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1 . Sora observed in amazement as Weilun picked up two large metal cans. She followed Weilun with a pail (桶) of clothes, watching him carry the two cans effortlessly. They were large and were covering Weilun’s small frame.

Sora’s father had sent her to the village to learn about rural life. Sora had never once done any household chores back home. She did not understand why her father would always chant “Where is your willingness to learn?” whenever she asked him if she could stay home for the holidays. Her father had given her a checklist on the life skills that she needed to learn, one of which was to wash clothes. She recalled washing a table cloth after an art lesson in school. That was a piece of cake, she thought. So Sora refused Weilun’s offer to help. Weilun then went to fill the large cans with water at the far end of the river.

Suddenly, a big bird dived from the sky when Sora placed the last piece of clothing back in the pail. Sora released her grasp of the pail in shock. Then she was relaxed to find it was aiming for a worm near her. But the clothes were drifting in the river. Weilun immediately came to help and Sora shifted the blame to the bird.

He pointed at the detergent foam (洗涤剂泡沫) on the surface of the river. “Don’t tell me you rinsed (漂洗) the detergent from the clothes in the river. Don’t you know that it may kill the river creatures? You caused the problem, not the bird!” Sora looked down in shame. “You think that you know everything, but you actually don’t.”

Sora closed her eyes to let Weilun’s words sink in for a moment. She finally understood the meaning behind her father’s chants. She walked towards Weilun and whispered, “Could you teach me all the life skills that my father had planned for me to learn?”

1. Why was Sora amazed?
A.Weilun was too small in size for the two large cans.
B.Weilun was willing to help his parents do some chores.
C.Weilun managed to carry the two large cans easily.
D.Weilun was willing to accompany her to the riverside.
2. Why did Sora refuse Weilun’s offer to help wash the clothes?
A.She thought it was an easy task.
B.She had learned how to do it.
C.She wanted her father to be proud of her.
D.She wanted to learn new things by herself.
3. What happened when Sora found the bird flew towards her?
A.The bird was diving for food.
B.The bird was attacking her.
C.Sora was rinsing the detergent in the pail.
D.Sora was shocked to find a worm in the pail.
4. What do you think Sora “finally understood”?
A.She wasn’t capable of living on her own.
B.She really lacked the willingness to learn.
C.Life skills could be learned in the country.
D.Her father wanted her to learn from Weilun.
2021-05-28更新 | 233次组卷 | 2卷引用:江西省赣州市2021届高三下学期5月适用性考试英语试题

2 . After beating bone cancer, Hayley Arceneaux thinks rocketing into orbit on SpaceX’s first private flight should be no problem at all. St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital announced the 29-year-old doctor’s assistant will rocket into space later this year.

Arceneaux, a former patient at St. Jude, will become the youngest American in space, beating NASA record-holder Sally Ride by over two years. She will travel with businessman Jared Isaacman, who is using the spaceflight he bought to raise money for charity. Two other yet-to-be-chosen space flyers will join them. Arceneaux will be the first person to launch with a prosthesis an artificial device that replaces a missing or injured part of the body. When she was 10, Arceneaux had an operation at St. Jude to replace her knee and a piece of metal was put in her left leg. She still limps and has occasional leg pain.

“My battle with cancer really prepared me for space travel,” she recently told The Associated Press. “It made me tough, and then also I think it really taught me to expect the unexpected and go along for the ride.” Arceneaux wants to show her young patients and other cancer survivors that “the sky is not even the limit anymore.” “It’s going to mean so much to these kids to see a survivor in space.” she said.

Isaacman announced his space flight on February 1, promising to raise $200 million for St. Jude. As the flight’s self-appointed commander, he offered one of the four seats aboard SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft to St. Jude. The hospital chose Arceneaux from among its many workers who had once been patients. The idea was that one of them could represent the new generation, noted Rick Shadyac, president of St. Jude’s financing organization.

Arceneaux was at home in Memphis, Tennessee, when she got a surprising call in January. She was asked if she would represent St. Jude in space. As a lifelong space fan who loves adventures, Arceneaux has traveled widely and loves roller coasters. Isaacman, who flies fighter airplanes for fun, considers her a perfect fit. The launch is planned for this fall at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, with the spacecraft orbiting Earth for two to four days.

