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1 . An 85-year-old primary school constructed in 1935 in Shanghai has been lifted off the ground in its entirety and relocated using new technology called the “walking machine.” The project marks the first time this “walking machine” method has been used in Shanghai to relocate a historical building.

Urbanization(都市化)has continued to significantly threaten architectural heritage. In the capital Beijing, for instance, more than 1,000 acres of its historic hutongs and traditional courtyard homes were destroyed between 1990 and 2010.

In the early 2000s, cities including Nanjing and Bejjing-due to the critics’ protest about the loss of old neighborhoods-drew up long-term plans to preserve what was left of their historic sites, with protections introduced to safeguard buildings and restrict developers.

These conservation efforts have taken different forms. In Beijing, a near-ruined temple was transformed into a restaurant and gallery, while in Nanjing, a cinema from the 1930s was restored to its original form, with some additions providing it for modern use. In 2019, Shanghai welcomed Tank Shanghai, an arts center built in renovated(重修的)oil tanks.

“Relocation is not the first choice, but better than destroying,” said Lan, the Shanghai primary school’s project supervisor. “I’d rather not touch the historical buildings at all.” Building relocations he said however, are “a workable option.” “The central government is putting more emphasis on the protection of historical buildings. I’m happy to see that progress in recent years.”

Shanghai has arguably been China’s most progressive city when it comes to heritage preservation. The survival of a number of 1930s buildings and 19th-century “shikumen” (or “stone gate”) house have offered examples of how to give old buildings new life.

“We have to preserve the historical building no matter what, ” Lan said. “The relocation has challenges, but in general, it is cheaper than destroying and then rebuilding something in a new location.”

1. How did cities respond to the loss of historical sites?
A.They criticized the developers.B.They rebuilt the historic hutongs.
C.They ended the significant threat.D.They proposed the protection project.
2. What does the underlined word “it” in Para. 4 refer to?
A.All original form.B.A new addition.C.A cinema.D.A temple.
3. What does the author intend to do in Para. 6?
A.Provide strong evidence.B.Introduce different opinions.
C.Summarize previous paragraphs.D.Add some background information.
4. What’s the best title for the passage?
A.Walking Machine: a New TechnologyB.Rebuilding: a New Option for Relics
C.Old Building Torn down for Modern UseD.Historical Site “Walks” to New Life

2 . Fu Cong, a Chinese-born pianist, died on Monday at a hospital in London, where he had lived for many years.

A lover of classical music from a young age, Mr. Fu began taking piano lessons when he was 7. He made his first stage appearance in 1952. The concert caught the attention of officials in Beijing, who selected him to compete and tour in Eastern Europe. Mr. Fu soon moved to Poland, where he studied at the Warsaw Conservatory (音乐学校) on a scholarship. To prepare for the fifth Chopin Competition in Warsaw in 1955, he practiced so hard that he hurt his fingers and was nearly cut from the first round of the competition.

Mr. Fu was one of the first Chinese pianists to achieve global fame when he took third place in the International Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw in 1955. He also won a special prize for his performance of Chopin's mazurkas. Almost overnight, he became a national hero. To China, Mr. Fu's recognition in a well-known international competition was evidence that the country could stand on its own artistically in the West. Chinese reporters came to interview Mr. Fu, while many others went to his father, Fu Lei, for advice on child-raising.

In 1981, a volume of letters written by his father, was published in China. Full of advice, encouragement, life teachings and strict paternal love, the book Fu Lei's Family Letters became a best-seller in China. Besides influencing a generation of Chinese, Mr. Fu's words resonated (引起共鸣) long after his death with the person for whom they were intended.

“My father had a saying that 'First you must be a person, then an artist, and then a musician, and only then can you be a pianist,'" Mr. Fu Cong once recalled in an interview. "Even now, I believe in this order-that it should be this way and that I am this way.”

