation reading lists loom(逼近) ahead, parents might take this chance to step in and make their own summer reading list and plan a family trip to the library or bookstore.
    28. What is the Common Sense Media report probably about?
    A. Children’s reading habits.
    B. Quality of children’s books.
    C. Children’s after-class activities.
    D. Parent-child relationships.
    29. Where can you find the data that best supports "children are reading a lot less for fun"?
    A. In paragraph 2. B. In paragraph 3.
    C. In paragraph 4. D. In paragraph 5.
    30. Why do many parents limit electronic reading?
    A. E-books are of poor quality.
    B. It could be a waste of time.
    C. It may harm children’s health.
    D. E-readers are expensive.
    31. How should parents encourage their children to read more?
    A. Act as role models for them.
    B. Ask then to write book reports.
    C. Set up reading groups for them.
    D. Talk with their reading class teachers.
    【文章大意】本文是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了一项关于儿童和青少年的阅读习惯的调查报告。报告表明,儿童和青少年趣味阅读时间明显减少;父母会对孩子的阅读习惯产生一些积极影响。
    28.A 【解析】推理判断题。题干问的是这篇报道可能是关于什么内容。根据整篇文章,我们可以看出这篇报道讲述了孩子们阅读的乐趣,孩子们阅读的时间,孩子们阅读方式和父母对孩子阅读的影响。A项意为:孩子们的阅读习惯;B项意为:孩子们所读书籍的质量;C项意为:孩子们的课后活动;D项意为:父母与孩子的关系。故选A。
    29.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据第三段中的the proportion (比例) who say they ‘hardly ever’ read for fun has gone from 8 percent of 13-year-olds and 9 percent of 17-year-olds in 1984 to 22 percent and 27 percent respectively today.可知,很少为乐趣而阅读的人的比例已经分别从1984年的13岁的8%和17岁的9%上升到现在的22%和27%。也就是说,为乐趣而读书的人越来越少了。故选B。
    30.C【解析】推理判断题。根据倒数第三段最后一句many parents still limit electronic reading, mainly due to concerns about increased screen time可知,许多家长仍然限制电子阅读,主要是由于担心看一些电子屏幕的时间越来越多,也即是担心会伤害孩子们的健康。故选C。
    31.A 【解析】细节理解题。根据倒数第二段The most hopeful data shared in the report shows clear evidence of parents serving as examples and important guides for their kids when it comes to reading.可知,有明显的证据表明,父母为孩子们做榜样并为孩子们作重要指导能培养孩子的阅读习惯。也即是说,父母可以通过给孩子们作榜样来鼓励孩子们阅读的。故选A。
    8.【2018·全国卷I,B】
    Good Morning Britain’s Susanna Reid is used to grilling guests on the sofa every morning, but she is cooking up a storm in her latest role — showing families how to prepare delicious and nutritious meals on a tight budget.
    In Save Money: Good Food, she visits a different home each week and with the help of chef Matt Tebbutt offers top tips on how to reduce food waste, while preparing recipes for under £5 per family a day. And the Good Morning Britain presenter says she’s been able to put a lot of what she’s leant into practice in her own home, preparing meals for sons, Sam,14, Finn,13, and Jack, 11.
    "We love Mexican churros, so I buy them on my phone from my local Mexican takeaway restaurant," she explains. "I pay £5 for a portion(一份), but Matt makes them for 26p a portion, because they are flour, water, sugar and oil. Everybody can buy takeaway food, but sometimes we’re not aware how cheaply we can make this food ourselves. "
    The eight-part series(系列节目), Save Money: Good Food, follows in the footsteps of ITV’s Save Money: Good Health, which gave viewers advice on how to get value from the vast range of health products on the market.
    With food our biggest weekly household expense, Susanna and Matt spend time with a different family each week. In tonight’s Easter special they come to the aid of a family in need of some delicious inspiration on a budget. The team transforms the family’s long weekend of celebration with less expensive but still tasty recipes.
    24. What do we know about Susanna Reid?
    A. She enjoys embarrassing her guests. B. She has started a new programme.
    C. She dislikes working early in the morning. D. She has had a tight budget for her family.
    25. How does Matt Tebbutt help Susanna?
    A. He buys cooking materials for her. B. He prepares food for her kids.
    C. He assists her in cooking matters. D. He invites guest families for her.
    26. What does the author intend to do in paragraph 4?
    A. Summarize the previous paragraphs. B. Provide some advice for the readers.
    C. Add some background information. D. Introduce a new topic for discussion.
    27. What can be a suitable title for the text?
    A. Keeping Fit by Eating Smart B. Balancing Our Daily Diet
    C. Making yourself a Perfect Chef D. Cooking Well for Less
    【文章大意】本文是一篇说明文。文章介绍了一档英国系列电视节目,给观众介绍如何减少食物浪费以及如何以较少的预算做出美味佳肴。
    24.B 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第一段知道Good Morning Britain’s Susanna Reid is used to grilling guests on the sofa every morning, but she is cooking up a storm in her latest role可知,她开辟了一个新的节目。故选B。
    25.C【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第二段中的In Save Money: Good Food, she visits a different home each week and with the help of chef Matt Tebbutt offers top tips on how to reduce food waste, while preparing recipes for under £5 per family a day.可知, Susanna 在Matt Tebbutt的帮助下,提供如何减少食物浪费同时给每日生活费低于5英镑的每个家庭准备食谱。故选C。解题关键词:同义词表达with the help of和help。
    26.C【解析】写作意图题。根据文章第四段中的which gave viewers advice on how to get value from the vast range of health products on the market.可知,Save Money: Good Food节目是Save Money: Good Health节目之后,给观众一些建议:如何从众多的市场上的健康产品中获取价值。故选C。
    27.D 【解析】主旨要义题。根据文章的整体内容可知,文章作者一直在讲如何用较少的钱做出好的食物。根据文章中的prepare delicious and nutritious meals on a tight budget. 在资金紧张的情况下,准备可口且有营养的饭菜; how to reduce food waste, while preparing recipes for under £5 per family a day. 如何减少食物浪费同时给每日生活费低于5英镑的每个家庭准备食谱; how cheaply we can make this food ourselves. 我们自己做这种食物有多便宜; less expensive but still tasty recipes.不贵可仍然可口的食谱。可以推知D正确。
    9.【2018`全国卷II,D】
    We’ve all been there: in a lift, in line at the bank or on an airplane, surrounded by people who are, like us, deeply focused on their smartphones or, worse, struggling with the uncomfortable silence.
    What’s the problem? It’s possible that we all have compromised conversational intelligence. It’s more likely that none of us start a conversation because it’s awkward and challenging, or we think it’s annoying and unnecessary. But the next time you find yourself among strangers, consider that small talk is worth the trouble. Experts say it’s an invaluable social practice that results in big benefits.
    Dismissing small talk as unimportant is easy, but we can’t forget that deep relationships wouldn’t
    even exist if it weren’t for casual conversation. Small talk is the grease(润滑剂) for social communication, says Bernardo Carducci, director of the Shyness Research Institute at Indiana University Southeast. "Almost every great love story and each big business deal begins with small talk," he explains. "The key to successful small talk is learning how to connect with others, not just communicate with them."
    In a 2014 study, Elizabeth Dunn, associate professor of psychology at UBC, invited people on their way into a coffee shop. One group was asked to seek out an interaction(互动) with its waiter; the other, to speak only when necessary. The results showed that those who chatted with their server reported significantly higher positive feelings and a better coffee shop experience. "It’s not that talking to the waiter is better than talking to your husband," says Dunn. "But interactions with peripheral(边缘的) members of our social network matter for our well-being also."
    Dunn believes that people who reach out to strangers feel a significantly greater sense of belonging, a bond with others. Carducci believes developing such a sense of belonging starts with small talk. "Small talk is the basis of good manners," he says.
    32. What phenomenon is described in the first paragraph?
    A. Addiction to smartphones.
    B. Inappropriate behaviours in public places.
    C. Absence of communication between strangers.
    D. Impatience with slow service.
    33. What is important for successful small talk according to Carducci?
    A. Showing good manners. B. Relating to other people.
    C. Focusing on a topic. D. Making business deals.
    34. What does the coffee-shop study suggest about small talk?
    A. It improves family relationships. B. It raises people’s confidence.
    C. It matters as much as a formal talk. D. It makes people feel good.
    35. What is the best title for the text?
    A. Conversation Counts B. Ways of Making Small Talk
    C. Benefits of Small Talk D. Uncomfortable Silence
    【文章大意】这是一篇议论文。在当今社会,人们在公共场合或沉迷于智能手机,或与不舒服的沉默抗争,陌生人之间缺乏沟通。但人与人之间是需要适当的交谈闲聊的,闲聊是人际关系社会交往必不可少的部分,而且也有很多好处。
    32.C 【解析】主旨大意题。题干问的是:第一段描述了什么现象。在公共场合(比如在电梯里,在银行排队,或在飞机上)人们深深地专注于他们的智能手机,或者更糟糕的是,与不舒服的沉默抗争。有此可知,陌生人之间缺乏沟通。A项意为:沉迷于智能手机。B项意为:在公共场所不适当的行为。C项意为:陌生人之间缺乏沟通。D项意为:对缓慢的服务不耐烦。故选C项。
    33.B 【解析】推理判断题。题干问得是对于Carducci来说,成功的闲聊中重要的是什么。根据第三段最后一句“The key to successful small talk is learning how to connect with others, not just communicate with them”(成功闲聊的关键是学习如何与他们交流,而不仅仅是与他们沟通。)由此推断C符合题意。A项意为:表现出良好的礼貌。B项意为:与他人有关的。C项意为:专注于一个话题。D项意为:做商业交易。故选B项。
    34.D 【解析】推理判断题。题干问的是:咖啡店的研究对闲聊有什么建议。根据第四段的调查结果可知,那些与服务员聊天的人,有显著的积极情绪和更好的咖啡店体验。由此可知,D项符合题意。A项意为:闲聊改善了家庭关系。B项意为:闲聊提高了人们的信心。C项意为:闲聊和正式谈话一样重要。D项意为:闲聊让人感觉很好。故选D项。
    35.C 【解析】主旨大意题。整篇文章刚开始介绍了社会的现象(公共场合人们沉迷于智能手机,陌生人之间缺乏沟通交流),接着分析了这一问题的原因,接下来有专家对闲聊进行了研究,最后得出结论,闲聊都有什么样的好处。A项意为:谈话很重要。B项意为:闲聊的方法。C项意为:闲聊的好处。D项意为:不舒服的沉默。故选C项。
    10.【2018·全国卷III,D】
    Adults understand what it feels like to be flooded with objects. Why do we often assume that more is more when it comes to kids and their belongings? The good news is that I can help my own kids learn earlier than I did how to live more with less.
    I found the pre-holidays a good time to encourage young children to donate less-used things, and it worked. Because of our efforts, our daughter Georgia did decide to donate a large bag of toys to a little girl whose mother was unable to pay for her holiday due to illness. She chose to sell a few larger objects that were less often used when we promised to put the money into her school fund(基金)(our kindergarten daughter is serious about becoming a doctor).
    For weeks, I've been thinking of bigger, deeper questions: How do we make it a habit for them? And how do we train ourselves to help them live with, need, and use less? Yesterday, I sat with my son, Shepherd, determined to test my own theory on this. I decided to play with him with only one toy for as long as it would keep his interest. I expected that one toy would keep his attention for about five minutes, ten minutes, max. I chose a red rubber ball-simple, universally available. We passed it, he tried to put it in his mouth, he tried bouncing it, rolling it, sitting on it, throwing it. It was totally, completely enough for him. Before I knew it an hour had passed and it was time to move on to lunch.
    We both became absorbed in the simplicity of playing together. He had my full attention and I had his. My little experiment to find joy in a single object worked for both of us.
    32. What do the words “more is more” in paragraph 1 probably mean?
    A. The more, the better. B. Enough is enough.
    C. More money, more worries. D. Earn more and spend more.
    33. What made Georgia agree to sell some of her objects?
    A. Saving up for her holiday B. Raising money for a poor girl
    C. Adding the money to her fund D. Giving the money to a sick mother
    34. Why did the author play the ball with Shepherd?
    A. To try out an idea
    B. To show a parent's love
    C. To train his attention
    D. To help him start a hobby
    35. What can be a suitable title for the text?
    A. Take It or Leave It B. A Lesson from Kids
    C. Live More with Less D. The Pleasure of Giving
    【文章大意】这是一篇议论文。文章讲述作者引导孩子主动捐献玩具,并从玩耍简单玩具中获得快乐的做法。
    32.A 【解析】词义猜测题。根据文章第一段最后一句…I can help my own kids learn earlier than I did how to live more with less可以推断出,人们通常认为越多越好。故选A。
    33.C 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第二段中She chose to sell a few larger objects that were less often used when we promised to put the money into her school fund(基金)可知,当我们承诺给她把卖玩具的钱放到她的教育基金里时,她同意卖玩具。故选C。
    34.A 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章最后一段最后一句My little experiment to find joy in a single object worked for both of us.表明,跟Shepherd玩球是为了测试自己的一种想法是否可行。故选A。
    35.C 【解析】主旨大意题。根据文章第一段可知,作者想要教会孩子how to live more with less,而二三段是作者的尝试,故C作标题适合。
    11.【2018·浙江卷,C】
    As cultural symbols go, the American car is quite young. The Model T Ford was built at the Piquette Plant in Michigan a century ago, with the first rolling off the assembly line(装配线)on September 27, 1908. Only eleven cars were produced the next month. But eventually Henry Ford would build fifteen million of them.
    Modern America was born on the road, behind a wheel. The car shaped some of the most lasting aspects of American culture: the roadside diner, the billboard, the motel, even the hamburger. For most of the last century, the car represented what it meant to be American—going forward at high speed to find new worlds. The road novel, the road movie, these are the most typical American ideas, born of abundant petrol, cheap cars and a never-ending interstate highway system, the largest public works project in history.
