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文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要介绍了短视频图书分享平台BookTok的特点及其影响力。

1 . Kate Wilson, a 16-year-old girl from England, holds up a book and smiles. “This is Day One of my reading The Little Prince,” she says. Then the video jumps forward. “And now”, she sighs deeply, her face covered with tears, “I end up crying so much that I have to change my shirt”.

This is BookTok, a collection of TikTok book-related videos on the short video platform. It has been an official reading community since April 2020. Bookworms gather on the platform to share their reading experiences by editing a video carefully at the length of less than 3 minutes. They “play”, “read” and “recommend” their favorite books, or recommend treasure writers who have never been discovered. It may sound like a simplified way to talk about books, but the most appealing point is that they can visually record videos to share the feelings of reading moment, and arouse a strong emotion, which written reviews cannot express instantly. So BookTok offers book lovers special reading experiences.

It has also driven a wave of old book sales in the market. A list of bestsellers from 20 years ago has been dug out, which most readers have never heard of. In fact, many of the books like It Ends With Us should not have been forgotten. On Amazon, BookTok is so influential that it has been added into the titles of books themselves. For instance, the novel It Ends With Us: BookTok made me buy it! is now riding high in the top 100. Under its influence, old titles were returning to the bestseller charts. Therefore, BookTok is devoted to bringing these classic books back.

Eventually, a great book finds its faithful readers. Thanks to BookTok, not only can more original works be appreciated, but the authors can attach more importance to literary creation. It is BookTok that offers such books “a second lease of life”.


(以下是A种题型)
1. What is paragraph 1 mainly about?
A.The importance of reading.B.The influence of great books.
C.An example of using BookTok.D.A story of a teenager booklover.
2. What special experience does BookTok offer according to the text?
A.Users can apply editing skills.
B.Bookworms can gather regularly.
C.It can give instant book reviews visually.
D.Users can share reading experiences freely.
3. Why do the classic books become bestsellers again?
A.BookTok is added into their titles.
B.Book publishers find a new market.
C.They' re recommended by the treasure writers.
D.BookTok brings them back to people’s attention.
4. What can be the best title for the text?
A.Classics Back to LifeB.Young People 's Favorites
C.A New Market for BookTokD.A Platform for Visual Reading

(以下是B种题型)
5. Where does Kate share her feeling of reading The Little Prince?
6. How do the bookworms share their reading experiences on BookTok?
7. What benefit does BookTok bring to the novel It Ends With Us?
8. Why do we say BookTok offers books “a second lease of life”?
2022-04-20更新 | 72次组卷 | 1卷引用:山西省太原市2021-2022学年高二下学期期中试题英语试题

2 . Young children who have experienced compassionate (有同情心的) love and empathy (认同感) from their mothers may be more willing to turn thoughts into action by being generous to others, a University of California, Davis’ study suggests.

In lab studies, children tested at ages 4 and 6 showed more willingness to give up the tokens (代金券) they had earned to fictional children in need when two conditions were present—if they showed bodily changes when given the opportunity to share and had experienced positive parenting that modeled such kindness. The study initially included 74 preschool-age children and their mothers. They were invited back two years later, resulting in 54 mother-child pairs whose behaviors and reactions were analyzed when the children were 6.

“At both ages, children with better physiological regulation and with mothers who expressed stronger compassionate love were likely to donate more of their earnings,” said Paul Hastings, UC Davis professor of psychology. “Compassionate mothers likely develop emotionally close relationships with their children while also providing an early example of satisfying the needs of others,” researchers said in the study, published in November in Frontiers in Psychology” Emotion Science.

In each lab exercise, after attaching a monitor to record children’s heart-rate activity, the examiner told the children they would be earning tokens for a variety of activities, and that the tokens could be turned in for a prize. The tokens were put into a box, and each child eventually earned 20 prize tokens. Then before the session ended, children were told they could donate all or part of their tokens to other children.

Taken together, the findings showed that children’s generosity is supported by the combination of their socialization experiences—their mothers’ compassionate love—and their physiological regulation, and that these work like “internal and external supports for the ability to act prosocially that build on each other”.

In addition to observing the children’s propensity (习性) to donate their game earnings, Hastings suggested that “being in a calmer state after sharing could reinforce (加强) the generous behavior that produced that good feeling.”

