09年高考英语第二次模拟考试10(3)

2019-03-15 19:30

optional.

69. This passage is most probably taken from _____. A. an educational booklet B. a school website C. a traveling guide D. an academic report

70. When you are in your 10th school year, you may _____.

A. stay with your classmates in the same classroom for all the subjects B. choose and take some optional courses with your homeroom class C. have both required and optional classes with the same classmates D. choose different classes based on your own choice and abilities 71. Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage? A. You are obliged to leave school when you are 16 in New Zealand. B. The total of school time per year is about 40 weeks in New Zealand. C. Students have a 20—30 minute interval between each period in New Zealand. D. Most teachers in New Zealand teach one subject for at least three to four years.

( C )

Winter is a great time to experiment with new sports. The key is to find one that matches your interests and natural abilities. If you like to walk, keep walking — on snowshoes. If you want to try an endurance sport, go for cross-country skiing. Besides, snowboarding is just great fun.

Not satisfied with these? Try downhill skiing, then. Downhill skiing is not as hard as it used to be — shorter, lightweight, curved skis make any beginner feel like an Olympic winner. These newer skis — along with another type of equipment called skiboards, which are even shorter than skis — help you control your speed and body movements.

Consider testing the latest high-tech skis or snowboards?Check with your local sports shops or the rental places at the ski mountains about sample programs.

You could also try sledding. Use a wood-framed sled with steel runners or a plastic sled to head down a snowy hill. If you prefer ice to snow, think hockey or figure skating.

Runners can also train during the winter in spite of wet or slippery roads. One of the easiest

sports around, snowshoeing can be excellent cold-weather cross-training for runners and cyclists — or anyone wanting to take a wintry walk in the woods. Snowshoes are smaller, lighter, and better than ever. If you want to try them out, you may be able to rent a pair for a day at many of the larger outdoor or sporting goods stores.

Whatever sport you choose, don’t rely on a friend for instruction. You wouldn’t let an inexperienced doctor perform a brain operation on you, but why let one teach you to ski or skate? That’s what instructors are for — to help newcomers start out right. Instructors can give you advice about equipment, techniques, safety, and dealing with injuries if they do happen to you.

Above all, if you want to progress, invest your time in learning the basic skills thoroughly. Everything else you do as a skier, boarder, or skater will be built on these first skills. 72. How many different types of sports are mentioned in the first two paragraphs?

A. Six.

B. Five.

C. Four.

D. Three.

73. What can we learn from the passage?

A. Runners and cyclists cannot train because of the wet or slippery roads in winter. B. Downhill skiing used to be more difficult to learn because of the old-fashioned skis. C. People can rent snowshoes for a day at their local sports shops or the rental places. D. In general, first skills are more important in skiing than in snowboarding or skating.

74. What does the sentence “You wouldn’t let an inexperienced doctor perform a brain

operation on you, but why let one teach you to ski or skate?” imply?

A. Don’t let an inexperienced doctor perform an operation on you when injured. B. You may have a brain operation if you ski or skate with a newcomer. C. Instructors can give better advice on skiing and skating than your friends do. D. It’s dangerous to have an inexpert person teach you to ski or skate.

75. Who are the most likely readers of the passage?

A. High school students. B. Physical educators. C. Winter sports lovers. D. Professional athletes.

(D)

As I was thinking about language learning the other day, the image of baking bread came into

my mind. I compared some of the exercises and drills that we put ourselves through in order to learn a language to the various ingredients(原料) that go into baking a loaf of fresh bread.

Real language learning takes place in human relationships. No one sits down and eats a cup of flour, even if he is hungry and in a hurry. You don’t become bilingual(双语的) by learning lists of vocabulary. You don’t become a speaker of a language by memorizing verb conjugations (动词的变化) and agreement rules. You become bilingual by entering a community that uses that other language as its primary means of communication.