    In 1928 Herbert Hoover imagined an America with “a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage.” Since then, this society has moved onward, never looking back, as the car transformed America from a farm-based society into an industrial power.
    The cars that drove the American Dream have helped to create a global ecological disaster. In America the demand for oil has grown by 22 percent since 1990.
    The problems of excessive(过度的)energy consumption, climate change and population growth have been described in a book by the American writer Thomas L. Friedman. He fears the worst, but hopes for the best.
    Friedman points out that the green economy(经济)is a chance to keep American strength. “The ability to design, build and export green technologies for producing clean water, clean air and healthy and abundant food is going to be the currency of power in the new century.”
    28. Why is hamburger mentioned in paragraph 2?
    A. To explain Americans’ love for travelling by car.
    B. To show the influence of cars on American culture.
    C. To stress the popularity of fast food with Americans.
    D. To praise the effectiveness of America’s road system.
    29. What has the use of cars in America led to?
    A. Decline of economy. B. Environmental problems.
    C. A shortage of oil supply. D. A farm-based society.
    30. What is Friedman’s attitude towards America’s future?
    A. Ambiguous. B. Doubtful. C. Hopeful. D. Tolerant.
    【文章大意】文章讲述了汽车在美国经济和文化上的重要作用,也指出了汽车带来的环境问题。
    28.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据第二段Modern America was born on the road, behind a wheel. The car shaped some of the most lasting aspects of American culture: the roadside diner, the billboard, the motel, even the hamburger.可知现代美国诞生于公路和汽车,汽车塑造了美国文化最持久的一些方面。Hamburger就是汽车塑造的美国文化的一个方面。用这个例子是在说明汽车对美国文化的影响,故选B。
    29.B 【解析】细节理解题。根据第四段The cars that drove the American Dream have helped to create a global ecological disaster.可知美国汽车的迅速发展,导致生态灾难。故选B。
    30.C 【解析】推理判断题。根据倒数第二段中的He fears the worst, but hopes for the best. 和最后一段中的Friedman points out that the green economy(经济)is a chance to keep American strength.可见Friedman虽然对未来担心,但抱有最好的希望,他指出了发展绿色积极的想法。可见Friedman对未来是充满希望的,故选C。
    12.【2018·天津卷,D】
    Give yourself a test. Which way is the wind blowing? How many kinds of wildflowers can be seen from your front door? If your awareness is as sharp as it could be, you’ll have no trouble answering these questions.
    Most of us observed much more as children than we do as adults. A child’s day is filled with fascination, newness and wonder. Curiosity gave us all a natural awareness. But distinctions that were sharp to us as children become unclear; we are numb(麻木的)to new stimulation(刺激), new ideas. Relearning the art of seeing the world around us is quite simple, although it takes practice and requires breaking some bad habits.
    The first step in awakening senses is to stop predicting what we are going to see and feel before it occurs. This blocks awareness. One chilly night when I was hiking in the Rocky Mountains with some students, I mentioned that we were going to cross a mountain stream. The students began complaining about how cold it would be. We reached the stream, and they unwillingly walked ahead. They were almost knee-deep when they realized it was a hot spring. Later they all admitted they’d felt cold water at first.
    Another block to awareness is the obsession(痴迷) many of us have with naming things. I saw bird watchers who spotted a bird, immediately looked it up in field guides, and said, a "ruby-crowned kinglet" and checked it off. They no longer paid attention to the bird and never learned what it was doing.
    The pressures of "time" and "destination" are further blocks to awareness. I encountered many hikers who were headed to a distant camp-ground with just enough time to get there before dark. It seldom occurred to them to wander a bit, to take a moment to see what’s around them. I asked them what they’d seen. "Oh, a few birds," they said. They seemed bent on their destinations.
    Nature seems to unfold to people who watch and wait. Next time you take a walk, no matter where it is, take in all the sights, sounds and sensations. Wander in this frame of mind and you will open a new dimension to your life.
    51. According to Paragraph 2, compared with adults, children are more ____________.
    A. anxious to do wonders
    B. sensitive to others’ feelings
    C. likely to develop unpleasant habits
    D. eager to explore the world around them
    52. What idea does the author convey in Paragraph 3?
    A. To avoid jumping to conclusions.
    B. To stop complaining all the time.
    C. To follow the teacher’s advice.
    D. To admit mistakes honestly.
    53. The bird watchers’ behavior shows that they __________.
    A. are very patient in their observation
    B. are really fascinated by nature
    C. care only about the names of birds
    D. question the accuracy of the field guides
    54. Why do the hikers take no notice of the surroundings during the journey?
    A. The natural beauty isn’t attractive to them.
    B. They focus on arriving at the camp in time.
    C. The forest in the dark is dangerous for them.
    D. They are keen to see rare birds at the destination.
    55. In the passage, the author intends to tell us we should __________.
    A. fill our senses to feel the wonders of the world
    B. get rid of some bad habits in our daily life
    C. open our mind to new things and ideas
    D. try our best to protect nature
    【文章大意】本文是一篇散文。我们有多久没有仔细观察我们周围的世界了。作者通过此文要告诉我们:放慢脚步,带着我们所有的感官来感受周围世界的奇妙。
    51.D【解析】推理判断题。根据文章第二段Most of us observed much more as children than we do as adults.可知,与成人相比较,孩子观察得更多,从而可以推断出孩子更急于探索他们周围的世界。故选D。
    52.A 【解析】推理判断题。根据文章第三段作者叙述在一个寒冷的夜晚,作者和学生徒步旅行穿过一条小溪的时候,学生们抱怨水太冷而不愿往前走,结果事实上那是一个温泉。作者举这样一个事例是为了向读者传递这样的观念:避免过早下结论。故选A。
    53.C 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第四段全段及首句Another block to awareness is the obsession(痴迷) many of us have with naming things.可知,鸟观察者发现鸟后只关心鸟的名字,并不关心它在做什么。故选C。
    54.B 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第五段I encountered many hikers who were headed to a distant camp-ground with just enough time to get there before dark. It seldom occurred to them to wander a bit, to take a moment to see what’s around them.可知,徒步旅行者只关心能够及时到达目的地,而很少关心周围的事物。故选B。
    55.A【解析】推理判断题。文章作者想要通过此文要告诉我们:大自然只展现给那些善于观察和等待的人,带着我们所有的感官来感受周围世界的奇妙。
    13.【2018·北京卷,D】
    Preparing Cities for Robot Cars
    The possibility of self-driving robot cars has often seemed like a futurist’s dream, years away from materializing in the real world. Well, the future is apparently now. The California Department of Motor Vehicles began giving permits in April for companies to test truly self-driving cars on public roads. The state also cleared the way for companies to sell or rent out self-driving cars, and for companies to operate driverless taxi services. California, it should be noted, isn’t leading the way here. Companies have been testing their vehicles in cities across the country. It’s hard to predict when driverless cars will be everywhere on our roads. But however long it takes, the technology has the potential to change our transportation systems and our cities, for better or for worse, depending on how the transformation is regulated.
    While much of the debate so far has been focused on the safety of driverless cars(and rightfully so), policymakers also should be talking about how self-driving vehicles can help reduce traffic jams, cut emissions(排放) and offer more convenient, affordable mobility options. The arrival of driverless vehicles is a chance to make sure that those vehicles are environmentally friendly and more shared.
    Do we want to copy — or even worsen — the traffic of today with driverless cars? Imagine a future where most adults own individual self-driving vehicles. They tolerate long, slow journeys to and from work on packed highways because they can work, entertain themselves or sleep on the ride, which encourages urban spread. They take their driverless car to an appointment and set the empty vehicle to circle the building to avoid paying for parking. Instead of walking a few blocks to pick up a child or the dry cleaning, they send the self-driving minibus. The convenience even leads fewer people to take public transport — an unwelcome side effect researchers have already found in ride-hailing(叫车) services.
    A study from the University of California at Davis suggested that replacing petrol-powered private cars worldwide with electric, self-driving and shared systems could reduce carbon emissions from transportation 80% and cut the cost of transportation infrastructure(基础设施) and operations 40% by 2050. Fewer emissions and cheaper travel sound pretty appealing. The first commercially available driverless cars will almost certainly be fielded by ride-hailing services, considering the cost of self-driving technology as well as liability and maintenance issues(责任与维护问题). But driverless car ownership could increase as the prices drop and more people become comfortable with the technology.
    Policymakers should start thinking now about how to make sure the appearance of driverless vehicles doesn’t extend the worst aspects of the car-controlled transportation system we have today. The coming technological advancement presents a chance for cities and states to develop transportation systems designed to move more people, and more affordably. The car of the future is coming. We just have to plan for it.
    47. According to the author, attention should be paid to how driverless cars can __________.
    A. help deal with transportation-related problems
    B. provide better services to customers
    C. cause damage to our environment
    D. make some people lose jobs
    48. As for driverless cars, what is the author’s major concern?
    A. Safety. B. Side effects.
    C. Affordability. D. Management.
    49. What does the underlined word "fielded" in Paragraph 4 probably mean?
    A. Employed. B. Replaced.
    C. Shared. D. Reduced.
    50. What is the author’s attitude to the future of self-driving cars?
    A. Doubtful. B. Positive.
    C. Disapproving. D. Sympathetic.
    【文章大意】本文为议论文。文章主要讨论有关无人驾驶汽车的发展前景和面临的问题。
    47.A 【解析】推理判断题。根据第二段While much of the debate so far has been focused on the safety of driverless cars(and rightfully so), policymakers also should be talking about how self-driving vehicles can help reduce traffic jams, cut emissions(排放) and offer more convenient, affordable mobility options. 可知,政策制定者应该讨论无人驾驶车怎么帮助削减交通阻塞,减少尾气排放,提供更方便、更便宜的出行选择,由此可见人们应该多关注无人驾驶车怎么帮助处理与交通有关的问题。故选A。
    48.D 【解析】推理判断题。根据文章第一段But however long it takes, the technology has the potential to change our transportation systems and our cities, for better or for worse, depending on how the transformation is regulated. 可知,不管花多长时间,这项技术都有可能改变我们的交通系统和我们的城市,不管是好是坏,这取决于如何这种转变如何被规范,再根据文章最后一句话The car of the future is coming. We just have to plan for it. 可知,我们需要为其做好计划,故作者的主要关注点是对这种转变的管理规范,故选D。
    49.A 【解析】词义猜测题。根据第四段The first commercially available driverless cars will almost certainly be fielded by ride-hailing services, considering the cost of self-driving technology as well as liability and maintenance issues(责任与维护问题). 可知,鉴于自主驾驶的费用以及责任和维护问题,无人驾驶车几乎可以肯定将会被打车服务使用。故划线词是“被应用”的意思。A. Employed被应用;B. Replaced被取代;C. Shared被分享;D. Reduced被减少。故选A。
    50.B 【解析】观点态度题。根据文章最后一段The coming technological advancement presents a chance for cities and states to develop transportation systems designed to move more people, and more affordably. The car of the future is coming. We just have to plan for it. 中的 advancement,move more people, and more affordably. 以及plan for it可推知,作者是积极的态度。故选B。
    14.【2018·江苏卷,C】
    If you want to disturb the car industry, you'd better have a few billion dollars: Mom-and-pop carmakers are unlikely to beat the biggest car companies. But in agriculture, small farmers can get the best of the major players. By connecting directly with customers, and by responding quickly to changes in the markets as well as in the ecosystems(生态系统), small farmers can keep one step ahead of the big guys. As the co-founder of the National Young Farmers Coalition (NYFC, 美国青年农会)and a family farmer myself. I have a front-row seat to the innovations among small farmers that are transforming the industry.
    For example, take the Quick Cut Greens Harvester, a tool developed just a couple of years ago by a young farmer, Jonathan Dysinger, in Tennessee, with a small loan from a local Slow Money group. It enables small-scale farmers to harvest 175 pounds of green vegetables per hour—a huge improvement over harvesting just a few dozen pounds by hand—suddenly making it possible for the little guys to compete with large farms of California. Before the tool came out, small farmers couldn't touch the price per pound offered by California farms. But now, with the combination of a better price point and a generally fresher product, they can stay in business.
    The sustainable success of small farmers, though, won't happen without fundamental changes to the industry. One crucial factor is secure access to land. Competition from investors. developers, and established large farmers makes owning one's own land unattainable for many new farmers.
    From 2004 to 2013, agricultural land values doubled, and they continue to rise in many regions.
    Another challenge for more than a million of the most qualified farm workers and managers is a non-existent path to citizenship — the greatest barrier to building a farm of their own. With farmers over the age of 65 outnumbering(多于)farmers younger than 35 by six to one, and with two-thirds of the nation's farmland in need of a new farmer, we must clear the path for talented people willing to grow the nation's food.
    There are solutions that could light a path toward a more sustainable and fair farm economy, but farmers can't clumsily put them together before us. We at the NYFC need broad support as we urge Congress to increase farmland conservation, as we push for immigration reform, and as we seek policies that will ensure the success of a diverse and ambitious next generation of farms from all backgrounds. With a new farm bill to be debated in Congress, consumers must take a stand with young farmers.