1. How do young children loved by their mother tend to become in later years?
A.Considerate.B.Emotional.
C.Generous.D.Optimistic.
2. What is the second paragraph mainly about?
A.The process of the research.B.The result of the experiment.
C.The reactions of the children.D.The importance of Mom’s love.
3. According to Hastings, what factor could strengthen children’s good behaviors?
A.Their moms love them deeply.B.They donate the tokens easily.
C.They behave physiologically.D.They are calmer after sharing.
4. What is probably the best title of this passage?
A.What Contributes to Generosity?
B.The More You Give, the Calmer You Will Be
C.Do You Prefer to Receive or Give?
D.More Giving, Less Receiving
2021-05-28更新 | 489次组卷 | 4卷引用:山西省(晋中市)2021届高三模拟考试(三模)英语试题

3 . Nearly everyone knows eBay is a website where you can buy and sell pretty much anything. There are other Internet auction (拍卖) sites, but none come close to eBay for brand-name recognition. And for good reason: eBay is the largest English-language online auction site in the world. Buyers come to eBay for the best chance of finding the particular thing they want. Sellers come for the largest pool of buyers, which they hope means the best chance of selling at the highest possible price.

Buying things on eBay is pretty simple. You can type a term into the search field, or click through the categories list to get to what you want. Inside an individual item listing, you’ll see the current asking price, and a little button to click if you wish to place your own bid. Enter a price, occasionally come back to see if someone has bid higher than you and wait for the end of the auction period. If your bid is the highest, you win! Now all you have to do is arrange payment and shipping method with the seller. eBay is only in the business of putting buyers and sellers together for a small fee from the seller. It doesn’t handle the actual payment or shipping of goods. In other words, it isn’t a big department store, or a warehouse. It’s the owner of a flea market, and you have to do your own deals with the individual sellers in their virtual stalls.

To be a skillful eBay buyer, you should learn when to trust sellers and how a proxy (代理人) bid can save you from going online every half-hour to up your bid. Experienced eBay users also know how to use escrows (公正托管) to guarantee goods, and how to avoid selling tricks such as fake bids that push up prices. The more often you buy on eBay, the more you learn.

1. Why is eBay the best website for people to buy and sell things?
A.Because it has all brand products.
B.Because the trade language is English.
C.Because sellers and buyers can close their deals.
D.Because sellers can find a swimming pool there.
2. What should you do first if you want to buy something at the site?
A.Find the current asking price.
B.Click a button to place your own bid.
C.Enter a price which is higher than others.
D.Find what you want in the categories list.
3. What should the buyer do if he/she wins the bid?
A.Get goods from eBay.
B.Determine payment and shipment.
C.Send somebody for the goods.
D.Talk about the price of the goods.
4. What is mainly talked about in the last paragraph?
A.How to be a skillful buyer at eBay.
B.How to make sure of qualified goods.
C.How to avoid being cheated by others.
D.How to spare you from going online frequently.
2021-05-28更新 | 268次组卷 | 3卷引用:山西省(晋中市)2021届高三模拟考试(三模)英语试题
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4 . We often hear friends ask why they should read fiction. There is so much to learn from history, from what is going on at the frontiers of science, and from contemporary studies of human behavior. Why should they spend their scarce "free time" reading fiction, the purpose of which, at best, is only entertainment?

We are disappointed about such comments. Yes, we respond, we do find pleasure in reading fiction. But we also learn much about how to best live our lives in ways that can only be captured by fiction. We recognize that some novels are entertaining, but leave no lasting impression. What makes a novel more than entertainment?

Our answer is that we don't just read great books - they read us as well. The human condition is complex and contradictory, layered like an ice-cream dessert, with flavors mixed among the layers. A great novel reflects that complexity. We may read it several times, as we do with our favorites, and each time it is like finding an old friend and gaining new insights from that friend. We put it down with new understandings of the world around us and, most important, of ourselves.

Let's look at the novel Frankenstein, written in 1818 by Mary Shelley. Frankenstein is not the monster, but a young man seeking out the secrets of the universe. He collects body parts and charges it with life. When the dull yellow eyes open, however, Frankenstein, shocked by what he has done, abandons the creature, which ultimately kills Frankenstein's brother, his bride, and his best friend.

On one level, Frankenstein is entertaining - a good horror story, though a little dated. But Shelley writes more than just that. On a deeper level, her book forces us to ask whether humans reach too far to gain knowledge that is as forbidden as the fruit of the Garden of Eden. This theme, as old as the legend of Prometheus (普罗米修斯),dominates Frankenstein. Shelley, of course, knew nothing of genetic (遗传的)engineering that happens today. She was deeply troubled by what human beings might discover about themselves, and the effects of those discoveries on society. Our reading of great literature can also be enriched by understanding the author's personal interests and anxieties.

