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阅读理解-阅读单选(约420词) | 较易(0.85) |
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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章根据迈克赤脚跑步的经历和医学分析,赤脚跑步能平衡身体,治疗膝盖疼痛,对身体有益。

1 . “Barefoot Mike” gets a lot of attention when he shows up at the beginning of a race. He loves to run and has been running since he was a kid. He loves to and often competes in 10K races. But That’s not the reason he gets so much attention. People notice him because when he runs, “Barefoot Mike” runs barefoot.

Running barefoot has become a huge trend in the world of running. “I didn’t set out to be a trend setter,” laughed “Barefoot Mike”, otherwise known as Mike Whitaker. “I’ve always been a runner, but until a few years ago, I always wore shoes. Then one day I was running after a rainstorm. I stepped off into the grass to avoid a puddle (水坑) on the sidewalk, and accidentally stepped into a huge muddy puddle that had been hidden in the grass. I tried to keep running, but the wet and dirty shoe made it really hard. I figured the best solution was to just get rid of the shoes.”

Mike took off his shoes and dropped them into the nearest trash can. “Then I started running. At first I went really slowly because I was watching out for rocks or other things that could hurt my feet, but there really weren’t any problems.” He started going faster. “It felt so good!” Mike said. “My knee, which always ached, didn’t ache. My foot was able to spread out so I had better balance. And my feet didn’t feel all hot and sweaty. It was awesome!”

“There are actually potential health benefits to running barefoot” said Dr. Nancy Bower, a podiatrist (足科医师).

A recent study agrees. A team of researchers recently videotaped several people running—first wearing shoes and then barefoot. In almost every case, when wearing shoes, the runners tended to land on the heel of their foot, which they call “heel-striking.” Many runners have impact injuries such as knee pain. Heel-striking may be the cause of these injuries or may make an existing injury worse. When running barefoot, the runners tended to land on the middle part of the foot. The force is spread out throughout the foot. The ankle, shin (胫部), knee and hip don’t get the shock of a hard landing with every step.

1. Why does Mike receive a lot of attention while running?
A.Because he runs very fast.B.Because he loses his shoes.
C.Because he wears no shoes.D.Because he wears strange clothes.
2. According to Paragraph 2, why did Mike run barefoot years ago?
A.He liked running barefoot.
B.He was advised to run barefoot.
C.His shoe became very uncomfortable.
D.His dream of becoming famous motivated him.
3. After running barefoot for a while a few years ago, Mike ________.
A.was very tiredB.was badly hurt
C.gave up runningD.felt unexpectedly great
4. According to the recent study, heel-striking ________.
A.is bad for one’s health
B.is caused by existing injuries
C.happens when one runs barefoot
D.can be avoided by wearing sports shoes
5. What is the text mainly about?
A.How to choose shoes.B.Why people need shoes.
C.Useful tips on running barefoot.D.The advantages of running barefoot.
听力选择题-短对话 | 适中(0.65) |
2 . What will the woman probably do this weekend?
A.Go swimming.B.Go dancing.C.Go camping.
2022-03-03更新 | 71次组卷 | 1卷引用:天津市红桥区2019-2020学年高三上学期期末考试英语试题(含听力)

3 . US Open Championships

The US Open has been in existence for more than 130 years. The first tournament was held in 1881 at the Newport Casino. It was called the US National Singles Championship. Entry was limited to only those clubs which were members of the United States National Lawn Tennis Association, and the competitors were all male, competing in both singles and doubles. Richard Sears won the men's championship and he went on to win the next six men's singles championships.

The Wimbledon

In 1875, the All England Croquet Club was troubled financially due to declining membership. A new sport called lawn tennis was gaining fast in popularity and taking away the members. Two years later, a new roller was needed for maintaining its lawns so the club proposed to hold a tournament to raise money. Twenty-two players entered that first Wimbledon tournament which was won by Spencer Gore in straight sets over W. C. Marshall. Two hundred spectators each paid a shilling to watch the final game, enabling the club to buy the needed roller plus some extra cash.