    61. The author mentions car industry at the beginning of the passage to introduce .
    A. the progress made in car industry
    B. a special feature of agriculture
    C. a trend of development in agriculture
    D. the importance of investing in car industry
    62. What does the author want to illustrate with the example in paragraph 2?
    A. Loans to small local farmers are necessary.
    B. Technology is vital for agricultural development.
    C. Competition between small and big farms is fierce
    D. Small farmers may gain some advantages over big ones.
    63. What is the difficulty for those new famers?
    A. To gain more financial aid.
    B. To hire good farm managers.
    C. To have fans of their own.
    D. To win old farmers’ support.
    64. What should farmers do for a more sustainable and fair farm economy?
    A. Seek support beyond NYFC.
    B. Expand farmland conservation.
    C. Become members of NYFC.
    D. Invest more to improve technology.
    【文章大意】文章主要阐述了美国的小农场主所持有的优势,同时也分析了目前美国农业所面临的问题,比如美国农业目前很多人不愿意卖地,且60岁以上的农民数目远远高出年轻农民。
    61.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据文章第一段If you want to disturb the car industry,you'd better have a few billion dollars: Mom-and-pop carmakers are unlikely to beat the biggest car companies.But in agriculture,small farmers can get the best of the major players.提到汽车行业,小型汽车制造商不太可能打败最大的汽车公司。然而农业就不一样了,小农场也能成为主导可知,作者开篇提到汽车行业,目的是引起下文,说明了农业特色,故选B项。
    62.D【解析】推理判断题。文章第二段是通过事例来证明第一段“…small farmers can keep one step ahead of the big guys.”小农场也可能会超过大型农场可知,小农场也可能比大农场先占领先机,故选D项。
    63.C【解析】细节理解题。根据第三段“Competition from investors, developers, and established large farmers makes owning one’s own land unattainable for many new farmers.” 来自投资者、开发商和老牌大农场主的竞争使得许多新农民无法拥有自己的土地可知,对于新型的农民来说要拥有自己的土地,即自己的农场还是困难重重的,故选C项。
    64.A【解析】细节理解题。根据第四段“We at the NYFC need broad support as we urge Congress to increase farmland conservation, as we push for immigration reform, and as we seek policies that will ensure the success of a diverse and ambitious next generation of farmers from all backgrounds. With a new farm bill to be debated in Congress, consumers must take a stand with young farmers.”可知,除了在敦促国会增加耕地保护的同时,在推动移民改革的同时,在寻求确保不同背景、雄心勃勃的下一代农民成功的政策时,农民应该为一个更可持续、更公平的农业经济寻求更多的支持,故选A项。
    【2017年】
    1. 【2017·全国卷I,B】
    I work with Volunteers for Wildlife, a rescue and education organization at Bailey Arboretum in Locust Valley. Trying to help injured, displaced or sick creatures can be heartbreaking; survival is never certain. However, when it works, it is simply beautiful.
    I got a rescue call from a woman in Muttontown. She had found a young owl(猫头鹰) on the ground. When I arrived, I saw a 2-to 3-week-old owl. It had already been placed in a carrier for safety.
    I examined the chick(雏鸟) and it seemed fine. If I could locate the nest, I might have been able to put it back, but no luck. My next work was to construct a nest and anchor it in a tree.
    The homeowner was very helpful. A wire basket was found. I put some pine branches into the basket to make this nest safe and comfortable. I placed the chick in the nest, and it quickly calmed down.
    Now all that was needed were the parents, but they were absent. I gave the homeowner a recording of the hunger screams of owl chicks. These advertise the presence of chicks to adults; they might also encourage our chick to start calling as well. I gave the owner as much information as possible and headed home to see what news the night might bring.
    A nervous night to be sure, but sometimes the spirits of nature smile on us all! The homeowner called to say that the parents had responded to the recordings. I drove over and saw the chick in the nest looking healthy and active. And it was accompanied in the nest by the greatest sight of all — LUNCH! The parents had done their duty and would probably continue to do so.
    24. What is unavoidable in the author’s rescue work according to paragraph 1?
    A. Efforts made in vain.
    B. Getting injured in his work.
    C. Feeling uncertain about his future.
    D. Creatures forced out of their homes.
    25. Why was the author called to Muttontown?
    A. To rescue a woman.
    B. To take care of a woman.
    C. To look at a baby owl.
    D. To cure a young owl.
    26. What made the chick calm down?
    A. A new nest. B. Some food. C. A recording. D. Its parents.
    27. How would the author feel about the outcome of the event?
    A. It’s unexpected. B. It’s beautiful.
    C. It’s humorous. D. It’s discouraging.
    【文章大意】救助小动物并没有那么简单,因为你所做的救助行为到最后可能都成了无用功。但无论结果怎样,救助小动物的这种行为是美好的。本文主要介绍了作者救助一只小猫头鹰,给它做新的窝,帮助它回到父母身边的故事。
    24. A 推理判断题。根据第一段中的Trying to help injured, displaced or sick creatures can be heartbreaking; survival is never certain.可知救助受伤的、流离失所的、生病的动物是令人心碎的,因为我们不知道救助的动物是否能活下去,也就是说我们为救助动物而花费的努力可能会白费,这是不可避免的。故选A。
    25. C 推理判断题。根据第二段中的She had found a young owl(猫头鹰) on the ground. When I arrived, I saw a 2-to 3-week-old owl可知有人给作者打电话是因为有只小猫头鹰掉在地上了,作者赶过去看看情况。文中并没有说小猫头鹰受伤了,作者只是过去看情况,所以D选项错误。故选C。
    26. A 细节理解题。根据第四段中的I placed the chick in the nest, and it quickly calmed down可知在作者把小猫头鹰放在窝里之后,它很快就安静下来,所以是窝让小猫头鹰安静下来的。故选A。
    27. B 观点态度题。根据前文描述可知作者为小猫头鹰做了窝,并且帮助它找回了它的父母,小猫头鹰的父母还为它带回了午餐,作者的救助成功了,说明结局是美好的。再结合第一段的However, when it works, it is simply beautiful.可推测,作者感觉很美好。故选B。
    2. 【2017·全国卷II,B】
    I first met Paul Newman in 1968, when George Roy Hill, the director of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, introduced us in New York City. When the studio didn’t want me for the film — it wanted somebody as well known as Paul — he stood up for me. I don’t know how many people would have done that; they would have listened to their agents or the studio powers.
    The friendship that grew out of the experience of making that film and The Sting four years later had its root in the fact that although there was an age difference, we both came from a tradition of theater and live TV. We were respectful of craft(技艺) and focused on digging into the characters we were going to play. Both of us had the qualities and virtues that are typical of American actors: humorous, aggressive, and making fun of each other — but always with an underlying affection. Those were also at the core(核心) of our relationship off the screen.
    We shared the belief that if you’re fortunate enough to have success, you should put something back — he with his Newman’s Own food and his Hole in the Wall camps for kids who are seriously ill, and me with Sundance and the institute and the festival. Paul and I didn’t see each other all that regularly, but sharing that brought us together. We supported each other financially and by showing up at events.
    I last saw him a few months ago. He’d been in and out of the hospital. He and I both knew what the deal was, and we didn’t talk about it. Ours was a relationship that didn’t need a lot of words.
    24. Why was the studio unwilling to give the role to the author at first?
    A. Paul Newman wanted it.
    B. The studio powers didn’t like his agent.
    C. He wasn’t famous enough.
    D. The director recommended someone else.
    25. Why did Paul and the author have a lasting friendship?
    A. They were of the same age.
    B. They worked in the same theater.
    C. They were both good actors.
    D. They had similar characteristics.
    26. What does the underlined word "that" in paragraph 3 refer to?
    A. Their belief.
    B. Their care for children.
    C. Their success.
    D. Their support for each other.
    27. What is the author’s purpose in writing the text?
    A. To show his love of films.
    B. To remember a friend.
    C. To introduce a new movie.
    D. To share his acting experience.
    【语篇解读】本文是一篇记叙文。作者讲述了与Paul的相识及与其建立友谊的原因,虽不常见面但是却因共同的信念而保持着友谊。
    24.C 【解析】考查细节理解。根据第一段中的"When the studio didn’t want me for the film — it wanted somebody as well known as Paul — he stood up for me"可知,摄影棚起初不愿意给作者角色的原因是想找一个与Paul一样著名的人物。故可知作者当时不够有名。该题选C项。该题文中只是给出了一些琐碎的信息,需要考生根据这些信息总结出两人拥有持久友谊的原因,这就要求考生具有一定的归纳推理能力。文中明确提到了作者与Paul并不同龄,所以排除A项;B项文中并未提及;C项不是两人拥有持久友谊的原因。
    25. D 【解析】考查推理判断。根据文章第二段中的"We were respectful of craft(技艺) and focused on digging into the characters we were going to play. Both of us had the qualities and virtues that are typical of American actors"可知,作者与Paul之所以拥有持久的友谊是因为他们有相似的性格特征。故D项符合题意。
    26.A 【解析】考查代词指代。根据第三段中的"We shared the belief that if you’re fortunate enough to have success, you should put something back"可知,下文的内容是对the belief的解释,that引导同位语从句,解释说明the belief的具体内容。下文提到了我们并不经常见面,但是分享这个信念把我们带到了一起。故选A项。该题要求考生具有一定的句法分析能力,能从一个长难句中找出关键词,并根据上下文信息判断出代词的指代内容。而B、C项只是the belief后的同位语从句中的部分内容,故排除;根据画线词后一句可排除D项。
    27.B 【解析】考查写作目的。根据全文内容,尤其是第一段中的"I first met Paul Newman in 1968"以及最后一段中的"I last saw him a few months ago"可知,该篇文章的写作目的是回忆一位朋友,所以选B项。
    3. 【2017·全国卷III,B】
    Minutes after the last movie ended yesterday at the Plaza Theater, employees were busy sweeping up popcorns and gathering coke cups. It was a scene that had been repeated many times in the theater’s 75-year history. This time, however, the cleanup was a little different. As one group of workers carried out the rubbish, another group began removing seats and other theater equipment in preparation for the building’s end.
    The film classic The Last Picture Show was the last movie shown in the old theater. Though the movie is 30 years old, most of the 250 seats were filled with teary-eyed audience wanting to say good-bye to the old building. Theater owner Ed Bradford said he chose the movie because it seemed appropriate. The movie is set in a small town where the only movie theater is preparing to close down.
    Bradford said that large modern theaters in the city made it impossible for the Plaza to compete. He added that the theater’s location(位置) was also a reason. "This used to be the center of town," he said. "Now the area is mostly office buildings and warehouses."
    Last week some city officials suggested the city might be interested in turning the old theater into a museum and public meeting place. However, these plans were abandoned because of financial problems. Bradford sold the building and land to a local development firm, which plans to build a shopping complex on the land where the theater is located.
    The theater audience said good-bye as Bradford locked the doors for the last time. After 75 years the Plaza Theater had shown its last movie. The theater will be missed.
    24. In what way was yesterday’s cleanup at the Plaza special?
    A. It made room for new equipment.
    B. It signaled the closedown of the theater.
    C. It was done with the help of the audience.
    D. It marked the 75th anniversary of the theater.
    25. Why was The Last Picture Show put on?
    A. It was an all-time classic.
    B. It was about the history of the town.
    C. The audience requested it.
    D. The theater owner found it suitable.
    26. What will probably happen to the building?
    A. It will be repaired.
    B. It will be turned into a museum.
    C. It will be knocked down.
    D. It will be sold to the city government.
    27. What can we infer about the audience?
    A. They are disappointed with Bradford.
    B. They are sad to part with the old theater.
    C. They are supportive of the city officials.
    D. They are eager to have a shopping center.
    【答案】
    【文章大意】本文是一篇记叙文,讲述了一家具有75年历史的剧院因为不利的地理位置和现代剧院的竞争而被转售的故事。
    24.B 【解析】细节理解题。根据首段的最后两句可知,这次散场后的清理工作与之前不同的是工人不仅清理走了垃圾,而且还搬走了座椅和剧院的其他设备,因为剧院已经被转卖出去了。
    25.D 【解析】推理判断题。根据第二段最后两句可知,剧院老板选择这部电影是因为这部电影本身讲述的就是小镇上唯一的电影院准备关门停业的故事,与Plaza Theater的现状一样。
    26.C 【解析】推理判断题。根据第四段末句中的"which plans to build a shopping complex on the land where the theater is located"可以推断出这个剧院将被拆除,取而代之的是一个购物中心。
    27.B 【解析】推理判断题。根据第二段中的"most of the 250 seats were filled with teary-eyed audience wanting to say good-bye to the old building"可知,人们非常难过,不愿意看到老剧院被拆掉。
    4. 【2017·北京卷,B】
    It was a cold March day in High Point, North Carolina. The girls on the Wesleyan Academy softball team were waiting for their next turns at bat during practice, stamping their feet to stay warm. Eighth-grader Taylor Bisbee shivered(发抖) a little as she watched her teammate Paris White play. The two didn’t know each other well — Taylor had just moved to town a month or so before.
    Suddenly, Paris fell to the ground,"Paris’s eyes rolled back," Taylor says. "She started shaking. I knew it was an emergency."
    It certainly was, Paris had suffered a sudden heart failure. Without immediate medical care, Paris would die. At first, no one moved. The girls were in shock. Then the softball coach shouted out, "Does anyone know CPR?"
    CPR is a life-saving technique. To do CPR, you press on the sick person’s chest so that blood moves through the body and takes oxygen to organs. Without oxygen, the brain is damaged quickly.
    Amazingly, Taylor had just taken a CPR course the day before. Still, she hesitated. She didn’t think she knew it well enough. But when no one else came forward, Taylor ran to Paris and began doing CPR. "It was scary. I knew it was the difference between life and death," says Taylor.
    Taylor’s swift action helped her teammates calm down. One girl called 911. Two more ran to get the school nurse, who brought a defibrillator, an electronic device(器械) that can shock the heart back into work. Luck stayed with them: Paris’s heartbeat returned.
    "I know I was really lucky," Paris says now. "Most people don’t survive this. My team saved my life."
    Experts say Paris is right: For a sudden heart failure, the single best chance for survival is having someone nearby step in and do CPR quickly.
    Today, Paris is back on the softball team. Taylor will apply to college soon. She wants to be a nurse. "I feel more confident in my actions now," Taylor says. "I know I can act under pressure in a scary situation."