1. What is paragraph 2 mainly about?
A.Fu Cong's achievements in music.B.Fu Cong's stage performances.
C.Fu Cong's experiences of learning music.D.Fu Cong’s efforts for competitions.
2. Why does Fu Cong's global recognition mean a lot to China?
A.It earns Chinese arts a place in the West.
B.It promotes the spread of Chinese culture.
C.It proves Chinese people's love for music.
D.It enables Chinese art education to be recognized.
3. What does the underlined word "they" in paragraph 4 refer to?
A.Fu Lei's Family Letters.B.Young people of China.
C.Fu Cong and his family.D.Readers of Fu Lei's Family Letters.
4. Which of the following agrees with Fu Lei's ideas in the last paragraph?
A.It's easy to be an artist.
B.It requires various qualities to be a pianist.
C.Everyone should develop an interest in art.
D.Talent is of greatest importance for a pianist.

3 . Like colorful corals, they rocked gently in the ocean current. Only these were not beautiful natural reefs grown over centuries. They were plastic bags, stuck to the Aegean Sea floor since a waste site slid into the water eight years ago.

A team of divers and environmentalists pulled thousands of plastic bags from the water near Greece’s Andros Island this month. The workers described what they found as a “gulf full of plastic corals”.

Seas polluted with plastic have become one of the most shocking signs of human damage to the planet. “It was a very scary thing to see, ”said Arabella Ross, a volunteer diver with Aegean Rebreath. The group carries out underwater and coastal clean-ups. “It really shook me and I think it really shook everyone who saw it, ”she added.

The Mediterranean is among the seas with the highest levels of plastic pollution in the world, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) said in a report in June. Greece produces about 700, 000 tons of plastic waste a year, or about 68 kilos per person. About 11, 500 tons enter its seas every year. Almost 70% of that returns to the Greek coast, one of the longest in the world. The sea pollution off Andros is thought to date back to 2011, when heavy rain caused a waste site to collapse. Most of the waste fell into the sea.

Aegean Rebreath divers removed blue, black and yellow plastic bags caught between reefs and among fish. It was “like the paradise of the Caribbean Sea, where you find coral reefs everywhere of every color. It was the exact same thing, but instead of corals it was bags, ”diver Arabella Ross said.

The team managed to remove only a small part of the plastic waste they found. They also pulled up 300 kilograms of old fishing traps—known as “ghost nets”—from Andros. In a separate operation in June off Salamina, a small island near Athens, they removed two tons.

“If people are wondering where their rubbish ends up, we see it each time we go into the water,” Ross said.

1. What does the underlined word “it” (Para.3) most probably refer to?
A.The Aegean Sea.B.Plastic pollution.C.The volunteer group.D.The waste site.
2. What is believed to be the start of the pollution of Andros?
A.Collapse of a waste site.B.Extremely bad weather.
C.Waste thrown away by tourists.D.Plastic waste produced by the Greeks.
3. Where does the rubbish finally end up according to Ross?
A.The oceans.B.In the fields.
C.In the rubbish sites.D.The waste treatment factories.
4. What could be the best title for the passage?
A.Gulf Of Plastic Corals’ Found in Aegean SeaB.The Paradise Lies in the Caribbean Sea
C.Coral Reefs Are Full of Every ColorD.Water Pollution Is Very Serious
2021-04-16更新 | 139次组卷 | 1卷引用:Unit 3 单元测评 【新教材】人教版(2019)高中英语选择性必修第三册(含听力)

4 . It is the stock response to a parent struggling with a crying baby or a bad-tempered teenager: “Treasure every moment because they grow up so fast.” Now researchers have found there may be something in the old saying. Watching children grow up really does seem to make time fly. Scientists have found that parents feel time passing more quickly than non-parents.

The findings could be due to the fact that children change fast. “Over ten years, children go through dramatic changes not only in their physical appearance, but also in their understanding abilities and their status, ” the researchers said. The results could also be a consequence of parents spending a large amount of their time on their children, they said, even though they found no difference in the time pressures recorded by parents compared with non-parents in the study.