1. Which statement is true about Hayley Arceneaux?
A.She works where she used to be a patient.
B.She is an adventure hater.
C.She is the youngest American in space.
D.She is the first woman space flyer.
2. What’s the correct order for what happened to Hayley Arceneaux?
a. She received a surprising call. b. She was diagnosed with a serious disease.
c. She was chosen to rocket into space. d. She was operated on at St.Jude.
A.a c d bB.b c d aC.b d a cD.c a b d
3. What’s the purpose of the space flight?
A.To carry out medical research.
B.To explore space.
C.To expect the unexpected.
D.To collect money.
4. How can we describle Hayley Arceneaux?
A.Generous and strong.
B.Caring and optimistic.
C.Brave and honest.
D.Patient and representative.
2021-05-28更新 | 218次组卷 | 2卷引用:江西省重点中学盟校2021届高三第二次联考英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约310词) | 适中(0.65) |

3 . You can pay a fortune to travel around the world. Or you can pay nothing at all. Here are some places you'll never regret visiting. They won't cost you a dime.

The British Museum, London(U.K.)

You need to go here to see the Egyptian mummies, the ancient Greek Marbles and so many other treasures. It's open every day, and unlike most other attractions in England that cost much money, it's completely free.

National Mall, Washington D.C.(U.S.A.)

You can walk a pathway from the Lincoln Memorial to the severe Vietnam Veterans Memorial and to the Washington Monument with other sights in between. Do you know you can go up in the elevator to the top of the Washington Monument? Tickets are free, but pay a small fee to reserve them in advance to avoid being disappointed.

Notre-Dame Cathedral, Paris(France) .

This great treasure of the world simply can't be missed. The great stained-glass rose window alone is worth the visit. The Sunday Mass with the Gregorian chant was like stepping back in time. Admission is free every day, but you're welcome to leave a donation. There are also free tours a few times each week. You'll pay extra for tours of the bell tower or the crypt.

National Museum of Ireland , Dublin and Mayo (Ireland)

Want to see bog bodies, gold ornaments, Viking artifacts and learn about rural Irish life? All four branches of this museum are free to visit, including museums devoted to archaeology, natural history, decorative arts and history and country life. The museum of country life in Tur lough Park, Mayo, is devoted to Irish rural traditions, while the natural history museum is especially famous for its collection of insects.

1. Where can you visit the ancient Greek marbles from the passage?
A.National Mall, Washington D.C.B.The British Museum, London.
C.Notre-Dame Cathedral, Paris.D.National Museum of Ireland, Dublin and Mayo.
2. Which place do you need to pay for an appointment?
A.Lincoln Memorial.B.Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
C.Notre-Dame Cathedral.D.The top of the Washington Monument.
3. If you do a study on how a worm turns into a butterfly, you probably go to ________.
A.National Museum of Ireland, Dublin and Mayo.B.The British Museum, London.
C.Notre-Dame Cathedral, Paris.D.National Mall, Washington D.C.
2021-05-28更新 | 81次组卷 | 2卷引用:江西省上饶市2021届高三三模英语试题(含听力)

4 . In previous recessions (经济衰退), billionaires were hit along with the rest of us; it took almost three years for Forbes’s 400 richest people to recover from losses caused in 2008’s Great Recession. But in the coronavirus recession of 2020, most billionaires have gotten richer than ever before.

Billionaires increased their new billions just as millions of other Americans ran into terrible financial problems. More than 20 million people lost their jobs at the start of the pandemic. Food banks across the country are preparing for another great increase in demand. Why are American billionaires doing so well while so many other Americans suffer? People may find part of the reasons from the following fact. Stocks (股票) are overwhelmingly owned by the wealthy, and the stock market has recovered from its early-pandemic depths much more quickly than other parts of the economy.

But some billionaires are also benefiting from economic and technological trends that were accelerated by the pandemic. Among these are the owners and investors of retail giants like Amazon, Walmart, Target, Dollar Tree and Dollar General, which have reported huge profits this year while many of their smaller competitors were defeated completely as the coronavirus spread.