    56. What happened to Paris on a March day?
    A. She caught a bad cold.
    B. She had a sudden heart problem.
    C. She was knocked down by a ball.
    D. She shivered terribly during practice.
    57. Why does Paris say she was lucky?
    A. She made a worthy friend.
    B. She recovered from shock.
    C. She received immediate CPR.
    D. She came back on the softball team.
    58. Which of the following words can best describe Taylor?
    A. Enthusiastic and kind.
    B. Courageous and calm.
    C. Cooperative and generous.
    D. Ambitious and professional.
    【文章大意】 讲述Taylor Bisbee通过及时的CPR挽救了一位学生的生命。
    56.C 【解析】细节理解题。根据文章第三段It certainly was, Paris had suffered a sudden heart failure.可知Paris是突然的心力衰竭,肯定是心脏问题,故答案为B。
    57.C 【解析】推理判断题。根据倒数第三段"Most people don’t survive this. My team saved my life."可知大多数人都没有从这样的疾病中活过来,她的队友们给她进行及时的心脏复苏,以及一系列的救治,把她救了回来,因此她觉得自己很幸运,故选C。
    58.B 【解析】推理判断题。Taylor根据自己所学的CPR知识及时挽救了 Paris的生命,虽然当时有所犹豫,但是很快地进行CPR抢救,说明她很勇敢,很镇静,不慌不忙,不像其他孩子那样陷入惊慌之中,故选B。
    5. 【2017·天津卷,B】
    Fifteen years ago, I took a summer vacation in Lecce in southern Italy. After climbing up a hill for a panoramic(全景的) view of the blue sea, white buildings and green olive trees, I paused to catch my breath and then positioned myself to take the best photo of this panorama.
    Unfortunately, just as I took out my camera, a woman approached from behind, and planted herself right in front of my view. Like me, this woman was here to stop, sigh and appreciate the view.
    Patient as I was, after about 15 minutes, my camera scanning the sun and reviewing the shot I would eventually take, I grew frustrated. Was it too much to ask her to move so I could take just one picture of the landscape? Sure, I could have asked her, but something prevented me from doing so. She seemed so content in her observation. I didn’t want to mess with that.
    Another 15 minutes passed and I grew bored. The woman was still there. I decided to take the photo anyway. And now when I look at it, I think her presence in the photo is what makes the image interesting. The landscape, beautiful on its own, somehow comes to life and breathes because this woman is engaging with it.
    This photo, with the unique beauty that unfolded before me and that woman who “ruined” it, now hangs on a wall in my bedroom. What would she think if she knew that her figure is captured(捕捉) and frozen on some stranger’s bedroom wall? A bedroom, after all, is a very private space, in which some woman I don’t even know has been immortalized(使……永存). In some ways, she lives in my house.
    Perhaps we all live in each others’ spaces. Perhaps this is what photos are for: to remind us that we all appreciate beauty, that we all share a common desire for pleasure, for connection, for something that is greater than us.
    That photo is a reminder, a captured moment, an unspoken conversation between two women, separated only by a thin square of glass.
    41. What happened when the author was about to take a photo?
    A. Her camera stopped working.
    B. A woman blocked her view.
    C. Someone asked her to leave.
    D. A friend approached from behind.
    42. According to the author, the woman was probably___________.
    A. enjoying herself
    B. losing her patience
    C. waiting for the sunset
    D. thinking about her past
    43. In the author’s opinion, what makes the photo so alive?
    A. The rich color of the landscape.
    B. The perfect positioning of the camera.
    C. The woman’s existence in the photo.
    D. The soft sunlight that summer day.
    44. The photo on the bedroom wall enables the author to better understand ____________.
    A. the need to be close to nature
    B. the importance of private space
    C. the joy of the vacation in Italy
    D. the shared passion for beauty
    45. The passage can be seen as the author’s reflections upon _____________.
    A. a particular life experience B. the pleasure of traveling
    C. the art of photography D. a lost friendship
    【语篇解读】这是一篇记叙文。本文讲述了作者一次旅行的特殊经历带给作者的深思和感悟。
    41.B 【解析】考查推理判断。根据第二段第一句Unfortunately, just as I took out my camera, a woman approached from behind, and planted herself right in front of my view可知选B。
    42.A 【解析】考查细节理解。根据第三段的句子She seemed so content in her observation.可知选A。
    43.C 【解析】考查细节理解。根据第四段的句子And now when I look at it, I think her presence in the photo is what makes the image interesting. The landscape, beautiful on its own, somehow comes to life and breathes because this woman is engaging with it.可知选C。
    44.D 【解析】考查推理判断。根据第五段的句子This photo, with the unique beauty that unfolded before me and that woman who “ruined” it, now hangs on a wall in my bedroom.可知选D。
    45.A 【解析】考查推理判断。最后两段内容是作者对这次特殊经历的感悟,所以这篇文章可以看做是作者对一次特殊经历的深入思考。故选A。
    6.【2017·浙江卷,A】
    Benjamin West, the father of American painting, showed his talent for art when he was only six years of age. But he did not know about brushes before a visitor told him he needed one. In those days, a brush was made from camel’s hair. There were no camels nearby. Benjamin decided that cat hair would work instead. He cut some fur from the family cat to make a brush.
    The brush did not last long. Soon Benjamin needed more fur. Before long, the cat began to look ragged(蓬乱). His father said that the cat must be sick. Benjamin was forced to admit what he had been doing.
    The cat’s lot was about to improve. That year, one of Benjamin’s cousins, Mr. Pennington, came to visit. He was impressed with Benjamin’s drawings. When he went home, he sent Benjamin a box of paint and some brushes. He also sent six engravings(版画) by an artist. These were the first pictures and first real paint and brushes Benjamin had ever seen.
    In 1747, when Benjamin was nine years old, Mr.Pennington returned for another visit. He was amazed at what Benjamin had done with his gift. He asked Benjamin’s parents if he might take the boy back to Philadelphia for a visit.
    In the city, Mr.Pennington gave Benjamin materials for creating oil paintings. The boy began a landscape(风景) painting. William Williams, a well-known painter, came to see him work. Williams was impressed with Benjamin and gave him two classic books on painting to take home. The books were long and dull. Benjamin could read only a little, having been a poor student. But he later said, "Those two books were my companions by day, and under my pillow at night." While it is likely that he understood very little of the books, they were his introduction to classical paintings. The nine-year-old boy decided then that he would be an artist.
    21.What is the text mainly about?
    A. Benjamin’s visit to Philadelphia.
    B. Williams’ influence on Benjamin.
    C. The beginning of Benjamin’s life as an artist.
    D. The friendship between Benjamin and Pennington.
    22.What does the underlined sentence in paragraph 3 suggest?
    A. The cat would be closely watched.
    B. The cat would get some medical care.
    C. Benjamin would leave his home shortly.
    D. Benjamin would have real brushes soon.
    23.What did Pennington do to help Benjamin develop his talent?
    A. He took him to see painting exhibitions.
    B. He provided him with painting materials.
    C. He sent him to a school in Philadelphia.
    D. He taught him how to make engravings.
    24.Williams’ two books helped Benjamin to   .
    A. master the use of paints
    B. appreciate landscape paintings
    C. get to know other painters
    D. make up his mind to be a painter
    【语篇解读】本文属于记叙文,主要讲了美国绘画之父Benjamin在决定要成为一名画家之前的经历。
    21.C 【解析】主旨大意题。文章主要介绍了美国绘画之父Benjamin在成为一名画家之前的生活经历,并介绍了Pennington对Benjamin在绘画道路上的一些帮助,故选C。
    22.D 【解析】句意猜测题。根据第三段"These were the first pictures and first real paint and brushes Benjamin had ever seen"可知Benjamin在剪完猫的毛做刷子之后,就很快有了真正的刷子,故选D。
    23.B 【解析】细节理解题。根据最后一段"Mr. Pennington gave Benjamin materials for creating oil paintings"可知Pennington为了帮助Benjamin培养绘画天赋,给他提供了一些绘画材料,故选B。
    24.D 【解析】细节理解题。根据最后一段"While it is likely that he understood very little of the books, they were his introduction to classical paintings. The nine-year-old boy decided then that he would be an artist"可知:这两本书帮助Benjamin坚定了自己成为一名画家的决心,故选D。
    7. 【2017·全国卷I,C】
    Some of the world’s most famous musicians recently gathered in Paris and New Orleans to celebrate the first annual International Jazz Day. UNESCO(United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) recently set April 30 as a day to raise awareness of jazz music, its significance, and its potential as a unifying(联合) voice across cultures.
    Despite the celebrations, though, in the U.S. the jazz audience continues to shrink and grow older, and the music has failed to connect with younger generations.
    It’s Jason Moran’s job to help change that. As the Kennedy Center’s artistic adviser for jazz, Moran hopes to widen the audience for jazz, make the music more accessible, and preserve its history and culture.
    "Jazz seems like it’s not really a part of the American appetite," Moran tells National Public Radio’s reporter Neal Conan. "What I’m hoping to accomplish is that my generation and younger start to reconsider and understand that jazz is not black and white anymore. It’s actually color, and it’s actually digital."
    Moran says one of the problems with jazz today is that the entertainment aspect of the music has been lost.
    "The music can’t be presented today the way it was in 1908 or 1958. It has to continue to move, because the way the world works is not the same," says Moran.
    Last year, Moran worked on a project that arranged Fats Waller’s music for a dance party, "just to kind of put it back in the mind that Waller is dance music as much as it is concert music," says Moran. "For me, it’s the recontextualization. In music, where does the emotion(情感) lie? Are we, as humans, gaining any insight(感悟) on how to talk about ourselves and how something as abstract as a Charlie Parker record gets us into a dialogue about our emotions and our thoughts? Sometimes we lose sight that the music has a wider context," says Moran, "so I want to continue those dialogues. Those are the things I want to foster."
    28. Why did UNESCO set April 30 as International Jazz Day?
    A. To remember the birth of jazz.
    B. To protect cultural diversity.
    C. To encourage people to study music.
    D. To recognize the value of jazz.
    29. What does the underlined word "that" in paragraph 3 refer to?
    A. Jazz becoming more accessible.
    B. The production of jazz growing faster.
    C. Jazz being less popular with the young.
    D. The jazz audience becoming larger.
    30. What can we infer about Moran’s opinion on jazz?
    A. It will disappear gradually.
    B. It remains black and white.
    C. It should keep up with the times.
    D. It changes every 50 years.
    31. Which of the following can be the best title for the text?
    A. Exploring the Future of Jazz
    B. The Rise and Fall of Jazz
    C. The Story of a Jazz Musician
    D. Celebrating the Jazz Day
    【文章大意】为提高人们对于爵士乐的重视程度,UNESCO把4月30日定为国际爵士日,然而这一行为还是没能挽救爵士乐。Jason Moran认为时代在进步,为了将老一代人和年轻一代人连接起来,爵士乐也应该不断进步。
    28. D 【解析】细节理解题。根据第一段中的UNESCO( United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) recently set April 30 as a day to raise awareness of jazz music, its significance, and its potential as a unifying(联合) voice across cultures.可知UNESCO把4月30日定为国际爵士日是为了让人们重视爵士乐,意识到它的重要性以及它作为连接各文化的纽带之声的潜在功能,也就是为了让人们意识到爵士乐的价值。故选D。
    29. C 【解析】推理判断题。根据前文Despite the celebrations, though, in the U.S. the jazz audience continues to shrink and grow older, and the music has failed to connect with younger generations可知尽管UNESCO为爵士乐设了纪念日,但美国的爵士乐听众依然在减少,并且年龄在老化,爵士乐没能将年轻一代人连接起来。再结合It’s Jason Moran’s job to help change that(Jason Moran的工作帮助改变了那一情况)可推测that指代的是前文中爵士乐在年轻一代人中失去吸引力的现象。故选C。
    30. C【解析】细节理解题。根据第五段中的The music can’t be presented today the way it was in 1908 or 1958. It has to continue to move, because the way the world works is not the same可知Moran认为现在爵士乐不能以1908或1958年的方式来呈现,因为世界已经不同了,所以爵士乐必须不断进步,说明随着时代的发展,爵士乐也要跟上时代才不会被年轻一代所抛弃。故选C。
    31. A 【解析】标题选择题。通读全文可知本文主要讲UNESCO为提高人们对爵士乐的重视而设立爵士日,但实际收效甚微。有人认为爵士乐应随着时代的进步而进步,否则它将失去对人们的吸引力,因此本文主要是探索爵士乐的未来,故选A。
    8. 【2017·全国卷III,B】
    Minutes after the last movie ended yesterday at the Plaza Theater, employees were busy sweeping up popcorns and gathering coke cups. It was a scene that had been repeated many times in the theater’s 75-year history. This time, however, the cleanup was a little different. As one group of workers carried out the rubbish, another group began removing seats and other theater equipment in preparation for the building’s end.
    The film classic The Last Picture Show was the last movie shown in the old theater. Though the movie is 30 years old, most of the 250 seats were filled with teary-eyed audience wanting to say good-bye to the old building. Theater owner Ed Bradford said he chose the movie because it seemed appropriate. The movie is set in a small town where the only movie theater is preparing to close down.
    Bradford said that large modern theaters in the city made it impossible for the Plaza to compete. He added that the theater’s location(位置) was also a reason. "This used to be the center of town," he said. "Now the area is mostly office buildings and warehouses."
    Last week some city officials suggested the city might be interested in turning the old theater into a museum and public meeting place. However, these plans were abandoned because of financial problems. Bradford sold the building and land to a local development firm, which plans to build a shopping complex on the land where the theater is located.
    The theater audience said good-bye as Bradford locked the doors for the last time. After 75 years the Plaza Theater had shown its last movie. The theater will be missed.