For the study, published in the journal Timing & Time Perception (感知), the researchers asked 431 people aged from 20 to 59 to fill in a subjective time questionnaire, a tool used by psychologists to measure time perception. They were asked: “How fast did the last ten years pass for you?” An answer of very slowly gave a score of-2; slowly was-I; neither fast nor slow was 0; fast was I and very fast scored 2. So the higher the score, the faster they felt time had passed. The parents had an average score of I. 22, compared with 0. 76 for the non-parents.

Participants were also asked how quickly the last year, month and week had passed, but there were no differences between the groups for these shorter intervals (间隔). Previous studies have suggested that time also seems to speed up when we get older. Research published in 2019 by Duke University in North Carolina suggests this could be due to physical changes in our bodies, with a slowdown in image processing speeding up our perception of time passing.

Days that seemed to last forever in our youth were “not due to experiences being much deeper or meaningful”, the researcher Adrian Bejan said, “but due to the fact that they were being processed rapidly.”

1. What probably makes parents feel time passing more quickly than non-parents?
A.The pressure of raising children.B.Devoting much time to children.
C.The slowdown in image processing.D.Noticing children’s daily physical growth.
2. What can be inferred from the text?
A.Time seems to speed up for the young.
B.Parents responded differently to the old saying.
C.Non-parents have deeper experiences.
D.The older people are, the higher scores they may get.
3. What does the underlined word “they” in the last paragraph refer to?
A.Experiences.B.Researchers.C.Days.D.Youths.
4. What’s the best title for the text?
A.The perception of time passing.
B.Teenagers experience dramatic changes.
C.Time really flies when you are having children.
D.Comparison between parents and non-parents.
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5 . If your friend says she feels relaxed, but you see that she closes her hands into fists, you may doubt her words. Robots, however, might believe her. Body language says a lot, but robots have great difficulty in observing tiny body movements and can miss important social signals as a result.

Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University developed a body-tracking system that might help solve this problem. The system called OpenPose can track body movement in real time. One important quality of the OpenPose system is that it can track not only a person's head, body, arms and legs but also his fingers. To do that, the researchers used a dome (圆顶状物)lined with 500 cameras, where they recorded body movements at different angles and then used those pictures to build a data set.

They then passed those pictures through a keypoint detector to identify and label specific body parts. The software also learns to connect the body parts with different people, so it knows, for example, that a particular person's hand will always be close to his or her upper arm. This makes it possible to track multiple people at once.

The pictures from the dome were recorded in 2D. But the researchers used 3D technology to help the system understand how each movement appears from different angles. With all of this data processed, the system can determine how the whole hand looks even if some fingers cannot be seen.

Now that the system has this data set to draw from, it can run with just one camera and one computer. It no longer requires the camera-lined dome to determine body poses, making the technology mobile and accessible.

The researchers say this technology could be used for interactions between humans and machines. It could play a huge role in VR (虚拟现实)experiences, allowing finer detection of the user's physical movement without any added hardware. It could also help with more natural interactions with a home robot. You could tell your robot to “pick that up", and it could easily understand what you're pointing at. By interpreting your physical gestures, the robot may even learn to read emotions by tracking body language. So when you' re silently crying with your face in your hands because a robot has taken your job, it might offer you a tissue.

1. What does the underlined words “this problem" in Paragraph 2 refer to?
A.Humans are addicted to technology.
B.Human-robot relationship is poor.
C.Robots show too much trust in humans.
D.Robots fail to interpret physical gestures.
2. What do we know about OpenPose?
A.It tracks one person at a time.
B.It can track slight body movements.
C.It uses a dome to recognize people.
D.It can take 500 pictures in one second.
3. What makes OpenPose easy to use?
A.The data set.B.3D technology.
C.A powerful computer.D.A camera-lined dome.
4. What would be the best title for the text?
A.What robots are expected to do in the future?
B.Why is body language so important?
C.Robots learn to read body language.
D.Robots can and will change our lives.
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6 . Becoming a real runner

I would never use the word “athletic” to describe myself. To me, athletes are people who really enjoy working out. I remember crying in middle school when I had to run a mile during gym class. I huffed and puffed as I jogged. As I grew up, I would go to the gym, but I never enjoyed working out. That, I thought, was for real runners.