Then there are companies that have bet on the rapid digitization of everything Eric Yuan, the chief executive of Zoom, became a billionaire in 2019. Now he is worth almost $20 billion. Dan Gilbert, the chairman of Quicken Loans, was worth less than $7 billion in March, now he commands more than $43 billion. But there is a great deal of stratification (层化) even among billionaires—richer billionaires got even richer in 2020 than the poorer ones did. Jeff Bezos, Amazon’s funder, was worth about $113 billion at the start of the pandemic. Now he is worth $182 billion. Two years ago, Bezos was the only “centibillionaire” on earth—the trendy neologism (a new word) for people whose wealth exceeds (超过) ¥100 billion.

1. What does the author mainly tell us in the passage?
A.Food banks are not enough in the United States.
B.The richest kept getting richer even in the pandemic.
C.The stock market recovered before the pandemic started.
D.400 richest people recovered from losses in the pandemic.
2. What is “part of the reasons” that is implied in Paragraph 2?
A.The American inequality.
B.The recovery of stock market.
C.The effect of the pandemic.
D.The food shortage across the country.
3. What is one of the changes during the pandemic?
A.The decline of digital games.
B.More money lent to people by banks.
C.The trend of technology acceleration.
D.High profit earned by smaller companies.
4. Why does the author refer to “centibillionaire” as a “neologism”?
A.It is a new title in the stock market after the recession.
B.It is a new way of solution to poverty through the world.
C.It is a newly established company during the pandemic.
D.It is a new term for people whose wealth exceeds $100 billion.
2021-05-28更新 | 300次组卷 | 3卷引用:江西省赣州市2021届高三下学期5月适用性考试英语试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~

5 . Turtles have an unfortunate habit of eating plastic objects floating in the sea. These then cannot be broken down and digested, and may ultimately kill them.

It is widely assumed that this special liking for plastics is a matter of mistaken identity. Floating plastic bags, for instance, look similar to jellyfish, which many types of turtles love to eat. Yet lota of plastic objects that end up inside turtles are not similar to jellyfish. Joseph Pfaller of the University of Florida therefore suspects that the smell of micro-organisms (微生物) which grow on floating plastic objects fools turtles to feed.

Researchers at the University of California noticed that certain chemicals, which are released into the air by micro-organism — colonised plastics, are those which many seabirds sniff to track down food. These chemicals mark good places to hunt because they indicate an abundance of the seaweed and bacteria. Since turtles are known to break the surface and sniff the air when swimming towards their feeding areas, Dr. Pfaller indicated that they are following these same chemicals, and are fooled into thinking that floating plastic objects are edible.

To test that idea, he and his colleagues set up an experiment. They arranged for 15 of the animals, each around five months old, to be exposed, in random order, to four smells delivered through a pipe to; the air above an experimental area. The smells were: the vapour from deionised (去离子) water; the smell of turtle-feeding meal; the smell of a clean plastic bottle; and the smell of a similarly plastic bottle that had been kept in the ocean for five weeks to allow seaweed and bacteria to grow on it. Two of the smells-the smell of meal and that of five-week-old bottles-proved far more attractive to the animals than the others.

On the face of it, then, the turtles were responding to the smell of old bottles as if it were the smell of food. In an unpolluted ocean, pretty well anything which had this smell would be edible-or, at least, harmless. Unfortunately, five-week-old plastic bottles and their like are not.

1. What is most people's opinion on turtles' special habit?
A.Turtles prefer jellyfish to plastics.
B.Turtles enjoy the taste of plastics.
C.Turtles like being fed with plastic tools.
D.Turtles choose to eat plastics for a mistake.
2. What does the underlined word “edible" in paragraph 3 mean?
A.Fit to eat.B.Pleasant to smell.
C.Far to reach.D.Easy to digest.
3. What can we infer from Dr. Pfaller's research?
A.Many seabirds can track the food.
B.Most animals find food through smells.
C.Two smells are especially favored by turtles.
D.The favored smell leads turtles to seek for food.
4. Why did the author mention the unpolluted ocean at last?
A.To explain why the ocean is polluted.
B.To ask for people to feed turtles proper food.
C.To arouse the awareness of protecting the ocean.
D.To show his agreement on Dr. Pfaller's research.
2021-05-20更新 | 136次组卷 | 3卷引用:江西省南昌市2021届高三下学期第三次模拟测试卷英语试题

6 . Scientists have created an "artificial leaf" to fight climate change by inexpensively changing harmful carbon dioxide into a useful alternative fuel. The new technology was inspired by the way plants use energy from sunlight to turn carbon dioxide into food.