1. How does the author feel about fiction reading?
A.It is a window to a whole new world.
B.It helps us discover the frontiers of science.
C.It offers insight into how to live best lives.
D.It holds some clues to understanding our memory.
2. Why does the author say great books read us as well?
A.Because they deserve reading several times.
B.Because they lead us to a rich and colorful life.
C.Because they explore humans' complex reality.
D.Because they improve the writer-reader relationship.
3. What do we know about the novel Frankenstein!
A.It is based on a grand theme.
B.It is a record of a historic event.
C.It is merely a great horror story.
D.It is about the legend of Prometheus.
4. What is the best title of the text?
A.Why should we read fiction?
B.Can novel reading last long?
C.Read for fun or read for none?
D.Is Frankenstein really entertaining?
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5 . With the world’s attention on vaccines (疫苗), now feels like a good moment to sing the praises of an often forgotten contribution to their development. Three hundred years ago this month, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu got her daughter inoculated (接种) against smallpox, making her child the first person in the West to be protected in this way. Without Montagu’s willingness to adopt a practice she had learned from other cultures, the introduction of vaccines around 80 years later would never have taken place.

Montagu first witnessed inoculation when she accompanied her husband to Turkey in 1717. Inoculation had started in Asia, probably in China, as early as the 10th century AD. Montagu observed how older women in Turkey took a tiny amount of pus (脓) from a person with smallpox. They then used needles to make cuts on people’s wrists and ankles and added the pus to their bloodstream. This helped people gain immunity from future infection.

Like other visitors to the country, Montagu took steps to ensure that her son was inoculated in Turkey. This worked well, but she knew that trying it in England would be far more challenging. Inoculation performed by unlicensed amateurs would threaten doctors’ professional standing and potentially rob them of valuable income. Churchmen also disagree with the practice, as they saw it as going against nature.

Back in England, Montagu observed the increased severity of smallpox infections. Eventually, in April 1721, she decided to use the Turkish practice to have her daughter inoculated, because she believed that the rewards would outweigh the risks. After a safe time had passed following the inoculation, Montagu allowed doctors to examine her daughter.

Doctors in Britain gradually accepted the practice. About so years later, a pioneering physician found smallpox vaccines to destroy smallpox completely. As early as last century, academics argued that Montagu was no more than an enthusiastic amateur. In truth, she made a vital scientific contribution towards finding the cure for smallpox.

1. What is the second paragraph mainly about?
A.The origin of smallpox inoculation.
B.Montagu’s first access to inoculation.
C.The benefits from smallpox inoculation.
D.Turkish women’s invention of inoculation.
2. Montagu found it difficult to try inoculation in England because ________.
A.it was against human natureB.it might harm doctors’ interests
C.it was beyond doctors’ abilitiesD.it might shake churchmen’s belief
3. What led doctors in Britain to accept inoculation?
A.The increased severity of smallpox infections.
B.A physician’s discovery of smallpox vaccines.
C.The result of Montagu’s daughter’s inoculation.
D.Montagu’s focus on its rewards rather than its risks.
4. What might be the best title of the test?
A.An unsung heroB.No limit to creation
C.Development of vaccinesD.A historic medical innovation

6 . Chimps use loud calls and gestures to make their feelings known but until now, the exact meaning for individual movements has remained a mystery. Now researchers believe they have translated the key gestures used in the chimp community and identified their intentions for the first time.

From 4,351 gestures, experts were able to identify 66 that are used for 19 specific message meanings, including showing a foot to tell a child they can climb on their back. The researchers were able to narrow down these 66 gestures to 36 that are used intentionally to achieve 15 purposes. The translations were made by Dr Catherine Hobaiter and her colleagues at St Andrews University in Scotland.

Dr Hobaiter used behavior sampling and filmed all recorded cases of gestural communication. Other gestures include stomping their feet to ask another chimp to stop what they are doing, and slapping objects together to ask another to follow them. Of the 19 meanings,17 encouraged interactions to start, or to develop, such as “move closer,” and “change play”. Some of the gestures were found to have more than one meaning. and only 10 of the 66 gestures were used for only a single meaning.

Researchers collected a total of 471 video clips from two social groups of chimps at a shelter near Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. As well as identifying what the gesture means, they also discovered the technique needed to increase the chances of success.