In June 2017, my friend sent me an email that would forever change my attitude towards running. He was training for a 200-mile relay (接力赛) and wanted me to be on his team. I would run three legs between four and six miles each over the course of two days. Figuring that I would never again have the chance to work with some top runners, I immediately agreed, and started running outside to prepare.

That first run was hard. I purposefully avoided Central Park in order to stay away from real runners. After a few blocks, I was already winded, and ran the rest of the way home. I called my mom, choked up, to say I had no hope at all of running this relay. But she encouraged me to keep at it, so I didn't quit. I went from running four miles a week to eight within one month before my advanced training began.

I was frightened going into the first training session with the team as everyone else was super “athletic”. We ran for five miles, and I was significantly slower. However, my teammates were so supportive that I felt the runner’s high, which I had never believed existed.

One day, about two weeks into training, my ankle gave out while I was running in Central Park. I was diagnosed with a stress fracture (应力性骨折). The doctor told me to stop running for two months. It took me a while to face the fact that I was out of the race. My doctor told me that he too had once been struck down with a stress fracture, and the following year, he beat his best running time in a half-marathon. That brought me hope.

I made it through the next two months by picturing myself running again. Just yesterday, for the first time since that fateful day, I took my outdoor run with my physical therapist. I mentioned that I might run a half-marathon the next year. Now I wake up excited for the days I get to run. Maybe I am a “real runner” after all.

1. According to the article, when did the author start to feel passion for running?
A.After she got into the habit of working out.
B.After she got the courage to run outdoors on her own.
C.After she ran with some top runners and got their encouragement.
D.After she broke her ankle in training and stayed in bed for two months.
2. The underlined word in the passage refers to her doctor’s _________.
A.helpful advice.
B.immediate treatment.
C.experience in the marathon.
D.personal experience with an injury.
3. What can we infer from the article about the author?
A.She didn’t take the relay seriously.
B.She had a strict and overprotective mother.
C.She felt disappointed about withdrawing from the race.
D.She would have expected to run a half-marathon if she had won the race.
4. The author’s purpose of writing the article was to _________.
A.urge readers to exercise regularly.
B.share with readers the fun of running.
C.warn readers to be careful about running.
D.encourage readers to pursue their hobbies.

7 . I sometimes find that watching a film adaptation (改编作品) of a book helps me to understand the story of a book.This is especially true for books from a different period or with a difficult dialect.My favourite example of these is Pride and Prejudice, which is also my favourite book.

Film and TV adaptations of books also mean that books reach a wider audience,prompting (促使) people to read the book if they really liked the film. In terms of language learning,watching film or TV adaptations of books can help to provide an understanding of a story that may have otherwise (否则) been difficult to understand.They also help to give a story a more modern twist (转折),for example Oliver!As an adaptation of Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist.The language in the book can be enough to reduce a native speaker to tears,but the adaptation allows everyone to enjoy the story of the child Oliver. Similarly, the 1996 film Romeo and Juliet,an adaptation of the Shakespeare play of the same name,enables those of us who haven’t studied Shakespeare to still enjoy his play.

Of course, there are limitations and not every story that is translated onto the screen is liked by the many fans of the book,or even the author. For example, the author of the book Mary Poppins, P.L.Travers,hated Disney’s adaptation,but it is now a well-loved work. One of my least favourite adaptations is that of Still Alice by Lisa Genova.They changed the location from Boston to New York for no real reason,which for some readers changes the whole feel of the book.

