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21-22高一·全国·单元测试
其他 | 较易(0.85) |

1 . We’re not saying that everyone needs to contribute their lives to the poor. Your lives are enough doing homework, playing sports, making friends, seeking after your dreams. But we do think that you can live a more powerful life when you devote some of your time and energy to something much la than yourself. Find an issue you are interested in and learn more. Volunteer or, if you can, contribute little money to a cause. Whatever you do, don’t be a bystander. Get involved. You may have the opportunity to make your biggest difference when you’re older. But why not start now?


What does the author stress in Paragraph 5?
A.Learning more and contributing more to a cause.
B.Rising above self and acting to help others.
C.Working hard to get a bigger opportunity.
D.Trying your best to help the poor.
2022-08-26更新 | 228次组卷 | 1卷引用:大单元作业设计 人教版(2019) 必修一 Unit 1
2022高三下·全国·专题练习
其他 | 适中(0.65) |

2 . Terrafugia Inc. said Monday that its new flying car has completed its first flight, bringing the company closer to its goal of selling the flying car within the next year. The vehicle—named the Transition—has two seats, four wheels and wings that fold up so it can be driven like a car. The Transition, which flew at 1,400 feet for eight minutes last month, can reach around 70 miles per hour on the road and 115 in the flies using a 23-gallon tank of gas and bums 5 gallons per hour in the air. On the ground, it gets 35 miles per gallon.


What is the first paragraph mainly about?
A.The basic data of the Transition.B.The advantages of flying cars.
C.The potential market for flying cars.D.The designers of the Transition.
2022-04-16更新 | 321次组卷 | 2卷引用:大单元作业设计 人教版(2019) 必修一 Unit 1
2021·江苏·二模
阅读理解-阅读单选(约380词) | 适中(0.65) |
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3 . Not long ago, Linda Khan was sitting by a hospital bed in Houston, feeling ill at ease. Beside her lay her father who needed a heart surgery. The two of them had engaged in nothing but depressing small talk. Then, her eye fell on a pile of books. She picked up one, and started to read it out loud. "Right away it changed the mood and atmosphere," she says. Reading gave the daughter a way to connect with her father. Listening allowed the father travel on the sound of his daughter's voice into a place where he felt himself again. “From then on," Khan says, “I always read to him."

In a 2010 survey in the United Kingdom, elderly adults who joined weekly read-aloud groups reported better concentration, less anxiety, and an improved ability to socialize. The survey authors owed these improvements in large part to the “rich, varied diet of serious literature" that group members consumed, with fiction encouraging feelings of relaxation and calm, poetry fostering focused concentration, and narratives giving rise to cognitive (认知的) thoughts, feelings, and memories. In truth, almost any kind of reading to another person can be beneficial.

Readers get rewards too. For Neil Bush, the late-life hospitalizations of his famous parents, George H. W. and Barbara Bush, became opportunities to repay a debt of gratitude. “When I was a kid, they would read to me," he said. With his parents in and out of care, “We've been reading books about Dad's foreign policy and, more recently, Mom's autobiography." Bush went on, his voice thick with emotion, “And to read their amazing life to them has been a remarkable blessing to me, personally, as their son."

To many people, reading to parents may seem so far outside the normal range of regular activities, and it may even feel odd and improper. However, there are still a lot many who brave the momentary strangeness of reading to elderly adults and both reader and listeners are, to borrow a phrase from Wordsworth, surprised by the joy of it.

1. What did reading offer to Linda and her father?
A.A way to establish a bond.B.A way to travel together in reality.
C.A way to treat the disease.D.A way to engage in learning.
2. What is Paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.Improvements in mental health.B.Benefits of reading to others.
C.Changes in cognitive process.D.Development of social skills.
3. What does Neil Bush's experience prove?
A.Reading benefits more than the listener
B.Parents should red more to their kids.
C.Children should show their gratitude.
D.Reading to parents is children's duty
4. How does the author feel about reading to an elderly adult?
A.Improper and odd.B.Abnormal but worthy.
C.Rewarding and joyful.D.Interesting but unnecessary.
2021-05-07更新 | 387次组卷 | 4卷引用:Unit 4 Body Language B卷·能力提升练-【单元测试】2022-2023学年高二英语分层训练AB卷(人教版2019选择性必修第一册)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约310词) | 适中(0.65) |
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4 . Who're happier, men or women?Research shows it's a complex question and that asking whether males or females are happier isn't really that helpful, because basically, happiness is different for women and men.