“Human children use gestures to communicate before they produce their first words, and their earliest gestures typically appear around 10 months of age,” explained the researchers. “In great apes, there is good evidence that language-trained individuals are capable of acquiring and understanding signals, but this is far less clear in their natural communication. ”

1. Chimps slap the objects to____________.
A.tell others to stop what they are doingB.ask others chimps to join them
C.gather other chimps to move closerD.encourage interactions to start
2. What did researchers find after studying 471 video clips?
A.Chimps trained in language are good at understanding signals.
B.Two social groups of chimps live at a shelter near Kinshasa.
C.Language-trained individuals do well in natural communication.
D.Chimps’earliest gestures appear around 10 months of age.
3. How is the last paragraph developed?
A.By analyzing causes.B.By examining differences.
C.By making comparisons.D.By following time order.
4. What can be a suitable title for the text?
A.A New Research on ChimpsB.Human Children and Chimps
C.Getting the Chimps Trained for LanguageD.Translating the Sign Language of Chimps

7 . If there had to be a father of handwashing in history, it would be Ignaz Semmelweis. While working at Vienna General hospital, the Hungarian doctor, faced with a situation in which maternal death (孕产妇死亡) in hospitals were significantly higher than local clinics, tried hard clues as to why.

Germs (细菌) were yet to be discovered, and it was still believed in the 1840s that disease was spread by bad smells in the air. So it didn’t seem a problem that trainee doctors hanging out of labs to dissect (解剖) human bodies would pop up to the maternity ward (产房) to deliver a baby without washing their hands.

Then an accidental finger cut by a knife during a dissection caused a doctor to die, seemingly of the same sign the mothers had been getting. Semmelweis assumed that something from the dead bodies was to blame, which might, through the hands of doctors, make their way into women’ s bodies during childbirth.

To test his theory, he ordered doctors to wash their hands and instruments in some chlorine solution. As a result, the death rate for new mothers dropped to about 1 percent, compared with that of as high as 18 percent before the experiment.

However, he faced great resistance, and met a sad end. People at that time didn’t think of themselves as sort of walking Petri dishes. And the majority of doctors then were from middle- or upper-class families, and thought of themselves as very clean people.

Over the next 40 years, a better understanding of germs developed, and attitudes to hygiene (卫生) gradually shifted. In 1876, the German scientist Robert Koch discovered the anthrax bacillus (炭疽), kicking off the new research field of medical bacteriology. Many more germs were later identified. Surgeons started to take handwashing seriously.

By the 1890s and into the early 1900s, handwashing moved from being something doctors did to something everybody had been told to do.

1. What was the situation like in the 1840s?
A.Germs might have been discovered then.
B.Women suffered from delivering babies then.
C.The air at that time was dirty and full of viruses.
D.People were unaware of how disease was spread.
2. What does the underlined word “Solution” probably mean?
A.Liquid.B.Option.C.Tissue.D.Shell.
3. How did the public feel about handwashing at first?
A.It was effective.B.It was necessary.
C.It was ridiculous.D.It was dangerous.
4. Which of the following can be the best title of the passage?
A.Steps to Protect Yourself
B.Disease Spreading by Your Hand
C.Hand Washing Critical in Fighting Viruses
D.The First Recorded Discovery of Handwashing
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8 .

In Africa, the honeyguide birds can respond to human calls to lead people to honey—what scientists describe as a mutualistic interaction,   or one that benefits both creatures. The birds tweet and fly from tree to tree to guide honey seekers to hidden bee nests, typically inside trees. Then, humans open the trees to find honey, and the birds can dine on beeswax, their favorite food.

Dogs have an excellent sense of smell, which is why the folks at Penn Vet Working Dog Center are training dogs to identify the smell of cancer using tissue and blood samples from people who suffer. The scientists hope to develop a way for dogs to screen samples first, then perform follow-up testing on the samples the dogs flagged—a system for spotting cancer in its early stages.

Having a snake wrapped around your neck isn’t necessarily what you usually expect. But Monty, a 13-year-old snake has been helping customers relax with neck massages(按摩). It’s unlikely he was trained to do the job and is just pulsating like any other snake would when   around a person’s neck. Regardless, this special snake books out a few weeks in advance.

The Guide Horse Foundation has been training miniature horses (those standing 34 inches or less) as assistance animals for the visually damaged since 1999. Miniature horses are ideal service animals for people who feel uncomfortable with dogs or who want a guide animal with a longer life span. The horses typically live from 30 to 40 years.