The French Open

The very first French Championship was way back in 1891, and the tournament has since grown into one of the four tennis Grand Slam tournaments we know today. The first competition was a one-day national championship which was won by a British. The competition was poorly attended by world class players. It took 24 years before it became fully international and an accepted tennis grand slam event. After the First World War, French tennis was achieving stature. Suzanne Lenglen was the predominant French player, winning the championships six times between 1920 and 1926.

The Australian Open

The very first tennis tournament ever played in Australia was held in January 1880, on the courts of the Melbourne Cricket Club. In 1905, the Australian Open was established as the Australasian Tennis Championship and was played at the Warehouseman's Cricket Ground in Melbourne. It became the Australian Championship in 1927 and the Australian Open in 1969. Women's events were added in 1922.

1. Which of the following statements about the first U.S. Open is right?
A.It has a history of 130 years.
B.Only men were allowed to play in the game.
C.Richard Sears won six championships.
D.It has remained about the same through all these years.
2. The purpose of the first Wimbledon tournament was to________.
A.raise some fund for a lawn rollerB.attract more people to play tennis
C.attract more audience to watch the gameD.celebrate the renaming of the club
3. According to what is said about the first French Open,________.
A.the tournament has been played in the same place all these years
B.twenty-two players played in the first tournament
C.few good tennis players took part in the first French Championship
D.the players played in singles and doubles in the tournament
4. What is common about the four international tournaments is that________.
A.they were all born in the same year
B.they all had only male players in the first tournament
C.they have all experienced financial difficulties
D.they all have had a history of 130 years or more
5. The passage mainly tells us________.
A.how the four international tennis tournaments came into being
B.how long it took for women to have the right to play in the game
C.how the four international tennis tournaments get their present names
D.why the tennis tournaments are held in these four countries
书信写作-邀请信 | 适中(0.65) |
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4 . 假设你是李津,得知2020年女排亚俱杯(Asian Women’s Volleyball Club Championship)将于1月20日至28日在天津举行。请你写信给在天津某国际学校的英国朋友Chris,内容包括:
(1)告诉Chris天津女排将代表中国参加比赛;
(2)解释值得学习的女排精神;
(3)邀请他一起去观看比赛。
注意:
(1)词数不少于100;
(2)可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;
(3)开头已为你写好,不计入总词数。
Dear Chris,

How is everything going?


_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Yours,

Li Jin

智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
书信写作-建议信 | 适中(0.65) |
5 . 假设你是晨光中学高三学生李津。 你校篮球队应邀去新加坡一所中学参加学生篮球友谊赛。请你给该校的联系人Mr. Longman写一封邮件询问相关事宜,应包括以下要点:
1. 接受邀请,表示感谢;
2. 询问相关情况(食宿、交通等)
3. 提出相关建议(制定比赛日程等)
注意:词数不少于100;可适当加入细节,使内容充实,行文连贯。
2020-11-25更新 | 111次组卷 | 1卷引用:天津市和平区2021届高三上学期期中英语试题
阅读理解-阅读表达(约390词) | 较难(0.4) |

6 . Diana Nyad, born in 1949, is one of the world's greatest long-distance swimmers. She started as a speed swimmer, winning races in high school and dreaming of the Olympics. However, Nyad fell ill with heart disease before she could compete in the 1968 Olympic Games and had to spend three months in bed. By the time Nyad was better, she was unable to swim as fast as she had previously.

Nyad then turned from speed swimming to distance swimming. Her first race was 10 miles in the cold waters of Lake Ontario. Even though she came in tenth place, she was the first woman ever to complete the course. In 1974, Nyad set a record while swimming a 22-mile race in the Bay of Naples, Italy. That same year she tried to swim back and forth across Lake Ontario, a total of 64 miles. Nyad made it across the lake, but on the return trip, she lost consciousness and had to be pulled from the water. In 1975, she swam around Manhattan Island, a distance of 28 miles, in a record of 7 hours and 57 minutes. Three years later she swam 102 miles from the Bahamas to Florida.