    24. In what way was yesterday’s cleanup at the Plaza special?
    A. It made room for new equipment.
    B. It signaled the closedown of the theater.
    C. It was done with the help of the audience.
    D. It marked the 75th anniversary of the theater.
    25. Why was The Last Picture Show put on?
    A. It was an all-time classic.
    B. It was about the history of the town.
    C. The audience requested it.
    D. The theater owner found it suitable.
    26. What will probably happen to the building?
    A. It will be repaired.
    B. It will be turned into a museum.
    C. It will be knocked down.
    D. It will be sold to the city government.
    27. What can we infer about the audience?
    A. They are disappointed with Bradford.
    B. They are sad to part with the old theater.
    C. They are supportive of the city officials.
    D. They are eager to have a shopping center.
    【文章大意】这是一篇社会生活类文章,讲述了一家具有75年历史的剧院因为不利的地理位置和现代剧院的竞争而被转售的故事。
    24.B【解析】细节理解题。根据首段的最后两句可知,这次散场后的清理工作与之前不同的是工人不仅清理走了垃圾,而且还搬走了座椅和剧院的其他设备,因为剧院已经被转卖出去了。
    25.D【解析】推理判断题。根据第二段最后两句可知,剧院老板选择这部电影是因为这部电影本身讲述的就是小镇上唯一的电影院准备关门停业的故事,与Plaza Theater的现状一样。
    26.C【解析】推理判断题。根据第四段末句中的"which plans to build a shopping complex on the land where the theater is located"可以推断出这个剧院将被拆除,取而代之的是一个购物中心。
    27.B【解析】推理判断题。根据第二段中的"most of the 250 seats were filled with teary-eyed audience wanting to say good-bye to the old building"可知,人们非常难过,不愿意看到老剧院被拆掉。
    9. 【2017·江苏卷,C】
    A new commodity brings about a highly profitable, fast-growing industry, urging antitrust(反垄断) regulators to step in to check those who control its flow. A century ago, the resource in question was oil. Now similar concerns are being raised by the giants(巨头) that deal in data, the oil of the digital age. The most valuable firms are Google, Amazon, Facebook and Microsoft. All look unstoppable.
    Such situations have led to calls for the tech giants to be broken up. But size alone is not a crime. The giants’ success has benefited consumers. Few want to live without search engines or a quick delivery. Far from charging consumers high prices, many of these services are free (users pay, in effect, by handing over yet more data). And the appearance of new-born giants suggests that newcomers can make waves, too.
    But there is cause for concern. The internet has made data abundant, all-present and far more valuable, changing the nature of data and competition. Google initially used the data collected from users to target advertising better. But recently it has discovered that data can be turned into new services: translation and visual recognition, to be sold to other companies. Internet companies’ control of data gives them enormous power. So they have a "God’s eye view" of activities in their own markets and beyond.
    This nature of data makes the antitrust measures of the past less useful. Breaking up firms like Google into five small ones would not stop remaking themselves: in time, one of them would become great again. A rethink is required — and as a new approach starts to become apparent, two ideas stand out.
    The first is that antitrust authorities need to move from the industrial age into the 21st century. When considering a merger(兼并), for example, they have traditionally used size to determine when to step in. They now need to take into account the extent of firms’ data assets(资产) when assessing the impact of deals. The purchase price could also be a signal that an established company is buying a new-born threat. When this takes place, especially when a new-born company has no revenue to speak of, the regulators should raise red flags.
    The second principle is to loosen the control that providers of on-line services have over data and give more to those who supply them. Companies could be forced to reveal to consumers what information they hold and how much money they make from it. Governments could order the sharing of certain kinds of data, with users’ consent.
    Restarting antitrust for the information age will not be easy. But if governments don’t want a data economy controlled by a few giants, they must act soon.
    61. Why is there a call to break up giants?
    A. They have controlled the data market.
    B. They collect enormous private data.
    C. They no longer provide free services.
    D. They dismissed some new-born giants.
    62. What does the technological innovation in Paragraph 3 indicate?
    A. Data giants’ technology is very expensive.
    B. Google’s idea is popular among data firms.
    C. Data can strengthen giants’ controlling position.
    D. Data can be turned into new services or products.
    63. By paying attention to firms’ data assets, antitrust regulators could    .
    A. kill a new threat B. avoid the size trap
    C. favour bigger firms D. charge higher prices
    64. What is the purpose of loosening the giants’ control of data?
    A. Big companies could relieve data security pressure.
    B. Governments could relieve their financial pressure.
    C. Consumers could better protect their privacy.
    D. Small companies could get more opportunities.
    【文章大意】文章大意:本文主要讲的是信息时代的信息数据的垄断现象。一些科技巨头Google, Amazon, Facebook, Microsoft等对数据的垄断引来了有关部门的反垄断调查。
    61.A【解析】第二段"Such situations have led to calls for the tech giants to be broken up."中的such指代上文介绍的公司现状,根据第一段中的"urging antitrust(反垄断)regulators to step in to check those who control its flow"可知,督促反垄断管理者介入来调查控制数据市场的大公司。
    62.C【解析】根据第三段中的"Internet companies’ control of data gives them enormous power. So they have a "God’s eye view" of activities in their own markets and beyond."可知,互联网公司对数据的掌控使得它们拥有了很大的权力,说明数据会加强大公司的统治地位。
    63.B
    【解析】根据倒数第三段"The first is that antitrust authorities need to move from the industrial age into the 21st century. When considering a merger(兼并), for example, they have traditionally used size to determine when to step in. They now need to take into account the extent of firms’ data assets(资产) when assessing the impact of deals."可知,在考虑公司数据资产的基础上,反垄断监管机构会避免陷于规模陷阱。
    64.D【解析】根据倒数第二段Companies could be forced to consumers what information they hold and how many money they make from it. Governments... with users’ consent."可知,由于大公司垄断数据信息,不利于小公司更好地服务消费者,也不利于政府开展工作。弱化这种垄断将会给小公司带去更多的发展机会。
    10. 【2017·天津卷,C】
    This month, Germany’s transport minister, Alexander Dobrindt, proposed the first set of rules for autonomous vehicles(自主驾驶车辆). They would define the driver’s role in such cars and govern how such cars perform in crashes where lives might be lost.
    The proposal attempts to deal with what some call the “death valley” of autonomous vehicles: the grey area between semi-autonomous and fully driverless cars that could delay the driverless future.
    Dobrindt wants three things: that a car always chooses property(财产) damage over personal injury; that it never distinguishes between humans based on age or race; and that if a human removes his or her hands from the driving wheel — to check email, say — the car’s maker is responsible if there is a crash.
    “The change to the road traffic law will permit fully automatic driving,” says Dobrindt. It will put fully driverless cars on an equal legal footing to human drivers, he says.
    Who is responsible for the operation of such vehicles is not clear among car makers, consumers and lawyers. “The liability(法律责任) issue is the biggest one of them all,” says Natasha Merat at the University of Leeds, UK.
    An assumption behind UK insurance for driverless cars, introduced earlier this year, insists that a human “be watchful and monitoring the road” at every moment.
    But that is not what many people have in mind when thinking of driverless cars. “When you say ‘driverless cars’, people expect driverless cars.” Merat says. “You know — no driver.”
    Because of the confusion, Merat thinks some car makers will wait until vehicles can be fully automated without human operation.
    Driverless cars may end up being a form of public transport rather than vehicles you own, says Ryan Calo at Stanford University, California. That is happening in the UK and Singapore, where government-provided driverless vehicles are being launched.
    That would go down poorly in the US, however. “The idea that the government would take over driverless cars and treat them as a public good would get absolutely nowhere here,” says Calo.
    46. What does the phrase “death valley” in Paragraph 2 refer to?
    A. A place where cars often break down.
    B. A case where passing a law is impossible.
    C. An area where no driving is permitted.
    D. A situation where drivers’ role is not clear.
    47. The proposal put forward by Dobrindt aims to _____________.
    A. stop people from breaking traffic rules
    B. help promote fully automatic driving
    C. protect drivers of all ages and races
    D. prevent serious property damage
    48. What do consumers think of the operation of driverless cars?
    A. It should get the attention of insurance companies.
    B. It should be the main concern of law makers.
    C. It should not cause deadly traffic accidents.
    D. It should involve no human responsibility.
    49. Driverless vehicles in public transport see no bright future in ____________.
    A. Singapore B. the UK C. the US D. Germany
    50. What could be the best title for the passage?
    A. Autonomous Driving: Whose Liability?
    B. Fully Automatic Cars: A New Breakthrough
    C. Autonomous Vehicles: Driver Removed!
    D. Driverless Cars: Root of Road Accidents
    【语篇解读】文章介绍了德国交通部长对于自主驾驶车辆的规章制度的一个提议,引出说明了位于科技前沿的无人驾驶的自动化车辆在英国、新加坡和美国的不同前景。
    46.D【解析】考查词义猜测。根据第二段的句子the grey area between semi-autonomous and fully driverless cars that could delay the driverless future可知选D。
    47.B【解析】考查推理判断。根据第二段内容The proposal attempts to deal with what some call the “death valley” of autonomous vehicles…可知选B。
    48.D【解析】考查细节理解。根据第六、七、八段内容可知选D。
    49.C【解析】考查细节理解。根据最后一段That would go down poorly in the US, however. “The idea that the government would take over driverless cars and treat them as a public good would get absolutely nowhere here,” says Calo.可知选C。
    50.A【解析】考查标题归纳。通读全文可以知道,本文主要讲述了谁来对无人驾驶的机动车辆负责。故选A。
    11. 【2017·天津卷,D】
    I read somewhere that we spend a full third of our lives waiting. But where are we doing all of this waiting, and what does it mean to an impatient society like ours? To understand the issue, let’s take a look at three types of “waits”.
    The very purest form of waiting is the Watched-Pot Wait. It is without doubt the most annoying of all. Take filling up the kitchen sink(洗碗池) as an example. There is absolutely nothing you can do while this is going on but keep both eyes fixed on the sink until it’s full. During these waits, the brain slips away from the body and wanders about until the water runs over the edge of the counter and onto your socks. This kind of wait makes the waiter helpless and mindless.
    A cousin to the Watched-Pot Wait is the Forced Wait. This one requires a bit of discipline. Properly preparing packaged noodle soup requires a Forced Wait. Directions are very specific. “Bring three cups of water to boil, add mix, simmer three minutes, remove from heat, let stand five minutes.” I have my doubts that anyone has actually followed the procedures strictly. After all, Forced Waiting requires patience.
    Perhaps the most powerful type of waiting is the Lucky-Break Wait. This type of wait is unusual in that it is for the most part voluntary. Unlike the Forced Wait, which is also voluntary, waiting for your lucky break does not necessarily mean that it will happen.
    Turning one’s life into a waiting game requires faith and hope, and is strictly for the optimists among us. On the surface it seems as ridiculous as following the directions on soup mixes, but the Lucky-Break Wait well serves those who are willing to do it. As long as one doesn’t come to rely on it, wishing for a few good things to happen never hurts anybody.
    We certainly do spend a good deal of our time waiting. The next time you’re standing at the sink waiting for it to fill while cooking noodle soup that you’ll have to eat until a large bag of cash falls out of the sky, don’t be desperate. You’re probably just as busy as the next guy.
    51. While doing a Watched-Pot Wait, we tend to __________.
    A. keep ourselves busy
    B. get absent-minded
    C. grow anxious
    D. stay focused
    52. What is the difference between the Forced Wait and the Watched-Pot Wait?
    A. The Forced Wait requires some self-control.
    B. The Forced Wait makes people passive.
    C. The Watched-Pot Wait needs directions.
    D. The Watched-Pot Wait engages body and brain.
    53. What can we learn about the Lucky-Break Wait?
    A. It is less voluntary than the Forced Wait.
    B. It doesn’t always bring the desired result.
    C. It is more fruitful than the Forced Wait.
    D. It doesn’t give people faith and hope.
    54. What does the author advise us to do the next time we are waiting?
    A. Take it seriously.
    B. Don’t rely on others.
    C. Do something else.
    D. Don’t lose heart.
    55. The author supports his view by __________.
    A. exploring various causes of “waits”
    B. describing detailed processes of “waits”
    C. analyzing different categories of “waits”
    D. revealing frustrating consequences of “waits”
    【语篇解读】这是一篇议论文。文章主要通过介绍三种不同种类的等待来论述我们花费大量的时间来等待,而且作者陈述了自己的观点,即充满希望和信念地等待。
    51.B【解析】考查细节理解。根据第二段的句子During these waits, the brain slips away from the body and wanders about until the water runs over the edge of the counter and onto your socks. This kind of wait makes the waiter helpless and mindless. 可知选B。
    52.A【解析】考查细节理解。根据第三段内容,尤其是This one requires a bit of discipline. 及After all, Forced Waiting requires patience. 可知选A。
    53.B【解析】考查细节理解。根据第四段的句子Unlike the Forced Wait, which is also voluntary, waiting for your lucky break does not necessarily mean that it will happen.可知选B。
    54.D【解析】考查细节理解。根据最后一段第二句可以判断出下次当我们等待的时候作者建议我们不要灰心、绝望。故选D。
    55.C【解析】考查推理判断。通读全文可以知道,作者在二、三、四段列举了三种类型的等待,所以判断出作者是通过分析不同种类的等待来支持自己的观点的。故选C。
    12. 【2017·浙江卷,C】
    Getting less sleep has become a bad habit for most American kids. According to a new survey(调查)by the National Sleep Foundation, 51% of kids aged 10 to 18 go to bed at 10 pm or later on school nights, even though they have to get up early. Last year the Foundation reported that nearly 60% of 7- to 12-year-olds said they felt tired during the day, and 15% said they had fallen asleep at school.
    How much sleep you need depends a lot on your age. Babies need a lot of rest; most of them sleep about 18 hours a day! Adults need about eight hours. For most school-age children, ten hours is ideal(理想的). But the new National Sleep Foundation survey found that 35% of 10- to 12-year-olds get only seven or eight hours. And guess what almost half of the surveyed kids said they do before bedtime? Watch TV.
    "More children are going to bed with TVs on, and there are more opportunities(机会)to stay awake, with more homework, the Internet and the phone," says Dr. Mary Carskadon, a sleep researcher at Brown University Medical School. She says these activities at bedtime can get kids all excited and make it hard for them to calm down and sleep. Other experts say part of the problem is chemical. Changing levels of body chemicals called hormones not only make teenagers’ bodies develop adult characteristics, but also make it hard for teenagers to fall asleep before 11 pm.