I am not suggesting that we can make bread without ingredients. Flour is necessary, as are yeast(酵母), salt, water and other ingredients. Vocabulary is part of any language and will have to be learned. Grammatical rules exist in every language and cannot be ignored. But merely combining the appropriate ingredients in the recommended proportions does not result in bread. At best, you only end up with a ball of dough(面团).

In order to get bread, you have to apply heat to the dough. And in language learning, that heat comes from the community. Anyone who has learned a second language has experienced that heat. It creeps up your neck when you ask the babysitter, “Have you already been eaten?” when you meant to say, “Have you already eaten?” When you try to say something quite innocent and the whole room bursts into laughter, you are experiencing the heat that turns raw dough into good bread.

Remember the old saying, “If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen”? This is where language learning often breaks down because we find the heat uncomfortable and we stop the baking process. In order words, we can’t stand the heat, so we get out of the kitchen.

However, the language learner who stays in the kitchen—in the heat—until the combined ingredients are thoroughly transformed will enjoy the richness of a quality loaf of bread. He is lad that he did not “get out of the kitchen” at the critical moment when the oven seemed too hot. The dedicated language learner knows that becoming bilingual cannot be achieved without the heat! 76. The passage is mainly about _____.

A. how we can make baking bread with various ingredients B. how to become bilingual by communicating with others C. what an important role “heat” plays in learning a language D. what a high quality of bread you may achieve in the kitchen

77. You can become a speaker of a language by _____. A. bearing millions of words and expressions in your mind B. using the language to communicate with those around you C. knowing verb conjugations and grammatical rules D. saying something innocent to be laughed at by others

78. What’s the purpose of illustration of the example—you ask the babysitter, “Have you already been eaten?” when you meant to say, “Have you already eaten?”?

A. To verify that you are sure to make some mistakes when you enter a community. B. To show that you should combine the ingredients in the recommended proportions. C. To prove that you may experience “heat” from the community in language learning. D. To indicate that being bilingual calls for your courage, confidence and perseverance. 79. According to the passage, which of the following is NOT the necessity of baking bread and learning language? A. Excellent Skills. B. Various ingredients. C. Appropriate proportions. D. Uncomfortable heat.

Section C

Directions: Read the following text and choose the most suitable heading from A-F for each paragraph. There is one extra heading which you do not need. 80. Charles Dickens is often thought of as one of England’s greatest writers. Yet for many his

A. The secret of the writer’s success B. A writer with enduring popularity

C. Well-received creation to encourage Brits D. The insight into human nature E. Writing styles in different stages

F. The stories appropriate for school students

language is old-fashioned and his story plots often improbable. Why, Dickens, out of so many other great English writers, has made the list? How then to explain Dickens’s enduring popularity? 81. One reason undoubtedly is the British government’s insistence that every child studies a Dickens novel at school. Alongside William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens is a compulsory(必读的) writer on every English literature school reading list. His stories, though often over-long by today’s standard, are superbly written moral tales. They are filled with colorful characters. 82. But what makes his books stand out from other English writers is his insight into human nature. Dickens, like Shakespeare, tells us truths about human behavior that are as true to citizens of the 21st century as they were to his readers in the 19th century. Readers have returned to Dickens’s books again and again over the years to see what he has to say about readers’ own time. 83. The BBC adapted one of his less well-known novels, Little Dorrit, into a popular television drama that introduced many Brits to the novel for the first time. A dark story about greed and money, it was the perfect story to illustrate the bad times. No surprise then that it was Dickens Britons turned to, during the economic crisis last year, to make sense of a world rapidly falling apart. 84. Readers of the 19th and early 20th century usually prized Dickens’s earlier novels for their humor and pathos. While recognizing the virtues of these books, critics today tend to rank more highly the later works because of their formal coherence and acute perception of the human condition. For as long as Dickens’s novels have something to say to modern audiences, it seems likely that he will remain one of Britain’s best loved writers.

第Ⅱ卷

I. Translation

Directions: Translate the following sentences into English, using the words given in the brackets. 1. 很可惜我不会烹饪。(It)


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