组卷网 > 知识点选题 > 文章出处
更多: | 只看新题 精选材料新、考法新、题型新的试题
解析
| 共计 59 道试题
2024高三上·全国·专题练习
其他 | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章是一则书评,简要介绍了Dorothy Wickenden的书籍并对其进行了评价。

1 . In 1916, two girls of wealthy families, best friends from Auburn, N. Y.—Dorothy Woodruff and Rosamond Underwood—traveled to a settlement in the Rocky Mountains to teach in a one-room schoolhouse. The girls had gone to Smith College. They wore expensive clothes. So for them to move to Elkhead, Colo. to instruct the children whose shoes were held together with string was a surprise. Their stay in Elkhead is the subject of Nothing Daunted: The Unexpected Education of Two Society Girls in the West by Dorothy Wickenden, who is a magazine editor and Dorothy Woodruff’s granddaughter.

Why did they go then? Well, they wanted to do something useful. Soon, however, they realized what they had undertaken.

They moved in with a local family, the Harrisons, and, like them, had little privacy, rare baths, and a blanket of snow on their quilt when they woke up in the morning. Some mornings, Rosamond and Dorothy would arrive at the schoolhouse to find the children weeping from the cold. In spring, the snow was replaced by mud over ice.

In Wickenden’s book, she expanded on the history of the West and also on feminism, which of course influenced the girls’ decision to go to Elkhead. A hair-raising section concerns the building of the railroads, which entailed (牵涉) drilling through the Rockies, often in blinding snowstorms. The book ends with Rosamond and Dorothy’s return to Auburn.

Wickenden is a very good storyteller. The sweep of the land and the stoicism (坚忍) of the people move her to some beautiful writing. Here is a picture of Dorothy Woodruff, on her horse, looking down from a hill top: “When the sun slipped behind the mountains, it shed a rosy glow all around them. Then a full moon rose. The snow was marked only by small animals: foxes, coyotes, mice, and varying hares, which turned white in the winter.”

What is the text?
A.A news report.B.A book review.
C.A children’s story.D.A diary entry.
2024-02-07更新 | 43次组卷 | 1卷引用:高考复习第二轮-阅读理解-推理判断题

2 . Earthworms don’t move fast. But humans can accelerate the worms’ spread. Fishermen often use invasive(蔓延性的) earthworms to catch fish. Many have introduced invasive earthworms to rivers, streams and lakes previously unexposed to these animals. Gardeners who use earthworms to make their soil rich may unknowingly introduce invasive ones. The worms even give rides in the mud on wheels, potted plants and road materials shipped around the nation.

But they’re not everywhere yet. In the Great Lakes region, “20 percent of the land is earthworm-free,” says Cindy Hale, a research biologist. Of the remaining 80 percent of land, half of the land has fewer than two earthworm species-meaning there isn’t yet too much impact on the ecosystem, she explains. For these regions, she says, now is the time to take action. According to Hale, educating the public, especially fishermen, is one approach to stopping the spread of invasive earthworms. Identifying which lands are currently earthworm-free is another.

Ryan Hueffmeier, a program coordinator for Great Lakes Worm Watch, has been working on a model that will help create large maps of areas with minimal(最小的) or no damage from earthworms. Ultimately, landowners can use it to identify earthworm activity on their property. once identified, lands with minimal or no earthworm damage should be protected.

But scientists suspect that once invasive earthworms arrive they can’t be removed. And even if all could be, affected forests might never return to the way they were. “It’s very much a story of learning to live with them,” concludes Lee Frelich of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Forest Ecology.

Forest ecologists have called earthworms “ecosystem engineers” because they can change or create habitats that otherwise would not be present. Whether this is a good thing depends on the situation.

“What the earthworms do and how we value it is what really matters.” said Hale. “In one place-farm fields or gardens-we really like European earthworms and what they do, so we consider them good. In native hardwood forests, we really don’t like what they do-so we consider them bad. You really have to understand how an organism(微生物) affects an ecosystem. Things aren’t black and white.”