    Because sleepiness is such a problem for teenagers, some school districts have decided to start high school classes later than they used to. Three years ago, schools in Edina, Minnesota, changed the start time from 7:25 am to 8:30 am. Students, parents and teachers are pleased with the results.
    25.What is the new National Sleep Foundation survey on?
    A. American kids’ sleeping habits. B. Teenagers’ sleep-related diseases.
    C. Activities to prevent sleeplessness. D. Learning problems and lack of sleep.
    26.How many hours of sleep do 11-year-olds need every day?
    A.7 hours. B.8 hours. C.10 hours. D.18 hours.
    27.Why do teenagers go to sleep late according to Carskadon?
    A. They are affected by certain body chemicals.
    B. They tend to do things that excite them.
    C. They follow their parents’ examples.
    D. They don’t need to go to school early.
    【语篇解读】本文属于议论文,首先用数据告诉我们美国孩子的睡眠状况堪忧,接着告诉我们孩子在不同年龄段需要的睡眠时间不同,然后分析了孩子晚睡的原因,最后介绍了一些学校为了让孩子们有更多的睡眠时间而推迟了上课的时间。
    25. A【解析】细节理解题。文中第一段列举了一些数据,向我们说明美国有51%的10到18岁的孩子上床睡觉的时间偏晚,也调查了60%的7到12岁的孩子在白天感到疲惫,15%的孩子会在学校睡着,所以这些调查都是关于美国孩子的睡眠习惯的,故选A。
    26. C【解析】细节理解题。根据第二段"For most school-age children, ten hours is ideal"可知11岁正在上学的小孩子的理想睡眠时间是10个小时,故选C。
    27. B【解析】细节理解题。根据第三段"She says these activities at bedtime can get kids all excited and make it hard for them to calm down and sleep"可知她认为孩子们睡觉晚的原因是他们会在睡前做一些让他们兴奋的活动,故选B。
    【2016年】
    1.【2016·江苏】D
    Not so long ago, most people didn’t know who Shelly Ann Francis Pryce was going to become. She was just an average high school athlete. There was every indication that she was just another American teenager without much of a future. However, one person wants to change this. Stephen Francis observed then eighteen-year-old Shelly Ann as a track meet and was convinced that he had seen the beginning of true greatness. Her time were not exactly impressive, but even so, he seemed there was something trying to get out, something the other coaches had overlooked when they had assessed her and found her lacking. He decided to offer Shelly Ann a place in his very strict training seasons. Their cooperation quickly produced results, and a few year later at Jamaica’s Olympic games in early 2008, Shelly Ann, who at that time only ranked number 70 in the world, beat Jamaica’s unchallenged queen of the sprint(短跑).
    “Where did she come from?” asked an astonished sprinting world, before concluding that she must be one of those one-hit wonders that spring up from time to time, only to disappear again without signs. But Shelly Ann was to prove that she was anything but a one-hit wonder. At the Beijing Olympic she swept away any doubts about her ability to perform consistently by becoming the first Jamaican woman ever to win the 100 meters Olympic gold. She did it again one year on at the World Championship in Briton, becoming world champion with a time of 10.73--- the fourth record ever.
    Shelly-Ann is a little woman with a big smile. She has a mental toughness that did not come about by chance. Her journey to becoming the fastest woman on earth has been anything but smooth and effortless. She grew up in one of Jamaica’s toughest inner-city communities known as Waterhouse, where she lived in a one-room apartment, sleeping four in a bed with her mother and two brothers. Waterhouse, one of the poorest communities in Jamaica, is a really violent and overpopulated place. Several of Shelly-Ann's friends and family were caught up in the killings; one of her cousins was shot dead only a few streets away from where she lived. Sometimes her family didn’t have enough to eat. She ran at the school championships barefooted because she couldn’t afford shoes. Her mother Maxime, one of a family of fourteen, had been an athlete herself as a young girl but, like so many other girls in Waterhouse, had to stop after she had her first baby. Maxime’s early entry into the adult world with its responsibilities gave her the determination to ensure that her kids would not end up in Waterhouse's roundabout of poverty. One of the first things Maxime used to do with Shelly-Ann was taking her to the track, and she was ready to sacrifice everything.
    It didn't take long for Shelly-Ann to realize that sports could be her way out of Waterhouse. On a summer evening in Beijing in 2008, all those long, hard hours of work and commitment finally bore fruit. The barefoot kid who just a few years previously had been living in poverty, surrounded by criminals and violence, had written a new chapter in the history of sports.
    But Shelly-Ann’s victory was far greater than that. The night she won Olympic gold in Beijing, the routine murders in Waterhouse and the drug wars in the neighbouring streets stopped. The dark cloud above one of the world’s toughest criminal neighbourhoods simply disappeared for a few days. “ I have so much fire burning for my country,”Shelly said. She plans to start a foundation for homeless children and wants to build a community centre in Waterhouse. She hopes to inspire the Jamaicans to lay down their weapons. She intends to fight to make it a woman’s as well as a man’s world.
    As Muhammad Ali puts it, “ Champions aren't made in gyms. Champions are made from something they have deep inside them. A desire, a dream, a vision.”One of the things Shelly-Ann can be proud of is her understanding of this truth.
    65. Why did Stephen Francis decide to coach Shelly-Ann?
    A.He had a strong desire to free her family from trouble.
    B.He sensed a great potential in her despite her weaknesses.
    C.She had big problems maintaining her performance.
    D.She suffered a lot of defeats at the previous track meets.
    66. What did the sprinting world think of Shelly-Ann before the 2008 Olympic Games?
    A.She would become a promising star.
    B.She badly needed to set higher goals.
    C.Her sprinting career would not last long.
    D.Her talent for sprinting was known to all.
    67. What made Maxime decide to train her daughter on the track?
    A.Her success and lessons in her career.
    B.Her interest in Shelly-Ann’s quick profit.
    C. Her wish to get Shelly-Ann out of poverty.
    D. Her early entrance into the sprinting world.
    68. What can we infer from Shelly-Ann's statement underlined in Paragraph 5?
    A. She was highly rewarded for her efforts.
    B. She was eager to do more for her country.
    C. She became an athletic star in her country.
    D. She was the envy of the whole community.
    69. By mentioning Muhammad Ali’s words, the author intends to tell us that .
    A. players should be highly inspired by coaches
    B. great athletes need to concentrate on patience
    C. hard work is necessary in one’s achievements
    D. motivation allows great athletes to be on the top
    70. What is the best title for the passage?
    A. The Making of a Great Athlete
    B. The Dream for Championship
    C. The Key to High Performance
    D. The Power of Full Responsibility
    【答案】65. B 66. C 67. C 68.B 69.D 70. A
    【解析】本文是一篇励志短文,牙买加著名女飞人Shelly-Ann从不被人看好到成为奥运冠军,再到最后成为世界上跑的最快的女性,并想用自己的影响力改变能够吞噬了很多人梦想的贫民窟。
    65.推理判断题。根据第一段五、六句"Stephen Francis observed then eighteen-year-old Shelly Ann as a track meet and was convinced that he had seen the beginning of true greatness. Her time were not exactly impressive, but even so, he seemed there was something trying to get out, something the other coaches had overlooked when they had assessed her and found her lacking."可知Stephen Francis 从她的身上看到了其他教练忽视的潜力。故B项正确。
    66.推理判断题。根据第二段第一句“Where did she come from?” asked an astonished sprinting world, before concluding that she must be one of those one-hit wonders that spring up from time to time, only to disappear again without signs.当2008年奥运会上Shelly-Ann获得冠军以后,很多人都质疑她是一个流星而已,认为她的成功不会延续很长时间。故C项正确。
    67.推理判断题。根据第三段最后两句Maxime’s early entry into the adult world with its responsibilities gave her the determination to ensure that her kids would not end up in Waterhouse's roundabout of poverty. One of the first things Maxime used to do with Shelly-Ann was taking her to the track, and she was ready to sacrifice everything.可知Shelly-Ann的母亲Maxime很早进入要承担很多责任的成人世界,她决定要让女儿Shelly-Ann离开混乱的Waterhouse,唯一的方法就是让女儿练习田径。故C项正确。
    68.推理判断题。根据第五段最后四句“ I have so much fire burning for my country,”Shelly said. She plans to start a foundation for homeless children and wants to build a community centre in Waterhouse. She hopes to inspire the Jamaicans to lay down their weapons. She intends to fight to make it a woman’s as well as a man’s world.可知Shelly-Ann计划为牙买加建立无家可归儿童基金会,鼓励牙买加人放下武器。说明她很迫切地想为祖国做一些事情。故B正确。
    69.推理判断题。根据最后一段拳王阿里的名言:冠军不是体育馆里造出来的。造就冠军的是冠军内心深处的某种东西─渴望、梦想、愿景。他们需同时拥有技能和意志,但是意志必须强于技能。作者是在鼓励运动员们达到巅峰。故D项正确。
    70.标题概括题。本文介绍了牙买加著名女飞人Shelly-Ann从不被人看好到成为奥运冠军,再到最后成为世界上跑的最快的女性。激励我们要想成功必须要经过艰苦的努力。故A项正确。B、C、D三项的范围有点过大,与文章不贴切。
    2.【2016·浙江】D
    Two things changed my life: my mother and a white plastic bike basket. I have thought long and hard about it and it’s true. I would be a different person if my mom hadn’t turned a silly bicycle accessory into a life lesson I carry with me today.
    My mother and father were united in their way of raising children, but it mostly fell to my mother to actually carry it out. Looking back, I honestly don’t know how she did it. Managing the family budget must have been a very hard task., but she made it look effortless. If we complained about not having what another kid did, we’d hear something like, “I don’t care what so –and –so got for his birthday, you are not getting a TV in your room a car for your birthday a lsvish sweet 16 party.” We had to earn our allowance by doing chores around the house. I can stil l remember how long it took to polish the legs of our coffee table.My brothers can no doubt remember hours spent cleaning the house .Like the two little girls growing up at the White House,we made our own beds (no one left the house unitil that was done)and picked up after ourselves.We had to keep track of our belongings ,and if something was lost ,it was not replaced.
    It was summer and ,one day ,my mother drove me to the bike shop to get a tire fixed---and there it was in the window, White, shiny, plastic and decorated with flowers ,the basket winked at me and I knew ----I knew---I had to have it.
    “It’s beautiful,” my mother said when I pointed it out to her,”What a neat basket.”
    I tried to hold off at first ,I played it cool for a short while. But then I guess I couldn’t at and it any longer:“Mom, please can I please ,please get it? I ‘ll do extra chores for as long as you say, I’ll do anything ,but I need that basket,I love that basket.Please ,Mom .Please?”
    I was desperate.
    “You know,” she said ,gently rubbing my back while we both stared at what I believes was the coolest thing ever,” If you save up you could buy this yourself.”
    “By the time I make enough it’ll bu gone!”
    “Maybe Roger here could hold it for you,” she smiled at Roger ,the bike guy.
    “He can’t hold it for that long ,Mom .Someone else will buy it .Please, Mom,Please?”
    “There might be another way,” she said.
    And so our paying plan unfolded. My mother bought the beautiful basket and put it safely in some hiding place I couldn’t find. Each week I eagerly counted my growing saving increased by extra work here and there (washing the car ,helping my mother make dinner, delivering or collecting things on my bike that already looked naked without the basket in front).And then ,weeks later ,I counted ,re-counted and jumped for joy. Oh ,happy day ! I made it! I finally had the exact amount we’d agreed upon….
    Days later the unthinkable happened. A neighborhood girl I’d played with millions of times appeared with the exact same basket fixed to her shiny ,new bike that already had all the bells and whistles. I rode hard and fast home to tell my mother about this disaster. This horrible turn of events.
    And then came the lesson . I’ve taken with me through my life:”Honey, Your basket is extra-special,” Mom said, gently wiping away my hot tears.”Your basket is special because you paid for it yourself.”
    55.What can we learn from the first two paragraphs?
    A. The children enjoyed doing housework.
    B.The author came from s well-off family
    C. The mother raised her children in an unusual way
    D.The children were fond of the US president’s daughters.
    56.When the author saw the basket in the window,she .
    A. fell in love with it B. stared at her mother
    C. recognized it at once D.went up to the bike guy
    57.Why did the author say many “please” to her mother?
    A. She longed to do extra work. B. She was eager to have the basket.
    C.She felt tired after standing too long. D.She wanted to be polite to her mother.
    58.By using“naked” (Paragraph 12),the author seems to stress that the basket was
    A..something she could afford B.something important to her
    C.something impossible to get D.something she could do without
    59.To the author, it seemed to be a horrible turn of events that
    A. something spoiled her paying plan
    B. the basket cost more than she had saved
    C.a neighborhood girl had bought a new bike
    D.someone else had got a basket of the same kind
    60.What is the life lesson the author learned from her mother?
    A. Save money for a rainy day B. Good advice is beyond all price.
    C. Earn your bread with your sweat D. God helps those who help themselves
    【语篇解读】本文为一篇记叙文。作者回忆自己母亲对孩子不寻常的教育方法。通过一个自行车篮子的事情,母亲教会作者什么事情都要自力更生,通过自己努力得到的东西才是珍贵的。
    55. 【答案】C
    【解析】根据第二段的句子We had to earn our allowance by doing chores around the house…. we made our own beds (no one left the house unitil that was done)and picked up after ourselves.We had to keep track of nd if something was lost ,it was not replaced.可知,作者的母亲用不寻常的方法教育孩子。故选C。
    56. 【答案】A
    【解析】根据第三段的句子and there it was in the window, White, shiny, plastic and decorated with flowers ,the basket winked at me and I knew ----I knew---I had to have it.可知,当作者在橱窗里面看见这个篮子就喜欢上了它。故选A。
    57. 【答案】B
    【解析】根据第五段的“I tried to hold off at first,I played it cool for a short while. But then I guess I couldn’t stand it any longer”可知,作者说了很多“pleases”,是因为她渴望拥有这个篮子。故选B。
    58. 【答案】B
    【解析】根据第十二段的句子(washing the car ,helping my mother make dinner, delivering or collecting things on my bike that already looked naked without the basket in front可知作者觉得没有这个篮子,自行车看起来光秃秃的,使用“naked”这个词,说明这个篮子对她是重要的东西。故选B。
    59. 【答案】D
    【解析】根据第十三段的句子A neighborhood girl I’d played with millions of times appeared with the exact same basket fixed to her shiny ,new bike that already had all the bells and whistles.可知作者认为其他人有和她相同的篮子是一个灾难。故选D。
    60. 【答案】C
    【解析】根据文章内容可知,作者的妈妈教育作者要通过自己的努力获得想要的东西,也就是Earn your bread with your sweat。故选C。
    3.【2016·浙江】A
    “Did you hear what happened to Adam Last Friday?”Lindsey whipers to Tori.