In 2010, at the age of 61, Nyad announced she would swim from Cuba to Florida. In order to train, Nyad spent as many as 14 hours a day swimming in the ocean. The swim from Cuba to Florida would last at least 60 hours and cover 103 miles. Unfortunately, bad weather forced Nyad to wait until the next year. In 2011, Nyad attempted the swim but was blown off course after being in the water for 29 hours. Nyad attempted the swim again a few months later, but she had to stop because of too many jellyfish stings (海蜇蜇伤).

Despite these setbacks, Nyad continues to preserve and plans to eventually make the Cuba-to-Florida swim. She has made a vow (誓言)to never stop swimming and wants other older Americans to understand that it is never too late to make one's dreams come true.

1. What made Nyad fail to participate in the 1968 Olympic Games? (No more than 5 words)
2. What does the second paragraph mainly talk about? (No more than 10 words)
3. How did Nyad make preparations for her swimming from Cuba to Florida? (No more than 15 words)
4. What does the underlined word “setbacks” in the last paragraph mean? (Only 1 word)
5. What inspiration do you learn from Nyad’s stories and experiences? (No more than 25 words)
2020-11-16更新 | 265次组卷 | 3卷引用:天津市八校2020-2021学年高三上学期期中联考英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约460词) | 适中(0.65) |
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7 . The term “Iron Man” has many connotations(内涵), including references to a song, a comic book icon, even a movie. Yet only one definition of the term truly lives up to its name: the Ironman triathlon held annually in Hawaii, a picturesque(独特的)setting for a challenging race, which demands amazing physical prowess and the ability to swim, bike, and run a marathon, all in less than 12 hours with no break. Very few individuals are up to the task.

However, Gordon Haller is a notable exception. Growing up in the 1950s, Haller developed an interest in many sports categorized as endurance(耐性)athletics and welcomed their physical demands. As he pursued a degree in physics he drove a taxi to pay the bills, but competitive training proved his passion. So when he heard about the race in 1978, the first year it was held, he immediately signed up.

The race originated in a somewhat amusing way. The members of the two popular sports clubs, the Mid-Pacific Road Runners of Honolulu and the Waikiki Swim Club of Oahu, had a long-standing and good-natured debate going over who made better athletes: runners or swimmers. However, some local bikes thought both clubs were wrong, claiming that they, in fact, deserved the title. Wanting to settle the dispute (争论)once and for all, they decided to combine three separate races already held annually on the island into one massive test of endurance. Thus, the Waikiki Roughwater Swim of 2.4 miles, the Around-Oahu Bike race of 112 miles, and the Honolulu Marathon of 26.2 miles were all put together to form the Ironman Triathlon.

Haller was one of only fifteen competitors to show up that February morning to start the race. He quickly scanned the few pages of rules and instructions, and on the last page he discovered a sentence that would become the race’s famous slogan: “Swim 2.4 miles! Bike 112 miles! Run 26.2 miles! Brag(吹牛)for the rest of your life!” Haller took that to heart, and at the end of the day, he became the first Ironman champion in history. Haller’s physical strength enabled him to do what no one else in the past had accomplished.

In the approximately thirty years since that very first race, the Ironman has become a tradition in Hawaii and now boasts approximately 1500 entrants every year. The competitors who complete the race don’t have to be the first across the finish line to claim success: just finishing is a victory onto itself.