Scientists call it an artificial leaf because it mimics real leaves and the process of photosynthesis(光合作用). A leaf produces glucose(葡萄糖) and oxygen. Scientists use an artificial leaf to produce methanol(甲醇) and oxygen. Making methanol from carbon dioxide, the primary contributor to global warming, would both reduce greenhouse gas emissions and provide a substitute for the fossil fuels.

The key to the process is a cheap, fully used red powder called cuprous oxide. Engineered to have as many eight-sided particles as possible, the powder is created by a chemical reaction when four substances are added to water that has been heated to a particular temperature. The powder then serves as the catalyst(催化剂), or trigger, for another chemical reaction when it is mixed with water into which carbon dioxide is blown and a beam of white light is directed with a solar simulator(模拟器). "This is the chemical reaction that we discovered," said Wu, a professor of mechanical and mechatronics engineering, has worked on the project since 2015. He added, " Nobody has done this before." The reaction produces oxygen, as                                        in photosynthesis, while also changing carbon dioxide in the water-powder solution into methanol. The methanol is collected as it evaporates when the solution is heated.

Next steps in the research include increasing the methanol yield and commercializing the patented process to convert carbon dioxide collected from major greenhouse gas sources such as power plants, vehicles and oil drilling. "I'm extremely excited about the potential of this discovery to change the game," said Wu, "Climate change is an urgent problem and we can help reduce CO2 emissions while also creating an alternative fuel."

1. What is the function of an artificial leaf?
A.Turning carbon dioxide into a solid fuel.B.Changing a chemical reaction into food.
C.Producing much glucose and oxygen.D.Making methanol and oxygen cheaply.
2. What do we know about cuprous oxide?
A.It's a powder containing four substances.
B.It should be directed with a solar simulator.
C.It's a key substance to cause another chemical reaction.
D.It's used to collect methanol from a chemical reaction.
3. What is professor Wu's attitude toward the prospect of' Artificial Leaf?
A.Optimistic.B.Wait- and- see.C.Skeptical.D.Negative.
4. What is this text?
A.A short story of an artificial leaf.B.An advertisement for a famous company.
C.A report in a science journal.D.An introduction to a science fiction.
2021-05-18更新 | 97次组卷 | 1卷引用:江西省上饶市2021届高三三模英语试题(含听力)

7 . Look up in the sky. See that French poodle? Before your eyes it morphs into an elephant. A few seconds later, it becomes the profile of Taylor Swift floating by. Cloud-watching has captured our imaginations since we were children. Many people even have found the International Cloud Appreciation Society.

In 2003 Gavin Pretor-Pinney was living in Rome while on holiday. After seven months glancing into the heavens at the mostly clear blue Roman skies, he discovered he missed the constantly changing cloud formations that were an everyday event in his native United Kingdom. He returned home and was engrossed in learning about clouds. The subject dominated his conversation for a year. Then a friend invited him to speak about clouds at a small literary festival. Pretor-Pinney titled his presentation "The Inaugural Lecture of the Cloud Appreciation Society." Afterward, he had to inform audience members who wanted to join the society that it did not exist. A few months later he launched a website, and the society was born. Five years ago it became his full-time occupation.       

Today, the Cloud Appreciation Society enjoys a membership of more than 50,000 people scattered in 120 countries, all united through their appreciation of celestial mist. It is divided into local groups that include a chapter in St. Louis, and another in central Missouri. Illinois cloud spotter groups are near Chicago.

Pretor-Pinney thinks of the society as reconnecting people with their early relationship to the sky as children finding images in the clouds. "Clouds are for dreams, and a deep thinking of them benefits the soul. If you consider the shapes you see in clouds, it will save you money on psychoanalysis bills," Pretor-Pinney jokes.