    With her eyes shining,tori brags,“You bet I did,Sean told me two days ago.”
    Who are Lindsey and Tori talking about?It just happened to be yours truly,Adam Freedmam,I can tell you that what that what they are saying is (a) not nice and (b) not even true.Still,Lindsey and Tori aren’t very different from most students here at Linton Higt School,including me.Many of our conversations are gossip(闲话)。I have noticed three effects of gossip:it can hurt people,it can give gossipers a strange kind of satisfaction,and it can cause social pressures in a group.
    An important negative effect of gossip is that it can hurt the person being talked about.Usually,gossip spreads information about a topic-breakups,trouble at home,even dropping out-that a person would rather keep secret.The more embarrassing or shameful the secret is,the juicier the gossip it makes.Probably the worst type of gossip is the absolute lie.People ofen think of gossipers as harmless,but cruel lies can cause pain.
    If we know that gossip can be harmful,then why do so many of us do it?Tht answer lies in another effect of gossip:the satisfaction it gives us.Sharing the latest rumor(传言)can make a person feel important because he or she knows something that others don’t.Similarly,hearing the latest rumor can make a person feel like part of the “in group.”In other words,gossip is satisfying because it gives people a sense of belonging or even superiority(优越感).
    Gossip also can have a third effect:it strengthens unwritten,unspoken rules about how people should act.Professor David Wilson explains that gossip is important in policing behaviors in a group.Translated into high school terms, this means that if everybody you hang around with is laughing at what John wore or what Jane said,then you can bet that wearing or saying something similar will get you the same kind of negative attention.The do’s and don’ts conveyed through gossip will never show up in any student handbook.
    The effects of gossip vary depending on the situation.The next time you feel the urge to spread the latest news,thing about why you want to gossip and what effects your “juicy story”might have.
    41.The author uses a conversation at the beginning of the passage to .
    A.introduce a topic
    B.present an argument
    C.describe the characters
    D.clarify his writing purpose
    42.An important negative effects of gossip is that it.
    A.breaks up relationships
    B.embarrasses the listener
    C.spreads information around
    D.causes unpleasant experiences
    43.In the auther’s opinion,many people like to gossip because it.
    A.gives them a feeling of pleasure
    B.helpl them to make more friends
    C.makes them better at telling stories
    D.enables them to meet important people
    44.Professor David Wilson think that gossip can .
    A.provide students with written rules
    B.help people watch their own behaviors
    C.force school to impove student handbooks
    D.attract the police’s attention to group behaviors
    45.What advice does the author give in the passage?
    A.Never become a gossiper
    B.Stay away from gossipers
    C.Don’t let gossip turn into lies
    D.Think twice before you gossip.
    【语篇解读】本文是一篇议论文。文章讨论了传言的危害和人们为什么喜欢传闲话。
    41. 【答案】A
    【解析】根据文章第三段的Many of our conversations are gossip. (我们的话题很多都是闲话),可知开头的对话是为了介绍本文的主题, 故选A。
    42. 【答案】D
    【解析】根据文章第四段的An important negative effect of gossip is that it can hurt the person being talked about.,可知主要危害是他会给被讨论的人带来不愉快的经历,故选D。
    43. 【答案】A
    【解析】根据文章第五段的The answer lies in another effect of gossip: the satisfaction it gives us可知人们散播传言是因为它会给他们带来满足感,故选A。
    44. 【答案】B
    【解析】根据文章第六段的Professor David Wilson explains that gossip is important in policing behaviours in a group.可知,他认为传言能帮助人们观察自身的行为,故选B。
    45. 【答案】D
    【解析】根据文章最后一段的The next time you feel the urge to spread the latest news, think about why you want to gossip and what effects your “juicy story” might have. 可知,作者的建议是让人们在传言之前三思而后行。故选D。
    4.【2016·天津】D
    Failure is probably the most exhausting experience a person ever has. There is nothing more tiring than not succeeding.
    We experience this tiredness in two ways: as start-up fatigue(疲惫) and performance fatigue. In the former case, we keep putting off a task because it has either too boring or too difficult. And the longer we delay it, the more tired we feel.
    Such start-up fatigue is very real, even if not actually physical, not something in our muscles and bones. The solution is obvious though perhaps not easy to apply: always handle the most difficult job first.
    Years ago, I was asked to write 102 essays on the great ideas of some famous authors. Applying my own rule, I determined to write them in alphabetical(按字母顺序), never letting myself leave out a tough idea. And I always started the day’s work with the difficult task of essay-writing. Experience proved that the rule works.
    Performance fatigue is more difficult to handle. Though willing to get started, we cannot seem to do the job right. Its difficulties appear so great that, however hard we work, we fail again and again. In such a situation, I work as hard as I can-then let the unconscious take over.
    When planning Encyclopaedia Britannica (《大英百科全书》), I had to create a table of contents based on the topics of its articles. Nothing like this had ever been done before, and day after dat I kept coming up with solutions, but none of them worked. My fatigue became almost unbearable.
    One day, mentally exhausted, I wrote down all the reasons why this problem could not be solved. I tried to convince myself that the trouble was with the problem itself, not with me. Relived, I sat back in an easy chair and fell asleep.
    An hour later, I woke up suddenly with the solution clearly in mind. In the weeks that followed, the solution which had come up in my unconscious mind provided correct at every step. Though I worked as hard as before, I felt no fatigue. Success was now as exciting as failure had been depressing.
    Human beings, I believe must try to succeed. Success, then, means never feeling tired.
    51. People with start-up fatigue are most likely to .
    A. delay tasks
    B. work hard
    C. seek help
    D. accept failure
    52. What does the author recommend doing to prevent start-up fatigue?
    A. Writing essays in strict order.
    B. Building up physical strength.
    C. Leaving out the toughest ideas.
    D. Dealing with the hardest task first.
    53. On what occasion does a person probably suffer from performance fatigue?
    A. Before starting a difficult task.
    B. When all the solutions fail.
    C. If the job is rather boring.
    D. After finding a way out.
    54. According to the author, the unconscious mind may help us .
    A. ignore mental problems
    B. get some nice sleep
    C. gain complete relief
    D. find the right solution
    55. What could be the best title for the passage?
    A. Success Is Built upon Failure
    B. How to Handle Performance Fatigue
    C. Getting over Fatigue: A Way to Success
    D. Fatigue: An Early Sign of Health Problems
    【语篇解读】这是一篇夹叙夹议的文章。文章主要介绍每个人都希望成功,但是人们在实施任务的时候会出现启动疲惫和表现疲惫,这是造成失败的两种原因,文章具体介绍如何克服这两种疲惫。
    51.【答案】A
    【解析】根据第一段的句子In the former case, we keep putting off a task,可知,有启动疲惫的人更可能拖延任务。故选A。
    52.【答案】D
    【解析】细节理解题。根据第三段的句子The solution is obvious though perhaps not easy to apply:always handle the most difficult job first可知,为了防止启动疲惫作者建议首先处理最难的任务。故选D。
    53.【答案】B
    【解析】根据第五段的句子Performance fatigue is more difficult to handle…we fail again and again,可知,当所有的解决方法都失败的时候,一个人可能会有表现疲惫。故选B。
    54.【答案】D
    【解析】根据第五段的最后一句话however hard we work, we fail again and again. In such a situation, I work as hard as I can-then let the unconscious take over.,可知,无意识的行为可能帮助我们发现正确的解决方法。故选D。
    55.【答案】C
    【解析】主旨大意题。根据全篇文章和最后一段的内容可知,文章主要介绍造成失败的两种疲惫,以及如何克服疲惫。故选C。
    5.【2016·天津】B
    Every man wants his son to be somewhat of a clone, not in features but in footsteps. As he grows you also age, and your ambitions become more unachievable. You begin to realize that your boy, in your footsteps, could probably accomplish what you hoped for. But footsteps can be muddied and they can go off in different directions.
    My son Jody has hated school since day one in kindergarten. Science projects waited until the last moment. Book reports weren’t written until the final threat.
    I’ve been a newspaperman all my adult life. My daughter is a university graduate working toward her master’s degree in English. But Jody? When he entered the tenth grade he became a “vo-tech” student(技校学生). They’re called “motorheads” by the rest of the student body.
    When a secretary in my office first called him “motorhead”, I was shocked. “Hey, he’s a good kid,” I wanted to say. “And smart, really.”
    I learned later that motorheads are, indeed, different. They usually have dirty hands and wear dirty work clothes. And they don’t often make school honor rolls(光荣榜).
    But being the parent of a motorhead is itself an experience in education. We who labor in clean shirts in offices don’t have the abilities that motorheads have. I began to learn this when I had my car crashed. The cost to repair it was estimated at $800. “Hey, I can fix it,” said Jody. I doubted it , but let him go ahead, for I had nothing to lose.
    My son ,with other motorheads,fixed the car. They got parts(零件)from ajunkyard, non-toasting toaster have been fixed.Neighbours and co-workers trust their car repair to him.
    Since that first repair job, a broken air-conditioner, a non-functioning washer and a non-toasting toaster have been fixed. Neighbors and co-workers trust their car repairs to him.
    These kids are happiest when doing repairs. They joke and laugh and are living in their own relaxed world. And their minds are bright despite their dirty hands and clothes.
    I have learned a lot from my motorhead: publishers need printers, engineers need mechanics, and architects need builders. Most important, I have learned that fathers don’t need clones in footsteps or anywhere else.
    My son may never make the school honor roll. But he made mine.
    41. What used to be the author’s hope for his son?
    A. To avoid becoming his clone.
    B. To resemble him in appearance.
    C. To develop in a different direction.
    D. To reach the author’s unachieved goals.
    42. What can we learn about the author’s children?
    A. His daughter does better in school.
    B. His daughter has got a master’s degree.
    C. His son tried hard to finish homework.
    D. His son couldn’t write his book reports.
    43. The author let his son repair the car because he believed that_______.
    A. His son had the ability to fix it.
    B. it would save him much time.
    C. it wouldn’t cause him any more loss
    D. other motorheads would come to help.
    44. In the author’s eyes, motorheads are _______.
    A. tidy and hardworking
    B. cheerful and smart
    C. lazy but bright
    D. relaxed but rude
    45. What did the author realize in the end?
    A. It is unwise to expect your child to follow your path.
    B. It is important for one to make the honor roll.
    C. Architects play a more important role than builders.
    D. Motorheads have greater ability than office workers.
    【语篇解读】这是一篇记叙文。作者一开始希望自己的儿子能效仿他,完成他没有实现的目标。但是他的儿子学习成绩不理想,只上了技校。一次作者的车坏了,儿子和同学帮助作者修好了车,让作者改变了自己的看法。
    41.【答案】D
    【解析】根据第一段的句子You begin to realize that your boy, in your footsteps, could accomplish what you hoped for.可知,作者希望儿子完成他没有实现的目标。故选D。
    42.【答案】A【解析】根据第三段的句子My daughter is a university graduate working toward her master’s degree in English,可知,作者的女儿学习很好。故选A。
    43.【答案】C
    【解析】考查细节理解。根据第六段的句子I doubted it, but let him go ahead, for I had nothing to lose,可知,作者让儿子羞耻,因为他觉得这不会给他带来损失。故选C。
    44.【答案】B
    【解析】根据倒数第三段的句子These kids are happiest when doing repairs. They joke and laugh and are in living in their own relaxed world. And their minds are bright…,可知,在作者眼中,motorhead是令人兴奋的,聪明的。故选B。
    45.【答案】A 【解析】根据倒数第二段的句子Most important, I have learned that fathers don’t need clones in footsteps or anywhere else,可知,作者最后意识到期望孩子走自己的道路这是不明智的。故选A。
    6.【2016·北京】B
    Surviving Hurricane Sandy(飓风桑迪)
    Natalie Doan,14, has always felt lucky to live in Rockaway, New York. Living just a few blocks from the beach, Natalie can see the ocean and hear the wave from her house. “It’s the ocean that makes Rockaway so special,” she says.
    On October 29, 2012, that ocean turned fierce. That night, Hurricane Sandy attacked the East Coast, and Rockaway was hit especially hard. Fortunately, Natalie’s family escaped to Brooklyn shortly before the city’s bridge closed.
    When they returned to Rockaway the next day, they found their neighborhood in ruins. Many of Natalie’s friends had lost their homes and were living far away. All around her, people were suffering, especially the elderly. Natalie’s school was so damaged that she had to temporarily attend a school in Brooklyn.
    In the following few days, the men and women helping Rockaway recover inspired Natalie. Volunteers came with carloads of donated clothing and toys. Neighbors devoted their spare time to helping others rebuild. Teenagers climbed dozens of flights of stairs to deliver water and food to elderly people trapped in powerless high-rise buildings.
    “My mom tells me that I can’t control what happens to me,” Natalie says. “but I can always choose how I deal with it.”
    Natalie’s choice was to help.
    She created a website page matching survivors in need with donors who wanted to help. Natalie posted introduction about a boy named Patrick, who lost his baseball card collecting when his house burned down. Within days, Patrick’s collection was replaced.
    In the coming months, her website page helped lots of kids: Christopher, who received a new basketball; Charlie, who got a new keyboard. Natalie also worked with other organizations to bring much-need supplies to Rockaway. Her efforts made her a famous person. Last April, she was invited to the White House and honored as a Hurricane Sandy Champion of Change.