In my opinion, adaptations are a great way to introduce people to the story and characters of a book before reading it.They’re also a good way for people who may not feel confident enough to read a whole novel in a different language,but still want to enjoy a specific story.

1. The film adaptation of Pride and Prejudice helps the author        .
A.develop an interest in the book
B.understand the story of the book
C.learn history of a different period
D.understand the dialect in the book
2. How does the author mainly support his ideas?
A.By listing facts.
B.By giving examples.
C.By making comparisons.
D.By offering explanations.
3. What does the underlined word “it” in Paragraph 3 refer to?
A.The film Still Alice.
B.The book Still Alice.
C.The film Mary Poppins.
D.The book Mary Poppins.
4. What is the author’s attitude towards books being translated onto the screen?
A.He pays little attention to it.
B.He has doubts about it.
C.He is in support of it.
D.He is against it.
2021-04-01更新 | 80次组卷 | 1卷引用:2020-2021学年高一英语北师大版必修四Unit 12 Culture Shock 阶段质量评估

8 . Lego is considering a brick rental scheme in an attempt to cut down on plastic waste.The Danish toymaker has promised to make all its bricks from sustainable sources by 2030 and is ploughing significant resources into finding alternatives.

Tim Brooks,vice-president responsible for sustainability,said the company was “totally open” to the idea of a product rental scheme but acknowledged that lost pieces could cause a significant problem.He said the rental scheme was “possible” but admitted there were some “technical barriers”,one of which is the complexity of some Lego kits (配套元件),many of which contain thousands of pieces.

“What are the chances of giving them to an eight-year-old child and getting them all back again?” Mr Brooks added.There is a lot of technical thinking that needs to be done.

“We are right at beginning of that.” Mr Brooks said Lego was exploring several ideas with a view to producing the highest value from products while consuming the least amount of resources.He said many would “probably never see the light of day” and there was no current plan to try a rental scheme.

Lego has come under increasing pressure to reduce its carbon footprint amid growing international alarm about the impact of plastic waste on the environment.It manufactures 19 billion pieces per year—36,000 a minute—that are made only of plastic while much of the internal packaging is also plastic.

So far,the only breakthrough has been the development of a line of bricks made from plant-based plastic sourced from sugarcane.The green trees,plants and flowers were first included in Lego sets late last year but account for only one or two percent of the total amount of plastic elements produced.Henrik Ostergaard Nielson,a production supervisor in Lego’s factory in Billund,told the New York Times last year,“We need to learn again how to do this.”

1. How will Lego cut down on plastic waste?
A.By considering a brick rental scheme.
B.By producing a new kind of toys instead of bricks.
C.By replacing common plastic with a renewable material.
D.By investing large amounts of money into market.
2. What does Tim Brooks expect of the product rental scheme?
A.It’ll cause certain serious problems.
B.It’ll be of great complexity.
C.It’ll require more mature technical skills.
D.It’ll involve much more kits of bricks.
3. What does the underlined word “many” in paragraph 4 refer to?
A.Ideas.B.Values.
C.Products.D.Resources.
4. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.Lego has to explore a new product to earn a profit.
B.A brick rental scheme has been put into mass production.
C.Plant-based plastic is environmentally friendly.
D.Lego is optimistic about the brick rental scheme.
2021-03-28更新 | 42次组卷 | 1卷引用:第六单元测评【新教材】外研版(2019)选择性必修第四册(含听力)

9 . When I was a boy there were no smart phones, and our television only got one channel clearly. Still, I was never bored. The fields, hills, and woodlands around my home were the perfect playground. I can remember once hiking to a nearby lake. At the backside of it I was amazed to find an old dirt road that I had never seen before. It was full of muddy tracks and deep woods bordered it on both sides, but exploring it still seemed like a fine adventure.

I walked on and on for hours. I was sure my guardian angel was whispering in my ear “Turn around and head back home”, but I was stubborn, so I walked on. There was still neither a car nor a house in sight. I noticed that the sun was starting to go down and I grew scared. I didn’t want to end up trapped on this road,   and I was worried that it would be dark before I could make my way back to the lake again.