In a positive Ted Talk about the Cloud Appreciation Society accessible on the Internet, Pretor-Pinney points out that clouds are common to everyone no matter where they are in the world. They are the most egalitarian (平等主义者) of nature's displays, because people all have a fantastic view of the sky.

1. What is the purpose of Paragraph 1?
A.To explain a natural phenomenon.B.To recommend an international society.
C.To lead in the main topic of the text.D.To stimulate readers' imaginations.
2. What does the underlined words "was engrossed in" in Paragraph 2 probably mean?
A.Was involved in.B.Was absorbed in.C.Took pride in.D.Participated in.
3. What could be inferred from Paragraph 3&4?
A.The Cloud Appreciation Society enjoys popularity.
B.The Cloud Appreciation Society has three groups.
C.The society attracts a lot of children with dreams.
D.The society helps people save money and heal their souls.
4. Which is the best title of the text?
A.A fantastic cloud-watching societyB.A group full of imagination
C.A society benefiting soulsD.A positive Ted Talk
2021-05-18更新 | 114次组卷 | 1卷引用:江西省上饶市2021届高三三模英语试题(含听力)

8 . Raffles EL Week

Be absorbed in the world of words, metaphors and imagery in our annual Raffles EL Week! Come and participate in the exciting activities we have for you!

The learning adventures begin from 20 May 2021 to 24 May 2021. Read on to find out where the actions are!

Activities that add fun to your recesses!

ONCE UPON A TIME...

A fan of fairy tales? This activity is definitely right up your alley!

Let our student librarians tell you fairy tales from all over the World! Suitable for all levels.

Date: 20 and 23 May

Time: 9:30 am

Venue: School library

HOW WELL CAN YOU SPELL?

Show your spelling skills in this Spelling Bee challenge! Get to compete with peers from different classes too!

Date: 20 and 21 May (P1 & P2 pupils)

22 and 23 May (P3 & P4 pupils)

24 May (P5 & P6 pupils)

Time: 9:30 am

Venue: Lower canteen area

Story Writing Competition

Do you love writing stories? Take part in our annual story writing competition! The theme this year is “Fractured Fairy Tales”.

Rules & Regulations:

·In less than 500 words, pick a fairy tale you like and modify it to make us laugh at an unexpected characterization, plot development or a different point of view.

·You may submit only one story and we will pick one winner from each level (P1-P6).

·The winning entries will be published in our Raffles Magazine in Term 4.

·Email your entry to: elweek@raffles.com by 30 May 2021.

·If you have any questions, go to the General Office and approach any of the friendly staff there.

Organized by: The English Department     Partners: Writers’ Association

1. How often is Raffles EL Week held?
A.Once a month.B.Every two years.C.Once a year.D.Every two months.
2. What rule should you follow if you take part in the story writing competition?
A.Writing an original fairy tale.
B.Not going over the word limit.
C.Being a member of Raffles Magazine.
D.Submitting your entry at the General Office.
3. What do we know from the poster?
A.Students at all levels can go to the Spelling Bee challenge every day.
B.There will be one winner for the school story writing competition.
C.Student librarians will be telling fairy tales in the school library.
D.Its purpose is to get pupils to compete with peers from other classes.
2021-05-12更新 | 82次组卷 | 3卷引用:江西省赣州市2021届高三下学期5月适用性考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
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9 . Since time immemorial, people have been searching for the fountain of youth. Surprisingly, the dream of human immortality is, according to some scientists, not so far out of reach.

Professor Brian Cox, Google's Ray Kurzweil, and Tesla head Elon Musk all agree on not only the possibility of human immortality but also that it is not too far away. The solution, they say, is something called the “technological singularity”.

The singularity is a combination of humankind with computers, namely uploading the contents of one's brain onto a hard drive. In that way, a person's consciousness can stay alive after a physical body gets worse. This is based on the idea that a human brain is simply a machine, and there is, according to Professor Cox, “no reason at all why we cannot simulate (模拟) human intelligence,” using a computer.