1. The “Iron Man”in the passage above refers to ____________.
A.a folk songB.a movie character
C.a triathlon athleteD.a sports event
2. What do we know about Gordon Haller from the passage?
A.He had a great interest in all kinds of sports.
B.He was a member of the Waikiki Swim Club of Oahu.
C.He became a taxi driver after he graduated from school.
D.He was the champion in the first Ironman Triathlon.
3. What does the underlined word “prowess” in the first paragraph mean?
A.musclesB.skillsC.balanceD.reaction
4. The Ironman race was born due to the fact that__________.
A.The two clubs fought over who made better athletes.
B.Gordon Haller wanted to show his great endurance.
C.The combined race can help choose the most athletic.
D.Club members wanted to improve their physical abilities.
5. What can we infer from the passage about the first Ironman Triathlon?
A.Participants had to choose two from the three races in the first Ironman Triathlon.
B.Haller may not have known the rules of it before he showed up for the event.
C.No other competitors other than Haller finished the races in the end.
D.Sixteen competitors in total participated in it on February morning.
6. What does the last paragraph try to tell us?
A.It is the participation rather than victory that counts.
B.The current Ironman Triathlon is different from the original one.
C.The victors respond excitedly when crossing the finish line.
D.The event attracts many people because it creates good fortune.
2020-09-03更新 | 347次组卷 | 3卷引用:2020届天津市耀华中学高三第一次校模拟考试英语试题

8 . Long ago, poems were recited out loud instead of being written down. Back when the Greeks first started the Olympics, they held poetry contests as well as athletic competitions.

Now, poetry competitions have been revived. This year 120,000 high school students competed in the first Poetry Out Loud national recitation contest, performing poems from memory for $100,000 in prizes.

The first competitions were held in classrooms. The winners went on to schoolwide contests, and then they competed in city and state competitions, and then the 50 state champions, along with the District of Columbia champion, came to Washington, D. C., last week for the last showdown(对决). After the 51 champions competed against one another,12 went on to the finals. Then the field was narrowed to five. The final five had one last chance to “perform” a poem. The overall champ, Jackson Hille, a high school senior from Ohio, won a $20,000 scholarship.

The National Endowment for the Arts and the Poetry Foundation started Poetry Out Loud because they realized that hearing a poem performed is a different experience from reading it on the page.

It’s not just a matter of saying the words in the right order. It’s the tone of voice, the pauses, the gestures, and the attitude of the person performing that bring the words to life. “Each time we hear somebody recite a poem, we understand again what we found fresh and interesting about it,” says National Public Radio broadcaster Scott Simon, master of ceremonies for the finals. Hearing it in a new voice offers something new to the listener.

Not only do the people hearing poems have a new experience, memorizing and presenting poems helps the participants understand those poems in a new way. Another benefit of a competition such as Poetry Out Loud is that the participants learn public-speaking skills that can help them for life.

1. From the first paragraph, we can know _______.
A.the Greeks were the first to write poems
B.the Olympics used to start with poem reciting
C.poems were spread orally in the past
D.athletes were asked to recite poems before competing
2. How many rounds of competitions did the champions take before they went to Washington, D. C.?
A.Three.B.Four.C.Five.D.Six.
3. According to the passage, hearing a poem recited in a new voice can _______.
A.bring a new life to listeners
B.help listeners find their interest
C.make listeners learn the words
D.offer something new to listeners
4. One benefit the participants get from a competition such as Poetry Out Loud is that they can _______.
A.become confident while speaking in public
B.write good poems themselves
C.change their attitudes towards life
D.make friends with many great poets
5. What’s the best title for the passage?
A.Reciting poems improves your memory
B.Remembering a lot of poems is fun
C.Poets have a great time
D.Poetry rocks the microphone
书信写作-其他应用文 | 适中(0.65) |
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9 . 假设你是晨光中学的学生会主席李华。学生会将举办每年一度的英语演讲比赛,本年度的主题为“The English Novel I Like Best”。作为组织者,你将在演讲比赛开幕时发言,请你根据以下提示用英语写一篇发言稿。
1. 说明比赛的意义,如提高英语听说能力,养成读书的习惯等;
2. 说明比赛的注意事项,如 预祝比赛圆满成功。
注意:
1. 词数:不少于100词;
2. 可适当加入细节,以使行文连贯;
3. 发言稿的开头和结尾已为你写好,不计入词数。
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen,
Welcome to this year’s English speech competition._________________________
Thank you!
共计 平均难度:一般