1. Why are fishermen and gardeners mentioned in the first paragraph?
A.To attract more people to fishing and gardening.
B.To introduce different uses of invasive earthworms.
C.To stress the importance of invasive earthworms to humans.
D.To show humans’ effect on the spread of invasive earthworms.
2. What is Hale’s advice on protecting the Great Lakes region from invasive earthworms?
A.Finding out areas free of earthworms.
B.Extending a ban on the fishing industry.
C.Making maps of areas with most earthworms.
D.Informing the public of different earthworm species.
3. What is Hale’s attitude towards invasive earthworms?
A.Objective.B.Positive.
C.Ambiguous.D.Doubtful.
4. Where is the text probably from?
A.A biology textbook.B.An official report.
C.A science magazine.D.A research paper.
2021-04-15更新 | 345次组卷 | 1卷引用:浙江省金华十校2021届高三4月模拟考试(二模)英语试题

3 . A team from Northwestern University has developed a soft, skin-interfaced sensor that can analyze the molecular (分子的) composition of sweat for things like cortisol, blood sugar, and vitamin C, sending the data to the wearer's smartphone. This data, the researchers hope, will allow people to better control their stress levels throughout the day.

Cortisol, also called the stress hormone, can be measured in a person's sweat. Released from the adrenal glands (肾上腺) under periods of physical and mental stress, it can be a powerful performance enhancer—increasing energy production and glucose (葡萄糖) availability for the muscles during a "fight or flight" situation, for instance being attacked by a lion. However, cortisol can also be released because of modern stressors such as money problems, issues at work, and other day-to-day worries that if built up over time, create the chronic anxiety and can lead to an increased risk for diabetes, depression, high blood pressure and obesity.

When someone wears the chip sweats, the liquid runs through small channels into a series of chemical test sensors that look for different biological signals which could suggest a rise in cortisol.

Previous attempts in years past at creating devices like this were limited by the need to take sweat samples to laboratories for analysis, removing any ability for the individual to act on the data in a way that might prevent buildup of stressful feelings, or even an anxiety attack.

Such a device could be paramount in helping people relieve depressive or stressful feelings (not least because exercising hard enough to cause sweating helps with anxiety on its own).

Furthermore, the percent of the population of American adults with regular feelings of worry, nervousness, or anxiety is around 11.2%, while there are nearly 60 million doctors' visits where mental or behavioral health is the chief concern. Putting power into patients' hands—in the form of a detailed diagnosis of cortisol levels, could help significantly to lower those numbers.

1. What's the function of the newly developed sensor?
A.To examine the component of sweat.
B.To show when one lacks vitamin.
C.To connect wearable devices to smartphones.
D.To control people's stress levels the whole day.
2. What is Paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.What may create the profile of chronic anxiety.
B.What may cause the release of the stress hormone.
C.How cortisol can enhance one's energy production.
D.How cortisol can be measured in a person's sweat.
3. Which of the following can replace the underlined word?
A.Significant.B.Useless.
C.Accessible.D.Weak.
4. Where is this text most likely from?
A.A product review.B.A guidebook.
C.A magazine.D.A science fiction.
2021-03-09更新 | 323次组卷 | 1卷引用:河北省“五个一名校联盟”(张家口一中、唐山一中、保定一中、邯郸一中、邢台一中)2021届高考二模英语试题

4 . In the 1960s and 1970s, the greatest fear was that the human race, and possibly all advanced life forms on the planet, could be wiped out by nuclear missiles. Today, however, environmental problems have taken over as the greatest risk to life on Earth. Scientists are thinking of ways to lower this risk, such as replacing coal and oil with forms of renewable energy. But they are also preparing for the worst: what can we do if the terrifying scenes in films such as The Day After Tomorrow happen in real life? What is our plan B for Earth?

One option is to explore other planets to see if we could live on them. The most likely choice is Mars, which is relatively close to Earth and has an environment less hostile than that of other planets. Mars has fascinated people since ancient times, and today our interest in Martian exploration is greater than ever before. Besides, more governments are making efforts to educate the public on the Red Planet.

There is no doubt that humankind is drawn towards Mars. However, sending people there will require all the skill, courage and intelligence. While the Moon can be reached within days, it would take months to reach Mars, travelling through dangerous solar radiation. And even if the first settlers do reach Mars safely, they may not be able to return to Earth — ever. Staying alive will be a daily challenge, but as proved by the Biosphere 2 experiment, not impossible. As early as the 1980s, scientists were building Biosphere 2 in the Arizona desert, consisting of a closed space in which people, animals and plants could live together. Although the two-year experiment was not a success, it did provide us with a better understanding of how humans might be able to live on another planet.       

For now, human settlement of Mars is still decades away. Until we are finally able to live on another planet, we need to take much better care of our own. Right now, it's the only one we have!