Women's happiness has been declining for the past 30 years, according to recent statistics.And research shows that women are twice as likely to experience depression compared with men.Gender(性别) differences in depression are well confirmed and studies have found that biological, psychological and social factors contribute to the difference.

Early studies on gender and happiness found men and women were socialized to express different feelings.Women are more likely to express happiness, warmth and fear, which help with social bonding and appear more consistent with the traditional role as a primary caregiver, while men display more anger, pride and disrespect, which are more consistent with a protector and provider role.

Recent research suggests that these differences are not just socially, but also genetically related.Studies have looked into these findings further and discovered that females use more areas of the brain containing mirror neurons(镜像神经元)than males when they process feelings.Mirror neurons allow us to experience the world from other people's view, to understand their actions and intentions.This may explain why women can experience deeper sadness.Women tend to experience more negative feelings, such as more guilt, shame and to a lesser degree, embarrassment.

Psychologically it seems men and women differ in the way they process and express feelings.With the exception of anger, women experience feelings more strongly and share their feelings more openly with others.Studies have found in particular that women express more appreciation﹣which has been linked to greater happiness.This supports the theory that women's happiness is more dependent on relationships than men's.

1. Which feeling are men more likely to show compared with women?
A.Warmth.
B.Depression.
C.Happiness.
D.Disrespect.
2. What factors cause women to share feelings more openly?
A.Psychological factors.
B.Biological factors.
C.Educational factors.
D.Social factors.
3. One can probably read the text from ________.
A.a science fiction
B.a culture brochure
C.a nursery guide
D.a health magazine
4. What is the text mainly about?
A.Men and women differ in biology and psychology.
B.Men and women experience happiness differently.
C.Social roles have a great effect on men and women.
D.Women's happiness has declined in the past years.
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5 . Traffic jams are the horrible dreams of motorists’ lives. If you think your journey is bad, spare a thought for drivers in Sao Paolo, Brazil — one evening in May last year, the traffic jams during the rush hour added up to a 344km queue, according to the city's traffic management agency.

This isn't a new problem, of course. During the car boom of the 1960s, city planners had one seemingly obvious solution: build more and wider roads. But the more roads created, the more cars they attracted. So what's the solution? Some cities have adopted easy methods, like banning cars from driving on certain days.

However, ending this horrible dream may need more of a complete rethink. A company, Urban Engines, has a slightly fresher method. "We're providing an online game that offers trip suggestions and prizes to encourage commuter behaviour changes, including changing travel from peak to off-peak times,“ says Shiva Shivakumar, Urban Engines' co-founder and GEO. For the past two-and-a-half years, the company has conducted pilot studies in major cities, including Bangalore and Singapore. In Bangalore, one-in-six people who took part in the trial started travelling off-peak, and in Singapore one-in-eight.

But others think this solution doesn't go far enough—and that we should provide more reasons for putting fewer cars on the road. “The only effective long-term solution is to improve alternative methods—walking, cycling and particularly high-quality public transport,” says Todd Litman of the Victoria Transport Policy Institute in Canada. Road pricing that charges motorists extra if they drive during the rush hour could also be an option. Cities like Singapore, London and Stockholm have successfully used road pricing to control the steel river.

The solution to beating traffic jams in cities, if it comes, will probably take a long time to gain prizes. But if at least some of these new ideas are a success, the days of Sao Paolo's heavy traffic jams may finally become history.

1. What can we learn about the method of building wider roads?
A.It results in the car boom.B.It is far from satisfactory.
C.It needs to be further tested.D.It is unlikely to be widely used.
2. What does Urban Engines do to deal with traffic jams?
A.It charges commuters for travelling at peak times.
B.It changes its working time to avoid peak times.
C.It bans commuters from driving on certain days.
D.It offers prizes to those travelling at off-peak times.
3. What does the underlined part “the steel river” in Paragraph 4 refer to?
A.The traffic flow.B.The traffic light.
C.The public transport.D.The crowd of people.
4. What can be the best title for the text?
A.How Do Traffic Jams FormB.Can We Ever End Traffic Jams
C.Do Traffic Jams Affect Our LifeD.Where Is the Most Jammed City
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