1. According to the text, which animal can help you relax?
A.A snake.B.A dog.
C.A honeyguide bird.D.A miniature horse.
2. Miniature horses could serve _________.
A.blind people who dislike dogsB.blind people who can live longer
C.animal lovers who search for honeyD.animal lovers who suffer from cancer
3. The text is about animals’ _________.
A.special trainingB.great potentials
C.unique jobsD.high intelligence

9 . Yet although officers will not disappear, it’s hard to imagine that working life will return to before-COVID-19 (新冠肺炎) ways. For more than a century workers have pushed themselves on-to crowded trains and buses, or suffered traffic jams, to get into the office, and back, five days a week. However, for the past one year they have not had to commute (上下班往返), and may enjoy it for a long time.

Employers, for their part, have supported expensive offices in city centers because they need to gather workers in one place. The rent is only part of the cost; there are cleaning, lightning, printers, catering and security on top. Needless to say, in the homeworking era these costs are cut down.

Another part of the homeworking era may be the disappearance of the five-day working week. Even before the COVID-19 many workers became used to taking phone calls or answering emails at the weekend. In the homeworking era, the dividing line between home and working life, a useful way of relieving stress, will be even harder to keep. It may be lost altogether.

What’s more, without the Monday-to-Friday commute, the weekend seems more nebulous, for employees may walk and take breaks freely, with only the company video calls unchanged.

Looking further out, the homeworking era may bring other changes. Some may decide to live in small towns where housing costs are lower, since they have no need to commute. Men will have fewer excuses to skip cleaning or childcare if they are not disappearing to the office.

In a sense, this is a return to normal: until the 19th century most people worked at or close to their homes. But social historians may still regard 2020 as the start of a new age.

1. Which one is the change of the working life after the COVID-19?
A.Living in big cities.B.More traffic jams.
C.Reduced working cost.D.Less phone calls at the weekend.
2. What does the underlined word “nebulous” mean in the 4th paragraph?
A.Important.B.Unclear.C.Fruitful.D.Annoying.
3. Which word can best describe the writer’s attitude in the last paragraph?
A.Doubtful.B.Objective.C.Supportive.D.Negative.
4. What’s the best title of the passage?
A.2020: the Start of a New Age?
B.Working at Home: Are You Ready?
C.Who is the Winner: Employer or Employee?
D.Home and Working Life: How to Keep Balanced?
2021-05-09更新 | 109次组卷 | 1卷引用:山西省怀仁市第一中学2020-2021学年高一下学期期中英语试题

10 . While going to the aquarium(水族馆)is a great way to learn about sea animals, some have raised concerns about the animals' quality of life. But Edge Innovations, a company in New Zealand, has a very special way to solve the problem.

Edge Innovations is working with American creators of some of Hollywood's most famous animals to develop robot dolphins that look like almost exactly the same as real-life animals.

The ocean park industry has had falling interests for over ten years because of ethical(道德的)concerns and the cost of live animals, yet people's hunger for learning about and experiencing these animals is still as strong as ever. Developers believe that it's time to make a change in this industry and that this method shows humans' mercy and brings more interests at the same time.

One robot dolphin could cost an aquarium at least $ 26.3 million. But the robot would be controlled by humans and be able to play with humans as a regular dolphin would. The price at the moment is very high, but Edge Innovations notes that since the robots last longer than a real animal, the returns will be worth the price.

The robot dolphin weighs just about 600 pounds but is amazingly life-like. According to The Guardian, a test audience was actually not able to tell it apart from a real dolphin. As for aquarium visitors, the developers forecast that they won't mind not seeing a "real" dolphin. "For people in New Zealand, for me, I prefer natural animals," said Li Wang, the business developer for Edge Innovations. "But when we think about the new generation who spend far more time than us playing electronic games online, we think the robot dolphins will be accepted.”

The development of robot animals may be the future of zoos and aquariums, making it easier for animal lovers to enjoy nature in a kind way.

1. What is Edge Innovations doing?
A.Designing robot dolphins.
B.Stopping animal shows.
C.Improving dolphins' living conditions.
D.Making Hollywood films about dolphins.
2. What is the third paragraph mainly about?
A.Why the ocean park industry closes down.
B.How the ocean park industry can develop.
C.How robot dolphins can succeed.
D.Why robot dolphins are created.
3. What can we learn about robot dolphins?
A.Their price is too high to be accepted.
B.They look smaller in size than real ones.
C.They save aquariums' cost in the long run.
D.They can serve longer than creators thought.
4. What may be the best title for the text?
A.Robot Dolphins Are Coming
B.The Rise and Fall of Robot Dolphins
C.The Aquariums Are Facing the Ethical Problem
D.Robot Dolphins Will Bring an End to Ocean Park Industry
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