1. What was the biggest threat to humans in the 1960s and 1970s?
A.Human race themselves.B.All advanced life forms.
C.Nuclear missiles.D.Environmental problems.
2. Why is Mars so attractive to scientists?
A.It's closest to the earth.
B.It has relatively appropriate living conditions.
C.It has drawn the public's attention in recent years.
D.It has a more hostile environment.
3. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.Humans have visited Mars.
B.The Biosphere 2 experiment proved to be valueless.
C.Humans will have to go and live on another planet.
D.Our Plan A includes developing renewable energy resources.
4. From which magazine would the passage probably be taken?
A.The Traveler.B.Environmental Concerns.
C.All About Space.D.Biology for Fun,
2021-03-07更新 | 264次组卷 | 3卷引用:辽宁省东南合作校2021届高三下学期期初英语质量试题
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~

5 . Renewable energy projects, including onshore and offshore wind and solar farms, have so far been subsidized (资助) by government support schemes. This has led to some to complain that clean energy is pushing up bills.

However, the most recently approved offshore wind projects will most likely operate with ‘negative subsidies’ -- paying money back to the government. The money will go towards reducing household energy bills as the offshore wind farms start producing power in the mid-2020s.

This is the conclusion of an analysis by an international team led by Imperial College London researchers published today in Nature Energy.

Lead researcher Dr Malte Jansen, from the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial, said: “Offshore wind power will soon be so cheap to produce that it will undercut   fossil-fueled power stations and may be the cheapest form of energy for the UK. Energy subsidies used to push up energy bills, but within a few years cheap renewable energy will   see them brought down for the first time. This is an astonishing development.”

The analysis for five countries in Europe, including the UK, focused on a series of government auctions (拍卖) for offshore wind farms between February 2015 and September 2019. Companies that want to build wind farms bid in the auctions by stating the price at which they will sell the energy they produce to the government.

These are known as ‘contracts for difference’ or CfDs. If a company’s bid is higher than the wholesale electricity price on the UK market once the wind farm is up and running, then the company will receive a subsidy from the government to top up the price.

However, if the stated price (规定价格) is less than the wholesale price, then the company will pay the government back the difference. This payback is then passed through to consumer’s energy bills, reducing the amount that homes and businesses will pay for electricity.

The winning companies said they could build new offshore wind farms for around £40 per megawatt hour (MWh) of power. This was a new record set by these wind farms with bids 30 percent lower than just two years earlier.

1. What does the passage mainly talk about?
A.Offshore wind farms to be built in the UK could reduce household energy bills by producing electricity very cheaply.
B.Offshore wind farms will not be subsidized by government in the near future.
C.The importance of CfDs.
D.The operation of negative subsidies.
2. According to Paragraph 2, offshore wind farms .
A.will stop producing power in the mid-2020s
B.are paying money back to the government
C.will help reduce household energy bills
D.will all operate with ‘negative subsidies’
3. The underlined words “top up” in Paragraph 6 probably mean .
A.make up
B.take up
C.cover
D.fill up
4. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.The renewable energy projects will lead to some to complain that clean energy is pushing up bills.
B.The company whose bid is less than the wholesale electricity price will receive a subsidy.
C.The stated electricity price is now higher than the wholesale electricity price.
D.Fossil-fueled power will be soon produced cheaply.
5. What is the author’s attitude towards the offshore wind farms?
A.Curious.
B.Pessimistic.
C.Indifferent.
D.Optimistic.
6. Where does this text probably come from?
A.A science fiction.
B.A financial magazine.
C.An advertisement.
D.A science report.

6 . After about two weeks of intense negotiations in Paris, delegates from around the world reached an international agreement on Dec. 12 to address climate change. For the first time in history, 195 countries have promised to reduce greenhouse gas(GHG)emissions and to increase these reductions over time.

The agreement goes beyond requiring developed countries like the US to take actions to cut down emissions. It's a universal agreement requiring some form of action from every country, rich or poor.

The agreement sets the date for an emissions peak "as soon as possible". It would also limit warming worldwide to less than 2℃ above the levels in the 1800s. According to scientific studies 2℃ is the point at which climate change will bring destructive consequences to the planet, including rising sea levels, severe droughts, increased flooding, destructive storms, and widespread food and water shortages.

The deal also urges wealthy countries to set a non- binding goal of providing more than $100 billion(650 billion yuan)per year in public and private financing by 2020 for poorer countries to help them invest in clean energy and combat the impact of climate change.

The Paris deal asks countries to make voluntary promises based on an analysis of each country's economy, politics and technology. However, the deal also includes a series of legally binding(有约束力的)requirements. It requires countries to reconvene every five years, starting in 2020, with updated plans that would cut their further emissions. Countries will also be legally required to reconvene every five years starting in 2023 to publicly report on their progress.