    Today, the scars(创痕)of destruction are still seen in Rockaway, but hope is in the air. The streets are clear, and many homes have been rebuilt. “I can’t imagine living anywhere but Rockaway,” Natalie declares. “My neighborhood will be back, even stronger than before.”
    59.When Natalie returned to Rockaway after the hurricane ,she found______.
    A.some friends had lost their lives
    B.her neighborhood was destroyed
    C.her school had moved to Brooklyn
    D.the elderly were free from suffering
    60.According to paragraph4,who inspired Natalie most?
    A.The people helping Rockaway rebuild
    B.The people trapped in high_rise building
    C.The volunteers donating money to survivors
    D.Local teenagers bringing clothing to elderly people
    61.How did Natalie help the survivors?
    A.She gave her toys to the kids
    B.She took care of younger children
    C.She called on the White House to help
    D.She built an information sharing platform
    62.What does the story intend to tell us?
    A.Little people can make a big difference
    B.A friend in need is a friend indeed
    C.East or West,home is best
    D.Technology is power
    【答案】59.B 60.A 61.D 62.A
    【解析】Natalie是一个14岁的孩子,她生活的地方遭到了飓风桑迪的袭击,受灾严重。看到人们在帮助家乡重建,Natalie也加入了进去,Natalie创建网站来分享求助信息,帮助捐赠者找到需要帮助的人。Natalie的行为得到了社会的认可,她受到了表扬。
    59.B细节理解题。根据第三段“Many of Natalie’s friends had lost their homes and were living far away.”排除A;根据第三段“Natalie’s school was so damaged that she had to temporarily attend a school in Brooklyn”可知,学校没有搬走,而是Natalie暂时去Brooklyn上学,排除C;根据“people were suffering, especially the elderly”排除D;根据“When they returned to Rockaway the next day, they found their neighborhood in ruins.”可知,他们的街区被飓风毁了,故选B。
    60.A推理判断题。根据第四段“In the following few days, the men and women helping Rockaway recover inspired Natalie.”可知,那些帮助Rockaway恢复重建的人使Natalie最受鼓舞,故选A。
    61.D细节理解题。根据倒数第三段“She created a website page matching survivors in need with donors who wanted to help.”可知,Natalie创建了一个网站来分享和匹配求助信息和捐赠信息,故选D。
    62.A写作意图题。根据倒数第二段“Her efforts made her a famous person. Last April, she was invited to the White House and honored as a Hurricane Sandy Champion of Change.”可知,Natalie的助人行为得到了社会的认可,她受到了表扬,这说明小人物也可以有大作为,故选A。
    7.【2016·全国新课标III】B
    On one of her trips to New York several years ago, Eudora Welty decided to take a couple of New York friends out to dinner. They settled in at a comfortable East Side cafe and within minutes, another customer was approaching their table.
    “Hey, aren’t you from Mississippi?” the elegant, white-haired writer remembered being asked by the stranger. “I’m from Mississippi too.”
    Without a second thought, the woman joined the Welty party. When her dinner partner showed up, she also pulled up a chair.
    “They began telling me all the news of Mississippi,” Welty said. “I didn’t know what my New York friends were thinking.”
    Taxis on a rainy New York night are rarer than sunshine. By the time the group got up to leave, it was pouring outside. Welty’s new friends immediately sent a waiter to find a cab. Heading back downtown toward her hotel, her big-city friends were amazed at the turn of events that had changed their Big Apple dinner into a Mississippi.
    “My friends said: ‘Now we believe your stories,’” Welty added. “And I said: ‘Now you know. These are the people that make me write them.’”
    Sitting on a sofa in her room, Welty, a slim figure in a simple gray dress, looked pleased with this explanation.
    “I don’t make them up,” she said of the characters in her fiction these last 50 or so years. “I don’t have to.”
    Beauticians, bartenders, piano players and people with purple hats, Welty’s people come from afternoons spent visiting with old friends, from walks through the streets of her native Jackson, Miss., from conversations overheard on a bus. It annoys Welty that, at 78, her left ear has now given out. Sometimes, sitting on a bus or a train, she hears only a fragment(片段) of a particularly interesting story.
    5.What happened when Welty was with her friends at the cafe?
    A. Two strangers joined her.
    B. Her childhood friends came in.
    C. A heavy rain ruined the dinner.
    D. Some people held a party there.
    6.The underlined word “them” in Paragraph 6 refers to Welty’s.
    A. readers B. parties C. friends D. stories
    7.What can we learn about the characters in Welty’s fiction?
    A. They live in big cities.
    B. They are mostly women.
    C. They come from real life.
    D. They are pleasure seekers.
    【答案】5.A 6.D 7.C
    【解析】文章介绍了一位女作家请纽约的朋友吃饭时发生的故事。Welty是一位年纪比较大的作家,她来自密西西比。Welty的作品都是来自于现实的生活。
    5.细节理解题。根据第一段的"another customer was approaching their table"和第三段的"the woman joined the Welty party. When her dinner partner showed up, she also pulled up a chair"可知,先后有两个陌生人(一位女士及其同伴)加入了Welty的聚会,故选A。
    6.猜测词义题。画线的them指代前面提到的人或物,根据"Now we believe your stories"可知,them指代的是Welty写的小说里面的故事,听了Welty和两个陌生人的有关密西西比的谈话之后,Welty的朋友相信了Welty小说里的故事都是来源于生活,故选D。
    7.推理判断题。根据"I don’t make them up"和"Welty’s people come from afternoons spent visiting with old friends, from walks through the streets of her native Jackson, Miss., from conversations overheard on a bus."可知,Welty小说里的人物并不是虚构的,他们都来源于现实生活,故选C。
    7.【2016·全国新课标II】D
    A new collection of photos brings an unsuccessful Antarctic voyage back to life.
    Frank Hurley’s pictures would be outstanding----undoubtedly first-rate photo-journalism---if they had been made last week. In fact, they were shot from 1914 through 1916, most of them after a disastrous shipwreck(海滩), by a cameraman who had no reasonable expectation of survival. Many of the images were stored in an ice chest, under freezing water, in the damaged wooden ship.
    The ship was the Endurance, a small, tight, Norwegian-built three-master that was intended to take Sir Ernest Shackleton and a small crew of seamen and scientists, 27 men in all, to the southernmost shore of Antarctica’s Weddell Sea. From that point Shackleton wanted to force a passage by dog sled(雪橇) across the continent. The journey was intended to achieve more than what Captain Robert Falcon Scott had done. Captain Scott had reached the South Pole early in 1912 but had died with his four companions on the march back.
    As writer Caroline Alexander makes clear in her forceful and well-researched story The Endurance, adventuring was even then a thoroughly commercial effort. Scott’s last journey, completed as be lay in a tent dying of cold and hunger, caught the world’s imagination, and a film made in his honor drew crowds. Shackleton, a onetime British merchant-navy officer who had got to within 100 miles of the South Pole in 1908, started a business before his 1914 voyage to make money from movie and still photography. Frank Hurley, a confident and gifted Australian photographer who knew the Antarctic, was hired to make the images, most of which have never before been published.
    13. What do we know about the photos taken by Hurley?
    A. They were made last week
    B. They showed undersea sceneries
    C. They were found by a cameraman
    D. They recorded a disastrous adventure
    14. Who reached the South Pole first according to the text?
    A. Frank Hurley B. Ernest Shackleton
    C. Robert Falcon Scott D. Caroline Alexander
    15. What does Alexander think was the purpose of the 1914 voyage?
    A. Artistic creation B. Scientific research
    C. Money making D. Treasure hunting
    【答案】13. D 14. C 15. C
    【解析】本文属于记叙文。讲述了Frank的图片记录了一次海难,文章介绍了与这次航海活动相关的具体内容。
    13.细节理解题。根据文章第二段第二句“they were shot from 1914 through 1916, most of them after a disastrous shipwreck....”可知这些照片记录的是1914年左右发生的一次海难事故。故D项正确。
    14.细节理解题。根据第三段最后一句“Captain Scott had reached the South Pole....”可知第一个到达南极的是Captain Scott。故C项正确。
    15.细节理解题。根据文章倒数第二句“... started a business before his 1914 voyage to make money from movie and still photography”可知Alexander认为他的这次航行就是为了挣钱。故C项正确。
    8.【2016·全国新课标II】B
    Five years ago, when I taught art at a school in Seattle, I used Tinkertoys as a test at the beginning of a term to find out something about my students. I put a small set of Tinkertoys in front of each student, and said:”Make something out of the Tinkertoys. You have 45 minutes today - and 45minutes each day for the rest of the week.”
    A few students hesitated to start. They waited to see the rest of the class would do. Several others checked the instructions and made something according to one of the model plans provided. Another group built something out of their own imaginations.
    Once I had a boy who worked experimentally with Tinkertoys in his free time. His constructions filled a shelf in the art classroom and a good part of his bedroom at home. I was delighted at the presence of such a student. Here was an exceptionally creative mind at work. His presence meant that I had an unexpected teaching assistant in class whose creativity would infect(感染) other students.
    Encouraging this kind of thinking has a downside. I ran the risk of losing those students who had a different style of thinking. Without fail one would declare, ”But I’m just not creative.”
    “Do you dream at night when you’re asleep?”
    “Oh, sure.”
    “So tell me one of your most interesting dreams.” The student would tell something wildly imaginative. Flying in the sky or in a time machine or growing three heads. “That’s pretty creative. Who does that for you?”
    “Nobody. I do it.”
    “Really-at night, when you’re asleep?”
    “Sure.”
    “Try doing it in the daytime, in class, okay?”
    5. The teacher used Tinkertoys in class in order to ________?
    A. know more about the students B. make the lessons more exciting
    C. raise the students’ interest in art D. teach the students about toy design
    6. What do we know about the boy mentioned in Paragraph 3?
    A. He liked to help his teacher. B. He preferred to study alone.
    C. He was active in class. D. He was imaginative.
    7. What does the underlined word “downside” in Paragraph 4 probably mean?
    A. Mistake. B. Drawback.
    C. Difficulty. D. Burden.
    8. Why did the teacher ask the students to talk about their dreams?
    A. To help them to see their creativity. B. To find out about their sleeping habits.
    C. To help them to improve their memory. D. To find out about their ways of thinking.
    【答案】5. A 6. D 7. B 8. A
    【解析】本文属于记叙文,作者通过让学生拼装玩具发现并鼓励学生的创造性和想象力。
    5.推理判断题。根据文章第二段可知当我把拼装式玩具放在学生面前的时候,有些学生犹豫着在等着看别人如何行动,有一些学生查看了使用说明并根据模型做出了一些东西。而另外一些学生则根据自己的想象做出了一些东西。通过观察我对不同的学生的性格有了不同的理解。故A正确。
    6.推理判断题。文章第三段第一句中提到的这个男孩在空闲时间拼装这些玩具,而且他的作品堆满了艺术教室的架子,家里的卧室里也有很多。第三段倒数第二句“Here was an exceptionally creative mind at work”说明他是一个很有想象力和创造性的人。故D项正确。
    7.词义猜测题。根据画线单词后一句“I ran the risk of losing those students who had a different style of thinking.”可知我冒着失去那些有不同思维方式的学生的危险。说明我的这种教育方法也有不足之处。故画线词意为“drawback缺点”。故B正确。
    8.推理判断题。根据文章最后七段中的对话内容可知作者鼓励孩子们说出最有趣的有创造性和想象力的梦,并鼓励他们在白天的课堂里把梦的内容做出来。作者这样做的目的就是为了让他们看到自己的创造性和想象力。故A正确。
    9.【2016·全国新课标I】C
    I am peter Hodes ,a volunteer stem courier. Since March 2012, I've done 89 trips of those , 51 have been abroad, I have 42 hours to carry stem cells(干细胞)in my little box because I've got two ice packs and that's how long they last, in all, from the time the stem cells are harvested from a donor(捐献者) to the time they can be implanted in the patient, we’ve got 72 hours at most, So I am always conscious of time.
    I had one trip last year where I was caught by a hurricane in America. I picked up the stem cells in Providence, Rhode Island, and was meant to fly to Washington then back to London. But when I arrived at the check-in desk at Providence, the lady on the desk said: “Well, I’m really sorry, I’ve got some bad news for you-there are no fights from Washington.” So I took my box and put it on the desk and I said: “In this box are some stem cells that are urgently needed for a patient-please, please, you’ve got to get me back to the United Kingdom.” She just dropped everything. She arranged for a flight on a small plane to be held for mere-routed(改道)me through Newark and got me back to the UK even earlier than originally scheduled.
    For this courier job, you’re consciously aware than that box you’re got something that is potentially going to save somebody’s life.
    9.Which of the following can replace the underlined word “courier” in Paragraph17
    A provider B delivery man
    C collector D medical doctor
    10. Why does Peter have to complete his trip within 42hours?
    A. He cannot stay away from his job too long.
    B. The donor can only wait for that long.
    C. The operation needs that very much.
    D. The ice won't last any longer.
    11.Which flight did the woman put Peter on first?
    A. To London        B. To NewarkC. To Providence     D. To Washington
    【答案】9.B 10.D 11.B
    【解析】本文是一篇记叙文,主要介绍了作者在一次运送造血干细胞途中的一段经历,表现了人们之间的友爱。
    9.词义猜测题。根据本段内容 I’ve done 89 trips和I have 42 hours to carry stem cells in my little box以及第二段内容可知作者是运送干细胞的人,也就是delivery man。故选B 。
    10.细节理解题。根据第一段第二句I have 42 hours to carry stem cells in my little box because I’ve got two ice packs and that’s how long they last.可知冰盒只能保持42小时适宜的温度。故选D 。
    11.细节理解题。根据第二段末句 She arranged for a flight on a small plane to be held for me, re-routed me through Newark 可知,这位好心的女士首先安排作者去Newark的航班。故选 B。



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