I continued to walk on with something growing inside of me. My heart was pounding and my legs were aching. I was almost in tears when I turned one last curve and saw something in the distance.   It was a house that I recognized. I jumped up and down and laughed out loud.   It was still over a mile away,   but my legs felt like feathers and I hurried back to my house in no time. I walked in with a big smile on my face just in time for dinner.

I remembered this recently when I saw a sign that said “All roads lead home”. It is true. In life,   all roads,   no matter how they twist and turn,   can lead us home again. What is important,   though,   is how we travel them.   Are we going to go forth in fear or are we going to go forth in faith? Are we going to make this life a terrible trip or are we going to make this life a joyful journey? The choice is ours.

1. Why did the author hardly feel bored when he was young?
A.Because he could have fun in nature.
B.Because he could watch TV all day.
C.Because he had many friends.
D.Because he used to explore the old dirt road.
2. How did the author feel when he was exploring the dirt road?
A.He thought he would be scolded by his parents.
B.He felt contradictory in mind.
C.He thought he would be trapped in the woods.
D.He was unconscious.
3. What does the underlined word “something”(Para. 3) refer to?
A.The dirt road. B.His house.
C.The lake. D.A passing car.
4. What does the author mainly intend to tell us?
A.Always make choices on our own.
B.All roads lead home.
C.It’s our attitude that matters in our life.
D.Every effort is worthwhile.
20-21高一下·湖北恩施·课时练习
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10 . Solothurn is a picturesque town in the northwest of Switzerland known primarily for its closest relation with the number eleven. It seems like everything in this place was designed around this magical number, from the fact that there are precisely eleven churches, as well as eleven historical fountains, eleven museums and eleven towers, to the unusual clock in the town square that features an eleven­hour dial and the number twelve missing.

Although nearly everyone in Solothurn knows about the town's obsession with the number eleven, the origin of that is covered in mystery. The first mention of eleven in Solothurn's history dates back to 1252, when eleven members were first elected for the town's council. Another great example of Solothurn's obsession with the number eleven is the magnificent Cathedral of St. Ursus. Designed by Italian architect Gaetano Matteo Pisoni, it was built in eleven years. It features three sets of steps, each numbering eleven rows, eleven doors, eleven bells and eleven altars, one of which is made out of eleven different types of marble. Interestingly, the altars can be viewed at the same time from only one place in the cathedral, the eleventh black stone in the long central part.

The people of Solothurn also show an intense interest in the number eleven in their daily life. There are special celebrations held on eleventh birthdays, and there are local products and businesses that include the special number. There is “Öufi­Bier” (Beer eleven), “eleven­i Schokolade” (eleven­Chocolate), and even “öufiyoga” (eleven o'clock yoga). The mysterious relationship between Solothurn and the number has become one of the town's primary tourist attractions, and there is even a themed tour about the number eleven.

1. What is mainly discussed about Solothurn in Paragraph 1?
A.Its unique designs.B.Its cultural origin.
C.Its natural attractions.D.Its connection with nature.
2. What does   the underlined word “that” in Paragraph 2 refer to?
A.The number eleven.B.The city of Solothurn.
C.Solothurn's love for eleven.D.The history of Switzerland.
3. What is the Cathedral of St. Ursus like?
A.Its steps contain 33 rows in all.B.Its doors are made out of marble.
C.It has eleven bells on each step.D.It has eleven altars in the center.
4. What do we know about the people of Solothurn?
A.They attach great importance to tourism.B.They bring number eleven to daily life.
C.They lead a busy but comfortable life.D.They are expert at designing products.
2021-03-21更新 | 85次组卷 | 1卷引用: Unit 5 The Value of Money单元综合练-2020-2021学年下学期高一英语同步精品课堂(人教版新教材必修第三册)
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