The Paris deal alone won't solve global warming. Its effectiveness will depend on whether each country enacts(立法)their promise. But the deal "could be viewed as a signal to global financial and energy markets, triggering a fundamental shift away from investment in coal, oil and gas as primary energy sources like wind, solar and nuclear power", according to The New York Times.

1. Which of the following is true according to the passage?
A.The agreement requires only developed countries to take actions to cut down emissions.
B.The agreement would limit warming worldwide to 2℃ less than the levels in the 1800s.
C.The agreement requires some form of action from all the countries in the world
D.The constant global warming will do great harm to the planet.
2. The 195 countries have to___________.
A.do something to fight against the influence of climate change
B.invest more in coal, oil and gas as primary energy sources
C.provide more than $100 billion per year in public and private financing
D.report on their progress of reducing their emissions every 5 years in Paris
3. What does the underlined word "reconvene" in paragraph 5 mean?
A.MeetB.Report.C.PromiseD.Return.
4. You may read this article from___________.
A.a science magazineB.a newspaper
C.a school textD.an economic lecture
2021-02-27更新 | 196次组卷 | 1卷引用:四川省凉山州2021届高中毕业班第一次诊断性检测英语试题(含听力)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约340词) | 较难(0.4) |
名校

7 . As digital devices (设备)have taken over society, “keyboard activity is now often recommended as a substitute for early handwriting," a new study notes. The idea is that typing may be easier for young children.

“Some schools in Norway have become completely digital," notes Audrey Vander Meer, the new study's leader, who measures brain activity to better understand learning and behaviors. She works at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim. The human brain has developed to interact with the world in as many ways as possible, she notes. She believes that young children should learn to write by hand successfully, and, at the same time learn to manage a keyboard.

Using a pen involves more of the brain than using a keyboard, her new findings show. This is because writing and printing involve complex movements that activate more areas of the brain. The increased brain activity, "gives the brain more 'hooks' to hang your memories on," she explains.

Think about it. The same movement is required to type each letter on a keyboard. By comparison, when we write, our brain needs to think about and recover memories of the shape of each letter. We also need to use our eyes to watch what shapes we're writing. And we need to control our hands to press a pen or pencil to shape the different letters. All of this uses and connects more areas of the brain.

Along the way, these processes appear to “open the brain up for learning", says Vander Meer. So learning through only one format — digital — could be harmful, she worries.

Vander Meer also points out that taking notes by hand stimulates (激发)"visual notetaking". Rather than typing blindly, the visual note-taker has to think about what is important to write down. Then, key words can be "interlinked by boxes, and arrows, and supplemented by small drawings".

1. What is the main idea of the text?
A.Digital devices are popular with students.
B.Handwriting beats typing in taking notes.
C.The process of taking notes changes thinking.
D.The new study makes contributions to science.
2. What should young kids do according to Vander Meer?
A.Communicate with the world.B.Rely on keyboard activity.
C.Learn to write by hand.D.Master basic drawing skills.
3. How does the author draw the conclusion?
A.By studying how the brain develops.B.By observing social phenomena.
C.By assessing functions of senses.D.By comparing ways of taking notes.
4. In which section of a newspaper may the text appear?
A.Relationship.B.Fashion.
C.Culture.D.Science.
2021-01-30更新 | 404次组卷 | 4卷引用:云南省昆明市2021届高三”三诊一模“摸底诊断测试英语试题
20-21高二上·上海闵行·阶段练习
阅读理解-阅读单选(约20词) | 较难(0.4) |
名校
8 .
1. How should we read the following sentence with proper pauses?
A.Buffalo buffalo Buffalo/ buffalo buffalo/ buffalo Buffalo buffalo.
B.Buffalo buffalo/ Buffalo buffalo buffalo/ buffalo Buffalo buffalo
C.Buffalo buffalo Buffalo/ buffalo buffalo buffalo/ Buffalo buffalo.
D.Buffalo buffalo/ Buffalo buffalo/ buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo.
2. What is the key element to make this sentence possible?
A.The relative pronouns in English can be omitted.
B.In English, place names can be used as adjectives.
C.The city has the same name with a kind of American bison.
D.The word buffalo has the same form of singular and plural.
3. Where can you probably find this article?
A.Wandering the Earth
B.Linguistics Around Us
C.Popular Animal Science
D.Collins English Grammar
2021-01-02更新 | 275次组卷 | 4卷引用:名校卷专题汇编-阅读选择

9 . Most online fraud (诈骗)involves identity theft. Passwords help. But many can be guessed. Newer phones, tablets, laptops and desktop computers often have strengthened security with fingerprint and facial recognition. But these can be imitated. That is why a new approach, behavioural biometrics (生物统计学),is gaining ground.