Although Professor Cox did not say when the singularity would occur, Google's Ray Kurzweil predicts that the singularity will happen as early as 2045. By 2100, he says, human body parts will be replaceable by machine parts. Further, by uploading our brains onto a computer, we will be able to toy with it, and become “able to expand the scope of our intelligence a billion fold. ”

Elon Musk agreed with the asessments of the other scientists, even going so far as saying that the chances that we are not in a computer simulation right now are “one in billions” .

Google is preparing for a future where you can download personalities onto robots. For example, you might be able to download onto your robot a celebrity personality, or of the personality of your deceased grandmother.

The search engine giant filed a patent for this download process recently. So they definitely believe that the singularity is just around the corner. All you have to do is hold on until 2045, and soon you can effectively live in the cloud.

1. What does the underlined word “immortality” in paragraph 1 probably mean?
A.Living forever.B.Rebirth after death.
C.Being perfect.D.Continuous improvement.
2. How did the writer illustrate the idea of human immortality in the text?
A.By giving examples.B.By presenting quotations.
C.By logically reasoning.D.By making a description.
3. Which of the following can Elon Musk most probably agree with?
A.Computers are much smarter than humankind.
B.Computers can never surpass humankind at all.
C.Computers and humankind are quite different.
D.Computers can be another version of humankind.
4. How can humankind improve by 2100 according to the text?
A.Physically and intelligently.B.Individually and corporately.
C.Psychologically and spiritually.D.Emotionally and materially.
阅读理解-阅读单选(约410词) | 较难(0.4) |

10 . Zhang Guimei, a rural teacher in Huaping county, Lijiang, Yunnan province, breaking cycle of poverty in mountain areas realizes potential of students.

It was a chance meeting that revealed the reality of one life as it changed another. About 20 years ago, while on the way to visit a student’s house, Zhang Guimei noticed a girl sitting on the hillside. She was staring blankly into space. She was completely preoccupied. The girl, 13, told Zhang she was about to get married. It was arranged by her parents. “But I want to go to school,” the girl says. Zhang went to her house and tried to persuade her parents to let the girl return, to school and promised to pay for her tuition herself. However, they didn’t agree.

Zhang says she feels sorry not being able to help “We always say, each child should stand on the same starting line, but these girls didn’t even have a chance to get on the track,” she tells Xinhua News Agency.

That fateful encounter persuaded Zhang to build a free big school for girls, aiming to help break the cycle that saw women drop out of education, marry early and spend their whole life in the remote mountain. The priority of less well-off families was to spend whatever scarce resources they had on educating their sons.

After years trying to raise funds, in 2008, Huaping High School for Girls, a free public high school, was founded at the foot of the Shizi Mountain in Huaping, where Zhang is the principal.

Over the decades, the principal walked thousands of kilometers, visiting students’ families in the deep mountain, talking to villagers, persuading girls to go back to school. She donated her wages and bonus to support rural education and poor people. It has been worth it. More than 1. 800 graduates have been admitted to college, which is regarded a “miracle” in the remote area, as most students didn’t perform well in academic study before the school was established.

In early December. she was named a national outstanding member of the Communist Party of China for her dedication to education in rural China. She was also given the honor of the country’s “role model for teachers”, advanced worker “and” outstanding woman”. Her moving stories inspire thousands of people.

1. What does the underlined word “preoccupied” probably mean in paragraph 2?
A.Cautious.B.Regretful.C.Worried.D.Merciful.
2. What’s the main reason for Zhang Guimei to build the school?
A.Women are poor in academic fields.B.There are few women schools in China.
C.Few girls are admitted to universities.D.Girls in rural areas receive little education.
3. What words can best describe Zhang Guimei?
A.Independent and tough.B.Faithful and honest.
C.Inspirational and generous.D.Determined and conventional.
4. What can we infer from the text?
A.Zhang Guimei helps change the life of girls from poor families.
B.Zhang Guimei creates a miracle in advanced technology.
C.Zhang Guimei is awarded as an international heroine.
D.Zhang Guimei devotes her life to fighting poverty.
2021-05-09更新 | 213次组卷 | 1卷引用:江西省景德镇市2021届高三第三次质检英语试题
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