It relies on the wealth of measurements made by today's devices. These include data from sensors that reveal how people hold their phones when using them, how they carry them and even the way they walk. Touchscreens, keyboards and mice can be monitored to show the distinctive ways in which someone's fingers and hands move. These features can then be used to determine whether someone attempting to make a transaction (交易)is likely to be the device's habitual user.

Behavioural biometrics make it possible to identify an individual's unique motion fingerprint",says John Whaley, head of Unifyid, a firm in Silicon Valley that is involved in the field. When coupled with information about a user's finger pressure and speed on the touchscreen, as well as a device's regular places of use—as revealed by its GPS unit一that user's identity can be pretty well determined.

Used wisely, behavioural biometrics could be a great benefit. In fact, Unifyid and an unnamed car company are even developing a system that unlocks the doors of a vehicle once the pace of the driver, as measured by his phone, is recognised. Used unwisely, however, the system would become yet another electronic spy on people's privacy, permitting complete strangers to monitor your every action, from the moment you reach for your phone in the morning, to when you throw it on the floor at night.

1. What is behavioural biometrics for?
A.To ensure network security.B.To identify network crime.
C.To track online fraud.D.To gather online data.
2. How does behavioural biometrics work?
A.By restricting and detecting the access to an account of users.
B.By spotting and revealing a device's regular places of use.
C.By monitoring and comparing the ways users interact with devices.
D.By offering and analyzing the operating system of devices.
3. What's the author's attitude towards behavioural biometrics?
A.Doubtful.B.Concerned.C.Objective.D.Favorable.
4. From which section of a magazine can this passage possibly be taken?
A.Health and wealth.B.Science and technology.
C.Finance and economics.D.Books and arts.

10 . Not all vegetables need lots of sunshine. Mark Hoffman and his wife own a bed-and -breakfast guesthouse in rural Kempton, Illinois. They often serve their guests fresh products from the garden.

The Hoffmans have been growing food and flowers for twenty-five years. For almost ten of those years, Mr. Hoffman has been experimenting and working with shade (阴凉) plantings. He says, “The bottom line here is that most plants will produce more in full sun. But if you do not have full sun, there are other choices.”

For example, he grows tomatoes near oak trees. Oak trees can produce a lot of shade. But Mr. Hoffman says his tomato plants grow as long as they get five hours a day of direct sunshine, especially morning sun. Not only does this go against the traditional advice that tomatoes need six,eight,even twelve hours a day of full sun, it also shows how plants and trees roots can share nutrients and water.Mr. Hoffman also planted asparagus(芦笋)around a tree at its drip line,the area below the outer limit of the branches. So when it rains,all the rain drips down right on the asparagus.Mr. Hoffman says plants with wider leaves seem to do better in shady environments. He also found that his potatoes did better partly in shade than in full sun.

Moving them out of the sun helped control an insect problem. Mr. Hoffman does not use pesticide (农药). Instead, he planted the potatoes in the shade, especially on the east side of the tree. The potatoes get morning sun, but they are shaded during the hottest part of the day. Some insects dislike shade, and the hottest part day is when they do the worst of their damage.

Time of day, sun intensity (强度), shadows from trees, walls and buildings all influence how much sunlight falls on plants. And people interested in shade planting should also remember something else. The term “shade” can describe different amounts of darkness. It can even mean different things in different parts of the world.

1. What’s the author’s purpose of writing the passage?
A.To present a kind of eco-friendly lifestyle.
B.To recommend an approach to manage a website
C.To show vegetables can be planted in the shade.
D.To introduce Mark Hoffman and his family.
2. How many hours of sunshine are enough to keep tomato plants growing in Hoffman’s garden?
A.five hours a dayB.Six hours a day
C.Eight hours a dayD.Twelve hours a day
3. What can we infer from the second paragraph?
A.Food and flowers produce more in the shade.
B.Food growing in the shade contains more nutrients.
C.Sun can affect the production of some plants.
D.Food growing in the shade is the best choice for most plants.
4. By using asparagus as an example, the author wants to explain that________.
A.asparagus prefer to grow in the shade.
B.how plants and tree roots share water.
C.vegetables grow better in partial shade.
D.how leaves gain sunshine under the tree.
5. We may read the passage on a website in the section of ______.
A.environmentB.traveling
C.lifestyleD.agriculture
2020-12-19更新 | 182次组卷 | 1卷引用:天津市红桥区2021届高三上学期期中英语试题
共计 平均难度:一般